Thursday 24th September 2015
Alan Shephard pictured in the
Central Car Park, Warminster.
Photographs taken by Danny Howell
on Thursday 24th September 2015.
Information about persons whose surnames begin with the letter S.
Sunday 20th September 2015:
Peter Bruges writes ~
Dear Danny Howell,
I came across your site as I have a marriage in my records and I have some more detail.
Agnes Warder, widow who married Henry Snowe on 27 November 1565 was born Agnes Burde, Birde etc. She was the daughter of Hugh Burde a descendant of the Birde family of Yowley, Cheshire. Agnes’s mother was Alice Horton who married secondly Thomas Yerbury.
Agnes’s daughter Jone or Johanne married (as you have recorded) Thomas Bartholomew.
______
The marriage of Henry Snowe and Agnes Warder took place at The Parish Church of St. Denys, The Minster, Warminster.
http://www.dannyhowell.net/1970/04/warminster-st-denys-minster-marriages_20.html
Saturday 5th September 2015
100th birthday celebrations for Warminster resident Ronald Smith.
Wiltshire Times:
http://www.wiltshiretimes.co.uk/news/13646402.Birthday_celebrations_for_100_year_old_Warminster_resident_and_ex_WWII_soldier/
Betty Sales. Died peacefully in her sleep at Henford House, Warminster, on 8th June 2015, aged 90 years. Formerly of Zeals. Sadly missed by her sons, family and friends. Funeral service will be held at Salisbury Crematorium on Tuesday 23rd June 2015 at 12.15pm. Flowers to Hill & Son, Funeral Directors, Water Street, Mere, Wiltshire, BA12 6DZ tel 01747 860361.
Warminster artist
Anna Shuttlewood
will be showing some of her artwork at
Le Cafe Journal,
High Street, Warminster
Sunday 22nd March
–
Saturday 18th April 2015
(during the cafe opening hours).
Come along and meet Anna
at the
Opening Evening
on
Saturday 28th March 2015
7.00 p.m. to 9.00 p.m.
https://www.facebook.com/events/1567794010171144/
https://www.facebook.com/AnnaShuttlewood
Wednesday 15th January 2014
Dear Danny,
I am Alister Smith from Wellington, New Zealand and was wondering if you or anyone here have any information on Stephen Payne Smith’s parents or siblings.
Stephen Payne Smith was baptised at St. Denys Church, Warminster on 14th August 1805, and the baptism papers has his middle name spelt as ” Pain” instead of Payne. His parents were Thomas and Elizabeth Smith, but Elizabeth’s maiden name is not on the record.
Stephen Payne Smith married Jane Rebecca Hedgeland at St. Georges Church, Hanover Square, Westminster, London on 17th November 1839, and they had nine children :-
Jane Susannah 20th July 1830,
Stephen Thomas 1832,
Samuel Richard 1834 – 1839,
Elizabeth Harriet 1835,
Mary Ann 1837,
Clarissa Emma 1839,
Louisa Hedgeland 1842 and Maria Payne 1842 (both twins),
William Samuel 1845.
Samuel Richard died on January 1839 (age 5 years old) and is buried at St. John the Evangelist Church, Westminster, London, England.
Both Stephen Thomas & Samuel Richard were born at Longbridge Deverill, Wiltshire.
Elizabeth Harriet was born in Marlborough,Wiltshire
and Mary Ann was born at Crockerton Inn, Crockerton, Wiltshire,
whereas the rest were born in Westminster, London.
I think Thomas Smith (Stephen Payne Smith’s father), was a publican at Crockerton Inn at the time of Mary Ann’s birth.
Stephen Payne Smith and Jane Rebecca Hedgeland and their eight remaining children immigrated to New Zealand on board the Steadfast in 1851.
They first settled in Lyttleton, Christchurch, then lived in Kaiapoi, Christchurch for many years before eventually settling down in Geraldine, South Canterbury, New Zealand, and that is where I was born with five other siblings.
Would be much appreciated if anyone else can add to the chapter in our family history, as our family bible has gone missing for many years.
Thanks very much,
Alister Smith.
Wednesday 18th December 2013
Julian Butler writes:
Hello Danny,
Lately I’ve been casting my mind back to Gloria Sloper. I recall you mentioned her in your reply about the Fancy Dress competition photo in June 1950. She organised a Dancing Display in the park on the same day.
It must have been in 1956 or so, when I was eight, that my parents enrolled me in Miss Sloper’s Dancing School in Boreham Road. Those self-conscious memories of dancing about in her studio – the front room of the house, I think – remain after all these years. How long I stayed there, before embarrassment got the better of me, is unknown, but it can’t have been long.
A later memory is of attending a fete in the gardens of St Boniface College and there is Miss Sloper again, with her dear little cherubs in tutus.
At one time or another both my older sisters attended Miss Sloper’s. So not only did she play a fascinating part in my own family, but in so many other families in Warminster.
It would be wonderful to hear from anyone else who remembers Gloria Sloper; and if any other information about her were available I would be very chuffed to hear of it.
My sister Moreen told me with great certainty that Miss Sloper’s house in Boreham Road is the one now numbered 34.
Best wishes.
Danny Howell replies:
Thank you for that, Julian. It seems, from the large number of people I have gathered recollections from, that Gloria probably taught most of the young people in Warminster to dance in days gone by, long before television’s Strictly Come Dancing gripped the nation. There are various mentions in my books and archives about people who went to Gloria’s home at 34 Boreham Road, to learn dancing before embarking on courting and wanting to woo would-be girlfriends/boyfriends at the Town Hall ‘sixpenny hops’ and other social functions. And, as you rightly say, the Gloria Sloper Dancers, her troupe of little hoofers, entertained at many fetes and attractions in Warminster.
In my book Remember Warminster Volume Five, the late Doris Houghton recalled her friendship (from school days) with Gloria and how the two of them worked together at Harraway’s Nurseries until Gloria went on forestry work on the Longleat Estate during the Second World War. Also in that book is a photo of Gloria sat on a swing with a dog.
I have my own personal memories of Gloria. She would buy my books and come to my book signings. When she died I played a part in connecting her solicitor with her family members after Gloria’s friends expressed concerns about Gloria’s funeral and the need to settle her estate.
Gloria came from a very well-do-family. As a child she had the best of clothes and because my grandparents (very much at the opposite end of the social scale) knew the Sloper family and lived not far from them, my mother when she was a tot, received many of Gloria’s hand-me-down and beautiful clothes.
I have done quite a lot of research into Gloria’s background and very interesting it is too. I will publish this information, for you and other dannyhowell.net readers on these pages. I’m sure you will find it an intriguing insight into a person you probably only knew as the dance teacher who put you through your embarrassing paces in her front room at Boreham Road. In the meantime, perhaps, readers of this website are welcome to contribute their recollections of Gloria.
Sunday 8th December 2013
The memorial plaque to members of the
Shoare family inside The Parish Church
of St. Denys, The Minster, Warminster.
The photographs were taken by
Danny Howell
on Sunday 8th December 2013.
The wording reads:
Sacred to the memory of
Charlotte Shoare,
who departed this life
Octr. 2nd 1766, aged 6 years.
Alfo of the above named
John Shoare,
who departed this life
Janry 8th 1777, aged 68 years.
Alfo of the above named
Mary Shoare,
who departed this life,
Novr. 5th 1787, aged 66 years.
Alfo of
William Shoare,
Son of
the above named John and Mary Shoare,
who departed this life
March 21ft 1789, aged 32 years,
By whofe Direction this tablet
was erected.