Woman spots family name in Victorian Ironbridge ledger
- Published
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The Pinches name is mentioned in an entry for this order for springs and staples
An amateur genealogist says she got "goose bumps" when she spotted her family name in a Victorian sales ledger gifted to her mum decades ago.
The 1,000-plus page book lists sales made by Beddoes ironmongers in Ironbridge, Shropshire, between 1895 and 1897.
It was given to Diane Perry's mum in the 1980s but left in a damp cupboard until last spring.
After patiently drying it out, her daughter made a discovery on page 331.
'Snapshot of history'
"I found an entry for my family name, which is Pinches, and I got goose bumps," said Mrs Perry, who lives in Ludlow.
"It was incredible to see their name and amazing to think we have this passion for Ironbridge - where my mum grew up as a child, where my uncle worked as a shop boy at Beddoes. And now we've got this beautiful book and a connection to the building and the history of the family."
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The ledger dates back to July 1895 and is more than 1,000 pages
Mrs Perry, who has been tracing her family tree for two years, discovered her great-great-grandfather and grandmother on her dad's side were named Pinches and lived and worked in Ironbridge in the 1890s.
She already had a strong connection to the town as her mum grew up there and was a freelance journalist who interviewed Beddoes' last owner before it closed in the 1980s. He was so pleased with the article he gave her the ledger as a thank you.
Though the cover has rotted from water damage, Mrs Perry has painstakingly dried out the pages which are all intact and filled with "beautiful Copperplate" writing.
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The cover has suffered water damage but all the pages are intact
The first entry is dated 25 July 1895 for a farrier who bought nails for "14,6" and the final entry 1,026 pages later is on 6 September 1897.
"It's fascinating, it's like a diary, so [on yesterday's date] in 1895 horse nails were sold to a blacksmith; today there's a dog muzzle, and a spindle and two brass rings.
"People were coming quite a distance and travelled miles to this ironmongers - Highley in Bridgnorth was still quite a long way [to travel] back then.
"Every time I turn a page I'm looking at a snapshot of history. I don't know if I'll [see the Pinches names again] but as long as I can read what's there, I will keep on looking and [tracing] my ancestry."
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