The Pridmores of Lincolnshire

A leathery face or two

Saddled with a horsey set of skills

Another area steeped in agricultural working was Lincolnshire but with a different set of problems to overcome in the fens and marshland areas of the East coast. Whilst farming was the largest industry until the industrial revolution, it was dependant upon a number of related professions.

Saddlery, flax dressing, rope making and related skills were readily absorbed and inherited in the Pridmore families centred around Bourne,  providing services to the local farmers amongst others.

James Pridmore (1821 – 1866) was a saddler who married his own first cousin, Susannah Pridmore and lived in Bourne. James Pridmore and Elizabeth Ward were living in Star Lane, Bourne in the 1841 census whilst in 1861 Thomas Pridmore and Mary Franks had premises according to the Post Office Directory as a Collar, Harness and Rope Maker in North Street near to the Angel Inn.

The Angel Inn, Bourne

1. John Pridmore and Ann Durham
          2. John (Flaxdresser)
          2. James
               3. James (Saddler)
                    4. Thomas (Master Saddler and Harness Maker)
               3. Henry (Rope maker)
               3. Thomas (Saddler)
                    4. Robert James (Saddler and Harness Maker)
                         5 William (Saddle Collar and Harness Maker)
                         5. Thomas (Saddler)

Whilst Bourne was the centre of the Pridmores in the 1800’s, the tradition of large families and poor circumstances inevitably meant a spreading of wings and during this time a movement south was seen with Pridmores heading towards Middlesex and even as far away as Australia by both government assisted passage and also at Her Majesty’s Pleasure !!

The adventurers who made the move from Lincolnshire to South Yorkshire included some interesting characters. Thomas William Booth Pridmore and his brother Brigham Young Pridmore appear to have been christened after founders of different religious organisations of the time. William Booth was a Nottinghamshire Methodist preacher who, along with his wife, founded the Salvation Army whilst Brigham Young was an American who became the second President of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints. What influenced their parents to christen them with these names remains a mystery.

A further brother was named Joseph Hiram Smith Pridmore, presumably after Joseph Smith, the founding president of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints.

Thomas William Booth Pridmore continued his work as a sadler after he moved to Sheffield, where we believe he became the chief sadler at Reuben Thompson’s Funeral and Cab Service, a large business that may have had up to 400 horses at its peak. Henry Pridmore, born in Bourne in 1830, sailed for Australia in 1853, arriving at Port Adelaide, South Australia 19th May 1853. They established the Pridmore line in Australia which diversified over time. Son John married Annie Griffiths, daughter of Samuel and Bridget who had been sent to Tasmania by the much harsher passage of transportation under the English judicial system.

Staff at Reuben Thompson (T.W.B.P. 2nd right?)

The Australian Pridmores settled in Tasmania and found work on local sheep farms giving rise to extremes of fortune over the decades with John Pridmore, son of Henry,  convicted of murdering his wife while Professor Saxby Pridmore made his reputation as an internationally renowned leader in the field of psychiatry.