Ann Helsham (nee Harvey), of
Stoke Ferry, Norfolk
1731?-1793
Born: 1731(?) and died 29 January
1793 aged 62, buried 4 February.
Parents: Robert
Harvey (1700-1756) and Mary Harvey
(nee Wheasenham, 1701?-1777)
Sister of:
1. Dr
William Harvey (1732-1803), Surgeon in the Navy.
2. Mary (?-1784).
3. Elizabeth (?-1798).
4. Susan
Forby nee Harvey (1732-1824) who married Rev Robert Forby.
5. One other brother (name unknown but
possibly Joseph) who had a son William.
Ann
married: Dr Henry Linhooke Helsham
Ann and Henry had issue:
1. Dr
Henry Helsham (1767-1806) who married Catharine
Crowe (Katharine) 17 September 1795.
Ann Helsham (nee Harvey): An Overview
The information I have about Ann Helsham comes from the following sources:
1. The diary of her
grandaughter Elizabeth Jones
(nee Helsham) who makes reference to her but gives no information
about her (written in the mid 1800s).
2. Various notes written by her great grandson Col
Henry Helsham Helsham-Jones.
3. The book titled "Stoke Ferry" by Doris E Coates, 1980,
page 61. This mentions the doctors in the village including the
Harveys and the Helshams living near the church.
The book "Stoke Ferry" states that Robert Harvey was a doctor and practiced in the village and was followed by his son Dr William Harvey (1732-1803), his son-in-law Dr Henry Lindhook Helsham (1730-1805) and later his grandson Dr Henry Helsham (1767-1806). Robert Harvey's will however presents him as a Grocer and this is probably more likely.
The diary of Elizabeth
Jones (nee Helsham) reads as follows:
My Grandmother was Anne Harvey, and I should think that she was both
born and married at Stoke Ferry, her parents being Robert and Mary
Harvey. A relative, the Rev William Harvey, was incumbent of
Fincham Church the years 1745 and 1787. Another of the name, a
cousin, resided at Watton in Norfolk, whose only child married Sir
Robert Harvey, and their son is the Mr Harvey whose entertainments at
Crown Point cause such a sensation from year to year. My
Grandmother had, I believe, more than one brother but the only member
of the family we knew and loved was her sister Susan who is very
imperfectly represented by the portrait which hangs over my
fireplace. She married Mr Forby of Stoke Ferry, whose brother,
the Rev. Joseph Forby, was Rector of Fincham from 1787 to 1799 and he
it was who, while travelling on the Continent before the French
Revolution, left some small sum in the French Fund of which mention
was made some years since.
Page 61 of "Stoke Ferry" reads as follows:
The Doctors - Harvey and Steele
In medicine, as in the law, it was traditional that sons would follow
fathers and grandfathers in their professions. This explains
why just two families provided local doctors for the whole of the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It is interesting that one
house (The Lodge, which together with Lodge Cottage was one property)
was 'The Doctors House' from 1771 until 1954.
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Dr Robert Harvey |
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William |
Mary |
Elizabeth |
Anne |
Brother |
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Henry Helsham, M.D. |
William Harvey |
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All the members of this family are commemerated on stone slabs in the
floor of the aisle in All Saints Church, Stoke Ferry.
In 1771, when Peter Smith, grocer and draper, went bankrupt, Dr
William Harvey bought his estate at public auction for
£378. It included the grocer and drapery shop with house
adjoining, the old chemist's shop, and the lodge with its out-buildings
and servant's quarters (now 'Lodge Cottage'). Dr Harvey and
his family lived at 'The Lodge' and the two shops and houses were
let. In his medical practice he was assisted by first his
brother-in-law, Henry Linhook Helsham, then by his nephew, Henry
Helsham, the younger, both described as 'surgeons'.
Later owners of The Lodge found a print of William Harvey (1578-1657)
who discovered the circulation of the blood and the working of the
heart. Given that the name William recurs, and the custom of
sons following their father's profession, it is reasonable to assume
that the doctors at Stoke Ferry were descendents of a famous ancestor.
Dr Harvey died in 1803, and Helsham the younger continued as
doctor. The widow sold the Chemist shop to Roger Micklefield
and the grocer and drapery shop to Abraham West, keeping the Lodge
for her family's use, and still the doctor's surgery. In the
1820s the practice (and the Doctor's house) was brought by Dr Henry
Steele, whose family continued there until 1928.
If you have any information to add to what is listed please contact
me on jj@jjhc.info
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of Elizabeth Jones)