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William Mansfield (1803 - 1844)

William Mansfield was born in 1803 and baptised on ? in Barsby. He was the fourth child (and second one named William) of William Mansfield and Ann Parker. William Snr was also a carpenter, and all of his sons followed him into the trade. It is unknown why William relocated to Kegworth, however we know that he was living there

On 23 Feb 1826 William married Ann Starkey - who was 17 at the time - in Kegworth. Ann is the daughter of William Starkey and Sarah Marriot. William Mansfield and Ann had gained a formal license from Thomas Stevenson on 21 Feb 1826. This was necessary because Ann was under 21 and meant that the reading of Banns was not necessary.  The marriage was witnessed by her father William Starkey and her sister Elizabeth Newham.

William and Anne had at two children :

but there is a William Mansfield in Leicester who is charged with Fraud in Oct 1827 - but the charge is not prosecuted.

It appears that some time between 1829 and 1833 it appears that the marriage broke down, we know this because on Dec 14 1833 William marries Eliza Clarissa Price at St Marys, Bryanstones Square, London. William was in his 30s and Eliza was very young (either 16 or 17) at the time of the marriage. Eliza was the daughter of ? and ?.

We were unable to find a divorce record, and this is highly unlikely during Victorian England as it required and act of parliament - so you had to be very wealthy. A indication as to what happened appears when you look at these events

  • In 1833 Ann remarries using her maiden name and no notation of being a widow or divorcee

  • 1841 census sees both his children with Ann Starkey using the surname Starkey in the census

  • In 1844 his daughter Sarah gets her daughter Sarah Ann Starkey baptised, and on the record there is a notation regarding why she was using the name Starkey rather than Mansfield  "the father Mansfield proving a married man". The fathers occupation is also "joiner"

Based on this, it would appear that William was already married when he married Ann - which would mean that the marriage would be automatically deemed null and void. For that to have occurred it would need to have become common knowledge, which should have resulted in William being charged with Bigamy. We have been unable to find any record of a bigamy charge. In fact bigamy - whilst against the law - was often not prosecuted during this period. More frequently the offender simply moved away and started life anew. Given what we see from the records above, this could be case, however it does not explain how Williams marital status was identified.

It also raises the issue that unless William likely commits bigamy a second time when he marries Eliza in 1833. Between 1833 and 1842 William and Eliza had four children:

William and Eliza had 4 children:

  • Mary Ann Mansfield Born 1835

  • William Mansfield Born 1838

  • Eliza Mansfield Born 1840 Died 1841

  • Edward Parker Mansfield Born 1841

The 1841 census finds the family living at ????

The family suffered a tragedy later in 1841 when their daughter Eliza dies at the age of ?.

Eliza dies some time in the first 3 months of 1844 at the age of 27. It is anticipated that this death was as a result of pregnancy. Anywhere between 5 and 8 months later William passes away at the age of 41. He is buried in a non conformist burial at


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Formal Records



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