Author Topic: Samuel HENDRIE bc 1838 & Mary CAMPBELL bc1829  (Read 10393 times)

Offline MonicaL

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Re: Samuel HENDRIE bc 1838 & Mary CAMPBELL bc1829
« Reply #63 on: Friday 07 November 14 11:39 GMT (UK) »
I think I am going cross eyed now and seeing things that my brain wants to see! Def. not Black, nor Henry  :P Agree with you on the possible last letter being 'y.

Monica
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Offline loobylooayr

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Re: Samuel HENDRIE bc 1838 & Mary CAMPBELL bc1829
« Reply #64 on: Friday 07 November 14 11:41 GMT (UK) »
Hi guys,
Been keeping tabs on this thread and have to concur. I don't know what Thomas the witness surname is  ??? but I think last initial is a Y.
Looby :)

Offline loobylooayr

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Re: Samuel HENDRIE bc 1838 & Mary CAMPBELL bc1829
« Reply #65 on: Friday 07 November 14 11:42 GMT (UK) »
Sorry ::) that should be last letter is a Y!

Offline Forfarian

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Re: Samuel HENDRIE bc 1838 & Mary CAMPBELL bc1829
« Reply #66 on: Friday 07 November 14 11:44 GMT (UK) »
Could it be Thomas Hanery? Another variant of Henry?
Never trust anything you find online (especially submitted trees and transcriptions on Ancestry, MyHeritage, FindMyPast and other commercial web sites) unless it's an image of an original document - and even then be wary because errors can and do occur.


Offline Millmoor

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Re: Samuel HENDRIE bc 1838 & Mary CAMPBELL bc1829
« Reply #67 on: Friday 07 November 14 11:45 GMT (UK) »
Agree with Ruskie. It is the first letter which is hard. The rest does look like ..endry to me.

Also note that John and Hannah Black are on 1861 census. Their eldest son is called Samuel age 11. 

William
Dent (Haltwhistle and Sacriston), Bell and Jetson (Haltwhistle), Postle, Ward, Longstaff, Purvis, Manners, Parnaby and Hardy (Co. Durham), Kennedy and McRobert (Banffshire), Reid(Bathgate), Watson (Wemyss), Graham (Libberton), Sandilands (Carmichael), Munro (Dingwall)

Offline Ruskie

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Re: Samuel HENDRIE bc 1838 & Mary CAMPBELL bc1829
« Reply #68 on: Friday 07 November 14 11:51 GMT (UK) »
 ::)
Purchased the Ellen Henry Daniel Watton m/c. Her father is Archd. So the wrong Henry family.

It is looking like there were a number of Henry families in the area. The father of Samuel in the Samuel Henry/Mary Campbell marriage (21st Jul 1848) was Archibald too.

I think I will have to give up on this branch for the time being.

Thank you to everyone for all of your help.

I have just started working on another poser which is also sending me slowly mad. :(

Offline loobylooayr

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Re: Samuel HENDRIE bc 1838 & Mary CAMPBELL bc1829
« Reply #69 on: Friday 07 November 14 12:01 GMT (UK) »
Ballywillan Prsebyterian Church is just outside Port Rush (my mum used to go on her hoildays there in the 1950s  ;) ). It now comes under County Antrim.
http://www.ballywillanpci.org/

Looby :)

Offline Forfarian

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Re: Samuel HENDRIE bc 1838 & Mary CAMPBELL bc1829
« Reply #70 on: Friday 07 November 14 12:18 GMT (UK) »
the Presbyterian Manse (I think the word was Manse)

Yes. The Manse is the home of the minister of a presbyterian church, though originally it could have been the residence of any clergyman.

In Scotland, the normal place for a wedding ceremony was in the bride's home. However if the bride's parents were dead, or she was marrying a long way from her home, she might get married in her employer's house, or in the manse. Weddings in the actual church didn't become the norm until the late 19th or early 20th century. I imagine that something similar applied in presbyterian families in Ireland.
Never trust anything you find online (especially submitted trees and transcriptions on Ancestry, MyHeritage, FindMyPast and other commercial web sites) unless it's an image of an original document - and even then be wary because errors can and do occur.

Offline Ruskie

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Re: Samuel HENDRIE bc 1838 & Mary CAMPBELL bc1829
« Reply #71 on: Friday 07 November 14 13:07 GMT (UK) »
Thanks for the clarification Forfarian. In other families I have researched I have seen couples marrying at home or in the Manse. I just found the writing difficult to understand in this example. :)

I need to do some research into Presbyterians in Ireland. My knowledge on the subject is non existent.