family history

The Beresfords of Biggleswade and Buckden by Emily Randall

One of the “myths and legends” in my family is that we are related to Lord Charles Beresford (1846-1919). Lord Beresford was a British admiral, naval commander, Member of Parliament, and popular public figure descended from a line of Anglo-Irish nobility. I understand the appeal of a connection to nobility, but I haven’t found anything in my family’s paper trail or in our DNA matches to link us to Lord Beresford’s pedigree. This story probably arose from wishful thinking or a comment said in jest.

The Beresford Bear, official symbol of the Beresford Family Society


My grandfather and great-grandfather were both given Beresford as a middle name, and I distinctly remember my grandfather telling me as a child that this name came from his great-grandmother Rhoda Beresford (1828-1892). I’ll delve a little deeper into Rhoda’s life in a future post. For now I want to clear up our Beresford line and share how I busted through a “brick wall” in my research to take our family tree back one additional generation.

A Regency-era marriage

Rhoda’s parents were William Beresford and Mary Anne Callow. They were married in Huntingdon in August of 1811. William was a bricklayer and later a proprietor of houses. According to their marriage record, William was a resident of Long Lane Smithfield, London (near Smithfield Market), while Mary Anne was a resident of St John’s Parish, Huntingdon. 

Source: Pallot's Marriage Index for England: 1780 - 1837

William was not originally from London. On the 1841 England Census, the enumerator (i.e., the census taker) reported that he was born around 1786 in the county of Huntingdonshire, but on the 1851 Census his birthplace is recorded as “Not known.” (England and Wales Census records can be found on Ancestry.com or FindMyPast.) I couldn’t find a baptism record for William in Huntingdonshire nor could I find any Beresfords in the town of Huntingdon pre-1811. To figure out William’s early years I had to look for other Beresfords living nearby and close to him in age who could be his siblings.

The search for Siblings

Samuel Beresford (1789-1872) was a very good candidate for William’s brother. Samuel was a “coach wheelwright” (meaning he made and repaired wooden wheels for coaches) who married and raised children in Huntingdon. He reported Buckden as his birthplace. Buckden is a village 4 mi southwest of Huntingdon and is the site of Buckden Towers, the palace in which Catherine of Aragon was held after her divorce from Henry VIII. Samuel appears in Buckden baptism records with his parents listed as Joseph and Mary Beresford. (Buckden parish records are not in Ancestry.com or FindMyPast but can be obtained from the Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire Family History Society.)

When I traveled to Huntingdon in 2022, I was able to visit the grave of William Beresford (1786-1855) located at Priory Road Cemetery. Here he is buried with his second wife, Mary Wilson (1794-1873). The stone reads “Sacred to the memory of William Beresford who departed this life October 14 1855 aged 69 years.” William’s first wife Mary Anne Callow (1789-1837) was buried elsewhere, before Priory Road Cemetery opened. Unfortunately, her exact grave site could not be located as Huntingdon has very few surviving headstones that predate the 1850s.

Right next to William’s grave I found the grave of Samuel Beresford and his wife Hannah Lamb. The fact that William and Samuel were buried in adjoining plots is very good evidence that they were brothers.

In my online research, I came across another potential brother for William: Henry Beresford (1800-1866). In every census record, Henry reported his birthplace as Buckden. I found a baptism record for him in Buckden parish records with his parents recorded as Joseph and Mary (the same couple named earlier in Samuel’s baptism record). Henry briefly worked as a stonemason in Huntingdon before moving to London and starting on a long career in law enforcement, becoming a superintendent of the Metropolitan Police and later a superintendent of the Railway Police. I have very few DNA matches with the surname Beresford in their tree, but I do have two matches who trace back to this same Henry Beresford. Thus, I believe that Samuel and Henry were William’s younger brothers.

The Beresford boys of Buckden

Joseph and Mary Beresford baptized seven children in Buckden, but the Beresford surname doesn’t appear anywhere in Buckden records until 1787. William wasn’t baptized there, so he must have been born elsewhere.

After expanding my search to a wider geographical area, I discovered that William was baptized in Biggleswade, Bedfordshire, 20 mi to the south of Buckden. William’s baptism record (found on Ancestry.com in England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975) states that he was born on 13 March, 1786, to parents Joseph and Mary Berisford (alternate spelling of Beresford). Luckily, I found a Biggleswade marriage record for Joseph Berisford and Mary Hinkings with a date of 31 May 1785, exactly nine and a half months before William’s birth (record found on Ancestry.com in England, Select Marriages, 1538–1973). I am confident that Joseph Berisford and Mary Hinkings are William’s parents. 

For whatever reason, Joseph and Mary didn’t stay in Biggleswade for long. They raised their children in Buckden and were buried there in the churchyard of St Mary’s. My next post will focus on the life of their son William, my 4th great-grandfather.

The parents, grandparents, and spouses of Rhoda Beresford (1828-1892)

The Callows of Huntingdon, England by Emily Randall

Until last year the parents of my 4th great-grandmother Mary Anne Callow (1789-1837) were a mystery. All I knew was that Mary Anne’s mother was named Sarah and that both Mary Anne and Sarah died in Huntingdon, England. I could not find an infant baptism record for Mary Anne nor could I find any probable siblings for her or a marriage record for her parents. I have only a transcribed adult baptism record for Mary Anne under her married name of Beresford; the record is dated 1816 and gives her birth year as 1789. (Ancestry.com: England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975). 

Last year while searching on the surname Callow in British newspapers in Newspapers.com, I found the following mention in the Friday, April 25th, 1817 edition of the Cambridge Chronicle and Journal and Huntingdonshire Gazette, which reads “At Huntingdon, on the 23rd inst. suddenly, Mrs. Callow of the Rose and Crown public-house, at an advanced age.” 

Death notice from the Cambridge Chronicle and Journal and Huntingdonshire Gazette, 25 April, 1817

I knew this notice referred to my 5th great-grandmother Sarah Callow because the date aligned with the burial record I had for her, which described her as a 66-year-old widow, buried on the 27th of April 1817 in Huntingdon (Ancestry.com: England, Select Deaths and Burials, 1538-1991). But I had never before seen mention of the Rose & Crown pub and had not previously seen Sarah listed as a publican.

Sarah of the Rose and Crown


A Google search revealed that the Rose & Crown pub of Huntingdon is no longer in operation, but the building still stands as a private residence at 76 Ermine Street. It is a Grade II building listed on the National Heritage List for England

76 Ermine St, Huntingdon, England (photo taken September 2022 by me)

I tried to find a list of pub licenses in the area from this time period, but was not successful. However, with my subscription to Findmypast, I was able to search additional British newspapers beyond what is available on Newspapers.com, and there I found an earlier reference to the Callows and the Rose & Crown public house in the Northampton Mercury, dated 21 August 1802. It reads “On Wednesday se’nnight, Mr. Tho Callow, master of the Rose-and-Crown public-house, Huntingdon, and contractor for the bye mails between Huntingdon and Cambridge, and Huntingdon and Kimbolton.” (sennight = seven nights; in this case, a week before Wednesday)

Death notice in the Northampton Mercury, 21 August 1802

I was absolutely thrilled to find this notice, because it offered more proof that my Callows had indeed operated the pub. The notice also verified that Mr. Callow’s first name was Thomas, and he was quite a busy man. Not only did he run a pub, he delivered mail all over the county!

Next I searched for Thomas and Sarah Callow in the catalog of the National Archives. There I found an 1802 probate record for Thomas and an 1817 probate record for Sarah. These records are not digitized, so to see them I had to either visit the Huntingdonshire Archives in person or hire a local genealogist to copy the records for me. My family has used the services of professional genealogists in the past with great success, but in this case I wanted to visit the archives in person so I could see the town of Huntingdon and better understand one of the places I have spent so many hours researching.

To Huntingdon we go

Huntingdon, England welcome sign, September 2022

Huntingdon (population 25,000) is not on the usual tourist track for international travelers, but it’s only 1 hour via direct train from London and is situated in a pleasant area along the River Great Ouse (I believe this is pronounced ooze). My husband and I stayed at the Gothic Cottage in the center of town, only a 10-minute walk from the train station. While in the area we walked and took public transportation everywhere we needed to go. Renting/hiring a car was not necessary. There was a Wetherspoons pub very close to our accommodation and we ate there multiple times.

Fish and Chips at Sandford House - JD Wetherspoon, Huntingdon (I had the mushy peas, my husband took his peas unmushed)

Historically, Huntingdon was a market town and the county seat of Huntingdonshire, but in 1974 Huntingdonshire was absorbed into Cambridgeshire. Huntingdon was previously known as a “coaching center” meaning that it was a place to stop while traveling along the Roman Road (also known as Ermine St) that runs from London to Lincoln. Huntingdon was also the birthplace of Oliver Cromwell. Here is my husband hamming it up at the Oliver Cromwell museum:

My husband at the Oliver Cromwell Museum

Thomas and Sarah Callow, Victuallers

At the Huntingdonshire Archives I was able to view the will of Thomas Callow, my 5th great-grandfather (dated 1793) as well as the probate documents for Thomas and Sarah. In Thomas’s will he is referred to as a victualler (pronounced vitt-ler and meaning someone licensed to sell alcohol). He left his estate, worth less than £20 in 1802, to his wife Sarah.

Cover page for the will of Thomas Callow of Huntingdon, proved 1802 (Huntingdonshire Archives)

Sarah died 15 years later and left an estate worth £138 (equal to £15,000 or $19,000 in today’s money). This estate passed to her daughter Mary Anne. The inventory included

  • Cash in the house

  • Household goods and furniture

  • Plates, linens, and china

  • Books and prints

  • Wearing apparel

  • Ale and spirituous liquors

  • Book debts [debts owed to her]

Probate inventory for the estate of Sarah Callow, 1817 (Huntingdonshire Archives)

Sarah successfully ran the Rose and Crown pub for 15 years after her husband’s death. As the pub was located on a busy road, I can’t help but wonder who came in on a regular basis or while just passing through. What were her Georgian and Regency-era customers like? How did they dress? What ales and food (i.e., vittles) did Sarah serve them? What conversation topics did they discuss?

And how interesting it must have been for Mary Anne to grow up in (and above) the pub! Surely she helped her mother with the day-to-day operations. Perhaps this is where she met her future husband, bricklayer William Beresford. (Mary Anne and William Beresford did not take over the pub after Sarah died. It seems that another family took it over.)

Sarah née Andrew?

If you’re wondering what Sarah’s maiden name was, you’re not alone. I did find an indexed entry of their likely marriage record, stating that Thomas Calow and Sarah Andrew were married in 1788 in nearby Stilton, which is to the north, closer to Peterborough. I have only found this record in Findmypast, as part of the Huntingdonshire Marriages 1754-1837 Index. It doesn’t seem to be in Ancestry.

In the transcribed marriage record (the transcription is all I have to go on), Thomas is marked as widowed, while Sarah is not marked as widowed. I found that Thomas was previously married to Isabella Edmondson and they raised children in Chesterton, near Peterborough. I have not found baptism records for Sarah or Thomas, but it seems that Sarah’s age at marriage was 37. If she was not widowed, what was her life like before marrying Thomas? Was Mary Anne really her first and only child? Was Stilton her hometown or was she born elsewhere?

The research is never complete. Answers lead to many more questions. But for now, this concludes the story of my Callow ancestors. Stay tuned for posts on my other Huntingdon lines.