Samuel George Caleb Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Samuel George Caleb Pinsent: 1875 – 1951 GRO0778 (Mariner and shoe maker, Plymouth, Devon)

Florence Edith Louise Hill: 1875 – 1959
Married: 1897: Plymouth, Devon

Children by Florence Edith Louise Hill: 

Edith May Pinsent: 1897 – xxxx (Married Frederick James Brimmell, Plymouth, Devon, 1923)
Irene Louise Pinsent: 1899 – 1980 (Married Arthur Lee, Plymouth Devon, 1924)
Lilian Beatrice Pinsent: 1900 – 1973 (Married Reginald Joseph Wootton, Plymouth Devon, 1929)
Leslie Samuel Pinsent: 1904 – 1976 (Married (1) Lucy Nahas, Plymouth Devon, 1951; (2) Olwyn Beryle Trestrail, Plymouth Devon, 1976)
Phyllis Eleanor Pinsent: 1907 – 1920
Victor William Pinsent: 1909 – 1983 (Married Mavis Beatrice Victoria Bignall, Plymouth Devon, 1940)
Marjorie Rosetta Bessie Pinsent: 1912 – 1973
Lena Pauline Pinsent: 1915 – xxxx (Married Herbert George Rowe, Plymouth, Devon, 1936)
Florence Audrey Pinsent: 1917 – xxxx (Married John Alexander Norris, Plymouth, Devon, 1939)

Family Branch: Bovey Tracey
PinsentID: GRO0778

References

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Samuel George Caleb Pinsent was the second son of Samuel Pinsent by his wife Sarah Jane (née West). Samuel George was born, and grew up in, Plymouth with one surviving brother (William Abraham West Pinsent) and six surviving sisters, three of whom were later to marry. The city was home to the Royal Navy’s “Devonport” dockyards, which serviced the ships Britain used to project its maritime power around the globe and, although Samuel George’s father became an “upholsterer,” there was a strong maritime tradition in this branch of the Pinsent family. Samuel George had three paternal uncles who served in the Royal Navy from the the mid 1850s to the 1890s. Their lives are described elsewhere. Samuel George’s brother (William Abraham West Pinsent) and two of his cousins (John Samuel Pinsent and Frederick Christopher Pinsent) also joined the Navy. 

Samuel George was caught “scrumping” (stealing) apples while he was still a teenager and was up before the Plymouth magistrates in 1889 (Plymouth Magistrates Court Summary Convictions: Findmypast). They fined him 10s. He was an “errand boy” living in the family home at 31 Morley Place two years later, when the 1891 census was taken, and a “labourer” when he joined the Royal Navy as a “B2C” (Boy, 2nd Class) shortly thereafter.

When he signed up, Samuel George was said to be 5 ft. 2 7/8 in. tall, with brown eyes and hair and a ruddy complexion. He had no distinguishing features – at that time at any rate. He was upgraded to “B1C” (Boy, 1st Class) in August 1892 and was sent to sea. He had several short postings and then joined “H.M.S. Impregnable”. From there, he was sent to “H.M.S. Boscawen” (the boys training ship based at Portland in the Solent) in November 1893 and then to the shore station at “H.M.S. Vivid I” for a few days the following March. At that point he had served his apprenticeship and was old enough to formally sign up.

Samuel George joined the “senior service” for twelve years on 4th March 1894 (National Archives: ADM 188/244: #168270). He was promoted to “ordinary seaman” and posted to “H.M.S. Warspite”, (a wind and steam driven armoured cruiser) on 1st March 1894. A year or so later, on 9th April 1895, he was transferred to “H.M.S. Retribution”

That June (1895), Samuel George was promoted to “able seaman” and posted to “H.M.S. Impregnable” (another training ship). Unfortunately, he suffered from sciatica (see below) while there, and was invalided out to Plymouth Hospital “per Vivid I” on 5th September 1895 and left the Navy. While serving, his character was invariable rated at “VG” – (very good): so ended Samuel George’s military service. Fortunately, he was eligible for a pension (Naval and Military Records and Royal Dockyards Gazette: 12th September 1895).

When he returned to civilian life, Samuel George took a job as a “street gas lamp-lighter” and walked the streets with a ladder and pole. Time had moved on while he had been in the navy and gas lighting in the streets was in fairly common use towards the end of the Victorian era.

Samuel George married Florence Edith Louise Hill, the daughter of a deceased “carpenter and joiner” in January 1897 and the census takers found them living on Wellington Street, in the Greenbank district of Plymouth when they made their rounds in 1901. They had had three daughters by then. They were, eventually, to have seven girls and two boys. 

Samuel problems with sciatica and kidney disease continued long after he left the Royal Navy. Fortunately, he found a cure in “Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills”. He was so happy with the results, that he wrote a letter to the manufacturers extolling their virtue and they were all too happy to share it with the public at large: It reads: … “31 Morley Place, Plymouth, 22nd January. 1902. “Dear Sir, — l am anxious that you should know what a wonderful cure your Dean’s Backache Kidney Pills have worked in my case. I suffered from sciatica for years, and had almost given up hope of ever getting better. I was bent nearly double with the pains in my side and back and I could not walk many yards without resting. I had tried other medicines before I used yours, but not one bit of good did they do me. But I received very quick relief from Doan’s Pills. Altogether I have used 13 boxes of your medicine, and now I am well; the sciatica is quite gone, and I can walk splendidly. Seven of my friends are now using your pills, because they have been convinced of the medicine’s merits, by my cure. I believe in speaking as I find of a medicine, and I can honestly say that Doan’s Pills may be relied upon for kidney troubles. It you care to make use of my statement, you may do so with pleasure. I am well known in Plymouth, having lived in the same house for the past. 26 years. Believe me, dear sirs, yours faithfully, S. PINSENT” (Orcadian: Saturday 13th February 1904)

At the manufacturer’s request, he seems to have written another letter in 1906. It was included in an advertisement that, needless to say, waxed lyrical about the product. In it, he says:  … “I am sure there are many others in Plymouth suffering as I did, who will be glad to come across a medicine which not only cures, but cures to stay cured. For a long time I was a victim of sciatica, and just before I used Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills I was so ill that I almost gave up hope of every getting better. Doan’s pills drove my trouble completely away, and, out of gratitude, I sent a testimonial for the medicine. This was several months ago, yet I have remained in perfect health ever since. I haven’t lost any opportunity of recommending Doan’s Backache Kidney Pills, nor shall I do so, for I have every confidence in the medicine.”… The letter was referred to in several advertisements published by the manufacturers (“six boxes for thirteen and nine-pence” which may be had of all chemists and stores…) over the years (Western Morning News: Wednesday 10th January 1906).   

By 1911, Samuel George’s family had grown through the addition of two sons and another daughter, and it had moved to a presumably larger house on Neath Road. While lighting lamps, Samuel George had trained to be a “cordwainer” and he was a “journeyman boot maker” when his son Leslie Samuel was born in 1904. He had become a “master shoemaker” by the time his daughter Phyllis Eleanor arrived in 1907 and when his second son, Victor William turned up in 1909. The Census takers put him down as a “boot worker operating on his own account” when they caught up with him in 1911. Samuel George and Florence Edith had been married for sixteen years and had had six children by then. They were all still living.  Three more daughters were still to come! It is worth noting that the non-conformist streak in the family was strong enough to include baptisms and all but the two eldest children were christened according to Non-conformist rites. Non-conformity also shows up in the use of the names “Abraham” and “Caleb”. 

In the early 1910s, Samuel George left Neath Road and set up in business at 64 Salisbury Road in Plymouth. He made, sold and repaired boots and shoes from there between 1914 and 1923 (Kelly’s Directory for Devonshire: 1923). According the the 1921 census, Samuel George and Florence still had seven children living with them. Their daughters Edith and Lilian operated a “green grocery” business out of the family home, while Irene was a “general domestic” employed by a “Mrs. Wolmington” at the “Headland College School.” Their son Leslie assisted his father in making and repairing boots and shoes, and their younger children Victor, Marjorie and Audrey were “at school.” Presumably Lena, who was only six years old would have been living at home had she not been a patient at Plymouth “Borough Isolation Hospital.” Phyllis Eleanor had died the previous year.

Irene Louise had been in Swindon in December 1919. I do not know why; perhaps she was visiting family. However, she seems to have helped out in a Jubilee Bazaar in aid of the local Wesleyan Chapel (Swindon Advertiser and North Wilts. Chronicle: Friday 5th December 1919).

Most of Samuel George’s daughters married during the 1920s and/or 1930s. Edith May married a “postman” in 1923 and her younger sister Irene Louise married a “professor of music” the following year. He must have been quite a catch. Lillian Beatrice married a “bus driver” in 1929. Lena Pauline, who was quite a few years younger, married a “decorator” according to the rites of the Church of England in 1936. The family does not seem to have been overly committed to Non-conformity. Florence Audrey married a “baker” earlier in 1939.

#64 Salisbury Road was still the family home family in 1932-1933 (Plymouth and District Post Office Directory 1932 -1933) and the Wartime Register shows that the family was still there in 1939. By then, Saumuel George’s elder son Leslie Samuel Pinsent was by then a “woodworker and frame-maker” and their younger son, Victor William Pinsent, was a “boot repairer.” Presumably he worked with his father. Their sister Marjorie Rosetta Bessie had yet to marry and she too was living with her parents.

Samuel George Caleb Pinsent, a “retired boot maker” of Salisbury Road in Plymouth, died in May 1951 and probate was granted to Robert Martin Bennett (who was probably a solicitor) and Reginald Joseph Wootton, one of his sons-in-law. Reginald had married Lillian Beatrice. The executors put a notice in the London Gazette (28th October 1952) asking for creditors to contact them. Samuel George’s “effects” were valued at £1,190 7s 7d. Whether his nephew William Oliver Bristow Pinsent was a beneficiary or not I do not know. Sadly, he died in London later the same year (England and Wales: National Probate Calendar: 1858 – 1966: Ancestry.com). Samuel’s widow, Florence Edith Pinsent stayed on at #64 Salisbury Road for a few more years and died there in March 1959.

Leslie Samuel Pinsent: Samuel George and Florence’s eldest son was born and brought up in Plymouth with a younger brother, Victor William Pinsent, and several sisters. He married but, as far as I am aware, had no children. His life is described below.

Leslie was born in 1904 and was living at home with his parents in 1911 and also in 1921, when he helped out his father repairing boots and shoes. He was still living on Salisbury Road with them when the Wartime Register was compiled in 1939. At that point, he was a “wood worker and frame maker.” He had graduated to being a “cabinet maker” by the time he married Lucy Nahas, in Plymouth Registry Office, in August 1951. Why he left it so long to marry, I do not know. Lucy was the divorced ex-wife of Arthur Matthews. I am not ware of any children. Lucy Pinsent died in Plymouth in the summer of 1972.

Leslie Samuel married Olwyn Beryl Trestrail, in Plymouth, in 1976; however, the marriage was short lived as he died later the same year. They were living at #3 Quarry Cottages in Honicknowle in Plymouth. His estate was processed and probate granted in Bristol in January 1977 (Calendar Index of Wills and Administration; 1967 – 1995: Ancestry.com). Olywn Pinsent stayed on in Plymouth after his death and died there in September 1991. I do not know if she had been previously married; however, as Leslie was over seventy and she was over fifty when they married, there was little likely hood of them having children.

Samuel George Caleb and Florence’s younger son, Victor William Pinsent did marry and have children. His life and times are discussed elsewhere. 


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: Thomas Pinsent: 1806 – 1839
Grandmother: Mary Mugford: 1808 – 1850

PARENTS

Father: Samuel Pinsent: 1839 – 1912
Mother: Sarah Jane West: 1946 – 1931

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

John Pinsent: 1831 – 1908
Sarah Jane Pinsent: 1832 – 1916
Mary Ann Pinsent: 1834 – 1850
Thomas Pinsent: 1835 – 1884
William Pinsent: 1837 – xxxx

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

William Abraham West Pinsent: 1872 – 1958
Samuel George Caleb Pinsent: 1875 – 1951
Thomas Charles Pinsent: 1886 – 1889


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Samuel Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1793
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1798

Family Branch: Bovey Tracey
PinsentID: GRO1300


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Unknown
Grandmother: Unknown

Parents

Father: Thomas Pinsent: 1738 – 1818
Mother: Jane Glanville: 1757 – 1827

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

Thomas Pinsent: 1773 – 1799
Unknown Pinsent: 1782 – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1786 – xxxx
Samuel Pinsent: 1793 – 1798


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Samuel Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Samuel Pinsent: 1839 – 1912 GRO0775 (Upholsterer, Plymouth, Devon)

Sarah Jane West: 1846 – 1931
Married: 1886: Plymouth, Devon

Children by Sarah Jane West: 

Rosetta Pinsent: 1868 – xxxx (Married Frank Toms, Plymouth, Devon, 1888)
Eleanor Elizabeth Pinsent: 1870 – 1942
William Abraham West Pinsent: 1872 – 1958 (Married Louisa Bristow, Plymouth, Devon, 1899)
Samuel George Caleb Pinsent: 1875 – 1951 (Married Florence Edith Louise Hill, Plymouth, Devon, 1897)
Lily Hetty Pinsent: 1877 – 1955 (Married William Henry Coles: Plymouth Devon, 1897)
Beatrice Mary Ann Pinsent: 1879 – xxxx (Married Herbert Arthur Veale, Plymouth, Devon, 1910)
Louisa Pinsent: 1882 – 1893
Bessie Pinsent: 1884  – 1918
Thomas Charles Pinsent: 1886 – 1889
Ann Pinsent: 1887 – 1889

Family Branch: Bovey Tracey
PinsentID: GRO0775

References

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Samuel Pinsent was the youngest presumably legitimate son of Thomas Pinsent by his wife Mary (née Mugford). He was born in Bovey Tracey five days before his father died and was brought up with three brothers (John, Thomas and William Pinsent), two sisters (Sarah Jane and Mary Ann Pinsent) and a later illegitimate half brother, George Pinsent – who was born after his father had died and his mother had taken up with Samuel Tapper. 

Mary and Samuel never married. Mary looked after her children throughout the 1840s but, sadly, died while in labour in 1850. Her daughter Mary Ann died a few days later. Mary’s elder sons (John and Thomas Pinsent) had left home by then but her younger sons, William, Samuel and George were taken to the “Union Workhouse” in Newton Abbot and that was where the Census takers found them when they made their rounds in 1851.

It cannot have been easy living in the “Workhouse” and it would not have been thought that surprising when the Exeter Flying Post (Thursday 7th February 1856) and the Exeter and Plymouth Gazette (Saturday 2nd February 1856) reported that “Samuel Pinsent” and Thomas Ware were charged with stealing a bag of chaff at Chudleigh and were committed for trial in Exeter the following month. 

However, when the details came out, it became clear that it was John Pinsent, a well-known local miscreant from the BRISTOL branch of the family, who was, in fact, charged with receiving the stolen chaff (Western Times: Saturday 1st March 1856). John and his friend Thomas were both imprisoned for ten weeks. Theft was treated as a serious matter in those days. John and his wife Ann had, on one occasion, had the audacity to refuse payment to Pinsent and Co., the local brewers from the DEVONPORT branch of the family (Western Times: Saturday 23rd September 1854). They even got away with it as it was not entirely clear who had ordered the beer. The lives of John and Ann are discussed more fully with the rest of the BRISTOL family. 

Most of Samuel’s brothers sooner or later moved to Plymouth and joined the Royal Navy and Samuel was living with his brother John Pinsent – who was a Royal Navy “stoker” and his wife and family on Richmond Street in St. Andrew’s parish in Plymouth when the census was taken in 1861. By then, Samuel was 21 years old and an “upholsterer.” Presumably he had been apprenticed out.

Samuel married Sarah Jane West in Plymouth in 1866. She was the daughter of a “cab-driver” in Plymouth. The Civil Government marriage record says that George “Hind” (sic) of 16 Green Street married Sarah Jane West. Perhaps this is in error; however, it raises the possibility that although Samuel usually answered to the name “Pinsent” he may also have been illegitimate despite being born in his “father” Thomas’s lifetime. 

Samuel and Sarah Jane had three sons and seven daughters over an interval of twenty one-years and all but the last two, Thomas Charles Pinsent and Ann Pinsent survived early childhood. They both died of scarlet fever a few days apart in 1889. Sadly, Louisa was the next to go. She died aged eleven in 1893. The other children reached maturity and all but two of them; Eleanor Elizabeth and Bessie went on to marry. Bessie (she was baptized as such) seems to have been was a late daughter who stayed home to look after her parents.

The Pinsent family was living on Richmond Street when the 1871 Census was taken. The household then only consisted of Samuel and Sarah Jane and two young daughters, Rosetta and Eleanor – who was only six months old. Interestingly, the 1939 Wartime Register gives Eleanor’s year of birth as 1874. This is clearly a mistake. In 1871, there was also a widowed “seamstress” living with the family. 

Samuel’s work seems to have taken him away from home, as the following census (taken in 1881) shows that he was ensconced in lodgings on Castle Street in Totnes. His wife and six children were, meanwhile, living with Samuel’s brother Thomas – who was an unmarried “mason’s labourer” – at 31 Morley Place in Plymouth. Thomas had recently retired from the Royal Navy. His life is discussed more fully elsewhere.

The 1881 Census refers to Samuel’s eldest daughters as being Rosaline and Ellen – which is close enough, I suppose. Perhaps that is what they were called around the house. They, and Samuel’s two eldest sons, William and Samuel, were still “scholars”. Compulsory education up to the age of ten had come into effect in England the previous year. Sarah Jane (née West) had not had the opportunity to go to school. She signed the death certificates for her two youngest children (in 1889) “by mark.”

Samuel and Sarah Jane were still living at Morley Place in 1891. Their daughter Rosetta had married a “carpenter” a few years previously and Eleanor had also moved out. I am not sure where she was that year; however, she turns up as a single, “house-keeper” in the “City Hospital” on Longfields Terrace in Plymouth in 1939 – when the Wartime Register was compiled. She was still a spinster when she died in Totnes in March 1942.  Morley Place the family home until at least the 1920s.

Samuel’s youngest son, Thomas, had died in 1889; however, the other two were still around when the Census was taken in 1891.  William Abraham West Pinsent, the eldest, was only sixteen years old but he was already a “seaman in the Royal Navy”. He, like so many of his relatives, must have joined the navy as a “boy,” with the intention of enlisting for ten years when he came of the appropriate age – which was, I think, 18. Their next son, Samuel George Caleb Pinsent was an (“errand boy”) in 1891. Doubtless he had caused the family some embarrassment in 1889 when he was caught “scrumping” – stealing apples. He was fined 10s at “Plymouth Magistrates Court” (Plymouth Magistrates Court Summary Convictions: Findmypast). I ask you – what fourteen-years old boy wouldn’t nick a few apples if he had a chance? Samuel and Sarah Jane’s younger daughters, Lily (a “domestic servant”), Louie and Bessie were also living at home in 1891. They were both “scholars.” 

Samuel George Caleb Pinsent, married Florence Edith Louise Hill the daughter of a “carpenter,” in 1897 and his sister Lily married a “mason” in September that year. It is worth noting that the name “Caleb” came from the West side of the family, which must have had a formidable non-conformist streak in it. Samuel and Florence had several children in the years that followed. William Abraham West Pinsent married Louisa Bristow, the daughter of a “seaman” in 1899. They had children and their lives are described elsewhere. 

The Morley Place house had emptied out a little by the time of the 1901 Census. Samuel Pinsent (“senior”) the “upholsterer” was still there with his wife Sarah Jane and their daughters Beatrice (aged twenty-one) and Bessie (aged seventeen). They were “domestic housemaids” who worked locally. Beatrice went on to married a “bank messenger” who came from London, in Plymouth, in 1910. Presumably he had settled in Devon.  

The 1911 Census shows that Bessie was still living with her elderly parents who had been married for forty-six years and had ten children, of whom seven were still alive. Samuel passed away in October the following year (1912). Sarah Jane and her daughter Bessie stayed on in Morley Place. Bessie died of influenza in October 1918, a victim of the pandemic that hit the country that year. Her sister, Rosetta Toms, registered her death.

Sarah Jane, meanwhile, soldiered on. She was living on Mutley Plane in Plymouth at the time of the 1921 census. Sarah died in Plymouth in February 1931. She was eighty-five years old. 


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: Unknown: xxxx – xxxx
Grandmother: Jane Pinsent: 1791 – 1831

PARENTS

Father: Thomas Pinsent: 1806 – 1839
Mother: Mary Mugford: 1808 – 1850

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

John Pinsent: 1831 – 1908
Thomas Pinsent: 1835 – 1884
William Pinsent: 1837 – xxxx


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Rosetta Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1868
Marriage: 1888
Spouse: Frank Toms
Death: N/A

Family Branch: Bovey Tracey
PinsentID: GRO0765


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: Thomas Pinsent: 1806 – 1839
Grandmother: Mary Mugford: 1808 – 1850

PARENTS

Father: Samuel Pinsent: 1839 – 1912
Mother: Sarah Jane West: 1946 – 1931

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

John Pinsent: 1831 – 1908
Sarah Jane Pinsent: 1832 – 1916
Mary Ann Pinsent: 1834 – 1850
Thomas Pinsent: 1835 – 1884
William Pinsent: 1837 – xxxx

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

William Abraham West Pinsent: 1872 – 1958
Samuel George Caleb Pinsent: 1875 – 1951
Thomas Charles Pinsent: 1886 – 1889


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Richard Hugh Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Richard Hugh Pinsent: 1943 – 2003 GRO0739 (Dental Surgeon, Ludlow, Shropshire)

Wife (GRO1568)
Marriage: 1967: Lambeth

Children by Wife (GRO1568):

Son (GRO1221)
Daughter (GRO1222)

Family Branch: Bovey Tracey
PinsentID: GRO0739

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Richard Hugh Pinsent was the eldest son of Charles Hubert Pinsent by his wife, Margaret Evelyn Pettifer. He was born in Camberwell in London and was brought up there with a younger brother.

Richard obtained his degrees in dentistry, and married Wife (GRO1568) in Lambeth in 1967. They lived in Dulwich, in London in the early 1970s but moved to Ludlow, a market town in Shropshire, shortly before their first child, a son, was born in 1973.  They had a daughter the following year. Richard either joined an existing dental practice or set up his own. 

When Richard’s mother died in Cornwall in 1967, his father moved to Ludlow, to be near him. He was still a solicitor and partner in the firm of “Parker, Fogg and Pinsent;” however he would have been nearing if not already in retirement. Richard co-authored several professional papers on dentistry with colleagues in the “Department of Dentistry”, at “Birmingham University” in the late 1980s and early 1990s. 

Sadly, he died in 2003. His widow moved to Church Stretton – another market town in Shropshire and lived there until at least 2008. The family line most likely continues through his son. 


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: William Abraham West Pinsent: 1872 – 1958
Grandmother: Louisa Bristow: 1874 – 1958

PARENTS

Father: Charles Hubert Pinsent: 1909 – 2009
Mother: Margaret Evelyn Pettifer: 1917 – 1969

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

William Oliver Bristow Pinsent: 1900 – 1951
Ethel Muriel Pinsent: 1904 – 1992

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

Brother (GRO0533)


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Phyllis Eleanor Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1907
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1920

Family Branch: Bovey Tracey
PinsentID: GRO0724


Family Tree

GrandPARENTS

Grandfather: Samuel Pinsent: 1839 – 1912
Grandmother: Sarah Jane West: 1946 – 1931

Parents

Father: Samuel George Caleb Pinsent: 1875 – 1951
Mother: Florence Edith Louise Hill: 1875 – 1959

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

Rosetta Pinsent: 1868 – xxxx
Eleanor Elizabeth Pinsent: 1870 – 1942
William Abraham West Pinsent: 1872 – 1958
Samuel George Caleb Pinsent: 1875 – 1951
Lily Hetty Pinsent: 1877 – 1955
Beatrice Mary Ann Pinsent: 1879 – xxxx
Louisa Pinsent: 1882 – 1893
Bessie Pinsent: 1884  – 1918
Thomas Charles Pinsent: 1886 – 1889
Ann Pinsent: 1887 – 1889

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

Leslie Samuel Pinsent: 1904 – 1976
Victor William Pinsent: 1909 – 1983


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