Author Topic: Northallerton - Local knowledge required  (Read 13064 times)

Offline Yorkie2

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Re: Northallerton - Local knowledge required
« Reply #18 on: Monday 27 September 10 15:17 BST (UK) »
Hello Ezyka, I read your message about James Castle.
You see I'm tracing my family history and we come from Northallerton.
I found on the 1881 census a Castle family living at 14, Main Street Northallerton. They are Samuel head, Mary wife, William so, Thomas son, Fanny daughter, George son, James grandson, John grandson. It's actually written down as Castles.
Is this your family ?
My family also has a Samuel, Thomas, William Castle.
Samuel is my Great Great grandfather, Thomas is my great grandfather, William was the elder brother of Thomas.

Yours faithfully
Mr Stuart Castle

Offline Ezyka

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Re: Northallerton - Local knowledge required
« Reply #19 on: Monday 27 September 10 15:54 BST (UK) »
Hello.  The 1881 census you mention is indeed my Castle family.  James Castle was my Great Grandad.  He was the son of Sarah Castle, Samuel Castles daughter from his first marriage. 

Erica

Offline sillgen

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Re: Northallerton - Local knowledge required
« Reply #20 on: Monday 27 September 10 17:17 BST (UK) »
Hi Yorkie2 and welcome to rootschat
I have merged your second post with this thread as it was a bit isolated on its own and Ezyka may not have seen it.    To answer on this topic you just click reply at the bottom.
Andrea

Offline Yorkie2

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Re: Northallerton - Local knowledge required
« Reply #21 on: Monday 27 September 10 17:33 BST (UK) »
Hello Andrea, Ezyka has seen it and she is it touch.
We've found out we're related through an ancestor.
His name was Samuel Castle
Yorkie2


Offline Yorkie2

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Re: Northallerton - Local knowledge required
« Reply #22 on: Monday 27 September 10 17:34 BST (UK) »
so that makes us cousins or something.
I'm descended from Thomas and Elizabeth Castle, their son John William was my grandfather.

I expect there are a lot of descendants about from their other children.
Small world isn't it.

Offline Ezyka

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Re: Northallerton - Local knowledge required
« Reply #23 on: Monday 27 September 10 17:43 BST (UK) »
Yes, I think we are cousins!!  I've sent you an email :-) 

Erica

Offline Yorkie2

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Re: Northallerton - Local knowledge required
« Reply #24 on: Monday 27 September 10 17:52 BST (UK) »
yes thanks I got it.
Thanks again for all that family history, I'll have to show my dad, he'll be took up.

Yorkie2

Offline johnboy

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Re: Northallerton - Local knowledge required
« Reply #25 on: Monday 03 January 11 19:44 GMT (UK) »
I trust you found this information from Steve Metcalfe's site about the Northallerton Memorial:
Quote
UNIT: 50th Machine Gun Corps

NUMBER: 73620

STATUS: Killed in Action

DATE OF DEATH: 27th May 1918

CEMETERY OR MEMORIAL: Commemorated on the Soissons Memorial, France

AGE: 32

James Castle was married to Mary Alice Payne and they lived at No. 2 Melbourne Yard, Northallerton. He worked as a carter before the War.

James originally served with the 1st Volunteer Battalion of the Yorkshire Regiment, until the Volunteers were replaced by the Territorial Army under the Haldane Reforms of 1908. The Territorial Army came into being on 1st April 1908 and the following day James Castle was formally sworn in as a member (no. 66) of the 1/4th Battalion of the Yorkshire Regiment, at the age of 22.

It would appear that James left the Army in April 1916, after 8 years and 6 days serving with the 4th Yorkshires, including 349 days in "France" (which was the usual euphemism for the Western Front). It is not clear why he was discharged, but his escape did not last long. Like all soldiers who leave the Army, he was placed on the "Reserve" which meant that he was liable to be recalled in time of particular need. That time came in August 1916, when he was recalled from the Reserve and posted, once again, to the 4th Yorkshires (No. 6241). One can only speculate, but perhaps it was the huge casualties being suffered in the Battle of the Somme, which was reaching its height in August 1916, which prompted James' recall.

It is not know how long he served with the 4th Yorkshires as he was subsequently transferred to the Machine Gun Corps. He went missing on 27th May 1918, shortly before his 33rd birthday, whilst serving on attachment to the 4th Yorkshires, who were heavily attacked by the Germans near St. Quentin and their positions were overrun. James' body was never identified and he is commemorated, like so many others who fell during this fighting, on the Memorial to The Missing at Soissons.
http://www.northallertonmemorials.org.uk/
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Brompton: Burn, Winn
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Offline Yorkie2

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Re: Northallerton - Local knowledge required
« Reply #26 on: Tuesday 04 January 11 11:15 GMT (UK) »
Hi Johnboy, thanks for the info on James Castle.
I've been on the Commonwealth War Graves site, on there is a picture of the Soissons Memorial and a little info of the battle in 1918.

Kind regards

Yorkie2