Alfred Edwin Hope Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1906
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1907

Family Branch: Bristol
PinsentID: GRO0022


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: William Henry John Pinsent: 1841 – 1923
Grandmother: Louisa Broad: 1837 – 1926

PARENTS

Father: Edwin John Pinsent: 1868 – 1949
Mother: Emily Mary Vowles: 1877 – 1912

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

William Henry Thiery Pinsent: 1865 – 1915
Louisa Pinsent: 1867 – 1936
George Pinsent: 1870 – 1890
Alfred James Pinsent: 1872 – 1873
Emilie Marie Eugenie Pinsent: 1873 – 1959
Josephine Pinsent: 1876 – 1952
Lana Florence Mary Pinsent: 1878 – 1879
Alfred Louie Pinsent: 1880 – 1944
Beatrice Rose Pinsent: 1882 – 1959
Sidney Pinsent: 1883 – 1947

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS, Half-Brothers)

Eric Henry Edwin Pinsent: 1896 – 1959
Leslie Donald Pinsent: 1900 – 1972
Samuel Claude Pinsent: 1904 – 1988
Alfred Edwin Hope Pinsent: 1906 – 1907

Ronald Leslie Pinsent: 1926 – 2007
Cyril Edwin Pinsent: 1928 – 2003


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Albert John Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Albert John Pinsent: 1882 – 1928 GRO0015 (“Sergeant” in Devon Regiment and “clay cutter” in Newton Abbot, Devon)

Hilda Maude Brimblecombe: 1891 – 1925
Married: 1912: Newton Abbot, Devon

Children by Hilda Maude Brimblecombe:

William Edwin Pinsent: 1912 – 1985 (Married Agnes Foster, Llanaber, Merionethshire, 1940)
Alfred John Richard Pinsent: 1914 – 1920
Harriet Hilda Priscilla Pinsent: 1916 – 1997 (Married Ronald Patrick Nicholls, Newton Abbot, Devon, 1943)
Wallace Frederick Pinsent: 1920 – 2004 (Married Audrey Ivy Beckett, Sompting, Sussex, 1946)
Winifred May Brimblecombe Pinsent: 1921 – xxxx (Married Stanley Frederick Castle, Winchester, Hampshire, 1947)
Daughter (GRO0587)

Family Branch: Bristol
PinsentID: GRO0015

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Albert John Pinsent was the second son of John Pinsent by his wife, Ann Paddon. He had one brother and four surviving sisters, all but one of whom were born in or around Bovey Tracey between 1874 and 1894. The 1911 census refers to a second brother, “Willie”, who would have been born around 1900. Similarly, Wallace and “Willie” Pinsent were said to be Florence Annie Pinsent’s brothers, and among the chief mourners when she died in 1918 (Western Times: Friday 22nd March 1918). However, I think it unlikely that he was their brother. “Willie” was probably Florence’s illegitimate nephew William Henry Pinsent (the son of Ada Pinsent) who was the right age and could, logically, have been brought up in the family as another son. This branch of the family was strongly embedded in the pottery and brick making industries and illegitimate children were all too common.

John and Ann were living apart when the 1891 census was taken. Albert and several of his siblings were living with their mother in Ilsington parish – where their grandfather (John Pinsent) came from. He was said to be a “scholar,” so he had some education before being sent out to work. The next census, which was taken in 1901, shows that he was a “coal slacker” living with his family at “#16 South View” in Bovey Tracey. The presence of low-quality coal and lignite, and brick and pottery-grade clay deposits in a geological formation known as the “Bovey Beds” had been known for quite some time, and the village of Bovey Tracey had grown into a major brick and pottery-producing centre. This was particularly so since the arrival of the railway, in 1866. A “slacker” was expected to sort through fine coal and removed clay particles before it was shoveled into a furnace. He was probably either employed at one of the coal pits or a brick works. His father was a “labourer” in a brick-works. Perhaps they worked together.

Albert and his brother Wallace were most likely, the A. and W. Pinsent who played cricket for Bovey Tracy in 1901. Unfortunately, they were not formally identified and there were quite a few Pinsents around at the time. Evidently, in a match against “White, Chatton and Co.” (a household furnishing firm in Torquay) in June 1901, “A special word of praise is (was) due to A. Pinsent who captured 4 wickets for 7 runs, and brought off the hat trick. … The home team on going in looked like winning the match with very little difficulty, Staddon and Carpenter scoring at a great pace. … The only other batsman on the home side, with the exception of the two already named, to make any stand against Davey’s bowling was W. Pinsent who played very carefully for 10” (Torquay Times, and South Devon Advertiser: Friday 7th June 1901). The two of them played together several times that month.

Albert’s playing career was, however, to be ended by a long stints in the army and he dropped out of the team. However, he seems to have played a few games for the Chudleigh 2nd XI. His team beat the Bovey 2nd XI in June 1910 (no mention of his brother). “A Pinsent” scored 36 (out of a total of 107) for Chudleigh and also took two wickets for 11 runs – which is not bad at all (South Devon Weekly Express: Friday 24th June 1910).

Albert was nineteen years old when he joined the army in February 1902. He initially signed on for six years with the “Devonshire Royal Artillery” as a “gunner.” This was a militia unit and thus restricted to near-home service. His attestation papers tell us that he was single when he joined, he had not been apprenticed and he had no previous military experience. He had, however, worked as a “labourer” for a Mr. Robinson in Bovey Tracey. Albert was living (presumably lodging) on Waterloo Avenue in Ford, near Devonport when he signed up. He was 5 ft. 8 ½ in. tall, weighted 134 lbs., had a chest that expanded from 32 to 34 ins., a dark complexion, brown eyes and dark brown hair. Otherwise, he had no particular distinguishing features. Albert named his father, John, and his brother Wallace (who lived on Fore Street in Bovey Tracey) as his next of kin.

Albert later transferred to a main-line unit, the “Royal Garrison Artillery” (Royal Regiment of Artillery), for an extended term that could amount to seven years abroad, and after that five years in the reserves. “Gunner” Albert John Pinsent [#10516] finished his basic training on 23rd March 1902 and served at home for almost a year before being sent to Gibraltar, where he served from 4th February 1903 to the 9th November 1903. While there, he passed his proficiency tests for “dial reading and gun-laying” (13th June, 1903). The unit transferred to Malta on 10th November 1903. While there, he served with “99 Coy. R.G.A.”. He remained with the unit until 20th October 1908.

On 16th July 1904 Albert agreed to extend his service to eight years, and was granted the “1st G.C. Badge” a week later. However, he was to commit the unpardonable crime of striking a superior officer on 11th November 1907 and resist the military escort when it was sent to apprehend him! I suspect alcohol was involved. He was sentenced to 72 days detention but was released somewhat sooner, on 26th November. The next day he was posted as “duty gunner” which was probably not a coveted assignment. Needless to say, he forfeited his badge.

Albert suffered several fairly prolonged bouts of sickness while in Malta. He suffered from gonorrhea for 47 days in January 1904, from some sort of fever for 11 days in July 1905. Worse still, he had “Mediterranean fever” – whatever that was – for 106 days starting in January 1906. There was also a case of syphilis for 43 days in July 1908. Albert was shipped home on 21st October 1908. He still had several years of service still to run; however, it may have been in a reserve unit on an “on-demand” basis. Attestation for Militia: [WO 96/1328/45 – Militia Attestation: Devon Artillery Western Division: R.G. A.) [Findmypast.com]. He was finally released from service on 23rd March 1914 (after serving his twelve years) .

Albert was an experienced soldier and only 33 years old when the “First World War” started, so he seems to have re-enlisted. Sergeant Albert Pinsent, of the “Devon Regiment” [#2415] and of the “Machine Gun Corps: M.G.C.” [#61145] was awarded the Victory and British Medals (Roll MGC/101 page 3587); and also the Star Medal (MGC/15c, page 1962) for his war service (British Army WWI Medal Rolls Index Cards: 1914-1920: Ancestry.com). Why he chose not to re-join the “Royal Artillery”, I do not know. He saw action in “Theatre 3” (Russia, Balkans (?)) on 15th September 1915 (National Archives WO 372/16).

Back in England after the war, Albert went back to being a “labourer” in one of the clay works near Bovey Tracey. He lived on Exmouth Street in Chudleigh and took part in the town’s Coronation Festivities in 1911. He was part of that “splendid band of the Ugbrooke Royal Rumfloozlers. The band was organized by Mr. Searle and was headed by two grotesque banner bearers (Messrs. J. Nixon and A. Pinsent). All those taking part were in comic costume. “ (Western Devon Weekly Express: Friday 23rd June 1911). It must have made quite an impression!

Albert married Hilda Maude Brimblecombe in Wolborough (Newton Abbot) in April 1912. They married by banns. Why Albert named his father as “William John” Pinsent and not just “John” Pinsent I am not sure. Perhaps his father used “William John” to differentiate himself from  his father (Albert’s grandfather) another John Pinsent. He lied about his age too. Why, I have no idea. Hilda signed “by mark,” so had had little or no schooling.

Albert and Hilda had had four children by the time the census-takers came by in 1921; however, one had died young. The record shows that Albert was a “clay digger” employed by Mr. Fox at the “Devon and Courtney Clay Company.” He lived in a fairy large house on “Victoria Place” in Newton Abbot that he shared with the Petty Johns family. The Electoral Registers (1920-1932) tell us that John and Hilda lived at “#29 Victoria Street” in Chudleigh in Wolborough (Newton Abbot) district between 1922 and 1925. Hilda had six children in all, however, she died of an embolism following the birth of the last, in 1925. Albert John never remarried. He hardly had time too! He himself died in “Newton Abbot Hospital” in March 1928. He was a “clay-works labourer” and only 45 years old . What happened to the children when he died, I am not sure. However, most of them survived.

Albert and Hilda’s eldest son William Edwin and their third son, Wallace Frederick Pinsent both married in the 1940s. Interestingly, William Edwin described his father as being a “sergeant major” When he married. Perhaps he was.  However, when Wallace was born in 1920, his father was said to be a “clay-works labourer and ex-Sergeant in the Devon Regiment.”  William Edwin and Wallace Frederick’s lives are described elsewhere. Albert and Hilda’s three daughters married during or after the Second World War and they may well have families throughout the country.


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: John Pinsent: 1823 – 1902
Grandmother: Elizabeth Loveys: 1817 -1884

PARENTS

Father: John Pinsent: 1852 – 1917
Mother: Ann Paddon: 1849 – 1922

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

Emily Pinsent: 1850 – 1857
John Pinsent: 1852 – 1917
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1854 – xxxx
Anne Pinsent: 1856 – 1857
Anne Pinsent: 1858 – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1860 – 1936
Laura Emily Pinsent: 1863 – 1868

Illegitimate: Jane Ann Mead Pinsent: 1845 – 1914

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

Wallace Pinsent: 1877 – 1955
Albert John Pinsent: 1882 – 1928


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Albert George Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Albert George Pinsent: 1907 – 1976 GRO0013 (Quarryman and electrical engineer in Chudleigh, Devon)

Bessie Edith Froom: 1908 – 1988
Married: 1927: Newton Abbot, Devon

Children by Bessie Edith Froom:

Douglas George Pinsent: 1927 – 1993 (Married Joyce Hamilton, Exeter, Devon, 1957)
Daughter (GRO0147)
Audrey Edith Pinsent: 1937 – 2010 (Married Michael John Lentern, Chudlleigh, Devon, 1956)
Kenneth Edgar Pinsent: 1943 – 2019 (Married (1) Wife (GRO1521); (2) Wife (GRO1522); (3) Wife (GRO1523); (4) Wife (GRO1552))
Daughter (GRO0726)

Family Branch: Bristol
PinsentID: GRO0013

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Albert George Pinsent was the illegitimate son of Lily Blanche Pinsent, who was the daughter of John Pinsent and Ann (née Paddon). He born, at the “Newton Abbot Workhouse” on 16th July and baptized in Newton Abbot on 2nd August 1907 (Devon Social & Institutional Records). The 1911 census records show that he grew up in Chudleigh with his grandparent and his mother Lily Blanche who working nearby “in (domestic) service”. The Pinsent household also included several of his uncles and aunts and his cousin “Willie” (William Henry Pinsent) who was the illegitimate son of his aunt Ada Pinsent. William was about seven years older than George. Their grandparents appear to have treated them as extra sons. The boys both went to school in Chudleigh. They may have attended “Pynsent’s Free School” an institution founded by a rich lawyer (Prothonotary of the Court of Common Pleas in Westminster) in 1668. Sadly, it closed in 1913 and the community needs were then met by state schools.

Albert George became a “stone quarryman” in his teens and then married Bessie Edith Froom a “domestic servant” whose father, George, was a “clay worker” in one of the local pits. He may have worked alongside Albert’s grandfather. Most of the Pinsent family were either in “domestic service” or somehow connected with the clay industry. There were both brick and pottery works. Albert and Bessie married in Newton Abbot Registry Office in June 1927. They had two sons and three daughters in the years that followed. The children grew up in Chudleigh and later married so the family line probably continues.

The Electoral Rolls show that Albert and Bessie lived on Woodway Street in Chudleigh in the early 1930s. The England and Wales Register compiled in 1939 shows that Bessie was living at “#52 Old Way”, Newton Abbot, immediately next door to her parents – Mr. George and Edith L. Froom. Her two eldest children were both “at school”. Her husband, Albert George, meanwhile, had signed up at the outset of the “Second World War” and he was a “military policeman” when his youngest son was born in 1943. He had left the army by 1946 and was a “railway employee” when his youngest daughter was born. Albert George Pinsent was designated an “electrical engineer” when his children started to marry in the late 1950s and the 1960s. Their eldest son, Douglas George Pinsent died in 1993 and his life is described elsewhere. Their younger was considerably younger than his brother and he may still living.

Albert George Pinsent died in Trafford in Cheshire in the spring of 1976. His widow, Bessie, stayed in Chudleigh. Telephone Directories show that she was there from 1980 until at least 1983. Her death was registered in Newton Abbot in April 1988.


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: John Pinsent: 1852 – 1917
Grandmother: Ann Paddon: 1849 – 1922

PARENTS

Father: Unknown: xxxx – xxxx
Mother: Lily Blanche Pinsent: 1887 – xxxx

Mother’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

Laura Ann Pinsent: 1874 – 1940
Wallace Pinsent: 1877 – 1955
Ada Pinsent: 1880 – 1959
Albert John Pinsent: 1882 – 1928
Florence Annie Pinsent: 1885 – 1918
Beatrice May Pinsent: 1894 – 1894


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Ada Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1880
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1959

Family Branch: Bristol
PinsentID: GRO0005


Ada had an illegitimate son, William Henry Pinsent.


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: John Pinsent: 1823 – 1902
Grandmother: Elizabeth Loveys: 1817 -1884

PARENTS

Father: John Pinsent: 1852 – 1917
Mother: Ann Paddon: 1849 – 1922

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

Emily Pinsent: 1850 – 1857
John Pinsent: 1852 – 1917
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1854 – xxxx
Anne Pinsent: 1856 – 1857
Anne Pinsent: 1858 – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1860 – 1936
Laura Emily Pinsent: 1863 – 1868

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

Wallace Pinsent: 1877 – 1955
Albert John Pinsent: 1882 – 1928


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Abraham Pinson

Vital Statistics

Abraham Pinsent: 1787 – 1871: GRO0001 (Agricultural labourer, Chudleigh, Devon)

1. Mary Willmiton: xxxx – xxxx
Married: 1819: Dawlish, Devon

2. Anne Unknown: 1795 – 1870
Married: xxxx: xxxx, xxxx

Children by Anne Unknown:

Joseph Cook Pinsent: 1832 – xxxx
Thomas Pinsent: 1834 – 1917 (Married Mary Gilley, 1868, Newton Abbot, Devon)

Family Branch: Bristol
PinsentID: GRO0001

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Abraham Pinson (or Pinsent as he was later known) was the son of Richard Pinson by his wife Elizabeth (née Gregory’s). He was born in Lustleigh, in Devon, in around 1787 but was not baptized until 1794. He came from a Baptist family, which may account for the discrepancy. He was baptized in the local parish church in 1794. Abraham’s apprenticeship, census and death records provide birth dates ranging from 1787 to 1796. He was said to be 84 years old when he died, so I have assigned his birth date to 1787.

Abraham’s father was an “agricultural labourer” who married in 1775 and had ten children (including six boys) in the years that followed.  What happened to three of his brothers (Thomas Pinson, William Pinson and Joseph Pinson) is not entirely clear. Thomas may have died in infancy; however William and Joseph were apprenticed out. They either died relatively young or disappeared into the wider population of “Pinsons” in the early 1800s. However, two of Abraham’s brothers (Richard Pinson and Joseph Pinsent) did grow to maturity. Their lives are discussed elsewhere. Abraham had four sisters but only two can be accounted for.

It was common practice for the sons and daughters of labourers in rural parishes to be apprenticed out to local farmers while there were still quite young, and Lustleigh’s “Apprentice Registers” tell us that Abraham was apprenticed out to a Mr. John Cole to work at “East Fursden” in 1801. From there, he went to Mr. John Wills of Lustleigh for a few months in 1804. Presumably both were for agricultural work. The Wills family owned several farms in the area and apprenticed several of Richard’s children.

Abraham “Pinson” appears to have married Mary Willmiton in Dawlish (on the South Coast of Devon) in 1819. They were both “sojourners” in the parish (i.e. visitors), which tells that neither had any particular affiliation with the place. Unfortunately, the records do not say where they were from. They married by banns with both of them signing “by mark”. There was a Mary “Willmington” born in Dalwood in Eastern Devon in 1804. Perhaps she was a youngster who had eloped.

I can find no further mention or Mary so she may have died shortly thereafter.  Abraham “Pinsent” reappears sometime later (in the early 1830s) as an “agricultural labourer” living in Chudleigh with his (second?) wife Anne (née Unknown). The transition from “Pinson” to “Pinsent” is easily explicable as Abraham was illiterate and the people around him must have been well aware of the “Pinsent” family. Several branches farmed in the neighbourhood and one owned a brewery in Highweek that supplied beer to at least one of the pubs in Chudleigh!

Chudleigh was Anne’s hometown and she must have seen it ravaged by fire in 1807. Perhaps they landed up there because of the family connection. Abraham and Ann had two sons, Joseph Cook Pinsent and Thomas Pinsent in Chudleigh in January 1832 and July 1834 respectively. I this case there was no delay in their baptism. They were baptized by a dissenting minister in the “Independent Chapel” (England and Wales, Non Conformist and Non-Parochial Registers: Chudleigh Independent: 1711 – 1837: Ancestry.com). Joseph probably died young, so Abraham and Anne only had Thomas with them when the Census takers made their rounds in 1841. The family had moved to Culver Street and taken in a lodger by the time they returned in 1851. Thomas had moved out by 1861; however, Abraham and Anne were still there and they still had a lodger with them. Thomas was later to return to the parish (see elsewhere).

Abraham was called to provide evidence in case of “common assault” brought before the magistrates at Chudleigh Petty Sessions in August 1866. Apparently, he witness an argument between one of his neighbours, Elizabeth Godbeer and her brother, Mr. James Godbeer, who was visiting from Torquay. Apparantly, Mr. Godbeer had an on-going dispute with his sister and her husband over their right of access to property in Chudleigh that he owned. He claimed that she used foul language and, without any provocation, struck him in the face with a lock. Abraham agreed. However, The magistrates saw it as a domestic matter and they were happy to dismiss the case (Western Times: Friday 31st August 1966).

Anne Pinsent died in Chudleigh in 1870 and Abraham Pinsent of Culver Street, Chudleigh followed a year later, dying, apparently at the age of 84 years, in 1871.


Family Tree

PARENTS

Father: Richard Pinson: 1745 – 1825
Mother: Elizabeth Gregory: 1748 – 1837

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

Thomas Pinson: 1776 – xxxx
Richard Pinson: 1778 – 1868
John Pinson: 1782 – 1849
William Pinson: 1784 – xxxx
Joseph Pinson: 1788 – xxxx


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Elizabeth Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1836
Marriage: 1864
Spouse: Edward Thomas Potter Rose
Death: N/A

Family Branch: Bristol
PinsentID: GRO1285


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: John Pinson: 1782 – 1849
Grandmother: Mary Follett: 1782 – 1859

PARENTS

Father: William Pinsent: 1811 – 1879
Mother: Sarah Eales: xxxx – xxxx

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

Ann Pinson: 1809 – 1862
Elizabeth Pinson: 1814 – xxxx
John Pinsent: 1817 – 1819
Joseph Pinson: 1819 – 1881
Sarah Pinson: 1821 – 1886
John Pinsent: 1823 – 1902
James Pinsent: 1825 – 1886
Samuel Pinson: 1828 – 1833
Thomas Pinson: 1830 – 1832

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS, Half-brothers)

Thomas James Pinsent: 1833 – 1915

William Henry John Pinsent: 1841 – 1923
Sidney Pinsent: 1846 – 1880
Alfred James Pinsent: 1847 – 1848


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