Biography
Sarah Jennings was born in Warwick in 1784. She was the daughter of Aaron Jennings and his wife Sarah Harvey. Sarah was baptised at Warwick Unitarian Chapel, High Street, Warwick, on 18 August 1784.[1]
Robert Bayman and Sarah Jennings married on 7 Jan 1810 in the Parish of St James, Westminster, England.[2] Both were listed as being from the parish, and Elizabeth Bedford and John Clarke witnessed their marriage.[3]
They had at least 4 children, including Caroline Bayman (later Wallwork), all baptised at St Mary's Church, Long Ditton, Surrey.
Her husband, a gardener at Long Ditton, passed away in about 1826, aged 39. He was buried at St Mary's Church, Long Ditton.
Sarah Bayman passed away at Kilburn priory estate in about 1866. She was buried on 19 February 1866 at St Mary's Church, Long Ditton.
Sarah's will, probate on 21 March 1866, valued her effects at less than 100 pounds. Her address was recorded as 4 Manchester Terrace, Kilburn. Her son Robert Bayman, a gentleman of Savage Gardens, Tower Hill, was listed as the executor.
Sources
- ↑ The National Archives (United Kingdom); Kew, Surrey, England; General Register Office: Registers of Births, Marriages and Deaths surrendered to the Non-parochial Registers Commissions of 1837 and 1857; Class Number: RG 4; Class Number: Rg 4; Piece Number: 3634
- ↑ London Metropolitan Archives; London, England, UK; London Church of England Parish Registers; Reference Number: DL/T/090/004
- ↑ City of Westminster Archives Centre; London, England; Westminster Church of England Parish Registers; Reference: STJ/PR/6/10
- London Metropolitan Archives; London, England; Reference Number: DW/T/6527
- London Metropolitan Archives; London, England; Reference Number: DL/T/090/004
- Principal Probate Registry. Calendar of the Grants of Probate and Letters of Administration made in the Probate Registries of the High Court of Justice in England. London, England.
- Wallwork Family Tree, hard copy, c1990s
Notes
'Building began again on the Kilburn priory estate in 1843 when Howard made an agreement with William Cullum, a china manufacturer, who had built four substantial houses by 1846 when Howard died. (fn. 33) In 1845 Howard made an agreement with James Carter, a Maida Vale builder, who laid out Springfield Lane (originally Goldsmith's Place, Osborne Terrace, and Bell Terrace), built Greville (originally Manchester) Mews and two-storeyed tenements (Manchester Place) backing the stables and the Bell and Red Lion, and built some more 'classy' houses in Springfield Villas (later Kilburn Priory). Carter was still building in 1849 but in 1851 he was superseded by George Duncan, a substantial developer from Grove End Road on the Eyre estate, with whom Col. Arthur Upton, heir to the Kilburn priory estate on Howard's death in 1846, made a building agreement for 15½ a. In Kilburn Priory, Priory Road, and St. George's Road, Duncan built mostly pairs of good-class villas, with some terraces of shops in Belsize Road, extended westward from the Eyre estate, a public house in West End Lane and a church, St. Mary's, built in Abbey Road in 1856. Some 69 houses were built in Kilburn between 1845 and 1850 and another 200 were added between 1851 and 1857, mostly by Duncan and, after 1854, by his son John Wallace Duncan, but about a third by a number of small builders on underleases. The Duncan houses, Italianate and three-storeyed, were mostly north of the L.N.W.R. railway, built through the middle of the estate in 1837, and some of the occupants used Kilburn station, opened on it in 1852. The main access to London was by horse omnibus along Edgware Road. Some larger houses were built on higher ground in Greville and Mortimer roads, laid out in 1853. By 1860 building was almost complete on the estate.' https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/middx/vol9/pp47-51 accessed 21 March 2021