My paternal grandmother was a professional tailoress. She
objected to being referred to as a dressmaker as she made clothes for everyone.
Most of my childhood clothes were made by her and also, a beautiful, pink satin
eiderdown for my first ‘big girl’ bed. It was beautiful and I wish I still had
it. My mum and I had summer dresses in matching fabric. My dad and granddad always
had smart trousers. It is sad that Nanna Hetty passed away when I was only
eight years old, but from being about four or five, she’d taught me a few
skills. I could thread a needle, sew a neat running stitch and sew buttons on
to a piece of spare fabric. These small things sowed the seed for my future
sewing abilities. At secondary school, I excelled in needlework. Over the years
I’ve made clothes for myself and my daughter and made items of soft
furnishings. As my eyesight worsened, it became a difficult task and these days I
just sew buttons back on, mend things and sew name labels on school uniforms.
From Nanna Hetty’s background, I learnt about a different type of thread than
anything she had on her bobbins. It was family and the invisible thread that
fastens us together, which I came to appreciate more when I started to research
my family tree.
When our maternal aunt died, my sister and I, as next of
kin, were tasked with dealing with everything. Amongst her belongings was a
large envelope with my name on. It wasn’t private, it was open and over-filled,
containing old family papers, certificates and important letters, directed to
me because of my interest in family history. Eventually, I got round to going through the
contents, being very careful with delicate items. Most was self-explanatory but
there was the running thread of a surname that was unfamiliar to me. Clearly,
this name belonged in the family, somewhere. I needed to discover more and
solve the mystery. Looking into my ancestry gave me the answers.
This year marks twenty years since I began to search
online, piecing my family tree together. I have followed my paternal line to
Southern Cemetery in Manchester, where upon finding a clerical error in their
data input, I was able to help them to correct it and find the grave I wanted.
I knew that my Nanna Hetty was orphaned as a baby as she’d told me, but I don’t
know if she knew anything about her parents, in particular that her father was
employed as a tailor’s assistant. That thread was definitely in her bloodline.
The unfamiliar name in my maternal family turned out to be my great-grandmother’s
maiden name. I’m grateful to Cheshire Births, Marriages and Deaths website for
that discovery, long before I started on Ancestry.co.uk. My family tree, even
now, is a work in progress. Now and again I pick up a known thread, which is
often more than one person and see where it leads. These are the threads of
life in my family, which will weave on into future generations.
I found this poem,
The Way It Is
There’s
a thread you follow. It goes among
things that change. But it doesn’t change.
People wonder about what you are pursuing.
You have to explain about the thread.
But it is hard for others to see.
While you hold it you can’t get lost.
Tragedies happen; people get hurt
or die; and you suffer and get old.
Nothing you do can stop time’s unfolding.
You don’t ever let go of the thread.
William Stafford 1914 – 1993
Thanks for reading, Pam x
3 comments:
Family history is so interesting and can take you down a deep rabbit hole filled with wondrous stories and people that weave in and out of time and place making us who we are. How lucky you are to come from a family of such valuable skill.
Eiderdowns are great.
Love the phrase 'big girl's bed'.
Lovely article.
Enjoyed the poem.
A fascinating read, Pam. Thank you. I'm sure there's a poem waiting to be written about 'thread in the bloodline'.
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