Mary Ann Haynes: Difference between revisions
RodStradling (talk | contribs) (New page: '''Mary Ann Haynes:''' was almost the first Gypsy singer that the collector and recordist Mike Yates was to meet. She was born in 1905, in a Faversham waggon parked behind ''The Coac...) |
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Mary’s husband died suddenly, leaving her with a large family, and, having settled in Brighton, she worked as a flower-seller, earning enough to support her family. Mary died in 1977. | Mary’s husband died suddenly, leaving her with a large family, and, having settled in Brighton, she worked as a flower-seller, earning enough to support her family. Mary died in 1977. | ||
''Part of the booklet notes, written by Mike Yates, to the Musical Traditions Records CD Here's Luck to a Man ... (MTCD320)'' |
Revision as of 16:41, 26 March 2007
Mary Ann Haynes: was almost the first Gypsy singer that the collector and recordist Mike Yates was to meet. She was born in 1905, in a Faversham waggon parked behind The Coach and Horses in Portsmouth, Hampshire. Her father, Richard Milest, was a horse-dealer whose family would accompany him across England during the summer as he made his way from fair to fair. “We used to go to the Vinegar & Pepper Fair at Bristol, then to Chichester, Lewes, Canterbury and Oxford, then up to Appleby and back down to Yalding.”
Mary’s husband died suddenly, leaving her with a large family, and, having settled in Brighton, she worked as a flower-seller, earning enough to support her family. Mary died in 1977.
Part of the booklet notes, written by Mike Yates, to the Musical Traditions Records CD Here's Luck to a Man ... (MTCD320)