Showing posts with label Flett family history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flett family history. Show all posts

Saturday, 14 September 2019

Fishcuring Fletts of Findochty

Founder of a Family Business

The Alexander Flett whose firm embarked on the Newfoundland Fisheries venture in 1907 was not the first nor the only one of his family to make a noteworthy contribution to the herring industry of north-east Scotland. That their surname became 'a name to conjure with' in the fishcuring context may be attributed to the energy and entreprise of his father, James, whose death in 1897 drew a remarkable double tribute from the county's weekly newspaper.



"A portrait of the late Mr, James Flett, Findochty, whose death we announced last week"
 -  Banffshire Advertiser, 28 January 1897


DEATHS... At 42 Findochty, on the 14th inst., James Flett, Fishcurer, in his 80th year.
 -  Banffshire Advertiser, 21 January 1897



THE LATE MR FLETT, 
FINDOCHTY
By the death of Mr James Flett, senior partner of the firm of J. Flett & Sons, one of the best known, familiar and striking figures has been removed from Findochty. Mr Flett was born at Findochty in 1817, and was thus in his 80th year. His father was Alexander Flett, his mother Margaret Smith, both of Findochty. He served an apprenticeship as cooper with the late Mr Taylor, fishcurer, Findochty. After completing his apprenticeship, he worked for some time as a journeyman with Messrs Walter Biggar & Co., who were the first curers to send Scotch cured herrings to the German markets. He commenced fishcuring on his own account at Peterhead in 1839, and at Findochty, his native village, in 1849. Mr Flett married Catherine Pirie, daughter of the late Alex. Pirie, who belonged to Banff, and who went to Findochty many years ago as manager for Messrs Walter Biggar & Co. His wife died on January 3rd, 1868. Mr Flett's family of three sons and five daughters all survive him. The sons are all in the business so long carried on by their father. Of the family to which Mr Flett himself belonged, the eldest brother, Alexander Flett, died in Findochty in 1892, aged 88. There still survives another brother, William, surnamed [nicknamed], from his uncommon strength, "Wallace". This nonagenarian celebrated his 90th birthday on 5th January of this year. The deceased gentleman was a man of splendid and striking physique. Standing as he did six feet three inches in height, no one could fail to notice him. He was of a kind and genial disposition, a great favourite with everybody in the village, particularly so with the young. Of children, he was very fond, and to run up to him in the street, seize his hand or his huge staff, was sufficient to dtaw forth a "sweetie," from his capacious pocket and a blessing fron his generous heart. He had a fund of quaint humour, and was known and respected throughout the whole of the North of Scotland. Few strangers went to Findochty without giving him a call. 
    Although he never took an active part in public matters, he was a keen politician. Some years ago, a navigation class was started in Findochty, under the auspices of the County Council. What was the teacher's surpirse one night when the class was gathering to see the venerable form of Mr Flett walk into the room, pay his fee, and enroll his name among the rest. Anything that looked like the more scientific working on the sea and of its products was to him a source of personal interest. A Liberal in politics, Mr Flett was a Free Churchman, He was a life-long friend of the late Rev. Robert Shanks, the first Free Church minister in Buckie, and a correspondence was kept up between them till the demise of the latter. A few years ago, less than ten, another well known figure was seen paying a visit to Mr Flett in Findochty. This was "La Teste", the Elgin poet, To hear these two comparing notes, or to hear Mr Flett calling attention to points of similarity in the life and fortunes of himself and "La" was no ordinary treat. In the death of Mr Flett, his own generation see another place left vacant never to be filled; while the younger race, deprived of his portly figure in the street, and the kind smile from his open face, will feel the place srange, and the town less homely. It may be mentioned that the last work on which the deceased was engaged was in arranging volumes of Spurgeon's sermons, copies of which he had from the beginning of their publication. Mr Flett was a great reader and had a love of poetry, his favourite author being Scott. 
   The funeral took place on Monday and was largely attended, the coopers carrying the coffin when it left the house and also at the grave.
 -  Banffshire Advertiser, 21 January 1897
=================
The impression of warmth, sincerity and personal feeling in the above is reinforced by the author (possibly the same) of the paper's regular column of informal chat, local news and common-person views, written mostly in the Doric.

FIRESIDE TALK O' AUL'  FREENS
    Willie -- I was unco' sorry to learn that ane acquaintance o' mine, in the person o' Mister Flett, fishcurer, Findochty, had passed awa' fae this weary warl' last week, Nae doot he's been spared to his family an' freens for a gie puckle longer than is the lot o' mony, bit for a' that fin death comes an' tak's awa' even the aul'est o' oor freens an' neepers, peer, frail, human natur' canna keep back the fa'in' tear or hide the pang o' sorrow an' regret at the pairtin'.
    Geordie -- The curer 'll be unca mair missed in Finachty. He wis aye ready to help the needy, to cheer the dooncast, an' to encourage the young. Nae doot to some he may at times hae appeared to be caul' an' stern, bit fatever may hae been the appearance ootside there wis aye the warm, kin'ly heart within.
     Jamie -- I speak from personal experience of the sympathetic heart which beat in the bosom of Mr Flett. Of course it would be sheer mockery on my part to say that he was perfect (the perfect man must be translated to some other sphere as it has never been my lot to meet him yet-------
    Maggie -- I cud tell ye faur ye wid see him, bit I winna dee't evnoo.
    Jamie -- There were many traits in the deceased's character which it would be well worth our while to seek to emulate, These points I need not dwell on now as they will readily come up before those who had the pleasure of his acquaintance. Of him I think it may truthfully be said
To all he was pleasing -- to auld and to young --
To the rich and the poor, to the weak and the strong;
He laughed with the gay -- moralised with the grave
The wise man he honoured -- the fool he forgave. 
   Geordie -- That wis the curer's character to a T. He wisna ony o' yer harem-skarem patienceless creatur's that the warl's sae foo o' noo-a-days.
 -  Banffshire Advertiser, 21 January 1897 
================
Quayside, Findochty harbour
Findochty harbour from the West
Biographical details given by the paper are confirmed and amplified by census and other records:

1841
James can be found at James Street, Peterhead, although his birthplace is given as Aberdeenshire not Banffshire. There are a lot of other people in the same 'household', possibly some kind of lodgings or digs for migrant or temporary workers as there is a range of surnames, ages and occupations.
His mother Margaret and father Alexander, White Fisher, were in Findochty, Rathven, both ages rounded down to 60, with Female Servant Janet Copland, 20; all born Banffshire.
His future wife Katharine (Catherine) Pirie was 12, living in Findochty, Rathven, with her sisters Ann, 15, Spirit Dealer; Margaret, 9; and Isabella, 6, born in England (others in Banffshire). Intriguing as Ann's apparent role is, most likely it was very temporary, their parents being away from home on census night. Alexander Pirie's occupation is given elsewhere as both cooper and 'vintner'.

Alexander Flett b. 9-4-1776        Parents: George Flett and Isobel née Mackenzie
Margaret Smith b. Rathven, 20/01/1777    Parents: William and Anne [née] Smith m.16-10-1773
Margaret Smith m. Alexander Flett, Rathven, 18-2-1798
Anne FLETT b. 05/01/1800, RATHVEN. Parents: ALEXANDER FLETT/MARGARET née SMITH.

1851 
James, aged 33, Fish Curer, Unmarried, was living in Victoria Square, Rathven, with his now widowed mother Margaret Flett (née Smith), Stocking Weaver, Head of Household, and her two grandsons, Alexander Smith, 22, Cooper, and George Smith, 13, Apprentice Shoemaker. All born in Rathven (the parish/registration district for Findochty). 
Catherine Pirie was 22, Unmarried, living in Road Leading West with her father Alexr. Pirie, Cooper & Vintner. born Turriff, Aberdeenshire (1795); mother Isabella, 50, born in Rathven; unmarried sisters Margaret, 19, and Isabella,15; also two grandsons of the household head - John Pirie Legg, aged 2, and Walter James Flett, 2 months. The latter was the acknowledged son of James and Catherine, the former possibly Margaret's son. Reputedly it was not unusual, and not socially unacceptable in the fishing villages of north-east Scotland, for a couple's eldest child to be born before their formal marriage.

Old Parish Records for Rathven 1821-22, 10th Dec:
Alexr. Pirie and Isabel Campbell both [residing] in this parish were matrimonially contracted
and after publication of banns were married.

1861
James, now 43, Fish Curer, and Catherine, Fish-curer's Wife, 31, were living in a Private House, Rathven, with James's mother, Margaret Flett, Fisherman's widow, 84, and their children: Walter Jas (James), 10; Alexander, 7; Margaret, 5; William D (Downie), 3; and Catherin(e), 10 months; also Isabella Taylor, Domestic Servant, 23.

1865 Scottish Valuation Rolls
Owner Occupier FLETT JAMES DWELLING HOUSE AND FISHCURING PREMISES 20 AND 21 VILLAGE OF FINDOCHTY BANFF COUNTY (VR91/18/ 374)

1868 Sadly, Catherine died of peritonits, while still only in her 30s.

In 1871 James, now a widower, 53, Cooper & Fish Curer, was living at 20, Rathven with his children (except the eldest, Walter James): Alexander, 17, Cooper; Margaret, 15, House Keeper; William, 12; Catherine, 10; Isabella, 8; Ann, 6; Mary, 3.

In 1881 the census transcription gives James's address as house name 'Wesleyan Chapel', house number 41 (Rathven parish), where he wa living with his two youngest daughters: Isabella, Governess, and Mary, Scholar.

By 1891 Mary had moved on but Isabella, 28, was still unmarried and a Governess, living with James, now designated a Fish Oil Manufacturer (a new entreprise?), at Main Street (Rathven parish).
=================
Notes

In 1882-4, Frances Groome's Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland described Findochty

In 1887, John Bartholomew's Gazetteer of the British Isles described Rathven

In 1934 a review of the novel Bid for Fortune by James's grandson Joseph appeared in the Stornoway Gazette and decades later the reviewer remembered the book:
The ruse with the diamonds was a natural for Joe Flett. He belonged to one of the leading families in the herring trade.  Flett was a name to conjure with when I was young...  - The Hub of My Universe by James Shaw Grant. Edinburgh, James Thin, 1982. Ch. 41, 'They Hid the Diamonds in a Barrel'.

Friday, 16 November 2018

A Stornoway Girl from Away

In her centenary year, it is intended that this blog will look at the earlier part of the 'ordinary' life of Margaret Isobel (Peggy) Flett, married surname Smith, 19th December 1918 to 7th July 2015, in the context of her time, with particular attention to interactions with the town of Stornoway on  the Isle of Lewis.


By way of Introduction and taster, here are some links to previous posts:-

Family background

Two great-grandmothers
https://smothpubs.blogspot.com/2017/07/lewis-connections-and-coincidences.html
In December 1913 a grandson of Catherine (via her second son, Alexander), married a grand-daughter of Janet via Jessie. In due course there were therefore joint great-grandchildren of Janet and Catherine, and so on unto the third and fourth (so far) generations.

Ancestry. Mostly Paternal (Flett) side
https://smothpubs.blogspot.com/2018/06/examples-of-family-reading-in-scotland.html
Among the many Flett families of Findochty this one had achieved comparative prosperity by the 1890s, owning fishyards as far away as Stornoway. It was mainly Alexander's father James who built up the family fortunes, establishing himself as a well-known figure in the fishing community of the north east, nicknamed 'the Auld Cooper.' This group of siblings were probably the first generation of the family to have the resources and motivation to acquire books - apart from those required for religious observance - in any numbers.

https://smothpubs.blogspot.com/2016/05/a-findochty-flett-in-canada.html
Joseph Flett was aged 27 when he sailed to North America in August 1915, 28 when his young wife and baby daughter joined him in May 1916. While he may at that time have intended to make a permanent home in Canada, circumstances decreed otherwise and he had returned to Scotland 13 years before his novel Bid for Fortune was published in 1934. 

https://smothpubs.blogspot.com/2014/05/diamonds-among-silver-darlings.html
This summer sees the 80th anniversary of the publication of an unusual novel, “Bid for Fortune” by “J.S.” (real name Joseph, no middle name) Flett - not a famous one by any means but worthy of some consideration from several points of view, not least in its historical context…  
(And other posts about Joe Flett and his novel.)

Mostly Maternal (Maclean) side
https://smothpubs.blogspot.com/2018/03/a-trip-to-mainland-from-stornoway-1952.html
An aunt's letter
Dear Peggy,

https://smothpubs.blogspot.com/2016/04/a-stornoway-girl-in-new-york-100-years.html
A letter from mother to grandmother
The writer of the letter transcribed below, aged 22 at the time of writing, was the daughter of a Stornoway shopkeeper. After some time as a student at the prestigious Atholl Crescent College of Domestic Science in Edinburgh, in 1913 she married Joe Flett from Findochty, whose family's fish-curing business took him to Canada in August 1915. 

Siblings
https://smothpubs.blogspot.com/2017/09/so-proud-he-registered-her-twice.html
Older sister
It was as 'Marjory Joan Flett' that the baby's birth on 5th February 1915 was registered - twice.



The three children of Joe and Lizzie, in Canada
Later, in Scotland. - Not a very happy time
 

All nevertheless survived and flourished
A rare picture of Peggy (front row, left) with her father and all her siblings
(and several of their partners).
The occasion was a sad one, the funeral of her stepmother, Joe's second wife.

Schooldays
https://smothpubs.blogspot.com/2017/03/stornoway-schooldays-more-on-nicolson.html
"The old Nicolson Institute school provided education which was second to none in all of Scotland."
Margaret I. Flett completed her Junior Secondary education in 1934
Work
https://smothpubs.blogspot.com/2017/02/history-of-stornoway-airport-fragment.html
"During part of the war I worked as a clerk at the Stornoway aerodrome, which was expanded to meet the military needs of the time. "


There are also, as regular readers will know, numerous posts about Calum Smith, whom Peggy married in 1942.

Thursday, 21 June 2018

Examples of family Reading in Scotland over two centuries or so (Part 1)

I. The Fish-curing Fletts of Findochty

In a house in Inverness being cleared for sale last year, a collection or rather accumulation of books came to light, which had been given or bequeathed to the late owner by relatives on his father's side of the family. Most dated from the early 20th century or earlier; many were inscribed with the names of previous owners, and some had additional inscriptions or information. Examining the volumes with an eye to family history casts light on the literary interests of the people concerned, and perhaps a little on the intellectual life of the 'middling sort' at that time and place.
Thought to be the parents, Alexander and Annie,
with (possibly) their first child, Catherine.
In 1891 the family was living at West End N Terrace, Rathven;. In the household were the father Alexander, aged 37, Fishcurer, born in Findochty, Banffshire [Rathven Registration District] (same birthplace for others unless otherwise stated); mother Ann, 36, Fishcurer's Wife; Kate, 14, Fishcurer's Daughter; Alexr, 11, Scholar [i.e. at school], born in Banff; Ann (Annie), 6,  Scholar,  born in Banff;  Barbara, 5, Scholar;  Joseph aged 3,  born in Buckpoul, Banffshire; and Maggie Bella, 1. There were two Servants, Kate Macbain, 35, from Rathven , and Jane Flett, 17, from  Findochty  (Details as in Census.)

Among the many Flett families of Findochty this one had achieved comparative prosperity by the 1890s, owning fishyards as far away as Stornoway. It was mainly Alexander's father James who built up the family fortunes, establishing himself as a well-known figure in the fishing community of the north east, nicknamed 'the Auld Cooper.' This group of siblings were probably the first generation of the family to have the resources and motivation to acquire books - apart from those required for religious observance - in any numbers.

Their interests, if serious, were not narrow. Apart from the religion-related items - not all predictable - we find history, philosophy, Egyptology, criticism and German studies, along with recent and contemporary literature including quite a lot of poetry. Many of the authors are 'big hitters' although there are absences, notably Dickens, and the works here are not always the best known. 
The condition of the books generally tends to confirm that they were for use rather than decoration and may well have been passed on among the brothers and sisters. They would not, of course, constitute the entire family library, only those which happened to end up with the siblings' nephew Sandy. 
Some are in small format and have leather bindings and gilt edges; many are illustrated with a frontispiece at least. Online research suggests that a few of the titles and/or editions may be comparatively rare.

First, books without designated owners, grouped roughly by subject:

Practical Hydropathy,by John Smedley.
This went into many editions in the late 19th century and may have belonged to Alexander (junior), who became a doctor.



The Germany of Today, by Charles Tower (Home University of Modern Knowledge series). First printed July 1913, reprinted August 1914. (War was declared on 4th August).




The Hohenzollerns, by E D James.



Religion:
Gospel for the Day, by M G Pierce
Daily Light
New Testament
Psalter (Psalms) and Church Hymnary

Other non-fiction:

Ruskin, Unto this last

Personal religion in Egypt before Christianity by W M Flinders Petrie (1909) 


Matching volumes by Ruskin, Carlyle, Thackeray, de Quincy, Leigh Hunt and William Cullen.
The last is another medical connection, most likely his 'Lectures on the Materia Medica'.

Fiction:
Arnold Bennett, Leonora (1903)

Scott, Count Robert of Paris; St. Ronan's Well
Uniform editions (small print) by: Charles Kingsley, Coleridge, Tennyson, Turgenev, Burns, Milton, Shakespeare (Romeo and Juliet)


In 1901  the family was living in Netherton Terrace (Rosebank), Rathven (Registration District), Banffshire. The father was away from home on the census date. Others in the household were mother Ann, aged 46, Fishcurer 's Wife, born in Rathven [Registration District - all others born there too unless otherwise stated]; Alexander, 21, Medical Student, born in Banff; Catherine (Kate), 24, Occupation ‘At Home’; Barbara, 15, Scholar; Joe aged 13 Scholar, Maggiebella, 11, Scholar; Ina (Williamina), 7, Scholar; Walter, 6 Scholar; and a Visitor, Maud Holmes, 15, Scholar, born in England (probably a friend of Barbara); plus Isa Alexander, 31, Servant, born in Cruden, Aberdeenshire.           
"Rosebank" a century or so later
The books with named owners more or less filled a good-sized wooden crate.
Those with 'Flett' names are listed here; inscriptions are in inverted commas.
Some information about the people mentioned is added where known.

Thomas a Kempis, Of the Imitation of Christ. London, Longman Green, 1891.
"A. Flett"
A./Alex/Alexander could be either the father or older brother.
 'A.' could in theory also be the mother or another sister, each named Annie.

The Century Bible: Revelation. Edinburgh and London, C. Anderson Scott.
"Alex Flett, West Park, Wick"
 Alex junior (B, Bac. Surg., Aberdeen 1904)  has a Wick address in the 1913 Medical Register.


Green Pastures: A Monthly Messenger for the Children of God. Vol.8, 1914. Published in Partick and Inverness. (A periodical that ran for several decades).

"With Compliments of the Season from Mr. R. Hutchinson to Mr. A. Flett, Fishcurer, Wick."

'Fishcurer' indicates the father. Wick was one of the places where the family business was carried on in the heyday of the herring industry.  Mr. Hutchinson may well have been a business associate

From the Census, in 1871 Alexander Flett aged 17 was a Cooper (making barrels) living at 20, Rathven with his father James, 53, widower, a Cooper & Fish Curer, and six younger siblings. All the family were said to have been born in Findochty,
Accomplishment of a young lady:
the family was affluent enough to afford piano lessons and travel.
The Holy Bible. OUP.
Handwritten comments, refs or quotes on endpapers front and back. Leather bound; small.
"To dearest Kate from Isobel [other word/s erased] Deut.: 33 12.27"
(Deuteronomy ch. 33: "Moses blesses the tribes").
 and:
E. McHardie, "Ha Galgal": The Wheel. 
[This one does seem to be a rare and peculiar specimen]
"Kate Flett, Dec. 1908"

Believed to be Catherine's photo
 on a scrap of a 1917 pass for the 
North of Scotland Military Area 
Catherine (Kate) was the eldest sister, called after her paternal grandmother.

John Ruskin, The Two Paths. Lectures on Art. London, George Allen, 1906.
"To Bab from Alex with love. Mar. 14. 07"
and
John Ruskin, The Crown of Wild Olive: Four Lectures on Industry and War. (Work. Traffic. War. The future of England). London, George Allen, 1906.
"To Barbara from her brother Alex with love March 14: 07"


Barbara Flett, another sister (called after their maternal grandmother).
At school Barbara won a prize for English, a handsome edition of Pride and Prejudice.
Not with this collection; it was passed down to a niece (rather the worse for wear).


Frank Ballard (Wycliffe Church, Hull). The Miracles of Unbelief. Edinburgh, T & T Clark, 1900
"Aberdeen 6/2/01 Alick Flett. Pencil: 11 Bayview Road. A. Flett & Co. " 
Silvery (pencil) writing on endpapers: 
- you fortuitous concourse of atoms shut up
- when we are married we'll have sausages for tea - hray
[?] Romans Huxley #
Bottled spruce.   Allsopps pale ale. McCurrach Motor.   Frank Ballard MA BSc FRMS Etc.
with (in same pencil writing, at the back):
"Joseph Flett. Rosebank.  Findochty. Banffshire.  Scotland." 

Joe later wrote a novel in which, among much else, he explores the sort of youthful angst and alienation that may be hinted at in his apparently irreverent attitude to the above work of piety.
Joseph Flett married Elizabeth Hamilton Maclean 18-12-1913, in Blythswood, Glasgow.
Joe’s brother Alexander was a witness at the wedding (along with the bride’s sister Mary Ann).



Bees in Amber: A Little Book of Thoughtful Verse. London, Methuen,1913.
"L. Maclean"
 Lizzie Maclean of Stornoway married Joe Flett in 1913 as above.  



Mathematical and Physical Tables.
School issue, inkstained, calculations at back.
"A. J. Flett, 70 Nicolson Road, Stornoway, Isle of Lewis."
A survival from 1930s schooldays in the Nicolson Institute, Stornoway.
Alexander John (Sandy) was the son of Joe and Lizzie; the books were found in his house .




A stone in Rathven cemetery illustrates some of the unhappy events in the family's history
and finally, a more recent gift: 
The Practice of the Presence of God. Paternoster series, pbk. (1926) 1959. 
"To Kate from me, with love. Christmas 1965"

In 1927 Kate married James Roberson Dickson of Biggar, who brought his own heritage of family
books, dating in some instances from the 18th century, to their home in Elgin, whence they passed eventually to Inverness along with the Flett set. 

(It was Kate who at Christmas 1937 gave The Grand Book for Girls to her 8-year-old niece Irma.)
Part 2 will look at the 'Robertson/Dickson' collection in detail.
POSTSCRIPT
One more name occurred on a book which has already been passed on, title not recorded:
She may have had a Flett connection although this has not been confirmed. The surname occurs on Jersey, where Ina (Williamina) Flett (later Rice) made her home for many years. A possible candidate:
Annie May LeRiche, born 1890, who appears in the censuses of 1891 and 1901 in the Channel Islands.