Born: | |
Died: | |
Buried: | 22/06/1895 |
Listed below are all the details we have been able to find so far on Edith Annie Piddington.
As far as we are aware, all the information is correct. However, sometimes transcriptions can lead to errors being made. If you find any errors or omissions, please let us know and we will endeavour to get them corrected as soon as possible.
If you have any further information on Edith Annie Piddington, we would be delighted to hear from you.
There is no information in our database regarding the birth of Edith Annie Piddington.
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There is no information in our database regarding the death of Edith Annie Piddington.
Can you help us? If so, please contact our History Research Group.
There is no burial register information available for Edith Annie Piddington.
Only three of the five burial register books still exist as far as we know and these are held at the Berkshire Record Office.
Stillborn children were not recorded in the burial register, only in the cemetery accounts.
This information is taken from the accounts ledgers of the Newbury Cemetery Company that originally ran and maintained the cemetery.
The Ledgers are held at the Berkshire Records Office.
Name at death | Edith Annie Piddington |
Date of burial | 22/06/1895 |
Whence brought | Newbury |
Where & how buried | Conscrated Common Internment |
By whom buried | Reverend E J Gardner |
Account Entry | Book 02 - Page 084 |
Transcription comments | On FBMD |
Accounts Entry for Edith Annie Piddington
© Newbury Town Council
Reproduced with kind permission
The articles below have been transcribed from newspapers and magezines.
Source: | Newbury Weekly News and General Advertiser |
Article date: | 27/06/1895 |
Copyright: | Newbury Weekly News |
Transciption: | MELANCHOLY FATE OF A LITTLE GIRL It was on Whit-Monday that Edith Annie, like the rest of the children, was having a holiday. She was seen playing in West-Mills, where she lived in charge of a worthy couple named Joseph and Sarah Davis. At five o'clock Mrs. Davis went to call her to come to tea, but alas, no little Edith came with tripping feet in response to the call of her good foster-mother. Inquiries were made among the neighbours, but none could give any tidings, nor could her little playmates give any Information as to their little friend who had so suddenly disappeared. Fears began to be entertained that she must have fallen into the water, and these forebodings were strengthened when about eight o'clock a little hat, which was identified as that worn by Edith Annie, was discovered floating on the water the same evening near the Swing Bridge. A weary night and several weary days followed. Search was made along the water side, but without any success. Last Wednesday evening, sixteen days after the disappearance, Thomas Nightingale. a groom and gardener of Greenham Mills, was passing the mill stream, and saw the body some 150 yards below the mill, and getting a rope and some grappling irons, brought it to land, and with the assistance of P.C. Jones it was removed to the "Swan," where an inquest was held on Thursday morning by Mr. J. C. Pinniger, and a jury of whom Mr. G. Paulin was foreman. Evidence was given by Nightingale, P.C. Jones. and Mrs. Davis, the latter stating that she had had charge of Edith Annie from the time she was seven weeks old. The mother was Kate Piddington. a single woman. The jury were not long, after having heard the evidence, in coming to the conclusion that the little girl had been "drowned by having accidentally fallen Into the Canal." ' The same day the fast decomposing remains were removed to West Mills, and on Saturday afternoon the burial took place at the Cemetery. A number of little girls attending the British School followed the remains of their little school friend. Assisted by Miss Pascoe and the teachers, four nice wreaths were made and together with others placed upon the tiny coffin. A wreath was also placed upon the grave on Sunday by Mr. Lewis, as coming from the infants' class of the Primitive Methodist School, and the hymn sung on the last Sunday Edith Annie was present was again sung, with its chorus, "I am so glad that Jesus loves me." |
The articles below contain information about Edith Annie Piddington.
Edith Annie Piddington
c1890-1895
Edith was born c1890, in Newbury, Berkshire, the daughter of Sarah Kate Piddington. She was baptised on the 25th February 1890, at St Nicolas Church Newbury. The baptism record records her mother as Kate Piddington, a single woman, living in Craven Court, Newbury.
When Edith was about seven weeks old, she was placed in the care of Joseph and Sarah Davis. (Joseph and Sarah’s daughter Bertha Mary Davis married William John Piddington in 1885. William John was Sarah Kate’s brother).
The 1891 census records Edith, aged 1, living in Greenham, Berkshire, with Sarah and Joseph Davis and their son Charles Davis.
By 1895 Joseph, Sarah and Edith Annie, were living in West Mills, Newbury.
On Monday the 27th May 1895 Edith Annie was playing with some other children in West Mills. When it was time to go in for tea, Edith was nowhere to be found. Fears grew that she had fallen into canal and at eight o’clock, her hat was discovered floating in the water. Her body was discovered sixteen days later (12th June).
Edith Annie was laid to rest in the Newtown Road Cemetery on the 22nd June 1895.
Edith’s family:
Her mother Sarah Kate (aka Kate) was born in 1871, in Newbury, Berkshire, the daughter of Amos (a Carpenter) and Anne Piddington (nee Adams) who were married in 1866 (marriage registered in Newbury).
Sarah Kate’s siblings were:
William John 1866
Ellen c1870
Isabella Annie c1873
Emily Clara 1874 (died aged 19 months in 1875, buried in the Newtown Road Cemetery on the 7th December)
Clara c1878 (died aged 11 days, buried on the 19th March at St Mary the Virgin Speen)
The 1881 census records Sarah Kate (9) living in Backway, Speenhamland, Berkshire, with her father Amos (41), a Carpenter, her mother Anne (35), her brother William John (14) and her sisters Ellen (11) and Isabella (8).
In 1891 Sarah (19) (recorded as Kate) was working as a Servant in Islington, Middlesex, for a George Ridout (36) and his family.
Sarah Kate married Albert Edgar Brazier on the 2nd April 1898 in North Cray, Kent
They had the following children:
Edith Florence born 1898 in Bromley
Henry Frederick 1899 in Dartford
Albert Edgar 1900 in Dartford
Mabel Winifred c1904 in Dartford (died 1904)
Albert Edgar Brazier died aged 69 in 1946 in Dartford
Sarah Kate Brazier died aged 80 in 1955 in Dartford.
Author: Gambles
©
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