Hannah Hornblow b 1795


11 th CHILD OF JOHN HORNBLOW & HIS WIFE ELIZABETH YOUNG was Hannah  Born 6 Feb 1795 and baptised age 21 in 1816 shortly before her marriage.

She was married  by licence to  Lloyd Henry Standish  on 23 Aug 1816 St Lukes Old Street Finsbury witnessed by C  Standish & Ebenezer Hornblow of  Botolph Bishopsgate 


Hannah & her brother Ebenezer were witness to their sister Sarah’s 2nd marriage in 1816 Deptford. 


Hannah and her husband Lloyd or Floyd Standish were  Straw Hat makers. 

 Village women spent their lives plaiting straw to supply the local hat manufacturers. This is FINSBURY Banner Street is close to Bunhill Row

 
Lloyd Henry Standish, straw hat maker, dealer and chapman of Bishopsgate Street Without the city of London. After being made bankrupt  25 March 1817  they turned to school teaching  in Endfield.  


Bishopsgate Without the City of London


late C18th Ladies Straw Hats

THEN This Interesting Newspaper find. 

FLOYD Henry Standish  dissolved his partnership with a John Herne of Herne & CO  Straw hat manufactures  19 Banner Street St Lukes (Finsbury )on  1 April 1813 ( it is dated 1813 but there rest of the page are 1816 )


Bishopsgate Street Without. see left just outside the city walls of London

Jan 12th  1819 Dividends Bankrupts -  Standish L H Bishopsgate Street Without straw hat manufacturer

Commercial Chronicle Standish L H Bishopsgate Street Without, straw hat manufacturer,
Solicitor Francis & Co Fowk’s building

Lloyd  Henry Standish and his wife Hannah Hornblow who married 23 Aug 1816, had a  son Lloyd Henry Peniviel  Standish born 1825 Bb 12 July 1826 at St James Piccadilly WESTMINSTER.  
From London Metropolitan Records the  birth record states that father Lloyd a schoolteacher .


The death record for Lloyd H P Standish son of Lloyd Henry and Anne/Hannah Hornblowe He died in Brussels in 1890. Aged 62 a language teacher, his wife was  Jeanne Hubert,  His death record is signed by his son Arthur Standish age 23 Born London working in Brussels   
They were  nonconformist  -   Jerusalemite Swedenborgian !!  

 

 London  Met records.

  1788 A Marriage Bond for Floyd Standish.

One dated 1788 to Mary Rivers both of St Clement Danes.
Floyd was 25 born about 1763 and  Mary was 24 .  Their marriage is dated July 1790  The marriage bond was for £200   which was a hefty sum of money. 

Elizabeth Standish bpt 22/2/1789 of St Clements Dane mother Mary.


Another Bond  a few years later in 1793 ...

Floyd Standish of St Giles in the Fields , gentleman, widower married to Charlotte Laremuth of Enfield . She 22 .

  Lloyd Henry Standish son of Lloyd and Charlotte of Gloucester St born May 12 1794
Bapt June 6 .1794 at St George the Martyr Queen Square Camden.

   This must be Lloyds parents ,making Lloyd 22 when they married 

 
1798  Charlotte Isabella Standish born at 10.30 am on 15/11/1798. daughter of  Floyds & Charlotte Standish  Baptised 9 Dec 1798. source LONDON: Friar Street, Blackfriars (Swedenborgians): Births & Baptisms

  

The parents Floyd Standish  and his 2nd wife Charlotte Laremuth Standish either ran or were employed at a school  at Chase Side in Enfield ....which appears to be where Hannah & Lloyd retreated to when the Straw Hat company went bankrupt

https://hidden-london.com/gazetteer/chase-side/  


FMP Apprenticeship Indenture
1803  Charlotte Larmuth Standish, School Mistress  Apprenticed, by Indenture,  Mary Ann Lovell at Chase Side Enfield Middlesex. 

The National Archives reference (IR 1 series) 39 f 97

In 6 Aug 1809 she was married at Finsbury  to John Parry a widower of St Luke's    


Charlotte  Standish b 1798 married 4 Dec 1821 in Chelsea to RN Captain Henry Freeman Young Pogson born 1800 from distinguished naval family . He was  RN Commander in 1831  and died 1857 in Bath Somerset . 



   BHOL  Ref Enfield  Several private schools were established in the 17th and 18th centuries, (when the grammar school alone seems to have catered for the poor. 

Mary Turpin, by will dated 1775, left £200 to teach three poor girls reading, writing, and needlework. 

 In 1787 a school for poor boys and girls was opened in premises in Baker Street which had once formed part of the Old Fighting Cock alehouse; the school, which was supported by voluntary subscriptions, had declined by 1826 and disappeared soon afterwards.


Its closure may have resulted from the opening of two schools of industry for girls, the first in 1800 by Anglicans and the second in 1806 by nonconformists. 


An infants' school was opened in 1824 and another, by nonconformists, in 1830.  The second school was at Ponders End, where a part-time factory school was also opened in 1830 and closed with the jute factory in 1882, by which time it had over 150 pupils. 


A National school opened at Enfield Highway in 1833 and was followed by several similar schools both for Enfield Town and the remoter areas, including Forty Hill and Cockfosters.

 Nonconformists opened a British school, at Chase Side, in 1838 and Roman Catholics opened their first school, at Ponders End, in 1888.



Laremuth - I think they came from Sunderland !

Elizabeth dau of Robert and Isabella Laremuth BB 1762 Old Meeting or Corn Market Chapel High Street-Independent ,Sunderland,Durham,England

Elizabeth married by Lic in EnfieldMiddlesex 10 April 1792 a minor married William Horn of St Giles in Field  

Thomas Laremuth Inn Keeper mentioned in London Gazette - had Sunderland & Plymouth connections and in bankruptcy as meeting place in Sunderland Inn called Sign of George 27 Jul 1754


George Laremuth Jury service 1798 City of London Coroners' Inquests  8 Dec 1798 London Metropolitan Archives

Robert Laremuth 1766 Compton Street North Soho paying rates in Westminster

Isabell Laremuth Westminster Rate payer 1798 Princes Street Soho 

George Laremuth married Susan Heard Whitechapel 1810

Thomas Laremuth married Mary Dobson 1747 St James Piccadilly London 

Lots of same names in Durham &  Northumberland 


Lloyd Ernest Standish Bb 1861 Clerkenwell mother nee Clark died 1863

 

Lloyd Henry 1850 Newspaper Witness  to dissolving of a partnership in Brussels

James Richardson Glasgow merchant  who ceased to be a partner of non Bank Scotland 


Notes Finds & Observations by researcher   J Baldwin


Found rate assessments for Floyd Standish in Enfield for the years 1792-98. 

Record of Floyd Standish bur 31/12/1792. St George's Square. 

A Floyd Standish died 1800 age 34 of Somer Town Camden. This fits with father Floyd born about 1763,  

Also a Floyd Standish joined the Free Masons on 12/4/1792 age 36 gent of Drury Lane .


The Gazette....1850. Brussels  Lloyd Henry Standish a witness . 


 21st/1/2021

A few more dots......it appears that Charlotte Standish nee Larmuth was a school teacher. Floyd died 1800.

 In 1803 there is a apprenticeship record for her as master school teacher of Enfield taking on an apprentice Mary Ann Lovel. She would have also have taught her son Lloyd .j


An Ann Marie/A Standish 1787 married twice. First to one Charles Pratt in 1816 and 2nd to Richard Pearce in 1824. He a goldbeater.
She had children by him. 


 

It is possible Floyd was Irish or maybe American 


The name Penafiel.is apparently common in Bolivia, Mexico so likely some ancestor was from foreign parts!
I did see some info about a Penafiel and a Standish online but this was way back in 14th century.

Lloyd Henry Penafiel Standish was baptised at Westminster area so presumably his father taught somewhere there. 

I have a feeling that the Standish family was of good standing !