14 Dec 1822
|
George is born in Stoke
Newington, probably in Lordship Road, the son of Zachariah Wombwell and Mary
Webb
|
19 Mar
1823
|
He is baptized in Stoke
Newington
|
1832
|
He is adopted by his Uncle,
George Wombwell, founder of Wombwell’s menagerie and heads off on the road.
|
1833
|
His father, Zachariah
Wombwell, dies in Stoke Newington
|
1847
|
At the height of his
career, he is a member of the party that meets Queen Victoria, Prince Albert
and Prince Edward at Windsor Castle
|
1849
|
His mother, Mary Webb, dies
in Stoke Newington
|
7th Oct 1850
|
He marries Fanny Eliza
Kienlen at the New Gravel Pit Meeting House, Paradise Fields, Hackney
|
1850
|
His Uncle George dies and
leaves one part of his menagerie to George, namely Menagerie Number Three
|
30 Mar
1851
|
George is recorded as a
Wild Beast Merchant of Wombwell’s Menagerie resident at 79 Corn Hill, Ipswich
|
1851
|
His daughter Ann Fanny
Wombwell is born in Hackney, London.
George’s servant, Thomas
Burrows, is crushed by an elephant but survives the experience.
|
1855
|
A run of disasters leads to
the decimation of George’s Menagerie stock
|
28 Apr 1855
|
George’s Menagerie Number
Three is auctioned off for a pittance at Nova Scotia Gardens.
|
2 May 1855
|
The other Wombwells write
to the Times disassociating their own Menageries from any involvement with
George’s
|
18 June 1855
|
Bankrupted, George is
removed from his caravan next to Cremorne Gardens to Whitecross Prison
|
30 July 1855
|
George appears in court. He
may have been bailed out by members of the Wombwell family, and then worked
for them as a hired hand.
|
26 Oct 1858
|
Jamrach’s famous Bengal
Tiger escapes and wanders off down the Ratcliff Road. George may have been
involved in its subsequent purchase.
|
7
April
1861
|
He is resident with his
wife and daughter at 1 Grove Cottage, Poplar All Saints, and recorded as a photographer
and artist.
|
6 Aug
1863
|
Death of his first wife,
Fanny Eliza Kienlen in Hackney.
|
1866
|
Mrs Wombwell commissions
George to bring an elephant back from Paris for her. After various disasters,
George succeeds in bringing the elephant back to London, where it immediately
dies.
|
22 Feb 1869
|
George marries Elizabeth
Adella Cresey in Yarmouth, Norfolk. Born in 1849, Elizabeth is twenty-seven
years younger than George.
|
1870
|
Their daughter, Amelia
Gertrude Wombwell is born in South Shields, Durham.
|
2 Apr 1871
|
George is resident in
Stockton, Durham, now a musician. His daughter Ann Fanny Wombwell is now
living in Hampstead, London, with Mrs Wombwell, the partner of his Uncle
George.
|
3 Apr 1881
|
George is living at 132
Provost Street, Shoreditch, Hoxton Town. George is still a musician, and his
wife is working as a dressmaker.
|
11 Apr 1881
|
His first daughter, Ann
Fanny Wombwell marries Herbert Sowerby in Shanghai, China. They are members
of the China Inland Mission but shortly after join the American run
Protestant Episcopal Mission.
|
Feb 1882
|
Ann Fanny Wombwell and
Herbert Sowerby head up the Yangtze River to Wuhan and begin their work
there.
|
5 Apr 1891
|
They are living at 107
Provost Street. His daughter Amelia has now become a shirtmaker.
|
1894
|
The marriage is recorded of
Amelia Gertrude Wombwell and Jacob Valentine in the civil registration
records. Jacob is a member of the Sephardic Jewish community and it is
possible they went through a religious ceremony a few years earlier, since
their first daughter seems to have been born in 1892.
Ann Fanny Wombwell and
Herbert Sowerby complete their missionary service in China and possibly
return to England to discover that whilst they have been making conversions,
George has been leaking them.
|
4 Jan
1897
|
The Daily Mail publishes a
full-length profile of his life and sets up a subscription fund for him.
|
5 Mar 1897
|
The Daily Mail reports that
its Subscription Fund has raised three pounds and fifteen shillings.
|
1897
|
His second wife, Elizabeth
Adella Cresey dies in the Infirmary
|
Prob 1890s
|
George is visiting his
Bradley relatives probably to get help in writing down memories for sale for
publication. The full story of Peto the elephant is thus preserved.
|
1900
|
The entire family of
Herbert Sowerby and Ann Fanny Wombwell are now settled in Virginia, USA, all
to become naturalized American citizens.
|
31 Mar
1901
|
George, now a musician and
widower, is living at 22 Ottoway Road, Hackney
|
3 Mar
1909
|
George’s obituary appears
in the newspapers, reporting his death in Tottenham, Edmonton
|
1923
|
His first daughter, Ann
Fanny Wombwell dies in Bedford, Virginia, USA
|
1958
|
His second daughter, Amelia
Gertrude Wombwell dies in Shoreditch, London.
|
This Blog is for the most part the story of the family history of our own branch of the Eldridge family. The investigation of the ancestors of Hetty Jane Owen, the wife of Charles Albert Eldridge is now complete, and the tale has resumed with an examination of the line of Charles Albert Eldridge.
Friday, 25 August 2017
George Wombwell Junior Timeline
Since this story of George Wombwell junior seems to have take numerous side-turnings and digressions including up the Yangtze River, the Duaro Valley and to Bedford, Virginia, here is a timeline that illustrates some of the main events in his long life:
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