Elijah Ladbrooke

Elijah Ladbrooke (1879-1948)

Elijah Ladbrooke at his daughter Ursula’s wedding, 1927

Billy Bennington mentioned a player called Elijah Ladbrooke, and also said another of the family, Albert Dunnell, played.

Elijah Ladbrooke was born on 6th February 1879 to Harriet and Robert Ladbrooke, but Robert died a year later and Harriet remarried John Henry Dunnell. Elijah kept his father’s surname but had several stepbrothers and sisters by the name of Dunnell. He trained as a blacksmith before joining his stepfather as a horse-hoe maker in the village of Colton, where his stepfather John Henry Dunnell was also the licensee of the Horse and Groom from 1888 until his death in 1916.

The pub was later taken on by his sons Albert and John in the 1920s and 30s and this may well have provided a friendly place for Elijah to play his music, By 1911 he had moved a couple of miles away to Honingham, but the 1921 census shows that he was still working (as a horse-hoe, agricultural and motor engineer) in Colton. In 1939 he was still in Honingham, described as a master blacksmith in the register of that year, and he is remembered also as running a garage – a common move for blacksmiths in country villages.In 1902, Elijah married Laura Dennis and they had one daughter, Ursula known as Ula, born in 1906. Residents of the village of Mattishall recalled that Laura used to play the piano and the two of them would travel to village halls on a motorbike and side-car, together with the dulcimer and their daughter, to play for whist drives and dances, and he is remembered as playing into the 1940s.

Elijah Ladbrooke died on 27th December 1948, when he was still in Honingham, at ‘The Blacksmith’s House’.

In 2008, his dulcimer was still owned by a family member in nearby Mattishall. One of Elijah’s great grandsons, Perry Youngs had been interested in it and had taken it to Billy Bennington in about 1980 for restringing, but he had never taken it up and subsequently moved to the USA. The current whereabouts of the instrument are not known.


Elijah Ladbrooke’s dulcimer


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