Thursday, November 19, 2020

The Daughters of Job Nye in the USA

Over the years, we have been contacted by a number of people who have found this website and wanted to share their information and findings. One of the highlights was Lenny Goldsmith, who told us about the Nye family descendants on the Titanic.

We received another interesting query back in November 2015. It seems that Chris Hunt from Staten Island, New York, had met her husband for lunch in the quiet surrounds of the Fairview Cemetery at Castleton Corners in Staten Island.  She noticed an interesting obelisk grave marker and took a photo of it.  When she arrived home after work, she searched the internet for the name on the obelisk, which was that of Anne Nye, born 10 January 1828 in East Peckham, Kent, England.

Obelisk gravemarker of Anne Nye, surrounded by gravemarkers for her grand-nephews William Turner, Charles Turner and Norman Turner

Chris Hunt had no relationship to the Nye name but was interested in finding someone who did. Turns out that she found us and contacted my mother, Janice Nye Lutz. This was yet another very interesting beginning in the search for Nye information. 

Who was this Anne Nye? How did she end up in New York? Why is the name James Judson Turner on the left side of the obelisk? And what of the three gravestones next to the obelisk with the names Charles B. Turner, Norman Kent Turner and William H. Turner? What did these four people named Turner have to do with Anne Nye?

Here is what my mother found, step by step, and shared with me this week:

Caroline Nye, daughter of Job Nye and Ann Rolfe, was married to George Charles Bateman at Old Church, Saint Pancras on 19 March 1846. 

On the New York Passenger Lists 1820-1957  there was a ship called the Ionian which sailed from London and arrived in New York on 22 Jun 1852. On board were Caroline Bateman age 32, sons George age 4, and Charles infant, all born in England.

Apparently her husband, George Charles Bateman, departed London first to settle and establish himself in the USA, then sent for his wife Caroline and their two small children. 

They settled in Connecticut, as the 1860 United States Federal Census for Bridgeport, Fairfield County, Connecticut shows George C. Bateman age 30, born in England, was a hotel keeper. It also shows his wife Caroline age 32, born in England, and son Charles age 10 born in England. There were also four additional children, all born in Connecticut: Frederick age 8, Fanny age 6, Frank age 4, and Carolina age 3. 

The same 1860 Census entry shows Ann Nye, age 30, servant, born in England; and 6 other hotel boarders. This is the Anne Nye on the obelisk, the younger sister of Caroline born in 1828 in East Peckham, Kent.

Five years later, Anne Nye is found in the 1865 New York State Census for Castleton, Richmond District - which is on Staten Island, New York: Annie Nye, age 37, born about 1828, cook, born in England, working for T. G. Shaw and family.

Meanwhile, things were not going so well for her sister Caroline Nye Bateman. The 1870 United States Federal Census for Bridgeport, Fairfield County, Connecticut shows George C. Bateman, age 45, hotel and saloon keeper, born in England; Charles Bateman, age 18, works in sewing machine shop, born in England; and Eugene D. Clarke 26, clerk in saloon, born in Massachusetts. But no mention of Caroline and it lists only one of their children.

Amazingly, my mother found Caroline in the 1870 United States Federal Census for Hartford Ward 4, Hartford, Connecticut, Insane asylum: Caroline Bateman age 50, inhabitant, insane, born about 1820 Connecticut (she was actually born in East Peckham, Kent, England). 

Sadly, Caroline died in the insane asylum in Hartford, Connecticut about 1877.

The next time we find Anne Nye is in the 1875 New York State Census for Albany Ward 05. There she is in the home of George Loveridge, age 49, head, confectioner, born in England; Anne Loveridge, age 48 bride, born in England, Frank L. Loveridge, age 18, adopted son, born in Connecticut; Hattie Robinson, age 17, not related, born in Penns. County. 

The census taker assumed that all members of the household were the Loveridge family, but Anne Loveridge was actually Anne Nye, and Frank L. Loveridge was actually Frank L. Bateman, the son of George C. Bateman and Caroline Nye. There is no record of any marriage or adoption, and the record is partially corrected in the next Federal Census.

1880 United States Federal Census for New York, Albany County, Albany Township: George Loveridge, age 54, confectioner, born in England; Ann Loveridge wife, age 53, keeping house, born in England; Frank L. Bateman, age 24, boarder, huckster, born in Connecticut; Fred Bateman, age 26 boarder, huckster, born in Connecticut; Carrie Bateman, age 21, boarder, at home, born in Connecticut.

So it seems that Anne Nye and her nephew Frank Bateman brought his brother Fred Bateman and sister Carolina ("Carrie") Bateman to Albany to live. What was happening in Bridgeport, Connecticut with their father George Bateman and his hotel and saloon? Perhaps it was not a pleasant environment for the family, and they all fled after Caroline was put in the insane asylum.

The census taker also called Frank and Fred "hucksters". Today, that has a very negative connotation as someone who is dishonest, but a huckster is simply a person who sells small items door-to-door or from a market stall.

We don't know much about what happened for the next 20 years, as the 1890 Federal Census was largely destroyed by fire, but we do know that in 1886 Carolina Bateman was married to James Watkins Turner. 

In the 1900 United States Federal Census for New York, Richmond Ward (Staten Island) we find the following: James Turner head, born Dec 1857, age 42, expressman, born in  New York; Carrie A., wife age 41, born in Connecticut; Ella B. daughter, age 13, at school, born in New York; Charles B. son age 8, at school, born in New York; William H. son, age 6, at school, born in New York; Norman K. son, age 4, born in New York; Caroline M. daughter, age 2, born in New York; and Anne Nye, aunt, single, born Jan 1828, age 72, born in England, Immigrated 1852 or 1855 (actually 1857).

So after residing with George Loveridge in Albany at the time of the 1875 and 1880 censuses, along with some of the children of her sister Caroline Nye Bateman, by 1900 Anne Nye is now listed as single and living with with her niece Carolina Annette Bateman and her husband James Turner on Staten Island.

Again we find Anne Nye in the home of her niece Carolina and James Turner in the 1910 Federal Census for Richmond District, New York, and in the 1915 New York State Census for Staten Island at 100 Jewett Avenue, a location that today is a workshop for a construction business.

Last of all, my mother found Anne Nye in the New York State Municipal Deaths: Certificate #2174, "Ann Nye, age 89, born about 1828, death 25 Dec 1917 in Richmond, New York". 

Less than 2 miles away, Anne Nye was buried at the Fairview Cemetery, in the area known as Castleton Corners on Staten Island, where Chris Hunt had lunch and noticed an interesting grave marker and wanted to find more information. She is buried surrounded by her grand-nephews James, Charles, Norman and William Turner who she undoubtedly helped raise and whom they obviously loved enough to erect an obelisk in her honor. 

Thank you, Chris and your husband, for bringing us this puzzle and helping us to find more descendants of the Nye Family of Kent!

(For a list of the family of Caroline Nye and George Bateman and their Turner grandchildren, go to the Nye Genealogy page and press Ctrl+F on your keyboard to search for Job Nye.)

Inscription on the obelisk grave marker, which reads:
Anne Nye, born Jan 10, 1828
Hale St. East Peckham, Kent England

Gravestone of Anne Nye's grand-nephew, Charles Turner, which reads:
Charles B Turner, New York
Pvt Co. C 51 Pioneer Inf, World War I
Sept 11 1891 - Sept 14 1947

Gravestone of Anne Nye's grand-nephew, Norman Turner and his wife, Anna Hansen Turner, which reads:
Norman Kent Turner, New York
Cox USNRF, World War I
Sept 13 1895 - July 23 1957

Dear Mother of Harry
Anna Turner
1895 - 1975

Gravestone of Anne Nye's grand-nephew, William Turner, which reads:
William H Turner, New York
EN2 US Navy, World War I
Dec 26 1893 - April 23 1968


Sunday, October 6, 2013

Early 1900s photo of Charcott Farmhouse, Kent

Our thanks to Judy Coutts, who sent us the attached postcard showing the Charcott farm in Kent, which was owned by Richard Nye and passed down to his son.


The postcard reads: "You see I have been able to procure an up to date view or two of your old home at Charcott. The building between your house and the pub is the new bakery, otherwise Charcott is the same as you left it."

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Goldsmith Family Photos

Our thanks to Leonard "Lenny" Goldsmith of Lobethal, South Australia for sharing with us his family photos. Lenny is a descendant of Job Nye as follows:

Thomas Nye + Ann Walker (married 1775)
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Job Nye + Ann Rolfe (married 1815)
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Elizabeth Nye + Richard Goldsmith (married 1852)
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James George Goldsmith + Maria Barton (married 1875)
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Albert Goldsmith + Rose Turner (married approx 1913)
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Leonard Albert William Goldsmith + Jean Hay (married 1943)
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Leonard Goldsmith

Marriage Record of Richard Goldsmith and Elizabeth Nye, 25 November 1852
Witnessed by James Goldsmith and Job Nye
courtesy of Lenny Goldsmith

Albert Goldsmith (right) at the seaside in England
photo courtesy of Lenny Goldsmith

Rose Esther Turner Goldsmith, wife of Albert Goldsmith
photo courtesy of Lenny Goldsmith

Wally Turner, Rose Turner Goldsmith, and Albert Goldsmith
photo courtesy of Lenny Goldsmith

Leonard Albert William Goldsmith, 1916
son of  Albert Goldsmith and Rose Turner Goldsmith
photo courtesy of Lenny Goldsmith

Leonard Albert William Goldsmith, about 1918
photo courtesy of Lenny Goldsmith

Leonard Albert William Goldsmith
photo courtesy of Lenny Goldsmith

Leonard Albert William Goldsmith and Jean Sloan Hay
on their wedding day in Glasgow, Scotland 1943
photo courtesy of Lenny Goldsmith

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Partridge and Baker Family Photos

We are very grateful to Brian Skinner, of Dorset, who has sent us a number of photos of the Partridge and Baker family descendants of Elizabeth Nye and Samuel Kite.

They are related as follows:

Thomas Nye + Ann Walker (married 1775)
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Elizabeth Nye + Samuel Kite (married 1796)
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Samuel Kite Jr + Eliza Farrell (married 1833)
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Esther Kite + John Wood Partridge (married 1873)
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Sabina Farrell Partridge + Frederick Baker (married 1899)
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Children:
Mabel Annie Baker, Frederick George Baker, Winifred Baker, Leslie John Baker

Esther Kite and husband John Wood Partridge
photo courtesy of Brian Skinner

Sabina Kite, sister of Esther Kite Partridge
photo courtesy of Brian Skinner

Esther Kite and husband John Wood Partridge
photo courtesy of Brian Skinner

Sabina Farrell Partridge
daughter of Esther Kite and John Partridge
photo courtesy of Brian Skinner

Sabina Farrell Partridge and husband Frederick Baker
with their children Winifred, Mabel and Frederick
photo courtesy of Brian Skinner


Kneeling: June and Ann Pickett (daughters of Bert and Mabel Pickett)
Standing: Audrey French, Sabina Partridge Baker,
Mabel Baker Pickett (daughter of Frederick and Sabina Baker), Ethel Pickett, Frederick Baker, and Bert Pickett
1951 - silver (25th) wedding anniversary of Mabel and Bert Pickett
photo courtesy of Brian Skinner
Frederick Baker and Sabina Partridge Baker
photo courtesy of Brian Skinner

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Nye Descendants on the Titanic

Thanks to information sent to us by Leonard Goldsmith, of Lobethal, South Australia, we have been surprised to learn that there were descendants of the Nye family on the fateful voyage of the Titanic.


Thomas Nye + Ann Walker (married 1775)
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Job Nye + Ann Rolfe (married 1815)
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Elizabeth Nye + Richard Goldsmith (married 1852)
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James George Goldsmith + Maria Barton (married 1875)
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Frank John Goldsmith + Emily Alice Brown (married 1901)
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Frank John Goldsmith, Jr.


Frank John Goldsmith, the grandson of Richard Goldsmith and Elizabeth Nye Goldsmith, boarded the Titanic in Southampton, England, on 10 April 1912 with his wife Emily and son Frank Jr. as 3rd Class passengers. Their destination was Detroit, Michigan, where many of Emily's family had relocated.

Frank Goldsmith Snr, his wife Emily Brown, Frank Goldsmith Jr, baby Bertie.
Photo taken in Kent, England about 1907. The baby died in Kent in 1911.
When the ship struck the iceberg on 15 April 1912, Frank Sr. woke his wife and son, and, together with others made their way to the forward end of the Boat Deck, where lifeboat Collapsible C was being loaded. There was a ring of seamen standing around the boat, letting only women and children pass through.

Frank Jr. wrote of the experience in his book, Echoes in the Night: "Mother and I then were permitted through the gateway." He later recalled "My dad reached down and patted me on the shoulder and said, ‘So long, Frankie, I’ll see you later.’ He didn’t and he may have known he wouldn’t." Frank Goldsmith Sr. died in the sinking. His body was never recovered.

The story of Frank John Goldsmith Jr. is very well told on a page dedicated to him on Wikipedia. The story of his mother, Emily Alice Brown Goldsmith, is also told on the website Encyclopedia Titanica.

Emily Alice Brown Goldsmith later married Henry Illman.
Wedding photo of
Emily Alice Brown Goldsmith and Henry Illman
courtesy of Leonard Goldsmith

Friday, April 27, 2012

New information

I have been adding birth, marriage and death certificates to the blog but you will have to scroll through the families to find what I have added.  I will be working on adding more as I get time, I hope this will be useful to those searching for Nye information.  
Janice

Saturday, August 27, 2011

Photographs of Kite family

During the past month I have received several photographs of members of the Kite family courtesy of Brian of Dorset, England. It has been so exciting to hear from Brian who stumbled across this blog while searching one day.

I have been able to share some information on the Kite family with Brian and he has shared dates and places with me that I didn't already have. Thank you again Brian.

Since I began doing genealogy and family history work many years ago I have been contacted by many wonderful family members. By sharing our work we don't have to repeat the same research over and over again.

What a blessing it has been in my life to get to know new people and others who have only been names but now are my friends.

If anyone has information or who has family pictures please contact me at jnybltz@q.com and let's share!

Thomas Nye and Ann Walker

We know that Thomas Nye was buried 3 March 1831 at Leigh, Kent, England. He was 81 years old and his birth year has been estimated as 1750 from this information. Although many family members have reported that Thomas' parents are Thomas Nye and Barbara Gearing it has been proven that information is incorrect.

Trying to find the parents of Thomas Nye has been a very tedious and long task and as of August 2011 the search continues.

We do know that Thomas married Ann Walker on 12 October 1775 at Leigh. This information was found at the LDS Genealogy Library in Salt Lake City, Utah and is recorded in the Parish Registers of Leigh, Kent. England.

Another interesting bit of information was found in Salt Lake City also and following is a transcription of a court entry-

The 1797 Quarter Sessions Meeting House, recorded in Leigh:
Whereas Thomas Hopkins, Joseph Gateward, John Harmon, Thomas Nye and William Medhurst protestant injectors of the denomination of General Baptist have certified to the justices of the peace at the General Quarter Sessions of the peace to house of William Medhurst in the parish of Leigh in the said County as the place of meeting of a congregation or assembly for religious worship and desired that it may be recorded in the court for that purpose. It is ordered by this court that the said house behind the same is hereby for that purpose pursuant to the statute in that case made and provided.

This proof of Thomas being a non-conformist helps us to understand why his granddaughters Anne and Sophia Nye paid to have the Baptist Church on Pembury Road built and also why his grandsons John and Thomas Cotton Nye chose to marry their brides at the Wateringbury Baptist Church.

Ann Walker had been christened on 15 July 1750 in Bidborough, Kent, the youngest child of John Walker and Mary Peckam.

According to the Parish Registers of Leigh the following Nye children were baptized:

Click on the links to see the children's individual stories on this blog.

There is another problem that is believed by some family members. The spelling of Walker on one record appears to be Walther or Wather so it has been reported that Thomas Nye had two wives.

Reason reminds us that names were commonly misspelled, very few people could read or write and those who could certainly tried to be accurate but weren't always.

If Ann Walker had died and Thomas had married again there would have been records to that effect, I have been unable to find either one. Divorces were extremely rare and there would definitely be a record.

If anyone has a source or a copy of a record that is different to what I am posting in this blog please send it to me, I would be happy to receive it.

Ann Walker Nye died 14 November 1837 at Tonbridge Wells at the age of 88. Her death certificate reports that the cause of death was gangrene. Her son William was with her at the time of her death. She was buried 19 November 1837 in Leigh, Kent.

Hadlow St. Mary Church, Kent, England


Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Job Nye

Job Nye and Catherine Goldsmith marriage record 4 June 1840
Marriage Certificate of Job Nye and Catherine Goldsmith in the Parish of Brenchley
4 June 1840 is above.

The 8th and last child born to Thomas Nye and Ann Walker was named Job who was born about 1791. Similiarly to his brother Thomas, after much searching for a birth or christening I began to doubt that Job existed.

Finally after ignoring him for a long time I received a telephone call from my cousin Karen. She was in Salt Lake City researching at the Family History Library and was excited to tell me that she had found Job's marriage, so we were off and running again.

Job married Ann Rolfe on 4 June 1815 in Horton Kirby, Kent. They lived in East Peckham where five children were born to them:

  • Caroline Nye born in 1820
  • Mercy Nye born in 1823
  • Thomas Nye born in 1825
  • Anne Nye born in 1828
  • and Elizabeth Nye born in 1831.

Ann Rolfe Nye died and was buried at East Peckham on 21 November 1833. Their son Thomas died and is buried in East Peckham also on 6 April 1834.

On 4 June 1840 Job married Catherine Goldsmith (nee Bromley), a widow who had been born in Ireland. They were married at Brenchley, Kent. Catherine's first husband, James Goldsmith, had died in 1830 at Newfoundland, Canada and she had 3 children: Richard Goldsmith, born 31 Dec 1825; Martha Goldsmith born 16 March 1828; and James George Goldsmith born 11 May 1830 (died 1830). Martha and Richard came back to England - Martha can be found in the 1851 census and in the 1861 census she had married. Richard is in the 1841 census, but not  living with Job and Catherine and Job's daughters. He was probably working nearby being nearly 16 years old.

In 1851 and 1861 Job's birthplace was listed as Cranbrook, Kent. Since Cranbrook is approximately 15 miles from Leigh, and his mother could have travelled that far to be with a sister to have her last child, Cranbrook was thoroughly searched for Job's christening with no results.

Job was an agricultural laborer. He and Catherine did not have children. Job died in 1868 in East Peckham and in 1871 Catherine was living in an almshouse in East Peckham.

The death record of Catherine Goldsmith Nye reads as follows:
Catherine Nye nee Goldsmith died 18th Feb in Tonbrige workhouse aged 75 widow of Job Nye farm labourer died of senile decay Richard Goldsmith son in attendance Golden Green Hadlow

Elizabeth Nye Goldsmith
Job's daughter Elizabeth Nye married Catherine's son Richard Goldsmith on 28 November 1852 in East Peckham, Kent (about 5 miles from Tonbridge). Richard was age 26, and Elizabeth was age 20.

Elizabeth Nye and Richard Goldsmith marriage record 28 Nov 1852


As shown in the above marriage record, their residence at the time of marriage was Hale Street. Elizabeth could not write, so she left her mark in the presence of Richard Humphrey and Mercy Humphrey maiden name Nye. Mercy left her mark as well.

Richard and Elizabeth were blessed with three sons and three daughters. As shown in the following death record, Richard Goldsmith died on 8 March 1884 of a strangulated hernia, age 59.

Richard Goldsmith death record 8 March 1854

After Richard died, Elizabeth married John Wallis, a shoemaker in 1885. They are shown in the 1891 Tonbridge census. John died in 1895 in Maidstone, Kent.  Elizabeth died in 1907 at Bartons Farm (information provided by Leonard Goldsmith).

Mercy Nye Humphrey

Mercy Nye married Richard Humphrey, as shown in the above marriage record for Elizabeth Nye and Richard Goldsmith.  Richard and Mercy were the parents of ten children.

For more details on the descendants of Job Nye and the Goldsmiths, see the Genealogy page.