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Born: | |
Died: | |
Buried: | 27/10/1917 |
Listed below are all the details we have been able to find so far on Charles Woof.
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.
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There is no information in our database regarding the birth of Charles Woof.
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Name at death | Charles Woof | ||||||
Age at Death | 71 | ||||||
Burial Date | 27 October 1917 | ||||||
Abode |
Greenham Mills
Newbury |
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Official at Burial | A.G.P. Baines | ||||||
Comments | |||||||
Burial Register Index |
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Sources | Burial Register |
From top of shield: In Loving memory of/ Charles Woof/ died Oct.24 1917 aged 72 years./ Also Mary Jane, his wife, died Dec.29 1921/ aged 77 years./ "R.I.P." | |
Name on Memorial | Charles WOOF |
Date of death | 24/10/1917 |
Age | 72 |
Gender | Male |
Memorial Type | Shield |
Construction Material | Limestone |
Condition of memorial | In laid letters, poor, unsupported shield |
Pattison Location Code | LS(G)9a |
Others named on memorial | |
Mary Jane WOOF |
The articles below have been transcribed from newspapers and magezines.
Source: | Reading Mercury |
Article date: | 06/12/1884 |
Copyright: | Reading Mercury |
Transciption: | CHARLES WOOF SHOCKING ACCIDENT AT KINTBURY One of the most serious casualties that has occurred in the Newbury district for some years past, happened on Wednesday afternoon, near Kintbury, when six of the permanent way labourers in the service of the G.W.R. Company sustained injuries which were more or less of an aggravated character. It appears that some 12 or 15 tons of railway metals were stacked on a wooden staging erected on the embankment near Blunsdon’s Lock, between Kintbury and Hungerford stations, and on Wednesday a gang of men were engaged in loading trucks with these metals for conveyance to another part of the Great Western system. For this purpose five or six of them were standing on the stack, and about half-past one, without any warning or indication, the wooden staging gave way, and the men and metals were precipitated pell mell down the embankment. The greatest excitement and consternation ensued, and strenuous efforts were made by the other labourers to rescue the sufferers, but nearly half-an-hour elapsed before they could be extricated. Fortunately, the train due at Newbury at 2.2 approached at the time, and the injured men were conveyed to Newbury station, where Dr. Ryott and Mr. Montagu Palmer were in prompt attendance. It was here decided that two of the men who were most severely injured (named Fisher and Haines) should be sent to the Royal Berks Hospital, and they were, accordingly, taken on to Reading by the same train. Another of the sufferers named Woof, was conveyed to the Navvies Hospital, and the other three who were injured were sent to their homes. Fisher is 52 years of age, and has been in the employ of the company for 29 years. Most of the other men are married, and have worked on the line for some years. We sub-join a list of the unfortunate men who were injured: - George Fisher, of Kintbury, loss of left leg; Charles Woof, of Newbury, lacerated wound on right leg, and smashed ancle (sic); Frederick Deane, of Newbury, severe lacerated wound on left upper arm; George Willis, bad fracture of ancle (sic); William Simmons, of Hoe Benham, contusions, not serious; Alfred Haines, fracture of leg and other injuries. Upon enquiry at the Hospital yesterday, we were informed that Fisher and Haines were progressing slowly.
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This obituary entry is awaiting verification. |
Source: | Newbury Weekly News |
Article date: | 11/12/1884 |
Copyright: | Newbury Weekly News |
Transciption: | CHARLES WOOF THE LATE RAILWAY ACCIDENT AT KINTBURY FATAL TERMINATION The man Geo. Fisher, of Kintbury, one of those injured by the late accident on the Great Western Railway at Kintbury, on the 3rd inst., died from the effects of the terrible injuries he had sustained at the Royal Berks Hospital on Tuesday. On arriving at the Hospital it was found necessary to amputate the unfortunate man’s leg, but the injuries were so severe that he succumbed to his sufferings on Tuesday afternoon. The inquest will be held at the Hospital at 3.30 p.m., to-day (Thursday). Fisher is 52 years of age, he lived at Kintbury, and has been in the service of the Company 29 years. He has a son employed as porter at the Newbury Station. On enquiring at the Nurses’ Home last evening we found that the man Charles Woof, who had a lacerated wound on his right leg and smashed ankle, is progressing favourably and will in all probability be discharged next week. |
This obituary entry is awaiting verification. |
The articles below contain information about Charles Woof.
Charles Woof
He was born in 1846 (4Q) in Greenham: his parents were Joseph Woof and Lydia, née Bellinger. He was the brother of Joseph Woof who is buried in the Cemetery.
In 1851 Charles was recorded in the census at the age of 4 living with his parents and siblings on Greenham Common. His father’s occupation was agricultural labourer. He started working life at the young age of 13 as a carter boy employed by John Pocock, a farmer of 820 acres at Upper Bothampstead, Hampstead Norris (Norreys).
He married Jane (born Mary Jane) Dowling in 1868 (4Q); marriage registered in Newbury. The following year they had a son George. Between 1871 and 1881 he was employed by the Great Western Railway Company as a railway labourer, and Charles and Lydia had 5 more children: Eliza (b. 1871 2Q), Henry John (b. 1873 2Q), William Charles (b. 1875 4Q), Louisa (b. 1878 1Q) and Fanny (b. 1879 4Q). In 1881 the family is recorded living at The Common Cottage, Greenham. Another daughter Alice was born in 1882 (2Q).
The years 1884/5 proved challenging. Their fifth daughter Ellen Rose was born in 1884 (3Q) but died aged 9 months and she was buried on 4 April 1885 at St. Mary’s Church, Greenham. Then on 3 December 1884 whilst working with a group of gangers loading trucks with metals near Blunsdon’s Lock, between Kintbury and Hungerford, the weight of the metals overbalanced and he sustained a lacerated wound on his right leg and a smashed ankle – see newspaper reports below. Two of the gang - George Fisher and Arthur John Haines – died from their injuries.
Charles recovered from his injuries and continued to work for GWR as a plate layer and railway packer. Their last child Arthur was born in 1886 (2Q). The family moved to 9 Greenham Mills. His 2 sons Henry John and William Charles later worked for the Railway.
He died aged 71 years on 24 October 1917 and he was buried on 27 October 1917. His wife Mary Jane died in 1921 aged 76 years and she was buried in the same private grave with her husband on 31 December 1921.
Mrs. P. LS(G) 9a, page 145
Sources: Birth Index 1846 (4Q); Marriage Index 1868 (4Q); 1851 to 1911 census; Death Index 4Q 1917.
Author: Deirdre Duff
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