Sorry Catherine, I can't seem to copy and paste the website link using this iPad.
Just google "Scotlandspeople" and you'll find it. It is a pay to view site and they don't do subscriptions. The actual images of the census records for Scotland can also be viewed there. The ones posted on the thread are from (in my case) Ancestry and they are transcripts so may be inaccurate.
If you live in Scotland it would be far better to spend the day at The Scotlandspeople Centre in Edinburgh or the Mitchell Library in Glasgow. It only costs £15.00 for they day and you can view as many entries as time permits. You would be able to view George Carruthers McFarlane,s birth registration there as you can't online as he was born less than 100 years ago. If you go in person, you will be able to see if there is an RCE (Register of Corrected Entries) reference attached to it. This would show if Jane had gone to court to have paternity proved.
Credits for Scotlandspeople cost £7.00 for 30, one credit to view search results and five to view. / download the register entry.
Hope this helps you.
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Thank you, however I think online is my only option as unfortunately I am from the South so a journey to Scotland is out of the question sadly. I merely wanted to solve a mystery that has plagued the family for decades, maybe one day we'll find out what really happened..
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Given the death that ArgyllGran found for George's wife, this is a possibility for her with her parents. Again either her marriage certificate or death certificate will confirm her parents' names.
1851
Name: Jane Carruthers Age: 9 Estimated birth year: abt 1842 Relationship: Daughter Father's Name: James Carruthers Mother's name: Janet Carruthers Gender: Female Where born: Partick, lansh Parish Number: 644/1 Civil Parish: Glasgow St George County: Lanarkshire Address: 47 Shamrock Street Occupation: Scholar ED: 8 Page: 15 (click to see others on page) Household schedule number: 51 LINE: 4 Roll: CSSCT1851_153 Household Members: Name Age James Carruthers 44, House Servant, b. Lochmaben, Dumfriesshire Janet Carruthers 44, b. Annan, Dumfriesshire Wm Carruthers 13, son, Message Boy, b. Old Monkland, Lanarkshire Jane Carruthers 9 James Carruthers 7, son, Partick, Lanarkshire
1861
Name: Jane Carruthers Age: 19 Estimated birth year: abt 1842 Relationship: Daughter Mother's name: Janet Carruthers Gender: Female Where born: Cannisbus, Dumbartonshire Registration Number: 644/6 Registration district: Blythswood Civil Parish: Glasgow St George County: Lanarkshire Address: 44 Shamrock St ED: 6 Household schedule number: 4 LINE: 18 Roll: CSSCT1861_105 Household Members: Name Age Janet Carruthers 55 William Carruthers 23, Law Clerk Jane Carruthers 19, James Carruthers 17 Apprentice Grocer, b. Milngavie, Dumbartonshire
1871
Name: Jane Carruthers Age: 28 Estimated birth year: abt 1843 Relationship: Daughter Father's Name: James Carruthers Mother's name: Janet Carruthers Gender: Female Where born: Cannistown, Dumbartonshire Registration Number: 644/6 Registration district: Blythswood Civil Parish: Glasgow St George County: Lanarkshire Address: 44 Shamrock St Occupation: Dressmaker ED: 6 Household schedule number: 13 LINE: 18 Roll: CSSCT1871_133 Household Members: Name Age James Carruthers 64 Janet Carruthers 64 Jane Carruthers 28 James Carruthers 26 Grocer
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If there is no father named on the birth certificate, it may well remain a mystery. It may be that it was just a made up story that his father died in the war if his Mum didn't want to marry his father or perhaps his father was free to marry Jane.
So although you still don't know who his father was you now know who his Grandparents, uncles, half uncles , great grandparents, grand aunts and grand uncles were lol.
If it is any consolation, his Mum must have worked hard if she lived in the area where her death was registered as it is one of the posher areas of Glasgow.
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We know she was a very strong woman and her son worked very hard to make sure they left his illegitimacy behind and had them living in comfort which he did very successfully by getting into university.. They were both incredibly amazing people!
I'd like to thank you ALL for all your help on this, it will mean a great deal to my partners mum and such a comfort to her to know all of this. Even to know some of her famil will be overwhelming for her after her years of searching. Thank you everyone!
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hello Catfr, I've read through this long and tangled and interesting thread :-) ... and am just wondering whether there is something that might be done about the original question
does George have any male-line descendants, that is, did he have a son who might be living, or who had a son who is living?
if so, it is possible that YDNA (male-line) testing could point a direction
YDNA is passed from father to son, and so ordinarily follows the surname, except where a child is given a surname other than his father's
it changes very little in that process, and in fact can be passed on for 3 or 4 generations (on average) with no change at all
so a grandson of your George - a great-great-grandson of George's father's father - would have almost the same YDNA as another great-great-grandson of George's father's father, for instance, that is, a pair of 3rd cousins, men descended in male lines from the same great-great-grandfather, would have the same or almost the same YDNA
even if there were someone with, say, the same 5xgreat grandfather in the male line, the YDNA would still be a very close match
using this tool to find relations depends on there being a male-line descendant ... and on someone related having also tested and made their results available for comparison through one of the companies that offer such services
I have used Family Tree DNA and in fact have solved a mystery in the male line of one of my families (well, created new mysteries..!) by finding, though the most amazing luck, one other person who had tested who was a close match for my rellie and whose 'paper' genealogy matches my family's (from the same small area of Cornwall) ... so I now know what the 'real' surname for the family is, just not when and how and why it changed (a child given the mother's surname, a man who intentionally changed his surname, etc etc)
I recommend trying this route if you do have a male-line descendant available to test ... if your fiancé's parent who was George's child is his mother, that would break the chain, but if she has a brother, he could be tested
a YDNA67 test at FTDNA would be what I would recommend https://www.familytreedna.com/y-dna-compare.aspx https://www.familytreedna.com/learn/dna-basics/ydna/
I should add that there is another kind of DNA testing called 'autosomal' that you could try if there are no male-line descendants, I unfortunately do not know enough about this to be helpful - at FTNA it is called 'family finder' - it can identify cousins and then 'traditional' genealogy (or testing of other known cousins) can be used to determine what side the cousins are on
very probably you would not have the luck I had, but over time as more people join these projects, you never know
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Just in the passing Catherine, last night I read the thread again and went back to looking for McVeans in the Glasgow area (given the bracelet that Jane wore). Would you believe that by pure co-incidence there were McVeans living at the same address as the Carruthers family that I posted on page 1. Small world as neither Carruthers nor McVean are common Glasgow surnames.
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if you think that there may be a McVean connection here ... I wonder whether Canada might be a source ? (could possibly have visited the Glasgow McVeans during WWI as men from overseas did often go to see family when posted in Britain)
in searching a bit on the internet one sees people in Canada with an interest in their Scottish McVean roots e.g. in family trees at Ancestry and genforum http://genforum.genealogy.com/mcvean/ about McVeans who were in Canada (and some who went to the USA) before 1900 for instance http://genforum.genealogy.com/mcvean/messages/1.html (on a search of that forum for 'glasgow')
there are 8 McVeans in the Service Files of the First World War, 1914-1918 - Canadian Expeditionary Force http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/military-heritage/first-world-war/first-world-war-1914-1918-cef/Pages/search.aspx
and of course the USA is also a possible source ... there are nearly 60 WWI draft registration cards for men named McVean shown at familysearch
the name Ia(i)n doesn't seem to appear in military records or censuses in either country though
oh I wonder, this could be interesting
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/JV2P-JJX
Name: Ian Macvean Occupation: Gent Death Date: 14 Jan 1982 Event Place: Melbourne, Victoria, Australia Residence City: Rye Event Date: 02 Jul 1982
... but other info on line says he was born 1902 which is a bit late http://www.geni.com/people/Ian-Macvean/1440759
(has the Australian Trove site also destroyed its search function? I can't find a way to search for specific kinds of records e.g. military, now)
anyway what I was going to say was that if you wanted to pursue the McVean possibility specifically, you might be able to find a male McVean who is interested in genealogy (or a female McVean descendant with a male rellie she can get to participate, which is as often the case) to do YDNA testing - or failing a male-line descendant, any McVean descendant to do autosomal (cousinship) DNA testing - for direct comparison via a site like ftdna.
there actually is a Prof Gil McVean at Oxford who studies the Y chromosome :-) http://www.stats.ox.ac.uk/~mcvean/ http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14593400 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed?term=McVean%20G[Author]&cauthor=true&cauthor_uid=14593400 who knows, he might be interested!
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going back to George's birth ...did he have a middle name ? we traced our gggranfather because his mother had given the birth father's surname as middle name to her daughter . first name s could also be given to a child as a ref to the father . Also in my scottish family several of the children had various grandparents surname as well as christian names before their own surnames.
In this case The scottish naming would have 1st son named after paternal grandfather .....as he was illegitimate naming him George after her own father would seem logical was Carruthers one of his middle name 's too ?
i'm following this story with interest ( I have a gggrandma Agnes Mcfarlane born 1832 in lanarkshire )
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going back to George's birth ...did he have a middle name ? we traced our gggranfather because his mother had given the birth father's surname as middle name to her daughter . first name s could also be given to a child as a ref to the father . Also in my scottish family several of the children had various grandparents surname as well as christian names before their own surnames.
In this case The scottish naming would have 1st son named after paternal grandfather .....as he was illegitimate naming him George after her own father would seem logical was Carruthers one of his middle name 's too ?
i'm following this story with interest ( I have a gggrandma Agnes Mcfarlane born 1832 in lanarkshire )
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