When Mary Bannister was born on 24 January 1851, in Wolverhampton, Staffordshire, England, United Kingdom, her father, Richard Bannister, was 28 and her mother, Eliza Ward, was 21. She married Henry Hodgson on 6 February 1871, in Rotherham, Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom. They were the parents of at least 9 sons and 5 daughters. She lived in Holbeck, Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom in 1891 and Wombwell, South Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom in 1901. She died in April 1911, in Wombwell, Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom, at the age of 60, and was buried in Hemingfield, Yorkshire, England, United Kingdom.
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The Crimean War was fought between Russia and an alliance of Britain, France, Sardinia and Turkey on the Crimean Peninsula. Russia had put pressure on Turkey which threatened British interests in the Middle East.
The Lendal Bridge was opened in 1863, after a previous failed attempt at building it Thomas Page was brought in to design it. It is an iron bridge styled with the gothic style popular in England. When it was first opened, it was a toll bridge but in 1894, it accepted it’s last toll.
School attendance became compulsory from ages five to ten on August 2, 1880.
English (of Norman origin): from Old French banaste, banastre ‘covering for a cart or wagon; basket’, i.e. a large wicker container. In the 12th century a Norman family of this name had estates in Orne, Normandy, and in England. Ricardus Banastre appears in charters relating to the Earls of Chester c. 1120–29. With what sense the Norman surname was acquired is unknown. It can hardly have been occupational, contrary to Reaney's view that it denoted a basket maker. It is possible that many or even all of the later bearers of the surname were descended from this knightly family. However, several men with this surname in the 14th-century Poll Tax Returns are described as servants or agricultural laborers, while Ricardus Banastr', recorded in 1381 was a butcher. It is conceivable that these men took their name from Middle English banastre, a borrowing of the French word, and that it referred to a basket or hamper they used in their work. Alternatively, they may have belonged to branches of the knightly family that had fallen in the social scale. The term denoting a stair rail is unconnected with this name; it was not used before the 17th century.
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
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