The main surnames on this page are Weeks, Pobanz, Helyer, Seiguard, Quick - note that spellings for surnames can vary widely. I have found that in some families even siblings spell their last names differently. Research has lead me to keep an open mind :)
Sunday, March 27, 2011
| John Denison Weeks  Born: 15 Dec 1846 - Cheddar, England, Died: 13 Feb 1922 - Bay Port, Huron County, Michigan, USA John's parents were Reuben and Ann Weeks, both born in England. Reuben emigrated to the United States in 1852 with son Charles. Ann followed two years later in 1854 with the other Children. John enlisted in the Union Navy 31 Mar 1864 and served until 04-15-1865. John married Ida Helyer 04 Mar 1882. Witnessed by George Helyer and Ella Helyer | 
Ida Elizabeth Helyer Weeks
| Ida  Elizabeth Helyer   Born:  26 Apr 1865 - Fairhaven Twp, Huron County,  Michigan, USA   Died:  09 Apr 1926 - Fairhaven Twp, Huron County,  Michigan, USA Ida's parents were Thomas Helyer and Elizabeth W. Quick, both born in England | 
Information on John D Weeks military career
Who is Mary Charlotte Quick Avery?
  Mary Charlotte (Quick) Avery, sister to Elizabeth Wollacott (Quick)  Helyer and aunt to our Ida Elizabeth (Helyer) Weeks.  I know she married  Charles Avery in England and that they were separated at some point  with him in America and her in an English workhouse with four children,  the youngest one two years old.  
Mary Charlotte (Quick) Avery in an English workhouse in 1871
| These  images are from Ancestry.com showing Mary Avery with four of her young  children in an English workhouse.  Ten years earlier she and her husband  Charles were together.  Now she is in a workhouse and Charles is in  Saginaw, Michigan, USA (1850 U.S. Census).  Ten years later they are  reunited and living in Huron County, Michigan, USA very near several of  her siblings.  All of the children listed in the 1871 census with her in  the workhouse were listed in the 1880 U.S. census. I've posted a tract written by Charles Dickens that describes an 1850 English workhouse that may give a glimpse into the living conditions for Mary and her children during this desperate time. | 
What does it mean to live in a workhouse? Read on.
| Charles Dickens "A Walk in a Workhouse" http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/dickens/poorlaw.html What is a workhouse? Read this from Wisegeek. http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-a-workhouse.htm Excerpt from following link about Newton Abbot: http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/topics/Newton_Abbot The WorkhouseThe original Newton Abbot poorhouse was based in East Street, and the cellar of the Devon Arms was used as the oakum.Oakum Oakum   is a preparation of tarred fibre used in shipbuilding, for caulking or   packing the joints of timbers in wooden vessels and the deck planking  of  iron and steel ships, as well as cast iron plumbing applications...picking   room—where paupers were assigned the unpleasant job of untwisting old   rope to provide oakum, used to seal the seams of wooden boats. Newton   Bushel had its own poorhouse, not far from present day Dyrons. The 1834 Poor Law Act Poor Law Amendment Act 1834 The   Poor Law Amendment Act 1834 sometimes abbreviated to PLAA  was an Act   of the Parliament of the United Kingdom passed by the Whig government  of  Lord Melbourne that reformed the country's poverty relief system. It   was an Amendment Act that completely replaced earlier legislation  based  on the Poor...required changes and incorporation,  so  in 1839, a new workhouse was built in East Street and was used to  house  paupers from the surrounding areas. Over time, the workhouse  became more  of a hospital for the sick, infirm, and aged poor. By 1890  there were  nearly 400 inmates, and reports of cruel treatment. A new  infirmary was  built, and during the wars some of the buildings were  used as a military  hospital. By 1950, the workhouse buildings were  incorporated into the  present-day hospital. | 








 
