Born: | |
Died: | |
Buried: | 31/12/1941 |
Listed below are all the details we have been able to find so far on Rebecca Frances Mabel Robinson.
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 Rebecca Frances Mabel Robinson, we would be delighted to hear from you.
There is no information in our database regarding the birth of Rebecca Frances Mabel Robinson.
Can you help us? If so, please contact our History Research Group.
There is no information in our database regarding the death of Rebecca Frances Mabel Robinson.
Can you help us? If so, please contact our History Research Group.
Name at death | Rebecca Frances Mabel Robinson | ||||||
Age at Death | 72 | ||||||
Burial Date | 31 December 1941 | ||||||
Abode |
Woodspeen, London Road
Newbury |
||||||
Official at Burial | E.H. Stenning | ||||||
Comments | |||||||
Burial Register Index |
|
||||||
Sources | Burial Register |
Burial Register entry for Rebecca Frances Mabel Robinson
©Newbury Town Council
Reproduced with kind permission
From top of base of cross: William Robinson/ Dec. 2nd 1855/ April 11th 1935 "R.I.P."/ Rebecca Frances Mabel Robinson/ April 17th 1869/ Dec. 27th 1941. | |
Name on Memorial | Robinson Rebecca Frances Mabel |
Date of death | 27/12/1941 |
Age | 72 |
Gender | Female |
Memorial Type | Cross on base and 3 kerbstones |
Construction Material | Rough grey granite with inlaid letters |
Condition of memorial | Fair. Some subsidence |
Pattison Location Code | C80 |
Others named on memorial | |
William Robinson |
The pictures below are all linked with Rebecca Frances Mabel Robinson.
Click an image to show an enlarged version of it.
©
The articles below contain information about Rebecca Frances Mabel Robinson.
REBECCA FRANCES MABEL ROBINSON
Rebecca Frances Mabel Gilbanks— to give her full name -was the fourth of the nine women elected to membership of the Society between 1891 and 1919. She joined the Society in 1907. Unfortunately, there are no clues to indicate how she came to be proposed for membership, as the minutes for 1907 are missing. The only other local member at the time was Emanuel H. Evans of Stourbridge, elected in 1905.
Mabel was the daughter of the Rev. George Gilbanks, the first Vicar of Wollaston, who held the living from the opening of the church in 1860 until his death in 1913. She was the seventh of the Vicar's eight children, born in 1869. The family hailed from Lamplugh in Cumberland and in 1901 Mabel was staying with her relatives at Holme Cultram (or Abbey Town) in that county where her uncle was vicar and her elder brother George — later Vicar of Ratby and Groby in Leicestershire — was curate. Another brother was Rector of Great Orton.
Wollaston is a suburb of Stourbridge, right on the western edge of the Black Country and the Midlands conurbation. Open countryside lies to the west. It still likes to think of itself as a village, and the church and former school — striking Victorian buildings in blue engineering brick with stone dressings — are at the centre of the community. The six bells (by Warners) were installed in 1865 and from the 1880s the tower was home to a strong and active local band. To quote a recent history of the parish, "Bells are no use without people to ring them, and Wollaston has benefited from generations of dedicated ringers".
It was with this band that Mabel learned her ringing. She joined the Worcestershire & Districts Association in 1898, and she seems to have been the first lady member. It was not until nearly ten years later that she rang her first peal, ‘Grandsire Triples’, at Oldswinford on I8 February 1907. By the end of 1909 she had rung in 11 peals for the Association, one of these being the peal of Minor in 7 methods on 21 December 1909 commemorated on a peal board in the tower. The board states, "This is the first PEAL in seven methods in which a LADY has taken part". Martin Fellows recalls that Jack Bass, a member of the 1909 Wollaston peal band, spoke of Mabel as a capable ringer, adding that "you had to watch your mouth" — no bad language! — when she was around.
In fact, the peal of minor in seven methods was, perhaps, not her most noteworthy performance. All her peals were on an inside bell, and they included Grandsire Triples, Stedman Triples, Bob Major, Grandsire Caters and — in October 1909 — Stedman Caters. Her peals were rung at Wollaston, Oldswinford, Selly Oak, the "pepper-pot" at Tipton, Dudley “Top Church", Chaddeslry Corbett and Brierley Hill.
She is not known to have taken part in any more peals after 1909. On 27 January 1910 she married William Robinson, the secretary to an insurance company in London and a man 13 years her elder. She doubtless moved to London, but whether she continued to ring under her new name of Mabel Robinson I do not how.
Despite her obvious ability, she doesn’t feature in either Morris's History & Art or in the recent history of the Ladies Guild. Maybe this is because she drifted away from ringing after an initial spate of enthusiasm when she was in her thirties. At least we can now see that she was a notable figure in her day, and clearly a lady we should be proud to remember as a former member of our Society.
Author: Julie Goddard
© FNRC
Gilbanks/Robinson wedding
Provided by FNRC
Rebecca Frances Mabel wedding
Provided by FNRC
William Robinson 1855-1935 Rebecca Francis Mabel Robinson 1869-1941
William Robinson was a retired accountant working for Life Association of Scotland for 46 years. He worked most of his life in London and retired to Newbury in july 1921. They lived at " Woodspeen, London Road. William initially studied at art college but then became an accountant. Whilst he was working for the life association of Scotland he lived in Stanhope Gardens, London SW9 .
Rebecca known as Mabel was the daughter of the Reverend Gillbanks, vicar of Wollaston parish near Worcester. She was an early female bell ringer and important enough to have articles written about her in bell ringing journals. Whilst in London she played the organ at Saint Augustine's church Kensington
Author:
©
*The FNRC believe that the certificates published on this page have been added in compliance with the rules laid down by the General Register Office (GRO). Click here for more information.
If you believe that we may have inadvertently breached the privacy of a living person by publishing any document, please contact us so we can immediately remove the certificate and investigate further.
Thank you.
FNRC.
© 2010-2023. Friends of Newtown Road Cemetery, unless otherwise stated.
Web site designed by Paul Thompson
The Friends of Newtown Road Cemetery is a not-for-profit organisation that works in association with Newbury Town Council to look after and maintain Newtown Road Cemetery for the benefit of the people of Newbury.