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The World is our Tortoise.
THE
HISTORY OF A CROOKES FAMILY IN SHEFFIELD.
By
Eric Crookes.
Introduction.
My name is Eric Crookes and I was born
on September 10th 1945 in the city of Sheffield in England. Sheffield is, I
believe, the homelands of the Crookes family. Crookes with an "E"
that is. I know nothing of the others.
The point about this web page is to
satisfy a passion I have for the concepts of space and time. Time in the sense
that we are products of our past and the future is a result of ourselves. Space in the sense of movement in space; both in terms of physical
movement and the transference of thoughts and ideas by whatever means.
I am therefore attempting to put to the
world all that I know of myself, my family and my family's history at the risk
of being boring or seeming conceited. Why indeed should I imagine anyone would
want to know about me, simply because I existed.

Eric
Crookes.
My father Leonard was born on January
27th 1911 in Stannington View Road at Crookes in Sheffield where his family had
lived since around 1905. Leonard was the middle child of a family of twelve
children, all but two were boys and at this point, December 2011, there are no
survivors.
His father Frank was born in Harvest
Lane in the township of Sheffield in 1883 the second eldest in a family of six
to Frank and Mary Crookes.
My father's mother, Lily, was also born
in 1883 a late arrival to the second marriages of Henry and Elizabeth Bennett.

Leonard
Crookes.
And so I begin. My immediate family
consists of my son Steven Eric who was born on January 25th 1973 to my first
wife Grace (nee Short) in Sheffield and for all of his formative years he lived
at 74 Greengate Lane in High Green, a suburb of Sheffield. He now lives in the
small town of Wakefield in West Yorkshire and works as a Transport Manager with
a distribution firm called Rosier. He is unmarried and has a passion for
passenger transport and has a part share in several buses that are due for
renovation.
For myself I have worked in Sheffield's
steel and engineering industry all my life except for a spell in South Africa
from 1970 to 1972.
I have spent much of my life in study
making up for a poor education in my early years. I now have a Bachelor of Arts
degree in Humanities, a Master of Philosophy and a Master of Business
Administration.
I have three brothers and a sister. My
sister Patricia is the eldest and was born on January 11th 1939 in Sheffield.
She is now divorced from her former husband Robert Hanson with whom she had two
sons Shaun and Wayne. Shaun is married to Julie and has three children and
Wayne has one child. Sadly Pat died on
January 10th 2008 after a series of strokes and heart attacks.
My
eldest brother Leonard was born on October 19th 1943. He was married late in
life to Gloria and has no children. He was short and in his later years looked
a lot like my Dad. Leonard died quite suddenly on September 15th
2003.
My
next brother Anthony was born on November 4th 1946 and has been married three
times. He has a son Anthony who was born in 1965 and a daughter Nicole who was
born in 1993.
Alan is my youngest brother and was born in January
25th 1955. Alan is married to Vicky Barrett and has two children Danny born
November 11th 1984 and Lee Anne who was born on January 3rd 1987.

Our
Mam, Leonard, Eric and Tony.
Our Ancestors and before.
a) Leonard Crookes (1911-1986) and Ivy
Leary (1917-1996).

Ivy Crookes (nee
Leary)
My father Leonard married my mother Ivy
Leary (see www.september10th1945.com/leary.htm) on Christmas Eve 1936 after a lightening romance
that lasted all their lives. My father was 25 years old and my mother a lass of
19. She was the eldest of twelve surviving children and my father the middle,
also of twelve. Crookes was his name and he was born in Crookes amidst the
working class lives of Sheffield's steel and cutlery industry that by this time
had thrived through the nineteenth and into the twentieth century.
Leonard went to school at Lydgett Lane
until he was fourteen and worked in several trades. The most important was
property repairing. But there was no work in the area. At twenty years old he
joined the Royal Navy signing on for twelve years. His long service log is by
my side now and tells how he looked before I was born. He reached the rank of
Petty Officer Stoker Mechanic. The log also shows the ships he served on
through peace time and war.
He was an easy man, soft on the outside
with a soft centre. He loved his wife and children and worked himself to death
to support them. He died after several strokes at the age of 75 on February
19th 1986. My mother Ivy, whose history I will describe later, died quite
suddenly on April 21st 1997.
a) Frank Crookes (1883-1952) and Lily Bennett (1883-1936).
Frank Crookes was the son of Frank and
Mary Gillyatt and was born in 1883 at Harvest Lane in Neepsend, Sheffield.
Frank married Lily Bennett in 1903 at Saint Philip's Church in Sheffield and
they made their home in Crookes, first in Bute Street and then on Stannington
View Road also in Crookes. They spent the rest of their lives on this road.
Lily died early at the age of 53 in 1936 whilst my Dad was away on naval
service. Later Frank married Lily Johnson and they had one son called Philip.



Frank and Lily Crookes.
The family of Frank and Lily Crookes is
as follows:
Frank (1904-1963) married Louisa and had three children Frank,
Dorothy and Eric.
Harry (1905-1987) married Marion and had one daughter Barbara.
Elsie (1906 -) married Edward Snape and
had one son Anthony.
Fred (1908-1989) married Lily (1909-1989) and had one daughter
Joyce.
Albert (1909-1985) married Florence and had three daughters
Maureen, Margaret and Betty.
Leonard (1911-1986) married Ivy Leary (1917-1997) and had four
sons and a daughter: Patricia, Leonard, Eric, Anthony and Alan.
Arnold (1917-) married Hilda and had one
daughter Carole.
George (1915-1987) married Rosalie Green.
Edna (1926-1970) married Edward.
Philip (son to Frank and Lily Johnson)
There were two other sons who did not survive: Colin and Herman.
b) Frank and Mary Crookes (nee Gillyatt)

Frank
Crookes (1854-1894)
Little is known of my great-grand
father Frank Crookes except that he was born in 1853 at Holme Lane in
Grenoside, Ecclesfield into a family of ailing children, many of whom did not
survive. In the census records for 1861 Frank can be found at the age of eight
living in Owlerton on the outskirts of Sheffield along with his parents George
and Ann and a small family. In 1871, after much searching he was found living
in lodgings on Young Street off The Moor in Sheffield. His trade was a grinder
as was most of the male members of the Crookes family
in the nineteenth century.
The family of Frank and Mary Crookes (nee Gillyatt) is as follows:
Jessie Ann (1879-1939) married Arthur Palfreyman and had six
children: Arthur, Malin, Fred, Lucy, Ruth and Mabel.
Fred (1886-1935)
Frank (1883-1949) married Lily Bennett and had twelve children.
Malin (1885-1951) married Ada Gillyatt
and had two daughters Minnie and Eleanor. Eleanor died whilst quite young and
Minnie is alive and well in Lincoln.
Annie Eliza (1888-1967) married Joseph
Atkinson (1883-1967) and had two children Phyllis and George. Both to the best
of my knowledge are still alive though Phyllis is in her nineties.
Winifred died in infancy.
The Gillyatt family in this line is
almost legendary. Great cousin Phyllis the daughter of Annie Eliza and Joseph
Atkinson always talked about the Gillyatts and the Kelseys
from the Lincolnshire village of Corby. Mary Gillyatt's
family came from Lincolnshire and Phyllis always claimed she was of farming
stock. Indeed, Ada Crookes (nee Gillyatt) the wife of Malin did come from the
village of Corby and was the cousin of Mary Gillyatt though Mary's history was
more colourful than Phyllis suspected. I found the baptism record of a Mary
Gillyatt born in 1856 in the Lincolnshire Archives for the village
of Kirton-in-Lindsay. The record said that her mother Mary, along with her son
Tom, was in prison for stealing "four live fowls" and had to serve
four years. For years I believed this was the Mary Gillyatt who became my
great-grandmother but I found the real Grandma Crookes in computerised census
records in the year 2011.
The truth about the Gillyatt family and
how it became connected to the Crookes is as follows:
Suzannah
Gillyatt parted from her husband and came to Sheffield from Kirton-in-Lyndsey with her three daughters
Diana (born 1828), Elizabeth (born 1830)
and Maria (born 1836).
Elizabeth married Charles Spencer (born 1826) and had five children, Maria remained unmarried but had three children
John, Mary and Elizabeth. John never
married and died in the late 1890s, Elizabeth died young and Mary went on to
marry my great-grandfather Frank Crookes (born 1853) in 1856.
The Gillyatts in Sheffield and the Gillyatts
in Kirton-in –Lyndsey kept in constant contact and according to Phyllis Taylor
great-grandma Crookes (nee Gillyatt) made frequent visits to the Lincolnshire
side of the family with her own children.
Her son Malin met Ada Gillyatt, who was great-grandma’s blood cousin,
and they eventually married.
c) George and Anne Crookes (nee Crossland)
George Crookes was born in 1828 and was
married to Anne Crossland who was born in 1832. Anne Crossland's family appear
to have come from Skew Hill farm at Grenoside which is still standing on Fox
Hill Road. When they married they lived at Holme Lane Farm at Grenoside where
their first children were born. Like his father before him and his sons after
George worked as a grinder in Sheffield's new and developing industries. He
worked on farming implements such as shears and scythes since Wisewood,
Owlerton and Ecclesfield were primarily agricultural areas at that time.
Anne's parents were William (born 1801)
and Elizabeth (born 1802) and they lived and worked on the farm at Skew Hill.
Ann had two brothers Joseph (born 1835) and John (born 1834) and a sister Mary
(born 1840).
George and Anne had the usual
large family for the time. It was a fateful family though with only five out of
the eleven reaching the age of twenty and beyond. George himself died in 1863 a
date I found recently in the General Index here in Huddersfield.
The family of George and Ann is
detailed here:
Arthur (1852-1868)
Frank (1853-1894) married Mary Gillyatt
their family is listed above.
Herman (1854-1891) married Ann Turner
who had a grocery shop in the Park district in Sheffield. They had one daughter
Alice (1877-1955) who went on to be the mother of the Sharpe greengrocery
business in Sheffield.
Malin (1856-1881) married Mary Darling
(1856-1897) and had three children George, Mary and Emily all died in infancy.
Fanny (1858-)
Fred (1862-)
married Ellen they had a daughter Amelia in 1891.
Albert (1864-1895) was listed as a
"hawker" in the 1891 census.
Hugh (1866-1868)
Lilley (1867-1888)
Emma (1868)
Willis (1870-1882)
The poignant tale of Malin Crookes and
his wife Mary (nee Darling) is worth recording. Malin was a brother of Frank
and Herman Crookes and was born in 1856 at Holme Lane. At the age of 21 he
married his sweetheart, aptly named Mary Darling, They
had three children in quick succession, George, Mary and Emily. George was
named after his Grand-father George Crookes, whilst Mary after her mother. By
1881 George and the three children had all died leaving Mary to live a lonely
life with her brother Rueben Darling until she died in 1897. Further research
suggests that this is an example of ill-fate bringing together two tragically
blighted families. Reuben Darling was
born in 1813 and in the 1851 census he was shown as married to Mary born
1822. Mary and Reuben had five children,
the three sons never married, whilst the two daughters Emma and Mary did. Emma married William Shepherd and had six
children whilst Mary married Malin Crookes. Perhaps no one else alive is aware
of these two unfortunate families. I feel a compulsion to raise their tragic
lives to world wide proportions.
d) Joseph and Sarah Crookes.
The parents of George Crookes are to be
found in the 1841 census of Sheffield.
They were Joseph and Sarah.
Because of the inaccuracies of the 1841 census I can only work out their
birth years to within five years. Joseph
was born around 1802 and Sarah 1806 in the Bradfield parish. To the best of my knowledge there were four
children to the marriage of Joseph and Sarah Crookes, two girls and two boys. The
eldest daughter Elizabeth was born in 1823 and married
Job Smith and had six children, whilst the youngest child Ellen born in 1833
married William Chapman and had two daughters. The two boys Joseph and George
were born in 1826 and 1828 respectively.
The 1851 census shows Joseph senior
living alone with his two daughters and young George in Owlerton. Joseph had
married their next door neighbour Betsy and was also living in Owlerton. Their
descendants have been recorded quite accurately amongst my extended family
history.
The family of Joseph and Sarah Crookes.
Elizabeth (1823-) married Job Smith and
had six children
Joseph (1826-) married Betsy and had two
daughters Sarah (1849-)and Amelia (b.1850) and two sons Joseph (1851-) and
Bernard (1858-)
George (1828-) married Ann Crossland his
family is listed above.
Ellen (1833-) married William Chapman and had two daughters,