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Bevan and Dewar family history


In this section you can learn more about the Bevans and Dewars. Use the links below to explore their family histories and family trees.

At present, clicking on the 'more about' links will allow you to see images of various family members. In time, we will supplement the 'more about' sections with detailed histories of both families.


Introduction to the Bevans
 
Silvanus Bevan (1743–1830) was from a family of Welsh Quakers who were involved in banking, though he was born and grew up in London.  He was the son of Timothy and the nephew of Silvanus Bevan of Swansea, both of whom were well known pharmacists in London.  His uncle Silvanus was elected to the Royal Society in 1725.  His mother was Elizabeth Barclay, and the family were part of the banking group that was eventually to become Barclays Bank.

Born in 1743, Silvanus married Isabella Wakefield (1752-1769), from an old Quaker family in 1769, a marriage that lasted only 7 months as she died of fever.  Four years later, in 1773, he married Louisa Kendall (1748-1838) who was also from a banking family.  Louisa however, was not a Quaker, and because of Quaker rules at the time Silvanus had to distance himself from the Quaker community, a move that would have weakened his ties to family and friends.

The couple went on to have seven sons, six of whom were baptised in London.  The youngest son, Richard, was born in 1788 at their property in Swallowfield, Berkshire.  They moved from there to Riddlesworth House in Norfolk before buying House in Wiltshire in 1814.  Silvanus also had houses in Brighton and in Gloucester Place, London.

Some of their seven sons, including David the eldest and Richard the youngest, joined the bank while others – Frederick and George – became clergymen.  Richard, like his father, was to marry twice.  His first wife was Charlotte Hunter, with whom he had four daughters and a son.  Their youngest daughter, Harriet Caroline, died as a toddler in 1834, the year Richard Alexander – their only son – was born.  Charlotte herself died shortly afterwards in 1835.  Richard later married Sarah Dewar, who had been a long-time friend of Charlotte but there were no children from this marriage.  Two of Richard’s remaining daughters (Theodosia and Elizabeth Charlotte) married clergymen.  His son Richard Alexander married Laura Polhill and they had six children, one of who, Robert Polhill Bevan, went on to become a well known artist.  Robert Polhill Bevan was born in No. 17 Brunswick Square.

The Bevan family may have stopped being Quakers, but they remained interested in religion, with some of them becoming clergymen and Richards daughters also marrying into the clergy.  Richard Bevan himself was known to support dissenters from the .
 

Brief Family Tree
 The Bevans Family Tree

 
 
 
Introduction to the Dewars
 
Sarah Dewar was the second wife of Richard Bevan (the Bevan family being part of the banking group that eventually became Barclays Bank).  Sarah was a long time friend of Charlotte, Richards first wife, so it is perhaps no surprise that Richard married Sarah after the death of Charlotte.

Sarah had a brother James, who was married to Mary Anne and they had three children: Raymond, Robert Malcolm and Mary Elizabeth.  James and Sarah had other siblings:  Sibella, Elizabeth and possibly someone only currently identified as G.  The mother of the Dewar siblings was Hanna.

In 1856 when the letters are written, Sarah is living in Brighton with Richard, and the letters are largely sent from St. Leonards in East Sussex.

Robert Malcolm Dewar, son of James and Mary Anne, joined the Navy as a boy during the Crimea War and died in the Black Sea of a fever at the age of 12, despite an operation to help him breathe.  The news was conveyed to his family via , and he was buried in the military cemetery at , (now Tarabya on the European side of Istanbul).

Raymond sat the entry exams for , the military training academy for officers.  Mary Elizabeth, the only daughter, married a clergyman before dying in January 1882, and is buried in the cemetery in Ryde, on the Isle of Wight.  Mary Anne died in September 1892.
 

Brief Family Tree
 

 

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The Bevan Family Letters website is a micro-site of The Regency Town House website. The Town House is a grade 1 Listed terraced home of the mid-1820s being developed as a heritage centre and museum to focus on the architecture and social history of Brighton & Hove between the 1780s and 1840s. For further information about the Town House project see http://www.rth.org.uk.