Piecing together the Penroses: Part One

Sophie Towers, x3 great-granddaughter of the ‘original’ George Penrose, looks back at the origins of her family name and the legacies they left behind.

In 2023, we said goodbye to a place that holds a mountain of memories for our family. 

George Penrose and Sons was taken over in 2017 when the final Penrose retired; Peter Lewis being the 2x great grandson of the original George. The name and business Penroses are still in existence, thanks to Guy and Sarah Filer, but the shop itself has a new owner as well as a new trade.

The family can trace their lineage back to 1195 with the first recorded spelling of the name being Philip de Penros, a then resident of Cornwall during the reign of Richard the Lionheart; the likelihood being that they had travelled over with William the Conqueror in 1066.

 The coat of arms (see below) has the motto Rosa sine Spina translated as ‘A Rose without the Thorn’.

The family eventually moved to Yorkshire in 1680, settling near Fountains Abbey fish pools where trout and eels were reared.

In 1833, George Penrose Senior was born in Aldborough, North Yorkshire. He grew up in The Aldborough Arms, his father Thomas being the Innkeeper there. He began work as an Innkeeper himself at The Ship Inn, Aldborough and as a shoemaker but his passion was in playing cricket. As a professional player, he joined Alnwick Cricket Club, moving to Alnwick and living in Painters Hill (now the site of St. Michael’s Church Hall), in 1860. He and his wife Hannah had four children, Thomas, Annie, George Junior and Mary Jane.  

In an article from The Alnwick Mercury, dated Tuesday October 1st, 1861, George’s prowess on the Cricket field is noted – ‘the two crack bowlers, Messrs. Dixon and Penrose, are both benedicts, and their splendid bowling told heavily on their opponents.’ It seems George Senior was quite the sportsman & was certainly deserving of his visit to the ‘Nags Head’ that evening!

 
Alnwick Cricket Club c1895

In and around the 1880’s George Senior, affectionately named “Owld Pen”, suffered an unfortunate fate, finding himself gored and crippled when picking mushrooms. According to his obituary in The Morpeth Herald, George Senior ‘went over the hedge [in Washburn Field], to gather mushrooms, and a cow in the field charged at him and gored him severely, breaking his leg, and causing other injuries.’ It is also noted that ‘…only through his strength and determination…he escaped with his life’. He was undoubtedly a force to be reckoned with, even by bovines! He was an avid fisherman, spending time on the River Aln ‘plying his art’. After his accident, the then 6th Duke of Northumberland granted him ‘permission to fish in the “Pasture”’, a privilege only granted to the Percys themselves.

We find him again mentioned in The Alnwick Mercury in 1873, having caught a rather large fish ‘below the “Sumph” – ‘[it] was 22 inches in length, 11 ½ inches in girth, 5 inches deep at shoulder, and a weight 4 ½ lbs.’

His exploits at his Painter’s Hill home brought him to court in 1875 due to ‘wasting the town water’. It seems George felt that there was a ‘very serious deficiency’ and took matters into his own hands, ‘tying up the handle of his water-closet so as to allow the water to run full tap’. He was fined 15 shillings, including costs for this misdemeanour. 

George Penrose Senior passed away in 1902 aged 69. He was then residing with his daughter, Mary Jane Charlton in Aston Stevenage, Hertfordshire.

Photo courtesy of Ann Lewis

Hillcrest Maternity Unit, Alnwick

BRO 1944/1/148/4

This blog has been researched and written by Hilary Love, one of the volunteers on our maternity care project. Project volunteers are researching maternity care in Northumberland with particular focus on Castle Hills Maternity Home, Berwick, and Mona Taylor Maternity Home, Stannington. We are also researching in less detail some of the other Maternity Homes in the county. This blog provides a brief history of maternity provision at Hilcrest, Alnwick,Northumberland. 

Hillcrest was originally a private family home in Alnwick built for Charles Percy (1851-1929), a prominent Alnwick solicitor. Between 1918 and 1922 Charles Percy was M.P. for Tynemouth. The 1921 census lists the widowed Charles living at Hillcrest with three live-in servants. The census record notes that Hillcrest comprised 15 rooms. By 1939 Richard Simpson, a maltster, was living at the property.

In April 1952 Hillcrest was opened as a maternity home with eleven beds. The opening ceremony was performed by Helen, Duchess of Northumberland. The first child to be born there was a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Deeble of Alnwick. The Duchess presented a mug to mother and child.

In the late 1980s there was a proposal to close Hillcrest and transfer maternity services to Ashington. There was much local opposition to the closure – women marched through the town in support of retention. In response, the Health Authority decided that, if local people could raise £100,000, a new unit would be built in the grounds of Alnwick Infirmary. A new 8-bed unit, attached to Alnwick Infirmary, was given the go ahead when the appeal total was reached.

Such was the success of the campaign that construction of the new unit began just eighteen months after Northumberland Health Authority proposed to refer all Alnwick patients to Ashington Hospital. The total cost of the build was £472,000 with £372,000 coming from the sale of the old Hillcrest Hospital. An article and photograph in The Weekly Courier of 17 May 1989, features work starting on the new unit. The photograph showed the Duchess of Northumberland on a mechanical digger laying the first turf. A donation of 20 tons of sand from their depot in Powburn, was received from a north-east company, Ryton Sand and Gravel. Mr. Bill Hugonin of Alnwick Castle Estates received delivery of the sand on behalf of the Hillcrest Committee. Mr. Hugonin praised the local and regional press for publicizing the work of the committee and for getting behind the campaign.

The new unit was officially opened was on 10 October 1990, although it was open to patients a little while before that. Maternity services continue to be delivered from the Hillcrest Unit today.

Linda’s Story

March is Women’s History Month giving us an opportunity to shed light on some of the lesser-known stories of women from our archive. When researching family history, it is common to know what our grandfathers and great-grandfathers did during the Second World War but not many know what their female relatives did during the war. Now, more than ever, it is important to share the stories of those who lived through life changing experiences so that they can be remembered, and others can come forward to tell their own – ensuring they won’t be lost in time. Held in our archive are several collections relating to women during the Second World War. Here is Linda’s story told through her photos and books from our archive and library (she wrote her books later in life).

Linda was born in 1918 to a mining family and grew up in Ashington, living on Station Road then moving to Ashbourne Crescent. In the 1930s the family moved to Eleventh Row then to Dene View in the 1940s. Before the war started, Linda worked in Hirst Grocery, which was part of the Ashington Co-operative Society – she had lots of competition to get this job as she explains in one of her books. At the outbreak of war, in 1939, Linda voluntarily joined the Ashington Air Raid Precautions (ARP), completing an anti-gas precautions test followed by assisting in the recruiting of other women for the service. In her book, ‘From Store to War,’ she describes how she felt when asked to help with recruitment, “I had never felt so important in the whole of my life.”

Above: Linda with the Ashington ARP [NRO 07023/2/1/14]

By early 1940, Linda was volunteering as an ambulance driver around Ashington, where
she was given an old black ford to use as an ambulance, working evenings and weekends
(like many volunteers, they worked their day jobs in addition to these voluntary posts). She
remembers in her book, “There, at my post, often in total darkness and often cold, I sat
gazing at the searchlights and the occasional flashes and being grateful for the Ack-Ack
(anti-aircraft) pounding away defending with all their might this particular corner of our vast
empire.” During her time as an ambulance driver, she only ever took one casualty to
hospital when a land mine fell on Lynemouth one night, injuring a man in his garden. While
trying to take him to Newcastle’s eye hospital, she broke down once and lost a car door on
the way there! She did, however, get him safely to the hospital.

Linda in her ambulance driver’s uniform [NRO 07023/2/1/8]
Linda in her ATS uniform [NR0 07023/2/1/1]

In October 1942, Linda was called up for service – the conscription of women was
introduced in December 1941 – joining the Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS). In her book
she says she spent her last day of civilian freedom at a cinema in Blyth where they were
showing Gone with the Wind. She illustrates a vivid picture of the day she left, “Dearly
loved autumn, full of colour and changing pictures, trees beginning to show their dark, lacy
structure against the pale sky, gardens browner than they were, the dew still throwing up
diamond patches on the dark grass. Carrying my suitcase, I scuffed and crunched my way
among the leaves that had fallen from the park trees. At the bus station I met up with
Evelyn Todd. She too was going into the Auxiliary Territorial Service.”

Above: Linda with members of the ATS in Fenham Barracks [NRO 07023/2/1/2]

Soon after she was sent to Fenham Barracks where she got her uniform. Like many other
women found, the uniform didn’t fit very well, and she eventually took it to a seamstress to
be altered. Very early into her time with the ATS, she caught Scabies, staying in the sick bay
for a while until she was better. By the time she was ready to leave, she had been told she
had a high IQ and that she would do well in RDF (radar) which would mean working as
close to active service as possible (working on anti-aircraft stations). Across her career in
the ATS, she was promoted to Lance-Corporal, ‘making her a number one’ as she mentions
in her book then transferred to the Army Education Corps where she rose to the rank of
Warrant Officer. Whilst being in the ATS inspired her to become a teacher after the war, the
journey that took her there was risky and dangerous at times.

Above: Linda with members of the ATS and Army in Fenham Barracks [NRO 07023/2/1/3]

In 1944, Linda was working not far from London when the threat of V2 rockets challenged
the radar stations, as they were undetectable before they hit. It was when Linda was on
leave in London, however, that she experienced the destruction of these weapons. When
making her way back to a train station to return to camp, the air raid siren sounded. She
hurried back but was stopped by a warden when a bomb fell near them, knocking them
both to the ground. Shaken, she tried to continue but was told to find shelter in a nearby
hut. She describes, vividly, in her book, “There was a loud whistle, the earth shook, toppled
and crumbled. Bricks, it seemed, were raining down. I stood still in a little protected
pocket. I felt my body all over and my face. I was all right.” The warden nearby helped her
out, amazed that she was alive – many weren’t so lucky in the 1944 blitz on London using
V1 and V2 rockets with over 30,000 civilian casualties and hundreds of thousands left
homeless [1].

Linda described, in her book, an incident at her radar station caused by a power outage
where she had to carry a box to an FFI Mark II plane waiting outside. She describes, “I
hesitated just a moment. All hell was let loose. The noise was deafening. The searchlight
stilts criss-crossed the sky. The lights from the tracer shells. The planes overhead and the
bursts of flame. The fires. The flares. It wasn’t the thought of a bomb that frightened me.
What terrified me was the thought that I wore no hat and any second now a small piece of
shrapnel might come down and pierce my skull ending the life I knew. I ran as quickly and
carefully as I could, panting not from exertion but from the effect of the raid.”

Above: An image owned by Linda, held in our archive, of an Anti-Aircraft gun (Ack Ack)
[NRO 07023/2/3/3]

Linda’s experience in wartime changed the course of her career. She talks openly in her
book about questioning the expectation of getting married and settling down after the war,
debating the options of studying and returning to her old life. At the end of the war, she
decided to join a teacher’s training course in Newcastle, completing her training at the
University of Ireland. She married her husband, Ernest, in 1948 and enjoyed a rewarding
career for the rest of her life. In the 1960s, she and her husband ran a boarding school for
girls in Worsley, Manchester, which accommodated over 100 girls. Linda pioneered sex
education in schools and presented radio programmes about human relationships. Her
first book, ‘The Pit Village and the Store’ was published in 1985 and some parts of her
books were dramatised by Channel 4 (even featuring Linda in some of the shop scenes).

After the war, many women returned to their old jobs or domestic duties, as encouraged by
the government. In 1939, around five million women were employed but by 1943, over
seven million were employed due to the war. By 1951, women’s employment had almost
returned to the pre-war level and a bar on married women working continued in many jobs
[2].

Bibliography:
[1] Imperial War Museums, The Terrifying German ‘Revenge Weapons’ Of The Second
World War Blog – The Terrifying German Revenge Weapons Of WW2 | Imperial War
Museums (iwm.org.uk)

[2] BBC Teach, GCSE History resources – Did the war change life for women? WW2: Did the
war change life for women? – BBC Teach

Book referenced –
From Store to War By Linda Mccullough-Thew (1987)

Linda’s other books –
The Pit Village and the Store: Portrait of a Mining Past (1985)
A Tune for Bears to Dance to (1992