All these names are derived from a newspaper cutting saved by my grandmother, Valencia Ann Harper Olsen (née Penney) of the wedding of Herbert Gillies Penney and Lottie Affleck on Saturday 11 December 1909. Joyce and William Affleck have been most helpful, confirming what I had thought and supplying much new information. If you are a Penney (from South Shields) or an Affleck (from Gateshead) and are able to shed more light, I would be most grateful.
n025 George Scotson Affleck was the youngest son of Robert and Georgiana Affleck. He was born on 14th. April 1893 (1893 quarter 2, Gateshead, folio 10a page 957) and died in 1966 (1966 quarter 2, Whitby, folio 16 page 911). In 1901 he was living at Bloomfield. In January 1915 (1915 quarter 1, Middlesborough, folio 9d page 878) he married n069 Cecily Davenport. They did not have any children but adopted Barbara.
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n069 Cecily Affleck (née Davenport) was the wife of n025 George Scotson Affleck. They married in January 1915 (1915 quarter 1, Middlesborough, folio 9d page 878). She was born in 1883 (1883 quarter 3, Stone, folio 6b page 36). In 1901 she was a student living at Imerson Terrace, Middlesborough. She died in 1948 (1948 quarter 2, Whitby, folio 1b page 797). She did not have any children but adopted Barbara.
n070 Barbara Watson (née Affleck) is the adopted daughter of George and Cecily Affleck. She married n071 Harry Hogg in 1939 (1939 quarter 2, Whitby, folio 9d page 1038), but her husband was unluckily killed by a jettisoned German bomb, the only one to fall on Whitby, within months of the wedding. After the war, she married n072 Norman Watson. She had one son, Malcolm, and one daughter, Jean, with Norman. They are both married with young families.
n072 Norman Watson is the husband of n070 Barbara Watson (née Affleck). He had one son, Malcolm, n073, and one daughter, Jean, n074. He died in 1977.
n071 Harry Norman Hogg was born in Leeds in 1908 (1908 quarter 1, Leeds, folio 9b page 520). He married n070 Barbara Affleck in Whitby in 1939 (1939 quarter 2, Whitby, folio 9d page 1038). He was unluckily killed in 1940 (1940 quarter 3, Whitby, folio 9d page 821) by a jettisoned German bomb, the only one to fall on Whitby, within months of the wedding.