April 7, 2018

W C Blades, Wheelwright, Crowle

By angus

William Cordwin blades was originally born in 1852 at Spilsby.

The 1861 census shows the 9 year old William living with his family at Normanby-by-Spital where his father was Innkeeper of the Cross Keys.

By the 1871 census, the 19 year-old William was apprenticed to William Brown, a wheelwright in Ealand.

In 1873 he married Sarah Kelsey whose family were boot makers.

Not long after William set up his first business as a Coach Builder on Harvest Lane in Sheffield.

Sheffield Independent - Monday 15 March 1875

Sheffield Independent – Monday 15 March 1875

Sheffield Daily Telegraph - Tuesday 01 August 1876

Sheffield Daily Telegraph – Tuesday 01 August 1876

Although apprenticed as a Wheelwright and joiner he was also a coachbuilder building drays and carts as he following adverts show.

Sheffield Daily Telegraph - Thursday 01 March 1877

Sheffield Daily Telegraph – Thursday 01 March 1877

Sheffield Daily Telegraph - Thursday 01 March 1877

Sheffield Daily Telegraph – Thursday 01 March 1877

Sheffield Daily Telegraph - Thursday 22 March 1877

Sheffield Daily Telegraph – Thursday 22 March 1877

After being declared bankrupt in 1877 it appears he returned to Crowle where, by 1879, he had set up in business on the High Street, near Printing Office Lane.

Epworth Bells, Crowle and Isle of Axholme Messenger - Saturday 30 December 1882

Epworth Bells, Crowle and Isle of Axholme Messenger – 7 October 1882

Epworth Bells, Crowle and Isle of Axholme Messenger - 7 October 1882

Epworth Bells, Crowle and Isle of Axholme Messenger – Saturday 30 December 1882

Stamford Mercury - Friday 14 March 1884

Stamford Mercury – Friday 15 June 1888

Stamford Mercury - Friday 15 June 1888

Stamford Mercury – Friday 28 June 1889

Stamford Mercury - Friday 28 June 1889

Stamford Mercury – Friday 28 June 1889

Stamford Mercury - Friday 10 January 1890

Stamford Mercury – Friday 10 January 1890

Despite being declared bankrupt again in 1894, coinciding with the death of his first Wife, he appears to have remained in business.

He remarried in 1895, marrying Betsy Kettlewell, who was born in Derrythorpe, though had been working as a dressmaker and living on Cross Street.

In 1898 he sold up and moved to Shadwell in London, where he is described as a Foreman Wheelwright.

Stamford Mercury - Friday 13 May 1898

Stamford Mercury – Friday 13 May 1898

Epworth Bells, Crowle and Isle of Axholme Messenger - Saturday 20 August 1898

Epworth Bells, Crowle and Isle of Axholme Messenger – Saturday 20 August 1898

His later years were spent as a wheelwright in Sunninghill in Berkshire, where he died in 1925.