Descendants of William Ducksbury

Notes


155. John Harold Ducksbury

1911 Census : with parents at Highfield, Snibston, Leicestershire and working as a pony driver in the coal mines.

During world war I he served in the Leicestershire regiment as a private and was awarded a medal (12136/637765). In 1920 he visited his sister in america and stayed for 3 months, John was 5 ft 6 in tall of fair complexion with brown hair and grey eyes.

If the marriage is correct then its ref is Burnley, vol 8e p 574 and two children Dennis and Mary are theirs.


161. Ambrose Roland Alfonso Ducksbury

Marriage certificate vol 7a, p 385.

Possible death from death indexes


Alice Dorothy Blower

Possible death from death indexes.


164. Gordon Hedley Ducksbury

He was born at the Kings Arms Horel in Lancaster, was educated at the North Eastern County School at Barnards Castle.
1911 Census: Hartlepool.

Around 1914 he was a hotel manager of the George Hotel in Huddersfield. He enlisted with the army (3rd Reserve Northumbrian Field Ambulance, Royal Army Medical Corp) as a private in Hull on 26 Nov 1914. On 25th Jan 1915 he was promoted to Lance Corpral, 12th Feb 1915 to Corporal and 3rd April to Sergent. On 19th May 1915 he obtained a comission as a Lieutenent in the 4th (reserve) Battalion of the East Yorkshire Regiment and on 6th July 1916 promoted to Captain (physical training and Bayonet Fighting). He had a heart complaint which resulted in him being medically retiered around August 1919.

Around time of 1947 he appears to be renting a property in London, 6 Roland Gardens, Kensington, but signing his name Gordon Healey Ducksbury.,


272. Murial Ducksbury

Murial may have been married again in 1948, cert ref vol 5c, p 1170.


167. Harry Atkinson Ducksbury

Birth cert ref vol 10a 168., Death cert ref vol 8a, p 5.

Died at "Treetops", Penmon, Llangoed, Anglesey, Wales.
Brenda Ducksbury and Colin Henry Scott where the personal representatives at the time of death.

Possible second marriage around March 1950 to either someone called Davison or Hesketh in Huddersfiled, ref vol 2b p 1641.


275. Brenda Ducksbury

Death and birth dates from death indexes for the UK.

Brenda and Wendy may have been twin sisters and died as spinsters (?) in Bangor.

Brenda is given as the personal representative by solicitors at death of Harry Atkinson Ducksbury, they may not have been his daughters but closely related to him. Maybe there was an earlier marriage ?


276. Wendy Ducksbury

Death and birth dates from death indexes for the UK.

Brenda and Wendy may have been twin sisters and died as spinsters (?) in Bangor.

Brenda is given as the personal representative by solicitors at death of Harry Atkinson Ducksbury, they may not have been his daughters but closely related to him. Maybe there was an earlier marriage ?


Charles Fawcett

The contents below are copyright of the Daily Mirror (UK) and written by Kate Jackson, Feb 23, 2008.
( http://www.varianfry.org/fawcett_dailymirror_en.htm )
-------------------------------------

Adventurer, freedom fighter, liberator, film maker, jazz musician - no one could accuse Charles Fawcett of not living life to the full.

His story spans the globe, taking in major wars, breathtaking feats of daring, risky rescue missions and more than a hint of celebrity and spice.

You probably won't recognise his name - although Charles was a hero, he was modest with it. Yet most novelists would be hard-pressed to dream up a plot as extraordinary as the life of this incredible man, who has died aged 92. His funeral took place in London this week.

"What he wanted more than anything was to help humanity," says his widow, April Ducksbury, who lives in Chelsea, London.

"He would rescue anybody - it didn't matter who they were. People felt safe with Charles because they knew he really wanted to help them."

If you've seen the film Charlie Wilson's War, you'll remember Julia Roberts' character Joanne Herring talking about a friend's documentary footage of the Afghan war.

That friend was Charles Fawcett - whose film helped persuade America to provide the mujahedeen with arms to fight the invading Soviets - and it was narrated by his pal, Orson Welles.

"He thought he was a Jack of all trades and master of none," recalls his film-maker friend Pierre Sauvage. "It wasn't true at all - Charles had many talents. He believed everything was in our reach, nothing seemed to intimidate him."

Born on December 2, 1915, in Waleska, Georgia, Charles was orphaned at six. He, his brother and two sisters were raised by aunts in South Carolina. At Greenville High School, he learned to wrestle and play American football.

In his teens he ran away to Washington DC and, at 15, he claimed to have begun an affair with his best friend's mum, declaring: "If that's child molestation I would wish this curse on every young boy."

His wanderlust kicked in early and he set off around the world - working his passage on steamers to the Far East via the Panama Canal.

On returning to the US he picked up trumpet tips from Louis Armstrong and honed his wrestling skills before heading to Europe. He scratched a living by wrestling in backstreet theatres in Poland until the start of the Second World War.

Believed to have joined the Polish army, Charles was only in barracks for a week before he fled the Nazis.

After hitch-served hiking to Paris, he joined the Ambulance Corps.

An affable man, he befriended a relative of the commander-in-chief of occupied France and socialised with senior German officers - all the while passing back information to the French Resistance.

By impersonating a German ambulance crew, he helped free a group of British prisoners of war who were under French guard.

Next he joined the RAF, but had to quit as a Hurricane pilot after falling ill with tuberculosis. Charles spent most of 1943 recuperating in an Arizona TB clinic before rejoining the American Ambulance Corps in Italy, in 1944.

Towards the end of the war, he served with the French Foreign Legion.

He also married six Jewish women to provide them with an American visa so they could leave their concentration camp.

His bravery earned him high praise from Jewish groups for his role in helping defeat the Nazis. And in January 2006, at Holocaust Memorial Day in Cardiff, Charles was honoured by Tony Blair for helping rescue so many victims.

Speaking from his wheelchair on stage at the Millennium Centre, Charles said: "I thought we could make a difference. It's a responsibility people have." [N.B. The approximate quotation is in fact from footage of Fawcett shown on that evening.]

But although he appeared fearless in the face of danger, April says he was often terrified. "In Marseilles, in 1940, he worked alongside American humanitarian Varian Fry to rescue refugees," she says. "He didn't feel he had great protection and it was a very dangerous city.

"He said later he was scared all the time of being taken by the police, but he never showed it."

And he was the most scared during the Greek civil war - when he avoided the ban on foreign involvement by disguising himself as a journalist to fight the Communists.

Once the Second World War ended, Charles reinvented himself as an actor, appearing in around 100 B-movies. His final screen appearance will be in Pierre Sauvage's And Crown Thy Good, about Varian Fry's mission in Marseilles.

His movie star friends included everyone from Orson Welles to William Holden. He co-starred with Sophia Loren and was the lover of one of the most beautiful women in Hollywood, Hedy Lamarr.

"He was an extraordinary ladies' man," recalls Pierre. "He was handsome and a devil of a charmer - it's thought he met his Waterloo in April Ducksbury." [N.B. This last remark had been a direct quote from Andy Marino's remarks at the Fawcett memorial service.]

In 1956, Charles helped to rescue refugees from the Hungarian uprising. Then he spent three years in the Belgian Congo, during the civil war in the early 60s, where he flew out those who were unable to escape the fighting. But it was the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, in June 1979, that signalled his longest mission.

Without a second's thought, he told his fiancee he was off to help the Afghan resistance fighters - April had to wait another 12 years to marry the love of her life. Fortunately for Charles, one of the things April loved about him was his desire to help other people and she was happy to wait. They finally tied the knot on March 30, 1991.

April says: "He said he wouldn't marry until the Afghan war was over.

We had an Afghan wedding at a house in Los Angeles and were married by a Muslim mullah. It was the most appropriate thing we could do."

Charles's heroics earned him a slew of decorations including the French Croix de Guerre and the American Eisenhower medal. Sadly, all of them were stolen en route to Washington for President Reagan's inauguration. He finally "retired" at 75.

"After the Afghan war he felt his time was over," says April. "He was 75, he couldn't do anything else on the big cases. He felt the world was in a terrible mess. He didn't know what else to do."

Despite being a recognised hero, there was one area in which Charles felt he didn't shine - as a father.

He had little to do with Marina von Berg, his only daughter from a past relationship, until they were reunited when she was 21.

"Charles felt very sad that Marina wasn't in his life," says April. "But he didn't know what to do. He felt he'd been a hopeless father - he was embarrassed to intrude in her life."

Towards the end of his life, Charles successfully fought cancer. But it was an overactive thyroid and its treatment with radioactive iodine which finally felled this great man. "The treatment made him lose his immediate memory," says April. "He couldn't write or have discussions with me any more.

"It was a terrible shame and very sad to see. He loved life, he was always so interested in everything. In the end, he just gave up."

On Wednesday, April and Marina travelled to Paris - a city Charles adored - and scattered his ashes in the Seine.

"People say I'm lucky to have spent 47 years with him, but that's not much consolation now he's gone," says April. "He was a very kind, very good and very generous man. A real hero."

1915 Born in Georgia Dec 2
1921 Orphaned, taken in by aunts
1930 Age 15, has affair with pal's mum
1932 Travels to Far East via Panama
1935 Trumpet tips from Louis Armstrong
1936 Wrestles in theatres in East Europe
1939 Joins Polish army.. leaves after a week
1940 Joins war ambulance corps
1942 Trains to fly RAF Hurricanes
1943 Is treated for TB in Arizona
1945 Joins Foreign Legion, fights in Alsace
1945 Marries six Jewish women
1948 Fights in Greek Civil War
1949 Begins acting in B-movies
1956 Rescues Hungarian refugees
1957 Makes Boy On A Dolphin with Sophia Loren
1960 On rescue missions in Belgian Congo
1980 Goes to Afghanistan to fight mujahedeen war against the Soviets
1991 Marries April after 30-year engagement
2008 Dies on February 3


279. Georgina Ducksbury

Appears to have died in the quarter up to Mar 1944 but born in quarter up to June 1944 in Kensington. Mother is recorded as 'Hadfield'


168. Violet Eveline Ducksbury

Violet ran the Pack Horse hotel in Staines, Middlesex until her death.


Henry Racine Jaques

In 1915 Henry was a 2nd Lieut. in the South Staffordshire Regt. and later was in the Royal Flying Corp and Royal Air Force (info from his medal card).

Later on he ran the Pack horse hotel in Staines.


171. Reginald Lancelot Ducksbury

Ran the Bear Hotel in Maidenhead.

1937 : Divorced Jeannie (ref J 77/3775/4983) and Jeanie remarried in 1938 Anthony Brett "Bob" Sawyer in Windsor.
1944 : Notice in London Gazette disolving the partnership with Winnifred Heather Woods and Reginald continues running the Bear Hotel himself.
1950 : Remarried someone called Green or Warren, was her name Violet ? (from death indexes)
27 March 1951 : SS Bayano : Kingston Jamacia to Avonmouth. Reginald and Violet returned to UK.
1953 - 1956 Licensee of The Unicorn Hotel : 10 Lake Street, Leighton Buzzard.


Jeanie Birkett

Some confussion over spouses name, could also be Jean Sawyer ?.
Possible marriage certificate vol 8e, p 1095.


Violet Green or Warren

Possible death from death indexes.


172. Albert Stanley Ducksbury

Born at the Kings Arms Hotel, Market Street, Lancaster. In 1927 he was a licensed victualler at the Alexandra Hotel in Lancaster.

He also had a band the "Stan Ducksbury Syncopators" which owned the Elms Hotel in Bare, Morcambe and at some point in time also the Strathmore hotel in Morcambe.


173. Edna Constance Ducksbury

Birth Certificate vol 8e, p 767.


174. Orlando Harry Ducksbury

Lived at 8 Dallas Road, Lancaster and worked as a solicitors clerk.
1911 Census: Wasnt at home.

He enlisted as a private in the 5th Battalian Kings own Lancashire Regiment on 9th Oct 1914. On 14th Feb 1915 he went to fight in France and was wounded (severe gun shot wound to the left foot) returning home on the 8th May 1915. He spent a month in Wandsworth hospital in London and in the september was given a commision as a 2nd Lieutenant and returned to France. On 8 August 1916 he was wounded at Guillemont and taken prisoner (bullet through right shoulder and broken right arm), on his return to England after the war he was promoted to Lieutenant and resigned his commision with the army (Royal Army Vetinaray Corp) on 31 May 1924 and gave his place of residence as Felixstowe.

24 Jan 1927 he disolved the partnership in the solicitors business with Elkanah Hewitt at 33 Brazennose street Manchester due to his partner retiring. He continued the business trading as John Hewitt Son & Ducksbury.

Theres a possible marriage in 1927 in Fylde, vol 8e page 1492


Martha A Gath

possible details from death indexes


175. Charles Hedley Ducksbury

During 1914-1920 he served in the Machine Gun Corp as was awarded a service medal.
1921 : Promoted to Lt on 31 July, Royal Army Vetinary Corp..

There is a note for "Hedley Ducksbury,. M.R.C.V.S., D.V.S.NI., who died on. October. 23rd,. 1945" who was "veterinary inspector to the Borough of. Calne" could this be him ? following same career as his father ?.

Death cert ref vol 5c, p 646, Bath.


Christina Stewart Lamb

Lived at Pangbourne, North street, Calne, Wilts.

She died at 4 Chesterfield Place, Bristol.

Her estate valued at £887 and left to her husband Charles Hedley.


288. Christina Francis Joan Ducksbury

Christina appears to have been a Dr (M.B., CH.B., D.P.H.)

1955 : Edinburgh University.

2008 : Flat 11, Belvedere Gardens, Heaton Moor, Stockport and 8 Princess Avenue, Didsbury, Manchester

Not definately sure she is the daughter of Charles and Christina other than the link to Calne etc.

Her birth is given as the quarter ending Jun 1930, but her mother died 17 March 1930. Did she die in childbirth and Christina's birth wasnt registered until the April-Jun quarter.