Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Wassand Street. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Wassand Street. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, 1 January 2021

William Henry Tummon and Elizabeth Crowley

Wassand Street, Kingston upon Hull
cc-by-sa/2.0 - © Bernard Sharp - geograph.org.uk/p/3645571
The Wassand Arms, No. 99 Wassand Street. A traditional corner public house that once served the fishing community. Built mid to late Victorian period for Sykes Brewery. 

William Henry Tummon (b. 1838 in Marshchapel, Lincolnshire), son of Joseph Tummon and Jane Hatcliffe married Elizabeth Crowley (b. 1841), daughter of Thomas Crowley and Elizabeth Molloy, in Hull, in 1860.

William and Elizabeth Tummon had twelve children:

  1. Thomas Joseph Tummon b. 1861 D Quarter in HULL Volume 09D, bap 1 Dec 1861 in Hull. Died 5 Mar 1862 in HULL Volume 09D Page 132. The 3 month old infant son of William Tummon of Delaporte Court, Manor Street, was buried at Hull General Cemetery on 8 Mar 1862. He was "Found dead in bed from enlargement of the liver". The informant was Elizabeth Tummon.
  2. Jane Elizabeth Tummon b. 1863 M Quarter in HULL Volume 09D  Page 173, bap. 4 Jan 1863 in Hull.
  3. William Tummon b. 1864 D Quarter in HULL Vol 09D Page 183, bap. 4 Dec 1864 in Hull. Died, aged 7, on 15 Dec 1871 in HULL Vol 09D Page 167 and was buried at Hull General Cemetery on 18 Dec 1871, "Accidentally Burnt."
  4. Frederick Hatcliffe Tummon b. 1867 M Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 175, died at 19, on 6 Jan 1885 in HULL Volume 09D Page 155 and was buried on 11 Jan 1885 at Hull General Cemetery. The cause of death is given as 'Idiotsy' (sic) - it doesn't specify whether behavioural or congenital.
  5. Lucy Tummon b. 1870 J Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 212, bap. 1 May 1870 at St. James's Church, Hull, died from 'Diarrhoea and convulsions', aged 2 years 4 months on 1 Aug 1872 in HULL Volume 09D Page 179 and was buried at Hull General Cemetery on 4 Aug 1872.
  6. Robert Tummon b. 1872 J Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 211, died aged 5 months on 22 Aug 1872 from 'Consumption' (Tuberculosis) in HULL Volume 09D Page 188 and was buried at Hull General Cemetery on 24 Aug 1872.
  7. Margaret Tummon b. 13 Jun 1873 in HULL Volume 09D Page 208, bap. 29 Jun 1873 at St. Luke's Church, Hull (The church was badly damaged in the Second World War and demolished. The site is now occupied by council housing.) The family's address was Pease Place, Pease Street, Hull.
  8. Tom Tummon b. 20 Apr 1875 in HULL Volume 09D Page 252, bap. 26 Aug 1875 at St. James's Church, Hull (The church was closed in the mid 1950s and demolished in 1957. The site is now a garden.) At this time, the family were living at 38 Edgar Street, Hull.
  9. Sophia Tummon b. 15 Feb 1877 in SCULCOATES Volume 09D Page 154, bap. 8 Mar 1877, in Hull.
  10. George Tummon b. 19 May 1879 S Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 236
  11. Ada Tummon b. 1881 M Quarter in SCULCOATES Volume 09D Page 147
  12. Alice Tummon b. 27 Oct 1883 D Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 262

In 1861, William Tummon (22) Dock Labourer from Marshchapel, Lincolnshire and Elizabeth Tummon (19) were living at 5, Delaporte Court, St Marys, Hull. 

By 1871, William Tummon (33) Labourer, Elizabeth Tummon (29), Jane E Tummon (8), William H Tummon (6), Frederick H Tummon (4), Lucy Tummon (0), and boarders, Thomas Grayburn (46) and Edward Hatcliffe (26), were living at Broadley Street, St Mary, Hull. Another of Hull's lost streets - done away with in 1901 - Hull Daily Mail tells us that, "Broadley Street ran from Parliament Street, past Burlington Tavern, across the top of Manor Street and up to Leadenhall Square. The street was full of warehouses, sailmakers and wine, spirit and tobacco stores." 

In 1881, at 122, Chiltern Street, Newington, Sculcoates, were William Tummon (42) General Labourer, Elizabeth Tummon (40), Jane E Tummon (18) Domestic Servant Unemployed, Frederick H Tummon (14), Margaret Tummon (8), Tom Tummon (5), Sophia Tummon (3), George Tummon (1) and Ada Tummon (0). 

In 1891, William Tummon (52) Dock Labourer, was living at Lower Union Court, Lower Union Street, Holy Trinity and St Mary, Hull with Elizabeth Tummon (48), Sophia Tummon (14), Ada Tummon (9) and Alice Tummon (7). Maggie Tummon (17) was employed as a General Domestic Servant to John Ayer (39) Publican at 21 Sewer Lane, Hull. Searches show the Flying Horse at 21 Sewer Lane, Hull. George Tummon (11), was listed at Hull Truants Industrial School, in Elm Terrace, Hull.

William Tummon died, at 57, in 1895 M Quarter in HULL Vol 09D Page 182.

In 1901, Elizabeth Tummon (60) widow, was living at 18, Wassand Street, Margarets Terrace, Hull, with George Tummon (21) Commercial traveller; Ada Tummon (20) Charwoman and Alice Tummon (17) Domestic Servant.

Then in 1911, Elizabeth Tummon (69), widow, was living with her daughter, Ada Gallantree at 7 Hildas Grove, Westbourne Street, Hessle Road, Hull.

Elizabeth Tummon of Westbourne Street, died aged 71 of paralysis, on 25 Jan 1913, and was buried on 28 Jan 1913, at Hull General Cemetery, Spring Bank.

Wednesday, 11 January 2023

George Tummon, Fanny Elwick and Edith Mabel Peterken

St Luke, Baxter Road, Great Ilford
cc-by-sa/2.0 - © John Salmon - geograph.org.uk/p/1724085

George Tummon (b. 1879), son of William Henry Tummon and Elizabeth Crowley, married Fanny Elwick (b. 1884), daughter of James and Harriet Elwick, on 11 Jan 1904 at St. Barnabas's Church, Hull (closed 1970, subsequently demolished). 

George (24) gave his occupation as Engineer and his address as 18 Margaret's Terrace, Wassand Street, while Fanny (19) lived at 4 Margaret's Terrace, Wassand Street, so they were clearly neighbours. Fanny had lived at this address also in 1901, aged 16, when she was employed as a Confectioner's Shop Assistant. Her father, James Elwick, was a Shipping Clerk. George's father was listed on the marriage certificate as John William Tummon, which is clearly an error.

George and Fanny actually had seven children: 
  1. George Tummon b. 1905 J Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 309, died aged 3 on 5 Jan 1909 M Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 168 (see below)
  2. Fanny Tummon b. 25 Jan 1907 M Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 316
  3. James William Tummon b. 1908 D Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 291, died in the same quarter, 1908 D Quarter in HULL Volume 09D  Page 202
  4. Lily Tummon b. 1910 M Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 300, died in the same quarter, 1910 M Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 205
  5. Harriet Elizabeth Tummon b. 28 Jan 1911 in HULL Volume 09D Page 317
  6. Ellen Tummon b. 1913 J Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 591, died before her first birthday in 1914 M Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 372
  7. Ivy Tummon b. 19 Jul 1916 in HULL Volume 09D Page 540
On 9 Jan 1909, the Hull Daily Mai reported:

A PROMT AND BRAVE DEED
HULL MAN AND BURNING CHILD
        A burning accident, with fatal results, occurred on Tuesday in the Hessle Road district of Hull.
        A little curly-headed lad named George Tummon, the three year old son of George Tummon, fisherman, of 6, Ellis Terrace, Wassand Street, was the victim, and he died in the Hull Royal Infirmary that evening from shock consequent upon the severe burns. The mother of the child says that at 2.30 that afternoon she left deceased, with his sister Fanny, aged one year and two months, in the kitchen, where there was a fire in the grate, and went to give a sup of tea to a sick woman, who lives in the next door house. She did not intend to be away more than a minute, and never thought of the possibility of danger. The little lad was dressed in his night-shirt. There was no guard in front of the fire.
        As soon as Mrs Tummons (sic) had left the house the lad seems to have commenced to play near to the fire, and his clothes must have become ignited. The mother had only been gone two or three minutes when she heard cries of "Fire, fire." She immediately rushed out of the neighbour's house into her own, to find the boy had been taken to the Infirmary.
        In the meantime, a bricklayer named George Howard, of 4 Ellis Terrace, Wassand Street, was standing at his door when he heard screams. Looking down the terrace, he saw the boy run out of the house in flames. Howard rushed down the terrace to the aid of the boy, who seemed one mass of flames, and at once picked him up and wrapped some clothing and a quilt round him and extinguished the flames. Without halting, he lifted the lad once more in his arms and ran up Wassand Street in the direction of Hessle Road and boarded a tram car with the lad in his arms still smoking. The driver and conductor of the car were made acquainted with what had happened, and they ran the car right through to Brook Street without stopping once. At Brook Street Howard jumped out and ran all the way to the Infirmary with the screaming child in his arms.
        At the Infirmary Dr Lang instantly attended to the child, and found him to be suffering from severe burns and in a dying condition.
        The mother, when she found that her son was not in the house, at once connected the screams which she heard with the disappearance of her child. She rushed out into the terrace, and gathering an inkling of what had happened, and the fact that her son had been taken to the Infirmary by a neighbour, she followed as rapidly as possible. But when she arrived her child was in a dying condition, and death took place at ten o'clock that night.

THE INQUEST
        The inquest was held on Wednesday, before the Hull city Coroner (Colonel A Thorney), at the Infirmary.
        The Coroner said there had been an Act of Parliament [Children Act 1908] passed which in only some parts came into operation before the 1st of April. He was not quite certain whether section 15 of it applied to the present case. Section 15 of the Act provided that a fine not exceeding £10 should be inflicted on persons over sixteen who had the care of any child under seven who was injured through being in a room containing an open fire grate not sufficiently protected. If the jury thought that the case was so gross that they felt justified in considering the verdict of "Manslaughter" he would possibly adjourn the inquest to enable the woman to have legal representation.
        The first witness was Dr Lang, who stated that when the deceased child was admitted into the Infirmary he was suffering from extensive burns. It was a hopeless case, the child being moribund at the time of admittance. The child died the same night. The cause of death was shock consequent upon the injuries received.
        George Howard, bricklayer, of 4, Ellis terrace, Wassand Street, said that about half-past two he was in his home when he heard screams. He went out into the terrace and saw smoke issuing from Mrs Tummon's house. He rushed to the place, and just then the deceased child came out of the house. He whipped off his waistcoat and wrapped it round the child. Someone threw a coat to him, and a quilt, and he also wrapped these round the child, which he picked up and rushed it up to the Hessle Road and boarding a tramcar, conveyed it to the Infirmary.
        The Coroner: You will agree with me that Mr Howard has acted with the most excellent expedition and care and with the greatest rapidity, and with every credit to himself.
        The Jury: Yes.
        Fanny Tummon, wife of George Tummon, fisherman, gave evidence.
        The Coroner: Do you identify the body that we have seen in the Mortuary as that of your son?
        Witness: "I cannot see much of him, but I suppose it is him."
        Continuing, the mother of the deceased stated that she left the child in the kitchen while she took a cup of tea to a sick woman who lived next door. She left the child in his nightshirt because he had just got up. He had been up late the night before.
        She left the child on the couch eating some bread and meat. The child was dressed in a flannelette shirt. The fire was "middling" as she had not made it long. There was no guard. She went to the neighbour's with the cup of tea, and had just given her it, and was going to cut her some bread and butter, when she heard screams. She rushed downstairs, and was just in time to see Howard taking the child to the Infirmary.
        The Coroner said he felt certain from the evidence that the jury would not consider a verdict of "Manslaughter" against her. He would point out, not particularly to her, but to everybody generally, that after 1 April next any person who left a child alone in dangerous proximity to a fire would be liable to certain pains and penalties. There would be on the Statute Book a method and way of punishing parents and others for carelessness. At the present time Mrs Tummon could not be punished because of her carelessness which had caused the death of her child. He did not blame her particularly because being careless she was trying to do an act of kindness to someone else.
        A verdict of "Accidental death" was returned.

An earlier article said, "The death through burning, of the little Hessle Road child named Tummon, is one of the most painful cases of its kind recorded recently" and concluded that, "The only bright feature of this terrible incident of life among poor people was the presence of mind, humanity, and quick decision of Howard, who acted with promptitude and spirit of mercy it is hard to appraise too highly."

In 1911, Fanny Tummon (26) was living at 5 Margaret's Terrace, Wassand Street, Hull, with her daughters, Fanny Tummon (4) and Harriet Elizabeth Tummon (0). This census confirms that by then they'd had five children, of whom three had died and two were still living, during their seven years of marriage. George was not listed in the household. In 1909, he was reported as working as a fisherman and, if he was still employed in that capacity and at sea, this could account for his absense.

Fanny Tummon must have died as a result of giving birth to Ivy, as she died in the same quarter, aged 31, in 1916 S Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 302.

George Tummon remarried Edith Mabel Peterken, daughter of James Peterken and Edith Sach, at St Luke's ChurchIlford, Essex on 8 Mar 1918. This time George's father was correctly listed as William Tummon, Dock Labourer, Deceased.

Edith Mabel Peterken had given birth to a daughter before her marriage to George Tummon and named her after herself, Edith Mabel Peterken b. 1917 M Quarter in ROMFORD Vol 04A Page 871, but who died in the same quarter, in ROMFORD Vol 04A Page 700. We will probably never know if this child was George's or not, but as she was born in the first quarter of 1917, she would therefore have to have been conceived before George's first wife had died, so I feel it less likely she was his.

George and Edith had ten further children: 
  1. Edith Mabel Tummon b. 4 Feb 1919 in SCULCOATES Vol 09D Page 318
  2. James Tummon b. 1920 J Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 602, died in the same quarter, in 1920 J Quarter in HULL Volume 09D  Page 272
  3. Vera Tummon b. 1922 J Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 509, died aged 1, in 1923 S Quarter in HULL Volume 09D  Page 260
  4. Dorothy Tummon b. 1924 J Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 466
  5. Alice Tummon b. 3 Aug 1926 S Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 439
  6. Mary Doreen Tummon b. 1929 D Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 405
  7. Margaret Tummon b. 27 Feb 1931 J Quarter in HULL Volume 09D Page 419
  8. George Tummon b. 1933 S Quarter in SCULCOATES Volume 09D Page 154
  9. Raymond Tummon b. 1935 in Sculcoates (Vol: 9D Page: 193)
  10. Rosina Tummon b. 13 Dec 1937 in Hull (Vol: 9D Page: 265) 
In 1921, George Tummon (42) Dock Labourer (for no fixed employer in no fixed place), was living at 72, Canning Street, Hull, with Edith Mabel Tummon (22), Fanny Tummon (14), Harriet Elizabeth Tummon (10) and Ivy Tummon (4) - daughters from his first marriage - and Edith Mabel Tummon (2).

In 1939, George Tummon (b. 19 May 1879) Dock Labourer, Edith M Tummon (b. 20 Aug 1898), Edith M Tummon, Waitress; Alice, Margaret and Rosina and four other people (by elimination these must be Dorothy, Mary, George and Raymond), were living at 35 Arram Grove, Kingston Upon Hull, Yorkshire. Fanny had married in 1923, Harriet Elizabeth in 1928 and Ivy in 1935, which is why none of them remained with their father and step-mother at that point. 

George Tummon died, aged 67, on 25 Sep 1946 (1946 S Quarter in HULL Volume 02A Page 210). The Hull Daily Mail on that very same day reported his death, bizarrely on their front page, under the headline DEAD IN BED, "George Tummon, aged about 67, of Arram Grove, North Hull, was discovered dead in bed at his home in the early hours today. It is understood that Tummon was a former docker, and had been ill for a number of years. He had received medical treatment."

Edith Mabel Tummon died, aged 51, in 1951 S Qtr in HULL Vol 02A Page 208.

Friday, 1 January 2021

Harry Lowe Bloom and Ivy Tummon

Strickland Street, Kingston upon Hull
cc-by-sa/2.0 - © Bernard Sharp - geograph.org.uk/p/3645560
The Strickland Arms, a traditional corner public house that once served the fishing community.

Harry Lowe Bloom (b. 24 May 1911), married Ivy Tummon (b. 19 Jul 1916), daughter of George Tummon and Fanny Elwick, in Hull in Q4 of 1935. 

In 1921, Harry Lowell Bloom (10) was living in the household of William Finn (34) at 3, Ethel's Grove, Brighton Street, Sculcoates, listed as his Step-son. William Finn, Soldier, had married Harry's mother, Agnes Daisy Bloom, Spinster, on 6 May 1916. No mother's maiden name was listed on Harry's birth record, which confirms that he was born illegitimately. Lowe could have been his father's surname. 

Harry and Ivy appear to have five children:
  1. Harry Kenneth Bloom b. 3 Jul 1936 in Sculcoates (Vol 9D Page 312)
  2. Dennis Bloom b. 1938 Q4 in Hull
  3. Gladys Bloom b. 1939 Q4 in Hull, died in the same quarter.
  4. Lillian Bloom b. 1939 Q4 in Hull, died in the same quarter.
  5. Maurice Bloom b. 1940 Q4 in Hull
Gladys and Lillian, born and died in 1939, quite clearly must have been twins.

In 1939 living at 6 Columbine Terrace, Strickland Street, Kingston Upon Hull (parallel to Wassand Street, where Ivy grew up), were Harry Bloom, General Labourer; Ivy Bloom, Harry K Bloom. A closed record would relate to Dennis. 

The family clearly must have moved to Manchester at some point. 

Both Dennis and Maurice married in Manchester, in 1968 and 1972, respectively. Ivy Bloom died, aged 60, in Manchester in 1976, Harry Lowe Bloom died, in Manchester, in 1977, he will have been 66. Harry Kenneth Bloom died, also in Manchester, at 52, in 1988. Dennis and Maurice may still be still living.

Saturday, 19 August 2023

John Paddison, Esther Ann Borrell and Mary Ann Maplethorpe

Interior, Hull Holy Trinity, now Hull Minster.

John Paddison and Esther Ann Borrell - the parents of Ann Paddison who later married Charles Stocks, brother of William Henry Stocks - story is so complicated, it was worth writing down, if only to - attempt to - untangle its various turns.

John Paddison married Esther Ann Borrell on 19 Aug 1855 and the marriage was reported in the Lincoln, Rutland and Stamford Mercury (Published since 1712, this claims to be "Britain's oldest continuously published newspaper") announcing that the marriage of John Paddison of Hallington and Esther Ann Borrell of Market Rasen had taken place at the Wesleyan Reform Chapel, Market Rasen.

Daughter of George Borrell and Esther Ann Newbound, Esther Ann Borrell was baptised on 22 Jan 1827 in North Thoresby, Lincolnshire. She was eight years older than John Paddison (bap. 22 Mar 1835 in South Elkington, Lincolnshire, a village near the town of Louth), son of John Paddison and Ann Malkinson. 

When John and Esther married in 1855, this was not her first excursion into matrimony, however. Previously, Esther Ann Borrell, daughter of George Borrell, had married widower, David Hindes (sic), Labourer, on 14 Aug 1849, at Holy Trinity Church, Hull (now Hull Minster). David Hindes gave his address as Hatter's Square (Hull). Witnesses were Thomas Fulford and Mary Ellis. David Hindes listed his father as John Hindes, however, his baptism, on 12 Jan 1817, in Ulceby, Lincolnshire, specifies he was "David, illegitimate son of Sarah Hinde". 

David Hinds, who had been lodging with William and Mary Ellis in Healing, Lincolnshire in 1841, previously married Martha Corringham (bap. 27 Oct 1825), daughter of Richard Corringham, in Healing, Lincolnshire, on 2 Feb 1843

David and Martha had four children, all four baptised in Healing: 
  1. Elizabeth Hinds, bap. 20 Mar 1843
  2. Richard Hinds bap. 16 Sep 1844 
  3. John Weldon Hind (sic) bap. 3 Aug 1846. Died, aged 8, in 1853 S Quarter in GLANFORD BRIGG Volume 07A Page 333 and was buried in Ulceby.
  4. George Hinds, b. 1848 M Quarter in CAISTOR Volume 14 Page 335 (confirms mother's maiden name of CORRINGHAM), bap. 2 Feb 1848 
Probably as a result of giving birth to the last child that Martha aged 22, wife of David Hinds, was buried, on 27 Feb 1848, in Great Coates, Lincolnshire.

Esther Ann Borrell already had a son, John Borrell, bap. 22 Apr 1849, prior to marrying David. (DNA evidence from a descendant of John Borrell confirms that David Hinds was the father. John Borrell later married Elizabeth Jane Hawken or Hawkins in Canterbury, New Zealand in 1872; the couple had seven children and John died on 12 Feb 1886 in Waimakariri, Canterbury, New Zealand.)

A second son, Thomas Hinds, was born in 1850 D Quarter in CAISTOR Volume 14 Page 325, bap. 19 Jan 1852 in North Thoresby, Lincolnshire, but died in 1852.

In 1851, David Hinds (34) Farm Labourer, born in Ulceby, Lincolnshire, was living in Old Chapel Lane, Laceby, Lincolnshire, with Ann [Esther Ann] (24), born North Thorsby, Lincolnshire; Elizabeth Hinds (8), Richard Hinds (6), Wildan (sic) [John Weldon] Hinds (4), George Hinds (3), Tom Hinds (1) - undoubtedly an error and this child is actually John Borrell (b. 1849) - and Thomas Hinds (0). Also in the household was Margaret Borrell (14), Visitor (Esther Ann's sister). 

There's no record of a death of a David Hinds, however, the death of a George Hines (sic), aged 35, in 1851 D Quarter in CASTOR Volume 14 Page 193 and buried on 19 Dec 1851, in Laceby, has been suggested. Research found no George Hines (etc) of appropriate age living in the area whose death it could be, so I'm also convinced to accept it. The fact that [Esther] Ann had gone back to her home in North Thoresby, by the time of Thomas' baptism in Jan 1852, also makes me think that this death in the last quarter of 1851 must be relevant.

But as Esther was previously married to David Hinds, why was she again Borrell when she married the second time? This, I think, is unanswerable.

John and Esther Ann Paddison had two children:
  1. Ann Paddison b. 9 Nov 1855 (GRO Reference: 1855 D Quarter in LOUTH Volume 07A Page 511), bap. 6 Aug 1856 in Louth, Lincolnshire.
  2. George Paddison b. 1857 S Quarter in LOUTH Volume 07A Page 499, bap. 3 Jul 1857 in Raithby, Lincolnshire. Died aged 0 in 1857 S Quarter in LOUTH Volume 07A Page 344.
Esther Ann Paddison died, aged 30 on 4 Apr 1858 J Quarter in LOUTH Vol 07A Page 347 and was buried, on 6 Apr 1858. Lincolnshire Monumental Inscriptions (inferring that there is a stone) details that Esther Ann Paddison, wife of John Paddison was buried at St Peter's church, Raithby cum Hallington. The death of Esther Ann was also reported in the Lincoln Rutland and Stamford Mercury.

In 1861, John Paddison (26) Agricultural Labourer, Widowed, and daughter Ann (4) were living in Hallington, Lincolnshire, in the household of John's father, John Paddison (53) Shepherd, with his step-mother, Maria and brother, Joseph. John Borrell (11), was living in North Thoresby, with his maternal grandparents.

John Paddison remarried, on 9 Aug 1862, to Mary Ann Maplethorpe. This marriage too was announced in the Lincoln, Rutland and Stamford Mercury.

John and Mary Ann Paddison added another eight children: 
  1. John Paddison b. 1863 M Quarter in LOUTH Volume 07A Page 557
  2. Anne Maria Paddison b. 1864 D Quarter in LOUTH  Volume 07A  Page 537, died, aged 1, in 1866 J Quarter in LOUTH Volume 07A  Page 367 and was buried in Raithby cum Hallington, Lincolnshire.
  3. William Paddison b. 1866 J Quarter in LOUTH Volume 07A Page 574
  4. George Paddison b. 1869 M Quarter in LOUTH  Volume 07A  Page 588
  5. Thomas Paddison bap. 6 Nov 1870 in Tathwell, Lincolnshire.
  6. Hannah Maria Paddison bap. 4 July 1872 and buried 9 July 1872 in Stainton le Vale, Lincolnshire
  7. Eliza Paddison b. 1875 J Quarter in SPILSBY  Volume 07A  Page 548
  8. Joseph Paddison b. 1877 S Quarter in SPILSBY Volume 07A Page 573
In 1871, at Tathwell Cottage, Tathwell were John Paddison (36) Shepherd, Mary Paddison (28), John Paddison (8), William Paddison (5), George Paddison (2) and Thomas Paddison (5 mo) and John Whitworth (22) Lodger, Ag Lab.

In 1881, John Paddison (44) Shepherd, was living in Thornton, Horncastle, Lincolnshire with wife Mary Ann Paddison (38), William Paddison (14), George Paddison (12), Eliza Paddison (5) and Joseph Paddison (3). Living with them was Robert Greenfield (25) Lodger. Eldest son John Paddison (18) was staying in the household of his grandfather, John Paddison (74) in Hallington, Louth.

In 1891, John Paddison (56) Dock Labourer, was living in Walcott Street, Hull (the next street, parallel to Wassand Street where several of the Tummon family lived), with wife Mary A Paddison (49); John Paddison (29) Labourer Fram Company; William Paddison (25) Labourer Dock Co; Thomas Paddison (19) Grocers Assistant; Eliza Paddison (16) Shop Assistant; Joseph Paddison (14) Scholar; Henry Jackson (28) Lodger, Dock Labourer and Jesse Stocks (2) Granddaughter.

Mary Ann Paddison (49) died and was buried on 17 Sep 1891 at Hull Holy Trinity.

In 1901, John Paddison (66) Grocer Shop Keeper, Widowed, was living at 73 Walcott Street, Hull, with Frances Walker (44), Widow, Housekeeper.

John Paddison died aged 73 in 1908 and was also buried at Hull Holy Trinity.