The texture of everyday life gone by

Thomas Frank Witts (1900-1976)

Thomas Frank Witts (1900 – 1976), son of Thomas Witts (1870-1921) and Annie Ruth Mitchell (1871-1947). He was born in December 1900 in Erith. He lived in in Erith, Kent. He married Helen Florence Jones (1903-1942) in 1924 in Woolwich and later married Olive Dyson Lovell (1918-1995) in December 1945 in Wellingborough, Northamptonshire. Thomas Junior died in 1976 in Rushden.

His father, Thomas Witts, had a Gentlemen’s Outfitters shop in Erith and was apparently best of friends with his brother in law, Hedley Mitchell, who owned a department store in the town.

Raymond Mitchell Heasleden (1897-1997), was the son of an engine fitter, Walter Heasleden (1865-1954) and Mary Ellen Mitchell (1868-1965). Raymond, an only child, was born on 19 May 1897 in Dartford, Kent.

In 1901 he was living in Crayford, Kent. By 1956 he had moved to in Worthing, Sussex. He died in March 1997 in Worthing, West Sussex.

During the First World War Raymond was delighting his cousin with a series of cartoon postcards and letters all designed to be quite humorous if ironically joking about other members of the family.

Raymond was certainly a very talented person, he married Doris Crouch in 1927 and lived into very old age dying in 1997 aged 99.

The researched Heaselden and Witts family history is here (15):

Displaying 61 - 70
SurnameNameDatesLink
HeaseldenJohnabt 1831 - October 18865149
HeaseldenMaryabt 1825 - 5151
HeaseldenMaryabt 1825 - 5150
HeaseldenPercy StewartSep 1895 - 3 Aug 19545152
HeaseldenRaymond Mitchell19 May 1897 - Mar 19975153
HeaseldenRobertabt 1823 - 5155
HeaseldenRobertabt 1823 - 5154
HeaseldenSamuelabt 1821 - 5156
HeaseldenSarahabt 1835 - 5157
HeaseldenWalterabt 1865 - 3 Dec 19545158
Displaying 61 - 70

“In 1966 Deputy Mayor, Councillor Mrs M Barron, ceremoniously smashed the window of Hedley Mitchell’s store to mark the commencement of the demolition of Erith Town Centre to make way for redevelopment. As a consequence, all the existing Victorian buildings were lost”.