English: Bermudians Rosalie Catherine Darrell (born on 6 July, 1833; baptised 12 January, 1834, at St. Paul's Church (
Church of England),
Paget Parish,
Bermuda; buried 13 August, 1848, at St. Paul's, Paget),
Helen Malvina Darrell (born 28 November, 1828; baptised 8 March, 1829, at Christ Church (Church of England), in
Devonshire Parish, Bermuda; married John Harvey Trimingham of Paget on 23 November, 1847 at St. Paul's, Paget) and
Ellesif Spencer Darrell (baptised 26th of June, 1831, St. Paul's, Paget; married Nathaniel Augustus Butterfield of
Pembroke Parish, Bermuda, at St. Paul's Church, Paget Parish, on the 9th of April, 1853) in 1846. The three were daughters of Thomas Albouy Darrell (resident in Paget at the time of his marriage; baptised 23 October, 1803, in Devonshire Parish; the son of George and Frances Darrell) and Eliza Susan Trott of
Smith's Parish, Bermuda, who had married on the 3 January, 1828, at St. Mark's Church (Church of England), in Smith's Parish. The Trott (or Trout) family had been established in Bermuda in the Seventeenth Century, and included Perient Trott (a shareholder of the
Somers Isles Company), Sir Nicholas Trott (Governor of the
Bahamas 1694-1697), and judge
Nicholas Trott (1663-1740), among others prominent in Bermuda's history. Thomas Albouy Darrell was provisionally appointed receiver General of Bermuda in 1859.
[1]19TH CENTURY CHURCH REGISTERS OF BERMUDA, Second Edition. Indexed by A.C. Hollis Hallett. A joint publication of JUNIPERHILL PRESS and BERMUDA MARITIME MUSEUM PRESS. 2005 Board of Trustees, Bermuda Maritime Museum Association, The Keep, The Old
Royal Naval Dockyard, Bermuda, Ireland Island, Sandys Parish, Bermuda.
ISBN 0-921992-23-8</ref>
The Darrell family was established in Bermuda in the Seventeenth Century, and included many people who were prominent in the history of Bermuda, including Joseph John Darrell (1610-1677), Secretary of Army in Bermuda. The Butterfield family is best known for the Bank of N.T. Butterfield, founded in 1858 by Nathaniel T. Butterfield.[2][3] Thomas Butterfield was Chief Justice of Bermuda in 1855. The Trimingham family is best known for the Trimingham Brother's department store, founded about 1842 (and forced out of business by HSBC in 2005 to enable that the site of the Trimingham Bros's store be redeveloped for the new headquarters of HSBC Bermuda (formerly the Bank of Bermuda).[4][5]
References
- ↑ EARLY BERMUDA RECORDS, 1619-1826; A Guide to the Parish and Clergy Registers with some Assessment Lists and Petitions. Compiled by A.C. Hollis Hallett. 1991. Juniperhill Press, 4, Juniper Hill Drive, Pembroke HM13, Bermuda
- ↑ Family firm marks two centuries in business, by Raymond Hainey. The Royal Gazette, City of Hamilton, Pembroke Parish, Bermuda. Published 3 July 2015
- ↑ The Art of Giving Graciously (a biography of Richard Darrell Butterfield), The Bermudian magazine. 16 September, 2013
- ↑
https://www.thebermudian.com/heritage/heritage-heritage/50-years-ago-triminghams-125th-anniversary-an-interview-with-kenneth-fenton-trimingham Trimingham’s 125th Anniversary, an Interview with Kenneth Fenton Trimingham. The Bermudian magazine (originally appeared in an April 1969 issue of The Bermudian under the title A Man and His Trust, by William S. Zuill)]
- ↑ Ingenuity trumps confidence for meaningful turnaround, by Khalid Wasi. Published 11 February, 2020. The Royal Gazette