The Bradley Family

During his years living and working in the small Yorkshire town of Yarm, James Edward Ellam (1857-1920) lodged with Henry Bradley and his family who ran its tailors and outfitters.

Whilst James was Honorary Secretary of the nearby Stockton Photographic Society, Henry was a Vice-President.

In July 1896, the local press reported that James and Henry would be leaving the society and the district.

Their joint destination was Dunmow in Essex where the Bradleys took over another outfitters’ business and James again lodged with the family.

It was a domestic arrangement that lasted until the photographer’s death in 1920.

With London only 30 miles away by train, James was able to pursue his photographic ambitions during the week before returning to Dunmow at weekends.

Today’s uncaptioned stereo, taken from a cache of 30 3D cards by him that are the subject of this blogpost-a-day series, almost took my breath away when I viewed it for the first time.

If features an unnamed family group, posing outdoors, in which I recognised the bearded figure of Henry Bradley (1852-1937).      

Henry Bradley, his wife Dorothy and children, possibly by J.E. Ellam.  © Author’s collection.

Researching the Bradley family’s years in Dunmow, I came across a postcard Henry produced to promote his new business that included a self-portrait at its heart.

Promotional postcard featuring Henry Bradley
from Dunmow in Old Picture Postcards by Stan Jarvis (1986).

Using census records, I learned more about the Bradley family.

The woman to his right in the stereo is likely to be his wife Dorothy (1853-1931).

They are pictured together with three children.

Their eldest Clare Isabel was born in 1884 followed by Ellinor Pauline (1886), Feodora Alice (1887) and Marguerita Annie (1889).

The 1911 England Census records that another child had died by that point.

Parish records for Yarm reveal that a child named Rita Bradley, aged “24 hours,” was buried on 18th July 1883, so perhaps their last-born Marguerita was named partly in tribute to her sister.

Given this biographical information, and if the girl standing between her parents is their eldest, Clare Isabel, the stereo would appear to date from around the time the family left Yarm and moved south to Essex.

Whilst the stereo has no credit or markings on its verso, it would hardly be stretching credibility to think that it was taken by their lodger, James Edward Ellam.

More significantly, it was among the cache of 30 stereos which, I have recently learned, came into my hands via a donation to a charity … in Essex.

Tomorrow: “Darby & Joan.”

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