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Messages - Karl Craig

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1
Lanarkshire / Re: Bothwellhaugh
« on: Wednesday 18 October 17 05:34 BST (UK)  »
I visited Lithuania in September last year (2016), and managed to see the farm (Sakalupis) and parish church (Vladislavov, now Kudirkos Naumiestis) where my family lived. It was a fantastic experience. As a boy, I never thought I'd ever know anything about my Lithuanian forbears, so it pays to keep trying!  :)

Let's hope we can connect our Simanavičius families.

I did some searching in Scotland's People for my family names in the hope that brothers and cousins had also migrated to Scotland. Of course, spellings can vary enormously, and many changed their names to English ones (e.g. many in my 'Zinkevičius' family adopted the name 'Fletcher'). I think I did find ones that might have been 'Simanavičius', but discounted them at the time. Might look again.


2
Lanarkshire / Re: Bothwellhaugh
« on: Tuesday 17 October 17 03:48 BST (UK)  »
Hi Phil,

Plutiškės, Ąžuolų Būda, and Veiveriai are all places about 12 or 15 miles southwest of Kaunas. My family lived about 30 miles due west of Plutiškės right on the border of Lithuania and the Russian Exclave of Kaliningrad. At the time our families were going to Scotland, Kaliningrad was East Prussia.

You can see a map of pre-WW1 Lithuania on my blog-site at:

http://www.craig-galt.info/maps/lithuania-pre-ww1-map/

My guess is that your place names are just within the old province of Suvalki. It is possible that our Simanavičius people are related, but there's nothing connecting them from the names and places we have. Stanley Drive in Bellshill is about a kilometre north of where my family lived (1902–1911) in Glebe Street.

Many thanks for the information on your family. I'll keep them referenced in case one day something turns up that connects them to mine. You never know what might turn up!

Best wishes

3
Lanarkshire / Re: Bothwellhaugh
« on: Monday 16 October 17 07:33 BST (UK)  »
Hi Phil,

My great-grandmother was Petronėlė Melnikaitytė and she married twice: first to Pranciškus Simanavičius, and second to my great grandfather Jonas Šugžda. She married Pranciškus on 28 Sep 1886 at Vladislavov (now called Kudirkos Naumiestis). They had three children: Juozapas (1887), Silvestras (1888) and Ona (1891, later called Annie).

The two boys both died very young, and Pranciškus must have died before May 1890 as Petronėlė married Jonas Šugžda on 8 Sep 1890 at Vladislavov. Petronėlė and Jonas had 5 children in Lithuania, and Annie (Ona) was brought up in their household at the Sakalupis Estate near Lauckaimis. Two more boys died young, and then the family—Jonas, Petronėlė, Annie, Juozas (Joe, 1894), Bronislovas (Barney, 1898) and young Petronėlė (my grandmother, later called Sarah, b. 1901)—all left for Scotland around 1902.

The family settled in Bellshill, but in 1911 moved to the nearby pit village of Bothwellhaugh. The couple had two more boys in Scotland: John and Alex. All the boys (Joe, Barney, John and Alex) migrated to New Jersey in the early 1920s, although John Šugžda eventually returned to Bellshill where he lived for the rest of his life.

Annie and my grandmother stayed in Scotland. Annie married twice: first to Jonas Zinkevičius in 1911, and later to Vincas Dubickas in 1938.  Jonas returned to Lithuania in 1917 under the terms of the Anglo-Russian Military Convention, and died (probably in a prison camp at Kharkov, Ukraine) in December 1921.

Now, I had always wondered if any of Pranciškus Simanavičius's family had left Vladislavov and moved to Bellshill with the Šugžda family and others. If so, they would be connected to Annie, and I'm in contact with many of Annie's descendants, some of whom live in the USA, and others near me in Brisbane, Australia.

Does any of that help with your research? I have a family history blog where you will find quite a bit of information about my Lithuanian family:

www.craig-galt.info

Although some of my articles have not yet been finished on that site, you should find sufficient to give you a good idea of my family. I'd be delighted to hear if you have any information that might tie in with my Simanavičius connections.

Best regards

4
Lanarkshire / Re: Bothwellhaugh
« on: Friday 30 October 15 00:28 GMT (UK)  »
Andrew, you have expressed the times very well in your post, and there is little I could add. The issues were, as you say, sensitive, and my family was deeply affected, and divided, by the politics of the time. I still live with the pain of my mother’s split with her parents, but history is what it is and we must examine the past without partisanship or emotion.

Yes, the Lanarkshire mining communities were hotbeds of radical socialism and communism at that time, and with war looming and revolutions in Russia, the miners of Bellshill and Bothwellhaugh were living in electrifying times. My Lithuanian family seem to have arrived in Scotland to avoid conscription in the Tsar’s Russian army, but the 1905 and 1917 Russian revolutions would undoubtedly have added gunpowder to Lithuanian national ambitions. The Lithuanian migrants to Lanarkshire were certainly not welcomed by the mining unions at the time, as you say, and even Keir Hardie railed against them. These Lithuanians were technically “Russian Poles”, and that is how my family are registered in the 1911 census.

My grandmother married George Brown McKay, one of the foundation members of the Communist Party in Scotland. He was one of only six British Communists to be invited to Moscow in 1955 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the 1905 revolution. I still have a ‘Soviet-style’ paper weight he sent to me (in Australia, I was 6) as a souvenir. George died in Romania in 1974 while on a holiday paid for by the Communist Party – his will left almost everything, including a house, to the Party. Although I have little empathy for my grandfather’s politics, I have a curious ‘pride’ (well, grudging respect, anyway) in his achievements as a poor, working-class man who lived his life by his convictions.

Andrew has summed up the Lithuanian experience in Lanarkshire very well, but for those looking for a more detailed story, you could do worse than read Murdoch Rodgers’ 1985 article entitled “The Lithuanians” at the History Today website:

http://www.historytoday.com/murdoch-rodgers/lithuanians

5
Lanarkshire / Re: Bothwellhaugh
« on: Wednesday 28 October 15 22:59 GMT (UK)  »
Thanks for that Facebook tip, Andrew. I've signed up and hope to post there shortly.

Any clues to the names of children in that photo? Family names would be: Sugzda, Simanavicius, Zinkewicius (or variations thereof), Wallace, and McCaskill. Most Lithuanians in Bellshill/Bothwellhaugh were RC, but I have never heard that any of my family were particularly religious. Indeed, the 3 marriages I have in the 1920s for the children of Jonas and "Sarah" were all done by declaration, and not in church.

I know that the cousins (children of "Annie" and Jonas Zinkevicius) were specifically banned from being brought up as Catholics by their dad when he left to join the Red Army under the terms of the Anglo-Russian Military Convention of 1917. Their dad died of Typhus while serving in the Ukraine in 1921, but the mother never returned to the church. Their children were all born at 2 Store Place (above the billiard hall) between 1911 and 1915. My mother was born at that address in 1929, but went to school in Polmadie.

I'd love to hear from anyone who may have had contact with those families or places.

6
Lanarkshire / Re: Bothwellhaugh
« on: Tuesday 27 October 15 22:59 GMT (UK)  »
Yes, Lithuanian children often wore shirts with large collars.

My "Lithuanian" family lived in Bellshill and Bothwellhaugh from about 1902 to 1941. The family name was Sugzda (with marriages to the McKay, Wallace and McCaskill families). Eventually, they mostly moved off to New Jersey or Queensland.

My mother was born at 2 Store Place, Bothwellhaugh (just above the pool room); my g-grandparents both died at Park Place (near the footbridge) – my g-grandmum in 1930, and g-grandpa in 1941.

The family came to Lanarkshire shortly after the birth of my grandmother in 1901. They had lived in Lauckaimis, a tiny hamlet right on the border with modern Kaliningrad.

Karl Craig
Brisbane, Australia

7
Lanarkshire / Re: Hartwood Asylum, Shotts, Lanarkshire
« on: Thursday 30 July 15 00:06 BST (UK)  »
It is interesting that GeriK64 had the burial information. I also had a relative, Andrew McKay, who died at Hartwood 13 December 1928 (aged 23). His cause of death is given as epilepsy. Would I be able to find his medical records and burial place?

8
Scotland / Re: 72nd regiment of the Foot
« on: Monday 17 November 14 06:56 GMT (UK)  »
I know this thread is very old, but here's a story about one of my wife's ancestors that helps fill out some information about the 72nd:

Walter Ferguson of Old Cumnock, Ayrshire:

Walter joined the Lord Elgin Fencibles on 1 November 1799 at Cumnock in Ayrshire and became a private in 72nd Regiment of Foot on 4 July 1800 at Newry, County Down, Ireland. The fencibles were local militia who were recruited for home service, but not overseas service. These Highland militia groups were generally disbanded around 1799, and the Lord Elgin Fencibles were mostly recruited into the 72nd.  Walter enlisted while aged 24 and was discharged with the rank of serjeant (the way foot regiments spelled ‘sergeant’) on 9 November 1819 when he was closer to 46 than the 43 recorded on his service record.

Walter’s wife, Anne Phillips (born in Cork, Ireland), also travelled with the regiment throughout his service. While we have no record of their marriage, it is likely they married while he was on active service in Ireland with the regiment in 1798–1806. While in Ireland, his first four children were born: Catherine in 1798/9; James in 1800/1; Margaret 1801/2; and Elizabeth 1803/4 – all of these died at two years or younger.

Walter and Anne went with the regiment when it captured the Cape of Good Hope (South Africa) from the Dutch in 1806. It was during this campaign that his first two children to survive to adulthood were born: Janet in 1806, and William in 1808 (Janet died in 1829 in Cumnock aged 23).  Walter was made corporal on Christmas Day 1807, but was further promoted to serjeant on 25 June 1809.

The 72nd was next in action against the French during the Napoleonic Wars. The regiment helped capture Mauritius (Île de France) in November 1810, and the 72nd remained on as garrison troops in Port Louis until around June 1814. We know that his children Catherine (1811) and Walter (1815) were both born in Mauritius. The army registered this as service in the East Indies.

The regiment was known to have moved to Calcutta, India in 1815, and this is probably where he was during the period September 1815 and February 1816. His whereabouts from June 1814 to September 1815 are unknown, but the 72nd had returned to the Cape of Good Hope by 1816 as part of the Cape Province Garrison, and was soon involved in the Kaffir Wars of 1818–1819. During this period, his daughter Elizabeth (1816) and last child Thomas (1818) were born.

Walter, whose service was described as “very good”, was discharged from the army on 9 November 1819 after becoming a “supernumerary”. He incurred a disabling injury to his right hand while working with the Engineers.  He returned to Cumnock in Ayrshire – along with Anne, Janet, William, Walter, Elizabeth and Thomas. Walter had 20 years service with the 72nd and, with his injury on duty, he was entitled to an army stipend as a Chelsea Out-Pensioner.

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