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On 23rd May 1839, in Marylebone, London, Anne Elizabeth was born to her parents James Mason and Mary Harding.[1] She lived In Marylebone, London. The same year she was born, there was a deadly cholera outbreak, which made people extremely ill and killed many across the whole of Europe. Maybe her family knew of someone who died of this dreadful disease.
When she was 12 years old in 1851, she might have lived in Limehouse with her parents and siblings. However, she was not listed in the 1851 England census with the rest of her family. This could have been a mistake, or she potentially could have gone into service to help her family earn money. She might even have been listed under another name.[2]
In 1858, she got married to James Mears in Bethnal Green.[3] In 1861, she lived with her husband and her first daughter, called Anne Elizabeth after herself.[4] They also lived with a boarder called Emma Marshall, who was 18 years old. Her husband was a baker, and she doesn't seem to have an occupation, presumably to take care of her child, who was two years old at the time. Emma Marshall was a needle woman, who probably helped with money and taxes.
In 1871, she lived in St. George in the East, London.[5] They lived at number 95, and her father doesn't appear to be in the census. Her mother is listed as the Head.
In 1875, the third Public Health Act was passed. Conditions in towns and cities finally began to get better, and networks of sewers are dug and water pipes are laid. Gas light becomes common even in the poorest homes. Anne Elizabeth's family would have most likely experienced some of these changes in the home, and their quality of life probably improved.
In 1881, she was living with eight children and her husband.[6] Her eldest child Anne Elizabeth had moved out, and she lived with her eldest son Henry, Elizabeth, Ada, William, Alice, Hannah, Sarah, and her youngest child Mary Ann, who was one at the time. They lived in Marylebone, London, possibly at "St Anns Rd".
In the 1890's, the first underground train ran through London, and Anne and her family could have been there to witness it. The famous writer Lewis Carroll died, and in the very late 1890's the Boer War was fought in South Africa. Anne's family would have experienced all of these things, and maybe even had some connection with them.
In 1891, she was living with her husband and her youngest four children - Alice, Hannah, Sarah and Mary Ann.[7] They ranged in ages 19 to 11. Her husband was 57, while she was 53. Even though her husband was old, he still worked as a baker, and would have provided locals with food and drinks. Her eldest child living in the home was Alice, and she was a cap maker, along with Hannah and Sarah, who was only 14. Mary Ann was still a scholar, and along with her mother was the only one who didn't work. The whole family would have tried to make as much money as possible, even if that meant working from the moment you become 12 or 13.
In 1897, Anne Elizabeth passed away in Mile End Old Town, when she was 59 years old.[8]
This week's featured connections are Redheads: Anne is 21 degrees from Catherine of Aragón, 20 degrees from Clara Bow, 28 degrees from Julia Gillard, 16 degrees from Nancy Hart, 15 degrees from Rutherford Hayes, 18 degrees from Rita Hayworth, 22 degrees from Leonard Kelly, 21 degrees from Rose Leslie, 23 degrees from Damian Lewis, 19 degrees from Maureen O'Hara, 26 degrees from Jopie Schaft and 38 degrees from Eirik Thorvaldsson on our single family tree. Login to see how you relate to 33 million family members.
M > Mason | M > Mears > Anne Elizabeth (Mason) Mears
Categories: England, Orphan Trail Example Profiles | St Marylebone Parish Church, Marylebone, London | Bethnal Green, Middlesex (London) | Limehouse, Middlesex (London)