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Friday, 2 January 2026

Wizardry, triplets and a 90 year old father!

The view from Tam's bedroom window.  Snowy hills just visible in centre.




 Well, the predicted snow is sprinkled very lightly on nearby hills, but the hills beyond Hundred House in the distance are white.  I drove down to collect my prescription and have a word with the Pharmacist.  He said this is a very persistent virus, and to steam myself 3 times a day, 10 mins each time, and have short walks.  So, that I shall do.  I walked up to the junction and back but the very cold air effects my asthma so I had to put my gloved hand over nose and mouth to warm the air before it made me cough. I will wear a scarf over my face later.  Tea tonight is going to be Spag. Bol, so will throw that together shortly.   Update - if you have asthma, blood thinners or heart problems - you cannot steam!  It was working well too . . .  Glad I checked it out, but not the Pharmacists' fault as he didn't know me from Adam and it didn't occur to me to mention these problems, just what I was suffering from.  (Have steamed in the past and thought I was ok to do it now).  

I found a very useful Manx Family History link today and have been going through Newspapers.  Nothing that I am actively searching, but had to smile at Mr Dupe, gunmaker, St Aldate's, whose wife "about half his age" presented him with a daughter.  He has only drunk water all his life, and his wife is similarly teetotal.  His age . . . 90 years in 4 months time!!! (this was around 1841 I think).

Then there were two lots of triplets.  One set to a woman in Limerick, who had not had a child for 6 years now (obviously catching up after the rest!).  Another (unnamed) woman, a framework knitter from Leicestershire, gave her husband John Lee three fine daughters, which were named Faith, Hope and Charity . . .  Clearly the Manx papers collected news snippets country wide if of sufficient interest.

Then there was a case of Wizardry.  "It appears that some feud existed between Cringle and Clucas, when suddenly a cow belonging to the latter fell sick, which was attributed to the wizard agency of his foe.  However, a panacea was quickly devised by the enlightened rustics to neutralise the enchantment, and to save the animal from inevitable death.  The remedy was this: the dust was swept from the threshold of Cringle's door by the wife of Clucas, and rubbed upon the poor stricken cow.  The effect, as anticipated, was electrical; the cow was as well as ever before the rubbing ceased, and the whole vicinity are loud in their praises of the specific, and wish us to publish it.  We have done so, but not for the purposes of recommending it, but solely to apprize the Home Missionary Society of a station and hope they will despatch a teacher without delay to the benighted inhabitants of the above district (Oak Hill)."

Within in our family grouping, we have Mr Thomas C----e of the Glaick, aged 68 years, who married Miss Ann C----e, aged 27 years.  I would love to know the nitty-gritty of this relationship - did she marry for love or money or ???  That's quite an age gap.









16 comments:

  1. I wonder if he married for a housekeeper and she married for money, but we will never know. There is a story in my family that my Gt Uncle Bill and Gt Aunt Con were courting when my Mum was born in 1930. She was a bridesmaid for them in 1944, the family saying is it took World War 2 to get them to the altar! Glad you are feeling a bit better, could you put some Friar's Balsam in the hot water when you steam yourself. Hugs Xx

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    1. I think I should check the parish births just after this date . . .

      Just "steamed" myself over my cup of tea this morning. Nose appears slightly better . . . hoping I am not speaking too soon.

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  2. hope you shift that virus soon! So many things hanging around now that we can do without.

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    1. Me too, it's become an old friend and I do not need it!

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  3. There are a couple of marriages like that in my ex husband's tree...a second marriage to a housekeeper...it gave respectability in an area strong in (Wesleyan) chapel going. One had no children from the first marriage but quite a few from the second to the housekeeper...
    It also meant that the woman had a guaranteed house and home, as much as was possible

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    1. A marriage of convenience . . . You can understand why.

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  4. Now that is one big age gap. Between my one Aunt and Uncle there was 17 years and we thought that was a lot.

    God bless.

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    1. 11 years between Keith and I. Seemed like nothing when we were younger . . .

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    2. My wife is 7 years younger than me

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  5. You have to wonder about a 90 year old sorting a child with a wife half his age, makes you wonder if the milk man was around. I’d go marrying for money with the last one

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  6. I have to say Billy, that was exactly my first thought too!!! Yes, I think the 27 year old probably made a wise move.

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  7. What is interesting to me is that 27 was quite an advanced age for a woman to reach without being married. She would have likely been considered a spinster. It is interesting that he would have seen her as a love interest. I prefer to think he was a man who saw her worth and that she was a woman who knew her value.

    I hope you feel better soon. If your virus is anything like what is going around here, it IS a persistent and miserable experience.

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    1. You probably have a good point there. I reckon they both had quite a good deal, one way or another.

      I had a bit more energy this morning and - touch wood - sinuses not so persistent as they have been. The folk who have had this locally (there are a lot of them) all say it took the best part of a month to overcome . . .

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  8. I meant to say also. A 90 year old man with a wife half his age...you are talking about a woman in her 40s!

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  9. BIlly and I both reckon it was the milkman's baby!!

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