Showing posts with label Gaskell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gaskell. Show all posts

Monday, March 07, 2011

Alfred Gaskell 1869

We know that Alfred Gaskell a Stone Mason build the stone work for the Blackpool tower in 1891. His father Peter Gaskell moved the family to Blackpool. We know they lived in Blackpool in 1871 and would have moved to the area before that date. Peter Gaskell died just before the work started on the Tower, however we know that Alfred and brother William worked on the tower. Alfred Gaskell was born in 1869 and would have completed work on the tower before marrying.
Blackpool Tower was, at the time of its building, the greatest British construction of the time, and is now a great icon of British Victorian engineering.
The Tower was conceived by John Bickerstaffe, a Blackpool hotelier, who, in 1889, during his incumbency as mayor of Blackpool, visited the Great Paris Exhibition, and was amazed by Gustav Eiffel’s tremendous tower. Immediately upon his return home, Bickerstaffe set up a committee of businessmen to raise the funds to build a similar tower in Blackpool. They commissioned a design from Messrs Maxwell and Tuke, architects, of Manchester, who assured the worthy dignitaries that it was feasible, and indeed laudable, for a 500 foot tower to be built alongside the Blackpool seashore.
On 19th February 1891, the Blackpool Tower Company Limited was registered. The company purchased the land and laid out foundations. The Tower is built on a foundation of cotton bales, to ensure flexibility in high winds, and to ensure that in the unlikely event, Heaven forbid, that the Tower should topple, then it would land safely in the chilly waters of the Irish Sea.  On 29th September 1891, the foundation stone was laid, at a ceremony attended by luminaries from the borough and from numerous other northern towns.
The building took three years to complete, using 5 million bricks and 2,500 tons of steel, at a cost of £290,000 (£40 million in today’s money). About 200 workmen were engaged at any one time, scaling the dizzy heights and amazingly only one fatality was recorded of a young man who lost his grip and plummeted 100 feet to the ground. While construction was underway, the lower part of the building exhibited an aquarium, modelled on the limestone caves of Derbyshire. The aquarium is extant and is still open to the public, showing 57 species of marine creatures.  
The Tower was opened to the public on Whit Sunday, 14th May 1894, and has been open in every summer season since that date. In 1897, the top of the Tower caught fire and the platform could be seen blazing from fifty miles away. Despite high winds, storms, hurricanes and minor earthquakes, the famous Tower has never flinched from its position. Although the interior of the Tower has been modernised, much of its original decoration remains in place, including the exceptional Pre-Raphaelite figures on the ballroom tiles. The Tower is continually being painted, workmen starting from the base and finishing at the top, and then immediately starting work again on the base, using 6 tons of paint each round. The Tower is now a ‘Grade 1’ listed building, but not as yet a World Heritage Site. The instigator of the Tower project, Sir John Bickerstaffe died in 1930, and is buried in Blackpool. [Layton Cemetery, Talbot Road, Blackpool, FY3 7BB]

Start of the road

So I guess it was one of those things that I always said I would do one day. To be honest I never talked much about the family history with my mum and dad. No idea why, just that we never talked much about family of the past. I always got little bits, but nothing that stuck in my mind.

I start the job last month with Ancestry "Family Tree Maker" Software. Before jumping into the pot and paying out membership fees to use the site, I felt it was worth doing as much work as possible with what I could find on the web. You will be surprised what you can find.

The first job. Talk to the parents and enter in the software as much information possible. kicks of the process. I spent about a couple of weeks doing this task on and off. I then found myself wanting to get to the census information. So I paid for two census of the 1911 site. the census will give you a lot of informaiton, which I will post as another blogg in the future.

So what else is it worth doing? Well I have joined up on a couple of forums. www.rootschat.com comes over a very friend and useful site. You get a load of tips here. The other site to go to is the http://freebmd.rootsweb.com/ Here you get good info from the records that have been transcibed.. Finally the other place to go, whihc will give you links to other areas is UK Births, Marriages and Deaths site http://www.ukbmd.org.uk/ I say links to others as some counties have then done their own sites, whihc give you great details and a place to order copies of the records.

Going to finish off at this point for now. I will try and bring you other bits on my family tree task as well as writing up on Gaskell's of the past that I come across.