Charlotte Randall Barker Adams |
Life of Charlotte Randall
Charlotte Randall grew up in the area surrounding the city of
Chesterfield, primarily in the Nether Moor - Furnace Hill part of Wingerworth
Parish. Furnace Hill was named after the
ironworks that stood there from the late 1700s to the early 1800s
(Edwards). Her father, George Randall,
worked variously as a coal miner and agricultural laborer. He likely also assisted the gamekeeper at
Wingerworth Hall (Marriage Cert.).
Charlotte’s mother Sarah [Twelves] who lived into her 70s may have taught Charlotte to sew, a skill that she
utilized as a seamstress while still young. Her great-granddaughter Belva Hall
Francom wrote, “As a young girl she was a seamstress in Wingerworth Hall. This people were called gentry or the upper
middle class. Through association with
the upper class she became refined and cultured.” While this claim can not be documented,
photographs show her dressed in elaborately pleated and ruffled dresses.
Charlotte was the third of eight children and
the second daughter. The Randalls were
quite poor, receiving assistance from the parish church. The entire family may never have lived
together under one roof as Charlotte, 17, and her sisters Hannah,15, and
Harriett,12, were all working outside the home as servants when the 1861 Census
was recorded. Harriett’s work may have
resulted in the initial introduction of the young couple. Charlotte’s little sister
was working as a house servant for the Crofts family in Sutton cum Duckmanton
with Frederick’s two brothers, Charles and Edwin, who were carters and so she
may have had an opportunity to meet their older brother.
At age 17 Charlotte had moved to the village of
Barlborough to live and work for the Cast family. Cast was a butcher and a farmer who hired her on as a dairymaid. Charlotte
never spoke about milking, herding or tending dairy cattle, although she did
reminisce in her later years about sewing for the gentry at Wingerworth
Hall. Perhaps the work wasn’t to her
liking, but undoubtedly she learned how to perform a good day’s labor. As a young widow this experience stood her in
good shape to do the labor of a cleaning or charwoman. Since Barlborough is at least ten miles from
her home in Furnace Hill in Wingerworth Parish it is easy to imagine Charlotte
walking the distance, stopping at Duckmanton to rest and visit with her sister
before walking on to her parents’ home.
She apparently lived for a time in Duckmanton (Obituary).
One thing that becomes apparent is that family stuck
together and supported one another. Census records show that siblings in the Randall families lived with each other as adults. Family connections were strong between the Randall syblings as well as
between the Barker and Randall families, a necessity in times of
difficulty. Charlotte’s older sister
Mary Randall married Frederick’s older brother Henry Barker; two sisters
married two brothers. James Randall
stood as witness when Mary and Henry were married. Charlotte’s younger sister Hannah stood as
witness when she and Frederick were married.
Hannah and her husband George Bown welcomed the youngest Randall
daughter, Selina, to live in their home when she was 15 and after her father had
died. In that same year 1871 it is
recorded in the census records that Hannah and George also had visiting with
them their nephew George Barker, age 5, the son of Frederick and Charlotte - he
appears to just be visiting as he show up in the same census living with his
parents. When Selina Randall married
George Newton, they in turn, provided a home for her brother George, who at 29
was single and working as an engine tenter at the iron works. It is recorded in the 1891 census that James
Randall as a 52 year old widower took in the wife and daughters of his brother
Jabez when Jabez found work in Whittington.
While in Whittington Jabez boarded with Selina and George. Charlotte’s mother, Sarah, had outlived two
husbands and at age 70 she is found living on Whittington Hill with one
daughter, Hannah Bown, living on one side and another daughter, Selina Newton
on the other side. Down the road lived
another daughter Charlotte Barker. It
appears that with small homes of 4 rooms or less, especially if finances
required a family to take on a boarder, some children or even the father may be sent off to work or to
live with a married sibling. It must
have sometimes been difficult to share close quarters but the families worked
together to provide for each other.
Wingerworth Hall, Chesterfield, Derbyshire, England |
While in Mosbro two tragedies befell Charlotte. Frederick was thrown from a horse he was
breaking and suffered fatal injuries. “ The accident happened in the spring of
1874; he lived as an invalid until Sept. 1874 when he died in Mosbro, Derbyshire,
England. With three children younger than John at home, Charlotte had to find a
way to make money. “She made money
taking in roomers”(Francom). The next few years were undoubtedly trying ones
for Charlotte and her children. Within
eight years, however, another heartbreaking incident occurred. In 1876 she moved to Whittington to live
where she worked as a cleaning or charwoman (Birth Cert.). Soon afterward Jabez
who was only six years old was injured, suffering burns on his abdomen, chest,
neck, and arms. Because water was heated
on a stove, it is possible that he pulled scalding water over onto himself or a
similar situation. According to the
death certificate he died with his mother in attendance in December of 1877
after bearing the pain for 14 days. It
must have seemed like the pain couldn’t be handled but Charlotte had a baby
boy, Edgar to take care of. Fortunately,
she also had John, George and Annie Alice to share her grief.
Charlotte and George Adams family. |
Charlotte must have developed a supportive friendship with George Adams
about this time, also, as indicated by a photograph in which Annie Alice is
identified as the young girl and the boy is probably Edgar. The 1881 Census of
Whittington shows that John, 18, and George, 15, had been working as coal
miners to assist their mother. Annie Alice
was listed as a scholar. George and
Charlotte were married in 1882. This
event took place in Sheffield, Yorkshire, but they return to Whittington where
Charlotte had been living. Adams had been a bachelor until he married at the
age of 32 into a ready-made family. Of
this union a son, Joseph Harry was born in 1884 and welcomed by the older
brothers and sister. After John and
Edgar moved individually to the United States, a correspondence with Joe was
maintained.
John boarded a steamship in 1882 to
travel to Utah where he took up coal mining once again in order to save money
to send for his sweetheart, Rose Bacon.
Members of the Mormon Church, they lived in Wyoming for a time and then
moved back to Utah where they raised eight children to adulthood and buried
four. At times John had to board away
from home to work the coal mines, at others he was able to find work as a city
maintenance worker, a brickyard part-owner/foreman, or constable.
George was able to find employment away from the coal
mines. By 1887 he had married Mary Jane
Owen and was working as a wagon builder.
In the 1891 Census he was found, again, hewing coal, but when John’s
son, Jack Barker, visited England in 1925 he was a bobby or policeman. George and Mary Jane had five children, the
first two born in Nottinghamshire and the last three in Yorkshire.
Annie
married Frank E. Beresforde who also worked as a miner or colliery laborer. They had one child who was born in
Whittington where they continued to live close to Charlotte.
Edgar
married Lilian May Hewett and they followed John to America where they lived
with he and Rose for a time until they were settled. He was a good carpenter and also worked with
John in the brickyards loading brick.
They raised six children, the first being born in Whittington,
Derbyshire, the second and third in Worksop, Nottinghamshire, and the last four
in Utah.
Joe
moved with his wife, Jess, and son, Geoffrey, to North Wales where he was a
furnace manager in an iron-works plant (Adams).
Old Whittington Hill |
George
Adams was to remain Charlotte’s companion into old age where they still lived
on Whittington Hill in Old Whittington when her grandson, Jack Barker came to
visit in the mid 1920s. Of that occasion
he wrote,
When I met her in 1925 at 56 Old Whittington Hill near
Chesterfield, Derbyshire, England, she was a little old lady about 85 years
old. I would go out and buy fish and
chips and we would play dominos while eating the fish and chips. Her husband, George Adams, was an old man
about 80 years old. . .
When I found 56 Old Whittington Hill, I knocked on the
door. It was in the morning and Grandpa
Adams was still in bed. Grandma went
over to the stairway and called him. She
said, "Come on, old foggy, it is time to get up." After a while he came paddling down the
stairs into the kitchen. Grandma told
him I was John's boy from America. He
was glad to see me and I spent some time telling him about America. He was very glad to listen to me talk. I went to the golf course with him to watch
them play golf. We spent a lot of time
at the golf course. . .
Charlotte outlived her second husband. At age 86 she wrote a letter to her granddaughter, Mahala Barker Hall, in which she stated that she was very lonely after his death.
Note:
The photograph of Wingerworth Hall is from a postcard. It was originally found on the Chesterfield Forum.