(it seems likely by a process of elimination that this is the same building as that described in the 1901 census as no.4 Marshall Road)
Charles Symons, 39, superintendant railway goods foreman, born Devon
Gertrude Hogg, servant, 18, born Bradford
Herbery Hogg, boarder, 16, milk boy, born Bradford
William Thomas Keys, 43, carpenter wood, born Bucks
Henrietta, 38, born Oxon
Maud Mary, 14, apprentice dressmaker, born Oxford
William Thomas, 12, born Rugby
George Edward, 8, born Rugby
Ernest Charles, 7, born Cherryhinton
Frank, 5, born Cherryhinton
Victor Arthur, 1, born Cherryhinton
William Thomas Keys, a joiner b. 1868, and his wife, Henrietta, b. 1873, had six children aged between 17 and 4 at the outbreak of war. However they both volunteered for the Red Cross. He was a private from 1915-1916 with duties at the hospital, on convoys and air raids. She worked at the First Eastern General Hospital from 1917-1918.
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