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Brier of Huddersfield Family Chart no. 10


spacer Peaker BRIER spacer Lucy SHAW
bapt. 1 Oct 1786 at Kirk Bramwith, Yorkshire b. c 1788
m. 13 Aug 1809 at Kirkheaton
d. 5 Apr 1871 at Kirkheaton aged 84
bur. Kirkheaton Churchyard
d. 27 Jun 1846 at Kirkheaton aged 58
bur. 30 Jun 1846 Kirkheaton Churchyard
Tailor

Their Children


Ann BREAR William BRIER Thomas BRIER Peaker BREARS Sarah BRIER Abraham BRIERS Ephraim BRIER Elizabeth BREARS Lucy Hannah BREARS
bapt. 27 May 1810 at Kirkheaton born 7 May 1812
bapt. 28 Jun 1812 at Kirkheaton
bapt. 12 Jun 1814 at Kirkheaton bapt. 3 Jun 1816 at Kirkheaton born c 1821 bapt. 17 Aug 1823 at Kirkheaton bapt. 1 May 1825 at Kirkheaton born 4 Dec 1827
bapt. 27 Jan 1828 at Kirkheaton
born 20 Aug 1832
bapt. 16 Sep 1832 at Kirkheaton
m. George BEEVERS 3 Aug 1851 at Kirkheaton m. Samuel SYKES 30 Jun 1860 at Kirkheaton
d. 26 Dec 1839 age 27 d. 28 May 1819 age 3 yrs
bur. Kirkheaton churchyard
d. 2 Jan 1824 age 6 mths
bur. Kirkheaton churchyard


Additional Information

I have included Peaker and his family in this section of the study, despite the fact that he seems to have used the surname BREARS more than BRIER, because I am intrigued by the name Peaker. There appears to be no other instance of such a name amongst other BRIER families. He seems to have been a prominent citizen in Kirkheaton, a tailor, possibly the only tailor in the village, and his address on successive censuses show that he lived in the same house for decades. The name of the house is rendered in several spellings, such as Boyth Hall (on some of the baptism records), Boys Hall (on the 1841 census), Boyfe Hall (on the 1861 Census), and Boyf Hall (on the 1871 census). This house is marked on modern day maps as Boyfe Hall, and it stands a little to the north of Kirkheaton, in Stancliffe Common.

In Kirkheaton Churchyard, there is a memorial stone to (some of) the family; it reads:

In the 1851 Census, Boyf [sic] Hall contained two households. The first was of the widowed Peaker (now calling himself BREARS), and the second his widowed son Thomas, with sons James, Thomas, and Henry. Peaker stated to the enumerator in 1851 that he was born in Bramworth, and I am curious about this as I have been unable to find a parish in Yorkshire with this name. There is, however, a Kirk Bramwith, just north of Doncaster, and 27 miles east of Kirkheaton Huddersfield. In the 1861 census, I had been unable to make out the place of birth, but it looked like Brafwaitkirkhamoth! Could Peaker have originated in Kirk Bramwith? The IGI came up with the following: Pecker [sic] BRIERS bapt 1 Oct 1786 at Kirk Bramwith, parents William and Ann; and the marriage record for William, in 1772, gives his bride as Ann PACKER! There were a number of entries for the surname PEAKER in the Kirk Bramwith registers, and I am therefore pretty certain that I have found the explanation for Peaker's unusual name.