Thursday, December 29, 2011

Alfred John & Alice HOOKINS (Tree 3N)




This is post number 100 on the Hookinslinks blog and features Alfred John HOOKINS who appeared in the previous posting as a child. He grew up to be a soldier and is pictured displaying his Corporal stripes with his wife Alice. Alfred served in both the Boer War and the 1st World War. I am again indebted to Eric for this picture.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

William & Sarah HOOKINS (Tree 3N)



I put some posts on the blog back in June and July about William HOOKINS who was in the Crimean War, later a Prison Guard and later still a Chelsea Pensioner. I am indebted to Eric who has sent me another picture of William taken with his wife Sarah, son Alfred John and niece Lizzie. Apparently Sarah's brother George married William's sister Mary-Ann so there were 2 weddings between the families. Judging by Alfred this picture will have been taken towards the end of the 1870s so it's great to have it and to make it available to a wider viewing audience. Many thanks Eric.

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

HOOKINS in the 1911 Census

I have just finished indexing the 1911 Census and of the 262 people transcribed on the Census website as HOOKINS I have found 26 who are HOOKINGS and 44 who appear to be HOSKINS. All of these are found in 81 different family units. Most of the HOSKINS names would not appear to be people connected to the HOOKINS name but some of the HOOKINGS people may well be just spelt incorrectly as I think some of them do fit in. So the total number of HOOKINS accounted for is going to lie somewhere between 192 and 218 which compares well with the number I put as an estimate of those currently holding the name. The good news therefore is that we are between us keeping the name going. Having fathered two daughters I realise that I am not properly pulling my weight so thanks to those of you who have contributed to the male line and therefore the continuance of the name.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

How Popular Are We?

Having printed off all th Census pages for 1911 where a HOOKINS (and some labelled as HOOKINS but probably not because of 1911 handwriting and 2011 readers!) appears and I am now indexing those before adding details gleaned to the individual records. I have also started indexing the web page and other prints I have for births, baptisms, banns, marriages, deaths and burials so it is easier for reference purposes and also avoiding duplication.
I have come across some new sites to glean information and I have just established that there are about 280 people in England & Wales who currently hold the HOOKINS name. Eventually I will have indexed some of the Censuses and will be able to see if we are expanding as a name or gradually leaving the human race!
In answer to the question "How Popular Are We" it seems that we hold =17023rd place in England & Wales but there are over 270,000 different surnames so in that case we are pretty popular.
You may also be interested to know that there are 2038 people called CHRISTMAS, 40 SANTAs, 323 RUDOLPHs, 7 NEWYEARs, 678 HOLLYs, 5947 SNOWs, 1556 SNOWBALLs, 38 SNOWMANs (SNOWMEN?) and 18,440 WINTERs in England and Wales.There are also 27 DASHERs, 1104 DANCERs, 307 PRANCEs (no PRANCERs), 89 VICKERSONs (no VIXEN), 9 COMETs, 77 CUPIDs, 380 DONNERs and 82 BLITZ (but no BLITZEN).

Monday, November 14, 2011

Naomi Agnes Constance HOOKINS (Tree A)



A couple of posts ago I featured the discharge of Henry James HOOKINS and mentioned that Henry's wife Naomi died during the 2nd World War. This is the announcement of her death in the local paper and the verse chosen to celebrate her life.



This newspaper cutting indicates that her funeral took place at the Bristol Road Cemetery in Bridgwater and that at that time her only son Bill (William E HOOKINS) was serving in the RAF in the Middle East. It also lists her involvement with the WVS, as a collector for the Red Cross and as a Group Secretary of war savings for her immediate area as well as being a member of a working party for St John's Parish.

The list of mourners included F HOOKINS (Frederick John - my grandfather) who was a brother of Naomi's husband Henry (known as Harry). Fred is also listed with his wife Em (Emma Selina) amongst those providing floral tributes along with Alice (sister of Henry) and her husband Joe.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Long Time No See is Really Not Good

Whilst it's good to keep in touch with everyone having and interested in the Hookins name, because of the numbers involved this gradually changed over the years from regular letters to letters more infrequently and latterly the good old Christmas "round-robin" newsletter. I've used this method with one particular person on my family tree who about 15 years ago provided me with a load of information which virtually doubled my records of our family tree overnight. So we have remained in touch but yesterday he actually knocked on my door as he was in the area and it was so good to seem him and his wife and it made me realise that this sort of contact is so much better than the annual newsletter. The way he found me in this town of 30000 people also shows it was meant to be. He just went into the Tourist Information office and asked if they knew where my road was whereupon someone piped up "I know someone who lives at No 6". My distant relation looked at his notes and replied "Not Bob Hookins?" to which the lady replied "Yes". Unfortunately my wife and I cannot match the description of the lady with anyone we know who might know our exact address and I should point out that you shouldn't bank on this approach when you visit Barnstaple - I really am not that notorious. I hope that I can find out who it is soon so that I can explain this mysterious blonde to my wife!!! But it was really great to see you B & M and hope you don't mind if you get to see us again if we're in your area.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Henry James HOOKINS (Tree A)





No 40220 Private Henry HOOKINS was born at the beginning of October 1893 and was baptised at the end of that month in the Parish Church in Pawlett near Bridgwater. He was the son of William and Susan HOOKINS who have featured previously in the blog postings. Henry was the first volunteer in his Parish at the outbreak of World War I. He was disabled during the war and this is a copy of his honourable discharge dated 1917. He married Naomi Agnes Constance KING in June 1920 at St James Church in Bridgwater and their only child was born the following year. Naomi died during the 2nd World War and Henry married Gwendoline Evelyn GILLINGHAM who had also been fairly recently widowed and another son was born to them. Henry died just after Christmas in 1977.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Milestones Passed

I have just taken the number of individual records I hold for HOOKINS/HOOKINGS members passed the 1550 mark and the number of family units has now reached 400. The 400th family are William and Joane HOOKINS whose daughter Joane was baptised at St Michael's Church in Milverton Somerset on 21st October 1726. She later married a William OWEN at the same church on Boxing Day 1750.
I am gradually working my way through some web page prints for baptisms, marriages and burials of HOOKINS/HOOKINGS folk in Milverton as ther were a few around there in the 1700s.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

People Dismissed from My Family Tree (A)

No - there's nothing sinister here, no misdemeanours which have caused their removal! I've just started going through my family sheets and looking at some of the families who are not linked to a particular Tree to find out if there is any way of finding them a proper home in the Tree where they belong. There are more than 500 people included in this category - almost one-third of the records I hold. Hopefully then some at least can be repatriated if I can gather enough clues.
My first challenge relates to James and Ann HOOKIN(G)S both born at the end of the 1700s. I have now located from an on-line site the baptisms record of both James and Ann (nee LYDDON) and a record of their marriage in 1826 in Brompton Ralph which links them to a family in my Tree living there at the time. There is a James in that family - great - but I find that he seems to be married to a Sarah (nee HALE) - not great! But everything seems to fit into place for the new James so where did I get the HALE marriage from? I delve back to 1990 when I was given a huge amount of information which virtually doubled the records for my Tree and the detail was provided then by the father of my contact for all that information. I am not however able to find any record to verify it. What my contact did tell me was that "his" James was an ancestor of someone called HAWKINS! I can find no record of the HOOKINS/HALE marriage several acceptable links for James and Ann not least that the name LYDDON appears several times in my Tree as a second Christian name. So HOOKINS/HALE have been ejected from Tree A and replaced by the HOOKINS/LYDDON partnership. Their wedding witnesses were William HOOKINS (Father of groom?) and Ann LYDDON (Mother of bride). The bride's mother was living with the couple in the 1851 Census as a 90 year old widow but by the time of the 1861 Census James was a widower. So 2 people removed from my records - new number of individual records held 1538 - and one family removed - new number of families 397. Where will the next challenge take me?

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Richard Southey HOOKINS (Tree 3Q)





I posted some information about Richard Southey HOOKINS on 15th August concerning his brief service in the Australian Navy Reserve. Another wonderful surprise has happened following that posting and I am greatly indebted to Susan from Sydney Australia who has made a fantastic addition to that posting including a photograph of Richard. The record with the photograph also provides more information to indicate that he was serving on HMAS Australia Leyte Gulf in the Philippines when the ship was hit by a Japanese suicide plane on 22nd October 1943. Six officers and 23 ratings were killed and her Commanding Officer Captain E F V Dechaineaux DSC later died of wounds. Richard was among the wounded and died the following day. He was just 18 years old and he was buried at sea. A tragic end to this young life and we honour his memory and his sacrifice. Thank you so much Susan for locating and providing this information.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

John & Sarah HOOKINS (Tree R)






John HOOKINS married Sarah HAYES at Brompton Ralph Parish Church on 1st May 1828. John had been born in Brompton Ralph in 1799/1800 and Sarah at nearby Stogumber in 1802/3. John was a Cordwainer (see previous posting re explanation) and later was classed as a Master Shoemaker. They are known to have had 5 children. Their first two children were born at Burton, Brompton Ralph, the next at Pitsford Hill, Brompton Ralph and the last two were born in Parks Cottage, Brompton Ralph, pictures of which appear above. John and Sarah were buried at Brompton Ralph on the same day in 1860 so their death certificates could give more information about what happened to them. It is very likely that John, and therefore the whole of his Tree, is connected to my own Tree as they were in Brompton Ralph at the same time but I have yet to trace the exact confirmation of his connection to the family of his parents and siblings - unfortunately sometimes suspicion is just not enough!!

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Family History Surprises

It really is always surprising when you experience a Family History surprise. I've been going along with my searching and linking of families for over 30 years now but quite regularly I get these surprises which give extra information or documents which provide further insight into members of the Hookins family. The latest surprise was a visit from Debbie who is on the same Family Tree as me and had been given a number of photographs none of which were marked to indicate the subjects involved. I have now accumulated records of over 1500 Hookins people and acquired quite a number of photographs which I have been gradually sharing on this blog so I was quietly confident of being able to identify some of these. That illusion was shattered however when I looked through them and was able to identify 2 people who appeared in one of the photographs!! So - what do I know after all these years?!! Debbie was able to tell me where her father appeared but we are still left with 14 prints involving a number of people unkown to us so I have set about the task of sending them to people in our Family Tree who might just have been around at the same time as these people and/or may have seen pictures of them to identify some. Debbie's father was a William Ewart HOOKINS son of Henry James HOOKINS and it is probably Henry's siblings (there were 10 of them!!) or people of his generation whom we are looking at. Those siblings were Frederick John (my grandfather), Samuel, Ada Jane (married name RODBER), Alice (married name ROBERTS), Jesse (died at age 6), Walter, Charles, William, Nellie and Elizabeth (died at age 12). If anyone has knowledge of the families of any of these or of contact with them I would be delighted to hear from them. In the meantime I will continue to contact those I have come to know over the years to try and help solve this mystery. One thing with these surprises is that it normally involves a bit of work to solve mysteries or to catalogue changes but it's enjoyable all the same and such contact is very welcome. So thanks to Debbie - it was good to meet up again and I hope to get some answers for both of us. And here are the pictures.




Monday, August 15, 2011

Richard Southey HOOKINS (Tree 3Q)



Richard Southey HOOKINS was born in Elsternwick, Victoria, Australia just after Christmas in 1925. He was the only son in a family of 4 children to Spencer Southey HOOKINS and his wife Alma Vera (nee TURNER). Richard's grandfather Sidney Southey HOOKINS was born in Exeter but went out to Australia in 1867 and 13 years later married Fanny BLACKBURN. Richard was an Insurance Clerk but joined the Royal Australian Naval Reserve in 1943 as an Ordinary Seaman serving on a few ships. He was described as being 5ft 7 inches tall with brown hair and hazel eyes on the attached Naval record. Unfortunately he was badly burned and died as a result of the wounds received on 21st October 1944. His mother's details are included on his record and another page indicates that she was awarded a pension of £2.10s per fortnight from the following month.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Alice and Sarah Muriel M HOOKINS (Tree 3N)



This is the final picture I have of the familyof Alfred John & Alice HOOKINS and shows Alice and her daughter Sarah Muriel M. Alice was born in 1876 in Bermondsey and married Alfred in 1898. Alice died around 1972. Sarah Muriel M. was known as Muriel and was born in 1900, the eldest of the surviving children. She married Harry Edward JOHNSON with whom I believe she had 2 children. Muriel died around 1980.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Arthur Timothy HOOKINS (Tree 3N)



Another child of Alfred HOOKINS and his wife Alice (nee LONGWORTH) was Arthur Timothy the youngest apart from his sister Gertrude. He was known as Tim and was born in 1917 in Greenwich like the remainder of his siblings. He married Winifred Rose SMITH in 1945 in Lambeth and they had a son and daughter born to them. Tim died in 1999 and his wife 3 years later.

Monday, July 18, 2011

"Detached" HOOKINS/HOOKINGS

I have now accumulated 1534 different HOOKINS/HOOKINGS names past and present which seems a lot but is I understand quite small fry in Family History terms. I have just added the 500th Miscellaneous member - those individual records I have located for people who might have a spouse or be part of a single family but who are not joined to any particular Tree. Often the information I have about them is so limited that they can't be linked to anyone else with any certainty but it will be a project for me to work on in the future to see if I can find a home for them. They must belong somewhere!

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Gertrude HOOKINS (Tree 3N)



There are only 2 ladies in my Hookins records who have had the name Gertrude. This Gertrude is the one missing from the photo of the last posting for the family of Alfred and Alice HOOKINS as she was not born until 1920 the youngest of 9 children. I understand that she was also known as "Fred" as she hated her name. There is a story that when she was to be born her parents put different names into a hat and one of the brothers thought it would be funny to put in Gertrude and that was the name pulled out! I have been informed that she married Arthur OUGHAM thought to have been in 1954 in Ealing. She is pictured here in a photo thought to have been taken in 1983 with her grandson Bradley SCOTT who now lives in Australia and with whom I am in contact. If that year is incorrect he will let us know as I do not wish to make any comment about his potential age from more recent pictures I have seen!! Best wishes Brad!

Monday, July 4, 2011

Alfred John HOOKINS (Tree 3N)



Alfred John HOOKINS married Alice LONGWORTH in October 1898 at St Alfege Church in Greenwich. Alfred was a Flour Miller's Warehouseman and suffered serious accident when a large bag of flour fell on his head. He served as a driver in the Army Service Corps in the Corps of Waggoners in South Africa under Baden Powell having joined the Army at an early age. Between 1898 and 1917 Alice bore 10 children. By the time of the above photograph which is thought to be around 1915 their firstborn, Alice, had died before her first birthday and for some reason Gertrude (5) and William (6) are not included whilst Arthur Timothy had not yet been born. The other children enjoyed much longer lifetimes and the remaining 4 daughters all married. Those in the picture are thought to be from left to right John, Alfred, Alice (mother) Sarah Muriel, Henry George, Alfred John (father), Elizabeth and Mary. Alfred John died at the age of 71 in 1942 whilst Alice was 96 at her death in 1972.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

William HOOKINS (Tree 3N)

This is the another picture featuring William HOOKINS much later than on the last blog posting. His wife Sarah is seated beside him and alongside him is Lizzie SMITH (Sarah's maiden name) a niece of William and Sarah. The boy seated playing with his toy boat is said to be Alfred John the youngest of the children of William and Sarah. This suggests that the picture was taken in the late 1870s so William would have been aged just over 50, Sarah being 5 years younger.












This certificate is from the Royal Hospital at Chelsea which indicates that William was no. 9500 in the Chelsea pensioner ranks
as a result of which he was granted a pension of 4d per day. The letter I have a copy of in William's own hand was addressed to the Governor of Portland Prison where William had worked as a guard. In this letter William was asking the Governor to write to the Chelsea Hospital with a character reference and points out that he has a wife and 2 children - the other 2 children had died by this time - and that Sarah has been "for many years afflicted" presumably with some illness. She died in 1891 of apoplexy.

Saturday, June 18, 2011

William HOOKINS (Tree 3N)

William HOOKINS was born in 1826. I have a copy of a letter in William's own hand which was sent much later in his life in which he explains a little about his parents. His father William Thomas HOOKINS as a young man had apparently been a valet to Lord Palmerston but William indicates that he never really knew his father. William's mother Mary was brought up in a Foundling Hospital but sadly records of that institution appear to have been destroyed. He indicates however that she was a Lady's Maid to a Lady Wheatley of St James' Palace, Lady Blunt, Mrs Spicer of Esher Park nd Mrs Bosenquet of Broxbourne Park. William attended Westminster National School but it seems that his mother could not maintain him there for too long. In 1840 he obtained employment with a Mr Hinds in Tottenham Court Road who was a maker of Government sealing wax as an errand boy and was therefore able to support himself and also his mother as her health failed until her death in 1844 when William was only 18. The "new" postal system was then introduced which hit his role as an errand boy and so William states that he was "compelled" to join the Army to earn his living.

He became a Bombardier in the Royal Artillery and is pictured during his service in the Crimea. The copy of his discharge shown here indicates that he served for 9 years and 93 days of which 6 years and 8 months were spent abroad. Due to him being no longer fit for service following an injury sustained in the Crimea he was awarded an Army Pension of 7d (7 old pence) per day for 2 years. His character is described as "exemplary". He then joined the Prison Service at Portland where he served for another 23 years.



Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Adelbert HOOKINS (Tree I)



Adelbert HOOKINS was born in March 1881 and is the father of John Scott HOOKINS in the previous post. Adelbert was born in Oil City Pennsylvania one of 5 children of Isaac Frank HOOKINS and his wife Elizabeth Ann both of whom are said to have been born in England but that has not yet been proven. Neither is the fact that Elizabeth had been married prior to this marriage. Adelbert migrated to Kansas in the early 1900s to work for Prairie Oil & Gas Company which made the town of Independence its Headquarters from 1905. John Scott HOOKINS was born there in 1921 and Adelbert eventually died in the town in February 1950.

Monday, May 9, 2011

John Scott HOOKINS (Tree I)



John Scott HOOKINS (known as Scott) was born in 1921 in Independence Kansas the only son of Adelbert HOOKINS (not to be confused with his nephew Adelbert Mitchell HOOKINS) and Mary Irene (formerly SCOTT). The adjacent picture is said to have been taken in 1934 when Scott was approaching his 14th birthday but he looks quite mature for his age in his smart suit. Scott married and had one daughter and later went to live in Arkansas from where he wrote to me on a few occasions. He died in 2001.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Ardelle HOOKINS (Tree I)


Ardelle HOOKINS was a renowned flautist and in some articles is described as "the legendary Ardelle HOOKINS". She studied with George BARRERE - reputed to be the best flautist in the world at the time - when she was only 12 years old at the Chautauqua Institute. She was one of the youngest flautists in the world in 1931 and was considered too young to travel on her own so required a chaperone. She was a member of The Hookins Entertainers Deluxe with her father and brothers and performed lunch and dinner music at the Athenaeum Hotel in New York. Barrere insisted that she complete high school before entering the Institute of Musical Art so she auditioned for William Curtis at Kincaid at Curtis. She spent 6 years as the only woman in the Curtis wind department, graduating in 1934. Later she played in the Boston Women's Symphony under Ethel Leginska.
Ardelle was born in 1913 in Oil City Pennsylvania, one of 2 sisters and 3 brothers born to Frank and Mable HOOKINS. She married Arthur Donald BOWERS IN 1938 and they had 4 children. She was then known as Ardelle HOOKINS-BOWERS. Ardelle pre-
deceased her husband in 1995 in Mooretown New Jersey at the
age of 82 years.



Ardelle is pictured her with Georges BARRERE at the Athenaeum Hotel in 1925

Monday, April 25, 2011

Shoemakers, Cordwainers or Cobblers

So............. should they be called "shoemakers" or "cordwainers" or is that all "cobblers"?
Between the 16th and 18th Centuries shoemakers and cobblers were two completely separate trades. Cobblers were not permitted to make shoes or boots or even to work on the uppers of any shoes or boots. They were restricted to the repairs of soles and heels. Cordwainers used a special type of leather which I understand originated in Spain. Cordwainer boots were made for special purposes such as for when riding with hounds or with a military uniform or if paying a formal visit to "his lordship". Further on their careers some shoemakers and cordwainers also acquired the additional title of "Master Shoemaker (or Cordwainer)" or "Shoemaker ( or Cordwainer Master)". This denoted that they had served an apprenticeship and were also designated to be an employer. Some shoemakers and cordwainers (later Masters) appear in my Family Tree and lived in the North West Somerset area so the likelihood was that the cordwainer side of their activities was more to do with the area of hunting and less of the landed gentry although this could still have been an aspect of their work. I'm not sure if it paid that well as I see that one of them, having been a shoemaker etc all his life was suddenly living at the Carpenter's Arms in Brompton Ralph as a shoemaker and Innkeeper! - or perhaps he was one of those few males who can multi-task!!

Sunday, March 27, 2011

Ruby Ivy Louisa HOOKINS (Tree G)


I am so sad to have to report the death of the oldest living HOOKINS family member. Ruby Ivy Louisa HOOKINS passed away on Tuesday of this last week aged 101 years. A lovely lady who had a good sense of humour and whose hearing, sight, mind and memory enabled her to communicate in engaging conversation. The card below was given to her at her 100 birthday celebration and shows a picture of her parents as well as her own baby picture following her birth in July 1909 in Ealing. She married Charles Francis HOOKINS (photo below) in September 1931 at St Mary's Church Ealing and I understand that the honeymoon was spent in Bournemouth and Hastings. A year later they bought the house which was to be theirs throughout their married life. Charlie spent his war service in Bermuda whilst Ruby provided accommodation for relatives. Thereafter they lived happily in their home until Charlie died at the age of 93 in 1999. My first contact with Ruby was in 2000 when she responded to a letter I had sent but by that time she was housebound. I was pleased to be able to visit her the day

after her 100th birthday which she spent at St Vincent's Nursing Home which was so wonderful in caring for her. They gave her a party which included a number of visitors and her room was bedecked with flowers and cards and presents to celebrate this milestone. Thank you Ruby for what you meant to so many people who came into contact with you. I will miss our contact with you which has latterly been through Mary who is a relative of mine who lived in the area and spent time in visiting with Ruby on a regular basis and who I know will also greatly miss this lovely lady.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Ernest James HOOKINS (Tree G)


Ernest James HOOKINS was born in August 1887 at 3 Bath Road Mitcham and Bath Road was to be the home of various HOOKINS families in the years to come. He was the 6th of 11 children of George and Caroline (nee TRASH) HOOKINS. The family lived in Bath Road at No.3 (1885), No.21 (1890), No.41 (1895) and No.6 (1900). The family was a little elusive in a couple of Census returns being found in 1881 as HOSKINS and in 1901 as HOOKIN with Caroline being recorded as Clara! Ernest married twice, firstly to Mary Ann (nee BULL) with whom he had 3 children. There is a record of an Ernest James as a Private in WW1 with the Army Service Corps. When his wife was only 38 she died leaving Ernest with a 6 year old son and 2 other children in their teens. He then married Sarah May (nee BROOKER) at St Mary's Walton on Thames with whom he had another son the following year. Ernest is recorded as a Packer in a Varnish Works at the time of his second marriage and later as a Factory Hand. His youngest son was however less than 2 when Ernest himself died leaving Sarah to presumably care for the still young family as she survived her husband by another 30 years before her death in 1966 at the age of 70. Ernest was buried in Church Road Cemetery.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

William Carl HOOKINS (Tree D)


This is William Carl HOOKINS whose own family has been mentioned before with photos of 2 of his sons. William Carl was born in September 1895 at Caroline Street in Camden Town. He had 5 brothers and 2 sisters and they were the children of Edwin Alfred HOOKINS and Jessie (nee JEFFERY). Edwin was a Carman from the 1880s (which could be a driver of a horse and cart for deliveries or even a horsedrawn tram) but in 1915 was defined as a Horse Keeper and in 1919 as a General Labourer. Although William Carl was born at No 37 both in the 1891 and 1901 Censuses 25 Caroline Street and judging from the borth of William's other siblings the family also lived at Preston Street, Camden Street and Bayham Street within Camden Town. William Carl was a Compositor and died in Rainham Essex towards the end of 1974.

Monday, February 21, 2011

Victor Leslie HOOKINS (Tree D)


I mentioned on a previous post that Victor Leslie HOOKINS made his home in Canada and worked with young people at the Malibu Club. He may just have be doing a scouting expedition towards his future homeland when he travelled into New York aboard the ss Drakensberg Castle (originally called Empire Allenby) the day before his 24th birthday. You may not be able to see that the ship was carrying a locomotive on the foredeck and cowsheds on the after deck - interesting cargo. I wonder where they ended up?


In January of the following year (1947) Victor arrived in New York again aboard the English Prince. She was built in 1942 in Sunderland and launched the following year. She was chartered in 1953 but retained her name and was returned to the Prince Line in 1957. In 1961 she was sold to a Liberian Shipping Company when she was re-named Simos and 2 years later she was transferred to the Greek flag. She went aground near Cape St Vincent in 1972 and although refloated she was condemned as unseaworthy ad laid up in Setubal before being towed to Bilbao the following year for breaking up.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Edward John HOOKINS (Tree D)

Edward John HOOKINS was born 1n 1916 in Ponders End Middlesex the first child of Edwin John HOOKINS (featured in the last posting) and Elizabeth (nee DUKE). Edward's mother died less than 6 years later after the birth of his second sibling leaving 3 children under the age of 6. Edward John was a Gardener/Driver and married Lily PENNEY on Christmas Day in Walthamstow in 1937 and in the following 5 years had 3 children.
Edward John is pictured again here flanked by Ada and Albert Francis HOOKINS. Edward John's father married again within 3 years of the death of his first wife providing a mother-figure again for his 3 young children. His second wife was Ada and together they had a further 5 children. The second of these was Albert Francis who was born in 1926 who eventually moved to Australia where he raised his own family and where he eventually died in 1986.
Ada died in Kings Lynn the year before.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Edwin John HOOKINS (Tree D)


Edwin John HOOKINS was born in 1887 in Kentish Town and became a Fitter's Mate. In 1915 he married Elizabeth DUKE at St Matthew's Church in Ponders End with whom he had 3 children, one of whom was born in Ponders End and the other two in Chingford. Unfortunately Elizabeth died in 1922 at the age of just 33 very soon after the birth of her last child. Edwin then had 3 children under 6 to care for and he married again in 1923 to Ada RUMBLE with whom he had a further 5 children. Edwin died on Christmas Day in 1956 in Chingford and is buried at Enfield Crematorium. Ada died in 1985 in Kings Lynn at the age of 93.

Friday, February 4, 2011

Family of William Carl HOOKINS (Tree D)






William Carl HOOKINS married Sarah MONK in 1919 in West Ham and they had 3 sons together. The eldest on the left was Ronald William Nathaniel who was born in 1921 and died in 2001. He married Alma Sylvia COLLINSON in 1944 again in West Ham and in order no doubt to redress the male/female balance in the family had 3 daughters together all with christian names beginning with "S". (We also had 2 daughters with the same "S" initial too.)














The youngest son Victor Leslie is shown here. Victor was I believe in the Merchant Navy and I know he travelled to New York in 1946 on the Drakenburg Castle and again in 1947 on the English Prince. Although he married a Hendon girl they were married in what must have been a lovely setting at Yellowknife which is on the shores of the Great Slave Lake in North West Territories of Canada. Between 1962 and 1972 the couple were involved in the Malibu Club and spent future years returning there to assist with the work. Malibu is an evangelical resort for High School youth in the fiords about 100 miles north of Vancouver. There is no road access - everyone arrives by boat or seaplane - a great beginning for the young people who spend just one week at the camp. A picture of the setting is below and looks idyllic.



The couple also worked with YWAM and Victor's wife worked at the office when MV Anastasis was commissioned for Mercy Ships - the very ship which my daughter joined when she began her connection with Mercy Ships.

Later Victor and his wife settled in Chemainus on Vancouver Island but Victor sadly died in 2002 but it was good to have some connection with them both before that happened and to see that connection continue through contact with his wife.