James Bunbury BLAKE
(1802-1874)
Catherine PILKINGTON
(-1899)
James KING KING M.P.
(1806-1881)
Mary Cochrane MACKENZIE
(1811-)
Col. George Pilkington BLAKE
(1835-1915)
Adeline KING KING
(Abt 1841-Abt 1890)

Geraldine BLAKE
(1877-1965)

 

Family Links

Spouses/Children:
1. Capt. Edward Hector Le Marchant THOMAS (Uncle Ned)

Geraldine BLAKE 2

  • Born: 1877, Thurston, Suffolk, England
  • Marriage (1): Capt. Edward Hector Le Marchant THOMAS (Uncle Ned) on 5 Feb 1907 in Hereford, Herefordshire, England 1
  • Died: Dec 1965, Lichfield, Staffordshire, England aged 88 3
  • Buried: Thurston, Suffolk, England

  General Notes:

England 1881 Census: age 4. Lived in Kensington, London, with her parents & sisters Adeline A. & Catherine M.
England 1901 Census: age 24. Ladies Club, Chelsea, Holy Trinity, London, aged 24, Art Student

Geraldine was a sculptress and designed the monument in Kandy to the Ceylon's riffle regiment in memory of her brother in law Lt. Arthur Thomas and the others of Ceylon who died in the Boer's war.

Sculpture see : http://sculpture.gla.ac.uk/view/person.php?id=msib1_1219309640

Grave in Thurston, Suffolk. Inscription:
Side 1:

"EDWARD HECTOR LE MARCHAND THOMAS
BORN 1867 SERVED IN THE SOUTH AFRICA WAR
WITH THE CEYLON MOUNTED RIFLE AND
WAS AWARDED MEDAL WIT FIVE CLASPS
COMMISSIONED IN THE KINGS ROYAL RIFLE
CORPS 1914 PROMOTED CAPTAIN EAST
YORKSHIRE REGIMENT DIED 1946"

Side 2:

" GERALDINE HIS WIFE OF ORGREAVE HALL
STAFFORDSHIRE BORN 1876 DIED 1965
DAUGHTER OF GEORGE PILKINGTON AND
ADELINE BLAKE OF THURSTON HOUSE
HE WAS CAPTAIN 84TH REGIMENT BEING
MENTIONED IN DESPATCHES AND WAS ONE
OF THE HEROES OF LUCKNOW 1857 LATER
COLONEL ROYAL SUFFOLK HUSSARS"

Orgreave Hall in Staffordshireis now an old people's home .

http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Blake-1900
She was born in 1877 and on February 5th 1907 she married Capt. Edward Hector leMarchan Thomas (born in Colombo in 1867). His father, Mathew Henry Thomas (1837-January 28th 1915) was a planter. His Mother was Marianne Theresa Skinner (November 29th 1839 '96 February 8th 1901). He served in South Africa (Boer War) with the Ceylon Mounted Rifles as a L. Cpl. He was invalided in 1900 to UK where he was commissioned and served with the East Yorkshire Regt. in the 1914-18 war. He died in December 1946. She was a famous sculptress, particularly with horses. One of her largest works is the memorial to the dead of the Ceylon Rifles in Colombo. She died on October 31st 1965 at Orgrave Hall, Burton-on-Trent, and is buried at Thurston, Suffolk.

http://staffordshirebred.com/2013/03/19/house-to-let/

She comported herself with an imperiousness appropriate to the well connected memsahib she that was in her early married life half century before.

In her black riding habit and veiled top hat, Mrs. Geraldine Thomas, the last private tenant of Orgreave Hall, was often seen, well into the ninth decade of her life, determinedly venturing forth, riding side-saddle, between the shady lime tree avenues and across the level, green parkland surrounding her home. Captain Thomas had died 20 years previously, leaving her alone in the mansion, apart from the encroaching presence of sub-tenants in the periphery of the estate.

100_4819In the new, egalitarian Britain of the 1960's, Mrs Thomas was uneasily aware that she was a living anachronism. She declined to exchange money for the horse fodder supplied to her by her farmer neighbours, and in exercising this small droit de seigneur she was making a small gesture of remembrance towards the world into which she was born, in which the duties of her tribe, to be warriors, pioneers, and leaders of men, were supported by small armies of household servants.

According to Lucy Lethbridge's recent book "Servants: A downstairs view of 20th century Britain," Lord Curzon, only a generation senior to Mrs Thomas, entirely accustomed as he was to having his every need accommodated by his staff, was once so baffled by the problem of how to open a window without a servant at hand that he ended up smashing it with a log. Civilised life might break down altogether without the capable hand of the paid domestic assistant.

One of the long abiding inhabitants of Orgreave remembers himself scuffing through a six inch deep layer of leaves on the floors of the fine seventeenth century house towards an audience with Mrs Thomas in the drawing room in Orgreave Hall. Whether she allowed this foliacious carpeting to accrue through her lack of facility with a broom, or out of resignation to changing times, we do not know.

In common with Lord Curzon, Mrs Thomas had strong connections with the British Imperial presence in the Indian Subcontinent. She had married in 1907, Captain Edward Hector Le Marchant Thomas, whose family's interests in the Galleheria Coffee plantation in Ceylon, where he was born in 1867, provided them with a healthy income. His maternal grandfather, Tom Skinner, had been responsible for the construction of the Columbo '96 Kandy highway early in the 19th century, and had explored, and mapped, previously uncharted areas of the island. Geraldine's own father, Colonel George Pilkington Blake, had served in the Suffolk Imperial Yeomanry during the Indian Mutiny of 1856-7. Her elder sister Adeline married Hardinge Hay Cameron, of interest not just because of his family's own involvement in India and Ceylon, but because his mother was the famous pioneering Victorian photographer, Julia Margaret Cameron. In widowhood, Adeline came to live with her sister and brother in law at Orgreave.
100_4824

London children celebrate the Silver Jubilee of 1935.
From a book in my own collection.

The Lichfield Mercury of Friday 17th May 1935 pictures them in happy times, and performing roles in which I imagine them to be comfortable, leading local celebrations of the Silver Jubilee of King George and Queen Mary. Captain Thomas opened the event, hoisting the Union Jack after a few "well chosen words." Mrs Cameron, (Adeline), presented prize money to the children who were victorious in their sports contests, and Mrs Thomas presented Jubilee cups and saucers. Each lucky child "also received oranges and sweets."

When Adeline died in 1947, "Burton Woman Leaves £3,009? screamed the Derby Daily Telegraph. It must have seemed a useful sum.
00051u

"Sloane Gardens House"
from "Where shall she live?": Housing the New Working Woman in Late Victorian and Edwardian London', in Living, Leisure and Law: Eight Building Types in England 1800-1941, ed. Geoff Brandwood.

Rising 40 and 31 years old respectively when they married, both Edward and Geraldine had already lived remarkable lives. The 1901 census finds Geraldine living in an upmarket ladies' hostel in London. "Sloane Gardens House" was built on behalf of the Ladies' Associated Dwellings Company and had been opened in 1888 at 52, Lower Sloane Street. Its purpose was the accommodation of ladies who might, whilst retaining their good name, choose to pursue a career '96 an idea still only newly acceptable to many. These salubrious surroundings with their library, music room, and dining room were effectively Geraldine's student digs. Far from working in commerce, Geraldine was studying fine art, particularly sculpture.

A palace of delights for Christmas 1901 were illuminated in the windows of the nearby Peter Jones department store, and her Michaelmas term drew to an end. Meanwhile, her future husband's Boer War medal, with a creditable five clasps, denoting his service among the Ceylon Mounted Rifles in the battles of Dreifontein, Johannesburg, Diamond Hill, Wittebergen, and Cape Colony, was being collected by his brother Jocelyn, also a decorated veteran of the conflict. Edward had been invalided to England the previous year. A third brother, Arthur, had perished, one of over 22,000 British casualties. The Thomas brothers, not youths but men in their 30s, had travelled from one distant corner of The Empire to another for the sake of duty and adventure, and their father did not forget that one of them never returned home.

How did "Ted" Thomas become acquainted with Miss Geraldine Blake? Perhaps a clue lies in the following. A fine statue, representing a trooper of the Ceylon Mounted Infantry giving the signal "enemy is in sight" was commissioned by Mr Thomas senior in memory of his son and his fallen comrades. It was unveiled in Ceylon by H.R.H. The Duke of Connaught on March 18th 1907, some six weeks after the marriage of Lieutenant Thomas to the designer of the memorial.


Geraldine married Capt. Edward Hector Le Marchant THOMAS (Uncle Ned), son of Mathew Henry THOMAS and Marianne Theresa SKINNER, on 5 Feb 1907 in Hereford, Herefordshire, England.1 (Capt. Edward Hector Le Marchant THOMAS (Uncle Ned) was born in 1867 in Colombo, Ceylon, died in Dec 1946 in Lichfield, Staffordshire, England 4 and was buried in Thurston, Suffolk, England.)


Sources


1 The Plantagenet Roll. .... Julia Margaret Cameron Family Papers, http://archives2.getty.edu:8082/xtf/view?docId=ead/850858/850858.xml.

2 Julia Margaret Cameron Family Papers, http://archives2.getty.edu:8082/xtf/view?docId=ead/850858/850858.xml. .... Nikki's family History pages, Ancestry.com. .... British Census 1881, Rg11/0024 Kensington. .... 1901 England Census, Chelsea South, V. 1 Folio 24 p.40 #353.

3 "England & Wales, Death Index: 1916-2005," database, Lichfield, Staffordshire; Vol. 9b, p. 179.

4 "England & Wales, Death Index: 1916-2005," database, 1946, Lichfield, Staffordhire; Vpl. 9b, p.202.

J. Ferran 27/08/2024


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