Ipswich



Custom House and Old Wherry Inn, Ipswich, 1870s


It's been a balmy minus 31 degrees here in Eastern Canada today, so I stayed inside and worked on some more family history.   Off to Ipswich I went, via the internet, and found another distant relation's well-researched family tree pages - complete with sources - who is connected to us through Sarah Quinton's younger brother (Sarah Quinton being Lily Maud Meadows' mother), and I was able to correct some errors with the Meadows information I had.  I sent him an email message of thanks, so I may hear back from him at some point.

After discovering in the 1881 census that Lily Maud's father, Frederick Meadows, was a shipwright, I did a bit of digging around to see what I could find out about shipwrights in 19th century Ipswich.  Suffice it to say that Ipswich was once the largest grain terminal in Europe, so there was an ongoing demand for ships and barges to transport it around Britain and to the continent.  Apparently, each shipwright would have his own chest of tools that he took to work with him each day (picture below), containing about 75 different tools.

In 1881, the Meadows family lived at 20 Cavendish Street, which was very close to the Orwell River waterfront.  I went to Google Street View and the houses are not there any more - there are some sort of commercial enterprises taking up that end of the street now.  







A shipwright's chest c. 1850, with around 75 tools in it.


Photo credits:http://www.bargemen.co.uk/images/shipwrights.jpg
http://news.bbc.co.uk/media/images/47120000/jpg/_47120383_dolphin_wharf_1870s.jpg

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