Hij is getrouwd met Dorothy Challenor.
Zij zijn getrouwd in het jaar 1930, hij was toen 27 jaar oud.
Kind(eren):
Christened 12 October 1902, Holy Trinity Church, Darlington
Indexing Project (Batch) Number: C00696-7 , System Origin: England-EASy , GS Film number: 1894189 , Reference ID: p 199
Photo is of Frank in the Darlington Grammar Football team of 1919-1920
From Janes tree:
Comments Header Comments (1)
grandson Jane Tee added this on 2 Mar 2011
grandson is Dr John Stabler of Milton keynes
Date 1932
Location Terminus, Lancashire (1880-1946)
No description has been added.
Name: Francis E Stabler Address: GynecoIogical Srgn, 50 St Georges Exchange: ter City/Town: Terminus Directory Title: Liverpool / Southwest Lancashire / Manchester/ Southeast Lancashire / Mid-Lancashire / Cumberland/ Westmorland/ North Lancashire / Isle of Man / Northumberland/ Durham/ North Yorkshire / Hull / West and East Yorkshire Publication Year: 1932 Directory County: Lancashire Page Number: 113 Name: Francis E Stabler
Address: GynecoIogical Srgn, 50 St Georges
Exchange: ter
City/Town: Terminus
Directory Title: Liverpool / Southwest Lancashire / Manchester/ Southeast Lancashire / Mid-Lancashire / Cumberland/ Westmorland/ North Lancashire / Isle of Man / Northumberland/ Durham/ North Yorkshire / Hull / West and East Yorkshire
Publication Year: 1932
Directory County: Lancashire
Page Number: 113
Source Information:
Ancestry.com. British Phone Books, 1880-1984 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2007.
Original data: British phone books 1880-1984 from the collection held by BT Archives. Images reproduced by courtesy of BT Archives, London, England.
Description:
This collection contains British phone books published between 1880, the year after the public telephone service was introduced to the UK, and 1984, from the historic phone book collection held by BT Archives. The database currently contains 1780 phone books and provides near full county coverage for England as well as containing substantial records for Scotland, Ireland, and Wales
Date 1935
No place has been added.
Description Registered as a Doctor 8th July 1925 living at No 34 Eslington terr,Newcastle on Tyne
Yorkshire Post extract
Sold: The ultimate getaway – back to the 1930s
Published Date: 04 March 2006
Contracts have been exchanged after a flood of inquiries for one of the most desirable properties in the Dales, yet it has no gas or electricity supply and you have to walk across open country to reach it. Sharon Dale reports on why it is an ideal retreat.
WHEN estate agent Mike Charlton revealed that Leakin House needed modernising, he wasn't exaggerating.
The remote cottage in Swaledale hasn't been updated since the 1930s and has no gas or electricity, no telephone line or reception for a mobile pho
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ne and is only accessible on foot half a mile across fields.
The light comes from original gas lamps, the heat from open fires, the water is piped from a spring and the kitchen is completely "unfitted" with just an original Belfast sink and a 1930s cooker powered by Calor gas.
But although the four-bedroom property set in five acres is primitive by today's standards it is one of the most desirable homes in the Dales.
Charltons in Richmond was inundated with inquiries about Leakin House, near the village of Low Row, which was on the market with offers around £250,000 invited and contracts have just been exchanged.
"We had masses of interest," says Mike Charlton. "Some people wanted it as a second home; others were looking at it as main residence to retire to.
"The fact that it is isolated and needs updating didn't bother them. It offers an alternative lifestyle, a get- away with the most stunning, beautiful setting and incredible views over the dale."
Time has stood still at Leakin House, which has just been sold as a second home, because it has been in the same family for the past 70 years.
Built in the 1850s, it was bought by Newcastle doctor Frank Stabler in 1939 as a wartime refuge for his wife Dorothy and their three children Peter, John and Gillian.
"He knew war was coming and he wanted to get his family out of Newcastle because he knew it would be targeted by bombers," says Seamus Tollitt, Frank's grandson.
"He had relatives in that area, so he knew it well and bought Leakin House, which was then just an empty cottage with a cow byre and hay barn attached. He had some work done on it and the family moved in and stayed there for three years."
Although Mr Tollitt's late mother Gillian had happy memories of living in the country, her mother did not.
"My grandmother left a nice home in Newcastle, where she had help in the house, for a cottage in the middle of nowhere and it was hard for her," says Mr Tollitt.
"The winters were the worst. I can remember her telling me about 10ft-deep snowdrifts and she said
the postman used to have
to put the letters through the first-floor bedroom window.
"She missed her home comforts dreadfully. We even found receipts at the house for material she had ordered from Harrods.
"She also insisted that her piano be brought to the house and some poor people had to lug it down the hill so she could have that luxury.
"My grandfather loved it because he liked fishing and shooting, but my grandmother inisted on moving back to Newcastle after three years. She'd had enough."
Even though there is no road to the property Mr Stabler built a garage for his beloved Bentley.
"It was never used and never will be because you can't get a car there. It was obviously built in a fit of optimism and has always been known as Frankie's folly," says Mr Tollitt.
After the Stablers moved back to Newcastle they continued to use Leakin House as a holiday home, as did their children and grandchildren.
"I and my three brothers owned it, but we reluctantly put it up for sale because a lot of investment is needed to modernise the house and with the joint ownership it would be just too complicated to sort out," says Mr Tollitt.
"Everything is in working order, the gas lamps and the old cooker.
"Staying there was like being back in the 1930s and that was part of its appeal.
"It was the ultimate retreat and so relaxing because you were cut off from the mad world we live in."
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Francis Edward (Frank) Stabler | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1930 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Dorothy Challenor |
De getoonde gegevens hebben geen bronnen.