Person:Hannah Addington (6)

Watchers
Hannah Addington
 
m. 1890
  1. Margery AddingtonAbt 1897 -
  2. Geoffrey William Addington1898 - 1917
  3. John Sylvester AddingtonAbt 1900 -
  4. Hannah Addington1902 -
Facts and Events
Name[1] Hannah Addington
Gender Female
Christening[1][2] 1 Jan 1902 Eaton Socon, Bedfordshire, EnglandSt Mary's
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Coordinators: David Mayall, Ben Laurie and Dave Newbury. FreeREG - Search English Parish Register Transcripts and Indexes. (http://www.freereg.org.uk/

    The FreeREG Project's objective is to provide free Internet searches of baptism, marriage, and burial records, which have been transcribed from English parish registers.)
    http://www.freereg.org.uk/cgi/SearchResults.pl?RecordType=Baptisms&RecordID=143195.

    County Bedfordshire
    Place Eaton Socon
    Church St Mary
    Baptism Date 01 Jan 1902
    Forename Hannah
    Sex F
    Father Forename John Walter
    Mother Forename Ada
    Father Surname ADDINGTON
    Abode Eaton Socon
    Father Occupation Merchant
    Notes By whom the ceremony was performed T R HORLEY Vicar

  2. The church of St. Mary the Virgin originally consisted of a chancel, nave with north and south aisles and a west-facing tower. The walls of the church were built of cobblestones with a good deal of squared ironstone in the Tower, and all were finished with embattled parapets. To the north was a vestry dating from the 15th cent., but was built at a later time than the chancel. An organ transept was added in the latter part of the 19th century. The south porch was more recent.

    The church appears to have originally been built in about the beginning of the 15th century, but with the re-use of older nave arcades - the arches of which, except for those on the east bay on each side, were early 14th cent. The columns, with their capitals and bases, were of the 15th cent.

    The chancel arch and those in the east bay of the arcades were in larger stones than the rest, and were probably from the 15th cent. date. The nave was probably lengthened by a bay eastwards at that time. Other evidence of older work were the south door of the nave - with an early 14th cent. head, and the 12th cent. font, built of purbeck marble. The west window of the south aisle was of the 14th cent. style and was probably a copy of an older one.

    This church was unfortunately burned down in 1930, but it was immediately rebuilt and consecrated in 1932.