Born: | |
Died: | 05/08/1912 |
Buried: | 07/08/1912 |
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Name at death | Thomas Fidler | ||||||
Age at Death | 96 | ||||||
Burial Date | 07 August 1912 | ||||||
Abode |
Clifton Road,
Newbury |
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Official at Burial | T Clarke Edwards | ||||||
Comments | |||||||
Burial Register Index |
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Sources | Burial Register |
North facing top of slab: In Loving Memory of Sarah, beloved wife of Thomas Fidler of Porchester Villas who died march 7th. 1882 aged 72 years South facing top of slab: And of Thomas Fidler, who died August 5th. 1912 aged 96 years South facing panel: Also their daughter, Sarah Ann, born 27th. May 1843, died 2nd Jan. 1927. West facing top of slab: Also their daughter Elizabeth Capel wife of Chas. E. Griffin, Wesleyan Minister, born Dec. 11th. 1847, died Nov. 24th. 1913 West facing panel: Also Chas. Edward Griffin, Wesleyan Minister, born April 4th. 1848, died Jan. 24th. 1919. | |
Name on Memorial | Thomas Fidler |
Date of death | 05/08/1912 |
Age | 72 |
Gender | Male |
Memorial Type | Vault with side panels, single front panel. |
Construction Material | Sandstone with carved text |
Condition of memorial | Fair |
Pattison Location Code | 77 |
Recorder's Notes | Some text missing, completed from Mrs Pattison's record |
Others named on memorial | |
Sarah Fidler | |
Sarah Ann Fidler | |
Elizabeth Capel Griffin | |
Charles Edward Griffin |
The articles below have been transcribed from newspapers and magezines.
Source: | Newbury Weekly News |
Article date: | 08/08/1912 |
Copyright: | Newbury Weekly News |
Transciption: | THE LATE ALDERMAN FIDLER Alderman Fidler was the son of John and Martha Fidler, who lived at Shaw, his father haying carried on the business of brick and tile maker at Shaw Kilns, an industry which was until recent years in the family of the Fidlers for successive generations. As a lad Thomas Fidler received his education at Reading under a Mr. Shaw, where his companion was William White, who afterwards became one of Birmingham's foremost citizens, occupying the position of Mayor and being elevated to aldermanic rank. A teacher in the school at this period was the late Isaac Holden, who afterwards became a successful Yorkshire manufacturer, and received the honour of baronetcy. Mr. Fidler used to tell how Mr. Holden was of a decidedly scientific turn of mind, and at the time the lucifer match was invented he was engaged in experiments of a similar kind, and was anticipated in what has been an important factor in modern civilisation. On leaving school young Fidler was apprenticed to a Bristol chemist and druggist, and having served his time, took situations firstly at Maidenhead and secondly at Bath. On leaving the latter city he returned to his native town and started in business as a chemist and grocer in the Broadway, in the shop now occupied by Mr. Freeman and the adjoining premises. This was about the year 1844. Having succeeded in making a position he purchased premises in Mansion House-street, which he rebuilt, and here he continued until he disposed of the same to the Newbury Coffee House Company in 1879, and now carried on under the title of the Guildhall Temperance Hotel. AS MAYOR IN 1864-5 During his Mayoralty Mr. Fidler was the means of establishing a fire Brigade, the members of which received payment. The Brigade continued in existence until 1878, when the destructive fire in Church or Little-lane- but now bearing the more euphonious name of “Arcade” - impressed the necessity of better equipment, worked by a more intelligent body of men, hence the formation of the present Volunteer Fire Brigade. With the building of the Corn Exchange – which then had been recently opened- there seems to have been aroused quite a zeal for the improvement of the Town Hall during his Mayoralty, for a proposal was made and designs submitted to provide a second mode of exit. This modest project was defeated by a motion “to form a committee to consider the removal of the Mansion House and to effect a better approach to the town from the bridge. The committee was duly appointed but its findings were never approved. Another scheme was the formation of a new thoroughfare connecting Bartholomew-street with Cheap-street, but this did not mature until some ten years later. About that time the drainage question was forcing itself on public notice and Mr. Fidler submitted “a plan for the utilization of the sewage.”It was just after Mr. Fidler's accession to the office that the Penny Readings were instituted, and only those in the “sere and yellow leaf” can fully realise the immense popularity which these gatherings achieved. Nothing before or since has so captured the public sentiment. People would be standing outside an hour before the time of beginning, and on the doors being opened only a few minutes elapsed before the Town Hall would be crowded and hundreds would have to be turned away. Mr. Fidler also used his influence in starting a working men's club which had only a brief existence. In 1894 he was elevated to the aldermanic chair, and for some years prior to his death had been the Father of the Corporation. AS A TEMPERANCE REFORMER “Newbury, January 21st, 1871 To Mr. Thomas Fidler We take this opportunity of expressing our sincere regret that the late Municipal Election has deprived the town of the benefit of your long experience and devotion to public business: and although we are sensible that you need no other support than the testimony of a clear conscience to sustain the odium you have incurred for endeavouring to enforce the law against illegal practices, and suppress their encouragement, yet we feel it is only right that you should not be permitted to suffer the obloquy which has been heaped upon you without a counter expression of unabated confidence, respect, and esteem with which many of the Burgesses regard you. We beg your acceptance of the accompanying silver tea service, as a memorial of the sentiments we cherish towards you, and an earnest of our best wishes for your welfare.” THE GOOD TEMPLAR MOVEMENT THE CAMBERWELL POSTER Direct, control, suggest this day, AS A POLITICIAN In the year 1858, new Trustees were appointed to the Newbury Municipal Charities, which at that time included the Grammar School Foundation and Kendrick's School Charity. The list of the proposed new Trustees, of whom Mr. Fidler was one, had been prepared on the result of a ballot taken from the ratepayers of the town, but an effort was made by the Rector and Churchwardens to substitute another list of names, consisting entirely of Members of the Church of England, on the grounds that these were “Church Charities”. As the results of the lengthened law proceedings which ensued, the original list was confirmed by the Vice-Chancellor, with the addition of the name of the Rector, the Rev. J. Leslie Randall. Mr. Fidler, who had taken a leading part in the matter, became chairman of the new Board. AN UNFORTUNATE SPECULATION FAMILY LIFE Religiously Mr. Fidler was a Wesleyan; his parents were both Wesleyan Methodists, and it is a tradition in the family that his mother heard John Wesley when he preached in Newbury Parish Church. THE FUNERAL Among Borough officials present Mr. W.J. Pettifer (Assistant Town Clerk and Borough Accountant), Mr. J. Mason (Borough Auditor), Mr. Henry Pratt (Corn Exchange Manager), Mr. W.J. Clinch (tolls collector). There were also in attendance the Mayoress (Mrs. Knight), Mr. W.J. Blackett (representing the Municipal Charities Trustees), Rev. W. Pullen, Rev. C.V. Pike, Miss Dolton, Miss Edith Dolton, Mrs. and Miss Lomas, Mr. and Mrs. J.T. Nash, Mrs. C. Webb, Misses Gould, Mrs. J.B. Webb, Mrs. Taylor, Mrs. G. Griffin, Mrs. Herbert.Mr. And Mrs. Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. A.H. Butler, Mrs. J. Mason, Miss Prat Miss Midwinter, Mr. and Mrs. Percy Frost, Mrs. F. Gibbons, Misses Parsloe, Messrs J. J.E. Woodger, J. Johnson, J.H. Thompson, E. Piper, W. Keep, T.S. Watts, J.W.H. Kemp, F.H. Stillman, J. Gillett, G.W. Love, C. Brown etc. etc. The mourners were Miss Fidler (daughter), Rev. C. Griffin Miss Griffin, Mr. M. Fidler, jun., Mr. Wesley Walker (Maidenhead), Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Fuller, Mr. F.C. Fuller, and Rev. T. Clarke Edwards. The funeral service was conducted by the Rev. T. Clarke Edwards (superintendent of the Newbury Wesleyan Circuit and Rev. T. H. Lomas, the latter delivering an address as follows: “I am not disposed to elaborately eulogise the late Mr. Fidler. It is not necessary. He went in and out amongst us, busy with his philanthropic work, and most of us knew him well. But I suppose that man, whether statesman, philosopher, or Christian saint who, with holy enthusiasm, sets himself to change the habits and opinions of his fellow men, will be likely to meet with opposition and have his good name reviled. Yet, so far as I can gather, Mr. Fidler's name has been always held in honour in the neighbourhood where he was intimately known, and in the Borough of which he was made an Alderman eighteen years ago and of which he was elected Mayor in 1864. Yet he was an unflinching advocate of that cause of temperance which, when he first stood for it, was much more obnoxious to the English people than (happily for England) it is now. I have sometimes heard his work and methods, never have heard a word which impugned his high religious motives, his complete sincerity and his amiable desire to do what he believe to be his duty, in the sight of God and for the sake of men, without giving offence to the people whose convictions were unlike his own. He was not a bigot; he was simply a friend of mankind. His fellow townsmen knew it, and that is why so many are gathered round his grave to-day. I said that his motives were religious. He was a genuinely religious man: and those amongst us who are Methodists look back with thankfulness to his long term of serviceable membership in that particular communion of Christ's “Church militant here upon earth” in which we continue, for a while, to be taught and trained while we “look for the resurrection of the dead”. Mr Fidler's theology was “Evangelical,” intelligently held. He believed in the atoning merit of the Christian Saviour and in the forgiveness of sins. His lived a strenuous life in agreement with his Apostolic creed, and went quietly down to death in the spirit of Charles Wesley's hymn:- “In age and feebleness extreme, The interment was in a brick vault, in which had been previously buried the wife of Ald. Fidler. The coffin breast plate was inscribed THOMAS FIDLER The floral offerings included “From the family, with loving and happy memories,””In loving memory of his life-long work,” from his Newbury B.W. T.A., Mrs Butler, Mr. and Mrs. Mason, Dorothy and Sonnie, Haddy, Mrs. Deverill, Rose and Edith Dolton. The funeral arrangements were carried out by Messrs Hopson and Son, Northbrook-street. CIVIC SYMPATHY Alderman Ravenor seconded, and the resolution was adopted in silence. The union Jack was hoisted half-mast at the Town Hall. |
Source: | Newbury Weekly News |
Article date: | 08/08/1912 |
Copyright: | Newbury Weekly News |
Transciption: | In the autumn of 1910 two venerable nonagenarians, Alderman Thomas Fidler, & Mr. Richard Freeman, of Donnington Almshouses, were induced to be placed on roller-skates and to appear as notable personages at the Skating Rink. On Bank Holiday the Alderman was lying dead, and the other was present at the fete, enjoying himself as much as his ninety-seven years would permit. |
This obituary entry is awaiting verification. |
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Thomas Fidler
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A drinking water fountain that had been presented by Thomas |Fidler in 1859 was incorporated into the new Town Hall building in virtually the same position as previously page 57 "Newbury |Then and Now" by Dr. Nick Young
Author: D Clow
© Nick Young
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