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#1
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John Herman Merivale
Here's the Merivale grave in the west cemetery today.
Merivale was a mining engineer resident one time at Togston Hall. We've mentioned the family a few times! |
#2
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In Memory of
John Herman Merivale J.P. M.A. M.I.M.E. Born 19th May 1851. Died 18th Nov 1916 also of his wife Blanche Born 9th September 1854. Died 7th July 1919 also of their 5th and 7th Sons who fell in the Great War, John William Capt 7th Northd Fus T.F. Born 6th June 1887 Fell in Action 15th Sept 1916 Near Bois de Fourreau (High Wood) he lies in the Cemetery at Bazentin le Petit. Francis Lieut 7th Northd Fus T.F. Born 7th July 1895 Died in France 18th Nov 1918 He lies in the No. 5 Cemetery Rouen. |
#3
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Some of those dates are tricky with the missing lead letters.
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#4
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The headstone certainly provides a lot of information. I'm impressed you managed to find it.
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#5
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It's not a difficult one to find Janwhin, it's on the immediate left heading west on the tarmac footpath through the older part - the path with the large shrubs dotted along parallel to it.
I did not realise they had 7 sons. I wonder if 7 was the total number of children? |
#6
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It seems it was all sons, of whom two died in infancy. Surviving five were Charles Herman, Bernard, John William, Vernon and Francis.
Their grandfather, Charles Merivale was Dean of Ely. |
#7
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He has a Wikipedia page: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Merivale "His principal work was A History of the Romans under the Empire, in eight volumes, which came out between 1850 and 1862." will add that to my Christmas reading list. |
#8
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Their Great Grandfather was a pal of Lord Byron.
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#9
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Our John Herman Merivale was the author of a text book for mining students:
https://archive.org/stream/notesandf...ge/n5/mode/2up |
#10
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I see Wikipedia is waiting on someone to get started on a page for our man, who was, apparently, the first English professor of mining.
So...we have the first English professor of mining in our west cemetery. Now there's a thing. |
#11
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I have some of the bound volumes of the Transactions of the Institute of Mining Engineers, my first volume starts at 1917. I thought we would get lucky and have a biography / portrait, but it appears such an article was in the 1916 volume. I know this because I have the index volume for 1911 to 1918 and the reference to the 1916 volume is in there.
Our bad luck continues! we do know where it is now though; Volume LIV 1916 |
#12
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So who was Judith Merivale
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#13
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Just thought I'd add this advert for a bit of mining flavour. (c1909)
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#14
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It seems she was John Herman's unmarried sister. She and another sister, unmarried, Mary Sophia, were living together in Oxford in 1911. I would imagine they may have been "blue stockings"
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#15
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Bluestockings and seriously upper crust. The boys probably archetypal public schoolboy officers.
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#16
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I see the Durham Mining Museum has a bit on John H and his son Charles H under who's who.
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#17
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There are several public family trees on Ancestry relating to the Merivale family with a number of photographs. The photos seem to originate from a BruceLiddell tree which has Blanche (John H's wife) as a sibling of the tree's direct ancestors. As these photos are all public I attach a selection.
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#18
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Excellent.
I wonder if that group photo is Togston Hall? Francis is very young looking - Hard to believe they did what was asked of them - Take a load of Broomhill and Amble miners "over the top"! We did find the citation for Vernon's first award for the MC; now where did I put that? |
#19
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The youngest, Frank was born there and he looks about 1? on the photograph, so I would guess it is Togston Hall.
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#20
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Try looking under Medal Winners
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