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The family are at 98 Rolfe Street, Smethwick in the 1871 census:
Samuel Bates, 74, Engine Driver
Mary A. Bates, 54
Sarah A. Walton, 21, Lacquerer
Sarah here has taken up a craft that her mother practiced on previous censuses
There's a baptism and burial record for an Emma Eliza Walton matching those dates on Ancestry.
Her parents were John and Mary Ann Walton of Moland Street. John's profession is 'gilt toy maker'.
The above list is interesting to me in that it lists J.C. Onions, later one part of the merger that formed Allday & Onions, but no sign of any Alldays.
It had puzzled me that the other merger party, William Allday and Sons, variously claims establishment in 1720 or 1780, but doesn't start to...
The directory says Birmingham, yes.
I've also found an older entry in White's 1873 Directory of Birmingham, for James H. Prichard, in the same line of work, but at number 258. I should think this is nearer the time the picture was taken than the 1912 entry.
He seems an interesting chap. A scan of the newspaper archives shows Corbett making regular appearances in the Birmingham Journal and Aris's Birmingham Gazette from the late 1830's onwards.
He seems to have known my family well, particularly my 5 x great uncle Joseph Allday. Corbett and Allday...
I see three families headed by millers in Shipston all living on Mill Street, close to where the "Old Mill" is now, appropriately enough. These are presuambly the three millers employed by James Hands of New Street. Here's a (non-commercial) link with a picture of the Old Mill...
I've found the Nash family in 1851 just now - Worcestershire / Shipston on Stour / 9B, page 35. Surname is mistranscribed as "Nath".
Jesse's occupation confirmed as "miller", presumably in the employ of the aforementioned James Hands.
Jesse and Elizabeth live on Mill Street, with son Arthur and...
I can't shed any light on Henry Street or mills in the vicinity, but Jesse's marriage to Elizabeth Haydon on Nov 18th 1848 confirms his residence in Shipston on Stour and profession of miller at that time. There's a B&B called "The Old Mill" in Shipston that could perhaps date back to that era...
The passing of the 1832 Reform bill established Birmingham as a parliamentary seat with its own MPs for the first time, greatly aided by pressure groups like the Birmingham Political Union, founded by Thomas Attwood and others. The bill's tortuous passage, with prorogations of parliament and...
My great grandfather related similar from WWI, after a long term injury he suffered in a gas attack. He was steadying two horses at the time, and hesitated too long to release one of them so he could put his mask on. Besides the injury, what really stayed with him was being docked wages for the...
My copy of "Alldays & Onions Pneumatic Engineering Co. Ltd" has now arrived, and features a fine collection of photos and sketches of all manner of interesting engineering contraptions as well as pictures of notable Alldays - nice to be able to put faces to the names of some of these folk I've...
Just to check one point, the national archives records will list records for people who gained British citizenship through naturalization, or some similar process, after they were born. If that's the process your grandfather went through, then if you have a rough idea when the naturalization...
I tried a few variations on the name, but I have found no results either. Samuel Kala Khan's death record gives his birth year as about 1926, so if he was a naturalized citizen, the naturalization would definitely have taken place less than 100 years ago, so the details won't be fully public...
You can find the National Archives' own guide on searching for naturalization and citizenship records here:
https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/help-with-your-research/research-guides/naturalisation-british-citizenship/
If you start from the National Archives home page, and click the search button in the top right corner, you get an option for two different types of search "Search our website" and "Search our records". If you select the "Search our records" option, you should be able to search for any name...
An account of the use of bicycles in the Boer war, for which Alldays & Onions Ltd. was awarded a major supply contract:
https://onlinebicyclemuseum.co.uk/1898-alldays-matchless-military-roadster/?tax=tour&tid=49