Show menu
Database index
Search burials
War memorials
Search census
Grave maps
Admin sign in
Close menu

B12.6

Grave drawing
Grave photoSeveral members of the Jeacock Family are commemorated together on this stone. The engraving is split into two panels. On the right are commemorated Job Jeacock and his wife Sarah, along with their daughter Mary Ann Satchwell. On the left are commemorated two more children of Job and Sarah: Thomas, Jane King, and a grand-daughter, Mary Jane Taylor. Job was born in 1790, the son of William and Mary Jeacock (see B11.2). He went on to become Stoneleigh parish clerk just as his father had been. His name occurs in a great many documents relating to village affairs. On 8 July 1817 he married Sarah Garlick and they had four children. Job was a butcher and farmer and died on 20 August 1870 aged 79, just a few months before his wife Sarah who died on 11 November. Their elder son Thomas died aged 14 on 7 June 1840. Their elder daughter Mary Ann stayed at home as a dressmaker until after her parents' death. On 17 October 1872 she married George Satchwell, a widower, who died three years later. Mary Ann continued to live in Stoneleigh, at 10 Vicarage Road, on her own means, until her death on 14 April 1892. She was buried on 20 April. Job and Sarah's other daughter, Jane, married twice. On 1 August 1859 she married Matthew Taylor, the innkeeper of The Old Red Horse at Wolverton. They had two children, Mary Jane and William Jeacock, but Mary Jane died on 4 November 1884 aged just 24 and is named on the family stone. Matthew Taylor died in 1863 and Jane became the keeper of The Clarendon Arms in Kenilworth during the 1870s. In 1881, now living in Leamington, she married William King, a farmer from Corley and also a widower. He died in November 1895 (see E 5. 8)She died on 2 June 1907.

Return to previous list


Home
103,718