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Redman, Amos, Stephens, Stafford, and many other names

 Families

Amos Wiffen  from Essex

Rawlinson  Peacock, Dines from Essex

Redman Giddings, Sims
from Wiltshire

Stafford   Nichols,  Cornell , and Clee from  London &  Middlesex

Stephens Downton, Marfell.     from the Forest of Dean

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My families from London and  Middlesex

              Stafford, Nichols, Cornell, Glen, Redman, Rawlinson and Amos

   

Many parts of our family had at some point during their lives connections with the London area and Middlesex. 

  • The families of Stafford and Nichols, also Cornell and Glen  are known to have had early roots in Mary-le-bone and the St Pancras areas of London, then known as Middlesex.
    The earliest records so far date back to the early 1800s.


  • John Redman, a bricklayer, and family family moved to Agar Town from Wiltshire in the early part of the 1840 decade. Agar Town, situated in an area immediately to the north of St Pancras station, was at the time a notorious slum and short lived - from about 1841 until the development of St Pancras and Kings Cross stations in 1866.

  • John Redman's son, William married Elizabeth Giddings at St Pancras in 1854. 
    Shortly after, they
    moved into Marchmont Street, not far from St Pancras, where they brought up their family.  Elizabeth, being a Wiltshire girl from Urchfont.

Agar Town
Photo reproduced with kind permission of
Camden Local Studies Library


The Dairy, Stoke Newington

  • The Rawlinson and Amos families moved from Essex into Tottenham, Middlesex around 1880.
    Josiah Rawlinson bought his own dairy in St Annes Road, Stoke Newington.


 
Modern day London: The London Eye built to commemorate the new Millennium.

Family Tree/Chart and details