![]() | The Heard Family Name Index |
| Home | Index |
Family of Charles Henry Barker and Sarah Jane Labbett
| Husband: | Charles Henry Barker (1864- ) | |
| Wife: | Sarah Jane Labbett (1869- ) | |
| Marriage | Q3 1889 | Paddington, London, England |
Husband: Charles Henry Barker
| Name: | Charles Henry Barker 1,2 | |
| Sex: | Male | |
| Father: | - | |
| Mother: | - | |
| Birth | 1864 | Bermondsey, London, England |
Wife: Sarah Jane Labbett
| Name: | Sarah Jane Labbett 2 | |
| Sex: | Female | |
| Father: | John Labbett (1839- ) | |
| Mother: | Maria Fey (1843?-bef1901) | |
| Birth | 1869 | Devonport, Devon, England |
| Census | 2 Apr 1871 (age 1) | Stoke Damerel - Devonport, Devon, England 3 |
Additional Information
| Census | 42 Pembroke Street, Devonport |
Note on Marriage
Sarah Jane Labbett and Hannah Maria Labbett were married on the same day in Paddington in 1889
Note on Husband: Charles Henry Barker
Like his brother-in-law Henry Thorn, Charles Barker seems to be a school caretaker in 1901, at what appears to be Midland Road Board School, at St Pancras.
Sarah's father John and brother Walter are listed as visitors at the time of the census. John is by now a widower.
In 1911 Charles is the Publican of thenRaglan Hotel, 104 Dover Road, Folkestone. Sarah is still with him. They have a servant Ethel Lewis, 21, of Adisham, Kent.
Sources
| 1 | "File (merged): C:\Program Files\FamilyTree\Families\labbett.ged". Record originated in... |
| 2 | "Nick Heard". www.heardfamilyhistory.org.uk. This GEDCOM is predominantly the work of Nick Heard, but it incorporates the collaborated work of many other family historians. You are welcome to use the information herein but please acknowledge the source. Every effort has been made to ensure the data is accurate, but any use you make of it is entirely at your own risk. (c) Nick Heard 2009 |
| 3 | "Census 1871 Stoke Damerel - Devonport, Devon Stoke Damerel Clowance ED 6 RG10/2132 Folio 22 Page 36 (John Labbett )". Stoke Damerel Clowance ED 6 RG10/2132 Folio 22 Page 36. Cit. Date: 2 April 1871. Assessment: Secondary evidence. |