Return to main page of this section The name Readio is the name my immigrant ancestor George Austin Readyhough anglicized his name to when he moved from Rhode Island to New England. There are two variations of proper pronunciation of this name; Reddioff, and Reddihoff. This is the Yorkshire form of the name. The Lancashire variation was Redihalgh, and I don't know what it has evolved into. In modern Yorkshire the name is spelled according to modern phonetic rules in a variety of ways, even among the same family in Leeds. George Austin Readyhough came from Leeds, where his family had lived for several generations, they appear to have come from the Halifax area through Burstall, a geographically large town between Halifax and Leeds. I found the name pretty much assocated with towns and cities. The name, and the family, come from a small village named Redihalgh that existed in the 14th century or so on the coast of Lancashire. Sporadic court records show taht in medieval times, atleast some of the family were guildsmen. The family has done astonishingly little migration, few of them ever left that two county area, and only two or three lines ever made it to the U.S. I suspect the identity of GEorge Readio's mother had something to do with it; her name was Austin, Austin's were always notorious wanderers. I wondered, too, how much Leeds had to do with it; go to page on Leeds with historical photos of the area, including the suburbs Chapel Allerton and Kirkstall where George Readio's parents at times lived. The city combined elements of primitive, wild, wild west, with unattractive row housing even by industrial revolution standards. Few even modern buildings are at all attractive. The family is hard to trace because the entire big family group always used the same six male given names until the mid 19th century, and brides' last names usually weren't recorded, and also because spelling of the name was so absolutely chaotic; people went across the border and their name was suddenly Redihalgh, you didn't know what to make of what; I missed most of GEorge's parents' children and couldn't find his mother or his parents' marriage because the name was spelled eight radically different ways! I hadn't known that the name was often spelled phonetically or in anglicized fashion in the early 19th century. Some of John REadioff's children even had duplicate christening records for two spellings of the name! Same christening dates; not the case they were christened in their real unrecognized church adn then again as required by law in an Anglican church. Atleast, not according to the Anglican church records I saw abstracts of. All I know so far of the family is that when George Readyhough got to the US, he apprenticed himself as a wool sorter for two years. A cousin who has provided me with much information his family saved had a copy of the contract. Perhaps this is consistent with what his family customarily did in Leeds. My mother put together an entire Readyhough lineage back to the 16th century. I don't know how accurate it is; she admits she did alot of intuitively matching people up. My first efforts were miserably off because I knew John's wife ws named Martha, but, not knowing Martha's last name from the children's christening records, and not knowing that John's name got spelled "Redoff" on his marriage record, I thought he most likely married a Martha in Colne, Lancashire like his father before him (both actually married in Leeds)! There are clues the family may have had a somewhat intense temperament, though how much of it they inherited from the emotionally intense Allen family that George married into, I do not know. The Readios thereafter identified themselves as members of the Allen family; the Allens were herd animals who migrated in family groups, had regular family reunions, assiduously saved records, and Amzi Allen's branch had a herd territory that included four cities in Massachusetts, and one in New Hampshire, and all members of this family always lived in those five towns and did considerable moving back and forth between them. The Allens were always people who never failed to feel definitely and strongly about anything and were ever spoiling for a fight; the emigrant to this country cannot be traced but married into a powerful and wealthy Puritan family; they were ferocious patriots in the REvolutionary War and were founders and a governor of Vermont. George REadio's sons and an Allen cousin formed a singing quartet, who seemingly were quite good, according to what my aunt wrote in a series of autobiographical essays that she got from someone at a family reunion; this quartet performed at weddings and funerals and the like all up and down the Connecticut Valley, which I guess is a valley formed by the Connecticut River which flows through NOrthampton and Florence and Springfield where these people lived, or something. ANd also includes Connecticut, I guess. Amzi Allen, whose daughter Mary Elizabeth married George Readio, had at the level of his Allen and his Chapin grandparents and great grandparents two upper middle class families, well off and very well educated from their beginnings in this country, both of aristocratic and in one case Norwegian and Angevin royal ancestry, who became entire family groups of fanatical Puritan clergy, and got driven around England in their efforts to educate more Puritan clergy, lead churches, etc. And from those points, our branch of the Allen family had these characteristics, not with absolute consistency, they had very large families, and Amzi himself got shifted from pillar to post trying one thing and then another in his youth like David Copperfield, according to a letter he wrote to a grandchild; he must also have been extremely bright; he probably managed a total of six years of formal schooling, one in Latin, but found himself better educated than the highschoolers he tried his hand at teaching. His letters also show that he could write well, as well as that he was fairly emotionally intense, and his wife very much so. She seemed very depressed over the fact that her children left the house and married. According to her husband, who also admitted he was doing a certain amount of projecting. Amzi Allen, after his letter breaks off where he was working steadily for four years as a weaver, somehow became a sea captain. He ran a boat up and down the Connecticut River and the northern seacoast. He lived in Rhode Island for a time. He was married to Mary Sizer, whose father quite suspiciously was nephew and first cousin to an extremely wealthy, powerful and notorious Bristol, Rhode Island family of shippers and slave runners. George Readyhough began in Rhode Island, not sure right off which city, and met and married Mary Allen there. He had followed wealthier cousins to the U.S. and begun as a wool sorting apprentice, but ended up a more successful sea captain than his father in law. He drowned when the ship he was on, which was carrying supplies to the Union troops, during the Civil War, sank off of Cape Hattaras, North Carolina. Amzi Allen had a number of descendants who took to the sea, or captained boats on the Erie Canal and the Great Lakes. George Readio's children included a dentist and I think a college professor, as well as my great grandfather who I have been told was some sort of a manager. They were well-off middle class. They seem to have been fairly intelligent, though my grandmother clearly inherited both her brains and her manic depressive temperament from her mother. Family photos show that the Readio family was very middle class. One son, Frank Manly REadio, was a dentist; I have found his descendants the easiest to find, they've all saved considerable documents and share willingly. My aunt also has considerable family documents, including George's son Charles Hiram's diaries, but has both a feudal and a frightened attitude about sharing them. Charles Hiram Readio married a woman with very severe lifelong mental illness, and had my grandmother, a similar history existed in my grandfather's family, and one result was a family terrified to share and to believe in its past. My long consistent family history of people with family histories of mental illness marrying, which is very typical of people with bipolar disorder, also leads one to wonder what could have been Charles Readio's emotional nature. The one passage I've ever come close to seeing in my great grandfather REadio's diaries, my aunt quoted from it, he wrote about his wife's at the time seemingly successful operation for breast cancer (it came back 15 years later when she was in the state insane asylum and, ap- parently not soon detected and untreated, it killed her, she was about 65 at that time, so 40 when it first struck), something like "Thank God they got this dread disease". Very emotionally intense and too-proper style, identical to that of the members of President Nixon's adminis- tration; in fact this is the exact wording of the press announcement that a recent President's wife had breast cancer. Words breast and cancer never mentioned. According to my aunt, he "seems to have regarded" his seriously mentally ill wife "with affection". I have no idea if he ever really appeared to notice his wife's illness, or not. From the stories I have heard, it would have been hard to miss, but my phenomenally high-strung, intense and successful sister clearly inherited the family manic depressive temperament, and ways she acts peculiar and clean off the deep end go right past my brother in law, a way too proper man of New England (Morse) background, who also never raises his voice above 10 decibels and goes bananas if anyone else does, and who can't quite process the fact this his niece and nephew, who together with their mother live with him, inherited his family's allergies and asthma, which is taking cowardice to new heights. For the marriage and descendants of George Austin Readyhough, go to Readyhough family groups (That file may not exist for a day or two.) The following information is from Mormon IGI abstracts of Church of England records in Leeds area. William Redihoff m Elizabeth Holmes 3/16/1801, Saint Peter, Leeds, Yorkshire, England. Their children: George Readyhough c 9/23/1801 Chapel Allerton, Yorkshire (possibly) Ellen Rediough, father William Rediough, b 1804, Birstall, Yorkshire (adjacent to Leeds) (possibly) Merina Redeof c 12/25/1814 Birstall, Yorkshire, father William Redeof, mother Elizabeth. John Readyhough c 5/12/1805 Chapel Allerton, Yorkshire Christopher Readyhough c 9/21/1817 Elizabeth Readyhough c 9/21/1817 Chapel Allerton, Yorkshire (notice that this family were not necessarily christened at all promptly, in fact, one wonders if Merina was christened one of the two times in the year her family visited church!) Anne Readyhough c 9/21/1826 Chapel Allerton (possibly) Sarah Readyhough father William, mother Bety, b 6/27/1826, Cloughfield Particular Baptist, Rossendale Forest Non Conform (I don't know where that place is; even if it is in Yorkshire!) William Redioff to William Redioff, c 3/27/1803, Chapel Allerton, Yorkshire. There is also a marriage of William Redeof to BEtty Simpson, 10/11/1802, Birstall, Yorkshire, England. I guess that these were two families. Birstall William and Elizabeth also had Jubal_ Elizth. Redeof c 7/5/1818, Birstall, Yorkshire, England. John "Redoff" married Martha Austin 8/21/1825 Saint Peter, Leeds, Yorkshire, England. (Readio family records have John Readyhough married Martha Austin). I found many Martha Austins, Austons, Astins born not far away; just one in Leeds; Martha Austin to William Austin, mother not listed, c 3/14/1790, Saint Peter, Leeds, Yorkshire. Note that the Readyhoughs often christened two or three children at once; clearly they did so when they got around to it and not necessarily when the children were infants. This date of birth for only nearby Martha Austin suggests John Readyhough may have been born fifteen years before he was baptized! One must be careful; other John Readyhough's married other Martha's nearby. John Riddehalgh m Martha Wright 8/8/1822 Halifax, Yorkshire John Readyhough m Betty Haigh, 5/30/1826, Halifax, Yorkshire John Ridehalgh m Martha Bannister 12/18/1825 Colne, Lancashire, England Children of John Readyhough and Martha Austin: John Readyoff c 4/6/1828 Saint Peter, Leeds, Yorkshire, England George Austin Readyoff (Readyhough) one record for each spelling, 4/6/1828, Saint Peter, Leeds, Yorkshire, England. William Readyhough c 5/12/1805 Chapel Allerton, Yorkshire (letters between William in Kirkstall and George's family in MA confirm George had a brother William) The following children were probably related; John Readyoff to Wiliam and Sarah Readyhoff c 9/22/1833 Chapel Allerton, Yorkshire George Readyoff c 11/16/1837, to William and Sarah Readyoff, Chapel Allerton, Yorkshire William Redyhoff c 3/20/1831 Chapel Allerton, Yorkshire John William Reddyhoff to John Henry Reddyhoff and Susannah Potter, 9/20/1879, Chapel Allerton, Yorkshire Lavinia Reddyhoff b 1878, Moortown, Leeds, Yorkshire, to John Henry Reddyhoff and Susannah Potter. John William Reddyoff c 9/20/1879 to John Henry Reddyoff and Susannah Potter, at Chapel Allerton, Yorkshire George Reddyoff c 4/26/1875 to John Henry Reddyhoff and Susannah Potter, at Chapel Allerton, Yorkshire Harry Reddyhoff b 1883 Moortown, Leeds, Yorkshire to John Henry Reddyhoff and Susanah Potter (sources don't appear on file printout; this is probably someone's report and not an abstract of an actual record) Henry Reddyoff c 3/20/1879 to John Henry Redyhoff, and Susannah Potter, Chapel Allerton, Yorkshire Christopher Reddyhoff c 4/26/1875, to John Hernry Reddyhoff and Susannah Potter, Chapel Allerton, Yorkshire. Florence Ann Reddyhoff b 8/3/1887 Leeds, Yorkshire, England to John Henry Reddyoff and Susannah Potter. Annie Reddyoff c 8/18/1876 Chapel Allerton, Yorkshire, England to John Henry Reddyoff and Susannah Potter Charlotte Elizabeth Reddyoff c 3/31/1872 to John Henry Reddyoff and Susannah Porter Thomas Edward Reddyhoff b 1885 Moortown, Leeds, Yorkshire, to John Henry Redyhoff and Susannah Potter Violet Mary Reddyhoff b 1891 Mooretown, Leeds, Yorkshire, to John Henry Reddyhoff and Susannah Potter Sarah Elizabeth Reddyhoff b 1/1889 Moortown, Leeds, Yorkshire, to John Henry Reddyhoff and Susannah Potter John Redyoff and Martha of Halifax, Yorkshire, had: Sarah c 6/3/1827 Halifax Joseph Redyoff c 1/9/1825 Halifax James Readyoff c 3/30/1823 Halifax, Ann Readyoff c 1/3/1830 Halifax The following children could possibly be John's by a second wife, Mary: Eliza Redioff c 7/12/1835 Saint Peter, Leeds, Yorkshire Mary Readyoff c 11/1/1829, Saint Peter, Leeds, Yorkshire. Thomas Readyoff and Isabella had: Mary Readyoff c 6/17/1832, Saint Peter, Leeds, Yorkshire William Readyhoff and Sarah had Thomas Readyhoff c 11/16/1837 Chapel Allerton, Yorkshire William Reddyoff c 3/20/1831 Chapel Allerton,Yorkshire John Readyoff c 9/22/1833 Chapel Allerton George Readyhoff c 11/16/1837 Chapel Allerton Also, William Reddihoff m Elizabeth Hargreaves in Harewood, Yorkshire, and they had alot of children. Idon't know where Harewood is. Elizabeth Readyoff m James Mason 8/10/1829 Saint Peter, Leeds Ann Redyoff m Benjamin Millnes 12/29/1828 Saint Peter, Leeds Margaret Readyoff m John Brown 5/6/1761 Saint Peter, Leeds, Yorkshire. John Henry Redihoff (above) m Susannah Potter 2/10/1872 Leeds, Yorkshire William Redof m BettySimpson 9/17/1826 Birstall, Yorkshire William Reddyoff m Sarah Moss 7/9/1827 St Peter, Leeds, Yorkshire Back to top Contact Dora Smith at tiggernut24@yahoo.com Get your own free 11 MB of web space at![]()