Born: | |
Died: | |
Buried: | 21/11/1857 |
Listed below are all the details we have been able to find so far on Theophilus Cooper.
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 Theophilus Cooper.
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There is no information in our database regarding the death of Theophilus Cooper.
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There is no burial register information available for Theophilus Cooper.
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 | Theophilus Cooper |
Date of burial | 21/11/1857 |
Whence brought | Newbury |
Where & how buried | Consecrated Ground - Common Interment |
By whom buried | Rev'd. James L. Randall |
Account Entry | Book 1 - Page 36 |
Accounts Entry for Theophilus Cooper
© Newbury Town Council
Reproduced with kind permission
The articles below have been transcribed from newspapers and magezines.
Source: | Reading Mercury |
Article date: | 24/11/1855 |
Copyright: | Reading Mercury |
Transciption: | THEOPHILUS COOPER At a meeting of the Trustees of the Municipal Charities, on Monday evening last, (there follows a number of elections), Theophilus Cooper was also elected a scholar to the school of Mr. John Kendrick. |
This obituary entry is awaiting verification. |
Source: | Reading Mercury |
Article date: | 21/11/1857 |
Copyright: | Reading Mercury |
Transciption: | THEOPHILUS COOPER DEATH FROM DROWNING On Tuesday evening. An inquest was held in the Magistrates’-room, in this town, before Joseph Bunny, Esq., the borough coroner, on view of the body of Theophilus Cooper, aged 14, son of Mr. James Cooper, tailor, &c., who was accidently drowned in the river, on Monday evening. The jury having taken a view of the body and returned. Edmund Clayton, aged 13, stated that he was in Kendrick’s school, and was, on Monday afternoon, at school with the deceased. They left about four o’clock and parted, when he went home. About six o’clock, witness, deceased, George Heath, and several other boys, met, when they went up to West Mills to play, and passed over the bridge on the Kennet river, and those boys that were first pushed the gate about that was on the towing-path, when the deceased climbed round the railing which hung over the water, and said to witness, “I’m all right,” when he immediately fell into the water. Witness took off his belt and tried to give it to him, but the deceased said he could not take hold of it. Witness told the other boys to run and get assistance. Mr. Cole, a miller, came with a pole, but the deceased could not lay hold of it. Witness went for Mr. Cooper, his father, who came. It was twenty minutes before he was taken out of the water. Paul Griffith, another school boy, said, they met about six o’clock on that evening, and went to West Mills. They passed over the bridge to the gate on the north side of the river. The gate was pushed about by several other boys who were on the other side of it. The deceased went to get round the railing, when he said, “I am all right.” He then fell into the water. Witness went for Mr. Cole, miller, who brought a pole, but the deceased could not get hold of it. He kept above the water a little time, and then was drowned. He was in the water about half an hour before he was taken out. Henry John Arnold, of West Mills, said, that he assisted in getting the deceased out of the water. He was dead. The Coroner said, that was the whole of the evidence which would be brought before the jury, as to the cause of the deceased’s death; and he thought it was right to state that no charge had been brought against any of the other boys; but if any unfair means had been used by any of them, it would have been the bounden duty of the jury to have returned a verdict of manslaughter, and the parties would have been committed for trial at the next March Assizes. With these few remarks he would leave the case in their hands, and he had no doubt their verdict would be in accordance with the evidence given. The Jury returned a verdict of “Accidental Death.” The whole of the boys who were with the deceased just before his untimely end, were summoned to attend the inquest, and at the close of the proceedings, the Coroner addressed them in a most solemn manner on the sudden departure of one of their school fellows, hoping that they would take timely warning, and that their future course would be guided by good conduct. Also reported in the Berkshire Chronicle dated 21 November 1857.
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This obituary entry is awaiting verification. |
The articles below contain information about Theophilus Cooper.
Theophilus Cooper
He was born in 1844 in Newbury, the youngest child of James Cooper, a tailor of 2 Simmon’s Yard, and his wife Emily (née Jones).
On 24 November 1855, he was elected a scholar to the school of Mr. John Kendrick.
Two years later, whilst playing with some of his school fellows in West Mills near the bridge on the Kennet river, he fell in the water. All attempts to rescue him failed and he drowned. An inquest was held on Tuesday 17 November 1857 and the Jury returned a verdict of “Accidental Death.”
He was buried in the Cemetery on 21 November. He was 14 years old.
No Mrs. P. Code
Sources: Birth Index 1Q 1844; 1851 and 1861 census; Death Index 1Q 1858
Author: Deirdre Duff
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