Vincent Horace Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1893
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1893

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0864


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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Valerie Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1942
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1942

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0858


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Horace Pinsent: 1879 – 1949
Grandmother: Eveline Maud Holt: 1879 – 1946

Parents

Father: Thomas William Pinsent: 1912 – 1986
Mother: Iris Winifred Bliss: 1919 – 2002

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

John Holt Pinsent: 1904 – 1970
Florence Pinsent: 1906 – 1906
Katherine Sarah Pinsent: 1907 – 1907
James Leonard Pinsent: 1908 – 1978
Kathleen Pinsent: 1911 – 2003
Thomas William Pinsent: 1912 – 1986
Eveline Mary Pinsent: 1915 – xxxx
Beatrice Margaret Pinsent: 1919 – 2004


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Tom Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1883
Marriage: 1905
Spouse: Portia Thompson
Death: 1935

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0856

References

Newspapers


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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Thomas William Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1916
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1923

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0854


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Thomas Henry Pinsent: 1873 – 1910
Grandmother: Bessie Ada Penn: 1872 – 1964

Parents

Father: Thomas William Pinsent: 1895 – 1974
Mother: Florence Perkins: 1896 – 1947

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

Jessie Harriet Pinsent: 1893 – 1898
Thomas William Pinsent: 1895 – 1974
Joseph James Pinsent: 1897 – 1923
Bessie Louisa Pinsent: 1900 – 1902
Alfred Pinsent: 1902 – 1977
James Valentine Pinsent: 1908 – 1908

Male Siblings (Brothers)

Thomas William Pinsent: 1916 – 1923
Alfred James Pinsent: 1920 – 1992
George Albert Pinsent: 1924 – xxxx


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Thomas William Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Thomas William Pinsent: 1912 – 1986 GRO0853

Iris Winifred Bliss: 1919 – 2002
Married: 1940: Leicester, Leicestershire

Children by Iris Winifred Bliss

Valerie Pinsent: 1942 – 1942
Daughter (GRO0821)
Daughter (GRO0550)

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0853


Thomas William was the youngest of Horace Pinsent’s three sons by his wife, Eveline Maud (née Holt). He and his siblings grew up on Tudor Road in Leicester. Thomas William was still at home when the War-time Register was compiled in 1939. He was an unmarried “engineer’s fitter” at the time; however he married a “hosiery cutter,” Iris Winifred Bliss, the following year.

Thomas William and Winifred had three daughters, however the first died soon after birth. The other two lived to adulthood and are probably alive today.

Thomas William Pinsent and his elder brother John Holt Pinsent both seem to have stayed on in Leicester. Their brother James Leonard Pinsent moved to Chorley in Lancashire. Thomas and Iris Winifred were living on Henley Crescent in Leicester in 1981 (British Telephone Books) and Thomas died there in August 1986 (Calendar of Grants of Probate & Letters of Administration). His widow, Iris Winifred, died in Leicester in 2002 (England & Wales Burial Index: 1916-2005: Ancestry.com). 


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


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Thomas William Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Thomas William Pinsent: 1895 – 1974 GRO0852  (Soldier, Aircraftsman and Postman, Thurrock, Essex)

1. Florence Perkins: 1896 – 1947
Married: 1916: London, Middlesex

Children by Florence Perkins:

Thomas William Pinsent: 1916 – 1923
Alfred James Pinsent: 1920 – 1992 (Married Jane Barlow, Wigan, Lancashire 1945 and Ince, Lancashire, 1961)
Doris May Pinsent: 1922 – xxxx  (Married George Henry Bushnell, Thurrock, Essex, 1946)
George Albert Pinsent: 1924 – xxxx
Daughter (GRO0608)

2. Eleanor Mabel Eileen Littlefield: 1907 – 1985
Married: 1953
: Pitsea, Essex

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0852

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Thomas William was the eldest son of Thomas Henry Pinsent, a “Wesleyan Methodist Society book warehouseman,” by his wife, Bessie Ada (née Penn). He was born in Hoxton Old Town in 1895 and was, with his brothers Joseph James and Alfred Pinsent, baptized in St. Luke’s Church in Islington, in 1902.  

Thomas William was brought up in north London. He joined the army in 1911 and served for two years as a private in the “Royal West Surrey Regiment” [#5851]. However, he was transferred to the “Royal Engineers” as a Driver [#24985] in 1913. His younger brother, Joseph James Pinsent, signed up with the “West Surrey’s” in October 1914. He served with them throughout the First World War (see elsewhere). Thomas William saw action (presumably in France) with “3rd Signals Squadron R.E.” (British Army WWI Medal Rolls Index Cards: 1914 – 1920). However, he must have been home on leave in January 1916 as he found time to marry Florence Perkins, the daughter of a then deceased butcher, in Islington. They had a son, also called Thomas William Pinsent in December that year. Presumably, he was back in France by then. Interestingly, Thomas’s cousin Maud E. Pinsent (née Spall) – the wife of William George James Pinsent – was present at the birth. Thomas survived the war and was discharged in January 1919. He was awarded the “Victory”, “British” and “14 Star” Medals (see above). His son, Thomas William Pinsent “junior” died in Kent at the age of six, in 1923. However, his parents had four more children (two boys and two girls) in the years that followed. 

Thomas William was working for the railway as a “porter” when his second son was born in 1920, and he was a “labourer” when his first daughter was born in 1922. For some reason, he was away from home when the census takers came calling in 1921. His wife was living on Retford Street, in Shoreditch, in London with her two young sons. Both had been born in Stoke Newington, in London.

Thomas must have missed the discipline and structure of military life so, after apparently trying his hand as a “toy dealer”, he opted to put his skills as a “driver” and an “engine mechanic” to good use in the “Royal Air Force”– which he joined in January 1923. His service records (see above) tell us that he was five feet seven inches tall; he had dark hair, brown eyes and a fresh complexion. He had a “soldier with a musket” tattooed on his right forearm as a convenient distinguishing feature. Thomas William Pinsent signed on for six years of regular service and a further six in the reserves. He enrolled as an “Air Hand.” However, he was promoted to “Aircraft’s man 2nd Class” in January 1924 and to “Aircraft’s Man 1st Class” in June 1927. 

Florence and her two children moved to Andover in Hampshire to be close to where he was based, and they had two more children. Her two surviving sons and her daughters married during or soon after the Second World War. The sons went on to have families of their own. Thomas William Pinsent left the Air Force sometime in the 1930s, and he had joined the “General Post Office” (G.P.O.) as a “postman” in Thurrock, in Essex by 1937 (British Postal Service Appointment Books: 1737-1969: Ancestry.com). Thomas was away from home when the Wartime Register was compiled in 1939. However, his wife Florence was living on Tennyson Road in Pitsea with three other people whose names are redacted. They are probably three of her children. Thomas William remained with the post office for quite some time. He formally transferred from Grays – which is in the immediate vicinity of Thurrock – to Pitsea (which was approximately twelve miles (20 Kilometres) from Thurrock) at some point prior to 1945. Both his daughters later married in Thurrock.  

Florence (née Perkins) died in Chelmsford in December 1947 and her husband was granted probate of her effects, which were valued at £721 2s 10d (England and Wales National Probate Calendar: 1858 – 1966: Ancestry.com). Thomas William Pinsent of Tennyson Road in Pitsea later remarried. He married a widow, Eleanor Mabel Eileen Gurnham (née Littlefield), at the Church of St. Michael and All Angels, in Pitsea in 1953. He died in Brentwood in Essex, in 1974 and she, Eleanor, died there over a decade later, in 1985. 

Thomas’s eldest (surviving) son, Alfred James Pinsent grew up in Hampshire and married during the Second World War. His life is described elsewhere. His younger brother, George Albert Pinsent also grew up in Hampshire and married during the war. He may still be alive today. He married twice and had two sons by his first wife and two daughters by the second, so his line presumably continues. 


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: James Pinsent: 1837 – 1912
Grandmother: Sarah Savage: 1839 – 1914

PARENTS

Father: Thomas Henry Pinsent: 1873 – 1910
Mother: Bessie Ada Penn: 1872 – 1964

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

George James Pinsent: 1859 – 1860
James Walter Pinsent: 1861 – 1948
Sarah Lydia Pinsent: 1863 – 1942
Joseph Benjamin Pinsent: 1865 – 1897
Louisa Mary Pinsent: 1867 – xxxx
William John Pinsent: 1869 – 1918
Martha Elizabeth Pinsent: 1871 – xxxx
Georgina Frances Pinsent: 1875 – xxxx
Albert Hibbard Pinsent: 1878 – 1878
Edward Charles Pinsent: 1878 – 1878
George Hibbard Pinsent: 1879 – 1953
Alexander Sidney Pinsent: 1884 – 1911

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

Thomas William Pinsent: 1895 – 1974
Joseph James Pinsent: 1897 – 1923
Alfred Pinsent: 1902 – 1977
James Valentine Pinsent: 1908 – 1908


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Thomas Johnson Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1905
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1906

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0850


Family Tree

Grandparents

Grandfather: Thomas Johnson Pinsent: 1856 – 1925
Grandmother: Sarah Ann Ellis: 1858 – 1882

Parents

Father: John Arthur Pinsent: 1875 – 1942
Mother: Ada Soloman: 1876 – 1949

Father’s Siblings (Aunts, Uncles)

John Arthur Pinsent: 1875 – 1942
Harry Pinsent: 1877 – 1905
Ada Pinsent: 1878 – 1882
Emma Louise Pinsent: 1879 – xxxx
Jane Pinsent: 1880 – 1959
Sarah Ann Pinsent: 1882 – 1882

Male Siblings (Brothers)

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


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Thomas Johnson Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Thomas Johnson Pinsent: 1856 – 1925 GRO0849 (Shoe-finisher and hair dresser, Leicester)

1. Sarah Ann Ellis: 1858 – 1882
Married: 1875: Leicester, Leicestershire

Children by Sarah Ann Ellis:

John Arthur Pinsent: 1875 – 1942 (Married Ada Soloman, Leicester, Leicestershire, 1895)
Harry Pinsent: 1877 – 1905 (Married Florence Hannah Clayton, Leicester, Leicestershire, 1899)
Ada Pinsent: 1878 – 1882
Emma Louise Pinsent: 1879 – xxxx (Married William Warburton, Leicester, Leicestershire, 1899)
Jane Pinsent: 1880 – 1959 (Married William Perry, Leicester, Leicestershire, 1904)
Sarah Ann Pinsent: 1882 – 1882

2. Caroline Deakin: 1858 – 1921
Married: 1883: Leicester, Leicestershire

3.  Emma Jarvis: 1858 – 1924
Married: 1922: Leicester, Leicestershire, 1922

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0849


Thomas Johnson was the eldest son of John Pinsent and Elizabeth (née Johnson). He was born in Loughborough, into a family that included four girls and seven boys who were born over a period of twenty-four years. Thomas Johnson’s father was a “shoe finisher” who had moved to Leicester in around 1868.  Eight of the children (including Thomas Johnson Pinsent) grew up and married in Leicester and added to the local gene pool. Although John initially worked in the shoe trade in Leicester, he later ran a shop on the Birstall Road and, in around 1882, he took over the management of the “Sir Robert Peel” beer house on Bedford Street. 

Thomas Johnson Pinsent followed his father into the shoe trade. He was a “shoe finisher” when he married Sarah Ann Ellis, the daughter of a “nailer” (probably of shoes) in 1875.  Thomas remained in the shoe-trade for a few more years but he eventually switched profession and he was said to be a “hairdresser, perfumer and tobacconist” living at 21 Willow Bridge Street, in Leicester, in White’s 1877 Directory. Although nominally still a “shoe finisher”, he was a “hairdresser” on Willow Bridge Street when the property he rented was put up for sale, by auction, in January 1885 (Leicester Chronicle Saturday 31st January 1885). 

Thomas Johnson and Sarah had two boys and four girls in the years that followed their marriage in 1875; however Sarah Ann died after the birth of her last child, a daughter who was also named Sarah Ann Pinsent in January 1882 (Leicester Daily Chronicle: Saturday 28th January 1882).  Sadly, another of Thomas Johnson’s daughters (Ada Pinsent) died later the same year.

Thomas Johnson was left with four children (two boys, John Arthur Pinsent and Harry Pinsent and two girls, Emma Louise Pinsent and Jane Pinsent) to look after. He moved back into his father’s beer house at “69 Bedford Street” and he was living there when he married Caroline Chaplin (née Deakin) in April 1883. She was a widow with a young son, Robert Ernest Chaplin who she, needless to say, brought with her into the marriage. He shows up as “Robert E. C. Pinsent” in the 1891 Census but otherwise must have kept to his father’s surname. He does not figure elsewhere.  Thomas and Caroline had no children of their own. 

Thomas (and his younger brother George Pinsent) helped their father out behind the bar at the “Sir Robert Peel” and participated in his passion for dog racing. They can be found helping out as “marksmen” and “pistol firers” at local dog-races (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 13th May 1882). The family greyhound or whippet (“Pincent’s Turpin”) regularly competed in these events and had some, albeit limited, success. Both brothers also took up their father’s interest in “Pedestrianism” (the then current fad of competitive walking) and they competed in local heats throughout the early 1880s (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 10th September 1881). George seems have been more committed than Thomas. The two sports provided both a recreational outlet – and an opportunity for a bit of working class betting. 

The 1891 Census data tells us  that Thomas Johnson was a full-time “hairdresser“ living with his second wife and one daughter on Catherine Street in Leicester. His eldest son John Arthur Pinsent was away from home.  He had had a troubled life. He was charged and convicted of theft of a pair of boots at the Leicester Police Court in 1885 and was picked up for sleeping rough in Derby in 1889. The magistrates there decided that he should be sent to an industrial school until he was sixteen years old (Derby Mercury: Wednesday July 31st 1889). John Arthur may well have been living there when the census takers made their rounds in Leicester 1891.  On that occasion, Thomas’s younger son, Harry Pinsent, was living with his grandfather, Benjamin Ellis. Benjamin was a foreman in the shoe trade and presumably supervised Harry’s training as a “shoe-finisher.”

Thomas’s daughter also had her problems growing up. She was charge with the theft of two oranges, valued at 2d, in 1893 and her father pleaded with the court that she was beyond his control. Evidently, he had previously taken her to the police station after finding her with money she had taken from shop tills. The bench ordered her to be sent to an industrial school until the age of 16 years (Leicester Daily Mercury: Monday 27th February 1893).

While living on Catherine Street, Thomas Johnson gave evidence at the inquest of a 34-years old shoe finished who had fallen down stairs on returning home from the pub and broken his neck. Charles testified that he had seen James Hyde pass his hairdresser’s shop at around a quarter past eleven – and, crucially, that he was not sober (Leicester Chronicle: Saturday 15th November 1890). Thomas Johnson continued to run his business “on his own account” long after his children had left home (1911 Census). 

Thomas Johnson was still living on Catherine Street in 1921 when his second wife, Caroline, died.  He married a widow, Emma Jarvis (née Sykes), the following year. The Leicester Electoral Rolls give her name as “Emily”; however that is almost certainly wrong – unless she went by both. She died two years later and Thomas Johnson Pinsent followed, in March 1925. 

Thomas Johnson’s two sons both married: John Arthur (the elder) in 1895 and Harry (the younger) in 1899. Their lives are described elsewhere. His surviving daughters Emma Louise Pinsent and Jane Pinsent also married; the former to a “shoe-clicker” in 1899, and the latter, who was a “barmaid,” to a “civil servant” in 1904. 


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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Thomas Henry Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Thomas Henry Pinsent: 1873 – 1910 GRO0848  (Warehouseman, London, Middlesex)

Bessie Ada Penn: 1872 – 1964
Married: 1892: Shoreditch, London, Middlesex

Children by Bessie Ada Penn

Jessie Harriet Pinsent: 1893 – 1898
Thomas William Pinsent: 1895 – 1974 (Married (1) Florence Perkins, 1916, London, Middlesex; (2) Eleanor Mabel Eileen Littlefield, Pitsea, Essex, 1953)
Joseph James Pinsent: 1897 – 1923
Bessie Louisa Pinsent: 1900 – 1902
Alfred Pinsent: 1902 – 1977 (Married Annie Henrietta Brightman, London, Middlesex, 1930)
James Valentine Pinsent: 1908 – 1908

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0848

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Thomas Henry was the fourth eldest of five surviving son of James Pinsent by his wife Sarah (née Savage). He was born in London, where his father was a “greengrocer” and “fruiterer.” He grew up in Holborn and then Hackney, in north London after his family moved there in around 1878. Nevertheless, he spent his teenage years in Islington (which is about half way between Hackney and Holborn) – after his parents settled on Woodville Road in that parish in early 1880s. Thomas eventually had four sisters as well as his three brothers. It was a large family; however, not all the children survived. 

The British Government made schooling compulsory in 1880 and Thomas Henry went to an elementary school in “Chatham Gardens” in Hackney, before being sent to “Church Street Temporary School for Boys” in 1881 – when he was six years old. His sister, Martha Elizabeth signed on at the nearby “Girls’ School” at about the same time and their younger sister, Georgina Frances, joined them in 1883. It was normal practice to send children of both sexes to school until they were about twelve years old, when they were expected to leave school to find work. All three children were “scholars” living on Witchampton Street in St. Leonard’s parish, in Hackney, when the 1881 census was taken. 

Thomas Henry Pinsent was a “packer” and “warehouseman” working for the “Wesleyan Methodist Society” when he joined the “2nd London Rifles” in August 1888. It was  a “Territorial Army” unit, so he retained his job with the Society and he was a “book-makers’ porter” still living with his parents on Woodville Road in Islington when the census takers returned, in 1891. 

Thomas moved out the following year and he was living in Hutley Place in Shoreditch when he married Bessie Ada Penn, the daughter of a deceased “policeman”, in Hoxton, in October 1892. They had four sons and two daughters between 1893 and 1908. Sadly, all the girls died young and only three of the boys (Thomas William, Joseph James and Alfred Pinsent) grew to maturity. Thomas and Bessie moved to Norway Street in the mid-1890s and the census takers found them there with their remaining three children in 1901. It was an apartment consisting of two, unfurnished, second floor rooms (London, England, Electoral Register: 1904).

The three boys were baptized in St. Luke’s Church in Finsbury on 5th September 1905 (London, England, Church of England Births and Baptisms: 1894 – 1916). Arthur (the youngest) was admitted to the “Gopsall Street School” in Hackney on the same date (15th April 1907) as his cousin Violet Pinsent, and his stay probably overlapped with that of another cousin, Bertram Horace Pinsent. The families clearly kept in touch and knew each other. 

Thomas appears to have maintained his attachment to the “2nd London Rifles” until 1908, when (at age 36 years and 7 months) he transferred to the “6th Battalion of the City of London Rifles.” This was a regular army unit. He signed on for two years and he was sent to Salisbury in August 1908 for training. He served his time with the unit and was discharged in April 1910. He returned to his wife and family who were, by then, living on Frome Street and died there in October that year. Whether his time in the army contributed to his early death I do not know. He is listed among the records of the Chelsea Pensioner’s (1760 – 1913).

Bessie Ada (née Penn) was left with three teenage sons (Thomas William (16), Joseph James (13) and Alfred Pinsent (8)) to care for after her husband died. The family was living with a boarder in three rooms on Frome Street, in Islington, when the census was taken in 1911. Thomas and Alfred were later married, moved out and had children, and their lives are discussed elsewhere. The 1921 census, meanwhile, shows that Bessie and Joseph were then living in Noel Street in London N 1. She was, “Mr. Humphrey’s robe and costume man” working at 24 Highbury Crescent in London and Joseph was a “carpet designer” working for “H. M. Southwell Limited, Carpet Manufacturers” of Great Marlborough Street in Central London.

Joseph James Pinsent had signed on as a private [#410758] in the “6th(Queen’s) Royal West Surrey Regiment” in October 1914 and been sent to France in June 1915. He was reported wounded in August 1916 (Islington Gazette: 29th August 1916), and his service records show that he reported sick for a couple of days in November that year and received treatment for gout in his legs the following year. On that occasion, he was sent to “#11 Clearing Station” and forwarded to a “sick convoy”in August 1917. He was under treatment for 139 days – which must have been a welcome break from the font line (British Armed Forces: First World War Soldier’s Medical Records: Findmypast). Joseph James Pinsent survived active service. He returned and was discharged from the army in March 1919. He was awarded the Victory, British and 1915 Star Medals for his service (British Army WWI Medal Rolls Index Cards: 1914-1920). On his return, Joseph became a “carpet pattern designer.”  However, he hardly had time to settled down, he died in Islington in 1923. He never married.


Family Tree

GRANDPARENTS

Grandfather: Benjamin Pinsent: 1808 – xxxx
Grandmother: Myra Burgoyne: 1815 – 1869

PARENTS

Father: James Pinsent: 1837 – 1912
Mother: Sarah Savage: 1839 – 1914

FATHER’S SIBLINGS (AUNTS, UNCLES)

Samuel Benjamin Pinsent: 1833 – xxxx
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

MALE SIBLINGS (BROTHERS)

George James Pinsent: 1859 – 1860
James Walter Pinsent: 1861 – 1948
Joseph Benjamin Pinsent: 1865 – 1897
William John Pinsent: 1869 – 1918
Albert Hibbard Pinsent: 1878 – 1878
Edward Charles Pinsent: 1878 – 1878
George Hibbard Pinsent: 1879 – 1953
Alexander Sidney Pinsent: 1884 – 1911


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Thomas Pinsent

Vital Statistics

Birth: 1824
Marriage: N/A
Spouse: N/A
Death: 1831

Family Branch: Tiverton
PinsentID: GRO0983


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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