Bernard Thomas Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1965
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1990

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0965


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Sidney Henry Pinsent: 1895 – 1979
Grandmother: Louisa Elizabeth Sophia Kaylor: 1902 – 1979

Parents

Father: Henry George Pinsent: 1933 – 2016
Mother: Mother (GRO1237)

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Elizabeth Rose Pinsent: 1922 – 1924
Marguerite Maud Lilian Pinsent: 1923 – xxxx
Aunt (GRO0682)
Philip Sidney David Pinsent: 1929 – 2015
Uncle (GRO0455)
Henry George Pinsent: 1933 – 2016 ✔️

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Brother (GRO0638)
Bernard Thomas Pinsent: 1965 – 1990 ✔️


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Benjamin Charles Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1900
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1900

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0092


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

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

PARENTS

Father: George Pinsent: 1861 – 1932
Mother: Elizabeth Norman: 1859 – 1932

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

Sarah Jane Pinsent: 1855 – 1855
Thomas Johnson Pinsent: 1856 – 1925
John Henry Pinsent: 1858 – 1861
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 Thomas Pinsent: 1880 – 1880
Tom Pinsent: 1883 – 1935
George William Pinsent: 1885 – 1939
Arthur Pinsent: 1889 – 1890
Horace James Pinsent: 1896 – 1972
Benjamin Charles Pinsent: 1900 – 1900


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Benjamin Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Benjamin Pinsent: 1808 – xxxx GRO1294 (Carpenter, London, Middlesex)

1. Sophia Hewett: 1808 – 1831

Married: 1827: London, Middlesex

Children by Sophia Hewett: 1808 – 1831

Sophia Emily Pinsent: 1828 – xxxx (Married Stephen Heney, 1852, London, Middlesex)

2. Myra Burgoyne: 1815 – 1869
Married: 1832: London, Middlesex

Children by Myra Burgoyne:

Samuel Benjamin Pinsent: 1833 – xxxx (Married Mary Ann York, 1854, London, Middlesex)
James Pinsent: 1837 – 1912 (Married Sarah Savage, 1858, London, Middlesex)
Joseph Pinsent: 1840 – 1841
Esther Pinsent: 1843 – xxxx
Edward Brand Pinsent: 1845 – 1846
George Henry Pinsent: 1847 – 1849
John Pinsent: 1850 – 1856
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1853 – 1853

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO1294

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Benjamin Pinsent was the eldest of the two surviving sons of Benjamin Pinsent by his wife Esther (née Best). The latter was a “carpenter” from Tiverton in Devon who had settled in Holborn, in London, in the early 1790s. Benjamin and Esther had eleven children over twenty-two years but only four of their daughters and two of their sons (Benjamin and his younger brother William Pinsent) reached maturity. They both became “wood-workers”. Benjamin became a “carpenter” and/or “cabinet maker” (like his father) and William, whose life is described elsewhere, became a “coachbuilder”.

Benjamin married Sophia Hewett in St. Pancras Old Church, in London, in 1827 and they had a daughter, Sophia Emily Pinsent the following year. She grew up, became a “domestic servant” and married a “butcher” in Bloomsbury in 1852. Sophia’s mother (Sophia, née Hewett) died when she was only three years old, in 1831 – whether through infection or in childbirth is not clear.

Benjamin remarried shortly afterwards. He married Myra Burgoyne in St. Pancras Old Church in 1832. They had eight children (six boys and another two girls) in the years that followed. However, only his two eldest sons, Samuel Benjamin Pinsent and James Pinsent – who were born in St. Luke’s parish in Islington, can be shown to have grown to adulthood and married. It is not clear what happened to the others but death from infection doubtless accounts for most of them. His brother William and his wife, Mary Ann (nee Bright) suffered similar losses.

There were all-too-frequent outbreaks of cholera and typhoid in London in the first half of the nineteenth century. The cause only came to light in 1854 when a City doctor, John Snow, studied the morbidity returns for the parish of Soho and realized that a drinking-water pump on Broad Street must be producing contaminated water and responsible for the spread of the disease. The city’s sewage had been allowed to flow downhill into the Thames for centuries – which might have been fine in Tudor times but recent population grown made that mode of disposal not only untenable but unbearable. The summer in 1858 was particularly hot and, for many years thereafter it was (not so fondly) remembered as “the year of the big stink”. The City fathers finally succumbed to public pressure and had one of their engineer’s (Joseph Bazalgette) design an integrated system for collecting and pumping the city’s sewage and release it into the Thames well below the point where it would back-up to London on the in-coming tide. It took several years to complete but it was worth it as the health (and smell) of the city improved considerably.

Benjamin was a prisoner at the “Cold Bath Fields House of Correction” in St. James’ Clerkenwell at the time of the 1841 Census. What he had done to get there and how long he was in for, I am not sure. However, he may well have had financial problems, as it was a difficult time for artisans. It was hard for them to compete with factory production from the north of England. Benjamin’s wife, Myra, would have had to look after their three sons (Samuel Benjamin, James and Joseph) while he was incarcerated.

Benjamin and Myra moved to a disreputable part of Clerkenwell in the mid-1840s. Their timing could hardly have been worse and the five children they had after their three eldest boys (mentioned above) all died young. The family moved from Cock Court to Frying Pan Alley in around 1853 and lived there until at least 1857. They are missing from the 1851 Census records – perhaps because some of the records taken that year are extremely faint and in many cases unreadable; or perhaps because the district was hard to survey and they were overlooked. Clerkenwell had seen better days! By the mid 1800s, much of it was a densely packed warren of tall houses separated by narrow-alleyways. The houses were inhabited by the families of artisans and day-workers who were trying to make a living competing with cheap industrial products. According to on-line sources, “Frying Pan Alley” was so-named after a frying pan used as a hanging sign for a hardware shop fell and flattened a passerby. Fanciful or not, it is worth noting the Benjamin was a “cabinet-maker” and Myra’s father was a “blacksmith”.

Benjamin’s son, Samuel Benjamin, was a twenty-one year old “general dealer” when he married Mary Ann York (who was aged nineteen years) in the parish of St. John, Clerkenwell, on 14th August 1854. They both lived at 6 Frying Pan Alley and they signed the register “by mark”.  Samuel Benjamin’s father (Benjamin) witnessed the marriage and signed the register with his own hand. Samuel Benjamin’s half sister, Sophia Emily Heney also acted as a witness and signed “by mark”. The family seems to have struggled since moving into the area and their education had suffered.

Benjamin and “Maria” reappear in the 1861 Census records. Oddly, Benjamin now claims to be an “engineer” (of what type is unspecified) born in Devonshire (sic). By then, he was living on Rose Alley with his wife “Maria” (sic) who was reported to be “blind”. They were still there when Myra died in April 1869. As an interesting complication, there were two reports of her death filed at the General Records Office. “Catherine Connor” signed one report and “Catherine Pinsent” signed the other. Who she or they were, I am not sure. Rose Alley was not much of an upgrade from Frying Pan Alley. A survey of London in 1861 found that a single water closet in Rose Alley serviced 118 people. To make matters worse; the water was only available intermittently (Survey of London: Vol. 46: South and East Clerkenwell: Philip Temple, Editor).

I can find no record of Benjamin’s death. It is not clear what happened to his eldest son, Samuel Benjamin Pinsent and his wife Mary Ann. They cannot be found in the next census and they drop out of sight. They had no children that I am aware of. Samuel Benjamin’s brother Joseph Pinsent also disappears without trace; so it seems to have been left to their brother James to carry the family forward. He married Sarah Savage in St. Pancras in 1858.


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: Thomas Pinsent: 1738 – 1825
Grandmother: Anne Wright: 1740 – 1815

PARENTS

Father: Benjamin Pinsent: 1776 – 1819
Mother: Esther Best: 1773 – 1868

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

James Pinsent: 1769 – 1833
Mary Pinsent: 1771 – xxxx
Dorothy Pinsent: xxxx – 1590
Benjamin Pinsent: 1776 – 1819
Elizabeth Pinsent: 1776 – xxxx

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

Samuel Benjamin Pinsent: 1794 – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1795 – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1799 – xxxx
Benjamin Pinsent: 1805 – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1812 – 1893


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Benjamin Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Benjamin Pinsent: 1776 – 1819 GRO0945 (Carpenter, London, Middlesex)

Esther Best: 1773 – 1868

Married: 1792: London, Middlesex

Children by Esther Best:

Samuel Benjamin Pinsent: 1794 – xxxx
William Pinsent: 1795 – xxxx
Ann Pinsent: 1797 – xxxx* (Married Thomas Hammond, xxxx, xxxx, xxxx)
William Pinsent: 1799 – xxxx
Sarah Lucy Pinsent: 1800 – xxxx (Married Conway McKiernan Reade, 1822, London, Middlesex)
Esther Pinsent: 1805 – xxxx (Married (1) James King, London, Middlesex, 1828; (2) George Charles, Westbury on Trym, Gloucestershire, 1847; (3) John Cunningham, Clifton, Gloucestershire, 1855)
Benjamin Pinsent: 1805 – xxxx
Benjamin Pinsent: 1808 – xxxx (Married Mira Burgoyne, 1832, London, Middlesex)
William Pinsent: 1812 – 1893 (Married Mary Ann Bright, 1833, xxxx, xxxx)
Emily Pinsent: 1815 – xxxx
Amelia Pinsent: 1818 – xxxx (Married John Moffat, 1856, London, Middlesex)

* Mary Ann Sarah Pinsent: 1813 – xxxx: Illegitimate daughter of Ann Pinsent
** William Thomas George Pinsent: 1838 – xxxx: Illegitimate son of Amelia Pinsent

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0945

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Benjamin Pinsent was the younger of Thomas Pinsent’s sons by Anne Wright. He was baptized in Tiverton in April 1776 and may have had a twin sister, Elizabeth Pinsent – although it is also possible that they were near-age siblings who happened to be baptized on the same day.

Benjamin’s father was a “carpenter” and he was brought up in the same trade. He went up to London while young and married Esther Best in St. George’s Church, Hanover Square in 1792. She was from Oxford. They were both less than twenty years of age when they married and they had eleven children (six boys and five girls) in the years that followed. They seems to have been baptists and several of their children (including a twelfth that was stillborn in 1802) were born in the “Lying in Hospital” in Holborn (Non-conformist and Non-Parochial Registers: 1657 – 1970: Ancestry.com). Perhaps surprisingly – given the uncertainties of life in those days – there was a delay of twelve years between the birth of their daughter Sarah Lucy Pinsent in 1800 and her baptism in 1812. Perhaps they deferred the baptism of their stronger children until they were old enough to understand the meaning of the ceremony.

Relatively few children born in big cities reached maturity in the early part of the 19th Century. Nevertheless, four of Benjamin’s daughters and two of his sons seem to have made it. I have yet to find the death records for some of the others but it is clear from the re-usage of Christian names that deaths did occur. Benjamin and Esther (a.k.a. “Hester”) had three sons called William and two who were named Benjamin.

London was not a particularly pleasant place to live in around then. Baptismal records show that Benjamin and Ester’s eldest daughter, Ann Pinsent, had an illegitimate daughter by a “saddler”, Thomas Hammond when she was sixteen years old. She was baptized in St. Giles in the Fields, in Holborn in 1813. In 1826, this child, Mary Ann Sarah Pinsent/Hammond, found herself up on a charge of murder in “Hatton Police Court”. Evidently, she had been seen disposing of a bundle – which turned out to be an infant child – in a water closet. She was only thirteen and the evidence suggested that she was disposing of the body for another girl (Star (London): Wednesday 12th April 1826). Nevertheless, Mary Ann was remanded pending further investigations. Ann Pinsent’s youngest sister Amelia Pinsent had an illegitimate son, William Thomas George Pinsent who was baptized in St. Pancras Old Church in 1838 – although he was probably born ten years previously (London, England, Church of England Births, and Baptisms, 1813-1917: Ancestry.com). What happened to him is unclear. However, his mother married John Moffat, in Clerkenwell in 1856 and he may have became a “Moffat”.

Benjamin and Esther moved to Gilbert Street in St. George’s parish, Bloomsbury, sometime prior to 1808 and Benjamin died there, aged 47, in April 1819 (London, England, Deaths & Burials: 1813 – 1980). Benjamin’s youngest son, William and his wife Mary Ann (née Bright) seem to have lived in the family home after his father died. His mother,  Benjamin’s widow, Esther (née Best) had moved in with her daughter Esther and her husband James King (an “appraiser” of some sort) by the time the Census was taken in 1841. They lived on Crescent Street in St. Pancras in Marylebone. James seems to have died sometime shortly thereafter and his widow (“Esther, junior” as it were) married a “solicitor’s clerk”, George Charles. They moved to Clifton near Bristol in Gloucestershire and Esther’s mother, Esther (née Best) had joined them by 1851. George Charles must have died in the mid 1850s sometime, as Esther “junior” seems to have married again. She married John Cunningham in Clifton St. Andrew’s Church, in 1855. Her mother, Esther Pinsent, was still living with her when the 1861 Census was taken! She died in Clifton in 1868.


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: Thomas Pinsent: 1709 – 1773
Grandmother: Mary Knott: xxxx – xxxx

PARENTS

Father: Thomas Pinsent: 1738 – 1825
Mother: Anne Wright: 1740 – 1815

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

James Pinsent: 1769 – 1833


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Beatrice Margaret Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1919
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 2004

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0086


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)

John Holt Pinsent: 1904 – 1970
James Leonard Pinsent: 1908 – 1978
Thomas William Pinsent: 1912 – 1986


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Arthur Ernest Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Arthur Ernest Pinsent: 1899 – 1969 GRO0079

Lily Gallifant: 1900 – 1994
Married: Leicester, Leicestershire: 1925

Children by Lily Gallifant:

Ernest Pinsent: 1926 – 2021

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0079

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Arthur Ernest Pinsent was the second son of Walter Pinsent by his wife Clara (née Black). He was born while his father, a “boot maker,” was living on Harrington Street. The family moved to the Western Road around 1900 and his younger brother and sister were born while his mother ran a grocery shop out of the family home “on her own account” (1901 Census Data). Arthur’s parents had moved to Martin Street by 1909 (Leicester Electoral Registers). His father was nominally still a “shoe-worker” but he also helped run the store (Kelly’s Directory: 1912, 195). 

Arthur Ernest (or “Ernest” as he was commonly known) had left school and was a “shoe-hand” when called up before the Magistrates for playing football on Cottesmore Road on October 14th, 1914. They had seen him before and he was ordered to pay 3s 6d and costs (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 31st October 1914).  

Arthur’s elder brother Charles William Pinsent  had signed on with the Yorks and Lancashire Regiment and survived the First World War, only to succumb to influenza in November 1918. Arthur was, presumably, too young to sign up.

Arthur Ernest was still nominally a “shoe-maker” when he married Lily Gallifant in July 1925; however he seems to have also worked in a shop as Kelly’s Directory refers to him as a “shopkeeper” at 277 Clarendon Road, in Leicester. As part of a promotion, A. E. Pinsent (along with other shops was) “giving to every purchaser of a 1/3 bottle of Farrow’s Tomato Ketchup a large 71/2 packet of Farrow’s Green Peas FREE” (Leicester Evening Mail: Thursday 29th November 1828). Arthur’s younger brother, Wilfred, was, meanwhile, helping their parents out with their shop on Martin Street. Arthur and his wife Lily had one son, Ernest Pinsent, in 1926. 

Arthur Ernest received a bit of shock while hospitalized in the Ashby Poor Law Institute in June 1935. Evidently, he woke up one night when “he heard a tapping on the window by his bed and looking up saw a naked foot on the window feeling about for a foothold. The man broke the window and fell back. He heard him strike a form on the ground”. A Coroner later determined that an inmate in the room above had “seemed restless,” he had sent his room-mate to get a glass of water and had climbed out their window and lost his footing. As there was no obvious reason for the behaviour, the Coroner gave an “open” verdict (Leicester Evening Mail; Tuesday 11th June 1935.

The 1939 War-time Register shows that Arthur E. Pinsent was a “master grocer” living at 277 Clarendon Road with his wife and possibly his son. There is no actual reference to their son; however, two individuals are redacted.  

Arthur Ernest Pinsent of 277 Clarendon Park Road died in Leicester in 1969. His effects were valued at £7,003 (Calendar Index of Wills and Administrations: 1967 – 1995: Ancestry.com). His widow, Lily, lived on: she died in Market Harborough, in Leicestershire in December 1994. She was ninety-four years old.  


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: Charles Pinsent: 1842 – 1882
Grandmother: Susannah Bagshaw: 1844 – xxxx

PARENTS

Father: Walter Pinsent: 1869 – 1950
Mother: Clara Black: 1873 – 1949

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

Elizabeth Pinsent: 1865 – xxxx
George Henry Pinsent: 1867 – 1934
Annie Pinsent: 1872 – xxxx
Harriet Pinsent: 1875 – 1959
Ernest Alfred Pinsent: 1877 – 1902
Florence Pinsent: 1880 – 1901
Maria Pinsent: 1885 – 1943 * Illegitimate

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

Charles William Pinsent: 1896 – 1918
Arthur Ernest Pinsent: 1899 – 1969
Wilfred Pinsent: 1901 – 1970


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Arthur Ellis Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1895
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1895

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0078


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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Arthur Edwin Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Arthur Edwin Pinsent: 1872 – 1938 GRO0076 (Leather and Cloth Merchant)

Eliza Memory:  1873 – 1955
Married: 1901: Leicester, Leicestershire

Children by Eliza Memory:

Hattie Vera Pinsent: 1903 – xxxx (Married (1) John Arthur Bailey: Leicester, Leicestershire, 1923; (2) xxxx Jarvis, xxxx)

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0076


Arthur Edwin Pinsent was the third and youngest son of James Pinsent by his wife Emma (née Jackson). He was born in Leicester in 1872, and was considerably (fifteen years) younger than his eldest sister, Hannah Martha Pinsent. He grew up with five sisters and two brothers – all of whom married. Arthur’s father had been born in Tiverton, in Devon, and he had come north when his father, who was “shoe-maker”, relocated to be nearer the heart of Britain’s leather industry. James and his family were living on Syston Road in St. Margaret’s Parish, Leicester, in 1881, when the census was taken. Arthur Edwin was a “scholar” at the time.

Arthur followed his father and grandfather into the “boot and shoe” business when he left school. We find that he was a “shoe packer” at the time of the 1891 census but a “commission agent” (of some sort) working on his own account, ten years later.  Arthur Edward (sic) Pinsent may have worked for “Ward Bros. and Co.” as he was called as a witness at “Loughborough Police Court” to give evidence in a case that was heard in 1897. Evidently, Frederick Cramp, a “pattern cutter” from Argyle Street had charged “Ward Bros.” with being in a breach of contract for refused to pay him a week’s wages (£1 10s) in lieu of notice. Frederick made his point: the magistrates gave for the complainant (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 27th March 1897). Arthur’s partnership with Mr. W. Ward and others as “boot and shoe manufacturers” seems to have ended that year (Morning Advertiser 1st January 1898).

Arthur married Eliza (“Lizzie”) Memory in 1901. Her father was also in the shoe manufacturing business. He was a “riveter.” They had one child, a daughter Hattie Vera Pinsent, in 1903. She was to marry Leslie John Arthur Bailey shortly after her twentieth birthday. Leslie was an “accountant” and son of a “schoolmaster.” Arthur, had graduated to being a “leather merchant” by then.

Arthur and Eliza seem to have gone into business for themselves. They held a part share in a warehouse on Moore’s Road in 1900 and they had addresses on both Oxford and Aylestone Streets in 1905 (Electoral Rolls).  According to the 1911 census, they they ran a “drapery and boot dealership” out of their home on Aylestone Street and also acted as “fent” dealers – (i.e. they also sold remnants of cloth); (Kelly’s Directory: 1912). Nevertheless, it was not all work. Mr. A. E. Pinsent was a member of the “South End Tradesman’s Cricket Club” by 1910 (Leicester Daily Mercury: Wednesday 16th February 1910) and was its vice-president the following year (Leicester Evening Mail: Thursday 26th January 1911). I think it was probably a somewhat older Arthur Edwin who took part in a very successful match at Ayleston in 1925 during which “Pincent secured the remaining (six wickets) for four runs apiece” (Leicester Evening Mail: Saturday 16th May 1925).

Arthur seem to have planned to expand beyond the confines of Leicester as we find that A. E. Pinsent was looking for a: “girl, smart, wanted for boot stores: capable taking charge small Sheffield branch; write, wages, refs. Etc. A. E. Pinsent, 62 Aylestone St. Leicester” in 1912 (Sheffield Evening Telegraph: Wednesday 28th August 1912). Arthur advertised 5 tons of colourful (black and tan, glace, coloured Persian etc.) leather “Offal” for sale the following year (Leicester Daily Mercury: Tuesday 4th November 1913) and later directories also show that he was still a “leather factor” in 1925, and an “offal” dealer in 1928. The term “offal” refers to leather remnants and not the internal organs of farmyard animals!

He was a busy man; however he seems to have time to manage an allotment – until October 1916 at least, when he put it up for sale (Leicester Daily Mercury: Tuesday 10th October 1916). Arthur and Lizzie also put one of the weighing machines at their “Offal Dealership” at Granby Place up for sale in 1919 (Leicester Daily Mercury: Monday 10th March 1919).

The couple appear to have run the firm of “Pinsent & Co., Boot and Shoe Manufacturers” out of Paradise Lane in Leicester in the early 1920s. The 1921 census shows that Arthur Edwin worked out of Granby Street, but lived on Howard Road in Leicester with a servant and a boarder. His wife “Lizzie” and daughter Hattie (17) were, meanwhile, living on Loder Road, in Brighton. Hattie was a “typist” who, when working, worked for “S. & W. Evans. Limited, Flour Millers“, of Soar Lane in Leicester. Interestingly, they had a young visitor, William Ewart Land (19), a “hosiery and silk agent” employed by the “Midland Blouse Co.” in Leicester staying with them.

Arthur Edwin and Eliza moved their “offal” business to Gladstone Street in Leicester in around 1929 (British Telephone Directories) and ran it from there until at least 1932. They themselves were living on Upper Kent Street by 1930. Arthur Edwin died in Leicester in 1938. Lizzie died in Sevenoaks, in 1955. She may have moved to Kent to be close to her daughter as probate of her estate was granted to Hattie Vera Jarvis. Presumably her daughter had remarried at some point.


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

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

PARENTS

Father: James Pinsent: 1831 – 1902
Mother: Emma Jackson: 1831 – 1903

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
John Pinsent: 1836 – 1899
Henry Pinsent: 1838 – 1846
George Pinsent: 1839 – 1857
Charles Pinsent: 1842 – 1882

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

James Pinsent: 1862 – 1936
Adrian Pinsent: 1864 – 1945
Arthur Edwin Pinsent:  1872 – 1938 ✔️


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Arthur Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1894
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: Marie Cassidy
Death: 1940

Children by Marie Cassidy:

Dorothy May Pinsent: 1925 – 1971
Daughter: GRO0477

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO1421


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: James Pinsent: 1831 – 1902
Grandmother: Emma Jackson: 1831 – 1903

PARENTS

Father: James Pinsent: 1862 – 1936
Mother: Emma Elizabeth Poxon: 1865 – 1892

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES) 

Hannah Martha Pinsent: 1857 – xxxx
Georgiana Pinsent: 1859 – 1925
James Pinsent: 1862 – 1936 ✔️
Adrian Pinsent: 1864 – 1945
Fanny Pinsent: 1866 – 1940
Charlotte Ann Pinsent: 1868 – xxxx
Emily Pinsent: 1870 – xxxx
Arthur Edwin Pinsent:  1872 – 1938

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS, Half-BROTHERS)

Thomas Pinsent: 1885 – 1976
James Pinsent: 1886 – 1886
Arthur Pinsent: 1888 – 1889

James Pinsent: 1892 – 1972
Arthur Pinsent: 1894 – 1940 ✔️
Albert Pinsent: 1896 – 1980
Lawrence Pinsent: 1899 – 1991

Also:

Henry Pinsent: 1884 – xxxx (?)
George Pinsent: 1886 – xxxx (?)
Ernest Pinsent: 1891 – xxxx (?)


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Arthur Edward Thomas

Vital Statistics

Arthur Edward Thomas Pinsent: 1908 – 1964 GRO0075 (Driver and Mechanic, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire)

Dolly Blood: 1913 – 1958
Married: 1937: Nottingham, Nottinghamshire

Children by Dolly Blood:

Neville Arthur Pinsent: 1938 – 2001
Son (GRO0562)

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0075


Arthur Edward Thomas was the eldest son of Thomas Pinsent by his wife, Lily Gertrude (née Elliott). He was born in Nottingham in August 1908 and grew up there. He married Dolly Blood, who may have literally been the “girl next door ” as both their families lived on Rose Street in September 1937. Arthur was a “lorry” (truck) driver for an unnamed brewery when their first son, Neville Arthur Pinsent was born in 1938, and for the “Alet Mineral Water Company” when the Wartime Register was compiled the following year. The family was living on Allison Rise in Nottingham at the time. Arthur had a second son, Kenneth Anthony Pinsent in 1944.  Arthur eventually moved on from being a lorry “driver” to being a “mechanic”.

Dolly (née Blood) died of cancer in Nottingham in 1958 and Arthur Edward Thomas Pinsent died there a few years later, in 1964. I know almost nothing about his eldest son, Neville Arthur Pinsent, except that he died in Derbyshire in 2001. As far as I am aware, he never married or had children. Arthur Edward’s younger son married twice and had children by the first. His line probably continues.


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: James Pinsent: 1862 – 1936
Grandmother: Emma Elizabeth Poxon: 1865 – 1892

PARENTS

Father: Thomas Pinsent: 1885 – 1976
Mother: Lily Gertrude Elliott: 1886 – 1968

FATHER’S SIBLINGS AND half-SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES) 

Thomas Pinsent: 1885 – 1976 ✔️
James Pinsent: 1886 – 1886
Arthur Pinsent: 1888 – 1889
Florence Annie Pinsent: 1890 – 1890

James Pinsent: 1892 – 1972
Arthur Pinsent: 1894 – 1940
Albert Pinsent: 1896 – 1980
Lawrence Pinsent: 1899 – 1991
Florence May Pinsent: 1900 – 1999

Henry Pinsent: 1884 – xxxx (?)
George Pinsent: 1886 – xxxx (?)
Ernest Pinsent: 1891 – xxxx (?)

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

Arthur Edward Thomas Pinsent: 1908 – 1964 ✔️
Frederick Henry Pinsent: 1910 – 1999
James William Pinsent: 1912 – 1999
Frank Pinsent: 1926 – 2001


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