The following is a preliminary sketch of the Baxter family of Mansield, Nottinghamshire, which we believe to be ancestral to Mary Baxter, wife of John Jarratt, of Sheffield, Yorkshire, who is known to have been born at Mansfield about 1817. We begin with Thomas and Ann (____) Baxter, who had a daughter of exactly the right age, then briefly treat some unplaced, but possibly related, Baxters of Mansfield. By looking at all the men who were married, or baptized any children, at Mansfield from 1790 to 1830, we believe we have eliminated these other candidates as her father with a fair degree of probability. There was in fact only one other man who was married early enough, and was still baptizing children so late as 1817, namely another Thomas Baxter with wife Frances Pollard; and although there is a gap in their family which would accomodate another child born in 1817, there is no child credited to them for that time period in the IGI. But as we have not had access to a sufficiently complete or definitive copy of the original baptismal register of Mansfield, and have been forced to rely on frequently-illegible Bishops’ transcripts, we can only offer our proposed identification of the parents of Mary (Baxter) Jarratt as the most probable one which fits the data available to us.
1. Thomas Baxter, of Mansfield, Nottinghamshire, was b. 1784-85 (aged 56 in 1841, 66 in 1851) in Nottinghamshire, and was still alive at the taking of the 1851 census. He m. by 1807, Anne ____, b. 1790-91 (aged 50 in 1841, 60 in 1851) in Nottinghamshire, also still alive at the taking of the 1851 census. They were perhaps the Thomas Baxter and Ann Cottrell married 8 Feb. 1807 at Sutton-in-Ashfield, a mere 3½ miles southwest of Mansfield,[1] but the marriage record is devoid of any other information, and proof of this connection has not been found. They are enumerated with their sons John, William, and Samuel in the 1841 census of Mansfield, in which Thomas is called a wood sawyer.[2]
They are enumerated with their son Samuel (and the latter’s wife and child) in the 1851 census, in which he is called a labourer, and it is mentioned that he was deaf, and blind in one eye.[3]
We have not found either of them in the 1861 or 1871 censuses.
Thomas Baxter and his wife had the following children, baptized in the parish church of Mansfield (per IGI unless otherwise stated; the record of the eldest children is probably not complete):
- Mary Baxter, bapt. 6 Nov. 1807, d. by 1817, when another daughter was given the same name.
- Isaac Baxter, bapt. 5 Nov. 1811.[4]
- John Baxter, bapt. 24 May 1815, still living unmarried with his parents in 1841, when his occupation is given as “brush m____” (sic).
- Mary Baxter, bapt. 24 Aug. 1817. We presume her to have been the one of this name who m. 27 April 1835 in the Cathedral of SS Peter and Paul, Sheffield, following publication of banns (neither the ages of the parties, nor their fathers’ names, being stated in the record), John Jarratt, of Brightside, Ecclesall Bierlow (a suburb of Sheffield), in the West Riding of Yorkshire, b. probably in 1813, between April and November, at Birmingham, co. Warwick (now in the modern county of West Midlands), d. 2 Nov. 1885, aged 72 years, at Buckenham Street, Brightside, Ecclesall Bierlow, of “senile decay [and] paralysis, 14 days,”[5] and buried 5 Nov. following in St. Thomas Anglican churchyard, Brightside, Sheffield.[6] At the time of their marriage they were evidently residing at Sheffield. Neither could write their name, and both made a mark in lieu of a signature in the register; the witnesses were George Smedley and Rebecca Smedley, who have not been further identified. This connection is at least chronologically likely, because the Mary Baxter who married John Jarratt was b. ca. 1817 (she was aged 35 in 1851, 43 in 1861, 63 in 1881, 73 in 1891, and 83 at her death and burial in 1900) at Mansfield, Nottinghamshire; this woman d. 20 Sept. 1900 at no. 4 Buckenham Street, East Brightside, of “senile decay,”[7] and was buried 24 Sept. following in St. Thomas Anglican churchyard, Brightside, Sheffield.[8] See JARRATT for further details.
- James Baxter, bapt. 25 April 1819, of whom no further record has been found.
- Sarah Baxter, bapt. 27 June 1821, of whom no further record has been found.
- Henry Baxter, bapt. 20 April 1823, of whom no further record has been found.
- William Baxter, bapt. 9 June 1824, living with his parents in 1841, when he was a wood sawyer like his father.
- Samuel Baxter, bapt. 20 Sept. 1826, living with his parents in 1841, when he was a stone mason (at the age of only 14!), and still living with them in 1851, when he was a labourer. He m. by 1851, Mary ____, b. 1823-24 (aged 27 in 1851) in Nottinghamshire. Only known child:
- Eliza Baxter, b. around Nov. 1850 (aged 4 months at the taking of the census on 30 March 1851) at Ald… (place-name illegible), Nottinghamshire.
Other Baxters of Mansfield, from the eighteenth century onward
Thomas Baxter m. 27 Dec. 1756 in Mansfield parish church,[9] Elizabeth Mycroft
Thomas Baxter m. 30 June 1778 in Mansfield parish church,[10] Rebecca Downing.
William Baxter, called of Mansfield in his marriage record, living 1796; m. (by licence) 28 Aug. 1783,[11] Martha Ward, called of Mansfield in her marriage record, living 1796. Only known child:
- Elizabeth Baxter, bapt. 16 June 1796 in Mansfield parish church.
Thomas Baxter, living 1820; m. 30 Nov. 1803 in Mansfield parish church,[12] Frances Pollard (called “Fanny” in some records), living 1820. Known issue (all baptisms at Mansfield):
- James Baxter, bapt. 2 Aug. 1809.
- Reuben Baxter, bapt. 9 June 1815.
- Eliza Baxter, bapt. 4 Oct. 1820.
Henry Baxter, b. 1785-86 (aged 24 at his marriage); m. 9 June 1810 in Mansfield parish church,[13] Mary Hutchinson, b. 1788-89 (aged 21 at her marriage). In their marriage record, he is described as a bachelor and she a spinster, both of Mansfield; the witnesses were Tho. Langstaff and Elizabeth Hutchinson (who signed with a mark). We have not discovered issue of this couple.
James Baxter, living 1823. He m. 8 Nov. 1818 in Mansfield parish church (IGI), Martha Lupton, living 1823. Known issue (all baptisms at Mansfield):
- John Baxter, bapt. 1 Dec. 1819.
- William Baxter, bapt. 14 Nov. 1821.
- James Baxter, bapt. 1 Oct. 1823.
George Baxter, living 1833; m. by 1831, Mary ____, living 1833. Known issue (both baptisms at Mansfield):
- James Baxter, bapt. 22 June 1831.
- Thomas Baxter, bapt. 20 Dec. 1833.
|
1. | Parish register of Sutton-in-Ashfield, Nottinghamshire, 1572-1812, in Nottinghamshire Parish Registers — Marriages, vol. 11 (London: Phillimore, 1907), at p. 100.
|
| 2. | 1841 Census of England, Nottinghamshire, registration district: Mansfield, subdistrict: Mansfield, enumeration district 3, pp. 21-22; PRO HO107/859/2, folios 14v, 15r [Family History Library microfilm no. 438,905]). The entry reads:
born in county?
Thomas Baxter 56 wood sawyer y
=== (page-break) ===
Ann Baxter 50 ---- y
John " 26 brush m [sic] y
William " 17 wood sawyer y
Samuel " 14 stone mason y
|
| 3. | 1851 Census of England, Nottingamshire, registration district: Mansfield, subdistrict: Mansfield, enumeration district 1j, p. 27; PRO HO107, piece 2124, folio 212 [Family History Library microfilm no. 87,754].
Thomas Baxter* head 66 labourer Notts.: Mansfield
Ann Baxter wife 60 Notts.: Mansfield
Samuel Baxter son 24 labourer Notts.: Mansfield
Mary Baxter wife** 27 Notts.: Mansfield Woodham
Eliza Baxter g.dau. 4mo. Notts.: Ald... [illegible]
----
* deaf; blind [in] 1 eye
** This should evidently read “son’s wife”
|
| 4. | Mansield parish register, Bishops’s transcripts, 1761-1812 [Family History Library microfilm no. 503,790].
|
| 5. | Death certificate; registered at Sheffield in 4th quarter, 1885, vol. 9c, p. 279.
|
| 6. | National Burial Index.
|
| 7. | Death certificate.
|
| 8. | National Burial Index.
|
| 9. | Published marriage register.
|
| 10. | Published marriage register.
|
| 11. | Published marriage register.
|
| 12. | Published marriage register.
|
| 13. | Published marriage register; also Mansield parish register, Bishops’s transcripts, 1761-1812 [Family History LIbrary microfilm no. 503,790].
|
Some Sites of Related Interest
|