Robert Burton Pynsent

Vital Statistics

Robert Burton Pynsent: 1869 – 1953 GRO0744 (Farmer, Wanganui, New Zealand & Barrister, Westminster, London)

Mary Isobel Addie: 1879 – 1956
Married: 1906
: Northaw, Hertfordshire

Children by Mary Isobel Addie:

Charles Burton Pynsent: 1907 – 1967 (Married (1) Lorna Ruth Tasman Moss: Lahore, Punjab, India: 1933: (2) Bessie Florence Hunt: Windsor, Berkshire: 1942)
Joan Isobel Pynsent: 1909 – 1998
Mary Helen Pynsent: 1914 – xxxx (Married  (1) Edward Edmond Henry Trelle: (2) Cyril Reginald Gower: 1950)

Family Branch: Hennock
PinsentID: GRO0744

References

Newspapers

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Robert Burton Pynsent (“Bob”), son of Charles Pitt and Georgina Helen Pynsent was born at Heidelberg in Germany and emigrated to New Zealand with his father who may, perhaps, have thought of returning to his first love, running a sheep farm.

Huge, ornate stone building with an immaculate cut lawn in front.
Christ’s College in Christchurch.

Robert attended Christ’s College, in Christchurch on the South Island, from 1885 to 1887 (New Zealand School Registers and List (1850 – 1967) and returned to London with his parents and his sister Marion on the “S.S. Ruapehu” in May 1888 (Nelson Evening Mail: 5th May 1888). He was “admitted pensioner (age 19) at Jesus College, Cambridge in October 1888” and obtained his B.A. there in 1891 (Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser: Monday 22nd June 1891). His father, meanwhile, seems to have returned to Wellington in March 1890 (Auckland Star: 14th March 1890). Robert Burton stayed on in England and studied law, and was called to the bar, at the Inner Temple, on November 17th, 1893. He went on to serve on the Oxford Circuit (Scott, MSS; Law Lists).

Robert made several trips back to New Zealand. He returned once after graduation, in 1891, and once again in 1894 – after being called to the bar (Press: 29th January 1894). How long he intended to stay, I do not know. According to the New Zealand Graphic (10th March 1894), he was “visiting his parents for a few months.” However, his father was getting on in age and Robert seems to have stayed on to run a farm, or sheep station as it may more accurately be described, on “No. 2 Line” at Makirikiri, in Wanganui (now known as Whanganui) while his father and mother settled into  retirement in their comfortable house called “Clifton” on Hobson Road in Wellington.

Robert seems to have been less interested in the social functions than his mother and sister; however, he did attend a Mrs. Coke-Daniels “At Home” dance who assigned a Miss H. Johnston to be his dancing partner in November 1894 (New Zealand Mail: 30th November 1894). He also attended Wellington’s (Queen Victoria) “Birthday Ball” with the rest of his family in June the following year (New Zealand Mail: 21st June 1895) and went to at a dance given by Mrs. Charles Johnston as her eldest daughters “Debut” the year after that (New Zealand Graphic: 12th September 1896). In fact, his social life may have been far more active than that. The social columnists of the day (“Ophelia” and “Clarissa” in the New Zealand Graphic, and “Ignota” and “Violet” in the New Zealand Mail) obsessed about women’s clothes and rarely thought to mention their menfolk. They must have been there.

Ariel photograph of a city. A river curves gently in front. The city is lit with lights.
Whanganui City, Whanganui.

Robert Burton’s farm was near Cook Strait, approximately 200 kilometres north of Wellington. According to one of the New Zealand Post Office Directories (1896-7), it could  handle around 1,800 sheep (New Zealand Post Office Directories: 1896-7); however that seems like an understatement. A listing of Annual Sheep Returns attached to New Zealand’s Parliamentary Papers, shows that Robert’s sheep station at Makirikiri started out with 1,973 sheep in 1895 and it ran 3,796 in 1898. The number declined to 2,962 in 1899 and then to zero the following year as Robert prepared to returned to  England in the spring of 1898 (New Zealand Graphic 11th June 1898).

Bob was back in New Zealand the following year. He attended stock sales in Fielding, near Palmerston North in February 1899 (Fielding Star: 17th February 1899), and in July that year he crossed over Cook Strait to the South Island and traveled down to Dunedin by train (Otago Daily Times: 28th July 1899) – presumably on business. We know that he lost a “small roan cow” from “No. 2 Line” in August 1899 as he advertised for its return (Wanganui Chronicle: 23rd August 1899). The farm evidently had a dairy department too.

Black and white map showing the city of Wellington curled around Lambton Harbour.
Map of Wellington, New Zealand.

While working on the farm, “Bob Pynsent” applied for a license to shoot “imported game” in the Makirikiri district in May 1899 (Wanganui Chronicle: 10th May 1899). How good the hunting actually was I do not know, but he joined with his neighbours in issuing a notice that: “We the undersigned settlers hereby prohibit any person trespassing on our properties with dog or gun, and hereby authorize Mr. John Walker, Ranger to take proceedings against any person so trespassing. S. Oliver, No. 2 Line, R. B. Pynsent, No. 2 Line, Thos. H. Jones, Russelvale, A. Sheriff, No. 2 Line (Wanganui Herald 8th April 1900). Robert joined the Wanganui Hunt Club a fortnight later (Wanganui Herald: 21st April 1900). However, by then he must have already decided to return to England.

Robert Burton Pynsent sold a “draught mare” at the Wanganui Horse Fair in July (Wanganui Herald: 23rd July 1900) and put “No. 2 line” up for lease – presumably with the life-stock – up for sale the following month. He also arranged for Mr. J. H. Keesing to auction off his household furniture – which he did on Thursday 16th August 1900 (Wanganui Herald: 15th August 1900). The contents of his house are described in graphic detail.

Bob stayed on in Wanganui for a few months after the sale. He was an avid member of the Wanganui Golf Club and his wins and losses are documented in numerous issues of the Wanganui Chronicle (Wanganui Chronicle: 18th July 1900; New Zealand Graphic: 28th August 1900, and others). He seems to have sold the property in 1901 and to have returned to England sometime that winter and resumed his career in the law. However, ships’ manifests show that he was back in New Zealand the following year (1901). He passed through Hong Kong on the “Katuga Maru” in April 1901 (Overland China Mail: Monday 22nd April 1901). He was heading for Japan as he had, apparently, elected to take a different route home to England (New Zealand Graphic: 23rd February 1901)

News clipping announcing the engagement of R. Pynsent, of Hobson Street, to Violet Deane.
R. B. Pynsent’s engagement  appears in the New Zealand Graphic, January 31, 1903.

Robert Burton was probably in England when his engagement to Miss Violet Deane was announced in January 1903 (New Zealand Graphic: 31st January 1903). They intended to get married in London. Who she was, I do not know; however, she may have been the daughter of Major B. Pollexfen Deane of Box in Wiltshire. If so, she was bridesmaid at her sister’s wedding in  1902 (Globe: Wednesday 27th August 1902). Alternatively, there was a singer/dancer/actress with the same name in London in those days! Of course, the two are not mutually exclusive! Anyway, I am not aware that they did marry. Perhaps the need for Robert to go out to Wellington after his father’s death in July 1903 brought the engagement to an end.

Charles Pitt Pynsent died in Wellington leaving his widow, his son (who was in England) and Gifford Marshall (a solicitor in Wanganui) as his executors, and they set about winding up his estate. Bob returned to New Zealand in September 1903 (Sydney Evening News: 4th September 1903). How long he remained there on this occasion, I am not sure but he was back in London in 1905 in time to respond to Queen Alexandra’s Appeal for the Unemployed (London Daily News: Saturday 18th November 1905. Charles left a large annuity for Georgina and allocated substantial sums for his two granddaughters’ (Marion’s daughters: Dorothy and Barbara Goring) maintenance and Education. He also left them sizable bequests when they came of age. Robert was to receive the residue of his estate, including his land and property, and the reversion of the family home on Hobson Street in Wellington when his mother died. He was a wealthy man!

The New Zealand probate documents refer to Robert as being a “farmer”, although he may have given up the farm at “No. 2 Line” a few years earlier. His inheritance seems to have included a different (?) mixed sheep and dairy farm called Te-Ara te-Waka in the Mangawhero district north of Wanganui. This was in a particularly scenic part of the North Island – about halfway between Mt. Ruapehu and the Coast. It was near a famous waterfall that featured in the filming of the “Lord of the Rings.” A General interest article in the Wanganui Herald (15th December 1904) describes the property thus: “Still onward: we come to the property occupied by Mr. McDonald and another, called Te Aratewaka, owned by Mr. Pynsent, of Wellington. This is a very nice property indeed,’ and has some good flat and easy undulating country. Sheep and cattle raising is carried on here, as well as dairying for market. Mr. McDonald’s partner carries on the milking part of; the business, on, what is known as the top portion, where about fifty cows are milked, and as they have their own separator on the premises, the milk is separated at once, and the cream is sent off at proper intervals to the factory. I understand this part of their business is paying very well. Some years ago the late Captain J. Cameron (of Marangai) and our esteemed townsman, Mr. A. C. Lees, worked this property. When, under them, some of the best stock of the district was raised here, and Huripari became known as one of the best places, in the district … ”. Robert’s trustees in New Zealand were to spend several months in 1910 negotiating an acceptable price for the land that the Mangawhero Road Board needed for a road diversion through the property (Wanganui Chronicle: 5th April 1910). They eventually came to agreement and made the deal in July of that year (Wanganui Chronicle: 26th July 1910).

News clipping describing the auction of a "magnificent freehold property at the corner of Cuba and Dixon Streets".
Another sale of a magnificent property in the Evening Post, April 10, 1920.
News clipping offering property for sale for "specifically important to professional and business men" in need of a place to live close to the city.
R. B. Pynsent’s property is listed for sale in the Evening Post on January 25, 1913.

The following year, on 20th June 1911 to be precise, a large portion of Robert’s father’ estate in the city and suburbs of Wellington went under the hammer. It included around twenty different dwellings, and vacant or commercial lots. Charles had built up a large inventory of property between 1880 and 1903. Robert’s mother still had control of the family home #68 Hobson Street (near Wellington’s main railway station); however, she was in England by then (1911) and had no plans to return, so she allowed Robert’s trustees to place the furnishings up for auction in January 1913: “CATALOGUES IN PREPARATION. WILLIAM H. TURNBULL AND CO. will, sell by public auction, as above, under instructions from R. P. Pynsent, Esq. (sic): ON VIEW TUESDAY” (Evening Post: 25th January 1913). Robert Burton Pynsent was a rich man. The New Zealand Parliamentary Papers (Session II, 1912) list him among the “Owners of Land of Unimproved Value” of between £20,000 and £30,000.

Robert seems to have sold another of this father’s properties – at the junction of Cuba Street and Dixon Street (near Te Aru railway station) in the old part of Wellington – in 1920 (Evening Post: 10th April 1920). He kept the family home until 1922 (Evening Post: 14th February 1922).

Black and white photograph of an ornate building with a clocktower
Cuba Street in Wellington, New Zealand.
Handwritten letter. In it, R. B. Pynsent gives a copy of his marriage settlement. It says the trustees have the power to invest in Real Property.  It then gives further instructions for the copy.
Bob writes to Frank in 1909.

Robert Burton Pynsent married Mary Isobel Addie in Northaw, Hertfordshire in 1906 (Barnet Press: Saturday 16th June 1906). It was a “fashionable marriage”. In other words, she had good lineage and, of course, he had money! By then, he was a thirty-seven years old “barrister at law” living in Ashley Gardens on Victoria Street and practicing in the law courts at Westminster out of Chambers at #12 King’s Walk, Temple, E.C. (London City Directory: 1905 – 1910). “Bob Pynsent” appointed my grandfather, Francis Wingfield Homfray Pinsent, a trustee of his marriage settlement.

Handwritten front page of the marriage settlement. Copy request to the London & Westminster Bank.
The marriage settlement was dated July 23, 1906.

Francis was a land-valuer who had been educated in St. John’s, Newfoundland and had returned to the United Kingdom to be with his mother (Lady Pinsent) in 1899. She had stayed on in London after her husband, Sir Robert John Pinsent, died in Norfolk in 1893. Frank and Robert both came from “ex-colonial” families and lived in Kensington, so perhaps it is not so surprising they knew each other. As you can see from the database, they were both descended from John Pinsent and Susannah Pinsent (née Pooke) and were members of the HENNOCK branch of the family. Robert Burton Pynsent was to become “Cousin Bob” within my family. He attended the wedding of Francis’s brother, Captain Guy Homfray Pinsent’s and Miss Ethel Betty Brittan in Sheepstor in Devon, in September 1923. He came with a “Miss Pynsent” who was probably his daughter Joan Isobel Pynsent). “Bob” gave the couple a dining-room clock and his daughter gave silver buttonhooks and a shoe lifter. He had attended the funeral of Mrs. Margaret Willoughby at Chalton Kings, near Cheltenham in Gloucestershire two years earlier. She was one of Thomas Pynsent of Northam’s daughters who was herself linked by marriage to the DEVONPORT Pinsents. Robert’s attendance at both these events shows just how closely the well-to-do members of the overall “Pinsent” family were connected between the wars.

Census document with handwritten entries for the Pynsent family and their servants: Kathleen Reeves, 14; Mary Lewis, 49; Cora Goldsmidt, 20; Mary Kamber, 35; Edith Scarle, 24.
The Pynsent family and their servants appear in the 1911 census.

Bob and Isobel had a son, Charles Burton Pynsent in 1907 and a daughter, Joan Isobel Pynsent in 1909. He seems to have retired from the law shortly thereafter and moved the family to Eastbourne, in Sussex, where it lived in a large house on St. Anne’s Road. They were six servants in residence at the time of the 1911 Census. Finding staff must have been an ongoing problem! Mrs. Pinsent advertised for a “respectable active girl as a Kitchen Maid” in January 1911 (Bromley Journal and West Kent Herald: Friday 20th January 1911). They had a third child, a daughter, Mary Helen Pynsent while there in 1914.

News clipping describing Isobel's court appearance. She describes her husband as having an ungovernable temper. The two had separated because Isobel alleged cruelty. The court rejected the appeal but directed that the child spend some of the child's holiday with her mother.
Isobel’s appeal to regain custody of her daughter fails. Daily News, June 21, 1916.

Unfortunately, the marriage failed and Mary Isobel went to live with her mother at Datchet, in Buckinghamshire. Worse still, they quarreled over custody of the children. In June 1916, Mary appealed an earlier court decision that her husband should have custody of their middle child, (Joan Isobel Pynsent) while she was still at school in Eastbourne – where Robert still lived. Mary’s lawyer argued that her husband had an ungovernable temper and she had petitioned for separation alleging cruelty. She said she was perfectly capable of looking after all three of the children. The Appeals Court declined to annul the previous order, saying that the judge had every right to make the decision he did. However, it did direct that Joan should spend the first half of any vacations with her mother (London Daily News: Wednesday 21st June 1916; The People: Sunday 25th June 1916). Presumably the divorce went through. I am not aware that either of them remarried.

Robert had joined the Mid-Surrey Golf Club on returning to England (The Times: 27th October 1905) and he had continued to play after moving to Eastbourne (London Daily News: Thursday 21st September 1911). He attended several annual Bar Tournaments in the 1910s – including the one held at the Prince’s Course in Sandwich in Kent in June 1911 (Leicester Daily Post: Thursday 1st June 1911). Robert met his match at the Amateur Championship held at the Royal North Devon Club at Westward Ho! in 1912. He was drawn against Mr. Justice Avory and scratched (The Sketch: Wednesday 5th June 1912)! Bob must have known that Thomas Pynsent – the man who reinvented the surname (see elsewhere) – had been instrumental in building the community and the course. Robert was too old to serve in the First World War but he made his contribution as a vice-president of the Eastbourne Rife Club (Eastbourne Gazette: Wednesday 9th June 1915).

Robert Burton may have lived in Goudhurst, near Tunbridge Wells in Kent for a while in the 1920s and was probably living there when he visited his niece, Dorothy Edith Goring, in Bexhill, in Sussex at the time of the census in 1921. However, “Brackett and Sons” sold off his furniture in July 1926 (Hastings and St. Leonard Observer: Saturday 17th July 1926) and he moved to Broadway in Worcestershire. He lived there with his daughter, Joan, who we know took an unaccompanied trip to Malta while she was living there in 1932. Ship manifests show that she left London on 7th December 1932 and returned on April 8th 1933. What she was doing there, I do not know.

News clipping listing J. Pynsent as a vice-captain. Another person, Miss E. Douglas Jones, was appionted to ensure no players appeared on the field wearing high-heeled shoes.
J. Pynsent is listed as vice-captain in the Gloucestershire Echo, September 9, 1933.

Joan and her father lived in Broadway until at least 1936 (Kelly’s Directory, Worcestershire: 1932 – 1936). She played field hockey for the Broadway Ladies (Gloucestershire Echo: Saturday 9th September 1933) and he, presumably, played golf. They were still together when the pre-war Register was compiled in 1939. However, by then, they were living in Blythe, in Suffolk with one resident servant. Bob was now fully retired from the bar and Joan was an “Ambulance Driver“.

Joan Isobel Pynsent served in the Women’s Royal Naval Service during the war and was promoted to Second Officer in January 1945 (U.K. Navy List: April 1946. Vol. II). At some point, she served with another Pinsent, Joan Constance Pinsent and, to avoid confusion, she allowed her name to changed to “Joanna Pynsent”. Joan Constance had been appointed Second Officer in July 1943 (London Gazette: 30th July 1943) and had seniority! This Joan came from the INDIA branch of the family. Her forebears had been out in India as ship’s officers, merchants and administrators. Their history is outlined elsewhere in the database. Their crossing is just example of many that have happened over the years.

My father, Robert John Francis Homfray Pinsent, was a medical student at Selwyn College in Cambridge who found himself at Charring Cross Hospital during the early days of the blitz, in September 1940. In a letter home, he mentioned some disagreement or other between his “Uncle Guy” and “Cousin Bob”. The issue must have been resolved as Robert Burton Pynsent lived or stayed long enough with Captain Guy Pynsent and his wife Ethel (see above) in Chobham in 1945 for his name to be added to the electoral roll (Surrey England Electoral Registers: 1832 -1962). However, he had moved to nearby Godstone by 1946. The Electoral Registers tell us that he was there for a few years and then move in with his son, Charles Burton Pynsent, in Chaldon Common Road, in Caterham, Surrey.

Robert Burton died, in Caterham in February 1953. His effects were valued at £159,742. For some reason, he elected to be buried in St. John the Baptist Churchyard in North Bovey, in Devon (findagrave.com). This was his grandfather Joseph’s Pinsent’s parish. The headstone, as photographed by S. Prayerman in September 2020, is unfortunately, almost illegible. However, it seems to refer to “Robert Baring Pynsent.” This is a mistake, but one that echos another monument in the church, one dedicated to Joseph’s son, Robert Baring Pynsent, who was “lost at sea” in 1833.  

Robert’s divorced widow Mary Isobel Pynsent never remarried, and she retained her “Pynsent” name. We find her living in “St. George’s Court”, in Kensington, in London with her daughter “Mollie” in 1921, when the census was taken and living at the Langham Hotel in St. Marylebone when the pre-war Register was compiled in 1939. She was of “independent means”. Mary lived at Stratford Court (Oxford Street) after the war (London, England, Electoral Register: 1832 – 1965), (1947-1949) and she was still living there when she died. Her death was registered in Epsom, Surrey in 1956. Her effects were a modest, £1,532 (England and Wales: National Probate Calendar). Presumably her son, Charles Burton Pynsent was involved in the probate; however, a solicitor handled her estate.

Charles Burton Pynsent grew up in England and then went out to India. He served in the Royal Air Force during the Second World War, and then settled in England. He married twice and had two sons. His life is described elsewhere.

News clipping excerpt describing Miss J. Pynsent expressing regret that she could not stand again as president. She had held that role for 4 years.
J. Pynsent appears in the Tewkesbury Register, November 5, 1965.

Joan Isobel – or Joanna as she became – never married. After the War, she returned to live in Broadway. What she did there, I am not sure. However, she was an active member of its Conservative Party in the 1950s (Tewkesbury Register: Saturday 10th May 1952) and a member of the Women’s Section of the British Legion in the 1960s (Tewkesbury Register: Friday 5th November 1965). 

News clipping listing J. Pynsent as hon. secretary.
J. Pynsent appears at a meeting of the Broadway Conservative Association. Tewkesbury Register, May 10, 1952.

She also rode, and her love of riding nearly got her into trouble in 1964.  She was accused of causing an accident; however the magistrate disagreed: “Miss Pynsent was riding her mare through the village of Willersey as Mr. Powell was riding his motor-cycle in the other direction. A child shouted and caused the mare to shy and knock Mr. Powell off his machine. Mr. Hutton alleged that Miss Pynsent knew the mare was likely to shy. `Not a shying horse:’ Miss Pynsent said in evidence that the mare was “definitely not a shying horse.” Giving judgment for Miss Pynsent, Mr. Justice Payne said he was satisfied that she had behaved as a prudent horsewoman might be expected to do in the circumstances. She had no reason to suppose that the mare was likely to shy on that morning in that place ” (Birmingham Daily Post: Thursday 5th March 1964).

British Telephone Books tell us that Joan, or “Joanna”, lived in Winchcombe, in Gloucestershire from 1974 to 1977 and then moved to Crowborough in Sussex, where she died in 1998. Her death was registered in Uckfield. I gather from family correspondence that she had an album of photographs that she showed to one of her nephews – another Robert Burton Pynsent – in 1964. Evidently it contained photographs of Robert Burton Pynsent (their grandfather), Charles Pitt Pynsent (their great grandfather), and Thomas Pynsent of Northam and his three daughters. Doubtless some of them would have been taken in Europe while the two cousins (Charles Pitt and Thomas) were traveling in Europe together. Whether it still exists, I do not now.

“Joanna’s” younger sister, Mary Helen married a Frenchman, Edward Edmond Henry Trelle (presumably in France as there is no record of the marriage in the General Records Office). The marriage failed and they eventually divorced. However, she was still living under her married name in Chepstow Place, in Kensington, London in 1949 (London Electoral Registers 1832 – 1965). Mary Helen married Cyril Reginald Gower, a commercial clerk and the son of a retired Monmouthshire Police Superintendent the following year.


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Joseph Pinsent: 1770 – 1835
Grandmother: Ann Tucker: 1785 – 1855

Parents

Father: Charles Pitt Pynsent: 1824 – 1903
Mother: Georgina Helen Ball: 1833 – 1916

Father’s Siblings and half-siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Mary Anna Lambert Pinsent: 1802 – 1809
Joseph William Pitt Burton Pinsent: 1804 – 1805
Elizabeth Satterley Pinsent: 1805 – 1878
Joseph Burton Pynsent: 1806 – 1874
John Robert Pinsent: 1807 – 1808

Mary Anna Pynsent: 1810 – 1875
Anna Lucretia Pynsent: 1812 – 1880
Harriet Cordelia Pynsent: 1814 – 1900
Maria Sophia Pinsent: 1815 – 1819
Robert Baring Pinsent: 1818 – 1833
Ferdinand Alfred Pynsent: 1822 – 1894
Charles Pitt Pynsent: 1824 – 1903 ✔️

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Charles Joseph Pynsent: 1858 – 1870
Robert Burton Pynsent: 1869 – 1953 ✔️


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Robert Baring Pynsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1818
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1833

Family Branch: Hennock
PinsentID: GRO1213

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Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: John Pinsent: 1728 – 1772
Grandmother: Susanna Pooke: 1730 – 1772

Parents

Father: Joseph Pinsent: 1770 – 1835
Mother: Ann Tucker: 1785 – 1855

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

John Pinsent: 1751 – 1753
John Pinsent: 1753 – 1821
Robert Pinsent: 1753 – 1787
Thomas Pinsent: 1754 – 1785
William Pinsent: 1757 – 1835
Gilbert Pinsent: 1758 – 1835
Charles Pinsent: 1765 – 1765
Charles Pinsent: 1766 – 1826
Samuel Pinsent: 1767 – 1775
Joseph Pinsent: 1770 – 1835 ✔️

Male Siblings (Brothers, half-brothers)

Joseph William Pitt Burton Pinsent: 1804 – 1805
Joseph Burton Pynsent: 1806 – 1874
John Robert Pinsent: 1807 – 1808

Robert Baring Pinsent: 1818 – 1833
Ferdinand Alfred Pynsent: 1822 – 1894
Charles Pitt Pynsent: 1824 – 1903


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Robert Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1747
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1748

Family Branch: Hennock
PinsentID: GRO1319

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Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Thomas Pinsent: 1691 – 1777
Grandmother: Mary Gale: 1690 – 1774

Parents

Father: Robert Pinsent: 1721 – 1783
Mother: Eleanor Shapley: 1720 – 1780

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Thomas Pinsent: 1717 – 1802
Robert Pinsent: 1721 – 1783 ✔️
Gilbert Pinsent: 1724 – 1794
John Pinsent: 1728 – 1772

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Robert Pinsent: 1747 – 1748 ✔️
Robert Pinsent: 1750 – 1786
Thomas Pinsent: 1754 – 1762
John Pinsent: 1757 – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1760 – xxxx
Charles Pinsent: 1762 – 1816


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Robert Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1750
Spouse: Mary Pinsent (1771), Mary Jordan (1774)
Death: 1786

Family Branch: Hennock
PinsentID: GRO1316

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Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Thomas Pinsent: 1691 – 1777
Grandmother: Mary Gale: 1690 – 1774

Parents

Father: Robert Pinsent: 1721 – 1783
Mother: Eleanor Shapley: 1720 – 1780

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Thomas Pinsent: 1717 – 1802
Robert Pinsent: 1721 – 1783 ✔️
Gilbert Pinsent: 1724 – 1794
John Pinsent: 1728 – 1772

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Robert Pinsent: 1747 – 1748
Robert Pinsent: 1750 – 1786 ✔️
Thomas Pinsent: 1754 – 1762
John Pinsent: 1757 – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1760 – xxxx
Charles Pinsent: 1762 – 1816


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Robert Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Robert Pinsent: 1721 – 1783 GRO1306 (Serge-maker and shopkeeper of Newton Abbot)

Eleanor Shapley: 1720 – 1780
Married: 1744: Wolborough (Newton Abbot), Devon

Children by Eleanor Shapley:

Robert Pinsent: 1747 – 1748
Eleanor Pinsent: 1748 – 1748
Robert Pinsent: 1750 – 1786 (Tallow Chandler, Newton Abbot: Married (1) Mary Pinsent, Newton Abbot, 1771; (2) Mary Jordan, Newton Abbot, 1774)
Eleanor Pinsent: 1752 – xxxx (Married John Adams, Newton Abbot, 1788)
Thomas Pinsent: 1754 – 1762
Mary Pinsent: 1756 – 1789
John Pinsent: 1757 – xxxx (Woolcomber of Newton Abbot and Soldier of First Regiment of Foot; mason of Great Torrington (?))
William Pinsent: 1760 – xxxx (Baker of Exeter)
Charles Pinsent: 1762 – 1816 (Carpenter and Builder, Chudleigh and London, Married Elizabeth Butter, Woodbury, 1791, and had children)

Family Branch: Hennock
PinsentID: GRO1306

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Black and white photo of a stone church nestled among trees.
Wolborough Church, Newton Abbot.

Robert Pinsent was the second to eldest son of Thomas Pinsent and Mary Gale of “Knighton” (a.k.a Thomas Pinsent “the elder” of “Pitt”). How and when his father had acquired “Pitt” I am not sure. However, his father before him (another Thomas) was a “tanner” at “Slade.” Presumably Robert was brought up on the family farm. He married Eleanor Shapley in Wolborough in 1743/1744 and had several children but only two sons (Robert Pinsent and Charles Pinsent) and a daughter (Eleanor Pinsent) are known to have married. Another son, John Pinsent, may also have done so. Robert’s son Thomas Pinsent died whilst still a young boy and his daughter Mary Pinsent died unmarried, at the age of 33 years.

Colour map of Newton Abbot and its environs.
Map of Newton Abbot.

Robert “senior” had an elder brother, Thomas, who was destined to take over the farm at “Pitt” and it fell to “Mr. Robert Pinsent” to become a “serge” (worsted fabric) maker and a “shopkeeper” in a nearby market town. Robert, his elder brother John, and their brother Gilbert all moved from Hennock to Newton Abbot – which was then a thriving commercial centre upstream from Teignmouth. It was active both in the cloth trade and the Newfoundland fishery.  Most of the town is in Wolborough parish; however, even then, part of it was in the neighbouring parish of Newton Bushell (Highweek).

Painting of a squat-faced man with a dark curly wig sits in front of a loom.
A German serge weaver, Hausbuch de Memdelschen, 1714.

According to the “Sun Fire Office Inventories of Policies”, Robert’s house in Newton Abbot was worth £100 on October 31st, 1766; his household goods were valued at £100 and his utensils and stock were estimated at £300. A list of “freeholders”  (www.foda.org.uk/freeholders/QS7/44/haytor.htm) shows that Robert Pinsent was a “shopkeeper” in Wolborough in 1771.

Like most merchants and farmers, Robert took on apprentices to help them out and also to train them. The Apprenticeship Records for the parish of Bovey Tracey show that William Spray was apprenticed to Robert Pinsent of Wolborough “yeoman” in 1772. The usage of the term “yeoman” is interesting. In this case it seems to refer to his social status and not occupation.

In the 1780s, Robert and a partner, Gilbert Duke, paid a Land Tax of 13s 9d for their business premises, which appear to have passed to Robert’s daughter, Eleanor, after his death in 1783. According to Bailey’s British Directory, Eleanor was a “mercer, draper (textiles)” in Newton Abbot in 1784.

Robert’s brother, Thomas Pinsent “the younger” of “Pitt” had no children of his own; however, he mentions three of Robert’s sons (John, William and Charles) in his Will – which was written around 1791. This tells us that they lived to maturity.

Handwritten entry listing John Pinsent as a Perukmaker in 1766.
John Pinsent appears in the UK Register of Duties Paid for Apprentices’ Indentures, 1766.

The eldest – John Pinsent – was most likely apprenticed to a peruk (wig) maker in Newton Abbot but there is nothing to suggest that he became one. He most likely joined the army and served with the “First Regiment of Foot” (“Royal Scots”) in Canada – where he likely kept an eye on the French. The regiment fought the French at the Battle of Helder in a vain attempt to kick them out of Holland in August 1799. Whether he present or not, I do not know.

Handwritten record describes John Pinsent as a woolcomber.
John Pinsent appears in the UK Royal Hospital Regimental Registers of Pensioners, 1802.

John was admitted to “Chelsea Hospital” with a fistula on 21st June 1802. He is described as having being a “woolcomber” from Newton Bushell, (Newton Abbot) in civilian life, however it is not clear that he did more than help out his father. John served with the regiment for nine years (U.K. Royal Hospital Chelsea Pensioner Registers: 1743-1882). The injury may have continued to bother him as he was readmitted to the hospital with a problem with the fistula in his arm in 1814. 

Engraving of an ornate stone church.
St. Michael’s Church in Great Torrington.

Internet sources suggest that this is the same John Pinsent who later lived in Great Torrington in North Devon and married (1) Philippa Cock and then (2) Mary Walkey. The Church in Great Torrington (St. Michael’s) is notable for having been blown up in 1645, during the English Civil Wars. Clearly, it was rebuilt!

If this is the same John, he later worked as a “mason” and had a daughter Elizabeth by his second wife, Mary. He was buried in Buckland Brewer, in 1833. According to an on-line source (MyHeritage.com), his daughter Elizabeth was baptized in Great Torrington in 1792 and married William Charles Prouse in Buckland Brewer in 1812. The couple emigrated to Canada, where Elizabeth died in Little Britain, Kawartha Lakes, Ontario.

Perhaps it is worth noting that two of John’s nieces married into families who also lived in north Devon, so there may have been a connection. I am not aware that John had any sons to continue his family line.

John Pinsent’s younger brother William Pinsent was likely apprenticed to Samuel Speare of the City of Exeter, baker, in 1777 (U.K. Register of Duties Paid for Apprentices’ Indentures: 1710 – 1811). I am not certain what happened to him after that. Interestingly, John uncle (another John) had a son John who seems to have been apprenticed at the same bakery – and probably went on to marry the baker’s daughter (Susanna)! It was this latter John who, with his brother, ran a shipping business in Newfoundland.

Old black and white drawing of a man pouring a substance into a mold.
A tallow chandler.

Robert and Eleanor (née Shapley’s) third son Robert Pinsent was apprenticed to John Matthew, a “tallow chandler,” in 1764. This was an interesting choice of profession as his (very, very distant) “cousin” Mr. John Pinsent owned a major “soap and candle manufacturing business” in Moretonhampstead and John’s brother, Thomas Pinsent, was a well-known “tallow chandler” in Newton Abbot in the 1780s (Bailey’s British Directory: 1784). They were from the DEVONPORT branch of the family. The families clearly knew each other, although they may not have been clear on the degree of separation.

Handwritten record of Robert's marriage to Mary Pinsent on November 4, 1771.
Robert Jr. and Mary marry on November 4, 1771.

Robert Pinsent “junior” married Mary Pinsent, the daughter of Mr. John Pinsent’s brother Thomas Pinsent in Tiverton in November 1771. Why they married in Tiverton and not Newton Abbot, I am not sure! All did not go well, however, as these are likely the Robert and Mary who were registered at Tiverton St. Peter’s as “paupers” in 1776. Mary was said to be a cripple. The date seems odd, as Mary probably died in Newton Abbott in 1772. Perhaps the date is wrong.

Book excerpts describing the sale of a property to John Pinsent and its later sale out of the family.
Excerpts from the Wreyland Documents.

In his book “Wreyland Documents” Cecil Torr (1910) describes how Mary’s half ownership of a property called “Leigh”, in Hennock was brought into their marriage settlement. This caused a problem as Mary’s sister Elizabeth owned the other half. To resolve the issue, Robert sold Mary’s half to his late-wife’s uncle, Mr. John Pinsent, for £165 in 1775 and her sister sold Mr. John her half for the same amount on the same day. The “DEVONPORT” Pinsents clearly wanted the property back! They must have realized that if Elizabeth married, her half would be controlled by her husband. It was not a risk they were prepared to take.

The U.K. Register of Duties paid for Apprentices Indentures 1710 -1811 (Ancestry.com) shows that Robert was a “tallow chandler” in Newton Abbot when he apprenticed Wm. Reed in 1774. His mother, Eleanor, died in 1780 and his father died in 1783. He, himself, died three years later, aged only 36 years. He outlived his father but was still being referred to as Robert Pinsent “junior” when he was buried in Wolborough in 1786!

Handwritten entry notes Robert Pinsent's burial on December 30th.
Robert Pinsent Jr is buried on December 30, 1786.

Robert and Eleanor’s youngest son, Charles was a “carpenter” by trade. He went up to London and (initially at least) joined and shared premises with his cousin John Pinsent, a “baker” who ran a shipping business tied to the Newfoundland cod-fishery with his brother, William Pinsent. It is worth noting that the John and William also had a brother called Charles Pinsent but as he was busy farming at “Pitt” it is highly unlikely that he was the “carpenter” in London! John and Charles Pinsent seem to have worked from premises at 35 Edward Street, Portman Square in St. Marylebone Parish the 1790s.

Charles moved to Dean Street in Soho in the early 1800s but John stayed on and used the premises for his shipping business. London Directories show that Charles was both a “carpenter” and a “builder”. Charles married in London in 1791 and he was the only one of Robert and Eleanor Pinsent’s sons to have children of his own. His life is described elsewhere.

Handwritten entry describing Mr. Robert Pinsent, age 63, as buried on May 18th.
Robert Pinsent is buried on May 18, 1783.

When Robert Pinsent “senior” died in 1783, his eldest son, also called Robert Pinsent, might have been expected to inherit the family “serge cloth sales business”; however, he did not do so. He died three years later, so perhaps he was not fit enough to do so. It fell to Robert “senior’s” daughter Eleanor to pay the land tax and run the business (Bailey’s British Directories 1784). She did so until she married John Adams in 1788.  He, presumably, took over the business. It passed out of the family.


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Thomas Pinsent: 1657 – 1696
Grandmother: Ann Waters: xxxx – xxxx

Parents

Father: Thomas Pinsent: 1691 – 1777
Mother: Mary Gale: 1690 – 1774

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Susannah Pinsent: 1678 – xxxx
(?) Simon Pinsent: xxxx – 1744
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1682 – xxxx
Thomas Pinsent: 1684 – 1685
Ann Pinsent: 1686 – xxxx
Thomas Pinsent: 1691 – 1777 ✔️
Robert Pinsent: 1693 – xxxx
Unknown Pinsent: 1696 – 1696
Unknown Pinsent: 1696 – 1696

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Thomas Pinsent: 1717 – 1802
Robert Pinsent: 1721 – 1783 ✔️
Gilbert Pinsent: 1724 – 1794
John Pinsent: 1728 – 1772


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Robert Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1753
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1787

Family Branch: Hennock
PinsentID: GRO1171

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Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Thomas Pinsent: 1691 – 1777
Grandmother: Mary Gale: 1690 – 1774

Parents

Father: John Pinsent: 1728 – 1772
Mother: Susanna Pooke: 1730 – 1772

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Urith Pinsent: 1714 – 1751
Thomas Pinsent: 1717 – 1802
Julian Pinsent: 1719 – 1721
Robert Pinsent: 1721 – 1783
Gilbert Pinsent: 1724 – 1794
Julian Pinsent: 1726 – xxxx
John Pinsent: 1728 – 1772 ✔️
Mary Pinsent: 1731 – xxxx

Male Siblings (Brothers)

John Pinsent: 1751 – 1753
John Pinsent: 1753 – 1821
Robert Pinsent: 1753 – 1787 ✔️
Thomas Pinsent: 1754 – 1785
William Pinsent: 1757 – 1835
Gilbert Pinsent: 1758 – 1835
Charles Pinsent: 1765 – 1765
Charles Pinsent: 1766 – 1826
Samuel Pinsent: 1767 – 1775
Joseph Pinsent: 1770 – 1835


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Robert Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1693
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: N/A

Family Branch: Hennock
PinsentID: GRO1796

For more information, see his father Thomas Pinsent of Slade.


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Thomas Pinsent: 1633 – 1701
Grandmother: Julian Wilmeade: xxxx – xxxx

Parents

Father: Thomas Pinsent: 1657 – 1696
Mother: Ann Waters: xxxx – xxxx

Male Siblings (Brothers)

(?) Simon Pinsent: xxxx – 1744
Thomas Pinsent: 1684 – 1685
Thomas Pinsent: 1691 – 1777
Robert Pinsent: 1693 – xxxx ✔️
Unknown Pinsent: 1696 – 1696
Unknown Pinsent: 1696 – 1696


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Robert Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1758
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: N/A

Family Branch: Hennock
PinsentID: GRO1340

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Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Thomas Pinsent: 1691 – 1777
Grandmother: Mary Gale: 1690 – 1774

Parents

Father: Gilbert Pinsent: 1724 – 1794
Mother: Rebecca Collins: 1719 – 1788

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Urith Pinsent: 1714 – 1751
Thomas Pinsent: 1717 – 1802
Julian Pinsent: 1719 – 1721
Robert Pinsent: 1721 – 1783
Gilbert Pinsent: 1724 – 1794 ✔️
Julian Pinsent: 1726 – xxxx
John Pinsent: 1728 – 1772
Mary Pinsent: 1731 – xxxx

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Gilbert Pinsent: 1748 – 1748
Robert Pinsent: 1758 – xxxx ✔️


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Pamela Gertrude Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1917
Marriage: 1948 (approximate)
Spouse: Robert F. Horwood
Death: 1999

Family Branch: Hennock
PinsentID: GRO1163

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Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Charles Speare Pinsent: 1838 – 1914
Grandmother: Blanche Brown: 1850 – 1918

Parents

Father: Earl Speare Pinsent: 1887 – 1958
Mother: Augusta Beatrix Dickinson: 1885 – 1937

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Constance Douglas Pinsent: 1884 – 1927
Eleanor Vicars Pinsent: 1886 – 1898
Earl Speare Pinsent: 1887 – 1958 ✔️
Frances Isobel Pinsent: 1890 – 1987

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Charles Douglas Pinsent: 1919 – 1953


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