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Topics - Forfarian

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1
United States of America / Josiah Edward Glasse and Jessie Simpson or Glasse
« on: Wednesday 10 April 24 11:47 BST (UK)  »
Josiah Edward Glasse was born in London in 1824. He became a brass finisher and later a gasfitter. In 1848 he married Janet Yuill and they emigrated to America, arriving in 1948 on the 'Yorktown'. In 1850 they were in New York City with son Josiah, aged 1. This child died the following year, and another son, Thomas Allan, was born in 1851. They then returned to London, where three daughters were born, Amy Mary in 1853, Isabella Ada in 1855 and Jessie b and d 1856. Janet Yuill or Glasse died in London in 1859. In 1861 and 1871 Josiah, Thomas, Amy and Isabella were in the census in London.

Later in 1871 Josiah married Jessie Simpson in Glasgow. In 1880 Josiah and Jessie were in Buffalo City, Erie County, New York. In 1892 and 1890 Josiah and his daughter Isabella and his sister Sarah were in Buffalo, and in 1910 Josiah was in a church charity home in Buffalo. Isabella died in 1936 or 1937 in Buffalo. (Thomas and Amy remained in England.)

I'm interested in knowing the dates and places of death of Josiah himself and of his second wife, Jessie Simpson or Glasse. 

I've had a look online, and the rules for getting a NY State death certificate appear to preclude me from applying for one (I am related to Jessie Simpson or Glasse, but not closely enough to qualify). I found some sites with Erie County/Buffalo City deaths etc, but the ones that weren't blocked by Peter Lowe's malicious web site warning service didn't list either Josiah or Jessie.

I can manage without the certificate, but would very much like to have the basic death information.

Any suggestions?



2
Yorkshire (West Riding) / Victoria Mills, Rutland Street, Bradford
« on: Tuesday 02 April 24 12:02 BST (UK)  »
I'm looking at the family of the Reverend David Black, minister of Tillicoultry Free Kirk in Clackmannanshire, Scotland.

Three of his sons, John Dykehead Black, Matthew Thomson Black and David Black, were involved in a woolcombing business in Victoria Mills, Bradford. Matthew and David must have moved to Bradford between 1881, when they were in the census in Glasgow, and 1891, when they were in Bradford. I don't yet know where John was in 1881, but he was head of the household at 11 Sherborne Road where his brothers were in 1891. Apart from John in 1881, I have basic details - births, deaths, marriages and census - for all of them, and for their parents, five sisters and the fourth brother. Matthew was the last survivor, and his death notice in the Bradford Observer in 1941 describes him as 'Chairman of Directors of W and M Thompson Black Ltd, Woolcombers, Bradford'.

Matthew seems to have gone into a formal partnership, W and M Thom(p)son Black, because the dissolution of the partnership was announced in the London and Edinburgh Gazettes in October 1899. Matthew retained the name of the firm and continued in business on his own. Presumably it must at some point have been turned into a limited company, but I have yet to find any evidence of that.

What I would most like to know is who the William Black was who was in partnership with Matthew. I've tried the newspaper archive via FindMyPast, so far without success, other than a report of a fire in Victoria Mills in 1897.

I note that there are several references to the bankrupcy of the owners of Victoria Mills, Low Moor, Bradford, in 1883. It would be beautifully neat and tidy if Victoria Mills, Rutland Street and Victoria Mills, Low Moor, were one and the same, because then it would make sense that the unknown William Black and the brothers John, Matthew and David Black took it over after the bankruptcy. Can Rutland Street be described as being in Low Moor?

Ideas, anyone?


3
Ayrshire / Is the Reverend David Black buried in Ardrossan?
« on: Sunday 31 March 24 15:41 BST (UK)  »
David Black was born in Dykehead, New Monkland in 1808. He was Free Kirk minister of Tillicoultry from 1843 to 1874, and eventually retired to Ardrossan, where he died on 14 June 1878. His wife Jean Thomson died in 1904 and his daughters Jean in 1913, Agnes in 1916, and Catherine in 1932, all in Ardrossan.

I would be interested in knowing whether there is a gravestone and if so whether or not it commemorates any of the rest of his family.

4
South Africa / Marcelle Marie Rougé or Burgess
« on: Saturday 23 March 24 10:42 GMT (UK)  »
Marcelle Marie Rougé, daughter of Joseph René Basset Rougé, said to have been born in Portugal, married Alfred Burgess (1903-1977) on 12 January 1935 in Kampala. She left him in 1942 and in spite of his wish for her to return to him, and her father urging her to do so, she refused, and in 1950 Alfred divorced her in the Scottish courts for desertion. The divorce papers noted that she was living in South Africa.

Can anyone suggest where, if anywhere, I might find out anything more about her?

Background: Alfred was born and brought up in Scotland. He married his childhood sweetheart Mary Dayton (Detty) Sinclair (1905-1997) after the divorce from Marcelle but I do not know where or when. He lived at Njoro, Kenya. He was involved at various times in coffee planting, haulage, roadbuilding and pig farming, and failed financially at least twice.

5
Armed Forces / Alexander Milton McGregor
« on: Tuesday 19 March 24 11:31 GMT (UK)  »
Alexander Milton McGregor was born on 1 January 1921 in Keith, Banffshire, third child of John McGregor, plumber (1888-1929) and Mary Helen Simpson (1898-1981) who were married in Keith on 5 January 1918.

He joined the Gordon Highlanders during the Second World War, Service Number: 2879072.

According to https://www.cwgc.org/find-records/find-war-dead/casualty-details/2137075/alexander-milton-mcgregor/ he is commemorated on the Kranji Memorial in Singapore.

He was lost at sea on 21 September 1944, and according to https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/56224639/alexander-milton-mcgregor his ship was sunk by an American aircraft carrier 80 miles off Corregidor, Philippines.

Is this true? And if it is, how might I find out the name of the ship that was sunk, the name of the aircraft carrier, and how a British ship came to be sunk by an American one? How many other lives were lost in this incident? Was any action taken against the captain and/or any crew members of the American ship?

6
Australia / Where were they transported to?
« on: Saturday 02 March 24 17:51 GMT (UK)  »
Circuit Intelligence, Inverness: Anne Burgess, daughter of Alexander Burgess, late residing in Grantown, was, upon her own confession, found guilty of stealing a pocket book containing a number of bank notes etc. The father also confessed his having resetted the pocket book and notes, and they were both sentenced to transportation for life. [Aberdeen Journal, 14 May 1790]

Am I right in thinking that in 1790 the most likely place where this father and daughter would have been transported to would have been Botany Bay?

7
Clare / Death of Annie King Richardson
« on: Friday 02 February 24 16:26 GMT (UK)  »
Annie King, born 1836 in Scotland, married David Richardson, officer of Excise, Ennis, Co Clare, in 1866 in Glasgow. (It was a second marriage for both, but the first marriages have no bearing on this query.)

According to http://www.rootschat.com/links/01syv/ Annie King Richardson, Cappahard, Ennis, Clare, died 24th October 1915.

I have so far failed to find
- an Irish death certificate
- a Scottish death certificate
- any mention of her in the Scottish Calendar of Confirmation (there is no such thing as probate in Scots Law - the corresponding process is Confirmation)

Can anyone hazard a guess why there's apparently no death certificate?

8
Handwriting Deciphering & Recognition / Who were the sponsors?
« on: Thursday 18 January 24 15:40 GMT (UK)  »
This is from the Scottish Roman Catholic baptisms, 1857. I'm interested in the names of the sponsors in the last line on the page, but I'e included the lines above to provide a bigger sample for scrutiny.

Any suggestions please?

9
Tyrone / Hard to read place names
« on: Saturday 09 December 23 22:01 GMT (UK)  »
Can anyone help me to decipher these place names, please?

I get Omagh, obviously, and I think the parish is Clogherny, and the bride's residence might be Seskinore, and the groom's Moylagh, but the name of the church defeats me. I've looked at townlands.ie and https://www.johngrenham.com/places/ but am none the wiser.

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