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Madmeg
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31 Mar 2010 21:00 |
As you say Janey, always look at the image.
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JaneyCanuck
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31 Mar 2010 21:08 |
aaargh, I take it all back!!
Marriages Mar 1867 Mellor Thomas Manchester 8d 477 WAITE Elizabeth Manchester 8d 477 > WHITLOW Hannah Manchester 8d 477 > Worrall James Manchester 8d 477
1871 in Newton, Lancs:
James Worrall 37 Hannah Worrall 23 Ellis Worrall 3 Annie Worrall 1 month Fanny Whittam 11
Births Mar 1870 Worrall Annie Manchester 8d 353
The Worralls in 1891 are a huuuuuge coincidence - but a coincidence they seem to be.
This leaves us with *no* Hannah and Annie, except for the Hannah with Alice in 1871 possibly.
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Harold
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31 Mar 2010 21:35 |
What a pity, and I was beginning to think we were there.
All I can say is there is a lot of Worralls in that area as I know from research into that thread. Annie's husband's father was John Worrall from Frodsham.
You know I am still seduced by the market gardening connection - I will try and follow that line but it will have to wait until tomorrow.
Best regards and thanks to all of you for your help
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Madmeg
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31 Mar 2010 22:00 |
Don't be too harsh on the lad, Janey.
England & Wales, FreeBMD Marriage Index: 1837-1915 about Hannah Whitlow Name: Hannah Whitlow Year of Registration: 1867 Quarter of Registration: Jan-Feb-Mar District: Manchester (1837-1924) County: Lancashire Volume: 8d Page: 477 (click to see others on page) Spouse James Worrall (several Ancestry trees have him as James Ellis Worrall).
1851 England Census about Hannah Whitlow Name: Hannah Whitlow Age: 4 Estimated birth year: abt 1847 Relation: Daughter Father's Name: John Mother's Name: Elizabeth Gender: Female Where born: Altrincham, Cheshire, England Civil parish: Altrincham County/Island: Cheshire Country: England Registration district: Altrincham Sub-registration district: Wilmslow ED, institution, or vessel: 6a Neighbors: View others on page Household schedule number: 115 Household Members: Name Age John Whitlow 30 Elizabeth Whitlow 30 Hannah Whitlow 4 EDIT, I thought you were a bit hasty!!!
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Madmeg
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31 Mar 2010 22:19 |
I wandered back to page 1 and wondered if Hannah Garner had died, and the father had remarried to Sarah by 1881 (Sarah is married in 1881), but no, Sarah is with hubby and Eliza in 1871.
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JaneyCanuck
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1 Apr 2010 00:28 |
I do think the Joseph Drinkwater whose father was a market gardener is about the only candidate for being the JD in 1901 in the workhouse who was a plasterer, and thus for your JD from the birth certificate.
-- I just realized I wandered off without clicking "submit" on this so I may have been overtaken by events. ;)
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Madmeg
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1 Apr 2010 00:45 |
I'd go for that Joe Drinkwater if it were my ancestor. With a knife - oops, inappropriate comment.
Wish I could find a reasonable marriage for him or whereabouts or death. I think, Harold, you are going to have to search records from nearby towns, e.g. Stockport.
You could try finding the records of Knutsford Workhouse to see if there are any relatives connected with him. That's the safest other record we have so far.
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Harold
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1 Apr 2010 11:05 |
Hi I'm back - retired people are allowed to start late.
Continuing with this market gardening connection - are the names Drinkwater, Worrall, Garner still familiar names in that trade? Madmeg, you seem to know the area quite well, what do you think? Is there any evidence that any of the Hannahs were involved with market gardening? Did that show up in any of your extensive searches, Janey?
I know I'm grasping at straws but must try something and yes I will follow thru on the workhouse avenue
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Harold
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2 Apr 2010 10:18 |
So should I take the Joseph Drinkwater with parents Michael and Jane as the chosen one or is that too big an assumption? Incidentally I did see that in the 1841 census a William Garner (but no Hannah) was living next door
What about the Hannah Garner with parents Thomas and Martha in 1851 Altrincham as identified by Janey. Is that my Hannah?
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Madmeg
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2 Apr 2010 18:26 |
Unfortunately it will have to involve a bit of judgement as the evidence isn't as good as we'd like.
If we assume Joseph was a local fella, there is only the one that fits, and in 1901 he's a plasterer, and his family are a mixture of gardeners and builders.
The Hannah in 1851 has a plasterer father, might be how she met Joe.
We can't do any better.
Now a few things are bothering me about your Annie. Is this the family in 1911?
HARRISON, John Head Married M 32 1879 Labourer Manchester Lanc VIEW HARRISON, Annie Wife Married 11 years F 36 1875 Sale Cheshire VIEW HARRISON, Mona Daughter F 10 1901 Manchester Lanc VIEW HARRISON, Annie Daughter F 7 1904 Manchester Lanc VIEW HARRISON, John Sidney Son M 3 1908 Manchester Lanc VIEW
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- RG number: RG14 Piece: 23637 Reference: RG14PN23637 RG78PN1376 RD463 SD3 ED15 SN228 Registration District: Barton upon Irwell Sub District: Stretford EnumerationDistrict: 15 Parish: Stretford Address: 312 Third Street Trafford Park Manchester County: Lancashire But earlier you said in 1911 they were living in Ardwick. I know its not a million miles away but they are very different areas of Manchester.
The 1911 said they've been married 11 years. Did they in fact marry at all?
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Harold
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2 Apr 2010 20:44 |
Thanks Madmeg - yes you are right and I guess we will never know for certain.
Now about the other matter yes I am sorry I did make a mistake. They were with William Worrall in Adwick 1901 but she moved with the younger children to Manchester to be with Jack Harrison in 1911 and there the deception starts. I have to be careful because my mother-in-law and 2 brothers (John Sidney's children) are still alive. But the secret was uncovered only on John Sidney's death in 1982 when his death certificate revealed he was in fact not Sid Harrison but John Sidney Worrall (confirmed when I obtained his birth certificate). Were they married - who knows - they were together when William died in 1912. the children, probably Williams, were brought up as Harrisons.
So little Annie had a turbulent life right from the beginning which is probably why we are having so much trouble with her now
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Madmeg
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2 Apr 2010 21:17 |
I'd already sussed that out Harold.
Everyone is different of course, and the feelings of living people must be respected, but believe me we all have far more illegitimate births amongst our ancestors than we originally imagined - in fact I'm almost coming to the conclusion that there was something wrong with them if they didn't have at least one illegitimate child! My g grandfather had 3 children with his second wife before he married her, apparently still married to his first wife (who has never been found Janey!).
I've 2 jailbirds as well - so join the club!
We can't do anything about it and we don't know why it occurred. There's one branch of my family who were clearly all drunkards for several generations. No wonder the women shacked up with a kinder husband. There's also lots of stories of women having what we now know is post-natal depression and their husbands finding a new "mother" for his kids cos he didn't understand his wife's problem.
None of it is to be ashamed of - I find it fascinating, but others find it upsetting and embarassing.
So, if your wife's family believe that Jack Harrison was a decent bloke, I'd personally put his ancestors in the tree as well, cos he must have had a significant influence on their lives.
Happy hunting.
Margaret
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Harold
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3 Apr 2010 00:49 |
Hi Margaret, I am assuming you are Madmeg - to do this you have to be.
Yes, you are right I should do Jack Harrison. Afterall he was Grandad to Margaret, Sheila's mum. And who knows, he might actually be Sid's dad - though to be honest they say Margaret (my mother-in-law) is spitting image of Winefred who must surely be William's daughter at least.
Also people do, indeed, react differently. This Ancestry threw up much worse on my side.
My father and his parents were in Australia (Parramatta, NSW) during the 20's and 30's. Some months ago I was tracking them and came across the Australian Electoral Roll. It is not as detailed as our census system but does say who is living in a house of voting age. In one house I found my grandparents Harold & Mary Louisa Bower and, of course my dad, Jack, But there was also a Marian Caroline Bower. Once I'd picked myself off the floor I calmed down and remembered that lots of Bowers had gone to Oz and NZ - she would just be a cousin stayng with them. My daughters were not satisfied with this and pounced on it, and they soon found a 1930 marriage certificate of Jack Finch Bower and Marian Caroline Bower in Parramatta. So the search is on and 2 vital questions are to be answered. Firstly, was there any children from this brief relationship and secondly, did Dad legally get a divorce before returning to England (1938) and marrying my mum who as far as we are aware knew nothing about this. So far all our attempts have failed.
I thouht this was great- the sly old bugger, but my sister was upset - not the dad she knew -as you say different people!
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Harold
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3 Apr 2010 00:49 |
Hi Margaret, I am assuming you are Madmeg - to do this you have to be.
Yes, you are right I should do Jack Harrison. Afterall he was Grandad to Margaret, Sheila's mum. And who knows, he might actually be Sid's dad - though to be honest they say Margaret (my mother-in-law) is spitting image of Winefred who must surely be William's daughter at least.
Also people do, indeed, react differently. This Ancestry threw up much worse on my side.
My father and his parents were in Australia (Parramatta, NSW) during the 20's and 30's. Some months ago I was tracking them and came across the Australian Electoral Roll. It is not as detailed as our census system but does say who is living in a house of voting age. In one house I found my grandparents Harold & Mary Louisa Bower and, of course my dad, Jack, But there was also a Marian Caroline Bower. Once I'd picked myself off the floor I calmed down and remembered that lots of Bowers had gone to Oz and NZ - she would just be a cousin stayng with them. My daughters were not satisfied with this and pounced on it, and they soon found a 1930 marriage certificate of Jack Finch Bower and Marian Caroline Bower in Parramatta. So the search is on and 2 vital questions are to be answered. Firstly, was there any children from this brief relationship and secondly, did Dad legally get a divorce before returning to England (1938) and marrying my mum who as far as we are aware knew nothing about this. So far all our attempts have failed.
I thouht this was great- the sly old bugger, but my sister was upset - not the dad she knew -as you say different people!
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JaneyCanuck
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3 Apr 2010 05:17 |
Harold - either they did get a divorce, or they *both* committed bigamy!
3239/1949 marriage CREW HECTOR MALCOLM BOWER MARIAN CAROLINE ROCKDALE
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Harold
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3 Apr 2010 09:11 |
Hi Janey, I wish I knew - the marriage to Crew was 10 years after my father returned to England(1938). Australia was a long way away in those days - maybe she claimed annulment on absence. I have tried to find out but without success. The other,even bigger question, is was there a child from that obviously brief association - they were not toether in the 1933 electorial roll.
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