Most of the people who ended their days in the Charterhouse will remain unknown or be just names on a list. Public records may tell us the bare facts, but even then the most common names offer no clues to enable us to pin down those facts. Online searches sometimes reveal more. Ordinary people had extraordinary things happen to them. I have tended in this blog to pick those people out simply because they are interesting. But those who left no traces, the unremarkable lives, would be just as interesting if we knew more. Here are some of them.
William and Maria Abba (who come first alphabetically in our database) celebrated their golden wedding anniversary in the Charterhouse in October 1902.
This snippet in the Hull Daily Mail was the only time they got their names in the papers. William was born in Scarborough in 1823 but soon came to Hull to pursue a career as a shipwright. He married Maria Bradley in 1847 and by 1861 the couple were living in Grimsby Lane with their 3 children. Their last child, Gertrude, was born in 1865. Like many families they moved house quite often. By 1871 they were on Holderness Rd and William had taken on an additional job as a "fancy goods dealer". It's possible that this was not a side-line for him but a job for Maria, an attempt to bring in some money in lean spells for William's work as a shipwright. By 1881 they had moved to Grotto Square off Mason St and were to remain there until they were admitted to the Charterhouse early in 1897. They died within a year of each other, Maria in 1904 and William in 1905.Just ordinary lives, perhaps. But who knows what dramas, what joys and tragedies, are hidden behind those bare facts.
John Cana was another ordinary man, He was born in Woodbridge, Suffolk, in 1834. By the age of 17 he had moved to Staines and was working as a printer's apprentice and living with the printer's family. He was to follow the printing trade for the rest of his life. In 1857 he married Betsey Stropher back in Suffolk, and then the couple moved to London, co-incidentally living in Charterhouse Lane there. He was described on the 1861 census as a printer compositor. Soon after that the couple came to Hull. But John's printing business ran into trouble and he went bankrupt in 1869. It was a common experience for self-employed and small businessmen. The couple can't be found on the 1871 census but they were in Hull when Betsey died in 1872. John wasted no time in marrying again, to Elinor Banks who was 20 years his junior. By 1881 the family were living in Neptune St and John was working as a printer's overseer. It was safer to work for someone else than to set up on your own. In 1891 they were still there, with 5 daughters with the surname Banks (Elinor's children by a previous marriage, presumably) and Ada Banks who is "sister-in-law" to John. It's obviously complicated! By 1901 they were living in St James St. (pictured)
John stayed in the printing work as long as he could and. at the age of 72, he was admitted to the Charterhouse in May 1906. Elinor did not accompany him. She would have been too young for admission. But it's possible that the couple had separated before then. John Cana was a Charterhouse resident for ten years before his death. Just another ordinary life?