Person    | Male  Born 23/12/1862  Died 19/4/1943

Major Byron F. Caws

Believed to have assisted Fowler in his work on the Concise Oxford Dictionary.

The Latin on the memorial, 'castigavit et emendavit', translates as “he corrected and improved“, which is quite an acknowledgment from Fowler, but there is a mystery concerning Major Caws and his contribution to the Concise Oxford Dictionary. What was his relation to Fowler and what was his contribution to the Concise Oxford Dictionary? And why is it not better known?

At Bridging the Unbridgeable Richard Bond has investigated Major Caws. He has found no reference to Caws in Jenny McMorris’ biography of Fowler but he has found a Byron Frank Caws born Seaview, Isle of Wight, 1863, died Jamaica 19 April 1943. He was in the Royal Engineers and co-supervised the construction of the Jamaica Garrison church. Using the pseudonym Ginger he was the author of the Pepper Pot column in the Jamaica Times in the 1930s. His daughter, Miss Phyllis Caws (b.1899), died 4 January 1968. His grandson was Richard Byron Caws.

A correspondent at Bridging the Unbridgeable adds "... a 1934 copy of the Concise Oxford Dictionary of Current English, third edition. In the acknowledgements (by H.W.F.) is the following: “… to all those in the list below I would fain offer – what some of them are no longer living to receive – my heartiest thanks: Leslie J. Berlin Esq.; Major B. F. Caws;…”

Dr. Johnson’s House Trust has suggested that Caws may have been related to Sir James Murray, the primary editor of the first edition of the Oxford English Dictionary. It’s also possible that Fowler met Caws during his service in the army. Neither option has been proved either way.

We found a reference to the Major in "Religious Upbringing and the Costs of Freedom: Personal and Philosophical Essays", 2010, edited by Peter Caws and Stafani Jones. Peter Caws (1931 - 2020 , born Southall) was University Professor of Philosophy and Professor of Human Sciences at the George Washington University.

We have transcribed a relevant section of that book: "My father was something of a bibliophile, haunting the secondhand bookshops in Paternoster Row in London ... though most of what he bought was sent to his father, the grandfather I never met who lived in Jamaica. Major Caws was a local figure and newspaper columnist in Kingston and an object of veneration on my father’s part; he appeared to live the normal life of a military retiree in the colonies, in spite of having belonged to the {Mennonite} Brethren, and I became aware of some dissonance between the restrictions my father imposed on us and the worldliness he tolerated in his own father."

Online we found a 2-page article written by Phyllis Caws, and interestingly, it's about books.  It begins: "THE WEST INDIA REFERENCE LIBRARY, KINGSTON, JAMAICA The following description was submitted by Miss Phyllis Caws, former research assistant with the West India Reference Library. The West India Reference Library, one of the five libraries of the Institute of Jamaica, contains the most complete collection of material on Jamaica and the British West Indies to be found in the New World, as well as ..."

Other sources: Jamaica Defence Force, Jamaican Ancestral Records.

Our colleague, Andrew Behan, discovered the following:

Major Byron Frank Caws was born on 23 December 1862 in St Helens, Isle of Wight, Hampshire, the third of the eight children of Alfred Richard Caws (1828-1902) and Adeliza Ann Caws née Willis (1830-1923). His elder brothers were Alfred Ernest Caws (1858-1905) and Francis Henry Caws (1860-1862).

In the 1871 census he is shown as a scholar living at Arctic Cottage, Seaview, St Helens, Isle of Wight, with his father who was described as a Trinity House pilot, his mother who was listed as a lodging house keeper, and four siblings: Alfred Ernest Caws, Bertha Elizabeth Caws (1864-1918), Florence Maria Caws (1866-1946) and Lilian Mary Caws (1867-1949). He had another sister, Adeliza Emily Caws, whose birth was registered in the 1st quarter of 1871 but who tragically died and was buried on 7 January 1871. His youngest sister, Alice Emily Caws (1872-1960) was born on 9 April 1872.

White's 1878 Directory of Hampshire lists him as pilot living in Sea View, St Helens, however by the time of the 1881 census he was described as a draughtsman, boarding at the home of a Mary Ann Stoddart at 2 Olive Street, Bishopwearmouth, Sunderland. Also boarding at this house was a Peter Grant Tulloh (1858-1939) who was a watchmaker and an elder brother of Elizabeth Tulloh (1862-1923). He was in Sunderland as he was pupil of a distant relative, Francis Edward 'Frank' Caws (1846-1905), who was a Fellow of the RIBA and whose architectural practice was in Sunderland.

The 1891 census shows him as a surveyor living at the Royal Artillery Barracks, Sheerness, Kent, with a female general domestic servant. On the night of the census his sister, Bertha Elizabeth Caws, was visiting him at his home. In the 1st quarter of 1892, he married Elizabeth Tulloh in the St Neots registration district, Huntingdonshire. She was a schoolmistress and they had six children: Maxwell Byron Caws (1893-1977) was born in Sheerness, Eric Ewart Caws (1895-1985) was born in Bermuda, Phyllis Olivia Brook Caws (1898-1968) was born in Dover, Kent as was Geoffrey Tulloh Caws (1900-1990), Alfred Richard Brook Caws (1903-1961) was born in Eltham, Kent and Margaret Joan Adeliza Caws (1907-2000) was also born in Eltham, Kent.

On 5 April 1892 he was elected as an Associate Member of The Institution of Civil Engineers where he was shown as being employed in the Civil Service Department of the Royal Engineers. Kelly's 1899 Kent Directory lists him at 15 Harold Terrace, Dover, He was still living there at the time of the 1901 census where is occupation is described as 'Assistant Surveyor Civil Staff for Engineer services of the Army' together with his wife, four of their children: Maxwell, Eric, Phyllis & Geoffrey, a female general domestic servant and a nursemaid.

Electoral registers from 1905 show him listed at 14 Westmount Road, Eltham, Kent. On 1 April 1907 he was appointed as an Honorary Major and Inspector of Works for the Royal Engineers in Jamaica.

When their eldest son, Maxwell, joined the Army in the Non-Combatant Corps on 14 March 1916 the family address was recorded as 38 Clovelly Road, Ealing. At the end of the war, he was awarded the British War Medal 1914-1918 and the Victory Medal.

On 8 August 1921 he arrived in Avonmouth, Bristol aboard the TSS Coronado of the Elders & Fyffes Ltd line. The ship's manifest shows that he had embarked in Kingston, Jamaica, was a 1st class passenger whose occupation was recorded as 'Engineering' and that his proposed address in the UK would be Arctic House, Seaview, Isle of Wight. On 7 November 1921 he departed from Bristol aboard the same ship travelling back to Kingston, Jamaica. The ship's manifest showed him as a 1st class passenger whose occupation was recorded as 'Major - retired'. 

He died, aged 80 years, on 19 April 1943 at Cross Roads, Saint Andrew, Jamaica.

Andrew also found a surprising item in a local Isle of Wight newspaper dated 27 November 1920. It's posted on Ancestry.co.uk by Richard Parlour. Here's the item:

 "INTERESTING NEWS FROM JAMAICA The following cutting from a Jamaica paper will be interesting to many in this locality to whom Major Byron Frank Caws is well known. The son of the late Mr. Alfred Richard Caws and Mrs. Caws, of Douglas House, his boyhood days were all spent in Seaview, and after leaving the locality he frequently came to visit his parents and other relatives. A gifted man, he has made good use of his talents and distinguished himself by his excellent work. We congratulate him on his last achievement and very heartily wish him continued success in his work. "From nine o'clock today to noon to-morrow the Island address to His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales will be on view in the Lecture Room of the Institute of Jamaica. The address is in three sheets, the first having a border with roses as the motif, the Royal Arms (labelled for the Prince of Wales) at the top and the Jamaica Arms on the left hand or dexter side, as it is called in Heraldy ; on the second sheet the border is very similar but with pomgrenates instead of roses, a little water colour drawing of King's House at the top and the Prince of Wales' feathers on the left hand side. The third sheet differs altogether in design, the border having a panelled effect with a map of Jamaica at the top and four small vignettes of Jamaica views—the four which appears on the cover of Mr. Cundall's Jamaica in 1920," having been selected. The address is written and illuminated in gold and colours on vellum, and is the work of Major B. F, Caws, whose skill in this direction cannot be easily matched in the island and which affords the spectator a delightful aesthetic treat. Everybody should take the opportunity of visiting the Institute and having a view of the address. The amount of labour in the address may be judged when we say that Major Caws informed a Gleaner' man that the borders of the three sheets contained in the several back grounds well over 35,000 separate dots. If anyone disbelieves it they have the opportunity of counting them. We understand that this is the third address Major Caws has done for members of the Royal family, the others being one for Queen Victoria in 1897, and the Coronation address for King George in 1911."

So it seems the Major was a man of varied interests and activities: the army, architecture, engineering, newspaper columnist, books, religion, calligraphy, and, apparently, lexicography.

If you can provide any further information, especially relating to his work with Fowler, please contact us, and Richard Bond.

2022: Dai Bevan kindly let us know that he has added a photo to Find A Grave showing the South Ealing gravestone of Caws's wife Elizabeth Tullow Caws "Who fell asleep 21st December 1923 Aged 61 years" and "Their Youngest Son Richard Brooke Caws Of Coutts' Bank, London Who died 24th March 1961 Aged 57 Years". The gravestone also refers to "Byron Frank Caws Major, S.R.E.S. who died in Jamaica 19th April 1943 Aged 80 Years And is Buried There".

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Major Byron F. Caws

Commemorated ati

Hodge the Cat

Hodge is sitting on a leather-bound book ("A Dictionary of the English Langua...

Read More

Other Subjects

Philip Charles Hardwick

Philip Charles Hardwick

Architect of St Barts Hospital in 1861. Son of architect Philip Hardwick. We are not actually sure which of the two produced the Speke obelisk in 1866. Hardwick Snr has a track record in obelisks, ...

Person, Architecture

2 memorials
Joseph Clayton

Joseph Clayton

Architect active in 1924.  He was a war veteran and had been a member of the St George in the East's congregation. He gave a lead on the war memorial project but then in 1923 moved to the Midlands....

Person, Architecture

1 memorial
Edward Welby Pugin

Edward Welby Pugin

Architect.  Born Ramsgate, son of Augustus Welby.  Designed Catholic churches in the neo-Gothic style.  Surviving works in London: St Monica's and English Martyrs in Prescot Street E1.  Died at  ho...

Person, Architecture

1 memorial
Alfred Bickerdike

Alfred Bickerdike

Architect. Born Manchester. In partnership with Paull 1873-7.

Person, Architecture

1 memorial