MASSEY, Benjamin (Grimwade p.593)
Posted: Fri Mar 16, 2012 7:50 am
He was born in Norwich around 1780.
A document of 1805 records Benjamin, a merchant, son of Benjamin Massey of Lynn, Norfolk applying for freedom of the City of London by redemption in the Company of Bakers.
A business trade card at the British Museum indicates he was trading at 116 Leadenhall Street as a goldsmith in 1811 well before he entered his maker’s mark at Goldsmiths Hall from that address in 1829.
The 1841 UK Census for Paradise Villas, Stoke Newington records him as a banker aged 60 years living with his wife Mary aged 60 years, two children aged 30 and 25 years and, among others, two servants.
As a widower from Stoke Newington he married Catherine Baker, also from Norfolk, at St Martin in the Fields in 1845.
On the christening record of a daughter at St Mary, Stoke Newington in 1845 he is shown as a merchant from Stoke Newington.
The christening record of another daughter at the same church in 1848 shows him as a goldsmith from Stoke Newington.
On the christening record of a son at St John, Hackney in 1850 he is shown as a silversmith from Pembury Road, Hackney where he is similarly recorded on the 1851 UK Census aged 70 years living with Catherine, the three young children mentioned above and three servants.
His burial in 1854 aged 74 years is recorded at St James, St Pancras; his last address was Upper Hornsey Rise.
The family association with 116 Leadenhall Street continued. His widow Catherine’s Will granted Probate at the Principal Registry in 1878 refers to her having been late of that address.
A document of 1805 records Benjamin, a merchant, son of Benjamin Massey of Lynn, Norfolk applying for freedom of the City of London by redemption in the Company of Bakers.
A business trade card at the British Museum indicates he was trading at 116 Leadenhall Street as a goldsmith in 1811 well before he entered his maker’s mark at Goldsmiths Hall from that address in 1829.
The 1841 UK Census for Paradise Villas, Stoke Newington records him as a banker aged 60 years living with his wife Mary aged 60 years, two children aged 30 and 25 years and, among others, two servants.
As a widower from Stoke Newington he married Catherine Baker, also from Norfolk, at St Martin in the Fields in 1845.
On the christening record of a daughter at St Mary, Stoke Newington in 1845 he is shown as a merchant from Stoke Newington.
The christening record of another daughter at the same church in 1848 shows him as a goldsmith from Stoke Newington.
On the christening record of a son at St John, Hackney in 1850 he is shown as a silversmith from Pembury Road, Hackney where he is similarly recorded on the 1851 UK Census aged 70 years living with Catherine, the three young children mentioned above and three servants.
His burial in 1854 aged 74 years is recorded at St James, St Pancras; his last address was Upper Hornsey Rise.
The family association with 116 Leadenhall Street continued. His widow Catherine’s Will granted Probate at the Principal Registry in 1878 refers to her having been late of that address.