See also
Joseph WOODVINE's parents: William WOODVINE (1766- ) and Elizabeth BATES ( - )

Joseph WOODVINE (1807-1867)

Name: Joseph WOODVINE
Sex: Male
Father: William WOODVINE (1766- )
Mother: Elizabeth BATES ( - )
Spouse: Elizabeth LEE (1811- )
Children: Mary WOODVINE

Individual Events and Attributes

Birth 1807 Astley by Shawbury, Salop.
Baptism (1) 13 Sep 1807 (age 0) Shawbury
Baptism (2) 13 Dec 1807 (age 0) Shawbury,SAL. 1
Death 19 Nov 1867 (age 59-60)

Marriage

     
      Child: Ann WOODVINE
 
Spouse Elizabeth LEE (1811- )
Children Mary WOODVINE (1832- )
John WOODVINE (1835- )
Sarah WOODVINE (1838-1913?)
Thomas WOODVINE (1838-1881)
Ann WOODVINE (1842-1879)
Elizabeth WOODVINE (1845- )
Marriage 13 Nov 1831 (age 23-24) Wellington, SAL. 1

Individual Note 1 (shared)

Widower by 1861.

 

Moved from Shawbury to Wrockwardine (Wellington) between 1835 and 1838

 

1841 Census- Wrockwardine, Shropshire.

The only possible entry for the Woodvine household is:

WOODFIN Joseph. age 34 ; Ag.Lab.; Born in Shropshire

WOODFIN Elizabeth. age 30 ; Born in Shropshire

WOODFIN Sarah age 3 ; Born in Shropshire

WOODFIN Thomas age 1 ; Born in Shropshire

LEE James age 71 ; Ag.Lab. ; Born in Shropshire

 

 

1861 Census- Horsehay, Dawley,

Household Members:

John Woodvine Head; Married ; age 25; Waggoner

Ann Woodvine Wife; age 26;

Thomas Woodvine Son; age 1;

Joseph Woodvine Father; Widower; age 52; Waggoner1

Individual Note 2 (shared)

Comment by Jennifer (nee Parrot) during her research:

 

Anne Woodvine's father, Joseph, came from Shawbury but after the birth of his son John and before the birth of Sarah in 1838, he moved to Wellington - you can imagine that rural Shropshire was rapidly becoming very different from what Joseph has always known. Across from Shawbury, you can see the Wrekin and the chimneys of the Severn Gorge where the new ironworks and foundries were spring up. I expect that Joseph, a waggoner by trade, had needed to visit there in the course of his job, perhaps even delivering parts of farm machinery - which would now be iron - new tools for the farmers. Well you can imagine that he would see a new prosperity over there, under the Wrekin, and thought that he and his family could make their living there. I suppose his village would lose quite a lot of its population to the new factories where (again, I'm assuming) the housing was also new and goods were plentiful. He'd leave his rural roots then and settle down, eventually to die in 1867, in the industrial area of Shropshire.

Sources

1"File (merged): Lynn_Fournier_ancestors.GED".