William Chilvers was born in 1809, St Paul’s Norwich. His parents were
weavers, and lived in St Martin-at-Oak at the same period as Mark Widdows.
In 1826 he married Ann Tooley and in 1841 they were living with their young
family in St Mary Coslany in Norwich, working as weavers, but by 1842 they had
moved to the east Suffolk town of Halesworth, where a couple of years later,
White’s Directory records him as a musical instrument maker and music teacher
in Chediston Street. In the 1851 census he is listed as a master tuner –
indicating that he worked with pianos, which were becoming very popular at the
time, creating a growing demand for tuners in the provincial centres and
country villages as well. He
appears again in a directory from 1855 and in the 1861 census, still in
Chediston Street, this time described as a ‘music master’ and he stayed there
until 1870 when family circumstances forced a move back to Norwich. His
younger brother James, who had also worked as a piano tuner in the early
1860s, had subsequently established a music shop in the St Andrews area of the
city, at 5 Bedford Street. James died in June 1870 and in January of that year
had made a will laying out arrangements for William to take over the business
and run it with two of James’s sons. In the 1871 census, William and his
family are found in Norwich – not once but twice – once at the home address
and once at the business address.
William
Chilvers died on 18th September 1878. The 1879 Kelly’s Directory carried an
advertisement which must have been placed before his death – for Chilvers and
Nephews music warehouse in Norwich. By 1888 his nephew was running the
business on his own and it had moved premises to 10 St Stephen’s Street.
Three dulcimers are known to have been made by William Chilvers: one was
played by several different generations of the same family –
James Philpot (who
had been a neighbour of William Chilvers),
Charlie Philpot,
Reg Reader and Tom
Knights. Another identical one is owned by John Howson, provenance unknown,
but bought in the early 21st century in Hingham and the third is currently
owned by Steve Pena and has the inscription ‘William Chilvers, April 8th 1859,
Halesworth Suffolk inside the instrument. It’s possible that it also says
‘maker’ after Chilvers’ name, but that is partly masked by some black paint
applied during a poor renovation job. It was when Steve removed the
unsatisfactory replacement soundboard in 2009 that the signature was
discovered, so at least the ‘restorer’ did us this favour! The instrument had
been found as part of a house clearance in the Sandringham area in north east
Norfolk.
The Philpot family had lived in Chediston Street from the mid 1880s and bought
their dulcimer from a Mr Howard and they believed he had made it. There was a
family called Howard, also on Chediston Street and they were carpenters and
picture framers. It could be that they made the instruments in partnership
with William Chilvers, or that Mr Howard put the finishing gilt decorations on
the dulcimers, having that specialist skill.
Further family research may be found on the website of Julian Chilvers, a
great grandson of William.
http://www.julianchilvers.co.uk
http://www.chilversfamilyhistory.co.uk
in particular
http://www.chilversfamilyhistory.co.uk/histories/chilversroots/cr002.php