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Small mystery in 1901
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Madmeg | Report | 24 Mar 2012 00:24 |
But the 1901 census for 119 Westbourne Terrace does not have her. I cannot believe she has been missed off accidentally. As to witnesses at the wedding, there must be some reason why it was the Burrells, and not the direct family. Did it not say in the London Gazette that it was a "quiet marriage". How odd for a wealthy family to have a quiet marriage. Maybe it was just how it happened to be. Some of the family out of the country, not many relatives around to share the ceremony. Maybe she gave the address as a matter of convenience for the marriage - if it had been in another borough it would have incurred more aggro. |
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HeyJudeB4Beatles | Report | 24 Mar 2012 07:13 |
My guess is that she left Chorlton after her father's death and lived at Westbourne Terrace with Charles and Edith. Which would then support the fact that neither of them can be found in 1901 census - maybe BOTH out of the country. One assumes that she must have met Francis Wilford Boteler in London - this is his divorce from Elizabeth Augusta Boteler in |
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Ivy | Report | 24 Mar 2012 07:17 |
Hi, have just checked the position regarding church weddings via a BBC article on divorce and Christianity. Divorce and remarriage has been permitted in England, it says, since Henry VIII regularised the position to marry Anne Boleyn; but the Church of England would not marry divorcees even by the twentieth century; Charles and Camilla could not marry in church since her husband was still alive; instead they had a civil ceremony and the marriage was then blessed in church. So Francis and Ethel's marriage would not be in a Church of England parish church by either banns or licence (unless, perhaps, Francis's previous wife had died). I wonder if they used the Register Office licence procedure? |
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Ivy | Report | 24 Mar 2012 07:21 |
-just (edit: one male) repondent; here he is in 1901, with Francis' ex-wife: |
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Flip | Report | 24 Mar 2012 07:35 |
Wonder what happened to the son born in Madras 12/5/1878 - Wilford Henry Boteler - can't see anything on him after the christening 8/6/1878. |
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Ivy | Report | 24 Mar 2012 07:37 |
- here he is in school in 1891: |
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Flip | Report | 24 Mar 2012 07:46 |
Looks like we went into Royal Irish Fusiliers (4th Battalion Princess Victoria reg) - 2nd Leutenant according to Times 12/2/1896 |
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HeyJudeB4Beatles | Report | 24 Mar 2012 08:05 |
Ivy - of course. Didn't give the fact that he was a divorcee a thought. |
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Flip | Report | 24 Mar 2012 08:12 |
They certainly got about a bit - marriage for Maurice Block/Elizabeth Lang in Boston, 1888: |
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Ivy | Report | 24 Mar 2012 08:18 |
Jude, yes, absolutely, I could not understand why the marriage was not on the London Met archives of parish records - it only struck me when I was thinking about licences. |
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Ivy | Report | 24 Mar 2012 08:48 |
Following Flip's find, it looks as if Elizabeth Augusta Lang might have been born in India: |
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Flip | Report | 24 Mar 2012 09:29 |
Could someone check the 1901 census to see who is living with Ann Ord, just before her marriage to Willoughby? She's in the same area as the sisters were born, but not sure if this is the right Ann Ord. |
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Mary | Report | 24 Mar 2012 09:39 |
Think this is Anne Selby Burnell Ord born Scotland 1863 died 1910. |
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Flip | Report | 24 Mar 2012 09:46 |
I thought the one getting married to Willoughby was born 1851 in Glendale? |
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Mary | Report | 24 Mar 2012 11:00 |
Anne/Ann Selby B Ord married Willoughby 4.6.1901 St George 1a 947. |
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Ivy | Report | 24 Mar 2012 11:29 |
How weird; the one born in Crailing in Roxburgh is on the Scotland 1871, 1881 and 1891 census as Ann(ie) S B Ord; born in the mid 1860s to John Ord and Jane Read/Reed Dodd according to Family search, with several other siblings being given the middle name Bunell/Burrell etc. |
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Ivy | Report | 24 Mar 2012 11:36 |
Hi Flip |
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Flip | Report | 24 Mar 2012 11:48 |
Oh well, guess thats another dead end, on trying to find the sisters in 1901! |
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Ivy | Report | 24 Mar 2012 11:58 |
Another loose end to tie down? Anne Selby Burrell Wallace (daughter of an Edinburgh banker), born 1851, married William Logan before they went out to India; their daughter was Mary Ord Logan. |
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Ivy | Report | 24 Mar 2012 12:08 |
Hmm, I gave up on trying to find them in England at the 1901 census date after Vera's inspired suggestion that they might be buying their wedding frocks in Paris! |