Elizabeth was born circa 1795. By 1817 she had married Marlow baker William Lee of Chapel Street and was mother to a daughter Rose Ann, known usually as simply Ann.
I have not located the marriage of Elizabeth and William. He was baptised into a nonconformist Christian family which may explain that. I believe the couple worshipped at the Salem Chapel, Quoiting Square now known as Christ Church.
According to an obituary for Rose Ann, her father William Lee was hung in Aylesbury Gaol for forgery, one of the last to suffer this punishment for the crime. This must have been traumatic and embarrassing for Elizabeth. I believe the offence was actually fraud.
By the time of the 1841 census she had remarried Joseph Tyler and they were running the Clayton Arms pub in Quoiting Square. Joseph was there personally, with or without Elizabeth, by 1838. He was the first landlord of Clayton Arms, which was owned by the Clayton family.
Prior to this pub job Joseph had been a linen draper, at first in Watlington, then by working with John Meadows in the High Street, before striking out on his own with a business in Quoiting Square (probably next door to the Clayton Arms). He gave up the latter and sold it in 1830.
Joseph had a reputation for providing excellent dinners at the pub - or was that really Elizabeth's doing?
On the 1841 census Elizabeth had her daughter Ann with her. The girl would go on to marry Henry Moss. On the 1851 census Ann and Henry were living with Elizabeth who by then was a widow and running the pub alone.
The licence was transferred to someone else in 1858 following her death.
For more posts like this see the listing Biographies Of Individuals and Pub Related Index.
For more Quoiting Square (formerly Quoiting Place) content see this index
All mentions of a person on this blog can be found on the Person Index.
Sources:
Newspaper copies held at the British Library and accessed by me October 2020 via the BNA- South Bucks Standard May 17th 1895 [Rose Ann's obituary], Reading Mercury 15th March 1830 [Joseph Tyler information].
GRO death index online.
1841 and 51 censuses transcribed by me from microfilm images of census pages.
Buckinghamshire Baptism Index, baptism of William Lee. Find My Past. Accessed October 12th 2020.
© MarlowAncestors
No comments:
Post a Comment