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Caleb Lefevre was another
notable and interesting resident of Harrold. He provided us with
fascinating insights into a prominent local tradesman, and was himself
an inventor.
Caleb was born in a house on Harrold Green,
now number 5, and died in the same house 88 years later. Although
he only attended the village school he became a respected man. He
was a strong supporter of the Congregational Church. What singled
him out particularly was that he was an inventor and had a patent
and a patent application to his name.
When he was born in 1851, son of Caleb
senior (who was born in Kimbolton) and Eleanor (born in Hinwick),
the family name was Fever. His father's business in Harrold in 1861
was that of butcher and farmer, with extra duties as a jobbing smith
and way wardener.
In later years Caleb junior inherited
the butcher's shop, while William, one of his four brothers,
became
a dispensing chemist and dentist, and was a Member of the Pharmaceutical
Society of Great Britain. Caleb Fever, being now the local butcher,
and his brother the chemist, considered that such a name might
reflect
adversely upon his trade, and so he reverted backto the family's
original name of Le Fevre.
The following information was added in 2007 by
Caleb's great, great niece, Lesley Milne, who visited Harrold
a little
while ago to attend the Le Fevre family reunion.
"Of Huguenot origin, the family was
one of a large number of French Protestants settled in the area
previously brought in by the Duke of Bedford for draining the
land (the Bedford Levels, draining the
marshes of the Fens were financed by the Duke).They came in many
years
before Caleb (born 1850), with
the family
name
of
Le
Fevre,
anglicising
it to Fever.
Caleb's eldest brother was Dr William Fever, Chemist, who registered
his children 'Fever' with Caleb as Harrold Registrar, signing the
birth certificates 'Caleb Le Fevre' . William took back the family
name of Le Fevre a few years later.
Caleb's elder brother George born 1848, was a medical doctor who
studied under Sir Joseph Lister at Edinburgh. George lived in Melbourne
and was an M.P. with a large medical practice in Collins Street.
He died aged 43 of typhoid in Glasgow having returned to put his
17 year old son into medical school. His death left his children
orphaned. Two of George's sons became medical doctors, one in England
and
the other in Australia.
Caleb's eldest sister Sarah was educated in France and taught there.
She made her own wedding veil in Harrold lace
The French flag was flown over the family butcher's shop on
Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee.
Our Le Fevre family is
still in Australia and now Catholic! (What would Caleb say!)"

This picture was
also sent to us by Lesley Milne and was a newspaper cutting (possibly
Wellingborough News) of a photograph of Queen Victoria's Diamond
Jubilee celebrations in Harrold in 1897. The photograph had been
submitted by Mrs E Manton of 124 High Street, Harrold. It shows
Caleb Le Fevre's butchers' shop, highly decorated and proudly flying
the Tricolor and also The Australian flag.
(We should love to locate the original of this
so that we can get a better image - please let us know if anyone
knows the whereabouts)
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