Hij is getrouwd met Matilda Carr.
Zij zijn getrouwd op 2 september 1855 te Saint Martin In The Fields, Westminster, London, England.
Kind(eren):
Origin of Bloomfield name
According to Geoffrey Bromley:-
Bloomfield is not a Jewish name, but Norman/Viking. It originated in Calvados, Normandy, France.
It is derived from a place on the coast not far from Deauville, called Blonville sur Mer.
The Bloomfields probably came over to this country with William the Conqueror and appear to have settled mainly in Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex.
Geoffrey has concluded that: Charles Bloomfield, son of George Bloomfield; farmer, most probably came from Norfolk (where many Bloomfields lived) and eloped with Matilda Carr (a seaman's daughter, probably from Great Yarmouth and a minor) to London - with the help of a cousin, or brother named William Carr; soldier, (in St. George's Barracks at the time) where they were married at St. Martin in the Fields.
The addresses shown on their marriage certificate were probably the places where they lodged at the time.
This seems to fit in with a legend often mentioned by Edith Bromley concerning an elopement in her Mother's family.
Although George Bloomfield is described as a Farmer, there is nothing to show that he - or for that matter - William Carr - Seaman, were "gentry" as the legend went.
Charles Bloomfield | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1855 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Matilda Carr |