Annie Burrell, 19001977 (aged 76 years)

Name
Annie /Burrell/
Surname
Burrell
Given names
Annie
Birth 8 May 1900 37 32
Census

Quality of data: questionable evidence
Birth of a brotherCharles Frederick Burrell
1902 (aged 1 year)
Death of a maternal grandmotherMary Ann Walker
15 May 1912 (aged 12 years)
Source: D.Cert
Citation details: 1912 jun qtr Toxteth Park 8b/243
Note: Reported by her daughter who was at her bedside. Sarah Laynan
Birth of a daughterFrances Stephenson
6 August 1921 (aged 21 years)
Birth of a sonJames Stephenson
1923 (aged 22 years)
Death of a daughterFrances Stephenson
1976 (aged 75 years)

Death 1977 (aged 76 years)

Family with parents
father
mother
1868
Birth: 1868 24 28Lancs Liverpool
Marriage Marriage11 November 1889St James Church, Walton on the Hill, Lancashire
2 years
elder brother
3 years
elder brother
2 years
elder sister
2 years
elder brother
3 years
elder brother
2 years
elder brother
2 years
herself
19001977
Birth: 8 May 1900 37 32Liverpool, Lancs
Death: 1977
3 years
younger brother
Family with James Stephenson
partner
1893
Birth: 19 September 1893Wavertree, Liverpool, Lancs
herself
19001977
Birth: 8 May 1900 37 32Liverpool, Lancs
Death: 1977
daughter
2 years
son
CensusCensus 1911 (3rd April) 4 Wright Terrace, Wavertree, Liverpool
Quality of data: questionable evidence
Note

The following is from Carole Chapple:

It is my husband who is related to the Burrell family through his grandmother Annie, but I have been married to him for 35 years and spent many happy times at his grandmothers home in Orford Street, Wavertree, Liverpool where she lived with her brother Jack. They were a really grand couple. She never went out of the house after she was about 30, through tinitus. Perhaps today we might call it agoraphobia. And so she lived her life inside this home which was very victorian. There were the original bells for the servants and pictures and ornaments everywhere. The meal times were very precise and everything had to be done correctly. The table set with all the tea things. I used to dread shopping for them as they would send me all the way on the bus to Gatacre for a pound of beef "put through the mincer twice please" then all the way to the city centre to Marks and Spencers for their lemon sponge cake! I''d only intended popping to their little corner shop. Right at the end of Annie''s life she suddenly agreed to come out with us and quite enjoyed a little run in the car. So it was very nice that she managed to attend our wedding in 1971. Her brother Jack was a wonderful man. Never married with no children of his own he was like a grandfather to us all and a real gent. Hope to hear from you again. Regards Carole