See also
Husband: | Charles BROWN (1800-1864) | |
Wife: | Mary TRIMMER (c. 1800- ) | |
Children: | William Trimmer BROWN (1821-bef1861) | |
Charles BROWN (1824-bef1881) | ||
Marriage | 28 Aug 1820 | St Dunstan, Stepney, London |
Name: | Charles BROWN | |
Sex: | Male | |
Father: | - | |
Mother: | - | |
Birth | 30 Jan 1800 | Bethnal Green, London |
Baptism | 30 Mar 1800 (age 0) | St Matthew, Bethnal Green, London |
Death | Q3 1864 (age 64) | Farnham, Surrey |
Name: | Mary TRIMMER | |
Sex: | Female | |
Father: | - | |
Mother: | - | |
Birth | c. 1800 | Ealing, Middlesex |
Baptism | 30 Jan 1800 (age 0) | Ealing, Middlesex |
Name: | William Trimmer BROWN | |
Sex: | Male | |
Birth | 28 Oct 1821 | Stepney, London |
Baptism | 27 Nov 1821 (age 0) | St Dunstan, Stepney, London |
Death | bef 1861 (age 39-40) |
Name: | Charles BROWN | |
Sex: | Male | |
Spouse: | Ellen ADAMS (c. 1821- ) | |
Birth | 20 Mar 1824 | Stepney, London |
Baptism | 19 Apr 1824 (age 0) | Saint Dunstan, Stepney, London |
Occupation | Printer's Joiner Master | |
Death | bef 1881 (age 56-57) |
Hello Glynn,
Whilst tying up some odds and ends on my Trimmer ancestry I came across your
website. I was interested as you have Mary Trimmer, daughter of Joshua Kirby
Trimmer in your tree as a direct ancestor. I hate to break the news to you
but Mary never married and died aged 86 in 1886 at the home of her brother
the Rev. Kirby Trimmer in Norwich. You seem to have gone to a lot of trouble
putting much history on your website but it is the wrong family. She lived
most of her life with her siblings - in the 1850s and 1860s she was with her
brother Charles and his family in Cheshire and also with her sister
Elizabeth Downs and her family as well in Cheshire. Her brother Kirby lived
in Norwich most of his life where he was a vicar.
I descend from William Kirby Trimmer a brother of Joshua Kirby Trimmer.
I would be interested in hearing back from you and I'm sorry to be the
bearer of the above information - but it seems a shame thinking you are
related to people when you are not.
Regards,
Julia.