Beresford

The Beresford sisters of Huntingdon, Bloomsbury, and beyond by Emily Randall

Mary Ann, Sarah, and Rhoda Beresford were born in Huntingdon, England, the daughters of William Beresford and Mary Anne Callow. The girls did not grow up in poverty, but they faced many hardships throughout their lifetime. Their mother died in 1837 when the youngest girl, Rhoda, was just 8 years old. Their father remarried a year later. The girls eventually left Huntingdon but remained in close contact with each other. The lives of these sisters were intertwined in ways that highlight the harsh realities and tragic circumstances of life in Victorian England.

Mary Ann and John Henry Randall

The oldest Beresford sister was Mary Ann (1814-1864). In 1841, at the age of 27, she married John Henry Randall, who was working as a grocer on the North End of Huntingdon. In 1845 the couple moved to London, where John joined the Metropolitan Police Force and Mary Ann worked as a dressmaker. John and Mary Ann “moved house” many times within London but they always stayed in the Bloomsbury area, where John was appointed as a police constable in the E Division (i.e., the Holborn division). The couple was not wealthy enough to own property, so they rented living space in a three- or four-story building such as the one shown below.

15 Leigh St, Bloomsbury, where John Henry Randall and wife Mary Ann lived in 1846 (photo taken September 2022)

Bloomsbury was a middle- and upper-class neighborhood, but its residents were not immune to the high rates of infant mortality and other public health issues facing London at this time. John and Mary Ann had two boys. The first, Charles William Beresford Randall, lived only 11 weeks, dying of atrophy in May 1846. The second, John Frederick Randall, lived 4 years, dying of scarlet fever and pneumonia in January 1855. (Birth and death records throughout this post were obtained from the General Register Office.)

The 1855 death record for John Frederick Randall

I don’t think Mary Ann ever recovered from the pain of having to bury her children. She passed away in 1864 at the age of 50. Her cause of death was recorded as “softening of the brain” of 7 months duration. A quick Google search shows that softening of brain tissue is noted as a pathological finding in cases of stroke, brain infection, or brain injury. But it may have been used during the Victorian era as an umbrella term for a variety of neuropsychological issues. In an 1876 article in the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, Dr. Calvin Ellis, a professor of medicine at Harvard University, presents the following anonymous quote from another physician: “In common language, dementia is known as ‘softening of the brain.’ Persons who are losing their faculties from whatever cause are spoken of as having ‘softening of the brain.’ Persons in deep melancholia, who cannot be interested in anything outside of their deep and silent miseries, are in common language said to have ‘softening of the brain.’”

The 1864 death record for Mary Ann (Beresford) Randall

Mary Ann’s husband John Henry Randall was also having a rough time. In 1859, after 14 years of service for the London Metropolitan Police Force, he was dismissed (i.e., fired). I haven’t been able to find a record that explains the reason for his dismissal. He may have been fired for insubordination, misconduct, or showing up drunk. Later, John ended up working for a sheriff’s officer. In 1868, his occupation was recorded as “sheriff’s officer’s possession man.” This might have been a run-of-the-mill “repo man” or it may have involved rounding up debtors and taking them to a temporary debtor’s prison.

Stay tuned for a future post that delves deeper into the life, work, and death of John Henry Randall.

Sarah and John Prior Sissman

Mary Ann wasn’t the only Beresford sister to die a premature death in London. Sarah (1815-1854) faced a similar fate. In 1838 she wed farmer John Prior Sissman and moved with him to his home village of Sawtry, Huntingdonshire. There the couple had three sons and two daughters. Two of the boys lived just a few weeks and the other died of measles at the age of 2 and a half. Only the girls (Rhoda Mary and Sarah Ann Sissman) survived to adulthood. 

In the 1841 England Census, Sarah and John can be found living in Sawtry, where they were farming and starting their family. Ten years later Sarah and John were M.I.A. I have not been able to find an 1851 Census record for Sarah (Beresford) Sissman or her husband. At this time their daughter Rhoda Mary (aged 9) was living with her aunt and uncle Mary Ann and John Randall in London, while their other daughter Sarah Ann (aged 7) was staying with her maternal grandparents in Huntingdon. At some point Sarah (Beresford) Sissman ended up in London. She died of tuberculosis at University College Hospital in 1854 at the age of 39. Six months after his wife’s death, John Prior Sissman was admitted to the Bedford Asylum in Bedfordshire (Ancestry.com: UK, Lunacy Patients Admission Registers, 1846-1912). In 1860 he was moved to the newly opened Three Counties Lunatic Asylum in Stotfold, where a few months later he died of “epileptic paralysis” at the age of 40.

Rhoda Mary and Sarah Ann Sissman were at this point teenage orphans. With nothing to lose, they seized an opportunity to emigrate to Australia. In the spring of 1861 they sailed on the ship Utopia from Liverpool to Melbourne (Ancestry.com: Victoria, Australia, Assisted and Unassisted Passenger Lists, 1839–1923). The voyage lasted a grueling 3 months. The girls were only 17 and 19 years old at the time and made the trip without any other relatives. A few years later, Rhoda Mary Sissman wed Alfred John Stevens (Ancestry.com: Australia, Marriage Index, 1788-1950). The couple settled in Lucindale, South Australia, and had 10 children, one of whom received the middle name of Beresford. Sadly, Rhoda Mary died in 1883 the day after giving birth to her youngest child. Her sister Sarah Ann never married and lived to be 80 years of age. According to her obituary, Sarah Ann was a well-loved auntie.

Death notice for Rhoda Mary (Sissman) Stevens in Australia, immediately following the birth notice for her daughter (The Naracoorte Herald, 23 Jan 1883)

Death notice for Sarah Ann Sissman in Australia (The Naracoorte Herald, 29 April 1924)

Rhoda and William Henry Ashman

Finally we arrive at the youngest Beresford sister and my direct ancestor, Rhoda Beresford (1828-1892). In 1850, Rhoda married a carpenter from Cambridgeshire named William Henry Ashman (Ancestry.com: England & Wales, FreeBMD Marriage Index: 1837-1915). A year later they had a daughter named Eliza Mary Ashman. Nothing was amiss in the couple’s 1851 England Census record, but their 1861 Census record tells a different story. In 1861 Rhoda and her daughter Eliza Mary were living in Warfield, Berkshire with William’s parents and William’s brother. Rhoda’s marital status was recorded as “married” but her husband William Henry was nowhere to be found. I have looked for this man up, down, and all around, in every corner of the globe, and I have no idea what happened to him. He does not appear on any Census record after 1851. I cannot find a probable death or emigration record for him or any newspaper articles mentioning him. He seemingly vanished.

In January 1863 in London, Rhoda gave birth to a son named Charles Ashman. When she registered the boy’s birth she stated that William Ashman was the father, but I do not have any record that William was in London. Perhaps Rhoda was already pregnant when she moved to London. Unfortunately, Charles only lived for 2 and a half years. He died of rickets and diarrhea, suggesting that the family’s living conditions at this time were dark, overcrowded, and unsanitary. The family may have lacked clean drinking water, proper nutrition, and sufficient sunlight. (Vitamin D deficiency was a big problem in Victorian-era London, where the skies were full of smog and smoke that blocked the sun’s rays. Children also spent a lot of time indoors because they lacked clean areas to play outside.)

The 1865 death record for Charles Ashman

44 Burton St, Bloomsbury (photo taken September 2022)

The address that Rhoda reported for both the birth (1863) and death (1865) of her son Charles was 44 Burton Street, Saint Pancras (Bloomsbury). This address is noteworthy for a few reasons:

  1. This is the same residence where Mary Ann lived with her husband John Henry Randall from at least 1861 to 1864. This is where Mary Ann died. This means that Rhoda was living with her sister and her brother-in-law, probably in the same flat. Did she move to London to take care of her sister? Why did she leave her daughter behind? Where was William Ashman?!

  2. In the 1861 England Census there are 16 adults and 3 children living at 44 Burton St. As far as I can tell the street has not been renumbered since the 1860s. I’m sure that far fewer people live at that address today. These would have been very cramped quarters.

  3. Burton St runs perpendicular to Tavistock House, where Charles Dickens lived from 1851 until 1860. Dickens traveled frequently and had multiple residences, but he was known for taking long walks through London, especially at night. It’s quite possible that my ancestors came across him in the neighborhood. Dickens may have even used my ancestors as inspiration for his characters. (The original Tavistock House was demolished in 1900, but there is a Charles Dickens Museum nearby at 48 Doughty St, where he lived earlier in his career).

Rhoda and John Henry Randall

After Mary Ann died, John turned to his sister-in-law Rhoda. In January 1867, she gave birth to a boy named Harry Ashman Randall at 23 Henrietta St, Bloomsbury (this is now called Handel St and has since been redeveloped). The birth record names John Randall as the father and Rhoda Randall, formerly Beresford, as the mother. This boy would later be known as John Harry Randall.

The 1867 birth record for Harry Ashman Randall aka John Harry Randall

(I’ve confirmed through DNA matches that John Henry Randall was the father of this boy. I have no explanation for why Ashman was included as John Harry’s middle name. He never used that name in adulthood.)

In December 1868, while still living at 23 Henrietta St, Rhoda gave birth to a daughter named Bessie Jane Randall. Again, John and Rhoda presented themselves as a married couple when registering their daughter’s birth, but I cannot find any record of a marriage between them, not a civil record nor a church record. There should definitely be a civil record if they were actually married. Maybe they couldn’t wed because Rhoda’s first husband, William Ashman, was still alive. I would love to have baptism records for John Harry and Bessie Jane but I can’t find those either. Perhaps John Henry and Rhoda had given up on religion by this point.

I still have a lot of questions about how this relationship developed and how it did or did not fit the social norms of the time. If John Henry and Rhoda were “pretending” to be married, they didn’t have to pretend for very long. In March 1869, at the age of 51, John Henry died at University College Hospital. His causes of death were bronchitis, emphysema, and heart disease. He was buried at St Pancras Cemetery in north London in a third-class burial. It’s unlikely that he ever had a gravestone. (Burial information from Deceased Online and Ancestry.com: UK, Burial and Cremation Index, 1576-2014).

Rhoda was now a 40-year-old single mom with two children under the age of three. To make ends meet she took up work as a laundress. This was physically demanding labor, but she may have been able to do it at home, negating the need for childcare. She also had a few Beresford cousins living in the area who may have been able to help her. In the 1871 England Census, Rhoda, John Harry, and Bessie Jane were still living in Bloomsbury, this time on Sidmouth St. By 1881 they had moved to Islington, where the children attended school and Rhoda now worked as a dressmaker. I have not found Rhoda or her children in any workhouse records, so it seems she was able to keep her family out of “the poor house.”

Laundress Carrying Linen by Edgar Degas (public domain)

Whatever happened to Rhoda’s first daughter, Eliza Mary Ashman? She stayed in Berkshire with her paternal grandparents and in 1874 married a hairdresser named Harry George Redrup (Ancestry.com: England & Wales, FreeBMD Marriage Index: 1837-1915). The couple settled in Wales near Cardiff and had 11 children, one of whom received the middle name of Beresford. Although it’s a shame that Eliza Mary spent so many years without her mother, she was probably better off growing up in Berkshire rather than in London. 

In the mid-1880s Rhoda’s son John Harry Randall emigrated to the United States. He found work at a jute mill in Ludlow, Massachusetts and sent for his sister and mother. Rhoda and Bessie Jane arrived in Boston in 1888 on the SS Norseman (Ancestry.com: Boston Passenger and Crew Lists, 1820-1943). John Harry Randall and his wife Annie Boman would go on to have 9 children, one of whom received the middle name of Beresford. Bessie Jane married Wilfred L. Telmosse; Beresford was also passed on as a middle name in that line.

Rhoda (Beresford) Ashman Randall, c 1890, Springfield, MA

Rhoda died in 1892 of apoplexy (a stroke) and is buried in Island Pond Cemetery in Ludlow (Ancestry.com: Massachusetts, Town Vital Collections, 1620-1988). The only photo I have of her is a Xerox copy of this studio portrait, taken around 1890 in Springfield, Massachusetts. She was just 62 years old here, but she looks a bit older. The Dickensian life she led in England is evident on her face. But I’m relieved that she made it through so many challenges. Rhoda and her sisters are not forgotten.

William Beresford, bricklayer and billet master by Emily Randall

My 4th great-grandfather William Beresford (1786-1855) was a bricklayer in Huntingdon, England. He had 5 children with his first wife Mary Anne Callow: Two boys who died in infancy (William and Henry) and three girls who survived to adulthood (Mary Ann, Sarah, and Rhoda). I don’t have any photographs of William, but I’ve been able to find quite a lot of information on him through online research, which I supplemented with an in-person visit to the Huntingdonshire Archives in September 2022. 

William’s signature and seal from his will, signed in 1852

Bricklayer

William contributed to the construction and maintenance of numerous buildings in Huntingdon. The following is a list of projects for which William was paid or reimbursed, according to the Huntingdon Borough records (Corporation Accounts) held at the Huntingdonshire Archives:

1814: Bricklaying for Walden’s Charity School

1817: Mending floor at Guard House

1838: Bricklaying, fixing chimney at Town Hall 

1841: Bricklaying at Station House

Huntingdon Town Hall, September 2022

Constable

Around 1830 William took on a side job: He was appointed parish constable for St John’s parish, Huntingdon. This was basically police duty for the northern end of town and was not a full-time position, but it may have been quite time-consuming on occasion. For example, in the summer of 1837, after Queen Victoria ascended to the throne, William received £2.4.0 for “constable expenses re: proclamation of the Queen” (Huntingdon Borough Records, Corporation Accounts). I’m very curious what these duties entailed, but the records do not go into any details.

In 1833, William helped catch a thief named William Douse, aged 24, who was wanted for burglary and for previously escaping from the county gaol (spelling variant of jail). William Beresford’s court testimony on his pursuit and capture of Douse appeared in the local paper. Douse was found guilty and initially sentenced to death but was later transported as a convict to Australia.

William Beresford’s witness testimony reported in the 16 March 1833 issue of the Huntingdon, Bedford, and Peterborough Gazette

As parish constable William was also in charge of quartering troops. He is referred to in Huntingdon Borough Records as “billet master” and in 1841 he received £2 as “½ yrs salary for billeting soldiers.” Based on the Third Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, I’m going to assume this wasn’t an enjoyable task, but at least he received some compensation.

Landlord

In later years William is referred to as a “proprietor of houses” (i.e., landlord) and “yeoman” (land owner) of Huntingdon. His will, written in 1852, mentions five freehold properties in the area of Priory Lane and St Germain Street and four freehold properties in St Mary’s Lane, all occupied by renters. He also refers to a leasehold property in the North End as his own dwelling.

I really wanted to figure out the exact location of William’s house and see if the building is still standing, but I didn’t get very far without a proper address. In his 1841 and 1851 Census records, his location was simply recorded as “The North End.” I walked around the area and looked at a few houses that might have been his.

One of many buildings on Huntingdon’s “North End”

Linens ‘n Things

William died at age 69 of a stroke (death record obtained from the General Register Office, 1855 D Quarter in Huntingdon, Volume 03B, page 153). The Huntingdonshire Archives holds the inventory of his estate, which I have transcribed, word for word, as follows:

Inventory and valuation of household furniture and effects belonging to the late Mr. Wm. Beresford of Huntingdon taken 21 December 1855.

Seven pairs of sheets

Eight pairs pillow cases

Eighteen towels

Six tablecloths

Two counterpanes

Two silver tablespoons

Twelve teaspoons

Two plated sugar bowls

Wainscot bureau 

Ditto dining table

Ditto dressing table

Oval mahogany table

Two elbow chairs

Three chairs

Piece of carpet and rug

Pair window curtains

Two tea trays and waiter

Wheel barometer

Chimney glass

Two pictures and roll blind

Three table cloths

Fender and fire irons

Eight beakers and one decanter

Twelve wine glasses

Two pitchers and crockery ware

Tin broiler etc.

Set of tea china

Six elm chairs

One elbow ditto

Thirty-hour clock

Small round table

Round deal table

Square ditto

Tea tray and waiter

Fender and shovel

Five [can’t decipher] and ten plates

Flat iron and candlestick

Three saucepans etc.

Sundry courseware

Painted double chest of drawers

Four post bedstead and furniture

Mattress

Feather bed bolster and two pillows

Four blankets and quilt

Night conveniency

Mahogany chest of drawers

Three painted chairs

Five pieces carpet and rug

Dressing table and glass

Baton stand

Oak chest

Window curtain and blind

Four post bedstead and curtains

Mattress

Feather bed bolster and two pillows

Four blankets and quilt

Three chairs

Piece of carpet

Window curtain and blind

Oak chest of drawers

Dressing glass

Stair carpet

Large family Bible

Wearing apparel

All the above effects are valued at the sum of twenty-nine pounds fifteen shillings and six pence (£29.15.6) by me George Morris Fox, Licensed appraiser, Huntingdon

A leasehold brick and slated dwelling house situate at the North End of the Borough of Huntingdon thirty-eight years unexpired [i.e., built in 1817] at a ground rent of one pound ten shillings per annum valued at fifty pounds (£50.00) by me George Morris Fox, Licensed appraiser, Huntingdon

It sounds as though William Beresford lived comfortably, in a house with at least two bedrooms, some nice furniture, and plenty of linens. I would love to have seen his decanter, the clock, the wheel barometer, and everything else listed! I have no clue what happened to the family Bible. Maybe it has sadly disintegrated by this point or ended up in a charity/resale shop. But I enjoyed reading the inventory of his household, picturing how the interior might have looked, and gaining more insights into this ancestor.