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This blog will be a record of stuff I find interesting, discover or write. Interested in family & local history, cemeteries, reading & libraries, old stuff, research & writing, photography, wine and fine dining plus lots more! Immersed in local history, fascinated by technology and social media and would like more time to spend doing the things I love!

Wednesday, 9 April 2025

E is for ENGINEER

William Henry Nichols was the first born of William and Eliza Nichols, born in 1870 and my Great Grandfather, Ernest Nichols, brother.  When William was 21 he was listed as a clerk in the 1891 Census but by the time of the 1901 Census he was recorded as an Engineer.

In 1897 William married Pricilla Baltus and they had two sons. By 1899 they were living on Jersey but his 10 month old son, William Baltus, died in 1899 and wife Pricilla died in 1907.

In the 1911 and 1921 Census William was listed as an Engineer. He married a second time in 1909 to Mary Mabel Maud Single and another six children were born.  




Family stories state he worked on laying the underground cable across the channel. In 2010 I located information about William Thomas Henley's Telegraph works which provided details of William's employment with the Cable Manufacturer. Henley was also a pioneer of manufacturing telegraph and telephone cables. Henley died in 1882 before William worked at the company but the business continued for some years.

He was employed as a junior at the Telegraph Works Company Ltd in 1892. By 1895 he was transferred to the Estimating Department at North Woolwich and became the Department Head in 1900. He transferred to  the Contract estimating and appointed department Head. He was appointed with a silver rose bowl by the company in 1927, after being employed for 35 years. The high-profile company began making submarine cable in the 1850s. They also produced underground cables for the London United tramways. There is more about the company here  

W. T. Henley’s Telegraph Works Company Ltd, 1880-1932 scrapbook compiled by B. N. Purdie
Held at Porthcurno Telegraph Museum


William died 1 October 1934. His estate was worth £13,424.

This is my contribution to the Blogging from A to Z Challenge (#AtoZChallenge)

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