Family Card - Person Sheet
NameEliza DUCKERING 
, 951
BirthSeptember 1847, Ingham, Lincolnshire, England1953,1860
Baptism26 September 1847, Ingham Parish Church, Lincolnshire, England1954 Age: <1
Census30 March 1851, Ingham, Lincolnshire, England1852 Age: 3
Census7 April 1861, Lincoln Lane, Ingham, Lincolnshire, England1955,1853 Age: 13
Census2 April 1871, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England1956,1957 Age: 23
Census3 April 1881, High Street, Beeston, Nottingham, England1958 Age: 33
Census5 April 1891, Church Street, Beeston, Nottinghamshire, England1959 Age: 43
Census31 March 1901, 28 Chapel Street, Beeston, Nottingham, England1960 Age: 53
Census2 April 1911, 2 Chapel Street, Beeston, Nottingham, England1961 Age: 63
DeathAugust 1930, Basford, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England1962 Age: 82
Spouses
Birth2 April 1844, Branston, Lincolnshire, England1964,1965
Census30 March 1851, Bishop Norton, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England1965 Age: 6
Census2 April 1871, Fillingham, Lincolnshire, England1966 Age: 27
Census3 April 1881, High Street, Beeston, Nottingham, England1958 Age: 37
Census5 April 1891, Church Street, Beeston, Nottinghamshire, England1959 Age: 47
Census31 March 1901, 28 Chapel Street, Beeston, Nottingham, England1960 Age: 56
Census2 April 1911, 2 Chapel Street, Beeston, Nottingham, England1961 Age: 67
Death30 March 1919, Basford, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England1967,1968 Age: 74
OccupationGroom 1871, Fruiterer & Seedsman 1881, Fruiterer 1891, 1901 & 19111966,1958,1959,1960,1961
Family ID349
Marriage1872, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England1969,1963 
Notes for Eliza DUCKERING
THe 1911 Census records that Eliza had 5 children, 3 living and 2 dead.
1970
Notes for Henry (Spouse 1)
With nobody in the family apparently interested in continuing the Beeston business, Udall had relinquished the tenancy of 1 Church Street and this had been taken up by Henry Pask, a fruiterer and seedsman.
Henry Pask was born in Branston, Lincolnshire in 1844 and had married Eliza Duckering, from Ingham, Lincolnshire. Each of their fathers worked all their lives as agricultural labourers and their families would have had correspondingly lowly lives, and both Henry and Eliza were working as servants shortly before their marriage in 1872. 1. Nevertheless, certainly by 1874, when their first child was born, they had somehow managed to move to Beeston and, certainly by 1881, they had taken the tenancy of 1 Church Street and had opened the shop from where they were to continue to trade for over 30 years.
2. Henry died in 1919 followed in 1930 by his widow
3.
1971