I'm still pinching myself to realise just how much information has been so generously provided to me about my grandmother's siblings - there were five daughters of Joseph and Elizabeth (Parkes): Ann/Annie, my mother Martha, Selina Elizabeth, Mary/May, and Louisa/Lou. This thread was all started by mention of Mary's migration via Birmingham to the USA in 1904. I already knew a bit about Martha but most of that concerning Mary and Selina Elizabeth is new to me and has come from here.
All my original information, now supplemented, comes from my late, elder brother, Graham, whose efforts in the 1990s were prompted by our father's 1974 notes. Graham had to do his work the old-fashioned way, travelling widely from his retirement home in East Devon between various County Record Offices in different parts of the country, especially Birmingham and Gloucester - and suffering both from the lack of searchability of most of the records and also from the lack of 1901,1911 and 1921 Censuses. The result, in 1997, was this series of booklets, treasured by the family.
And now all that hard work is being supplemented here by the application of modern technology and fresh minds. My intention is to create an addendum to parts of the "Our Black Country Roots" booklet, containing, summarising and trying to interpret the information you have recently provided (e.g. might Solomon Stokes have been a complete rogue or might there have been faults on both sides.....?) That will take a week or three but I'll eventually post it here, to add to the Forum records and in memory of my brother's pioneering work on our predominantly Birmingham family. (Entitled "Five Black Country Sisters" perhaps?!)
I know that my brother struggled with the Black Country story, and especially its earlier members – the Bannister name is prolific there, families were large and most of the generations showed very little imagination in choosing the names of their children! For example my grandmother Martha's father was one of at least eleven identified by my brother and, from my own amateur delving years ago, there might have been even more. Most of the males had biblical names starting with Joseph, John, Matthew, Mark and Luke and then, later, a second Luke, no doubt a replacement. (John Bannisters are everywhere!).
Of the five sisters, I/we now know much of the story of Martha, my grandmother (although there is one significant gap) and of Selina Elizabeth and Mary.
I know already, as well, sufficient about the youngest,
Louisa/Lou Bannister. She married
Charles E. Newnham in 1916 at the age of 28. Charles was a year younger and came from Stourbridge. He served with the 5th R.W.R. in Italy as a quartermaster sergeant on the Asiego Plateau. Later he was a buyer at Lewis's in Corporation Street. They had two children, the first, Eric, being lost on a torpedoed troopship during WW2. The other, Freddie, married and had children and grandchildren. My brother knew Auntie Lou and, presumably, the two boys. The family by then had moved to South Wales where they seemed to have lived out their lives. I think I may have images of Charles and his wife and will try to dig them out.
Which leaves
Anne Bannister, the eldest (b.1871); all I know of her is that she married someone called
James Priest. Nothing more. My interest in her is limited to finding out whether she was the only one who remained true to her Black Country geographical roots and didn't end up, like her sisters, in somewhere exotic like Ohio, Tyneside, South Wales or Summer Lane/Snow Hill/Chessett's Wood! And also to establishing whether there was any significance in her marriage to a James Priest and at one stage having her 16-year-old younger sister, Martha, in service with a local chain-maker with the same surname.
And finally,
Martha Bannister herself, my grandmother. There is this gap in her life: between her living as a servant in the Priest household near to her home, for some time up to 1891 at least (my brother didn't find her in that Census) and later marrying my grandfather,
Charles Myers, in 1897, in Birmingham, to produce Gwendolin (1898), Henry (my father, 1899) and Grace (1907). If you can sustain your interest, just for a little while longer, I should be really grateful for any thoughts on that; also, perhaps, anything which can be discovered after 1891 and later, confirmation of her suspected whereabouts (as
Martha Myers) post-marriage in Birmingham in 1901, 1911 and 1921. After that, I promise, I'll stop banging on about this part of my family!
Chris