42.7 – Mary Alty

This little plot marker required paging through scans to find, since the older burial registers are often written out in ways that cause problems for Ancestry’s scan-to-text software. I found M.A. in the end – Mary Alty of Knowlwood, the daughter of Robert and Ruth, buried on July 28th 1842 aged 20 weeks old. Mary …

37.23 – Thomas Taylor

Thomas’s plot marker, with its little star, is one of the smaller markers that denotes an adult burial rather than a child’s. So what was Thomas up to? Thomas Taylor was born in 1803 to Ralph and Sarah Taylor of Walsden. He was baptised at St. Mary’s in August of that year. Ralph was a …

47.59 – Willie Dawson

Another plot marker for a small child. This time it’s Willie Dawson of 41 Garibaldi Street, who died a year old and was buried here on October 22nd 1877. Or is it? Willie was born on December 2nd 1875 at the house on Garibaldi Street to Lord and Sarah Hannah (Mitchell) Dawson. Lord was a …

46.62 – William Howarth and Andrew and Clarissa Russell

This set of sidestones is a frustrating one, because not only have William and Andrew’s stones been separated but Clarissa’s stone has also gone missing between the 1980s and now. Clarissa was buried here with both her husbands, two very different men in many ways. William Howarth was born in 1849 in Sowerby Bridge. His …

53.60 – Thomas and Alice Parkinson, and Margaret and James Cardwell

The Cardwells and Parkinsons are a good example of how migration from Lancashire to Todmorden had begun long before the Fieldens had become a powerful economic concern, and of the circuitous routes it could take! Thomas Parkinson was born in 1813 in Preston. Thomas’s father William was a weaver. A few decades earlier Thomas would …

39.37 – Sarah Taylor

The common experience for most FOCCers is that on your first or second visit, something catches your eye. Passively, of course, but maybe…well, if you believe in something else, you might think something actively caught your eye, but that’s a digression. For our Secretary it was Grace Bell. For our Chair it was Sarah Taylor. …