Showing posts with label Fairs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fairs. Show all posts

Friday, December 12, 2014

North British Accents


One of my first jobs was with British Sugar in Norfolk. I remember a time when I travelled to Newcastle with a colleague who had a strong Norfolk accent. Near our destination, somewhere between the Tees and the Tyne, he stopped to ask directions, and neither he nor the road-workers could understand each other's accents! I was, however, able to translate for us. And I wonder sometimes how my ancestors would have sounded, our accents separated by both time and distance, and whether I could understand their speech.

The previous post established a strong (no pun intended!) likelihood that the father of Joseph Strong ("Master Steem Boat", and my 3x great grandfather) is John Strong (formerly Keelman, and later Steam Boat Owner). John Strong would be husband of, first, Elizabeth Fairs, the mother of Joseph, and three brothers; and, second, Hannah Elliot, mother of nine children.
 
The hypothesized life of John Strong runs as follows:
       born about 1772 in Ryton, Durham (according to his marriage to Elizabeth Fairs)
              or Newburn, Northumberland (according to his 1851 England Census);
       marries 1. Elizabeth Fairs in Newburn, Northumberland, near Scotswood 1796;
              they have four children in Newburn;
       widowed between 1807 and 1813
       marries 2. Hannah Elliot and moves to Heworth (near Felling Shore), Durham before 1814
              they have eight children in Heworth, Durham;
       moves to Middlesbrough, Yorkshire, between 1830 and 1838;
              they have one more child, born in Middlesbrough;
       moves once more after 1851 to Birkenhead, Cheshire;
       dies 10 March 1858 in Birkenhead.

The data so far are consistent with this sequence of events. But just to complicate things, parents John and Ann Strong baptize a daughter, Ann, at Newburn on 18 Dec 1796, so likely there is more than one John Strong around in Newburn in the 1790s.

In effect, there are two sets of data, one for a family of John Strong and Elizabeth Fairs, and another for a family of John Strong and Hannah Elliot. This post details the evidence of their sharing the same John Strong.
 
First, John Strong, stepson of Hannah Elliot (1861 England Census), to John Strong, son of Elizabeth Fairs (1801 baptism) share the following:
       (1.) name (John Strong);
       (2.) year of birth (1801, consistent with infant baptism);
       (3.) place of birth (Scotswood, Northumberland).

Connecting this with my ancestry, obviously Joseph Strong of the 1807 baptism is a brother of John Strong of the 1801 baptism. This Joseph Strong and the census returns for my 3x great grandfather share:
       (1.) name (Joseph Strong);
       (2.) consistent year of birth (about 1807, consistent with infant baptism);
       (3.) place of birth on censuses is Heworth, Durham (1851) and Felling Shore (1871),
              which, while not identical to the baptism - given as Scotswood - is consistent with
              a supposed upbringing in Heworth.

In addition the Joseph of the census returns is connected with this supposed family of John and
Hannah (Elliot) Strong in the following ways:
       (1.) his Steam Tug work;
       (2.) moves out of Middlesbrough around the same time.

Second, around this time I was looking for a death record for John's first wife Elizabeth Fairs, which has presumably occured between 1807 (when Joseph was born to Elizabeth) and 1814 (when Elizabeth was born to Hannah). I followed up on a lead on a private tree on ancestry, and was not disappointed. The tree's owner, Judith from Wirral, Merseyside kindly sent me this photograph of a headstone at St Mary's Heworth, Durham. This is the resting place of Elizabeth Fairs, wife of John Strong, and mother of William (1798), John (1801), Anthony (1803), and Joseph (1807) of the baptisms at Newburn, Northumberland, previously cited.


The elements have damaged the left side of the inscription in particular, and here is
a transcript of what we can read, or infer.

       SACRED
       to the Memory of ELIZABETH, wife of JOHN STRONG
       […Daug]hter of WILLIAM FAIRS,
       […died] Jan. 11, 1812, aged 34 years.
       [… HI]S SON DIED JUNE 12, 1817 AGED
       19 YEARS.
       [… H]ENRY HIS SON DIED YOUNG.
       […] above WILLIAM FAIRS
       [w]ho died Feb. 5, 1836, aged 81 Years.
       ANTHONY SON OF THE ABOVE
       JOHN STRONG
       DIED APRIL 6TH 1850 aged 47 Years

This further narrows down John's move from Northumberland, since Elizabeth was buried in Durham in 1812. The headstone appears to have been inscribed in the order in which the various deaths occurred, except Henry's for which no date is given, but which presumably occurred between 1817 and 1836. Presumably, those memorialized are:
       Elizabeth Strong (nee Fairs), abt 1778 to 11 Jan 1812, wife of John Strong
       [...Hi]s Son must be William Strong, abt 1798 to 12 Jun 1812, son of John and Elizabeth
       Henry Strong, August 1819 to November 1819, son of John and Hannah*
       William Fairs, abt 1745 to 5 Feb 1836, father of Elizabeth Fairs
       Anthony Strong, abt 1803 to 6 April 1850, son of John and Elizabeth

*Heworth parish records have young Henry baptized (15 days old) on 22 Aug 1819, and buried (aged 15 weeks) 16 Nov 1819.

Thus, children of John and Elizabeth are buried with children of John and Hannah, indicative that the father is the same John Strong.
      
We can now account for the births and deaths of all four sons of John Strong and Elizabeth Fairs, baptized in Newburn, Northumberland:
       William Strong, born in 1798 died - on the headstone - in 1817, aged 19 years.
       John Strong, born in 1801 would be Hannah’ stepson in the 1861 England
       Census, and BMD Death Index has:
              John Strong Sep1866 Birkenhead 8a 269 Age:65.
       Anthony Strong, born in 1803 - on the headstone - in 1850, aged 47 years.
       Curiously, the BMD Death Index has no death registration, although the parish
       does have a burial record; according to law, it was illegal to bury someone
       without a death certificate or coroner’s order.
       Joseph Strong, born 1807 is the 1851 Census “Master Steem Boat” in
       Middlesbrough, and BMD Death Index has:
              Joseph Strong Mar1879 Market Drayton 6a 642 age:73
              (where his daughter lived at the time).
 
Third, while, this in itself is compelling evidence for the family as we have reconstructed it, in addition, we can look back at Robert Strong’s birth registration in Greenock. In this document, the mother of Robert is given as Susannah Strong, formerly Hughes (when we would have expected Jane Strong, formerly hughes) and the informant is Susannah Redhead, listed as Robert’s cousin. Judith is a Redhead family genealogist. She suggested that the informant is Susanna Nurser (1822-1890), wife of William Redhead (1818-1881). From the tree she has researched, William Redhead's mother is Dorothy Elliot, sister of Hannah Elliot, wife of John Strong. Census returns show William and Susanna Redhead living in Greenock around the time of Robert’s birth.

Thus Joseph Strong and William Redhead are first cousins, or rather step-cousins. And, it is in this sense that Susannah Redhead can claim to be Robert Strong’s cousin (she is married to his 1st step-cousin once removed!). This last piece of data corroborates the link between our Joseph Strong, "Master Steem Boat" and the other children of John Strong, Sr. by both Elizabeth Fairs and Hannah Elliot. And it also confirms that this record belongs to our Robert Strong. The substitution of Susannah for Jane as the given name of Robert’s mother is probably a clerical error, and I wonder if Susannah's Middlesbrough accent and the clerk's Glaswegian were mutually confusing!

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Fog on the Tyne

J. M. W. Turner: Keelmen Heaving in Coals by Night (1835)
Emily Strong (1883-1944) is the great grandmother I never met. Her maiden name passed as a middle to my Grandpa Stuart. Previously on this blog, I have traced her father, Robert Strong (, the youngest son of Joseph Strong; and then back down through Robert's oldest brother, Joseph, to Major-General Sir Kenneth Strong - my 2nd cousin twice removed. Another post remembers Emily's nephew, Robert Maxine Strong, who perished in the sinking of SS Empire Impala in 1943.

Today, and in a series of posts, I turn to Robert's father, Joseph Strong with a reconstruction of his family of origin. My technique, such as it is, involves searching census data for a surname (in this case, Strong), and date of birth around that of the known sibling (in this case, around 1810), and then correlating the individuals discovered in this manner with baptismal (and other) records.

First off, I do now have the birth certificate for Robert Strong (my 2x great grandfather) from scotlandspeople.gov.uk. Born in Middle or New Parish, Greenock Scotland. The Scottish birth
certificate reads:
       Robert Strong
       1856 July nineteenth 11h PM
       3 Trafalgar Street, Greenock
       father: Joseph Strong, Steamboat Master
       mother: Susannah Strong maiden name Hughes
       reported by: Susannah Redhead Cousin x her mark present [at birth]

Either Jane went by the alternative name of Susannah (attested nowhere else), or there is a clerical error in the record, possibly because Susannah Redhead reported the birth. It does not seem likely to me that our Robert Strong has a different mother to his siblings.The exact manner in which Susannah Redhead and Robert Strong are cousins will be explored later.

And now for siblings of Joseph Strong (my 3x great grandfather), whose 1851 England Census describes as "Master Steem Boat". The most specific reference for a place of birth for Joseph comes from the 1871 England Census with Felling Shore, Durham. Felling is on the south bank of the Tyne near Heworth. Census searches for Strongs born around 1810 in Heworth or Felling found the family of one John Strong, born about 1772 in Newburn, Northumberland, which is near Scotswood.

The 1851 England Census for Commercial Street, Middlesbrough (along the same street as Joseph and Jane Strong) gives:
       John Strong        Head   Mar 79 Steam Boat Owner  Northumberland Newburn
       Hannah Strong   Wife     Mar 58                                 Durham Heworth
       Robert Strong      Son    U     35 Steam Boat Owner Durham Heworth
       William Strong   Son      U     34 Steam Boat Owner Durham Heworth
       Nicholas Strong  Son     Mar  30 Steam Boat Owner Durham Heworth
       Thomas Strong   Son      U    25 Steam Boat Owner Durham Heworth
       Henry Strong      Son      U    21 Steam Boat Owner Durham Heworth
       Mary Ag Strong Daur      U    13                                Yorks Middlesbrough
       Ann Hamilton    Servant U    22 House Servant        Cumberland Carlisle
(Source Citation: Class:HO107; Piece: 2383; Folio: 246; Page: 40; GSU roll: 87061.)
 
The same year, and also on Commercial Street, Middlesbrough is:
       John Strong            Head  Mar         50 Steam Boat Owner Northumberland Scotswood
       Jane Strong            Wife   Mar         25                                Yorks Osmotherley
       Alister Patterson     Visitor Widower 37 Furniture Broker    Scotland
       Elizabeth Patterson Visitor                5 Scholar                    Scotland
       Jane Thompson      Servant U         17 House Servant         Yorks Middlesbrough
(Source Citation: Class: HO107; Piece: 2383; Folio: 242; Page: 33; GSU roll: 87061.)

So, three households of Strongs associated with steamboats (including our Joseph), making it difficult to resist the temptation that they have family connections. By 1861, while our Joseph Strong is living in Greenock, the other two households are in Birkenhead. The 1861 England Census for 127 Bridge Street has:
       Hannah Strong       Head      Widow  66 Steam Tug Proprietor Durham Heworth
       John Strong            Stepson  Mar      60  Not employed            Northumberland Scotswood
       Robert Strong        Son         Un        44 Steam Tug Proprietor  Durham Heworth
       Hannah Bell          Daughter  Mar     37 Supported by Hannah Strong
                                                                                                          Durham Heworth
       Thomas Strong      Son         Un        36 Steam Tug Proprietor Durham Heworth
       Hannah Akenhead Gd Daugh           16 Supported by Hannah Strong
                                                                                                          Yorkshire Middlesbrough
       Mary Akenhead     Gd Daugh           14 Scholar                       Yorkshire Middlesbrough
       Hannah Bell           Gd Daugh           14 Scholar                       Yorkshire Middlesbrough
       Elizabeth Bell        Gd Daugh             9 Scholar                        Yorkshire Middlesbrough
       Elizabeth Fegan     Servant               37 House Servant            Wales
(Source Citation: Class:RG 9; Piece: 2641; Folio: 131; Page: 59; GSU roll: 543004.)

John Strong, Sr. must have died between the two censuses. The FreeBMD Death Index has:
       John Strong Mar1858 Wirral 8a 331

And this is confirmed by the England and Wales, National Probate Calendar in 1858:
       John Strong                  7 September                                             The Will
                                                    of John Strong formerly of Middlesbrough in
           Effects under L4,000       the County of York and late of 127 Bridge
                                                    -street Birkenhead in the County of Chester
                                                    Steamboat Proprieter deceased who died
                                                    10 March 1858 at Bridge-street aforesaid was
                                                    proved at Chester by the oath of Hannah
                                                    Strong of 127 Bridge-street aforesaid Widow
                                                    the Relict and one of the Executors.

One can imagine that in 1861 Hannah was none too pleased to be supporting the families of two daughters! The presence of step-son, John, Jr. suggests that his father had been previously married. The 1851 census has Hannah twenty-one years younger than her husband, and the 1861 census has her only six years older than this step-son.

While next door at 128 Bridge Street, Birkenhead are:
       Nicholas Strong        Head      Mar 40 Steam Tug Proprietor Durham Heworth
       Maryann Strong       Wife         Mar 39                                    Northumberland Bedlington
       Sarah Strong            Daughter  Un  14 Scholar                       Durham Heworth
       Hannah Strong         Daughter        12 Scholar                       Yorkshire Middlesbrough
       Mary G Strong         Daughter        10 Scholar                        Yorkshire Middlesbrough
       Elizabeth Strong       Daughter         5 Scholar                        Cheshire Birkenhead
       Margarett Strong      Daughter         4                                     Cheshire Birkenhead
       Margaret Colebourn Servant    Un  26 House Servant            Lancashire Liverpool
(Source Citation: Class: RG 9; Piece: 2641; Folio: 131; Page: 59; GSU roll: 543004.)

And, going back to the 1841 England Census on Commercial Street, we have:
       John Strong          60 Ship Owner  N[ot born in the county]
       Hannah Strong     50                      N
       Elizabeth Strong  25                      N
       Robert Strong      25 Engine Man  N
       William Strong    20 Sailor             N
       Hannah Strong    15                       N
       Thomas Strong    15                       N
       Henry Strong       11                       N
       Mary Strong         3                        Y[es, born in the county]
(Source Citation: Class: HO107; Piece: 1258; Book: 3; Civil Parish: Middlesbrough; County:
Yorkshire; Enumeration District: 1; Folio: 22; Page: 39; Line: 15; GSU roll: 464234.)

Here are some birth and baptism data for this family, from England, Births and Christenings, 1538-1975, including a series of baptisms in Heworth, Durham, south of the Tyne, for children of John Strong and Hannah, given here with their respective dates of baptism.
       Elizabeth Strong 11 Sep 1814
       Robert Strong     13 May 1816
       William Strong   26 Oct 1817
       Henry Strong      22 Aug 1819
       Nicholas Strong 15 Oct 1820
       Hannah Strong   13 Jul 1823
       Thomas Strong   25 Sep 1825
       Henry Strong     17 Jan 1830

These are clearly the same family as the 1841 Census above, missing Henry (born 1819) – who must have died before 1830, since they give the name to another child – and Nicholas (born 1820) – who is among them in 1851 – and with the addition of Mary Ag[nes] who was born in Middlesbrough. Her birth certificate gives the name of their mother, Hannah Elliot.
       Mary Agnes Strong BMD Birth Mar1838 Stockton 24 189

Birth Certificate reads:
       March 27th Morning 5 o’clock Middlesbrough/
       Mary Agnes Strong/ Girl/
       John Strong/ Hannah Strong formerly Elliot/
       Steam Boat Owner
       X The Mark of Hannah Strong Mother Middlesbrough/
       March 29th

Mary Agnes Strong was baptized 28 Apr 1838 West Acklam, Yorkshire

Looking for a baptism for the stepson, John Strong, yields a set of four for children of John Strong and Elizabeth Fair(e)s in Newburn, Northumberland, north of the Tyne:
       William Strong   born  1 Feb 1798   bapt. 20 May 1798
       John Strong       born   6 Feb 1801   bapt. 8 Mar 1801
       Anthony Strong  born 30 Apr 1803   bapt. 22 May 1803
       Joseph Strong    born  11 Jun 1807   bapt. 26 Jul 1807



From the Register of Baptisms of the Parish of Newburn, Northumberland:
"Joseph Strong of Scotswood [born] June 11 [baptized] July 16 [1807] 4th Son of John Strong Keelman Native of Ryton Parish by his Wife Elizabeth Faires of St Johns New Castle Tyne"

The John of these baptisms makes a good candidate for John, Hannah’s stepson. And the Joseph of these baptisms makes a good candidate for our Joseph Strong, the “Master Steem Boat” of the 1851 England Census, and father of Robert Strong. There is a marriage record for John Strong and Elizabeth Fairs at Newburn, Northumberland 18 April 1796. Thus, it appears likely that John Strong, husband of Elizabeth Fairs, remarried after her death to Hannah Elliot, along with a move across the Tyne from from Newburn, Northumberland to Heworth, Durham, and eventually to Middlesbrough, Yorkshire.

The Tyne Keelmen loaded coal from the pits into shallow draught boats (called keels) and out to the waiting colliers which would transport the coal by sea, mostly to London. They were paid by the keel-load of about 20 tons, which had to be loaded onto the keel, transported to and unloaded into the collier. This was necessary because the Tyne was too shallow to load colliers from the banks. By the end of the eighteenth century, the use of short piers (or coal staithes) enabled direct loading of coal from the shore to the collier, reducing the available work for the keelmen. The introduction of steam tugs in the nineteenth was yet another blow to the keelmen. It would appear that John and his family followed the trend of industrialization, joining the steam tug business, and moving south to the Tees as increasingly coal was loaded from Middlesbrough.

The fog on the Tyne slowly lifts. Next time, a gravestone...