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Trying again !! James Greenwood 1832 - 1883

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 22 Jan 2008 23:07

So Simon -- got any Greenwood certificates yet??

I'm still dying to hear. ;)

Simon

Simon Report 11 Jan 2008 21:53

I didn't see it, but Moody Blue has been looking for Sipiro variants today.

My cousin is a woman not called Michael

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 11 Jan 2008 21:14

Oh lord, the Sipiros was you??

(So many people have the same usernames here I don't even try to sort out who's who.)

... Well now I can't find the Sipiro thread I posted in some time ago. Deleted? Why do people do that???????

Seriously, if that thread has been deleted, I'm peeved beyond words. I spent a lot of time on it, and really nobody is entitled to delete the work that other people did.

If it wasn't you, did you see it? I don't think it sounded like you; must have been the cousin.

Simon

Simon Report 11 Jan 2008 20:49

Kath

Sorry for not replying to this sooner. I missed your reply.

I have been looking for James on the 1851 and still can't find him.

It is plausable that James was in the military. Somewhere in the military they would have had boilers. They were new fangled though in the 1840's. Richard Trevithick didn't invent a commercial boiler until about 1812. I'm not sure when the navy had them.

I have not yet received the Birth and marriage certs.

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 1 Jan 2008 00:05

One thing I'm wondering -- and I've been hunting around for: do you suppose James was in the military and that's why he isn't findable in 1851? It could also be where he learned a trade.

The name is so unfortunately common ... I did find this at www.fibis.org:


Military records > Medal rolls : The Indian Mutiny Medal Roll (British Forces) 1857-1859.

Given Names(s) James
Surname Greenwood
Rank Private
Regiment or Ship 34th Foot (Cumberland)


Doesn't look like the sort of work to lead to boiler making, but you get my idea. Especially if he'd been in the navy, maybe, this would connect up.

In 1851, the navy / vessels were not included in the census. That would be a very plausible explanation both for his absence and for his acquisition of a trade involving boilers, I might surmise.

Simon

Simon Report 31 Dec 2007 23:19

Kathryn

You absolutely astound me.

How you put Jame's story together is like you knew something or just vefy clever like a clairvoyent.

I don't think this is a trick though just a very good lateral mind.

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 31 Dec 2007 23:07

Ah yes, how can we be sure?! If I had the answer to that ...

I'm always rather amused by people who have "PROOF" of such-and-such a relationship. That's no fun.

Have you read my tale?

http://genesreunited.co.uk/boards.asp?wci=thread&tk=976217

When I started this stuff 3 years ago, I knew the names of 7 of my 8 gr-grparents, and a few locations to go with.

My mother was born Monck, her father having immigrated to Canada as a young child with his parents in 1909. All we knew about his father was that ... he said ... he'd been a ship's cook like his father Francis before him ... and that either he or his father (I can never remember) was, oh yes, the son of a black sheep younger brother of Viscount Monck, the governor general of Canada around 1867. Or his father.

Well, through the magic of fuzzy search functions, I found nothing of any Ernest or Francis Monck, but I found an Ernest Hill with father Francis, an apparently prosperous mining agent, who matched the little I knew of my Ernest - year of birth and possible place of birth - in all particulars. And had a sister with the exact same unusual name as one of Ernest's children. And on and on with the piling up of "coincidences".

Will I ever have PROOF that my Ernest Augustus Monck was really that Ernest Augustus Hill? Well, my uncle's DNA might prove that our Ernest wasn't a Monck (or was ...), but Hill, there are so many of those buggers, failing to find a match might not mean anything.

Meanwhile, just yesterday I was musing over an early batch of Canadian Moncks, an Irish Capt Charles Stanley Monck (a classic Viscount-clan name) said, in early 19th century documents, to be a cousin of the Viscount. Wondering about a son of his. Looked back at Ancestry, and found a younger brother of the Viscount/Gov Gen whom I'd looked at and discarded two years ago, because he died at the Battle of Alma in September 1854. I'd long thought that the newly discovered sister, Ada Lennox Monck born Ada Lennox Monck Hill, was born c1856. Turned out she lied to her husband and the census-takers. She was born in Q4 1854. So I start to think about shelling out for DNA tests again ...

Proof? Who needs it? It's too much fun looking for it. ;)

Yes, it is odd that your James would have come from such humble, abandoned child-labourer origins and become a skilled worker like that. Note that his brother William, if such he was, employed 10 people at one time.

They may have been like my father's line -- in 1792 the family gets expelled from Dorset as burdens on the public purse, in 1869 their son dies in the workhouse, in 1891 his son is listed in the Canterbury trade directory as a cabinetmaker. And then *his* grandson (my grfather) marries the gr-grdaughter of the sister of the grfather of Viscount Sankey, Lord Chancellor of England 1929 and the Law Lord who wrote one of the most important decisions in Canadian constitutional history. Yes indeed, my grx5 grparents' gr-grson. My second cousin four times removed. I just learned last spring.

While the sister of my Monck gr-grfather (my mother's side) was marrying a rich guy and living on 50 acres with 8 household servants, my gr-grfather was hauling crates in a biscuit factory. Fat lot of good being descended from that Viscount line, if we were, did us.

I did find a living fellow Hill descendant, just this month. She had always been told that her ancestor, my Ernest's elder sister, was a Miss Montmorency from France. I've found her as a Miss Hill mysteriously and unprovedly born in Jersey to the Cornwall/Devon Bond/Hill couple ...

But as far as "educated", I really think you should be thinking on-the-job training. They didn't have vocational schools back then. My Monck grandfather in Canada became a highly skilled printing press operator, after starting his working life at 13 "in the jam factory" and certainly having no formal education beyond that -- although these days it takes 3 years of community college to qualify for the work he did. Well, it did 30 years ago. Now it takes a computer and photoshop.

If you're curious -- I did my undergrad in French and philosophy. Went to law school. Practised law for about 13 years. Went back to something I'd done for a year right out of law school for the next 15 years, to date, that involves law and language and sometimes training. Did one of those career tests about 10 years ago, and it said I should be a lawyer or a language teacher ... and if those didn't suit, I should try genealogist!

Simon

Simon Report 31 Dec 2007 22:03

I do hope James is the son of Betty Whitehead and Richard Greenwood with sister Hannah and brother William is my decendent, I will be very pleased.
As well as the Broadbent's and Ashworths connections.
All good Lancashire surnames.

If i find through birth certificates that Hannahs and Williams father was Richard Greenwood and I take it as read that the James living with Susannah Greenwood was Betty's son and therefore Richard's son. How can I be sure that the James Greenwood living in Bilston in the 1850's,60's,70's and 80's is the same James.
Other than the 1861 Census states Oldham as birthplace there is nothing else that links them.
I / we can't find another Richard with son James anywhere else though.
But how can I be sure.
Find other living decendents maybe. Can't find anybody else with a Betty with kids William and Hannah never mind the missing James who never lived with his parents and ended up working as a skilled boilerman 130 miles from where he was born.
How and where was he educated.

Katty if this is all true you should turn to either police work or clairvoyancy

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 31 Dec 2007 18:27

Oh, I don't dispute putting her in your tree! I've done the same myself, noting that it's on spec, for anyone I give access to. I only had potential grx4 grparents Joseph and Mary there for a few days before I had to relinquish them to someone else, after contacting the only other person here who had them in her tree. ;) And their real descendants don't even spell their surname right ... But shortly after that, my own grx4 grparents showed up on a search at familyhistoryonline, getting deported from Dorset back to Wiltshire under the Poor Law.

If only I could figure out who their son married, and why his son was born in Bristol (or so he said in censuses) and ended up a propsperous tradesperson in Canterbury while the father spent two decades in the workhouse in Mere ...


Simon

Simon Report 31 Dec 2007 08:39

Katty B

I only put Betty's name in to see if it threw up any connections, In the notes section I explain this is only a potentail at this stage. I have a few like that in my tree. Or a name and other potential marriages.
My tree is evolving all the time. Putting names in helps

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 31 Dec 2007 01:22

You sly one you. You've already put Betty Whitehead in your tree -- but note that her DOB varies -- 1807/1809 in 1851/1861 -- probably more accurate than the 1811 in 1841.

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 31 Dec 2007 00:55

To PM on Ancestry -- just find that record by searching for the name and details -- actually, the only thing you have to search for is:

grenwood greenwood

and this will bring up the one person who has both surnames, your James (and his household).

When you click on the individual record, the corrected name will be clickable right under the wrong name.

Click there, and in the correction details you see will the name -- oh aargh! There should be a "contact this person" link, to send a private message. There isn't. that is most likely because that person has not "activated" her account. I know I hadn't, for months of adding corrections to records, because I had no clue it had to be done.

I tried clicking on her name and the "contact this person" link -- and got:

"We're sorry. The user you would like to contact (JuneTaylor23) has elected not to be contacted by anyone regarding information posted on this site."

Well, there's the mark of a jerk, to my mind. I have one of my own: a jogee36 who has made dozens of corrections to my Littler family, never saying a single word beyond "known family". The link for that person's profile doesn't even offer a contact link -- I think that what happened was that s/he had a trial subscription and spent two weeks scurrying around doing all this, and then wandered off. My guess is: a Mormon on a mission.

In a couple of cases, s/he made corrections to names in households where I had already made changes -- without so much as a nod to me by PM while passing through. Extremely rude, if you ask me.

What I did, once I found that individual making corrections not only to Littlers of Leicestershire (my mother's mother's father's family), but also to Coopers of Nottinghamshire (my mother's mother's mother's name, but I don't know enough about the family to say whether they're connected), was make a slight variation to one of the names and post this as the "explanation":


"jogee36 would you PLEASE CONTACT ME!!! You have entered corrections to numerous Leicestershire LITTLERs and Nottinghamshire COOPERs saying they are "known family". The Littlers in question are my own ancestors and their descendants: one of those Littlers (John, Hose, 1873, son of Mary Corner and William) married a Calverton Cooper (Alice, 1864, daughter of Mary Ann Fallowell and Reuben) and became my gr-grparents (see in 1901 in Mansfield). What is our connection??? and will you not share the information you have? If you "activate" your account, you can contact and be contacted. Please do."


The only conclusion I have been able to draw is that if this person is related to both of my mother's mother's parents, then s/he must be ... me.

So you could try that. In 1871, "correct" James Greenwood's name to "Jas Greenwood", and call it a "variation". And post a request that junetaylor23 get in touch with you through the system -- or include a non-identifying email address in your notes. (Get one at gmail if you don't have one.)

It's possible that she's a "professional" genealogist. I contacted someone about a correction once, and she turned out to be unrelated, and just to have noticed the error in passing. I have also been contacted by a genealogist working for someone who turned out to share a set of ancestors with me (who then never bothered to get in touch). Or she could be someone else who just saw the error while looking for/at another person -- I make random corrections all the time, but now I add "I'm not related" if that's the case, so I don't get people's hopes up.

I also had someone contact me once to inquire about one of my hugely fascinating mystery people -- the sister we never knew my gr-grfather had, who was in the cast at the Adelphi Theatre in 1871 and then married a rich guy, had 3 kids, and disappeared. I was ecstatic at the contact; I wrote back immediately. And the next day. And a week later. And two months later. And I have never had a reply.

Anyhow, so much for that lead, eh? But off you go to order certificates. I'll be waiting!

Simon

Simon Report 30 Dec 2007 22:26

Katty B

You are on fire today.

Your hypothesis could be true.
I will order the Birth Cert and marriage cert

Yes I do have access ancestry again now. Thats where I picked up the James in Duckinfield Cheshire.
Remember I do not know for sure where James 1831/2 was born as on the 1861/71/81 census's there are 3 different birthplaces. Probably Lancashire but hey Duckinfield is less than 20 miles from Oldham.

I will follow your leads though and check other GR members sites.

How do PM someone on Ancestry. It would be useful to ask why they corrected James Surname. Do they have an interest in the family?

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 30 Dec 2007 22:00

Oh, and get those Hannah Greenwood birth certs -- I don't see any option but to get both of them.

If the parents are Richard Greenwood and Betty Whitehead -- well, you'll continue to owe me big time. ;)

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 30 Dec 2007 21:55

This looks like Betty Greenwood in 1861:


Name: Betty Greenwood - Washerwoman
Age: 54
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1807
Relation: Head
Where born: Crompton, Lancashire, England

Civil Parish: Crompton
Ecclesiastical parish: Goodshaw
County/Island: Lancashire
Country: England

Registration district: Oldham
Sub-registration district: Crompton


with son William two doors down:


Name: William Greenwood - Fustian Cutter (employing 10)
Age: 25
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1836
Relation: Head
Spouse's Name: Hannah
Where born: Oldham, Lancashire, England

Civil Parish: Crompton
Ecclesiastical parish: Goodshaw
County/Island: Lancashire
Country: England

Registration district: Oldham
Sub-registration district: Crompton
ED, institution, or vessel: 8
Household schedule number: 17

Hannah Greenwood 25
William Greenwood 25


So what we're after here is William's marriage.


I'd bet on this one:


Marriages Dec 1860
Greenwood William Oldham 8d 1043
Whatmough Hannah Oldham 8d 1043


-- on a search at FreeBMD for marriages, William Greenwood to Hannah, 1851-1861, Lancashire; this is the only one in Oldham, and obviously, given his age, it would be later in the decade rather than earlier.


So there you go. Get that certificate and see who William's father was.

If it was Richard, you owe me big time.

If it wasn't ... well, I grovel in shame. ;)

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 30 Dec 2007 21:41

In 1851, we have William living with mother Betty:


Name: Betty Greenwood
Age: 42
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1809
Relation: Head
Where born: Crompton, Lancashire, England

Civil Parish: Crompton
Ecclesiastical parish: Shaw
County/Island: Lancashire
Country: England

Registration district: Oldham
Sub-registration district: Royton
ED, institution, or vessel: 1h
Household schedule number: 24

Betty Greenwood 42 - Washerwoman
William Greenwood 15 - Cotton Fustian Cutter


And we seem to have Betty's daughter Hannah living with an aunt and uncle:


Name: Hannah Greenwood
Age: 12
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1839
Relation: Niece
Where born: Pendleton, Lancashire, England

Civil Parish: Read
County/Island: Lancashire
Country: England

Registration district: Burnley
Sub-registration district: Padiham
ED, institution, or vessel: 4
Household schedule number: 12

Lawrence Ashworth 45
Mary Ashworth 44
Hannah Greenwood 12


And the IGI has this undocumented submission of a marriage:


LAWRENCE ASHWORTH
Spouse: MARY GREENWOOD
Marriage: 29 JAN 1827 Whalley, Lancashire, England
Batch Number: 7116027


This could be a different Hannah; a little more tracery is needed.


Looks like Hannah's birth could be one of these:


Births Jun 1838
GREENWOOD Hannah Ashton & c 20 136
Births Dec 1838
GREENWOOD Hannah Ashton 20 81


And I would think that the Mary Whitehead in the household of Betty Greenwood in 1841 is the Mary Whitehead in the household of Susannah Whitehead in 1851.

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 30 Dec 2007 21:25

And lookie here.

I was just idly looking for women in the vicinity named Greenwood and of an age to be that young James's mother, and found this one:


Name: Betty Greenwood
Age: 30
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1811
Where born: Lancashire, England

Civil Parish: Prestwich Cum Oldham
Hundred: Salford
County/Island: Lancashire
Country: England

Registration district: Ashton and Oldham
Sub-registration district: Crompton

Betty Greenwood 30
Hannah Greenwood 2
William Greenwood 5


The geographic details match up with that Richard Greenwood in Prestwich cum Oldham in 1841. So I thought I'd take a look at the pages they are on, and see how close neighbours they were.

And what did I find? Ancestry has mistakenly hived off part of that Betty Greenwood's household (misinterpreting hesitation marks at the beginning of the "Hannah" as a household separator).

The rest of the household is, in this order:


Mary Whitehead 35
James Whitehead 40
John Whitehead 40


-- all cotton weavers. Betty Greenwood is washerwoman.


YES YES YES YES YES. The Greenwood - Whitehead connection.

I say:

This Betty Greenwood is the abandoned wife of Richard Greenwood, sharing quarters with her Whitehead siblings, children of Suzannah Whitehead with whom Betty Greenwood's son James is living.

JaneyCanuck

JaneyCanuck Report 30 Dec 2007 21:18

Well now that first one, in Stockport, is interesting -- the mother is a widow and the eldest son in the household is Richard, suggesting a father Richard. (There could have been older children, possibly including an older son named for the father's father or such.)

The IGI has a couple of Richard Greenwood + Hannah marriages before 1821, but in Yorkshire; none in Lancashire or Cheshire. Why are you looking in Cheshire now?

Have you ever figured out who the person is who corrected James's name in 1871, or contacted her? (If you want me to send that person your email address requesting contact, PM it to me. Or are you back at Ancestry now yourself?) --

1871 England Census
Name: James Grenwood
[James Greenwood]
-- correction made by Ancestry user JuneTaylor23
Age: 39
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1832
Relation: Head
Spouse's Name: Henrietta
Gender: Male
Where born: Bilston, Staffordshire, England



The eldest child in the 1841 household in Bolton Le Moors is David, and the mother is Sarah. I'd say this is quite likely the parents' marriage:


DAVID GREENWOOD
Spouse: SARAH STATON
Marriage: 01 JAN 1819 Saint Peter, Bolton Le Moors, Lancashire, England
Batch: M007153



Me, I'm sticking with my original theory.


The mother Susannah and son Ralph in the 1841 Whitehead household where my pick for young James was living are here in 1851:


Name: Susannah Whitehead
Age: 75
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1776
Relation: Head
Where born: Ripponden, Yorkshire, England

Name: Ralph Whitehead
Age: 46
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1805
Relation: Son
Mother's Name: Susannah
Where born: Oldham, Lancashire, England

Name: Joseph Whitehead
Age: 46
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1805
Relation: Son
Mother's Name: Susannah
Where born: Oldham, Lancashire, England

Name: Mary Whitehead
Age: 49
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1802
Relation: Daughter
Mother's Name: Susannah
Where born: Oldham, Lancashire, England

Name: Hannah Thomas Broadbent
(it looks like Thomas is stricken and Hannah written above)
Age: 37
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1814
Relation: Daughter - married
Mother's Name: Susannah
Where born: Oldham, Lancashire, England

Civil Parish: Oldham
Ecclesiastical parish: St James
Town: St James
County/Island: Lancashire
Country: England

Registration district: Oldham
Sub-registration district: Oldham
ED, institution, or vessel: 1t
Household schedule number: 99

Hannah Thomas Broadbent 37 - daughter of Susannah
Sarah Ann Broadbent 4 - daughter of Hannah
Joseph Whitehead 46
Mary Whitehead 49
Ralph Whitehead 46
Susannah Whitehead 75


But I'm danged if I can find a single event relating to a single one of them in the IGI, except for this possible marriage:

HANNAH WHITEHEAD
Spouse: JOHN BROADBENT
Marriage: 10 FEB 1836 Saint Peter, Leeds, Yorkshire, England
Batch No.: M071935


Nothing to make a Greenwood-Whitehead connection.

But I would bet a few loonies that the young James Greenwood in the household was indeed the grandchild of Susannah Whitehead, one way or another. That Richard Greenwood who had partnered up with Betty Ornroyd in the later 1830s could very well have been already married to, or having children with, someone else, e.g. that James's and/or your James's mother.

Or James could have been born to a Greenwood mother, and simply invented Richard Greenwood when he married -- or used his grandfather's name, a very not-uncommon practice.


cont'd

Simon

Simon Report 30 Dec 2007 19:26

1841 England Census
about James Greenwood
Name: James Greenwood
Age: 10
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1831
Gender: Male
Where born: Lancashire, England

Civil Parish: Bolton Le Moors
Hundred: Salford
County/Island: Lancashire
Country: England

Street address:

Occupation: View Image

Registration district: Bolton
Sub-registration district: Great Bolton West
Neighbors: View others on page
Household Members: Name Age
Benjamin Greenwood 15
David Greenwood 20
James Greenwood 10
Mary Greenwood 15
Sarah Greenwood 40


Simon

Simon Report 30 Dec 2007 19:24

Could be this be my James
No Richard though

Name: James Greenwood
Age: 10
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1831
Gender: Male

Civil Parish: Stockport
Hundred: Macclesfield
County/Island: Cheshire
Country: England

Street address:

Occupation: View Image

Registration district: Ashton under Lyne
Sub-registration district: Dukinfield
Neighbors: View others on page
Household Members: Name Age
Hanieal Greenwood 50
Hannah Greenwood 15
James Greenwood 10
John Greenwood 15
Mally Greenwood 20
Richard Greenwood 20
Sarah Greenwood 10