39.8 – William Taylor

Mourn not my friends, twas God’s decree, That I should leave this world of strife, From earthly danger shall I flee, To share with him eternal Life, Sudden fate so soon to sever, The tender thread of nature’s ties, From Parents, Friends, I’m hid forever, Yet we shall meet beyond the skies. But millions of …

39.12 – Mary and Ann Raper

This grave holds two sisters, the only children of their parents and another testament to how one’s presence in a particular graveyard isn’t about how much time you spend in a place but about what happens in that time. Charles Raper was from Spalding Moor, and Elizabeth Hides was from Conisbrough, but the two began …

39.34 – Thomas, Esther, Amelia, Susy, Thomas and Arthur Dawson

Blind Lane royalty, or rather, Blind Lane lifers. Three generations of Dawsons are here and their stories are brief, but still interesting. Thomas Dawson and Esther Fielden (or Fielding) were married in April 1838 at St. Chad’s, only a short time before the birth of their son James. We can’t go further back than that …

39.35 – Three Sarah Fieldens, Ann Sutcliffe and Mary Coates

Yes, this is going to get confusing very quickly. We’ve already sort of met Thomas Fielden before, via his brother James and their parents Joshua (aka “Old Jossy”) and Betty (Haslam) Fielden of Platts House. Thomas was the second to last child of Joshua and Betty, with Betty dying after the birth of their son …