Person    | Female  Died 7/12/1890

Bella Pearson-Kidd

Categories: Philanthropy

Bella Pearson-Kidd

A family researcher refers to "Thomas Pearson and his wife Bella Goss Pearson née Brooman lived {at Nightingale Hall} until Thomas died in 1862 and then Bella remarried to a John Kidd and became Bella Pearson- Kidd."

With that information we found this text at Wood Green Parish: "Some of our stained glass was presented by Thomas Pearson: a solicitor, lived with his family in Nightingale Hall and its 29 acre estate from 1841. The house was on Bounds Green Road roughly between the end of Cornwall Avenue and the Adventist church {Braemar Avenue Baptist, we think} today, with the estate stretching behind. The Pearsons also owned substantial property elsewhere in Wood Green. Mrs Pearson was an aunt of the wife of the first incumbent of Wood Green, Revd John Thomas (curate and first vicar 1862-1907) and had a reserved seat in the choir stalls. When Mr Pearson died in 1862 the windows in the sanctuary windows were given by his wife in his memory (a window to the memory of Mr Thomas’s children is to the left of the main door of the church). When the senior elementary school (now St Michael’s Primary School) was built in 1872 the site (value £1,000) was donated by Mrs Pearson, who laid the foundation stone {building no longer extant, we think}. In 1881 Mrs Pearson married John Kidd, a printing ink manufacturer who was active in local affairs. When she died her properties were put up for sale in December 1891; these included leasehold properties in central London, Westminster and Chelsea, and freehold properties in Wood Green including a strip of land between the senior school and vicarage. It was this piece of land that St Michael Wood Green bought for the Hall site when it came back on the market in 1909, for £450. Nightingale Hall itself was demolished and the site became the North London Cycling and Athletic track - built in 1895 but closed in 1900 and replaced with terraced housing.  Note on the sums of money mentioned: £1,000 in the early 1870’s would be about £45,000 today, and £450 in 1909 would be about £26,000 today.”

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Bella Pearson-Kidd

Commemorated ati

Archdeaconry

We can't explain the "SVHM".

Read More

Other Subjects

Reginald Brabazon, 12th Earl Meath, KP

Reginald Brabazon, 12th Earl Meath, KP

Born near Belgrave Square. The Earl of Meath was actively engaged in social and philanthropic work. He was the first chairman of the Young Men's Friendly Society, first President of the British Col...

Person, Gardens / Agriculture, Philanthropy, Social Welfare

1 memorial
Agnes Cotton

Agnes Cotton

Social reformer and philanthropist. Youngest daughter of William Cotton, remained unmarried. Opened a Home for Friendless Girls in 1865, at Forest Glade, in Whipp's Cross Road.  Then 1876, she boug...

Person, Philanthropy, Social Welfare

1 memorial
Samuel Lewis

Samuel Lewis

Moneylender and philanthropist. A jew, born in a slum in Birmingham, who worked his way into being an established travelling jeweller by 1867, when he married and came with his wife, Ada, to London...

Person, Philanthropy

2 memorials
Hannah Primrose, Countess of Rosebery

Hannah Primrose, Countess of Rosebery

In 1874, on the death of her father, Mayer de Rothschild, she became the richest woman in Britain. Married 5th Earl of Rosebery, who, after her death, achieved his ambition of becoming Prime Minis...

Person, Philanthropy, Scotland

1 memorial
William Cotton

William Cotton

William Cotton FRS was an inventor, merchant, philanthropist, and governor of the Bank of England 1842-5. He helped build St John's Church Leytonstone in 1833, and 75 other churches in London. He ...

Person, Philanthropy, Politics & Administration, Religion

1 memorial

Previously viewed

A. S. Death

A. S. Death

J. Lyons & Co. Ltd. staff member who died in WW1.

Person, Armed Forces

War dead, WW1
1 memorial
Gerard Michael Yeo

Gerard Michael Yeo

Non-British, killed by the Bali bomb.

Person, Tragedy

1 memorial
F. Cooke

F. Cooke

Name on one of the main panels of the East Ham WW1 memorial.

Person

War dead, WW1
1 memorial
Sir Geoffrey Jellicoe

Sir Geoffrey Jellicoe

Landscape architect. Born Geoffrey Alan Jellicoe at 70 Wynnstay Gardens, Chelsea. Educated at the Architectural School in London, where he later became principal. Founding member of the Landscape I...

Person, Gardens / Agriculture

2 memorials
London and North Western Railway

London and North Western Railway

Formed by the amalgamation of the Grand Junction Railway, London and Birmingham Railway and the Manchester and Birmingham Railway. In 1922 merged with other companies to form the London, Midland an...

Group, Transport

1 memorial