|

The
Hannahs in Huddersfield
The
first Hannah who appears to have lived in
Huddersfield was another John, who also died
unmarried. He was a son of Alexander Hannah and
Rachel Blount and was born in 1758. We know nothing
of why he went to Yorkshire but it would seem he was
joined by his nephew, yet another John (the same
John who was promised the Hannahfield property). The
latter's father, Alexander, was buried at Manchester
and some of his family at Blackburn, so perhaps the
two brothers both entered the textile trade - one in
wool and the other in cotton.
A trade directory for 1845, when he was 48, shows
John Hannah & Company, Woollen cloth manufacturers
and merchants, and the petition referred to him as
"head of one of the oldest established firms in
Huddersfield". There is an album which belonged to
his wife Margaret, showing their address as Bay
Hall, Huddersfield. I imagined this to be a mill
owners mansion and when I saw the name mentioned in
a book about Huddersfield, I wrote to the author to
make enquiries, as I intended to visit
Huddersfield. He replied that four or five families
now lived in the original house but it may have
given its name to the surrounding district. In fact
when I visited there I found it difficult to picture
as a complete house, as it appears to be a
conglomeration of odd buildings and a far cry from
what I had imagined.
There used to be large paintings of this mid-Victorian
couple in my grandmothers home in London -
forbidding looking pair, especially John - or so
they seemed to me as a child. These, together with a
much more interesting portrait of an earlier Hannah
- a man with red hair and holding a document bearing
a seal - had to be abandoned when I inherited them.
It was war time and we had other things on our
minds. They would never have fitted in a modern flat
anyway. My Hannah grandfather died long before I was
born, so I was never able to ask him who the red
haired man was.
I also own a silhouette which could be of the same
man. On the back is written Mr Hanay (one N and a Y)
but no trade label showing the artist. This started
my interest in silhouettes, and from seeing others
in an identical style, I am almost certain this was
by William Bullock of Liverpool.
To be more accurate, the artist was William Alport,
who rented a studio in Bullocks museum in Liverpool.
The subject could be one of three Hannah's - all
born around 1760 - if it was John Hannah of Hannahfield, could he have been in Liverpool enroute
to or from Jamaica? My guess is that it is of
Alexander Hannah, who lived either in Blackburn or
Manchester.
Among other relics, there is a fob seal with the
Hannay coat of arms and a set of coachman's buttons
bearing the crest. I believe these belonged to
Alexander Hannah, born 1823, and that it was his
wife who had them made. It was the thing in
Victorian days to be able to produce a family coat
of arms, but of course these Hannah's were not
armigerous.
In Margaret Hannah's album there are some examples
of the fine penmanship of the 1830's. I had owned it
for a long time before I noticed the signature J.
Craik on one page. This name seemed familiar and on
re-reading a book on Dumfries dated 1832, which
belonged to her son, Alexander, I found that a Mr
Craik taught penmanship at the academy. Perhaps this
means that the Huddersfield Hannah's visited
Dumfries. There are many place names in the album,
which Margaret Hannah must have taken on her
travels, such as Kendal, Matlock and Lytham, but not
Dumfries. Such are the small clues which tantalize
us.
Margaret Hannah must have been musical, or perhaps
it was merely politeness which made one contributor
to the album write a typical Victorian poem "To Mrs
Hannah" containing the verse "then raise thy voice
thou favour'd one and others please as thou'st
pleased me thy varied song when thou art gone will
still be sweet to memory".
I turn to the album again for sad news - the last
entry is by Robert Bell (perhaps the Reverend Robert
Bell) and dated 1868. It says "Succour and hope -
words affectionately offered to Mr & Mrs John Hannah
and their only son in their season of deep and long
continued trial" and then followed some verses. As
John died in 1869 it may have referred to his
illness. When I visited Huddersfield I was able to
see a notebook kept by Isaac Horden, cashier of the
Ramsden Estate in the 19th Century. A brief entry in
1877 said "Hannah's property purchased".
|