1861 (44)
Sarah Bayley, 45, gardener’s widow, b Cambridge
1871 (43 Barnabas Villas)
unoccupied
1881 (Barnabas Villas)
James McKinney, 32, clergyman C of E, b Ireland
1891 (51)
William Bemont, 70, bootmaker, b Cambridge
1901
Robert Pyle, 31, chimney sweep, b Cambridge
Beatrice [née Stallan], 28, b Sawston
Eva C, 3, b Sawston
Dorothy B, 2, b Cambridge
Olive A, 6 mos, b Cambridge
Arthur Odell, 21, boarder, chimney sweep, b Cambridge
In 1911 the Pyle family were living at 89 Mill Road.
In 1891 Robert Pyle was boarding at 25 Great Eastern Street.
Christopher Tongue notes in his family history: Robert’s upbringing would have been rough and harsh, but he was determined to improve himself, and the decision to marry Beatrice Stallan from the village of Sawston was intended as a steadying influence, because the Stallans were chapel-going and dedicated to self-improvement. Their first child was born in the Stallan home, ‘East View’, Sawston in April 1898, and at Sawston Congregational Chapel baptised Constance Eva, which reflected the taste for forenames derived from novels then in vogue. Known as Connie when very young, the child preferred to be known later as Eva to family and friends. For companionship she was joined in a few short years by three sisters, then two brothers. This volatile brood grew up in Mill Road, Cambridge, where Beatrice opened a millinery shop to eke out the family income. Eva went to the nearby St Barnabas school and passed the Minor Scholarship examination in 1910. When still a child on a visit to London it is recorded that she climbed Tower bridge with her father and threw his hat into the Thames from the upper walkway. If this is an example of her impulsiveness then we must say that this characteristic never left her, and her family would be either delighted or annoyed by her actions on impulse in the coming years. Her sisters in particular, who were content with domestic life, could not really understand their eldest sister, who seemed restless and unpredictable. Eva had much closer bonds with her brothers whom she loved indulgently and uncritically all their lives. [next part]
1913
Heber Harrison, draper and clothier
Christopher Morley, bricklayer
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