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Tuesday, 14 October 2025

Great-Great Grandma and Our Liddy


This rather awkward looking photograph is yet another from my parents’  album. It tells a tale of the perilous life endured by canal barge families. 

The picture shows my paternal grandfather and his sister, their mother, and their grandma, i.e. my own great- and great-great grandmas. The children were born in 1895 and 1896, so it would have been taken, what, around 1902? Great-Grandma was born in 1876, and Great-Great-Grandma in 1847. 

The family lived in houses for much of the time, but when they were carrying vessels around the Yorkshire rivers and canals, they lived on barges, sometimes for weeks at a time. My great-grandma was born on a canal barge at Bolten-upon-Dearne. By the time of the photograph, Great-Great Grandma was widowed, and they were all living at St. Andrew’s Terrace near Goole railway station. The children’s father (i.e. my Great Grandfather) would have been at sea. 

On the barges, they travelled West on the Rivers Dearne and Don through Doncaster and Barnsley, the River Aire to Leeds and beyond, the River Calder towards Halifax, and their associated canals. Eastwards, these rivers flowed into the River Ouse at the port of Goole, giving a route through to Hull on the River Humber. They carried heavy and unpleasant cargoes of all kinds, such as tar and coal. The Ouse and Humber were difficult to navigate, and had strong tides.  

Great Grandma also had a later child in 1908, and adopted my great-grandma’s sister, “our Liddy” (Hilda), in 1911 after both her parents died when she was six weeks old. Her parents were both 24. Their deaths were caused by the canals. 

Liddy’s father dies after falling into the Calder and Hebble Canal near Dewsbury. An inquest records a verdict as heart failure due to shock. Their mother was with Liddy and her older sister, but did not see it happen. However, one of the crew did. 

They were sailing east towards Horbury when Liddy’s father’s leg gave way because of stiffness due to rheumatism. He also had not fully recovered from a previous leg fracture. 

“At 2.30 on Tuesday afternoon the deceased was about to sit down on the stern rail, when his left foot slipped and he fell backwards into the water. He came up twice, but the second time only the top of his head was visible. The boat was stopped and in three minutes time deceased was got out of the water...”.  

Artificial respiration was to no avail. It seems likely he hit his head on the rudder or the side of the barge. 

The owner of the barge added that Liddy’s father had been in his employ for a number of years and was an exceedingly good captain. 

Liddy’s mother lived just one more week. It was always said that she died of a broken heart, although the death certificate records heart disease. She had asked my great-grandma to bring Liddy up, and her slightly older baby by an older sister. 

Liddy left the town under a cloud. Her later husband hatched a scheme to buy a wagon of coal and sell it to friends, relatives, and others in smaller quantities. He then disappeared without paying for the coal. The marriage later came to an end, and Liddy turned up in Leeds, remarried. I met her at a couple of family funerals. 

It seems most of the women were able to escape life on the canal barges through widowhood, marriage, or adoption. Liddy lived to 95, and her slightly older sister who was also on the barge, moved to Leeds as well, and lived to 83. Great-Great Grandma lived mostly in houses, and lived to 85. She spent her later years living in East Hull. 

It was a very different outcome for the men who stayed on the barges. They faced a life of injury, ill-health, and premature death. Great-Great Grandma’s husband died aged 53 of an aortic aneurism after being taken ill on his barge. Two of their other sons also stayed on the barges, one living to 56, and the other I can’t trace. They had twelve children in all between 1866 and 1887, four dying in infancy. 

It was a very tough life. The men were small, and they were fighters and boozers, fought dirty. and liked stout. One in particular, Manny, would fight anybody, and went to Wakefield Prison twelve times for fighting and drunkenness. My dad was taken to a family wedding reception when still very young, and remembers Manny causing a disturbance. My grandpa and another relative, both hardened First-World War veterans, pushed Manny out of the door, and the next minute a brick came through the window. 

The women could drink as well. The husband of one daughter said never to imagine for one minute you could go for a drink with them and come out sober. You would end up lying on the floor comatose while they were deciding who was buying the next round of stout. 

This second picture is of that wedding: the husband who said the women could drink you under the table, and where the disturbance at the reception later occurred. Don’t they look innocent! My dad, aged 3, is on the left between Liddy, aged about 13, and his grandma (my great grandma). Great Grandma has aged over the twenty or so years since the first photograph, and my dad was recovering from Polio. Great Grandma’s sister (the bride’s mother) who adopted the other orphaned child is on the lower right, and she may be just above to the left of the picture. We are not entirely certain. 



27 comments:

  1. Tough people back then who had tough lives.
    It is wonderful to have those family photos that have survived intact, even though nobody smiled.

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    1. I treasure them. My regret is that my mother's uncle threw the older ones away.

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  2. I think it is wonderful that you are able to trace the separate histories of each person. The top photo is sticking to the discipline not to smile for the camera and the second later one, faint smiles are beginning to break out. Liddy looks a beautiful girl, like her hat.

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    1. I think we were a family of story tellers. Liddy's hat is best. Clearly the fashion. My nanna's hat in the middle at the back looks silly.

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  3. That is a wonderful photograph of a remarkable family. It is amazing that you can identify the people in it. Such a hard and uncertain life they lived.

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    1. My dad talked a lot about the photographs.

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  4. What an amazing family you're from, tasker. I seem to be a generation ahead of you -- my parents born in 1895. They had hard jobs -- foundry and domestic service -- but nothing like the hard living and drinking of the barge people. What toughness, no wonder they needed their stout.

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    1. Your family sounds pretty tough too. It was my grandpa that was born 1895.

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  5. Tasker,

    I enjoyed reading this.

    Your dad had polio? That’s very serious, isn’t it? Did that affect his bones? We don’t have polio in England anymore.

    Also, I am wondering why no-one is smiling in the first photo? Was the idea of smiling whilst taking a photo a development in latter years?

    And poor Liddy. How old was she when she lost both parents in a 2 week period? I can’t even imagine. What rotten luck to meet a scumbag defrauding people as her husband. Did you ever talk to her much? I imagine at funerals it was all a bit terse.

    Manny sounds like a maniac. Throwing a brick into your family’s home! My goodness.

    Do you have any more photos. I love photos.

    Liam

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    1. Thank you.
      Dad had to wear a leg iron when young, and it left a weak leg.
      Apparently it was not done to smile. Now they gurn like imbeciles.
      Liddy was 6 weeks old when her parents died.
      She was very old when I met her, and said little of consequence.
      Loads of photographs. Have used quite a lot in other posts.

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  6. There seem to have been some rough people in your family Tasker - it's no wonder you turned out the way you did!
    P.S. Was it you who sent me a rare Hull Brewery beermat on the occasion of my birthday last week? There was no message in the envelope but the postmark indicated that it had come from West Yorkshire. If it was you - then thank you so much. It was a thoughtful gift that I shall treasure.

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    1. https://taskerdunham.blogspot.com/2019/08/beer-mats.html

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  7. I love family stories, life is so fleeting, it give it a bit of scale and perspective. My family came across from Staffordshire following work to the industry of South Yorkshire.

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    1. A lot moved to my home town as it did not exist until 1826.

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  8. So many memories! It all goes to show that the lives of the so-called ordinary people can fill volumes, if one only takes the time to research them and put them together.
    It must feel special to know so much about your family. I know some bits about mine, but by no means in such detail or particularly far back.
    Reading about the tough lives people had (and in too many parts of the world still have) makes me once again grateful and glad that I was born where and when I was born.

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    1. I think you need to belong to a family that talks about these things, had have relatives who live long enough for you to become interested. Yes, I agree most families will have such tales.

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  9. You really do breathe life into those names and dates. I hope someone in your family is collecting all these stories. You come from a long line of scrappers!

    It is interesting that your father had polio as a child. Were there any long term effects from it? I lived in Michigan for a while, and the area had been hard hit during the polio epidemic. Years after all of this, post polio syndrome hit a lot those poor people who found themselves dealing with the disease once again. A neighbor actually died from complications of it.

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    1. I think by dad's weak leg caused the fall that put him in hospital and a restiratory catastrophe.

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  10. Canal boat transport sound like having been tough work - not the romantic image that people seems to have of it these days. You are so fortunate to have such photos and to be able to name them and have their stories.

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    1. The Goole canal is one of the few working canals now. Others are only for leisure.

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  11. They dot away relatively lightly compared to many, but it was still a very serious illness.

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  12. Hello TD,

    A single photograph which has evoked so many memories and so many lives, loves and losses. This is a wonderful piece of social history and demands a whole album of reminiscences in order that these times are not just dry history but real, living events that can enable us to reflect on our lives and times of today.
    It has been fun to reconnect after far too long away....

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    1. Pleased to see you back. As you will see from my profile, I am now only here on borrowed time, and blogging is becoming increasingly difficult.
      Yes, I am very much enjoying revisiting my parent's photo albums.

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  13. rhymeswithplague18 Oct 2025, 13:43:00

    Fascinating stuff! And good on you for making a permanent record on your blog. My family were far-flung (Pennsylvania, Iowa, Texas, California) and not given to keeping in touch but I have managed to gather quite a bit of information nonetheless. This post is a treasure of family lore for you and a pleasure to read for your readers!

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    1. RWP: my concern is that Google have a policy of deleting accounts and all associated data that have been inactive for more than 2 years. I had an old inactive one, and the only way I know is that there was a recovery address with it. Others disappeared without notice.

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  14. amazing memories... so nicely now preserved for as long as the internet stays plugged in....... fascinating stuff..... having done a little bit of work on canals, i can appreciate how difficult and dangerous it can be......

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    1. Google seem to have a policy of deleting all accounts and data inactive for more than 2 years. This may eventually apply to Blogger.

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