Sarah Ann Horne who lies comfortably in Radnor Street Cemetery

When Joseph Horne returned from South Africa for a visit in 1931 the North Wilts Herald reported:

‘It has often been said that Swindonians can be found in almost every part of the globe.’

In 1894 Joseph Horne embarked for South Africa where he first worked as a carpenter in a goldmine and later lived in Johannesburg and the Transvaal. He was the eldest of five brothers who had at various times joined him in South Africa. At the time of his visit he was in business with his brother George in a general printing press they had established in 1914. Youngest brother William, a builder, was still living in Maritzburg in 1931. David had spent just three years in South Africa before returning to Swindon and a job in the GWR.

The adventurous Horne brothers were the sons of Herbert and Sarah Ann Horne who married at St. Martin’s Church in Birmingham on Boxing Day 1865. By 1881 they had moved to Swindon and were living at 14 Gooch Street.

How difficult must it have been to wave those sons off to South Africa? Did Herbert and Sarah Ann suspect they might never see them again? Perhaps they hoped their boys would eventually return home, and of course David did.

Herbert died in 1927 but Sarah Ann lived to see her eldest son Joseph on his return to Swindon in 1931. She died in 1934 aged 95 when the North Wilts Herald published another instalment in the Horne family history.

Thexton, Ronald; Back of Gooch Street, Swindon, Wiltshire; Swindon Art Gallery; http://www.artuk.org/artworks/back-of-gooch-street-swindon-wiltshire-64647

Aged 95 Years

Death of Mrs Horne, of Swindon

Oldest Resident?

Believed to be Swindon’s oldest inhabitant, and certainly the oldest follower in the Borough of the Baptist faith, Mrs Sarah Ann Horne died on Friday at 26 Cheney Manor Road, the residence of her son, Mr. David Horne.

Mrs Horne, was 95 years of age, having celebrated her 95th birthday on 5 September last.

Death has given the finishing blow to her hopes of living longer than her grandfather, who, having served in the Battle of Waterloo, lived to within five days of his 100th birthday.

Mrs Horne was active to the last and in full possession of all her faculties. In fact, she did her own mending without the aid of glasses.

Married in Birmingham

She was a native of Frome, and in December 1865, at Birmingham, she married Mr. Herbert Horne, who died at the age of 87, seven years ago. He was, in his time, the oldest railway guard in Swindon, being a link with the old days when, before the introduction of sandboxes, the guards had to be on the footplates and throw sand under the wheels of the engines.

They were married on a wage of 13s a week, and came to Swindon to live first in Gooch Street.

Mr Horne was a prominent official, and at one time the president of the Amalgamated Railway Servants’ Union, now the NUR.

On his retirement, they lived for 20 years at Lower Stratton, until nine years ago, when both came to live with their son in Cheney Manor Road.

Mrs Horne prided herself on a wonderful memory, and used to recall an incident which occurred when she was a girl in Bath.

For a wager, a man sailed down the Avon in a tub drawn by swans. As he passed under Bath Bridge, the crowd rushed to the opposite parapet to see him. The strain was too great and the parapet gave way, resulting in several spectators being drowned in the river.

Old Age Pensioner

A recipient of the old age pension since its introduction, she saved all of it up until she had sufficient to buy the land in Radnor Street Cemetery for her grave.

She always protested that she would not “lie comfortable” at Stratton Cemetery which she claimed was damp, but that in the sand of Radnor Street Cemetery she would rest peacefully.

She was buried there, with her husband, in the grave she purchased for them both.

There were five children of the marriage – all sons and four of them today are in Africa. Mrs Horne also had 14 grandchildren, and 19 great grandchildren.

Her final illness lasted only a few days.

North Wilts Herald, Friday, 19 January, 1934.

Sarah is buried with Herbert in grave plot E8676 where they were later joined by their son David who died in 1954 and his wife Emily who died in 1956.

I wouldn’t wish to question the redoubtable Mrs Horne, but I don’t think the soil is ‘sandy’ in Radnor Street Cemetery.