Unfortunately a number of the family details given for Harry are incorrect. He was my great great uncle and I have researched the family extensively.
The corrected information reads as follows:
Harry Bristow was the elder son of John Bristow and Mary Ann (nee Blight). He was born on 26 April 1873 at the south Cornwall coastal town of East Looe in that part of the town known as Shutta.
His father, John Bristow, worked for the Cornish Railway. He was born at Wivelsfield in Sussex in 1820 (of a family that has been traced back to the late 1500s in Surrey) and was one of the early railway “navvies”. In 1841 he was working at Godstone, building part of the first railway to run from London to Dover. In 1851 he was at Grantham, building what has now become the east coast main line railway, running from London to Scotland via York. By the late 1850s he was working in Devonport, building the Cornwall Railway. It was here that he lodged in a house in Queen Street, where he met the young orphan, Mary Ann Blight, who was 23 years his junior. She was Cornish and had been born at Saltash in 1843.
The lodging house was run by Mary Ann’s aunt, who used her and her sister as unpaid help in running the establishment. Because of the tensions within the household John and Mary Ann eloped to Bristol to get married (by licence) at Holy Cross or Temple Church, on 23 January 1861. Following the marriage they moved into Cornwall and settled in the town of Liskeard. It was here that their first two children, both daughters, were born. Harriet in 1865 followed by Ellen in 1869. They were still in Liskeard at the April 1871 census date but had moved to East Looe by April 1873 at which time Harry Bristow was born. John had now obtained regular work as a track inspector on the local railway Their fourth and last child, Fred was born at East Looe in 1876.
All the family are at Looe at the 1881 census date but 10 years later only Harry (now aged 17 and working as a groom) and his widowed mother, remain at home. Fred was on the training ship HMS Ganges, moored in Falmouth Harbour. Harriett was by now married to Richard Solt and both were visiting a family in West Ham. Ellen was in service in Ilfracombe.
At this point it is not apparent what Harry does next as he is not traceable on the 1901 census but in the summer of 1910 he marries Ethel Elliott (born 26/9/1887 at Bedminster, Bristol). Their first child is Vivian John Henry Bristow, born in Bath, Somerset on 13 August 1910, but it seems as though the family fell on hard times in the months that followed. The 1911 census shows that Harry was working in East Hoathly, Sussex, as a butler; Ethel was in service in Redland, Bristol; and their seven month old son was being fostered by a couple at Corsham in Wiltshire.
In 1912 the family are reunited and are living in Shortlands, Bromley, Kent. This is the address Harry gave when signing on for Titanic on 6 April 1912. Their parting in April 1912 must have been particularly difficult as Ethel was close to bearing their second child, Philip Harry Bristow. He was born on 3 May 1912, three weeks after his father’s death.