Showing posts with label Rowbottom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rowbottom. Show all posts

20 July 2013

Mystery Solved . . . almost

Jane Ann (Jennie) BEARDSELL
9 August 1889 - 10 February 1940

Back in March of this year, I shared  the mystery that is my Grand Aunt Jennie (Jane Ann BEARDSELL); the purpose of the post was to help document the pieces of the puzzle that I had and to find the missing pieces, with the goal of putting the puzzle together to see the picture (her story) in its entirety.

Today, I happily share that this family history mystery is solved . . . almost.  There is still a glaring hole (mystery) dead center of the puzzle; where is Jennie between 1911 and 1930?

What we now know and how we got there . . .

'Jennie' was born Jane Ann BEARDSELL, 9 August 1889, in Huddersfield, England.  Her father, Wallace Arthur BEARDSELL was 26 and her mother, Elizabeth Ann (nee ROWBOTTOM) was 22.  On 3 November 1889, Jennie was baptized, Jane Ann BEARDSELL; she was three months (12 weeks) old.  The baptismal record states that she and her faily were living at 'David's' Cottage.

 Baptismal Record
(ancestry.com)
 

And, in 1891, Jennie is living in Wooldale, England with her father and mother.

 
1891 England Census
(ancestry.com)


In 1895 Jennie, her brother George, and their mother, Elizabeth made the journey from the port of Liverpool, England to Pennsylvania, United States and the 'New World.'  A journey of 11 days on the American Line, S/S Southwark.  Their ship departed the port of Liverpool and the waters of England on 11 April 1895 and arrived the port of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 21 April 1895.

S/S Southwark
norwayheritage.com/gallery
 

 S/S Southwark Passenger List
ancestry.com 
 
The Immigrant Receiving Station located at the Washington Avenue, Philadelphia waterfront is where I imagine that Wallace Arthur BEARDSELL happily greeted his wife Elizabeth and two children, 5 year old Jennie and one year old, George.  Wallace, who immigrated to Pennsylvania two years before, would have walked with his family a short distance to the waterfront neighborhood of Kensington and their new home.  It is not currently known why the BEARDSELLs chose to leave their home in England, I can only presume that it was for the promise of better opportunities and employment.
 
Jennie would again sail the Atlantic in October 1898 with her mother and siblings, George and Edith.  The ship, S/S Russia, set sail for Liverpool, England, 29 October 1898.  The family would stay in England for a year and four months, setting sail once again for Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in February 1900.  Again, it is not known, with certainty, why the family returned to England, but I can only assume that it was to visit both the ROWBOTTOM and BEARDSELL families still living in England.  Knowing that I don't travel well - any mode of transportation - I can only imagine what it must have been like for the young children and their mother on these trans-Atlantic crossings that were before the more modern and comfortable cruise lines that we know today.
 
S/S Russia
Library of Congress
 
S/S Russia Passenger List
ancestry.com
  
 By February 1900, Jennie, her siblings, and her mother were home in Philadelphia with her father.

 

S/S Belgenland
youtube.com/watch?v=mHVzuevn1KY
 
 
S/S Belgenland Passenger List
ancestry.com
 

Sadly, a few short months later (August 1900) Jennie, at the age of 10, would lose her mother to tuberculosis.  Eight years later, according to the 1910 U.S. Federal Census, Jennie is married and living with her husband, Stanley McLean and their son, Ralph, in Knowlton Township, Warren County, New Jersey; Jennie is 20.  (to date, I have not been able to locate a marriage license or certificate in either Pennsylvania or New Jersey for Jane Ann (Jennie) BEARDSELL and Stanley McLean).
 
1910 U.S. Federal Census
ancestry.com
 
And then . . . Jennie disappears.
 
In 1920, Stanley is living in a boarding house in Paulsboro, Gloucester, New Jersey.
 
 
1920 U.S. Federal Census
ancestry.com
 

And, their son, Ralph, is found living with his grandparents (his father's parents) in the Tacony suburb of Philadephia, Pennsylvania.
 
1920 U.S. Federal Census
ancestry.com

It is not currently known when Jennie and Stanley separated, nor when their divorce was finalized.  While I have looked for Jennie in New Jersey and Pennsylvania; she had a brother, George; a sister Edith and her family; and her father Wallace who all were residents of Philadelphia at the time.  I have been unable to account for Jennie's whereabouts between 1911 and 1930 when I next find her.
 
In 1930, Jennie was 40 years old and living in Merchantville, Camden, New Jersey with her husband William J Brown, Sr. and their son, William, Jr.
 
1930 U.S. Federal Census
ancestry.com

 

 At the time that the 1930 census was taken, William Brown, Jr. was one year and four months old; having nothing else, at this time, to go by, I am assuming that Jennie and William, Sr. were married on, or about, 1928.
 
In 1940 at the age of 50 years and 6 months, Jennie passed away; her last known residence was 109 Monroe Street, Delaware Township, Camden, New Jersey.  She was survived by her husband, William J Brown, Sr.,; her sons Ralph Stanley Mclean and William J Brown, Jr.; her sister, Edith Rose (nee BEARDSELL) Costello; her brother, George BEARDSELL; and her father, Wallace BEARDSELL.
 
Death Certificate
Personal Collection - TLCmeyers.blogspot.com
 
Jane Ann (Jennie) (nee BEARDSELL) Brown is buried alongside her former husband, Stanley McLean in the Magnolia Cemetery in Tacony, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Lot 387, Section E, Grave 3.
 
Questions Remaining:
1. When and where were Jennie and Stanley married? 
    Pennsylvania?  New Jersey?
2. When did Stanley and Jennie separate?
3. When was the divorce between Stanley and Jennie final?  
    Where were the papers filed?
4. Where in the world was Jennie, between 1911 and 1930?
5. When and where were Jennie and William J Brown married? 
    New Jersey?  Pennsylvania?
 
If you are a descendant of any, who are listed here, and have information that could shed some light on the remaining questions, I'd love to hear from you.  Or, if you are visiting and are working through a similar situation, I'd love to hear your research strategies and how you are working to answer your questions?
 
 
 

 
 
 

 
 

25 June 2013

Travel Tuesday - Planning a Research Trip

I have an empty nest.  And, with an empty nest, freedom; what does a genealogy hobbyist do with freedom?  Travel of course.  So this July I am off on a mini-family history tour.  Queue the Beatles Magical HISTORY (err, Mystery) Tour.
 
I took my first mini-family history tour back in December; we were in the Philadelphia Pennsylvania region for other reasons, so decided that we'd take a day trip into the city to visit the cemetery where my Great Grandmother Elizabeth Ann (ROWBOTTOM) BEARDSELL is buried and to visit the Free Library of Philadelphia.  While we were reasonably successful in our family history endeavor, I don't believe that we were as successful as we could have been, if we had taken the time to PLAN our trip.  Both my husband and I have other ancestors in that area, and if we had just done a little planning, I think we could have accomplished far more.  In our defense though, we hadn't really thought about combining our trip with our research - we were in the area for other reasons entirely.

This July, we will again be in Pennsylvania to visit family over the 4th of July.  We will be in and around the area of Columbia, Luzerne, Montour and Monroe Counties; the area that my paternal ancestors are predominately from.  So, we've decided to include a family history tour in the itinerary.

Okay, so I better get planning; but, how do you plan a research trip?  I suppose it really comes down to your personal research needs and style.  So for me, this is how I set about it . . . 
 
1.       Request time off from work
2.       Make lodging reservations
3.       Make arrangements for furry friend to be cared for in your absence
1 - 3 are fairly straightforward
4.       Determine the scope and breadth of your research.
The location we'd be in pretty much set this for us; we'd be focusing our research on the LEARN family.
5.       Create a research log.  This is what I'll use to keep track of . . .
·         Address and contact information
·         Expenses
·         Names of ancestors who are buried in the cemeteries we'd be visiting
·         Last known home address for LEARN ancestors.  Wouldn't it be fun to get pictures of their home, if they are still there?
6.       Create a photo log.  I'll use this to keep an accounting of the photos I've taken and why along with any notes
Research Log

 
 
Photo Log
 
7.       Okay my next step was to take a look at the LEARNs on my family tree, and with the help of OneNote, really take a look at what I know and how I know it.  Thank you Crista Cowan, that mantra is ingrained on my brain.  Which isn't a bad thing. 
I created a notebook for the LEARN surname.  I then created a top tab for each individual and within each individual tab, I created side tabs to record pertinent genealogical information that I had on each of them.
Here's an example
 

 
The, General Information page that you see here, captures at a glance, the timeline for Margaret Ethel LEARN from birth to death.  See tabs on right-hand side . . .

 

·         Birth

·         Marriage

·         Death

·         US Federal Census

 

Within each, I have 'captured' the source documentation that I hold; either in my private holdings or that I have located online and saved.  Each page includes a transcription of those source documents as well as source citations.  I not only want to give credit, where credit is due, but I also want to remember where I found that information.

 

While this may seem duplicative of the information stored and saved on both ancestry.com and Family Tree Maker, I can honestly tell you that physically going through the steps of  transcribing each source document and creating a timeline, will help you hone in on what you're missing and where you need to go next with your research.  The other benefit of physically transcribing a document is that you may actually come across information you missed on initial reading.

 

8.       Having completed steps 1 - 7, I am now ready for my family history tour.  I am really looking forward to it and I look forward to sharing the results when I return.
Okay, have I forgotten something?  Should I be doing something else to prepare for our trip?
I am interested in learning how you plan for a family history tour.
Tracy


07 May 2013

Life in the City - Discovering Wallace BEARDSELL (Part I)


Wallace BEARDSELL; who is he? 

Growing up I would hear short stories about him . . .He and his family emigrated to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania from England; he played rugby and was thought to be quite good; he lost a leg.  And that was really all the information I had on him, until fairly recently.  Journey with me now,  to discover my Great Grandfather, Wallace Arthur BEARDSELL and as I learn of his life in the city of Brotherly Love.

When Wallace left his home in Wooldale, Yorkshire, England to emigrate to the United States, he would have made his way to Liverpool, Merseyside, England - a journey, presumably on foot, of 2 - 4 days - he would have been met in Liverpool by a representative of the Steamship company who would then take him to one of their lodging houses. (1)   Wallace, 30, left the Port of Liverpool, England on Thursday, 30 March 1893; leaving behind his wife Elizabeth (ROWBOTTOM) and his two children, Jane and George.  For the next 12 days he was a passenger on the S/S Ohio, the American Line Iron Screw Steamer, built by the Cramp Shipbuilding Company.  On Tuesday, 11 April 1893, Wallace arrived at the Port of  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the S/S OHIO docked at the Washington Avenue piers and he and his fellow European immigrants disembarked.  Wallace eventually settled in the nearby waterfront Kensington neighborhood where jobs and affordable housing could be found. (2)

It is currently unknown what happened to Wallace from the time he left the Washington Avenue Immigration Station on that Tuesday, 11 April 1893 and when I next find him in 1895.  However, of one thing I am sure; his immediate concern upon arrival must have been securing a home and employment, both of these things would have been paramount for his survival, but also would have been necessary before he could send for his wife and children to join him.
 
 

Steam Ship (S/S) Ohio (3)
American Line Iron Screw Steamer

343 Feet Long ~ 43 Feet Broad ~ 34-1/2 Feet Deep ~ Brig Rigged with vertical two-crank Compound Engines with cylinders 57 and 90 inches in diameter ~ 4 Feet Stroke ~ Boiler Pressure 60 pounds to the square inch.

The American Line - Passenger lists and Emigrant ships from Norway-Heritage
 



Philadelphia Passenger Lists (screen clipping)
1800 - 1945 (4)
To see the full page, click the link below

Ancestry.com - Philadelphia Passenger Lists, 1800-1945


 Philadelphia Passenger List Index Cards (5)
 

View Images — FamilySearch.org


Sources: 

  1. Emigration to USA and Canada http://www.liverpoolmuseums.org.uk/maritime/archive/info-sheet.aspx?sheetId=20

  1. Washington Avenue Immigration Station http://www.philaplace.org/story/190/

  1. The American-Line Passenger Lists and Emigrant Ships from Norway Heritage http://www.norwayheritage.com/p_shiplist.asp?co=amlin
  2. Ancestry.com Philadelphia Passenger Lists, 1800 - 1945


  1. Philadelphia Passenger List Index Cards https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/DGS-004759384_09462?cc=1921483&wc=M93Y-S5Y:1505178787