Page 32 • The HERALD • 12th September 2024 v READ THE HERALD ONLINE: www.herald-publishing.co.uk v First Call Rubbish Removal Established 1999 Waste Management Specialists If you’ve got waste we can clear it! • Flats • Houses • Gardens • Sheds • Lofts • Sites • Offices • Warehouses • Shops Specialist in Probate Clearance Certified and compliant to all regulations • Fully Registered and Insured (£5m) We also undertake small demolition works • Sheds/Garage/Outbuildings • Caravans/Boats FREE SAME DAY QUOTATION • PROMPT SERVICE Waste License No: CBDU 258239 Polite and Courteous Staff • Card Payments Accepted Office: 023 8122 4048 Mobile: 07502 093081 Info@firstcallrubbish.co.uk www.firstcallrubbish.co.uk FREE ESTIMATES • 10 YEAR GUARANTEE HYTHE: office.atlaswindows@gmail.com FAX/PHONE 023 8084 0441 Unit 2, Hardley Ind Est, Southampton ESTABLISHED FOR 30 YEARS THE LOCAL WINDOW COMPANY WITH THE BIG REPUTATION SUPPLY & INSTALL • Windows • Porches • Conservatories in PVCu • Doors • Choice of Colours & Woodgrain A.M.H. Handyman Services Internal & External Painting All aspects of DIY Work • Flat Pack Assembly Power Washing: Driveways, Patios, Paths & Decking Gutter, Fascia Boards & Window Cleaning (Bungalows only) Call or email Andy for a free estimate Tel: 07961 443623 handyandyharding@gmail.com Local and Reliable The next Herald is out on 3rd October STANSWOOD, PART 2 by Robin Somes, Fawley and Blackfield Memories Previously we looked at Stanswood’s Domesday records, when there were 37 households and probably well over a hundred inhabitants. Although it’s now more sparsely-populated, it has clearly le an in uence, much further a eld than one might imagine. e surname variants Stanswood, Stainwood and Stanwood probably derive from the area, and the Concise Oxford Dictionary of Family Names in Britain records: “The place-name probably means ‘wood belonging to Stone’ referring to the settlement of Stone (which also lies in Fawley parish) with Old English ‘wudu’ – wood”. Perhaps inevitably, there is a branch of the clan in the USA, one of whom, Ethel Stanwood Bolton of Boston, Massachusetts, compiled a family history in 1899. ey descend from a Philip Stainwood of Gloucester, Mass., an English settler rst recorded in Gloucester in 1652. Records suggest he was the only settler of that name who le descendants. Peculiarly, it is said that a great number of his descendants, far more than the average, had blue eyes. Philip was an educated man, with su cient means to buy a house, holding an important position in the town – fence-viewer; an o cial who administers fence laws by inspecting new fences, and settles disputes arising from trespass by livestock that had escaped enclosure. Incidentally, one of Philip’s daughters married a Timothy Somes – one of many Someses who emigrated to the New England states in the 17th century, who may be distantly related to me. e Stanwood name is commemorated in street names and towns across North America, in Massachusetts, Ohio, Washington, Michigan, Iowa, Kansas, and Ontario, Canada. More recently-available records provide slightly con icting evidence of Philip’s origins – although it’s known he came from England, his parents were from Devon and Surrey, not Fawley. However, while some of Ethel Stanwood Bolton’s research may include a dose of wishful thinking, there doesn’t seem to be any more plausible explanation for the origin of the surname itself. A more recent descendant of Philip, David Stanwood, visited the UK in 2013, and wrote about his exploration of Stanswood: “A short distance inland we found Stanswood Road Stanswood valley at sunset on a misty winter evening: Robin Somes Continued on page 33
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