John Michael Pinsent

Vital Statistics

John Michael Pinsent: 1930 – 2004 GRO0527 (xxxx, xxxx)

Joan Margaret Wilson: 1932 – 2016
Married: 1966: Birmingham, Warwickshire

Children by Joan M. Wilson:

Daughter (GRO1000)
Son (GRO1001)

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0527

References

Newspapers


John Michael was the only son of Harold West Pinsent by his wife, Lilian Mary (née Kirk). He was born in Leicester in 1930 and grew up in Ilkley in Yorkshire where his father managed a leather works. He was, evidently, artistic and he entered at least one of his paintings in “Ilkley Arts Club’s” annual show in 1950. The Bradford Observer’s correspondent noted “Joan Day’s “canal” has more warmth, richness and spaciousness than its title, and John M. Pinsent shows a spirit of adventure, while G. N. Rotheray has some good tones in a modest water colour. …” (Bradford Observer: Wednesday 25th October 1950).

John Michael was still with his parents when they moved to Bramscote Hills, in Nottingham, later in the 1950s and the family announced his engagement to Jean F. Nelson in the autumn of 1956 (Liverpool Echo: Thursday 29th November 1956); however, I can find no evidence that they married.

John Michael married Joan M. Wilson, in Birmingham in 1966 (Nottingham Evening Post: Thursday 27th October 1966). Joan finished her nurse’s training at “Guy’s Hospital” in London the following August (U.K. and Ireland Nursing Registers: 1898-1968). What John Michael did for a living, I am not sure. The couple seem to have had at least two children, a son and a daughter while living in Birmingham in the early 1960s. They are probably alive today. John Michael died in Reddich, Worcestershire, in 2004 and his wife died in Bodmin, Cornwall, in 2016. 


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Adrian Pinsent: 1864 – 1945
Grandmother: Hannah West: 1865 – 1934

Parents

Father: Harold West Pinsent: 1900 – 1962
Mother: Lilian Mary Kirk: 1902 – 1977

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Arthur Pinsent: 1888 – 1978
Doris Mabel Pinsent: 1897 – 1898
Harold West Pinsent:  1900 – 1962


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John Henry Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1858
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1861

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0522


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: Thomas Pinsent: 1795 – 1860
Grandmother: Hannah Johnson: 1800 – 1871

PARENTS

Father: John Pinsent: 1836 – 1899
Mother: Elizabeth Johnson: 1837 – 1909

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

Fanny Pinsent: 1820 – 1880
William Pinsent: 1822 – xxxx
Thomas Pinsent: 1824 – 1831
Caroline Pinsent: 1825 – 1864
James Pinsent: 1831 – 1902
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1833 – 1833
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1833 – xxxx
Henry Pinsent: 1838 – 1846
George Pinsent: 1839 – 1857
Charles Pinsent: 1842 – 1882

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

Thomas Johnson Pinsent: 1856 – 1925
John Henry Pinsent: 1858 – 1861
George Pinsent: 1861 – 1932
John Arthur Pinsent: 1869 – 1930
Henry Pinsent: 1871 – 1939
William Horace Pinsent: 1874 – 1876
Horace Pinsent: 1879 – 1949


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John Harry Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1892
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: N/A

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0521


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: John Pinsent: 1836 – 1899
Grandmother: Elizabeth Johnson: 1837 – 1909

Parents

Father: Henry Pinsent: 1871 – 1939
Mother: Elizabeth Phillis: 1872 – 1913

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Sarah Jane Pinsent: 1855 – 1855
Thomas Johnson Pinsent: 1856 – 1925
John Henry Pinsent: 1858 – 1861
George Pinsent: 1861 – 1932
Eliza Pinsent: 1863 – xxxx
Louisa Pinsent: 1865 – 1945
Ada Pinsent: 1867 – xxxx
John Arthur Pinsent: 1869 – 1930
Henry Pinsent: 1871 – 1939
William Horace Pinsent: 1874 – 1876
Horace Pinsent: 1879 – 1949

Male Siblings (Brothers, Half-Brothers)

John Harry Pinsent: 1892 – xxxx
Vincent Horace Pinsent: 1893 – 1893
Arthur Ellis Pinsent: 1895 – 1895
Harry Pinsent: 1896 – 1957
Horace Pinsent: 1897 – 1898
Jack Pinsent: 1899 – 1899
George Pinsent: 1901 – 1902

John Pinsent: 1911 – xxxx


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John Holt Pinsent

Vital Statistics

John Holt Pinsent: 1904 – 1970 GRO0524

Florence May Haywood: 1905 – 1989
Married: 1929
: Leicester, Leicestershire

Children by Florence May Haywood:

Daughter (GRO0619)
Stephen Pinsent: 1946 – 2009

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0524

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John Holt Pinsent was the eldest son of Horace Pinsent by his wife, Eveline Maud (née Holt). He was born in Leicester and grew up on Tudor Street with three sisters  (Kathleen, Eveline Mary and Beatrice Margaret Pinsent) and two younger brothers (James Leonard and Thomas William Pinsent). 

John followed his father into the shoe business and was a “shoe hand” when he married Florence May Haywood in 1929. They had two children, a daughter who arrived shortly after they married and a late son (Stephen Pinsent) who was born in 1946. 

Stephen married Janet Harriman (née Freer) in 1987. He would have been forty-one years old at the time. I am and not aware of his having had an earlier marriage. Janet certainly had: on-line trees (Ancestery.com) suggest she brought several Harriman children into the marriage. Stephen and Janet likely had at least one son of their own. 

Janet Pinsent (née Freer) died in Leicester in May 2008 (Staffordshire Sentinel: 15th May 2008) and her husband Stephen died there the following year (Leicester Mercury: 19th January 2009).  

In the 1930s, John Holt Pinsent was still working in the boot and shoe industry. He went to live with his “in-laws” on Beatrice Street in Leicester, and by the time the War-time Register came to be compiled in 1939, he was living with his wife Florence, his widowed mother-in-law, and one of her sons, James William Haywood (a “boot and shoe worker”). Mr. Haywood married John’s sister Eveline Mary Pinsent later that year. John Holt signed up as an “Air Raid Warden” and his experiences in wartime may explain why he switched to nursing when it ended. The Register shows one closed (redacted) record attached to the household. This was probably John Holt and Florence’s daughter. She would have been a schoolgirl at the time.  

The family stayed on in Leicester after the war. John took nurses training in London and received his qualifications in 1950 (U.K. & Ireland Nursing Register: 1898 – 1968: Ancestry.com). 

John Holt Pinsent died in Leicester in 1970, and his widow died there in 1989.


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: John Pinsent: 1836 – 1899
Grandmother: Elizabeth Johnson: 1837 – 1909

Parents

Father: Horace Pinsent: 1879 – 1949
Mother: Eveline Maud Holt: 1879 – 1946

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

Sarah Jane Pinsent: 1855 – 1855
Thomas Johnson Pinsent: 1856 – 1925
John Henry Pinsent: 1858 – 1861
George Pinsent: 1861 – 1932
Eliza Pinsent: 1863 – xxxx
Louisa Pinsent: 1865 – 1945
Ada Pinsent: 1867 – xxxx
John Arthur Pinsent: 1869 – 1930
Henry Pinsent: 1871 – 1939
William Horace Pinsent: 1874 – 1876

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

James Leonard Pinsent: 1908 – 1978
Thomas William Pinsent: 1912 – 1986


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John Arthur Pinsent

Vital Statistics

John Arthur Pinsent: 1875 – 1942 GRO0516 (Shoe finisher, Leicester)

Ada Soloman: 1876 – 1949
Married: Leicester, Leicestershire: 1895

Children by Ada Soloman

Joseph Pinsent: 1895 – 1896
Frank Pinsent: 1896 – 1899
Samuel Thomas Pinsent: 1897 – 1898
Thomas Johnson Pinsent: 1905 – 1906

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0516

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John Arthur was the eldest son of Thomas Johnson Pinsent and Sarah Ann (née Ellis). He was born in Leicester in 1875 and was seven years old when his mother died. His father married Caroline Chaplin (née Deakin) and John Arthur and his siblings were most likely brought up alongside her son, Robert E. (Chaplin) “Pinsent”.  John Arthur was a troubled boy. He stole a pair of boots (valued at 3s 6d) from a pawnbroker in 1885 and tried to pawn them to another the same day. The latter turned him in. When apprehended, John Arthur said: “I was told to take them.” True or not, he was sentenced to receive six strokes from a birch rod  and his father was told to keep an eye on him (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 28th November 1885).

John Arthur Pinsent ran away from home in 1889 and was one of five “Bad Boys” charged with sleeping in a barn on Meadow Road, in Derby. The boys frequented the Recreational Ground – playing cards and throwing stones. In court, their defense was that they came from wretched homes and for some of them their parents were in jail (Long Eaton Advertiser: Saturday 27th July 1889). The Magistrates decided to send John Arthur to an “industrial school” until he was sixteen years old, which probably explains why he was away from home when the census takers called on his father in 1891 (Derby Mercury: Wednesday 31st July 1889). After serving his term, John Arthur returned to Leicester and settled down as a “shoe machine operator;” however, he was up before the Leicester magistrates a few years later and fined 5s for gaming on Brandon Street (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 27th July 1895). This was a matter of weeks before he married Ada Solomon; the daughter of a “coachbuilder”. 

John Arthur and Ada had four sons (Joseph, Frank, Samuel Thomas and Thomas Johnson Pinsent); however none of them survived for more that a year of so.  Frank Pinsent died by accident from shock caused by scalding. Apparently he had been left in the care of his great-grandmother, Elizabeth Pinsent (née Johnson) and had fallen backwards into a pot of hot water while she was out of the room (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 18th November 1899). The 1911 Census shows that John Arthur and Ada were both active in the shoe trade, and that they had adopted a son, Joseph Harry Robertson. The family lived on the Loughborough Road.

John Arthur was over forty years old when he, perhaps surprisingly, signed up for active service in December 1915. On enlistment, he gave his wife’s name as Ada Pinsent and his home address as 24 Shirley Street. He was said to be 5 feet 3.5 inches tall and 106 lbs in weighed. He had a fair complexion and brown hair and eyes. As for distinguishing features, he had a scar on his left thumb from an old injury. He was a shoemaker, after all! And he had the letter “J” tattooed on his right forearm. Private John Arthur Pinsent [Regimental Number #35715] was assigned to the “Royal Veterinary Corp” and placed on reserve as a horse-keeper at Aldershot Barracks in May 1918. Like so many others, he was discharged back into civilian life in March 1919 (British Army WWI Service Records: 1914-1920).    

After the war, John Arthur rejoined Ada in Shirley Road and re-entered the shoe trade. The Electoral Rolls show that John Arthur and Ada lived there throughout the 1920s and 1930s. When the census takers came by in 1921, John was was an “edge setter in a boot and shoe works” employed by “Joe Green and Sons Limited, Boot Manufacturer” of Ash Street. Ada was also working outside of the house; she was a “machinist in a boot and shoe works” employed by “Woollerton Griffen and Co., Boot and Shoe Manufacturers” of Willow Street. Their nineteen years old adopted son, Joseph Harry Robertson, was also in the shoe trade. He was a “laster” employed by “Wilson” on Clyde Street. John and Ada and were still living on Shirley Road when the War-time Register was compiled in 1939. They had both long since retired. John Arthur died in Leicester in 1942 and Ada succumbed in 1949. They had no surviving children. 


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: John Pinsent: 1836 – 1899
Grandmother: Elizabeth Johnson: 1837 – 1909

PARENTS

Father: Thomas Johnson Pinsent: 1856 – 1925
Mother: Sarah Ann Ellis: 1858 – 1882

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

Sarah Jane Pinsent: 1855 – 1855
John Henry Pinsent: 1858 – 1861
George Pinsent: 1861 – 1932
Eliza Pinsent: 1863 – xxxx
Louisa Pinsent: 1865 – 1945
Ada Pinsent: 1867 – xxxx
John Arthur Pinsent: 1869 – 1930
Henry Pinsent: 1871 – 1939
William Horace Pinsent: 1874 – 1876
Horace Pinsent: 1879 – 1949

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

John Arthur Pinsent: 1875 – 1942 ✔️
Harry Pinsent: 1877 – 1905


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John Arthur Pinsent

Vital Statistics

John Arthur Pinsent: 1869 – 1930 GRO0515

Harriet Hunt: 1868 – 1933
Married: 1891: Leicester, Leicestershire

Children by Harriet Hunt*: 

Ethel May Pinsent: 1892 – xxxx
Horace Pinsent: 1893 – 1913

*Harriet’s illegitimate child:  Ernest “Pinsent”: 1889 – 1966

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0515

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John Arthur was the third of John Pinsent and Elizabeth (née Johnson’s) five family-producing sons. He was born in Leicester where his father was a “finisher” in the shoe trade. John Arthur joined his father in the same business after leaving school; however, as his father also ran a shop on the Birstall Road in the 1870s and took over the management of the “Sir Robert Peel” beer house in the 1880s, he doubtless learned those trades too. He was also to run a beer house.

When he was thirteen years old, John Arthur had his pocketknife stolen while at the public baths in Leicester. This led to a twelve years-old lad, Arthur Potterton, being charged with stealing it. He claimed he found it on the floor and intended to try and find it’s owner. The Magistrate was not convinced but he did admit that “the boy had shown considerable ingenuity in his defense” (Hinckley News: Saturday 4th August 1883). John got his knife back and Arthur was discharged in to his father care to “administer the necessary correction” (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 4th August 1883). I leave that to your imagination.

John Arthur Pinsent married Harriet Hunt in Leicester in 1891. She was a “reeler” – presumably in one of the textile industries. They had two children, a daughter Ethel May in 1892, and a son Horace Pinsent, in 1893. They were probably a Methodist family, and Ethel took part in a tea and concert put on by the young ladies of the church (chapel) in 1911 (Leicester Daily Post: Tuesday 14th November 1911). She was later to become a “hosiery machinist ” and marry Alfred Ladkin, an “engineer,” in 1918. Her brother Horace Pinsent never married. He committed suicide in 1913. 

Harriet (née Hunt) seems to have brought an illegitimate son into the marriage. Ernest “Pinsent” was born in 1889, two years before John Arthur and Harriet married. He could have been John Arthur’s child. Certainly, he took the Pinsent name. He married and had children (see elsewhere) but as he had no surviving sons, his male line did not extend very far.

Leicester’s Electoral Registers show that John Arthur was living on Burley Road in 1905, so he had taken on the role of publican at the “King’s Head” hostelry by then. The 1911 Census (and Wright’s Directory) show him living at the “King’s Head” with Harriett and their two unmarried children, May and Horace Pinsent. Their third child, his “son” Ernest had married Mabel Braimridge the previous year (1910) and had moved to Hull Street. He was a “hotel barman,” at the time. The “King’s Head” would not have qualified as a hotel, so he was probably working for someone else. The family was living in Archdeacon Lane by 1913.

John Arthur’s son Horace took his own life in 1913 after being jilted by a girlfriend. It created quite a sensation and the tragic affair was described in graphic detail in the National press. The story even made it into at least one newspaper in New Zealand (New Zealand Herald: 14th June 1913)!

Horace (who was an “engineer’s apprentice” aged 19) had, apparently, quarreled with his girlfriend Ada White and she had threatened to leave him. Nothing unusual there; however Horace took it very badly. He wrote a suicide note and took a revolver from a draw in his father’s bedroom and went on a date “walking out” with her on the London Road. She reiterated that she wanted to end their relationship – ostensibly because “he was too good for her” – and when questioned later she said that he started to act oddly. She started to run away but he followed and grabbed her shoulder and drew the gun and fired. The first bullet grazed her cheek and passed through her hat. The sound drew the attention of a passing cyclist, Herbert Hytch, who immediately stopped and dismounted to come to her assistance. Horace felt threatened and fired at him too, this time inflicting a serious wound to his neck. He fired two more shots more or less at random and then ran off towards town. However, he did not go far. He stopped and put the gun in his mouth and pulled the trigger.

A passing motorist took Mr. Hytch to the infirmary. Ada was taken to a local residence (doubtless for a cup of tea) and she was then taken down to the “Central Police Station” for questioning (Leicester Daily Post: Thursday 24th April 1913).

Horace’s father told the Coroner at the inquest that he “did not think that the girl was fit company for his son”  – “he had suspicions about her character” but he had thought that Horace would come to his senses and “give her up” of his own accord. She had a reputation for being a flirt, and their quarrel had started when Horace found her talking to a man in a local bar. His jealously got the better of him. He finally realized that she had being lying to him and he decided that if he could not have her, then nobody should. He wrote suicide notes or letters to his family and to the foreman where he worked. He asked the latter to send his tools to his father. They letters were shown at the inquest made it clear that Horace intended to kill the girl and take his own life. He even asked that they be buried together (Melton Mowbray Mercury and Oakham and Uppingham News: Thursday 1st May 1913). Not much change of that! Despite the evidence of “intent” the jury felt that “the evidence was insufficient as to the state of his mind” (Leicester Evening Mail: Thursday 24th and Saturday 26th April 1913; Birmingham Daily Gazette: Saturday 26th April 1913).

According to Horace’s brother Ernest Pinsent, Horace was an “engineer’s patternmaker” at the Eclipse Foundry in Graham Street and a “very steady, intelligent young fellow and (he) was a teetotaler. He had been going out regularly with this girl, Ada Smith, for about six months” (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 26th April 1913). Ada testified that she wanted to break off their relationship because she was not in his social class: “I could not find the clothes to match him” and that when he heard this, he threatened to kill then both. She had said “Don’t talk silly! Think about your friends, what will they say?”

Horace was buried in Welford Road Cemetery on 29th April (Leicester Evening Mail: Tuesday 29th April 1913). His funeral did not go well as a four-year old child who was watching the funeral procession was, unfortunately, knocked over and injured by a man on a motor bike (Hinckley Echo: Wednesday 30th April 1913). The following July, Horace’s father, John Arthur Pinsent was brought up at the “Borough Police Court” for selling liquor in the “King’s Head” after hours (at 11.07 p.m.). His lawyer argued in mitigation that he was under considerable stress at the time as his son had recently been buried in a common grave and he had just received permission from the Home Secretary to move the body to another grave. He had been too busy discussing arrangements for re-interment to notice the time. The prosecuting Police Inspector admitted that, “taking into consideration position of the house and the class of customers, the premises were well conducted”. Nevertheless, he was fined 40s and costs (Leicester Daily Post: Thursday 17th July 1913).

John Arthur was living with his son Ernest and his family when the census takers came to Archdeacon Lane in 1921. He was said to be a “licensed victualler working on his own account but then out of business”. He had previously lived on Burley Lane. Harriet was helping out with “house duties” which freed Ernest’s wife up to work as a “hosiery machinist” for “N. Corah and Sons, Hosiery Manufacturers.” Harriet’s grandchildren were at school.

Kelly’s Directory shows that John Arthur was, once again, a “beer retailer” in 1925. John Arthur and Harriet were living on Causeway Lane (next to the hospital). An item in the Falkirk Herald in 1927 (14th April 1927), shows that John Arthur was, once again, brought up in Court. This time, it was for the unpardonable sin of confining songbirds (linnets and goldfinches) in cages that were deemed too small for them to stretch their wings. There was no television in those days and Sports Bars had yet to be invented, so they were probably there to brighten up his new hostelry – the “Sir Charles Napier Inn”. In order to show that his birds were happy, John Arthur brought one of them with him. It sang on cue and so entertained their lordships that they dropped the case – presumably after telling him to find bigger cages. The Act that he had been charged under had only recently been passed and, according to his Lawyer, “it only appears in one text book published this morning” (Leicester Evening Mail: Friday 9th April 1926). Their Lordships let it go at that.

The electoral rolls show that John Arthur and Harriet continued to live on Causeway Lane until a least 1930, the year he died.  Harriet then went to live with her son Ernest Pinsent. She died on Archdeacon Lane in 1933.


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: Thomas Pinsent: 1795 – 1860
Grandmother: Hannah Johnson: 1800 – 1871

PARENTS

Father: John Pinsent: 1836 – 1899
Mother: Elizabeth Johnson: 1837 – 1909

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

Fanny Pinsent: 1820 – 1880
William Pinsent: 1822 – xxxx
Thomas Pinsent: 1824 – 1831
Caroline Pinsent: 1825 – 1864 
James Pinsent: 1831 – 1902
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1833 – 1833
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1833 – xxxx 
Henry Pinsent: 1838 – 1846
George Pinsent: 1839 – 1857
Charles Pinsent: 1842 – 1882 

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

Thomas Johnson Pinsent: 1856 – 1925
John Henry Pinsent: 1858 – 1861
George Pinsent: 1861 – 1932
John Arthur Pinsent: 1869 – 1930
Henry Pinsent: 1871 – 1939
William Horace Pinsent: 1874 – 1876
Horace Pinsent: 1879 – 1949


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John Pinsent

Vital Statistics

John Pinsent: 1836 – 1899 GRO0501 (Cordwainer & Publican, Leicester, Leicestershire)

Elizabeth Johnson: 1837 – 1909
Married: 1855: Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, 1855

Children by Elizabeth Johnson:

Sarah Jane Pinsent: 1855 – 1855
Thomas Johnson Pinsent: 1856 – 1925 (Married (1) Sarah Ann Ellis, Leicester, Leicestershire, 1875; (2) Caroline Deakin, Leicester, Leicestershire, 1883; (3) Emma Jarvis, Leicester, Leicestershire, 1922)
John Henry Pinsent: 1858 – 1861
George Pinsent: 1861 – 1932 (Married Elizabeth Norman, Leicester, Leicestershire, 1879)
Eliza Pinsent: 1863 – xxxx * (Married William Berry: Leicester, Leicestershire: 1883)
Louisa Pinsent: 1865 – 1945 (Married Walter Veasey, Leicester, Leicestershire, 1892)
Ada Pinsent: 1867 – xxxx (Married Henry Andrew Elliott, Leicester, Leicestershire, 1889)
John Arthur Pinsent: 1869 – 1930 (Married Harriet Hunt, Leicester, Leicestershire, 1891)
Henry Pinsent: 1871 – 1939 (Married (1) Elizabeth Phillis, Leicester, Leicestershire; (2) Lydia Spriggs, Leicester, Leicestershire 1914)
William Horace Pinsent: 1874 – 1876
Horace Pinsent: 1879 – 1949 (Married Eveline Maude Holt, Leicester, Leicestershire, 1903)

*Eliza’s illegitimate child: Bertie Major Pinsent: 1881 – 1881

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0501


John was the second (known) surviving son of Thomas Pinsent of Tiverton by his wife Hannah (née Johnson). He was born shortly after his parents moved to Loughborough, in Leicestershire, and he grew up there as part of a family of four girls and seven boys. He was one of three surviving brothers that between them established the Leicestershire sub-branch of the TIVERTON branch of the Pinsent family tree. John’s brother James Pinsent was five years older and his brother Charles Pinsent five years younger.

Census and birth records show that the family was living on Holland Street in the 1840s. However, it had moved to Barrow Street by 1851 (Census) and could be found on South Bond Street the following year. John followed his father into the shoe trade and was a 20-years old “cordwainer” when he married Elizabeth Johnson, the daughter of a Nottinghamshire farmer in 1855. Perhaps Elizabeth was related to John’s mother, Hannah (née Johnson); however, what the relationship was, I don’t know.

John and Elizabeth started out their married life in Loughborough. The 1861 Census shows that they were living on Wellington Road with their two young sons, Thomas Johnson Pinsent  (4) and George Pinsent (two months). Another daughter (Sarah Jane Pinsent) and another son (John Henry Pinsent) had died (Leicestershire Mercury: Saturday 13th April 1861).  John and Elizabeth went on to have three more girls (Elizabeth, Louisa and Ada Pinsent) and four more boys (John Arthur, Henry, William Horace and Horace Pinsent) in the years that followed.

John and Elizabeth moved to Leicester in around 1868/9 – presumably to be close to John’s brother James Pinsent and his family. He had moved there in around 1863. Perhaps surprisingly, given the nature of the times, only one of John’s younger sons (William Horace Pinsent) died young. In all, five of the boys (Thomas Johnson, George, John Arthur, Henry (a.k.a. Harry) and Horace) married and had children. Their lives are described elsewhere. The surviving daughters also married.

I have been unable to locate the family in the 1871 Census; however, I know from John’s elder children’s marriage data that he was a “shoe-finisher” in the 1870s.  The 1881 Census data collected a decade later confirms that John was a “shoe-hand” living on Birstall Street, in St. Margaret’s Parish, in Leicester with his wife Elizabeth and their as yet unmarried daughters, Eliza (18), Louisa (16) and Ada Pinsent (14) – all of whom were “shoe fitters,”  – and with his younger sons, John A. (11), Harry (9) and Horace Pinsent (2).  His daughter Eliza must have been pregnant at the time as shad an illegitimate son, Bertie Major Pinsent in July 1881. The child died a few weeks later.  Eliza went on to marry William Perry in July 1883. I do not know if William had been the father of her child or not. Louisa married a (house) “painter” in 1892 and Ada married a “hairdresser” in 1889.

John gave up boot and shoe making in the 1870s and kept a shop on the Birstall Road (Kelly’s Directory: 1881). After that, he took over the management of the “Sir Robert Peel” Beer house on Bedford Street. The Commercial Gazette (Thursday, February 2nd 1882), tells us that John Pinsent “boot-finisher and beer house keeper” transferred title of the beer house to “Frederick Bates and another” on 31st January 1882. However, if he did, it must have been a short-term arrangement as John and Elizabeth ran the beer house well into the 1890s (1891 Census). It was licensed to sell wines and spirits as well as beer (Commercial Gazette: Wednesday 9th November 1892). There is an old photograph of John’s beer house on the corner of Bedford and Fennel Streets, on the: pubhistoryproject.co.uk website. The modern-day “Sir Robert Peel” hostelry in Leicester is a different establishment.

John may have taken up the sport of “pedestrianism” (competitive walking) in the 1870s. Certainly there was a Pincent active in it in Leicester in the early years of the decade – and evidently quite good at it.  “The trial heats for Mr. Smith’s 115 yards Leicestershire Handicap of £10 took place on these grounds on Saturday afternoon last. The attendance of spectators was not large. … Heat 12: Pinsent, 16 ½; T. F. Peake, 15; C. Mason, 16; Pinsent won easy … The sport was rather above the average, the starting was very good and some excellent races were witnessed. The deciding heats will be run tomorrow (Saturday)” (Leicester Journal: Friday 30th May 1873). There is no proof that this was John; however, his sons Thomas Johnson Pinsent and George Pinsent clearly took up the sport in the 1880s (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 10th September 1881 and Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 22nd October 1881).

John Pinsent owned a whippet or greyhound by the name of “Pincent’s Turpin” in the early 1880s. He first puts in an appearance as a (7 months) old contestant in 1880, when he showed some potential, winning his heat (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 18th December 1880). John helped organize “dog’s handicap” races at the various tracks in and around Leicester. At one, a 200-yards’ handicap, held at the Victoria Grounds in May 1882, 69 dogs competed through a series of heats for £6 in prize money. John’s elder sons helped run the event. Thomas Pinsent acted as “marksman” and George Pinsent fired the starting pistol (Leicester Chronicle: Wednesday 3rd May 1882).  Turpin had done better at a Peacock Ground event organized by a Mr. Richardson in March 1881. It survived the heats and went on to win by half a length from (Clarke’s) Violet. Turpin won the race by half a yard (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 12th March 1881).

Turpin later fought his way through to the final of a similar race organized by a Mr. Mason at the end of October 1883. On that occasion, there was a dead heat between Pincent’s Turpin and Newbold’s Jim in the final heat. Sadly, Jim won the run-off (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 7th October 1883). Eighty dogs turned out for a similar 200-yards’ dog handicap that J. Pinsent organized at the Belgrave Road Grounds the following year. The heats were run at the end of March (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 5th April 1884) and the final was run in the first week of April. John’s son George was appointed the “marksman” for the final heat that saw Percival’s Lue beat Clarke’s Violet, Lacey’ Gip and Gilford’s Nigger (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 12th April 1884). Turpin was joined by a racing companion, “Pinsent’s Luce”, in 1882 – so he had at least one kennel companion (Leicester Daily Mercury: Monday 6th November 1882).

John and Elizabeth were still running the “Sir Robert Peel Inn”, on Bedford Street in Leicester in 1891. The Census shows that they lived in, and that they still had three of their children with them. They were Louisa (26) who was a “shoe fitter”, John A. (22) a “shoe-rivetter” and Horace (12) a “schoolboy”. Doubtless all his children helped out in the pub. According to the conventions of the day, children were put out to work when they were around twelve years old.

The “Sir Robert Peel” beer house, predictably, came to the attention of the Magistrates now and again.  Alfred Hallam was brought up at the Police Court in May 1888 charged with having stolen half a crown (2s 6d) from John Pinsent through a misunderstanding that had occurred in the bar. Evidently, John’s wife, Elizabeth had asked him (John) to give the coin to “Alf” as part of his change. John gave it to the wrong “Alf” and when he later asked him to return the coin Mr. Hallam refused. He said he had never received it. However, he eventually confessed to the police and John asked for leniency (Leicester Journal: Friday 4th May 1888). It pays to keep on the good side of your customers.

The Commercial Gazette confirms that John Pinsent was still running the beer house in 1892 (Commercial Gazette: Wednesday 9th November 1892). In May 1894, at another court appearance, John was asked to explain how a shoe-hand, (George Burley) had become so drunk and disorderly that he had refused to leave the premises until the police intervened. John argued that he had sold beer to Burley’s friends and they must have given him more than he could handle … . Mr. Burley claimed that some woman had thrown a pint of beer over him and, besides, the landlord and the rest of the house were the worse for wear too. Mr. Burley was a frequent offender, so the Magistrates fined him 5s or five days in jail.  The police constable who helped out, said that John was, in fact, sober.  Nevertheless, the Magistrates asked the police to keep a watch on his house (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 12th May 1894).

John seems to have been a great promoter of social activity and he was probably the J. Pinsent who held a “Bird Singing Competition” at the Milkmaid Inn on Bedford Street in 1898 ((Leicester Sporting News: 17th December 1898). He was 63 years old when he died on the 12th August the following year. After his death, his widow, Elizabeth (née Johnson), and her family moved to Southdown Road with at least two of her sons, John and Horace. John Henry must have been the shoe hand from Southdown Road who saved a three years old boy who was drowning near the Abbey Meadow bathing station in 1903 (Midland Free Press: 13th June 1903). Elizabeth died in Leicester in 1909.


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: James Pinsent: 1769 – 1833
Grandmother: Hannah Brimson: 1766 – xxxx

PARENTS

Father: Thomas Pinsent: 1795 – 1860
Mother: Hannah Johnson: 1800 – 1871

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

William Pinsent: 1792 – 1844
Thomas Pinsent: 1795 – 1860 ✔️
Anne Pinsent: 1799 – 1801
Richard Pinsent: 1799 – xxxx
Fanny Pinsent: 1804 – xxxx
Jane Pinsent: 1804 – xxxx

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

William Pinsent: 1822 – xxxx
Thomas Pinsent: 1824 – 1831
James Pinsent: 1831 – 1902
John Pinsent: 1836 – 1899 ✔️
Henry Pinsent: 1838 – 1846
George Pinsent: 1839 – 1857
Charles Pinsent: 1842 – 1882


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John Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1911
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: N/A

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0496


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: John Pinsent: 1836 – 1899
Grandmother: Elizabeth Johnson: 1837 – 1909

Parents

Father: Henry Pinsent: 1871 – 1939
Mother: Lydia Spriggs: 1873 – 1956

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Sarah Jane Pinsent: 1855 – 1855
Thomas Johnson Pinsent: 1856 – 1925
John Henry Pinsent: 1858 – 1861
George Pinsent: 1861 – 1932
Eliza Pinsent: 1863 – xxxx
Louisa Pinsent: 1865 – 1945
Ada Pinsent: 1867 – xxxx
John Arthur Pinsent: 1869 – 1930
Henry Pinsent: 1871 – 1939
William Horace Pinsent: 1874 – 1876
Horace Pinsent: 1879 – 1949

Male Siblings (Brothers, Half-Brothers)

John Harry Pinsent: 1892 – xxxx
Vincent Horace Pinsent: 1893 – 1893
Arthur Ellis Pinsent: 1895 – 1895
Harry Pinsent: 1896 – 1957
Horace Pinsent: 1897 – 1898
Jack Pinsent: 1899 – 1899
George Pinsent: 1901 – 1902

John Pinsent: 1911 – xxxx


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John Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1850
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1856

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0493


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Benjamin Pinsent: 1776 – 1819
Grandmother: Esther Best: 1773 – 1868

Parents

Father: Benjamin Pinsent: 1808 – xxxx
Mother: Myra Burgoyne: 1815 – 1869

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Samuel Benjamin Pinsent: 1794 – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1795 – xxxx
Ann Pinsent: 1797 – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1799 – xxxx
Sarah Lucy Pinsent: 1800 – xxxx
Esther Pinsent: 1805 – xxxx
Benjamin Pinsent: 1805 – xxxx
Benjamin Pinsent: 1808 – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1812 – 1893
Emily Pinsent: 1815 – xxxx
Amelia Pinsent: 1818 – xxxx

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Samuel Benjamin Pinsent: 1833 – xxxx
James Pinsent: 1837 – 1912
Joseph Pinsent: 1840 – 1841
Edward Brand Pinsent: 1845 – 1846
George Henry Pinsent: 1847 – 1849
John Pinsent: 1850 – 1856


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