Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Interlude - Peach upside-down cake



Here is a cake worth making (from the Taste Of Home website), and it's not difficult. 

Ingredients
  • 3/4 cup butter, softened, divided
  • 1/2 cup packed brown sugar
  • 2 cups sliced peeled fresh peaches
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1-1/4 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1-1/4 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 cup milk
Directions
  • Melt 1/4 cup butter; pour into an ungreased 9-in. round baking pan. Sprinkle with brown sugar. Arrange peach slices in single layer over sugar. * Sometimes I cook the brown sugar and butter together on the stovetop first, but I'm not sure that it makes much difference.
  • In a large bowl, cream sugar and remaining butter until light and fluffy. Beat in egg and vanilla. Combine the flour, baking powder and salt; add to creamed mixture alternately with milk, beating well after each addition. Spoon over peaches.
  • Bake at 350° for 45-50 minutes or until a toothpick inserted near the center comes out clean. Cool for 10 minutes before inverting onto a serving plate. Serve warm. Yield: 8 servings.

Plymouth fashion

The top picture shows an ad in Drake Circus Shopping Centre. It looks so nautical, so in keeping with Plymouth. Don't expect to see such a thing out on the streets though - this is hardly the Milan of England; it's a world away from London for that matter.

More likely you will see really bad hair, often in solid colours such as in the picture on the lower right. I saw it so frequently that I had to wonder if a craft store had a special on ink or dye. It seems that Plymouth is in desperate need of good hairdressers.

And the fashion... oh dear. Granted, bad or lack of fashion can be seen anywhere, but here, despite all the young university students, it usually missed the mark.

The Guildhall in Plymouth

Plymouth
May 14, 2012
 
Ancestry research
I went over to the Guildhall, which was mostly rebuilt after the war, but was dismayed to see the bunch from some tattoo event there cleaning up. Apparently they'd be there all day, so I had to tread carefully over floor cloths and around tables while burly guys toted equipment out.
 
I wasn't too sure what I was looking for. There is supposed to be a window there dedicated to my great-great-great-grandfather, Thomas Stevens the mayor. I found three in one room that were like stained glass church windows. In a main hall were windows with pictures painted on - quite amateurish. There was also supposed to be a coat of arms. A shield/crest is in that room but no one in the building could tell me what it was for. There was writing on the wall below it but it was all covered by portable walls. I asked when they might come down - thought about going back the next day but was informed that some do for the mayor was being set up when the tattoo people were finished so the Guildhall would be closed all week. Luckily a helpful, non-tattooed man came along and moved the walls away for me. Didn't see anything related to my family there.
 
 
These pictures appear to be stuck on the glass, like Mac Tac.

Carvings on the ceiling supposedly depict the labours of Hercules.


The shield and panels were all behind the movable walls before the nice man moved them aside. The top part of the design on the shield is like part of the town's coat of arms.

I would think the window was lost when the building was gutted in the war, but can't find any info to confirm. Somewhere was stated that the Arms was formerly in the guildhall, and was in the window. I would have liked to have seen it. Apparently it had (a?) chevron azure and two eagles. In searching on the internet I learned something about colours used in heraldry...

There are five colours and two metals that may be used in heraldry, called tinctures. They use French names and are:
  • Or (gold)
  • Argent (silver)
  • Gules (red)
  • Azure (blue)
  • Vert (green)
  • Sable (black)
  • Purpure (purple)

  • Less common tinctures include:
  • Tenne (orange or light brown)
  • Sanguine (dark red)
  • Murrey (dark purple)
  • Bleu Celeste (light blue)
  • Carnation (flesh coloured)
  • Cendree (grey)
    These are, however, much rarer than the seven above.
Not related as far as I know, but Tozer is a name in our family. This man, Clifford Tozer, was alderman in 1952.


Outside, not far from the Guildhall, sit the remains of Charles Church, shown here with the mall in behind.

Thomas Stevens, mentioned above, was born in Plymouth in 1799 and was baptized in Charles Church on January 3rd, 1800.

First full day - Part 6 - The End

Plymouth
May 13, 2012
 
Heading back toward town and my hotel, I passed through a seedy section of shops which didn't seem to fit the area.
The spooky looking Royal Eye Infirmary. Are there that many eye problems?

Over a door. Here's another thing I didn't know - that Drake renamed the Pelican to Golden Hind during a voyage. (I would have thought renaming a ship might be considered bad luck.)

Charles Church burned during the war but the shell is kept as a memorial.

Armada Way passes through the main shopping area. Between the big screen (this was before the London Olympics, remember) and the Guildhall on the left is Royal Parade, a main street.

Back at the Promenade, the race was still on and continued until well after suppertime. I went to Dutton's on the water for fish ‘n’ chips and mushy peas.

Sunday, December 29, 2013

First full day - Part 5 - Mannamead

Plymouth
May 13, 2012

Ancestry research
It seemed unlikely that I would find anything else astounding at Ford Park Cemetery on this visit so I stopped in at the office on my way out and picked up a search form.
Since I was already north of the city, and the Mannamead area was probably only about a mile to the east, it was easier to walk than trying to find a bus.
 
I think Mannamead took off as a residential area in the mid 1800's.

My great-great-great-grandparents, Thomas and Mary Stevens, (I'll call him Mayor Thomas to differentiate him from his son, Thomas Jones Stevens who was also married to a Mary) may have been the first in the family to move up to Mannamead from the Barbican (3 Parade). But where? Sometimes houses had names not street addresses. Street names can change over time, or disappear entirely if, say, the road got bombed out during the war. The 1861 census shows them living in Mannamead. Would that be Mannamead Road, Avenue, or just the general area? Probably one of the first two, judging by the census form. A probate record for then widowed Mary in 1876 states that she was living at Sunny Bank, Mannamead.

Next, my great-great-grandparents, Thomas Jones & Mary Stevens (he being the one who looked like a sea captain) lived in Mannamead, along with their son, John, among others, in 1871. The 1881 census shows them living at Woodbine Villa, Mannamead. This address is also mentioned in London Gazettes in 1874 and 1879. They must have liked living there because they later named their house in Oxford 'Mannamead.'

My great-grandparents, John and Eliza Stevens, lived at 12 Seymour Terrace in the 1881 census (This is also mentioned elsewhere in 1879). Seymour Terrace was the only address in Plymouth that I remember Dad taking about. The trouble is, there doesn't seem to be such a terrace. There is a Seymour Road, Drive, Park. Even on old maps I haven't found a Seymour Terrace.

I headed along Hermitage Road towards Mannamead Road. 




Row houses and more row houses (I was informed by an English person that they should be called terrace houses with bay windows), but they end at a rock wall. I crossed Mannamead Road over to Mannamead Avenue.

And here is where I realized I didn't know what I was looking for. It was confusing then and it still is.

I wandered along Mannamead Avenue but didn't find a building called Sunnybank - just a couple of named places, such as Windsor Lodge. Also a Mannamead Rise.

It just now occurred to me that I should have walked the length of the larger Mannamead Road, but I was probably getting tired. Instead, I walked to Seymour Road next door.

The neighbourhood was quiet and lacking people. I'm sure it was nice in its day but I felt it was a bit run down and even slightly seedy.



I'm still not sure I'm on the right road but I find a 12 Seymour.

What goes on here with multiple addresses and the Old School House?

I got quite a surprise when I looked next door to the right. Up until now, I'd only been able to walk these streets on Google.


What is this at the house (which appears to be divided into two) next door to the right? Oho! The name Woodbine! Could it be that T.J. & Mary Stevens lived next door to their son, my great-grandfather, John?

I wondered if the part of the building closest to the road was actually the back of house.

I suppose the only way to find out who lived at these properties would be to see a list of former owners like the sheet of information I was given by the owner of their house in Oxford. I don't know where one gets such a thing. Until then, this is really only speculation - this road could have nothing at all to do with our family.

Property details for Woodbine, Seymour Road, Mannamead
Semi-detached, Freehold, 7 Beds, 3 Baths, 4 Receps
Estimate: £810,839


Woodbine and Bryntirion, Plymouth
Description: Woodbine and Bryntirion
Grade: II
Date Listed: 19 November 1997

Listing Text
PLYMOUTH
SX4856SE SEYMOUR ROAD, Mannamead
740-1/38/336 (South side)
19/11/97 Woodbine and Bryntirion
GV II
Unequal pair of villas. Mid C19. Stucco with stucco detail;
dry slate hipped roofs with moulded eaves cornices, the
cornices to front blocks with modillions; stuccoed end stacks
with moulded cornices. Double-depth overall U-shaped plan.
EXTERIOR: 2 storeys; entrance fronts at left and right-hand
returns the front blocks with central porches. Original sashes
with glazing bars within moulded architraves on bracketed
sills to right-hand entrance front of Bryntirion; pilastered
porch with moulded entablature; pilastered openings left and
right of doorway with moulded hoods on brackets. Woodbine has
larger porch with balustraded parapet. Garden front is 4 bays
with triple round-arched windows at left and paired sashes at
right over canted pilastered bays with moulded cornices; other
windows within moulded architraves with sill brackets above
pilastered doorways with moulded hoods on brackets. Road front
is rear of the house with 2:2:0 window range.
INTERIOR: not inspected but likely to be of interest.
Part of a good group of villas in Mannamead which was
developed after 1851.
(The Buildings of England: Pevsner N: Devon: London: 1989-:
669).