Ancestral Trails 2016 » George Reynolds WRIGHT (1841-1914)

Persönliche Daten George Reynolds WRIGHT 

  • Er wurde geboren im Jahr 1841 in Castle Farm, Preston, Hitchin, Hertfordshire.Quelle 1
  • Er wurde getauft am 23. Februar 1842 in St Mary, Hitchin, Hertfordshire.Quelle 2
  • Berufe:
    • im Jahr 1861 Miller in Preston Hill, Kings Walden.
    • im Jahr 1871 Master Miller in Mill House, South Street, Ponders End.
    • im Jahr 1881 Miller renting 2 mills & 20 acres of land employing 7 men & 1 boy at Waltham, Essex in Mill House, South Street, Ponders End.
    • im Jahr 1891 Miller in Mill House, South Street, Ponders End.
    • im Jahr 1901 Flour Miller - Employer in Mill House, South Street, Ponders End.
    • im Jahr 1911 Flour Miller - Employer in Mill House, South Street, Ponders End.
  • Er ist verstorben am 15. November 1914 in Mill House, Ponders End, Enfield, Middlesex, er war 73 Jahre alt.Quelle 1
  • Er wurde beerdigt am 19. November 1914 in St James, Enfield Highway, Ponders End, Enfeld, Middlesex.Quelle 3
  • Aufteilung der Vermögenswerte am 28. Dezember 1914 naar London.Quelle 4
  • Ein Kind von George WRIGHT und Elizabeth REYNOLDS

Familie von George Reynolds WRIGHT

Er ist verheiratet mit Matilda ROBINSON.

Sie haben geheiratet am 15. April 1869 in St James, Enfield Highway, Ponders End, Enfeld, Middlesex, er war 28 Jahre alt.Quelle 5


Kind(er):

  1. Ethel WRIGHT  1877-1878
  2. Leonard WRIGHT  1877-1934 
  3. Jessie Irene WRIGHT  1873-1902 
  4. Walter James WRIGHT  1875-1946


Notizen bei George Reynolds WRIGHT

1851 aged 10, living at Preston Hill, Kings Walden with his parents, George and Elizabeth Wright, and brother James.

1861 aged 19, living at Preston Hill, Kings Walden with his parents, George and Elizabeth Wright, and brother James.

1867 at the age of 25 he became a partner with James Dilley Young at the flour mill at Ponders End, Enfield. Young died in 1870 and George took over the running of the mill. Until the mid 19th century, the flat swampy land of the Lea Valley had contained only isolated hamlets - Ponders End, Enfield Wash, Enfield Highway - but, throughout the later 19th century, industrial expansion was rapid and extensive along the Lea Navigation. The railway came to Ponders End in 1840, and density continued to increase through the 20th century as industry and workers moved out of London and the old hamlets became a continuous suburb. By 1853, Ponder’s End mill contained seven pairs of millstones and could grind 500 sacks a week; barges of 60 tons could be drawn up beside it. The mill’s connection with the Wright family began in 1867, when George Reynolds Wright entered the business belonging to James Young as a partner, and took over the firm in 1870 on Young’s death . Wright was an innovator; the mill was extended in the 1880s with the installation of new roller mills, and Wright’s Mill was one of the first industries in the area to switch to electricity as a power source, following the removal of water power with the King George V reservoir construction in 1909. It was also one of the first in the country to adopt the continental roller-mill system (although millstones were retained for a while for speciality products), and an early user of steam-powered horseless commercial vehicles from 1906. SOURCES: Pevsner & Cherry, London North 4 p434 & Wright’s history: www.wrightsflour.co.uk/pages/clubnew/history Ponders End

1871 aged 29, living at Mill House, South Street, Ponders End, Enfield St James, Middlesex with his wife Matilda 30 and servant Caroline Griggs 15 born Enfield.

1881 aged 40, living at No 2 Mill House, Ponders End, Enfield St James with his wife Matilda 41, children George William 9, Jessie Irene 8, Walter James 6, Leonard 3 and two servants, cook Emma Fitzjohn 29 of Gosmore, Herts and nurse Lavinia Esther Penn 17 of Bayford, Herts.

1891 aged 49, living at Mill House, South Street, Ponders End, Enfield St James with his wife Matilda 50, sons George W 19, Walter J 16, Leonard 13 and servants, housemaid Mary A Wilton 16 of Walton, Herts and cook Florence M Hammond 19 of Newington, Herts.

1901 aged 59, living at Mill House, South Street, Ponders End, Enfield St Matthews with his wife Matilda 60, son Walter James 26 and general domestic servant Elizabeth Ann Cockerton 19 of Hoddesdon.

1911 aged 70, living in a 13 room house at Mill House, South Street, Ponders End with his wife of 42 years, Matilda, son Walter James 36 and cook Charlotte Starling 47 of Roydon, Essex. Six children born, two living and four deceased.

South Marsh, Ponders End Corn Mill 362956

A considerable amount of information on this mill, more than on any other in the area, is available due to what seems to have been the extreme litiginousness of Enfield millers. It has been assiduously compiled by Mr Keith Fairclough from whose notes the references in the relevant entries have been obtained, except where otherwise indicated, and I am extremely grateful to him for sharing it with me.

The ancestor of the present mill was held of the Crown by the Wroth family by 1572. It may have been used to produce gunpowder for a time, as Thomas Carter in 1665 (see above) was delivering that commodity from the Enfield Mills, as it was known, as well as from Lock Mill. The use of the plural to describe the mill is significant, indicating that a second set of machinery had been added. A survey of Enfield in 1572 noted that there were “two mills under roof, which within twenty years was but one, which are driven by the stream issuing forth out of the River of Lea.” The building had two storeys with a tiled roof. The sub-tenant miller was Jacob Harlow, who the following year made his will in which he left the lease of the mill(s) to his son John, with the proviso that he gave his mother half a bushel of wheat, and his brothers James and Luke £6 13s 4d each, every week. John was still the miller in 1592 but was later succeeded by Jacob Harlow, who in 1608 accused one of his former servants, Nicholas Young, of stealing three quarters of wheat from him. In turn Jacob was accused of assaulting one Nicholas Gibson.

In the early 1590s John Norden remarked, “Enfeyld myll is a myll of great gayne, for that the most of the meale men of Enfeyld doe ther grind ther corne, which is infinite And it is mearlous {marvellous} to consider that one myll shoulde dispatch so manie quarters as the same is reported. It belongeth unto Mr Robert Wroth Esquire.” Robert Wroth died in 1605, leaving the mills to his eldest son, Sir Robert. In February 1614 the latter mortgaged the “two water grist mills” and other properties in Enfield with Sir Anthony Archer in an attempt to meet his debts. He died soon afterwards, leaving his property in trust for his baby son, and in May 1624 rows broke out over the repayment of the mortgage. John Wroth was tenant in 1635.

In 1650 a charter was granted by Act of Parliament for a new mill to be built. In 1662 Thomas Clark of Enfield, miller, was involved in a dispute over Chingford mill in Essex, which he had tenanted between 1654 and 1658 and then turned over to another miller, John Harlow, also of Enfield, who subsequently ran away. It was presumably the mill under discussion which they worked while at Enfield. In November 1670 Robert Lowe of Enfield, miller, brought a complaint against Dame Ann Wroth, widow, over the lease of 1 acre of marsh that her steward had let him for 15 years at 30 shillings a year by word of mouth in 1665, which rent the steward was now refusing to accept.

At this time the mill was owned by the Wroth family, but the millstream was copyhold of the manor of Enfield, rented at £6 a year, until the Wroths bought the freehold in September 1671.

By now that of the mills had come into the hands of James Cowper through his marriage to Ann Wroth. In July he leased the mill to Joseph Cornish, owner of the oil mill, for thirty-five years at £100 a year. The property was described as “All that the Scite of the Millnes of Enfield together…with all Houses Buildings Wharfes Aprons Gates Bridges ditches gutters Millnes pooles Lock and Leather Milne thereunto adjoining”. It was said to have previously been in the occupation of Charles Whitehead and Nicholas Whare. There were fourteen acres of meadow attached. In May 1672 Joseph raised a mortgage of £800 on the corn mill from Benjamin Hinton. He died in 1675, survived by his father John to whom he left most of his property including the mill. In June 1678 John Cornish sublet the premises to Thomas Flanders, who took out a twenty-one -year lease on them, which was inherited by his widow Johanna when he died intestate later that year. The deeds of the mill reverted to Cornish when he paid off his son’s mortgage and he gave James Cowper, the landlord, power to let the property provided any new tenant was prepared to sublet to himself the leather mills which were part of it along with the liberty to dry his leather in the accustomed manner for seven years at £20 a year. Cowper issued a new lease to Joanne Flanders with this proviso.

According to some sources the leather mills were situated within the same building as the corn mills, but they are differentiated on a map of 1754. Local historian David Pam suggests it would have used the oil from Cornish’s oil mill. The Ponders End mills were described in the the will of marriage settlement of Katherine Flanders, the then tenant (see below) and John Clarke as consisting of "two watermills, one leather mill and two tenements. The two houses...on the site stand one at each end of the mill." The wording suggests the leather mill was powered by some source other than water. It may have been the mill for dressing skins which is recorded in 1831. In 1747 the leather mills owned by the Cowpers and sublet to one Greenwood. They were in the possession of Elizabeth Greenwood in 1756. In 1786 when Augustine King George (see below) carried out repairs to the corn mill they had lately been in the tenure of Dutton Greenwood. In March 1770 the tenant was Francis Joseph who received compensation from the Lee Trustees for a stoppage to the mills during navigation works. They had ceased work by 1845 when “the old buildings of the leather mill” were let along with the corn mill to William Farmer. When Johanna Flanders died in 1703 she left the corn mill to her son, John, who was probably already working it by 1701. By 1713 he was also the tenant at Ramney Reach fishery in which there was a “frame” which controlled the flow of water to the mill. He died in the autumn of 1736, having bequeathed the mill to his brother James in his will of 1724.

In 1735 the mill was let at £100 on a lease which had seven years to run from the coming Michaelmas. An inventory of the business noted seven cart horses, “Two pair of French stones & iron work one pair of small French stones making one Peak one Colen and Iron Work one flint one French and Iron Work one pair of old French Cast off £80.”

Until October of this year Margaret Flanders had worked the mill for James; subsequently he and Katherine Flanders ran it as partners until James’ death in October 1738, after which Katherine inherited the property and worked the mills. In July 1739 she made her will leaving her estate to John Clarke “now living with me as a recompense for his Care and industry in the management of my affairs” and making him her sole executor.

In April 1741 William Cowper, whose family were still the landlords, let the corn mill, leather mill, lock and the fourteen acres of meadow to Clarke for forty-one years from Michaelmas 1743 at £100 a year. In 1744 Clarke became involved in legal disputes with the Flanders family over the accounts of the business when James and Katherine had worked it. Mr Fairclough notes, “the papers associated with these disputes provide a list of all customers at the mill, and a thorough investigation of these customers and a comparison with local parish registers could provide a rare insight into the workings of such a business in this period.”

In 1746 the mill was offered for sale by a decree of the Court of Chancery. The property was described as “Corn Grist Mills and Leather Mills on the River Lee, called Endfield Mills, with two dwelling houses, a Lock on the said River, a coal wharf and about 54 acres of Land and Right of Common in Enfield Chace, lett to one Tenant at the yearly rent of £125-10-0 upon two Leases.” At first difficulty was experienced in finding a purchaser, but in February 1747 Francis Craiesteyn, a London merchant of Dutch decscent, bought the premises from Wiliam Cowper junior, who had come into ownership in 1742. The sale may have been an attempt to pay off a mortage taken out on the mills by Sir John Cowper in 1691.

In February 1751 John Clark made his will in which he left the lease of the mill to his wife Ann for the rest of her natural life after which it was to go to Mr Peter Donde, the son of his widow by a previous marriage and miller by August 1751, provided he agreed to pay an annuity of £10 to John’s sisters Ann and Jane and an annuity of £20 to Thomas Bittleston, son of his sister Margaret. The will was contested and a Chancery case brought against Ann Clark by Thomas Flanders and others, as a result of which James Ibbott, a local butcher, was appointed receiver of the rents and and profits of the mill estate. In July 1756 Ibbott let the mills for the remainder of the forty-one-year lease to George Berner at £150 a year. In 1758 a new lease was granted to Berner for 25 years at £150. The following year the trustees of Francis Craeisteyn’s will sold the mill in order to meet the financial losses Craiesteyn had incurred by making various monetary bequests. It was bought for £3,270 by Edward Nash of Southwark, hop factor. In July 1763 Elizabeth Bittleston, executrix of the estate of John Clarke, assigned the remainder of the lease to John Brooks, corn factor, who surrendered it to Charles Smith in November 1763. Smith granted a new lease to George Berner, to run for twenty-one years from the previous April, along with a £100 mortgage on the property which was transferred to James Stevenson of Edmonton in 1767. Smith died in 1777 leaving his freehold estate in Enfield to trustees for the benefit of his widow, Judith, during her natural life. The trustees were given powers to issue leases of up to 61 years on properties on the estate which were said to be in the occupation of George Berner, Dutton Greenwood and William Naylor.

Berners’ lease expired in 1784 and the splendidly named Augustine King George was granted the tenancy on the condition that he first rebuilt and repaired the mills. He spent £2000 on the task. Unfortunately, no sooner had the work been finished, just after eight o'clock on the evening of 4th March, than all the floors fell in from top to bottom. The workmen had just been paid off and only one man was in the building, his skull being laid bare by the accident. 100 sacks of flour and 80 quarters of wheat fell into the river and were ruined. The collapse was attributed to the great weight of all the corn and flour inside the building. George was allowed £100 out of the first year’s rent and when the work was finally completed in November 1786 he was awarded the 61-year lease at £280 a year. George insured the property, spending a further £1000 on it over the next seven years. An inventory of the mill at this time noted two water wheels, two pairs of 4 foot 6in French stones, two sets of sack tackle, three flour machines, a corn machine, and a bolter. Presumably there was one waterwheel and one pair of stones for each mill.

George was to remain tenant for nearly fifty years; he was at the mill in 1830 when he complained about the condition of the road leading to it. During the 1830s he seems to have sublet to Joseph and William Farmer. By now a bakehouse had been established on the premises, if it had not been before. William Pluck was engaged as a nightwatchman until he was transported for stealing two sacks of flour, having entered into an arrangement with one of the servants to turn a blind eye to the theft.

In 1845 a further inventory was taken of the two corn mills by John Caston, millwright of Romford in Essex. The equipment of the second mill is of a far more primitive quality than the first, with greater use of wood; the likelihood is that it was soon dispensed with, since there is nothing thereafter to suggest two separate mills were in use within the same structure.

First mill.

"Ground floor:

Waterwheel with iron arms, rims and shaft, iron spur pit wheel (wood cogs), iron pinion to work De {De = the same}, iron bevel pit wheel (wood cogs), 4 iron pinions to work De, four iron bridge trees with lifting and lighter irons, iron upright and horizontal shafts with iron bridge trees to De, four meal troughs, and set of wheels, racks and pinions to lift the wheel shaft.

Stone floor and upper floor. 4 pair of French burr stones 4"4' in diameter with spindles, irons, casings, hoppers complete - iron crown wheel (wood cogs), 2 iron pinions to work De, 2 iron horizontal shafts, 2 iron riggers to drive flour machine and sack tackle, four wood riggers to drive grindstones, smut and flour- sacking machines, bolting mill, flour machines, revolving screens, and sack tackle.

Second mill.

Ground floor:

Wood water wheel with iron shaft, 2 floodgates with wheels, racks and pinions to work De. 2 pairs of iron pulley-blocks with ropes to lift trapdoors, iron bevel pit wheel (wood cogs), iron wallower, iron spur wheel (wood cogs), 3 iron pinions to work De, 3 iron bridge trees with lifting and lighter irons complete, wood upright shaft, wood bridge trees, 3 meal troughs and set of wheels, racks and pinions to lift wheel shaft.

Stone floor and upper floor.

3 pair of French burr stones 4ft 6in. in diameter with spindles, irons, casings, hoppers, etc., complete, wood crown wheel, one iron and one wood pinions to work De, 2 wooden horizontal shafts, 3 wood riggers to drive machine and bolting mills, 1 iron rigger to drive sack tackle; 2 bolting mills, flour machine, revolving screen and sack tackle.

“The whole of the machinery complete with all spindles, brasses, carriages, straps, bands, cords, pulleys etc., as fixed.

In 1850 the foreman at the mill stated that if the mill worked well it could probably grind in the region of 500 sacks per week.

George or a relative still held the lease in 1845, with William Farmer as sub-tenant at £750 a year, increasing to £850 when George obtained a new lease at Michaelmas 1850. The tenancy was advertised at this time, but unsuccessfully. The advert read:

"To Millers and Mealmen

To Be Let, with possession at Michaelmas next, that splendid Water Corn Mill, called Enfield Mill, on the river Lea, 10 miles from London, and within 100 yards of the Ponders End Station on the Eastern Counties Railway. The mill possesses ample stowage and granary room, works seven pairs of stones, and has an unlimited supply of water. There is also a most commodious mansion, with excellent walled garden, pleasure ground, and all suitable offices, miller’s house (a good family residence), millwright’s cottage, lodge &c, with about 60 acres of fine arable and meadow land and extensive right of fishery."

In 1853 Sir Charles Cunliffe-Smith of Saltons, Essex, who had acquired the property two years before, decided to sell it. George appears by this time to have left or died. According to the advert the wheels were undershot and of the stones, three pairs were 4'4" and four 4'6" in diameter. Good transport links were emphasised. The mill was close to Ponders End station and there was of course the river; barges could come in from the Lea Navigation and draw up alongside a wharf to be loaded and unloaded. Initially the mill failed to achieve its reserve price and it was not until two years later that it was bought by the East London Waterworks Company for the sum of £15,250, the fixtures and plant being valued at £1,300 18s 6d.

The company’s agents reported that Farmer rented the mill at £600 a year, but had no proper lease. The mill needed repainting and retarring and the larger water wheel was derelict and should be scrapped. A number of other repairs were required including new stones and new floats for the waterwheels. In March 1858 the replacement stones were ordered for £30 and the property improved by the installation of a new water closet which did not, like the old one, empty directly into the mill stream. Farmer died in January 1869 and by July 1860 had been succeeded as tenant by G D Young. In 1863 an additional pair of millstones was installed from St Thomas’ Mill at Stratford, which the Company also owned.

Various further repairs were carried out over the next few years, accompanied by disagreements over the level of compensation to be allowed Young for the stoppage while the work was done. In 1866 the large waterwheel was finally replaced and the following year the sluice which had become damaged was mended, the Company refusing Young’s request to erect cottages on site for his workmen to live in while the repairs were in progress. In 1871 Young received permission to put in a portable steam engine. The following January he asked for an allowance “in consequence of the shortness of water during the past season”, which was refused. In 1873 a new wheel (presumably a replacement for the smaller one retained in 1866) was put in, despite claims that Young was not taking sufficient care of the wheels. These complaints were renewed in 1874 after they sustained further damage. Towards the end of the year Young requested improved flour-dressing machinery which was installed for £370; he agreed to pay an additional £18 a year in rent in return. In October 1877 he asked that the mill be converted entirely to steam power so that it could work at all times and not shut down during floods or droughts. The Company agreed, and an old engine which had been lying around at their premises at Old Ford was installed, together with a new boiler and gearing, to replace the portable plant. Wright set it up to drive four pairs of stones, keeping the other pairs, of which there were now five, in reserve.

In 1867 a new chapter in the mill's history had begun with the arrival there of George Reynolds Wright. He was born at Castle Farm, near Hitchin, Hertfordshire, in 1842. After a disagreement with his father he left his farming apprenticeship to become a miller. He was first apprenticed to a watermill at Whetwell, near Luton, afterwards moving to Lensford mill near Welwyn, where he is said to have carried a sack of flour weighing 280 pounds from the mill to the local church, a distance of two and a half miles, for a wager. He came to Ponders End at the age of 25, and entered into partnership with G D Young, taking up residence in one of the two mill houses.

By the time the modifications had been completed Young was in a poor state of health and in February 1878 Wright took over as tenant. There was some dispute over the terms of the tenancy so for the first few years he rented the mill on a yearly basis, but in 1884 a long-term lease was signed.

Further modifications were carried out in 1893 including the replacement of the stones by roller plant. In 1904 the East London Waterworks Company was wound up, being absorbed into the Metropolitan Water Board, but Wrights remained tenants and this well-known local family have continued to operate the mill ever since. The business is flourishing, though it long ago ceased to be dependent on natural sources of power. The waterwheels remained in occasional use until 1909 when the Lea was diverted to serve the new King George’s Reservoir (named after the monarch, not the late eighteenth-early nineteenth-century tenant), after which they were dispensed with. For a time at least one pair of millstones was retained to grind a speciality product, Imperial Wholemeal bread. In 1968 one complete set of stones and the bedstones of five more, along with the vertical shafts which drove them, and the feeding apparatus for another were still in place. Since then internal alterations have removed all trace of the original equipment. Today of course the mill is operated entirely by electicrity.

Together with one of the eighteenth-century mill houses, the mill building stands today in what despite the presence on the site of several large metal and concrete silos gives the impression - enhanced by the river with its lock and a wooded area nearby - of being a tranquil "olde worlde" oasis, hemmed in by modernity with a flyover on one side and two massive tower blocks on the other. Unlike the other surviving Middlesex watermills, which are wholly or largely brick-built, Ponders End is entirely weatherboarded, with the exception of the brick first floor, and white-painted. There is a lucam, flat-topped and therefore less aesthetically pleasing than some. Its one window has been boarded over, giving it a blind appearance. The mill is a large affair, with four storeys in all including the first; the second and third are within the weatherboarded portion and the fourth the roof.

G R Wright & Sons, as the business is still known, have done their best to preserve the character of the mill and its surroundings, in so far as this is consistent with the efficient operation of the business, which understandably must be their first consideration. A covered loading bay has had to be constructed in front of the mill, and several large extensions built on, but it is still recognisable as the structure existing at the turn of the century. The firm's philosophy was expressed in a letter by Mr K R Wright to the Enfield Gazette in 1975, which he wrote to reassure local people worried about an application to remodel and extend the premises:

"We are fully in favour of the conservation of historic buildings and sites for posterity where it is feasible and sensible...much thought has gone into the general layout of our application so as to ensure that the buildings are situated in such a way as to be of as little detriment to the view of the buildings under preservation orders as possible.

It should be noted that the preserved buildings are grouped on the south side of our premises while the proposed new buildings are on the north side amongst the industrial-type structures already there.

As stated on the application, it is not expected that the new buildings will be over 45 feet high, which is more than can be said of the massive council tower blocks that now overshadow us on the west side of the railway!

Flour milling has been carried on at Ponders End Mills for hundreds of years and we would like to see that tradition continued. Each generation has had to develop and modernise as time has passed and we must do the same to remain a viable business.

We feel it is sensible for our company and the community to safeguard the livelihood of those employed here, and for us to remain a contributor to the rates and not a charge thereon. To do so we must invest in new plant and new buildings.

We...feel that we are presenting a plan which would not interfere with the preserved buildings but at the same time would help to ensure that we have a working mill on this site in the future."

The view on the back cover of this book shows the mill as it was c1900. The absence of a contemporary image is due to the fact that as part of an active business, and hemmed in by modern additions, the mill is at present difficult to photograph.

At Enfield, as in many other cases throughout the country (though whether to the same extent is a moot point), there were frequent disputes between the millers and other users of the river whose rights to it were just as legitimate; this conflict could be exacerbated by the effect of improvements to the navigation. The channelling of too much water to the mills could have an adverse effect on the carriage of goods, while it the level were reduced to assist navigation it might impair a mill’s efficiency. Between 1575 and 1580, as part of improvements to the river by the Commissioners of Sewers, a new lock was erected which when in operation cut off the supply of water to the mill. The Wroth family objected to this and tried to be obstructive; in 1581 the bargemen were told that their continued passage along the river would be resisted. The exception was presumably vessels carrying corn to and flour from the mills, unless these commodities were transported by land. The existence of the lock did not prevent the Wroth family drawing off so much water for Enfield mill that in 1608 barges were being left stranded for some days, to the bargemen’s fury. The miller may have been attempting to catch up on a backlog of work resulting from the freezing of the river for ten weeks the previous winter.

In 1709 John Flanders pulled down the lock and erected a new one which was designed to draw off less water. At the same time he widened and deepened the mouth of the mill stream and dumped earth into the navigable channel. Barges were unable to pass without the lock being closed, for which they had to pay an increased toll. In 1719 a Commission was set up to investigate complaints against Flanders, which he rejected, on account of this and to look into the problems at Enfield generally. The Commissioners ordered Flanders to repair the banks at the mouth of the stream, to clear the navigable channel and to raise the cill of the lock by twenty inches. Several months later he had failed to carry out the work and the orders were reissued (with the exception that the cill was to be raised by only eighteen inches) with a fine to be imposed if he ignored them, which he did. What eventually happened is uncertain as from this point the minutes of the Commission’s meetings seem to cease, but they evidently failed to solve the long-term problem of the competing interests of millers and bargemen. Fishing rights often went with the mill(64), and in August 1750s it was complained that miller Peter Donde had been abusing his position as tenant of four fisheries along the river to force the bargement to pay greater tolls.

In 1770 Francis Joseph at the leather mill was compensated for stoppage during navigation works, and George Berner at the corn mill for trees floating down the stream and damaging his waterwheels.

In September 1781 the Trustees of the river requested Berner to “take up the Boards of the Dead Rooms in Enfield Lock again for supplying the Navigation with a sufficient quantity of Water.”

Augustine King George was also accused of illicitly lowering the water level, in June 1801, the Trustees taking legal advice as a result. He had erected a temporary weir, described as a tumbling bay, to control the flow of the millstream to his advantage. Much of the trouble was caused by the outflow of waste water from the wheel. In 1804 the engineer John Rennie proposed building a cut enabling barges to bypass the mill, which would have solved the problem, but the scheme was never implemented and instead an Act of Parliament the following year (45 George III) stipulated that if the water level fell below six feet upon the sill of the gate through which the waste was discharged, the miller on request of the Trustees or a person authorised by them was to shut the mill down until it had risen above that level. A new weir was built, this time to divert water away from the mill and to the lock when required. In the long run this measure may not have been entirely successful as in September 1823 George was ordered to remove a dam he had placed in the stream which was obstructing his waste water flow and thus also interfering with the regulation of that to the lock.

In October 1866 there were complaints that the tenant was interfering with the water channel between his mill and that at Sewardstone mill on the Essex side of the Lea, depriving the latter of part ot its supply. The East London Waterworks Company claimed the tenant had removed ballast from the sluice leading to Enfield mill and that it was his right to do this. Connell, the miller at Sewardstone, insisted it was not gravel that had been removed but solid earth, and brought an injunction.
SOURCE: https://millsarchive.org/explore/features-and-articles/entry/165071/watermills-and-windmills-of-middlesex-second-edition/9022

Haben Sie Ergänzungen, Korrekturen oder Fragen im Zusammenhang mit George Reynolds WRIGHT?
Der Autor dieser Publikation würde gerne von Ihnen hören!


Zeitbalken George Reynolds WRIGHT

  Diese Funktionalität ist Browsern mit aktivierten Javascript vorbehalten.
Klicken Sie auf den Namen für weitere Informationen. Verwendete Symbole: grootouders Großeltern   ouders Eltern   broers-zussen Geschwister   kinderen Kinder

Vorfahren (und Nachkommen) von George Reynolds WRIGHT

John WRIGHT
1757-1841
Elizabeth
1790-????
Hannah BIGG
1778-1846
George WRIGHT
1809-1890

George Reynolds WRIGHT
1841-1914

1869
Ethel WRIGHT
1877-1878

Mit der Schnellsuche können Sie nach Name, Vorname gefolgt von Nachname suchen. Sie geben ein paar Buchstaben (mindestens 3) ein und schon erscheint eine Liste mit Personennamen in dieser Publikation. Je mehr Buchstaben Sie eingeben, desto genauer sind die Resultate. Klicken Sie auf den Namen einer Person, um zur Seite dieser Person zu gelangen.

  • Kleine oder grosse Zeichen sind egal.
  • Wenn Sie sich bezüglich des Vornamens oder der genauen Schreibweise nicht sicher sind, können Sie ein Sternchen (*) verwenden. Beispiel: „*ornelis de b*r“ findet sowohl „cornelis de boer“ als auch „kornelis de buur“.
  • Es ist nicht möglich, nichtalphabetische Zeichen einzugeben, also auch keine diakritischen Zeichen wie ö und é.



Visualisieren Sie eine andere Beziehung

Quellen

  1. BMD Index
    Mar Qtr 1842 Hitchin 6 557
    / www.findmypast.co.uk
  2. IGI Extracted Baptism Entry
  3. London, England, Deaths & Burials 1813-1980
    George Reynolds WRIGHT The Mill House Ponders End - aged 72 years
  4. England & Wales, National Probate Calender (Index of Wills & Administrations), 1861-1941
    George Reynolds WRIGHT of Mill House, Ponders End Middlesex died 15 November 1914 Probate London 28 December to Walter James WRIGHT and Leonard WRIGHT gentlemen. Effects £30536.16s.10d
    / www.ancestry.com
  5. London, England, Marriages & Banns 1754-1921, London Metropolitan Archives
    George Reynolds WRIGHT full age bachelor miller St James Enfield Highway. Father George WRIGHT farmer. Matilda ROBINSON full age spinster St James Enfield Highway. Father William ROBINSON deceased hay &; straw carter. License. Witnesses George WRIGHT, Elizabeth WRIGHT & R ROBINSON
    / www.ancestry.com

Historische Ereignisse

  • Die Temperatur am 23. Februar 1842 war um die 5,0 °C. Der Wind kam überwiegend aus Süd-Osten. Charakterisierung des Wetters: half bewolkt. Quelle: KNMI
  •  Diese Seite ist nur auf Niederländisch verfügbar.
    De Republiek der Verenigde Nederlanden werd in 1794-1795 door de Fransen veroverd onder leiding van bevelhebber Charles Pichegru (geholpen door de Nederlander Herman Willem Daendels); de verovering werd vergemakkelijkt door het dichtvriezen van de Waterlinie; Willem V moest op 18 januari 1795 uitwijken naar Engeland (en van daaruit in 1801 naar Duitsland); de patriotten namen de macht over van de aristocratische regenten en proclameerden de Bataafsche Republiek; op 16 mei 1795 werd het Haags Verdrag gesloten, waarmee ons land een vazalstaat werd van Frankrijk; in 3.1796 kwam er een Nationale Vergadering; in 1798 pleegde Daendels een staatsgreep, die de unitarissen aan de macht bracht; er kwam een nieuwe grondwet, die een Vertegenwoordigend Lichaam (met een Eerste en Tweede Kamer) instelde en als regering een Directoire; in 1799 sloeg Daendels bij Castricum een Brits-Russische invasie af; in 1801 kwam er een nieuwe grondwet; bij de Vrede van Amiens (1802) kreeg ons land van Engeland zijn koloniën terug (behalve Ceylon); na de grondwetswijziging van 1805 kwam er een raadpensionaris als eenhoofdig gezag, namelijk Rutger Jan Schimmelpenninck (van 31 oktober 1761 tot 25 maart 1825).
  • Im Jahr 1842: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • Die Niederlande hatte ungefähr 3,1 Millionen Einwohner.
    • 13. Januar » Während des Ersten Anglo-Afghanischen Kriegs kommt es zur Schlacht von Gandamak. Nur sechs Männer der britischen Armee von William George Keith Elphinstone überleben die Niederlage gegen die Afghanen, von denen einzig William Brydon einige Tage später das ursprüngliche Ziel Dschalalabad erreicht.
    • 27. Februar » Der Violinist Ferdinand Laub veranstaltet sein erstes Konzert.
    • 10. März » Die Posse mit Gesang Einen Jux will er sich machen von Johann Nestroy wird im Theater an der Wien uraufgeführt.
    • 30. März » Crawford W. Long verwendet in Jefferson, Georgia, erstmals Ether als Betäubungsmittel bei der Entfernung eines Nackentumors.
    • 28. Dezember » Der britische Entdecker und Seefahrer James Clark Ross entdeckt die sieben kleinere Inseln umfassende Gruppe der Danger-Inseln, die vor der Antarktischen Halbinsel liegt.
    • 31. Dezember » Die Uraufführung der komischen Oper Der Wildschütz von Albert Lortzing erfolgt am Stadttheater in Leipzig.
  • Die Temperatur am 15. April 1869 war um die 11,7 °C. Es gab 0.3 mm Niederschlag. Der Winddruck war 5 kgf/m2 und kam überwiegend aus Süd-Westen. Der Luftdruck war 75 cm. Die relative Luftfeuchtigkeit war 85%. Quelle: KNMI
  • Koning Willem III (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) war von 1849 bis 1890 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genannt)
  • Von 4. Juni 1868 bis 4. Januar 1871 regierte in den Niederlanden die Regierung Van Bosse - Fock mit als erste Minister Mr. P.P. van Bosse (liberaal) und Mr. C. Fock (liberaal).
  • Im Jahr 1869: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • Die Niederlande hatte ungefähr 3,6 Millionen Einwohner.
    • 18. März » Für den Bau des Sueskanals werden die Bitterseen mit Mittelmeerwasser geflutet.
    • 14. Mai » In Österreich-Ungarn wird mit der Verabschiedung des Reichsvolksschulgesetzes unter Minister Leopold Hasner von Artha die achtjährige Bürgerschule eingeführt.
    • 25. Mai » In Wien wird das neue Opernhaus am Ring mit einer Aufführung des Don Juan von Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart feierlich eröffnet.
    • 15. Juni » Die von Carl Koldewey geleitete Zweite Deutsche Nordpolar-Expedition verlässt Bremerhaven mit dem Ziel Ostgrönland.
    • 27. Juni » In Japan hört nach einem halben Jahr des Bestehens die abgespaltene Republik Ezo zu existieren auf.
    • 11. Juli » Auf der Galopprennbahn Hamburg-Horn findet erstmals das Deutsche Derby statt.
  • Die Temperatur am 15. November 1914 lag zwischen 0,1 °C und 4,9 °C und war durchschnittlich 2,3 °C. Es gab 5,8 mm Niederschlag. Die durchschnittliche Windgeschwindigkeit war 4 Bft (mäßiger Wind) und kam überwiegend aus Süden. Quelle: KNMI
  • Koningin Wilhelmina (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) war von 1890 bis 1948 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genannt)
  • Von 29. August 1913 bis 9. September 1918 regierte in den Niederlanden das Kabinett Cort van der Linden mit Mr. P.W.A. Cort van der Linden (liberaal) als ersten Minister.
  • Im Jahr 1914: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • Die Niederlande hatte ungefähr 6,2 Millionen Einwohner.
    • 10. Februar » Am Theater an der Wien in Wien wird die Operette Endlich allein von Franz Lehár nach einem Libretto von Alfred Maria Willner uraufgeführt.
    • 1. April » An der Hofoper in Wien wird die Oper Notre Dame von Franz Schmidt nach dem Roman Der Glöckner von Notre-Dame von Victor Hugo mit großem Erfolg uraufgeführt.
    • 9. August » Im Ersten Weltkrieg geht mit U 15 das erste deutsche U-Boot mit seiner Besatzung verloren. Der britische Leichte Kreuzer HMS Birmingham rammt das deutsche Kriegsschiff, bevor es tauchen kann, und verursacht seinen Untergang.
    • 20. September » Die weltberühmte gotische Kathedrale von Reims wird durch deutsche Artillerie schwer beschädigt.
    • 5. November » Großbritannien annektiert im Ersten Weltkrieg die bis dahin zum Osmanischen Reich zählende Insel Zypern und erklärt der Mittelmacht am selben Tag den Krieg.
    • 11. November » Im Ersten Weltkrieg beginnt die Schlacht um Łódź mit einer Offensive deutscher Truppen gegenüber russischen Einheiten.
  • Die Temperatur am 19. November 1914 lag zwischen -4,9 °C und 1,2 °C und war durchschnittlich -0,7 °C. Es gab 4,3 mm Niederschlag. Die durchschnittliche Windgeschwindigkeit war 3 Bft (mäßiger Wind) und kam überwiegend aus Süden. Quelle: KNMI
  • Koningin Wilhelmina (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) war von 1890 bis 1948 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genannt)
  • Von 29. August 1913 bis 9. September 1918 regierte in den Niederlanden das Kabinett Cort van der Linden mit Mr. P.W.A. Cort van der Linden (liberaal) als ersten Minister.
  • Im Jahr 1914: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • Die Niederlande hatte ungefähr 6,2 Millionen Einwohner.
    • 7. Februar » Die Filmkomödie Seifenkistenrennen in Venice, in der Charlie Chaplin erstmals in der Rolle des Tramps zu sehen ist, wird uraufgeführt.
    • 15. Mai » Die Oper Mârouf, savetier du Caire von Henri Rabaud wird an der Pariser Opéra-Comique uraufgeführt.
    • 31. Juli » Der sozialistische Politiker Jean Jaurès, ein führender Vertreter des französischen Reformismus und Kriegsgegner, wird in einem Pariser Cafe vom Nationalisten Raoul Villain ermordet. Der Attentäter wird später nach über vierjähriger Untersuchungshaft vor Gericht freigesprochen.
    • 26. August » Nach der Schlacht von Le Cateau ziehen sich die Truppen der Triple Entente vor den Deutschen zurück.
    • 18. Oktober » Gründungsrektor Richard Wachsmuth teilt Kaiser Wilhelm II. mit, dass die Universität Frankfurt am Main in aller Stille ihre Arbeit begonnen habe. Eine geplante feierliche Eröffnung der Stiftungshochschule mit dem Staatsoberhaupt fällt an diesem Tag wegen des Ersten Weltkriegs aus.
    • 24. Dezember » Der deutsche Flieger Hans von Prondzynski wirft im Luftkrieg die erste Fliegerbombe auf britischen Boden ab. Sie schlägt in einen Pfarrgarten in Dover ein.


Gleicher Geburts-/Todestag

Quelle: Wikipedia


Über den Familiennamen WRIGHT

  • Zeigen Sie die Informationen an, über die Genealogie Online verfügt über den Nachnamen WRIGHT.
  • Überprüfen Sie die Informationen, die Open Archives hat über WRIGHT.
  • Überprüfen Sie im Register Wie (onder)zoekt wie?, wer den Familiennamen WRIGHT (unter)sucht.

Die Ancestral Trails 2016-Veröffentlichung wurde von erstellt.nimm Kontakt auf
Geben Sie beim Kopieren von Daten aus diesem Stammbaum bitte die Herkunft an:
Patti Lee Salter, "Ancestral Trails 2016", Datenbank, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/ancestral-trails-2016/I81843.php : abgerufen 8. Mai 2024), "George Reynolds WRIGHT (1841-1914)".