Our trip to the UK and Ireland searching for the homes of our ancestors.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Silkstone, near Barnsley

We woke up this morning to thick fog - difficult to see the other side of the small campsite here at Ingbirchworth. However, after some handwashing (there is no washing machine on site), we drove to Silkstone, the village where many of John's ancestors lived up to five hundred years ago.

Silkstone has a church (All Saints) in a stunning setting, built in the 12th century, and added to in the 14th century. We were lucky enough to meet up with a couple of very friendly parishioners, and one of them opened up the church for us and gave us a guided tour for about an hour. Whilst John stayed chatting, I wandered around the churchyard looking for Moxon graves, but couldn't find any. However, I did find some Hattersley graves. Mary Hattersley of Silkstone was one of John's 3rd great grandparents, married to Joshua Moxon (b 1751).

Hattersley is still a big name in Silkstone, a village of between 4000-5000, around 6 miles from Barnsley.

We then had lunch at a very well appointed restaurant in a renovated water mill, part of a plant nursery and gift shop at Pot House Hamlet, right near All Saint's Church at Silkstone. The site has been productive since the 17th century, largely due to the Silkstone Beck, (creek). It was the first glassworks of its kind in Europe. In the 18th century a pottery took over the site. Later the site became a water mill and blacksmith.

When we got back to the campsite, we had to be rescued by another camper because we got bogged trying to position the motor home. Rain is now pounding down. There is nothing more dreary than sitting in a motor home with the rain pounding on the roof, looking out at drystone walls which are now soaking wet. Or perhaps there is - sitting on the drystone wall with the rain pounding down might be a tad more depressing. But only a tad mind you.

Our Silkstone web album can be viewed at http://picasaweb.google.com/JohnMoxon1/SilkstoneNearBarnsley

Tomorrow we head north through a hamlet called Ryecroft where we will meet a Betty Moxon, who is married to a John Moxon who is a decendant of the Joshua Moxon and Mary Hattersley mentioned earlier. Another relative found by internet. Ain't it wonderful!

And then we head for a village near Tadcaster (Kirkby Wharfe) where John's great great grandmother was born (Sarah Middleton) and where she and Isaac Moxon were married. No washing machine there either, the socks are beginning to pong (just joking).

4 comments:

Hazel and Deb said...

Hi John and Margaret
Looks like you are still having a great time - once again the photos are terrific - you should enter the ASCCA comp! Pick out some of your best and get one of us to enter for you if you can't do it yourselves long distance.
I thought May was Spring/Summer time - send some of the rain to Sydney. NSW has had the driest May in yonks.
Keep on Blogging - it really is great to read and see where you are and what you are up to.
Regards
Hazel Labka

jonleee said...

Have just caught up on reading about 5 days of your blog, great reading your adventures! And all your eating places, you'll have to tell us about the food as well.

Take care..............

Glee said...

G'day John and Margaret,

Have just spent quite a while catching up on all your news and all of your pictures. England looks just like on Ev. I would love to go there and look at all those little villages and pubs complete with their wet dogs.

It's exhausting reading all that you have been up to and knowing what it must be like with all the access issues. Well worth it tho I reckon. and you are sure gonna enjoy your comfy warm house when you get home.

It's very cold here in Adelaide at nights now so the lecky blanket is on and waiting for me (cats already in partaking of the warmth!).

I spent 2 weeks with Sue and Sam at their place near Willawarrin. Lots of trees and parrots and Jet the dog who belongs to Mel, Sue's daughter and Lee her partner who live in a shed out the back at the mo. The party was great with rellies from Thailand, Hong Kong and New Zealand. At times I needed an interpreter for the NZ accent, seriously!!! I had an excellent time overall and Sue and I got a lot of PDCA work done too.

I have been busy gardening, weeding endlessly and planting new plants which is the best bit. A bit of rockery remodelling near one of my ponds which looks great and something I have wanted to do for years

hugs and hugs and hugs
Glee

Pete said...

Hi Guys,

It looks like you are still enjoying yourselves.
Send some of your rain to Sydney and NSW. It was the driest May in living memory.
Keep up the blogs. Need to have more to show to the members at our next meeting 20 June.
Cheers,
Peter Grove.