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British Army in Mauritius 1800's
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Christine | Report | 2 Nov 2015 01:24 |
Can anyone tell me what involvement, if any, the British Army had in Mauritius from when Britain took over Mauritius in 1810 until at least 1825? My second question is, would it have been totally unheard of for a soldier in the British Army in those days to have married a local woman in Mauritius in 1825, and taken her back to England? I have found a record of a British Army marriage in the GRO Register - it names the woman but not who she married. I'm guessing she wasn't in the British Army, so she must have been a local. Thanks for any information anyone might be able to give me. |
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Eringobragh1916 | Report | 2 Nov 2015 09:19 |
Mauritius became an important base on the trade routes from Europe to the East before the opening of the Suez Canal and was involved in the long power struggle between the French and the British. The French won the Battle of Grand Port, their only naval victory over the British during these wars, but they could not prevent the British from landing at Cap Malheureux three months later. They formally surrendered on the fifth day of the invasion, 3 December 1810, on terms allowing settlers to keep their land and property, the use of the French language, and the law of France in criminal and civil matters. |
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Potty | Report | 2 Nov 2015 12:02 |
Not sure about Mauritius but it wasn't unusual for soldiers' families to accompany them abroad. She could have been the daughter of a soldier or even the widow of one. |
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Potty | Report | 2 Nov 2015 12:03 |
Christine, if you post some details, maybe somebody could help, eg her name and the date of the marriage and which site you found the record. |
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mgnv | Report | 2 Nov 2015 16:31 |
Potty -Re "That would mean that a marriage in 1825 would be Regimental record and not one held by the GRO" |
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Christine | Report | 2 Nov 2015 18:50 |
Thank you everyone for taking the time to try and answer my questions. Here's a bit more background. |
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Christine | Report | 2 Nov 2015 19:31 |
PS: After visiting the link to the GRO records, I see that they only hold records from 1837, and I need 1825. I have emailed the GRO Certificates people and asked if there's any way I can access information from 1825, so fingers crossed. But I'm still interested in opinions on whether this kind of marriage is thought to have been likely. |
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MarieCeleste | Report | 2 Nov 2015 20:07 |
I'd say it was certainly possible. |
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Christine | Report | 2 Nov 2015 23:31 |
Thanks for that link Marie Celeste - as I said, my thought was that they initially married in Mauritius, possibly because he couldn't take her back to England unless they were married, and then had another ceremony in London, maybe for Andrew's family's benefit? I noticed that the 2 witnesses to the London marriage were both Joiners. Even though the Certificate says Eliza was a Spinster from that Parish, none of her family were witnesses. |
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mgnv | Report | 3 Nov 2015 03:07 |
MC - I have seen several army marrs where the couple married twice. |
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Christine | Report | 3 Nov 2015 04:39 |
Thank you mgnv - I will pursue that Chaplains Return - I just need to sit down and read the lengthy reply I got, redirecting me to other places. |
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MarieCeleste | Report | 3 Nov 2015 10:43 |
Sorry, I'm not convinced! |
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Potty | Report | 3 Nov 2015 12:53 |
Looking at the children's baptisms, Andrew is shown as a Mariner from 1827 to until 1840 in Deptford; in 1845 his daughter Elizabeth Sarah was baptised in Tower Hamlets and he is a labourer. |
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Christine | Report | 3 Nov 2015 20:18 |
This is a real mystery! But hopefully it will be resolved within 2 weeks when I receive the GRO Overseas Marriage Certificate which I have just sent off for. I hadn't seen the Mariner info - my Great-Grandmother (Andrew and Eliza's daughter Maria) was born in 1847 and by then he was a Labourer - I didn't look back further than that. I had been looking for a record of Andrew being in the Army and couldn't find anything. But the fact that he says he was a Mariner puts another piece of the puzzle in place. There is the possibility that Mariners - or Marines - were tied in with the Army somehow in those days. The GRO Chaplain's Marriage Return says it was an Army Marriage. It's all very exciting for me - and I can't thank you all enough for your input into getting to the bottom of this. I will let you know what the Certificate says - I don't know why they can't email it, but the NZ Post will be delighted to have a letter to deliver!! |
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Kucinta | Report | 4 Nov 2015 13:16 |
Nothing for that period for Andrew Joiner in |
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Kucinta | Report | 4 Nov 2015 13:29 |
When/where was your Andrew Joiner born? |
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Kucinta | Report | 4 Nov 2015 14:36 |
If Eliza Hines was born in Essex, you might need to use the following site to search for a baptismal record for her, as a lot of the Essex records aren't availible on free sites. |
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Christine | Report | 4 Nov 2015 19:15 |
Thank you Kucinta! That is definitely my Great-Great-Grandfather Andrew Joiner, and the youngest daughter Maria in that 1851 Census record is my Great-Grandmother whose unusual appearance has set me off on this quest. |
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Potty | Report | 5 Nov 2015 11:16 |
I wonder if this man is connected - occupation: Master Mariner (there is something else written against this on the image, but I can't make it out). In 1861 he is a civil pensioner: |
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Kucinta | Report | 5 Nov 2015 14:08 |
Given that Andrew and Eliza seem to have had two sons named Daniel, it seems like a good possibility. Maybe the c1794 Daniel was a brother to Andrew? |
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