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In his book ‘Snapshots of Welsh History without the boring bits’ and on his BBC Wales Blog, Phil Carradice writes about Cardiff entrepreneur, Solomon Andrews. He was a self made man who was, Phil writes, ‘Born in Trowbridge, Wiltshire in 1835, Solomon Andrews came to Cardiff equipped with just a wooden tray to sling around his neck and a stack of trinkets and sweets to sell in the street’. By 1856 he was able to lease a shop and began a bakery and confectionery business.



Longfield Trowbridge, early 20th century

Having been born in Trowbridge myself I was naturally interested in the early life of this fellow Trowbridgean. I found him on the 1841 census living in Mortimer Street, in a house built for workers in the local cloth factory in the 1820s. His mother, Charlotte, was a woollen weaver and he had 5 brothers and sisters aged between 1 and 13 years. A look in the Parish registers for the Church of St. James showed that four of the children – James ( 6yrs 7m), Caroline (4yrs 3m), Jacob (2 yrs 3m) and Solomon (3 months) were all baptised on 5 June 1835. This could well indicate that they were non-conformists which the majority of people were at that time (I later found they were Methodists), and had decided to have all their children baptised after the birth of Solomon. The parents were listed as John and Charlotte Andrews; John was a hemp and flax dresser. This was a slightly unusual occupation in Trowbridge at this time as much of the industry was the production of woollen cloth.

Had father John died recently or was he somewhere else? Solomon was in Cardiff in 1851 so had the whole family moved there by 1851? The 1851 census throws up more questions. The family, with father John, but without the 16 yr old Solomon are living in King Street, Carmarthen, and John has changed his trade and become a confectioner with his two eldest sons helping in the business. I could find no trace of Solomon on the 1851 census for England or Wales, but as he set up as a baker and confectioner 5 years later it is interesting that his father and brothers had taken that occupation. On the 1851 census John Andrews is said to have been born in Malmesbury (Malmesbury Abbey parish register states that a John Andrews, son of Thomas & Elizabeth, was baptised 24 May 1807, which would be the right age for our John), while his wife Charlotte was born in Stroud. Where was John in 1841?





One of our latest jobs has been to look at Seend House, a grade II* asymmetric villa based the on the Doric order in the centre of Seend, adjacent to the church. It was built between 1807 and 1815 for Thomas Bruges, a Melksham maltster and estate agent to Katherine Long of South Wraxall. 


He was born in 1751, the son of Thomas Bruges senior, a well-to-do farmer of Semington. The younger Thomas became rich as a Melksham maltster and also by acting as land agent for Miss Katherine Long of South Wraxall. He was a Justice of the Peace, and a Commissioner of both the Canal and Turnpike Trusts. Miss Long relied on Bruges’ friendship and advice. With her financial assistance, he bought Craysmarsh and Green Lane farms in Melksham Without, and built, just to the north of the church, the mansion later called Seend House. The Bruges’ family coat of arms is carved on the central pediment on the front elevation of the house, and the drive entrance on each side is flanked by a pillared lodge. Niklaus Pevsner in Wiltshire (the buildings of England series) calls it one of the two best houses in Seend, the other being the Manor House.

 The Bruges' coat of arms
The Bruges' coat of arms






I thought it may be of interest to take a look on your behalf at the kind of original documents visitors order out when they visit our search rooms, to give you an idea of the wide range of requests we receive for documents each day. I chose a day last week at random, and got peeking!

 
Pattern Book, Ref: 947/1802