William Walton: Difference between revisions
Andyturner (talk | contribs) (New page: '''William "Binx" Walton''', (1836-1919), singer and morris dancer from Adderbury, North Oxfordshire. Provided secular and religious songs, and information on the Adderbury morris ...) |
Andyturner (talk | contribs) (details from Pickering - Village Song & Culture) |
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'''William "Binx" Walton''', (1836-1919), singer and morris dancer from [[Adderbury]], North [[Oxfordshire]]. Provided secular and religious songs, and information on the Adderbury morris tradition, to the collector [[Janet Blunt]]. | '''William "Binx" Walton''', (1836-1919), singer and morris dancer from [[Adderbury]], North [[Oxfordshire]]. Provided secular and religious songs, and information on the [[Adderbury#Morris_Dancing_in_Adderbury|Adderbury morris tradition]], to the collector [[Janet Blunt]]. | ||
William was one of a family of at least six children. His father died in prison in 1844, having been convicted on two counts of theft (two bushels of wheat taken whilst threshing, and a sixteen pound cheese stolen at night from a shop in Adderbury High Street). Following his father's death, William entered the workhouse, until apprenticed to a bricklayer and builder. Married in his early twenties to a yong woman from Coventry, William also fathered over six children. He and his family lived in one of a group of five small cottages in Back Lane, an area which was considered the slum part of the village (the street name has since been changed, because of its less than savoury reputation). Both in childhood and adulthood he is thus likely to have been all too familiar with hardship and want. | |||
[[category:Singer]] | [[category:Singer]] |
Revision as of 20:23, 9 August 2008
William "Binx" Walton, (1836-1919), singer and morris dancer from Adderbury, North Oxfordshire. Provided secular and religious songs, and information on the Adderbury morris tradition, to the collector Janet Blunt.
William was one of a family of at least six children. His father died in prison in 1844, having been convicted on two counts of theft (two bushels of wheat taken whilst threshing, and a sixteen pound cheese stolen at night from a shop in Adderbury High Street). Following his father's death, William entered the workhouse, until apprenticed to a bricklayer and builder. Married in his early twenties to a yong woman from Coventry, William also fathered over six children. He and his family lived in one of a group of five small cottages in Back Lane, an area which was considered the slum part of the village (the street name has since been changed, because of its less than savoury reputation). Both in childhood and adulthood he is thus likely to have been all too familiar with hardship and want.