Saturday 3 December 2016

Mary Ann Bottomley 1865-1906

Photograph © Copyright Humphrey Bolton and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence. St. Luke's Church, Norland is located at OS Grid Ref. SE0663222618

Right, let’s have some more genealogy stuff. I am currently working through my database locating and attaching citations from the various England & Wales census records. So far I have completed 1841-1891 and I’m now working on 1901.

The latest person to be worked on is my 3rd Cousin 3 times removed, Mary Ann Bottomley who was born on 16 April 1865 in Soyland, West Riding of Yorkshire (as was prior to 1974 when it was abolished). She was baptised on 20 May 1866 at St Bartholomew, Ripponden, baptism entry 423 in the register ‘Mary Ann dau of William & Susannah Bottomley, of Soyland, Stone delver. Born 16 Apr 1865’ (West Yorkshire Archive Service; Wakefield, Yorkshire, England; Yorkshire Parish Records; Old Reference Number: D21/7; New Reference Number: WDP21/7;).

I had located Mary Ann with her parents in the previous Census records; 1871 (PRO RG 10/4408 folio 40, page 20), 1881 (PRO RG 11/4413 folio 40, page 10), and 1891 (PRO RG 12/3598 folio 44, page 2).

I had also located her marriage on 7 April 1894 at St Mary, Elland to Arthur Nussey marriage entry 253 in the register ‘7 Apr 1894. Arthur Nussey, 23, Batchelor, Labourer, Norland. Father: Jem Nussey, Bootmaker. Mary Ann Bottomley, 28, Spinster, -, Soyland. Father: William Bottomley, Labourer. After Banns. Witnesses: W H Bottomley, Clara Nussey;‘ (West Yorkshire Archive Service; Wakefield, Yorkshire, England; Yorkshire Parish Records; Old Reference Number: D79/34; New Reference Number: WDP79/34;)

It struck me that Nussey is an unusual surname; I think it is a variant of the Germanic Nusse, itself a diminutive form of Den(n)is, whose etymology is from ‘follower of Dionysus’. Anyway, easy enough to locate in a Census and, sure enough, there they were in 1901:

(PRO RG 13/4133 folio 25, page 11)
Prospect Terrace, Norland, West Riding of Yorkshire, England
Arthur Nussey Head 30 Married Railway plate layer Norland, WRY
Mary Ann Nussey Wife 35 Married Soyland, WRY
Ivy Nussey Daur 2 Norland, WRY

So that gave me Arthur’s date and place of birth and I was able to locate a GRO birth index for him; Arthur Nussey, volume 9a, page 478, Dec quarter 1870, Halifax district. I also found the GRO index record for their daughter Ivy Nussey, volume 9a, page 460, Sep quarter 1898, Halifax district. So far, so good.

Next I tried the 1911 Census but there was no sign of Mary Ann. I did manage to find Arthur and he was a widower!

(RG 78, RG 14 PN 26438 registration district Halifax, sub district Sowerby, enumeration district 9)
28 Maude Buildings, Scarr Head, Sowerby Bridge, West Riding of Yorkshire, England
Gibson Riley Head 48 Married Iron moulder at machine tools works Sowerby Bridge, WRY
Harriet Ann Riley Wife 48 Married Sowerby Bridge, WRY
Mary Ellen Riley Daur 20 Unmarried Sowerby Bridge, WRY
George Arthur Riley Son 19 Unmarried Iron fitter, apprentice at machine tools works Sowerby Bridge, WRY
Jeremiah Riley Father 74 Widower Retired loom tuner at woollen mill Sowerby Bridge, WRY
A Nussey Brother in law 40 Widower Platelayer for railway company Norland, WRY
Married 21 years, 2 children, 2 living, 0 dead

Now I needed to find the death of Mary Ann and what had happened to Ivy?

I turned to the parish registers, located Mary Ann’s burial record, viewed the page, and was shocked to find three consecutive entries at Sowerby Bridge, Christ Church and Norland, St Luke, Yorkshire, England (West Yorkshire Archive Service; Wakefield, Yorkshire, England; Yorkshire Parish Records; Old Reference Number: D93/12/7A; New Reference Number: WDP93/12/7A):

No. 775. 9 Oct 1906 Mary Ann Nussey age 41 of New Longley, Norland. Died 6 Oct
No. 776. 9 Oct 1906 Ivy Nussey age 8 of New Longley, Norland. Died 8 Oct
No. 777. 13 Oct 1906 Fred Nussey age 5 of New Longley, Norland. Died 10 Oct


What on earth had wiped out the whole family except Arthur? I can find no details of an epidemic at that time and place, but it seems likely that that was indeed some kind of illness that caused the deaths. I would need to get the death certificates to be certain. In the meantime I was able to fill in the rest of the blanks for the family.

Ivy was born on 19 June 1898 and baptised on 24 September 1899 at Norland. (Baptism of Ivy Nussey in 1899; West Yorkshire Archive Service; Wakefield, Yorkshire, England; Yorkshire Parish Records; Old Reference Number: D93/12/1; New Reference Number: WDP93/12/1; Baptism. No. 768. 14 Sep 1899 Ivy, of Arthur & Mary Ann Nussey, of Prospect terrace Norland, Labourer. Born 19 Jun 1898)

Fred was born on 14 July 1901 and baptised on 22 September 1901 at Norland (Baptism of Fred Nussey in 1901; West Yorkshire Archive Service; Wakefield, Yorkshire, England; Yorkshire Parish Records; Old Reference Number: D93/12/1; New Reference Number: WDP93/12/1; Baptism. No. 807 22 Sep 1901 Fred, of Athur & Mary Ann Nussey, of Prospect Terrace Norland, railway Plate Layer. Born 19 Jul)

Arthur and Mary Ann had no other children. Arthur died and was buried on 22 February 1940 at Norland. (Burial of Arthur Nussey in 1940; West Yorkshire Archive Service; Wakefield, Yorkshire, England; Yorkshire Parish Records; Old Reference Number: D93/12/7A; New Reference Number: WDP93/12/7A; Burial at Sowerby Bridge, Christ Church and Norland, St Luke, Yorkshire, England. No. 1250 22 Feb 1940 Arthur Nussey of 6 Derby Road, Sowerby Bridge aged 70 [257 in margin]). The number in the margin may be the plot number where Arthur was buried.

Friday 2 December 2016

2016 Review

This blog is looking rather sparse. I must resolve to start using it again next year. Anyway, on with my 2016 music review.

Out of 41 musical purchases my pre-2016 acquisitions totalled 26, all on CD.

First a couple from the Original Album Series, Chris Rea and Alanis Morrissette. The Chris Rea collection consists of 5 albums, Water Signs, Shamrock Diaries, On The Beach, The Road To Hell and Espresso Logic. All good solid stuff but The Road To Hell is obviously the standout, but I was also very impressed with On The Beach. The Alanis Morrissette collection consists of Jagged Little Pill, Supposed Former Infatuation Junkie, Under Rug Swept, So-Called Chaos, and Flavours Of Entanglement. If you like Jagged Little Pill then you'll like the rest as it's pretty much more of the same, not in a bad way mind. So, in summary, two excellent purchases and fantastic value. Not so good was Masterpiece Annie Nightingale a curated collection from various artists, some tracks of which were very good but some just bafflingly poor. Everyone has different tastes I guess, hey ho.

Following on from my dip into the waters of acoustic guitar last year I decided to try The Art of Segovia by Andrés Segovia. A mixed bag, some I liked, some not so much.

Staying on the classic theme I also found a bargain recording of Der Ring Des Nibelungen by Richard Wagner, £22 for a 14 CD set comprising many hours of listening. Needless to say, I've not got through it all yet, but I'm working on it!

I had a bit of a Japan moment this year and decided to splash out on a number of David Sylvian issues; Brilliant Trees the 2006 remastered version of his 1984 solo album, A Victim of Stars the double CD from 2012, and Alchemy - An Index Of Possibilities the 2006 remastered version of his 1985 album. I have 5 Japan albums already and none of these new purchases disappointed.

The nostalgia continued this year with Third Stage the 1986 third album from Boston with classic tracks like Amanda, and Cool the Engines. The eponymous first album from Visage from 1980 and remastered in 2002. The third album from Status Quo, Dog of Two Head from 1971 and remastered in 2008.

As mentioned in last year's review, I saw Steve Hackett on tour. I continue to be impressed with his output and this year added; Bay Of Kings (1983, reissued 2013), Beyond The Shrouded Horizon (2011), and Genesis Revisited II (2015), all of which are cracking albums.

I continue to replace albums that I had on vinyl back in the day and this year added Very best of The Stylistics (2007), although I originally had their 1975 version, the slightly different The Best of the Stylistics.

I've always loved Catherine Wheel and one day, after listening to one of their albums, I looked to find out what ever happened to the band. I was surprised to see that lead singer/songwriter Rob Dickinson released a solo album in 2005 Fresh Wine for the Horses. I bought it and it was brilliant, well recommended.

Coming a little more up-to-date I've expanded my collection of albums by prog-metal supergroup Transatlantic by adding Bridge Across Forever (2009), and SMPT:e (2015).

I loved the first two albums by You Me At Six but had lost touch with their music, so remedied this by purchasing their third album, released in 2011, Sinners Never Sleep.

Having watched Tame Impala perform Elephant I decided to try the full psychedelic rock of their 2012 release Lonerism. The album is not easy listening but bear with it, it's very good indeed.

Finally, a bunch of recent releases from bands that have caught my ear; brilliant Finnish rock from Von Hertzen Brothers on Nine Lives (2013), indie rock from Mr Andrew Hozier-Bryne, Hozier (2014), spaced out Drones from Muse (2015), alt-rock from Dinosaur Pile Up on Eleven Eleven (2015), prog rock from The Pineapple Thief founder Bruce Soord's eponymous 2015 album, and John Mitchell's latest music project Lonely Robot whose Please Come Home(2015) is a complete tour de force.

So we come to the releases of 2016 of which I managed to pick up just 15. I have to say right from the start that there is not a duff album here but obviously not all can feature in a top ten. the ones that got away, in no particular order, were; Confessions of a Romantic Novelist by The Anchoress who is Welsh multi-instrumentalist, songwriter and author Catherine Anne Davies, The Winery Dogs by American supergroup The Winery Dogs, Your Wilderness by prog-rockers The Pineapple Thief, All Bright Electric the long awaited album from Feeder, and Resonate the solo album (at last!) from the 'Voice of Rock' Glenn Hughes (he of Trapeze, Deep Purple Mk III and IV, Black Sabbath, Black Country Communion, and California Breed.)

Yea gods, we're here at last! My own personal top ten of album releases of 2016. here we go pop-pickers...

Kentucky
(10) Kentucky by Black Stone Cherry. This is their fifth album, the first since the band signed to Mascot Label Group in late 2015. Southern-fried hard rock that very much reflects the band's roots. The album opens with The Way of the Future very much in their familiar style with a memorable chorus. The music is more diverse these days with some female vocals creeping in, a cappella harmonies on Rescue Me, there's even some brass on their cover of Edwin Starr's War.



Take Me To The Alley
(9) Take Me To The Alley by Gregory Porter. No, honestly, I haven't lost my marbles. I actually really enjoy listening to this jazz vocalist. Maybe I'm getting old but you have a listen and hear for yourself.







Blues of Desperation
(8) Blues of Desperation by Joe Bonamassa. His 12th studio album, that's a prodigious amount of recording. Previous albums have been heavy on covers of blues classics but all the songs here are all original with Joe Bones assisted by first rate musicians. Superb.







Ellipsis
(7) Ellipsis the latest from Scottish post-hardcore, alt-rockers Biffy Clyro. I first stumbled on Biffy, in 2003 with their The Vertigo of Bliss and have every album since. I've heard fans lament that Opposites (2013) was the band selling out to commercial success and certainly it gave them their first number one album, but for me they've continued to evolve and this album also jumped straight in at number one. Highly recommended, and also check out their back catalogue.



The Astonishing
(6) The Astonishing by Dream Theater. Well, hey, basically this is a band playing to all their strengths. A concept album, 2 CDs of material, alternating mix of soaring, inspirational tracks and quieter, introspective moments. It's what I like from this band and they delivered in spades.






Folklore
(5) Folklore by Big Big Train. I love Big Big Train and their quiet, English brand of prog-rock. If Genesis grew up in a mining village, they would have made this music. Simples.








Solas
(4) Solas. The Answer got a bit same-y after a while but they've come back with a new album that keeps their underlying, Irish hard-rock and somehow managed to re-invent themselves. They've tapped into folk, bluegrass and Celtic motifs and created a tapestry of songs that take the band to a new level.






4 1/2
(3) 4 1/2 by Steven Wilson. His fourth solo album Hand.Cannot.Erase from 2015 certainly marked a high point for Wilson and was number one in many yearly round-ups (4th on mine). So while we wait on his fifth album he has decided to treat us to a mini-album of 6 tracks, 37 minutes, to keep us going. Don't think for one minute that this is filler material though, oh no. Four of the songs were recorded during sessions for Hand.Cannot.Erase, one from sessions for the previous, The Raven that Refused to Sing, and one is a version of Don't Hate Me, a song originally recorded by Porcupine Tree in 1998 and redone with a feeling of his latest solo albums. My Book of Regrets is long prog track reminding one of Porcupine Tree. Happiness 3 is similar but shorter, almost, dare I say it, a pop song. Three track are instrumentals, Year of the Plague and Sunday Rain Sets In are cinematic, melancholy pieces whereas Vermillioncore is much more hard-core.

F.E.A.R.
(2) F.E.A.R. by Marillion. Wow! 68 Minutes of just five songs that will never get radio air-play. Recording was funded by fan pre-orders via PledgeMusic. Pundits are saying it's their best album for 20 years, I certainly think it's up there with Happiness Is the Road. Politically astute lyrics are lovingly wrapped in Floyd/Radiohead richly layered instrumentation. The whole band is on top form and this is a must-hear album.

 

Starstarxxx
(1) Blackstar by David Bowie. Yes, 2016 has been a fatal year for many household names across entertainment and music in particular. Among many others we've lost Keith Emerson, Prince, Glenn Fry, George Martin, Scotty Moore, Dale Griffin, Leonard Cohen, Eddie Harsch, Andy Newman, Leon Russell, and not least The Thin White Dame, David Bowie. Released on 8 January, his 69th birthday, he passed two days later. There can't be a soul on this planet that doesn't know at least one of his songs and his talent will be sorely missed. For me his career came in three parts. I really loved his early stuff, mostly on the Deram label. Then came what I think of as his pop years, with hindsight probably his mainstream albums. Finally, starting in 1995 with his 1. Outside I think he really transformed into a genuine prodigy. On Blackstar Bowie has grasped the waving fronds of improvisational jazz and tamed it into songs. With seven tracks and a 42 minute running time, it feels somehow out of sync with his back catalogue and stands alone, self-contained.
  • The album kicks off with the single Blackstar all hip-hop beats, doomy elegance, and sultry saxaphone. It comes as two parts somehow stuck together, that somehow make one song. Genius.
  • 'Tis A pity She Was A Whore gets its name from a controversial 17th-century play by John Ford in which a man has sex with his sister only to stab her in the heart in the middle of a kiss. Bowie twists the original with some gender-bending (she punched me like a dude), a robbery, and World War I, but the message is the same as the play, that humans will resort to savagery when necessary, no matter where or when. Originally released in 2014 as a single.
  • Lazarus is sung from the perspective of Newton, the homesick alien Bowie played in 1976 film 'The Man Who Fell To Earth'. Over a Massive Attack-like thick, skulking groove he sings the woes of a man out of time, scarred and self-mutilated. But, listen again to the lyrics and he could almost be foretelling his own death. Weird.
  • Sue (Or In A Season Of Crime) is a track from 2014 (B side to 'Tis A pity She Was A Whore) that has been radically reworked, its big band melodrama now welded to a frantic, drum'n'bass rhythm, its climax reflecting murderous intent.
  • Girl Loves Me is a menacing, militaristic tattoo with Bowie rapping in a lazily aggressive, sing-song style, and yelping in the slang of A Clockwork Orange. It also references a bar in Orwell's 1984 called the Chestnut Tree.
  • Dollar Days is a gentle reminisce about a soul who wants to spend his golden years in a blissful British countryside but can't because of his restless nature.
  • I Can't Give Everything Away. Tellingly, the final song is a beautiful and moving farewell, a epic closing track that basically says; here's an album which references 17th-century plays, classic nihilistic fiction, films, et al and yet I won't tell you what it's all about really; Seeing more and feeling less / Saying no but meaning yes / This is all I ever meant / That's the message that I sent.