Emma Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1808
Marriage: 1849
Spouse: Robert Perriman French
Death: 1881

Family Branch: Teignmouth
PinsentID: GRO0260


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Joseph Pinsent: 1748 – 1837
Grandmother: Mary Berry: 1751 – 1825

Parents

Father: Thomas Pinsent: 1776 – 1856
Mother: Lucia Ferrers: xxxx – xxxx

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

John Pinsent: 1773 – xxxx
Thomas Pinsent: 1776 – 1856
Sarah Pinsent: 1779 – xxxx
Unknown Pinsent: 1781 – xxxx
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1785 – xxxx

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Joseph Pinsent: 1812 – 1820


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Joseph Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1812
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1820

Family Branch: Teignmouth
PinsentID: GRO1349


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Joseph Pinsent: 1748 – 1837
Grandmother: Mary Berry: 1751 – 1825

Parents

Father: Thomas Pinsent: 1776 – 1856
Mother: Lucia Ferrers: xxxx – xxxx

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

John Pinsent: 1773 – xxxx
Thomas Pinsent: 1776 – 1856
Sarah Pinsent: 1779 – xxxx
Unknown Pinsent: 1781 – xxxx
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1785 – xxxx

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Joseph Pinsent: 1812 – 1820


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John Pinsent

Vital Statistics

John Pinsent: 1799 – 1878 GRO0509 (Schoolmaster, Teignmouth, Devon)

Susanna Morrish: 1799 – 1875
Married: 1829: Kingsteignton, Devon 

Children by Susanna Morrish

Joseph Pinsent: 1830 – 1840
Mary Pinsent: 1833 – xxxx (Married Elias Dawe, Newton Abbot, Devon, 1863)
John L. Pinsent: 1833 – xxxx
Susan Morrish Pinsent: 1836 – 1889 (Married Henry Rabbich, Chudleigh, Devon, 1866)
William Pinsent: 1837 – 1881 (Married Susanna Rebecca Harvey, St. John’s Newfoundland, 1867)
James Pinsent: 1839 – 1905 (Married (1) Mary Louisa Morrish, Starcross, Devon, 1866; (2) Selina Loney, London, Middlesex, 1875)
Melissa Pinsent: 1841 – xxxx (Married Charles Creedy Truman, Newton Abbot, Devon, 1877)

Family Branch: Teignmouth
PinsentID: GRO0509

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John Pinsent was the eldest son of another John Pinsent by his wife Sarah (née Hill). He was born and brought up in Bovey Tracey where his grandfather (Joseph Pinsent) had originally farmed part of a large block of land in “Yeo” that had been in the Pinsent family for several generations. As Bovey Tracey grew, Joseph started to develop land and John’s father owned several houses that were probably let out to craftsmen and others working in the brick and pottery trade. 

John’s father probably died when he was ten years old and his mother probably either took her young children back to her home parish of Lustleigh or went to live with John’s grandfather Joseph. He lived to be 89 years old, eventually dying in 1838.

John was apprenticed to a “baker” in Kingsteignton and married Susanna Morrish in the Anglican Church there in 1929. They had seven children in the years that followed. Susanna was from a Non-conformist family and her children were probably christened according to Baptist rites. They are not to be found in the Anglican records. The two youngest children, James Pinsent and Melissa Pinsent were born in 1839 and 1841 respectively and their births were also registered with the Central Government.  

John and Susanna’s eldest son (Joseph Pinsent) died in 1840; he was ten years old. When the census takers came calling the following year, they found that John was a “baker”  living in Kingsteignton village with his wife Susanna and their then five children, Mary, John, Susan, William and James.  Susanna was pregnant with her youngest child, Melissa, and she was born later that year.

John must have had a reasonable education as he switched from being a “baker” to being a “schoolmaster” sometime in the 1840s. It was a risky move and he was a “debtor”, lodged in the “Sheriff’s Ward for Debtors” on Cowick Street, in St. Thomas’s Parish, Exeter when the Census takers returned in 1851. Susanna and his eldest son, John Pinsent, were “gardeners” in Exminster supporting some the younger children (William, James and Melissa) who were still scholars. 

John’s two elder daughters were probably both “in service”. Certainly, Mary was an unmarried “child’s maid” working for Philip S. Mitchelmore, a well-off “linen-draper” in Newton Abbot. His wife, Ann (née Morrish) ran a large household that included five young children, three “assistant drapers”, an “apprentice”, Philips’ widowed mother-in-law (Ann Morrish) and three other servants. Mrs. Mitchelmore needed all the help she could get! Ann Morrish was Mary Pinsent’s grandmother. I am not sure where her sister Sarah was but she was likely also “in service” somewhere. 

John must have resolved his financial problems. Perhaps he had property in Bovey Tracey he could sell, or perhaps the more affluent Mitchelmore’s helped out. Anyway, somehow he managed to pay his debts and open a small school in Teignmouth. According to Kelly’s Directory, he was running a “Day School” on Upper Brook Street by 1857. The 1861 census records are in agreement. They show that he was a “schoolmaster” living on Brook Street with his wife and their unmarried daughters Susan (aged 24) and Melissa (aged 19) – who helped out at the school.   

John’s daughter Mary, meanwhile, was still with the Mitchelmores. The 1861 census tells us that she was a “draper’s assistant” working for her uncle, (Philip Mitchelmore), in his store on East Street in Newton Abbot. Evidently, he was doing well: he had several “assistants” and no less than four “apprentices” – in addition to a full quota of servants.  Mary married Elias Dawe, a “railway store-keeper” in the Baptist Chapel at Newton Abbot in January 1863.  

The same year (1863) the owner of the house that John rented – and presumably used for his school – put it up for sale at auction at Holcombe’s “White Horse Inn”, in West Teignmouth. He place an advertisement in a local paper that said the house was “now in the occupation of Mr. Pinsent, as tenant thereof, containing four bedrooms on the upper floor, and sitting room, kitchen, back kitchen and offices on the ground floor, with a side entrance and a convenient courtlage behind, well supplied with water. The premises are eligibly situated near the railway station, and have a frontage in Brook Street of forty feet, and are fifty-six feet in depth” (Exeter Flying Post: Wednesday 23rd September 1863). It was said to be well located on a corner lot in Upper Brook Street. Presumably it sold with John a sitting tenant. 

John’s daughter Susan Morrish Pinsent went looking for for greener pastures and took a job in Chudleigh as a “schoolmistress.” She married Henry Rabbich, a widowed “master builder” in “Brookfield Chapel” in Chudleigh in September 1866.

John’s school met with limited success. When the citizens of West and East Teignmouth met to consider the new Education Act (In November 1870); E. Gulson, Esq., who presided, pointed out that the two parishes of East and West Teignmouth only had one school, and whether one school would be sufficient for the two parishes for the future, it would not be for them to decide. He certainly considered additional accommodation necessary. The Rev. A. Lawson stated that the school accommodation in East and West Teignmouth would provide for 390 children. The Athenaeum School, which was termed a private adventure, was sufficient for 147 children, the Roman Catholic School 80, Mr. Pinsent’s school 56, and the school under the patron’ of Mrs. Wrey 30, making in all 703; but to provide for one-sixth of the population there would be a deficiency in school accommodation for 300 children. From Mr. Howard who inspected their schools last week (he might be right or wrong) he learned that the school accommodation at the Athenaeum and Mr. Pinsent’s would never pass the requirements of the Education Department. Taking into consideration the number of poor in West Teignmouth, he thought accommodation would be required for one-fifth rather than one-sixth, and if that were so they would have to provide for 500 instead of 300” (Exeter and Plymouth Gazette: Friday 25th November 1870).   

There was considerable discussion as to the relative merits of the private or voluntary system of schooling then in place and the proposed state sponsored or compulsory system enshrined in the “Education Act.” The Rev. A. Lawson moved a motion in favour of the former and it was seconded but later withdrawn – after wiser heads recommended that the citizens should form a committee to look into the relative merits of the two systems. The committee was to report back in a week

The 1871 census records tell us that John’s school was next to the brewery on Brook Hill in West Teignmouth, and that he was still running it with the help of his youngest daughter Melissa who was an unmarried “assistant teacher”. John and Susanna were over seventy years old by then and Susanna (née Morrish) died at Brook Hill a few years later, in December 1875. Her widowed husband soldiered on. White’s Directory tells us that John was still running his “Day School” at High Brook Street in Teignmouth in 1878, the year he died. 

Melissa had married Charles Creedy Truman, a “painter and gilder” in Newton Abbot a few months previously and her father was probably living with them, when he died on Teign Street in West Teignmouth. It was his daughter, M. Truman, who registered his death.    

John and Susanna had fours sons. Joseph Pinsent, the eldest, died of “scarlet fever” in Kingsteignton in 1840. His brothers, John, William and James were still alive ten years later, when their father was incarcerated in the “Debtors’ Ward” in Exeter in 1851. They were living with their mother in Exminster. John “junior” helped his mother out as a “gardener” while the others attended school. John drops out of sight after that. Presumably he died, or perhaps he emigrated.  

His brother William Pinsent is easier to trace, although there is a slight complication here as there was another William born in Bovey Tracey at roughly the same time and they both took to the sea. John and Susanna’s son, William Pinsent seems to have joined the Merchant Navy, married in St. John’s in Newfoundland in 1867, and settled in the United States. His life is discussed elsewhere. The other William Pinsent was the son of Thomas Pinsent and Mary Mugford. He appears to have joined the Royal Navy and his life and times are discussed with other members of the BOVEY TRACEY Branch of the Pinsent family.

John and Susanna’s son James Pinsent stayed closer to home. He became a professional “house painter” who married and settled in Torquay. His life is also discussed elsewhere.  


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Joseph Pinsent: 1748 – 1837
Grandmother: Mary Berry: 1751 – 1825

Parents

Father: John Pinsent: 1773 – xxxx
Mother: Sarah Hill: xxxx – 1839

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

John Pinsent: 1773 – xxxx
Thomas Pinsent: 1776 – 1856
Sarah Pinsent: 1779 – xxxx
Unknown Pinsent: 1781 – xxxx
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1785 – xxxx

Male Siblings (Brothers)

John Pinsent: 1799 – 1878
Joseph Pinsent: 1800 – xxxx
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1804 – 1851
Mary Pinsent: 1807 – 1854


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Thomas Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Thomas Pinsent: 1776 – 1856 (Carpenter, London, Middlesex and Bovey Tracey, Devon) 

Lucia Ferrers: xxxx – xxxx
Married: 1806: Westminster, Middlesex

Children by Lucia Ferrers

*Emma Pinsent: 1808 – 1881 (Married Robert Perriman French, Bovey Tracey, 1849)
Joseph Pinsent: 1812 – 1820
Mary Pinsent: 1813 – xxxx
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1814 – 1821
Lucia Pinsent: 1816 – 1816

* Emma’s illegitimate child: Georgiana Vallee Pinsent: 1840 – xxxx

Family Branch: Teignmouth
PinsentID: GRO0837

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Thomas Pinsent was the younger son of Joseph Pinsent by his wife, Mary (née Mary Berry). He was born in Bovey Tracey and grew up there with an elder brother John Pinsent and at least three younger sisters. His father was a tenant farmer who worked on a parcel of land at “Yeo,” a large farm that had at one time all belonged to the Pinsent family. John Pinsent, Thomas’s elder brother, appears to have died around 1808 and Joseph gave up farming around then. He bought houses as an investment instead. It was a smart move at a time as the town of Bovey Tracey was growing in response to the growth of the local potteries and brickyards. 

Thomas trained to be a “carpenter” and he was apprenticed to “Thomas Week & Son”, in Chudleigh in 1791 when he was fifteen years old (U.K. Register of Duties Paid for Apprentices’ Indentures: 1710-1811: Ancestry.com). After completing his training, he moved up to London, where he married Lucia Ferrers in St. James’s parish in Westminster, in 1806. They had five children, one son and four daughters in the years that followed. Thomas was a “carpenter” by trade; however, he settled for being a “coal merchant” in Ealing in West London for a few years in the mid 1810s. He paid London Land Tax while living in Ealing from 1816 to 1822 (London Land Tax: 1692-1960).  Thomas’s son Joseph Pinsent died in St. Marylebone parish in Westminster in 1820. He was eight years old. It is not clear what happened Thomas’s daughter Mary but his two younger girls, Elizabeth and Lucia died young. 

Mortality rates in London were exceptionally high in early decades of the 19th Century. The sanitation was poor and mortality rates were high. Thomas and his daughter Emma were back in Devon long before Dr. John Snow finally showed that an outbreak of cholera in Soho in 1854 was caused by water from a contaminated water pump. The build up of sewage in the Thames in 1858 caused what came to be known as the “big stink.”  It was only then that London turned its attention to rebuilding its sewage system. 

Thomas’s wife Lucia probably died in London; however, I do not know when or where. Thomas and his eldest, and only, remaining daughter, Emma stayed on in London for a while; however, Thomas’s father made him his executor in 1838 (Index to Probate Duty Register: 1796 – 1903: Findmypast) and the two of them returned to Devon sometime after he (Joseph) died. Emma had an illegitimate daughter, Georgiana Valle Pinsent in London in 1840 but she probably died an infant as she does not show up in the 1841 Census. 

The 1841 Census tells us that Thomas was still a “carpenter” when he returned to Devon. However, he had probably retired and, as he would have acquired some (if not all) of his father’s property in Bovey Tracey he most likely lived on rental income. Emma married a local “yeoman farmer” from Woolley near Bovey Tracey in 1849, and the extended family (plus visitors and servants) was all living on East Street when the Census takers returned in 1851. Thomas was described as a “shopkeeper” in White’s Directory for Devonshire in 1850. What he was selling, I do not know. 

Thomas’s home on East Street was one of five contiguous properties of his that were put up for Auction at the King of Prussia Inn, in 1854.  He lived in Lot 3: They comprised: “Lot 1: A cottage or dwelling house situated in East Street, Bovey Tracey, aforesaid, with the courtlage (surrounding land), walled garden and appurtenances thereto adjoining and belonging, now in the occupation of Henry Discombe as tenant: Lot 2: A convenient and roomy dwelling house adjoining Lot 1, with the cellar, stable, out-buildings, courtlage and walled garden thereto adjoining, now in the occupation of Mr. J. Storier, as tenant: Lot 3: A dwelling house, adjoining Lot 2, with the courtlage, garden, outbuildings, and appurtenances thereto belonging, in the occupation of Mr. Thomas Pinsent, the owner. Lot 4: A very desirable orchard, situated behind Lot 3, containing about 1 acre and a half of land, well stocked with thriving trees in excellent bearing. Also, three newly built cottages, with garden plots adjoining, in the occupation of Holmes, Shears and Daymond, and a spacious and substantial cellar, conveniently situated near the orchard. Lot 5: a cottage with yard and garden behind the same, situated in Fore Street, Bovey Tracey, and now in the occupation of Sarah Mitchell.” Prospective purchasers who wished to view the properties were advised to contact Mr. Pinsent at Lot 3 (Exeter Flying Post: Thursday 27th July 1854). 

In August 1855, Thomas took Elizabeth Coyshe to Newton County Court for recovery of £4 of rent on a cottage that he had let her for her daughter and her son-in-law, Mr. Shears. Quite reasonably, she argued that it was not her responsibility to pay their rent. Thomas was eighty years old by then and evidently a local “character”: “ Mr. Templer, who appeared for the defendant, asked the plaintiff (who is 80 years of age) if it was not in consequence of his familiarities towards Mrs. Shears that she refused to pay him her rent? The plaintiff: – “Oh! nonsense; she come where my family was, so that I could not take any liberties with her; they would have liked for me to have done such a thing” (laughter). Mr. Templer: ”How many bastard children have you?” Mr. Francis, for the plaintiff, objected to the question but the plaintiff replied – “don’t know that I have any; not to knowledge” (laughter). The defendant, on being called, stated that the cause of her daughter’s refusal to pay any more rent was that the old man behaved improperly” towards her. The old gentleman, upon hearing this, laughed heartily, upon which the defendant emphatically remarked, “You needn’t laugh, Mr. Pinsent! there you be, and you can’t deny that you cost the parish £50 year in bastards” (much laughter). In cross-examination, Mr. Francis asked her if she was not also afraid of the bad Mr. Pinsent?  The defendant (warmly), “No; why should I? I bant young enough for ‘en”(laughter).” If he had tried it on with me, he would have had something else” (laughter). I should like to catch him in my house again; I wish I had only cracked his head when caught him there last; he’ll never come again” (much laughter)”. His Honour gave judgment for the defendant (Western Times: Saturday 4th August 1855). Thomas died the following March, doubtless depriving the community of much amusement. 

Shortly after Thomas Pinsent died the five “lots” described above were brought back up for sale at auction, suggesting that they had not sold the first time round. Thomas’s son-in-law Robert French was asked to show prospective purchasers around before the lots came up for Auction at the King of Prussia Inn in May (Western Times: Saturday 17th May 1856).


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Roger Pinsent: 1725 – 1803
Grandmother: Elizabeth Unknown: 1719 – 1816

Parents

Father: Joseph Pinsent: 1748 – 1837
Mother: Mary Berry: 1751 – 1825

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Joseph Pinsent: 1748 – 1837
John Pinsent: 1755 – xxxx
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1756 – xxxx
Sarah Pinsent: 1758 – xxxx

Male Siblings (Brothers)

John Pinsent: 1773 – xxxx
Thomas Pinsent: 1776 – 1856


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John Pinsent

Vital Statistics

John Pinsent: 1773 – xxxx GRO1345 (Property owner, Bovey Tracey, Devon)

Sarah Hill: xxxx – 1839
Married: 1798: Lustleigh, Devon

Children by Sarah Hill:

John Pinsent: 1799 – 1878 (Married Susanna Morrish, Kingsteignton, 1829)
Joseph Pinsent: 1800 – xxxx
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1804 – 1851
Mary Pinsent: 1807 – 1854 (Married Thomas Howard, Bovey Tracey, Devon, 1825)

Family Branch: Teignmouth
PinsentID: GRO1345

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John Pinsent was the eldest son of Joseph Pinsent by his wife, Mary (née Berry). He was brought up in Bovey Tracey where his father was a tenant farmer who seems to have surrendered the “part of Yeo” he worked with his father back to its owner, (the Church: Rev. Mr. Morgan) in 1808. The land was probably part of a much larger estate that had been owned the Pinsent family in the 1600s. Joseph also seem to have sold the smaller “part of Yeo” where his mother lived with her daughter Sarah and her husband, Mr. Dearin, after her husband died. Joseph had been a “butcher” as well as a farmer and in later life, he became a “property developer” in Bovey Tracey. The community was growing fast with the development of its potteries and brickyards. 

Among the houses Joseph bought in 1797, was a small house in Bovey Tracey (valued at 2s 6d) called “Carrols” or “Canols.” He bought it the year before his son John Pinsent married Sarah Hill and they made it their home. Sarah came from the neighbouring parish of Lustleigh. The couple had two sons, John Pinsent and Joseph Pinsent and two daughters, Elizabeth Pinsent and Mary Pinsent

John most likely died in 1809, although I can find no record of it. What I do know is that his wife Sarah took ownership of the house and lived there until 1813. Land Tax Records show that she then rented it out to a Mr. Rich until 1818, and to a Mr. Newcombe until 1821. A Mr. Beale rented it until at least 1831, which is when the record series ends. John’s father was still alive and Sarah (née Hill) probably lived off family investments. Her father-in-law died in 1838 and her brother-in-law Thomas, a “carpenter” who had been living in London, returned to Bovey Tracey shortly thereafter. 

When John died, Sarah was left with four very young children to look after. I am not aware of her having remarried and, as she was still “Sarah Pinsent” when she rented out her house to Mr. Beale in 1831. Sarah’s daughter Elizabeth saw a lot of her mother’s family when she was growing up and Sarah may have taken her children back home to Lustleigh to live when they were young. I do not know for sure when Sarah died. However, she could be the Sarah Pinsent, aged 64, who died in Tormoham in June 1836.

John and Sarah’s elder son, John Pinsent was probably apprenticed to a “baker” in Kingsgteinton. If so, he married Susanna Morrish while living there in 1829. The couple had a family and, eventually, settled in West Teignmouth. John’s life is discussed elsewhere. His younger brother, Joseph Pinsent, is still unaccounted for.  

John and Sarah’s elder daughter Elizabeth never married. Census data shows that she was a “dressmaker” living with her uncle Abraham Hill and his wife Anne, and their unmarried daughter Mary Hill, at Daccombe in Coffinswell (a few miles southeast of Newton Abbot) in Devon in 1851. She died there a few months later. 

Elizabeth’s will was proved in the “Principal Registry of the Lord Bishop of Exeter” and a copy survived the bombing of the “Exeter Probate Registry” during the “Second World War”. It is in the “Stamp Office”. Elizabeth asked that her debts be paid and the remainder of the £5 she had in the “Devon and Exeter Savings Bank” be split equally amongst her (deceased) brother, John Pinsent’s living children, and that their portions be invested until they reached the age of 18 years. She gave her interest in a dwelling house in Bovey Tracey to her uncle (?), Abraham Hill, who had provided money for its purchase and repair, and she gave the rest of her estate to her cousin Mary Hill. 

Elizabeth’s younger sister, Mary Pinsent appears to have married Thomas Howard in Bovey Tracey in December 1825. 


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Roger Pinsent: 1725 – 1803
Grandmother: Elizabeth Unknown: 1719 – 1816

Parents

Father: Joseph Pinsent: 1748 – 1837
Mother: Mary Berry: 1751 – 1825

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Joseph Pinsent: 1748 – 1837
John Pinsent: 1755 – xxxx
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1756 – xxxx
Sarah Pinsent: 1758 – xxxx

Male Siblings (Brothers)

John Pinsent: 1773 – xxxx
Thomas Pinsent: 1776 – 1856


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Sarah Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1758
Marriage: 1793
Spouse: William Dearin
Death: N/A

Family Branch: Teignmouth
PinsentID: GRO1592


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Roger Pinsent: 1703 – 1783
Grandmother: Anne Edwards: xxxx – xxxx

Parents

Father: Roger Pinsent: 1725 – 1803
Mother: Elizabeth Unknown: 1719 – 1816

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Roger Pinsent: 1725 – 1803
John Pinsent: 1729 – xxxx

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Joseph Pinsent: 1748 – 1837
John Pinsent: 1755 – xxxx


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Joseph Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Joseph Pinsent: 1748 – 1837 GRO0539 (Tenant farmer, butcher and property owner, Bovey Tracey, Devon)

Mary Berry: 1751 – 1825
Married: 1773: Bovey Tracey, Devon

Children by Mary Berry:

John Pinsent: 1773 – xxxx (Married Sarah Hill, Lustleigh, Devon, 1798)
Thomas Pinsent: 1776 – 1856 (Married Lucia Ferrers, Westminster, Middlesex, 1806) 
Sarah Pinsent: 1779 – xxxx
Unknown Pinsent: 1781 – xxxx (probably Mary Ann who married William Symons – see Blackmore)
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1785 – xxxx

Family Branch: Teignmouth
PinsentID: GRO0539

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Joseph Pinsent was the eldest son of Roger Pinsent by his wife, Elizabeth (née unknown). His father farmed “part of Yeo” in the Manor of Wreyland in Bovey Tracey and he grew up there with a younger brother (John Pinsent) and sister (Elizabeth Pinsent) who are unaccounted for, and with a sister Sarah who married William Dearin, a “mariner” from out of parish in 1793. 

In addition to the “part of Yeo” that he had inherited from his father, Roger farmer a larger block of land in the parish owned by Rev. Mr. Walker. It was valued at around 19s 5 1/2d in Land Tax in 1780, which would have made him a significant, albeit not particularly wealthy, farmer. Bovey Tracey’s tax records shows that when Roger died in 1803 his widow took over her husband’s “part of Yeo. She probably had a life interest in it as the family freehold would have gone to her eldest son, Joseph. Joseph’s sister Sarah and her husband were in residence when their mother died in 1816. She stayed on there with her husband for a couple of years before turning the the property over to Joseph. They may have emigrated to the United States.

Joseph married Mary Berry “by banns” in Bovey Tracey in 1773 and had at least five children over the next twelve years. The first two were boys (John Pinsent and Thomas Pinsent) who went on to marry and have children. Their lives are described elsewhere. The third was a girl, Sarah. What happened to her, I am not sure. Joseph and Mary’s two remaining children are doubtful, as the parish registers are torn and difficult – if not impossible to read. The younger is probably another Elizabeth – born in 1785.

Joseph would, doubtless, have helped his father farm both pieces of land at “Yeo”; however, he was also a “butcher” in his own right, and had a home and/or shop, “late Clapps,” that was valued at 4s 6d in 1780. This was the first year that an annual run of “Land Tax Assessments” is available. The run ends in the early 1830s. Interestingly, Joseph Pinsent and Thomas Tapley were appointed Land Tax “assessors and collectors” for Bovey Tracey in 1786-1787. It was a role they filled until 1793-1794 – when Thomas backed out and Joseph teamed up with John Sercombe. The following year, he worked with George Harris. Clearly, Joseph knew the value of local real estate.  

The apprenticeship records for Bovey Tracey show that Joseph had Joanna Hilman apprenticed to him for “late Walker’s estate” in 1790. This was for the “part of Yeo” that his father worked for Rev. Mr. Walker. It probably belonged to the Church as it was transferred to Rev. Mr. Morgan after Mr. Walker died. The apprenticeship record shows that Joseph was a “butcher”; however, he probably helped his aging father out on the farm. Joseph also seems also to have rented a still larger piece of land, known as “Forda,” from 1794 to 1797. It was valued at £1 19s 0d and belonged to a Thomas Pinsent – until sold to Mr. Earl in 1797. 

Thomas was probably a descendant of the original Pinsent owner of “Lower Yeo” (see elsewhere) and a very distant relation of Joseph. He seems to be the last of a line of Pinsents that farmed at “Yeo” back in the early 1600s. He was born in around 1740; however his birth record appears to be missing. Thomas left Bovey Tracey and became a “gamekeeper” and “custom’s officer” in Talland in Cornwall. He inherited and later sold the bulk of his substantial holdings in Bovey Tracey (bits of “Higher” and “Lower Yeo” and “Hatherleigh” etc) to Nelson Gribble in 1788 (Cecil Torr: Wreyland Documents: 1910). Thomas kept some of his land (“Forda” and “Culverslades”) until he died; however, he had no children and it was sold off in 1797.  

Joseph was assigned William Bearn as an apprentice for “Forda” in 1795. A few years later, in 1800, he was assigned Jonas Gale as an apprentice for “Rev. Morgan’s part of Yeo.” Joseph’s father had retired by then so Joseph’s name was on the relevant contract and leasing documents. Joseph farmed the Rev. Mr. Morgan’s “part of Yeo” for a few years after his father died but returned it to its owner (the Church) in 1808. This was, perhaps, because he too was getting on in years. Unfortunately, his eldest son, John Pinsent, had died and his younger son, Thomas Pinsent, was a “carpenter” in London. There was no one to work the farm with him. 

Joseph’s mother, Elizabeth, must have had a life interest in the family “pt. or Yeo” and, as she did not die until 1816 when she was 97 years old, Joseph would have had to wait until then before taking full control of the property. After his sister left, he may have sold part of it and put the proceeds to the purchase of several houses (valued at 2s and 4s). They were rented out and probably bought for investment purposes. A Register of Freeholders in Bovey Tracey taken in 1816 (QS 7/64: Devon Social and Institutional Records: Findmypast) confirms his status as a property owner. 

Perhaps it is not surprising that even relatively modest landowners like Joseph were happy to invest in the property market. The town of Bovey Tracey had expanded rapidly in the late 1700s and several brickyards and potteries were coming on stream in the early 1800s. The community was linked to Newton Abbot and the outside world by a canal and the navigable part of the Teign River, and the arrival of the railway in the 1860s only served to increase its importance. Joseph held five houses (including “Pt. of Yeo” and “Pt of Clapps”) in 1830. He seems to have shared the ownership of some of the properties. Sadly, the run of Land Tax Assessment data ends in 1831.

Joseph’s wife Mary died in Bovey Tracey aged 74 years in 1825. Joseph died there in 1837. He was aged 89 years and a “gentleman”. He had likely been predeceased by his eldest son (another John Pinsent), so he appointed his younger one, Thomas Pinsent as executor of his will (Index to Probate Duty Register: 1766-1903: Findmypast).


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Roger Pinsent: 1703 – 1783
Grandmother: Anne Edwards: xxxx – xxxx

Parents

Father: Roger Pinsent: 1725 – 1803
Mother: Elizabeth Unknown: 1719 – 1816

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Roger Pinsent: 1725 – 1803
John Pinsent: 1729 – xxxx

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Joseph Pinsent: 1748 – 1837
John Pinsent: 1755 – xxxx


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Leonard Albert Walter Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Leonard Albert Walter: 1916 – 1995 GRO0576 (Police Detective Sergeant, London, Middlesex)

1. Theressa Nazer Warren: 1915 – xxxx
Marriage: 1939: London, Middlesex

Children by Theressa Nazer Warren

Daughter (GRO0476)

2. Enid Taylor: 1930 – 1997
Marriage: 1955: Westminster, Middlesex

Children by Enid Taylor

Son (GRO0771)
Son (GRO0480)

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0576

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Leonard Albert Walter Pinsent was the second son of William George James Pinsent by his wife, Maud Eleanor Spall. His father was a “wholesale spice merchant” who founded and initially ran the firm of “W. G. Pinsent Ltd.” of 2 St. John’s Lane, Clerkenwell, in London.  Leonard had two brothers, (William Thomas James and Ronald Bertram Horace Pinsent) and a younger sister (Joyce Elizabeth Rose Pinsent). They were brought up on Osidge Lane in Southgate (in north London).

Leonard joined the “Metropolitan Police Force” and was living in the Police Section House in Catherine Grove, Greenwich, in 1939 (London, England Electoral Registers: 1847-1965). However, he finished his training and was a qualified “Police Officer” living at Winchmore Hill in Enfield when he married Theresa Nazer Warren, the daughter of a “banker,” in December that year. 

Leonard joined the Royal Air Force (#150308) in 1942 and was part of a contingent of young officers that sailed for New York from Gourlock in Scotland on the “U.S.A.T. Thomas H. Barry” that August (New York Passenger Lists: 1820-1957: Ancestry.com).  On the completion of his training, he returned and he was a “Leading Aircraftsman” in April 1943. Where he was assigned, I am not sure; however, he was advanced to “Pilot Officer” (on probation) and to “Flight Officer” (on probation) in October that year. He became a “Flight Lieutenant” in April 1945 (London Gazette: 12th August 1943; and 1st May 1945). 

Leonard Albert Walter Pinsent survived the war (unlike his younger brother Ronald Bertram Horace Pinsent who had similarly married and joined the Royal Air Force early in the war. Bertram had also been sent out to America for training; but died in a mid-air collision during a night-flight exercise over Florida and Georgia in July 1942. This occurred only a matter of weeks before Leonard sailed to the United States for his own flight training). 

On returning to civilian life, Leonard re-joined the “Metropolitan Police Force” and started a family. He was living in Tintern Gardens in Wood Green (north London) when his daughter Janice Nazer Pinsent was born in 1948. The family moved to Broomfield Lane in Southgate in 1952 (London, England, Electoral Registers: Ancestry.com) but it was not there long before Leonard’s marriage to Theressa came to an end and the following year Leonard was back living with his father and stepmother (William George James Pinsent and Elizabeth, née Thornley, on Osidge Lane. From there, he moved in with his aunt Marguerite (née Pinsent) and her husband, George William Carey. They lived on Woodlands Road in Edmonton. He stayed with them until at least 1955.

Leonard and Theressa’s marriage was formally dissolved and both remarried in 1955. By then, Leonard was a “police sergeant” living at Trenchard House in Broadwick Street in Central London. He married a “hairdresser” named Enid Taylor. His ex-wife, Theresa, meanwhile, married Kenneth Ernest Wright, a “printer’s process engraver”. The latter may have emigrated to America as Theressa and her daughter Janice Pinsent are mentioned on the manifest of a “Pan American” flight to New York in April 1957. Janice was around ten years old (New York Passenger and Crew Lists: 1820-1957: Ancestry.com). 

Leonard and Enid (née Taylor), settled on Bedford Road in Wanstead (London, England, Electoral Registers 1832-1965) and had two sons, one in the late 1950s and another in the early 1960s. They have both since married and had sons of their own – so Leonard’s family line seems secure. 

Leonard became a “Detective Sergeant” and a noted Scotland Yard “finger-print expert”. His expertise was instrumental in solving numerous criminal cases. For example in 1952 he gave evidence in the trial of John Shannon and John Currie (“of no fixed abode”) who were accused of breaking and entering in Marlborough Hill, St. John’s Wood and stealing clothes and other property valued at £40. On that occasion, he was able to show that pieces of glass found at the scene of the crime had been marked by Currie’s right forefinger (Marylebone Mercury: Friday 29th February 1952).

Similarly it was, Leonard’s recognition of a thumbprint on a silver plate stolen by Sidney George Jones in 1955 that led him to not only confess but take the police on a tour of the houses in Wimbledon, Willesden and Highgate that he had broken into (Uxbridge & West Drayton Gazette: Friday 10th June 1955). Also, that year, he was able to match a thumb mark on part of a radiator stolen from a tank under repair at the “Royal Ordnance Corp” (R.E.M.E) camp at Bordon, near Portsmouth to a George Henry Preston. With others, he was charged with receiving and selling goods that he knew to be stolen. In a second but related case, Private Clive Brooks was charged with stealing radiators from Churchill and Sherman tanks under repair at the camp (Portsmouth Evening News: Tuesday 16th August 1955). 

Leonard’s skills were also called upon in 1958 when David Hickman, an unemployed “slater and tiler,” was charged with break-in to the “Royal Navy Association” club in Gosport and stealing over £63, numerous bottles of whisky, rum, gin and sherry, cigarettes and a considerable amount of tobacco (Portsmouth Evening News: Wednesday 9th April 1958).

He was in demand at other times as well. On one occasion, in 1959, after the “Managing Director” of a firm disturbed three burglars attempting to open his safe the miscreant fled and the manager gave chase! Nevertheless, proof of identity was needed and it fell to Leonard to match the villains prints to the get-away-car (Saffron Walden Weekly News: Friday 3rd April 1959). In September 1962 Detective Inspector Leonard Pinsent’s skills were called upon to solve a different sort of mystery. The police needed to identify a sick Polish man who walked into Westminster Hospital and died there of rat-poison (Chelsea News and General Advertiser: Friday 7th & Friday 28th September 1962). Fortunately Scotland Yard has his finger-prints on file.

Leonard retired from the Police in around 1980 and moved to Brighton and Hove in Sussex. Leonard and Enid were living on St. Helen’s Crescent in Hove in 1981 (British Telephone Books: 1880-1894: Ancestry.com). Leonard died there in April 1995 and his estate (valued at £125,000) was probated in Brighton the following month (England and Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations: 1858 – 1995). Enid died in Hove two years later, in (London Gazette: 19th November 1997).


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: William John Pinsent: 1869 – 1918 
Grandmother: Rose Emeline Parsons: 1872 – 1950

PARENTS

Father: William George James Pinsent: 1892 – 1963
Mother: Maud Eleanor Spall: 1892 – 1939

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

Sidney Henry Pinsent: 1895 – 1979
Henry Thomas Pinsent: 1896 – 1897
Leonard Charles Pinsent: 1898 – 1974
Rose Marguerita Pinsent: 1900 – 1918
Violet Pinsent: 1902 – xxxx
Bertram Horace Pinsent: 1904 – 1967
Ivy Lilian Pinsent: 1909 – xxxx
Marguerite Florence Ethel Pinsent: 1911 – 1911
Marguerite Winifred Pinsent: 1913 – 2006

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

William Thomas James Pinsent: 1914 – 1996
Ronald Bertram Horace Pinsent: 1921 – 1942


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