Families can be funny. Family history or genealogy as
it is more seriously known, can be even funnier. The basic starting point
to ancestry research is to look into birth, marriage, death and census
records as these hold lots of interesting detail on our forebears but a
wide variety of other, often lesser used records can be found. Take the
Victorian—style social security system where you really had to be
certified ill to receive any financial assistance at all: it was not
acceptable to state yourself as merely ‘unemployed’; you wouldn’t get a
penny until you were up the creek but the old records recalling these
situations can be both heartbreaking and amusing. From an 1868
‘application for relief’ we find 29—year—old Dinah Callander Havlin of 35
King Street, Calton, Glasgow ‘back land, 2 up, door on left’ applying for
assistance on account of her ‘husband Bernard Havlin, a Clock Agent, born
9 miles from Londonderry, deserted her on Saturday last, son of John
Havlin, a Coachman and Nancy O’Laughlin, both dead’. It then lists her 4
children aged between 1 and 8 years with a note ‘none at school’.
Additionally we find that Dinah’s ‘father was employed with Mr. Alex
Wilson, Millowner. . .father was insane and in
an asylum’. Dinah and husband Bernard's various residences are then listed
for the past ten years. One month later we are told ‘her husband has
returned and she is now off the roll’ and 12 years later, added onto the
same original page Bernard Havlin, now 45, ‘re—applies... .certified
injured leg, Dr. Smellie he is married, a hawker, earns 8 to 12 shillings
a week, got his leg broken by a fall, having slipped on an orange skin at
the New Year, he has been in the Royal Infirmary for 11 weeks and came
home a fortnight ago...’ We can follow up on these details in many ways
— search for the family in old census records,
look at hospital records etc.
In England and Wales it became law to register births,
marriages and deaths in 1837 and nowadays we find all of these at The
Family Records Centre, 1 Myddelton Street, London EC1R 1UW where the
census records are also kept. At New Register House in Princes Street,
Edinburgh EH1 3YT we find the equivalent records for Scotland with the
slight difference that it was not until 1855 that it
became law there to register events.
Before compulsory registration, there are still many
baptisms, marriages and burials registered and these church—created parish
records are, for England/Wales, held at local county record offices
whereas for Scotland all are gathered under the one roof at New Register
House.
Beyond this we can use Wills, inheritance records, land
records, sources to do with ancestors’ specific occupations, old maps and
old photographs of streets etc., found in archive collections, to
illustrate your record finds.
A typical procedure for working back in time could
involve a death of an ancestor as a start — in
1934 on February 2, died David McAllister, for example ‘Tobacco Spinner,
married to Annie Cassidy, died at 2 Glebe Street, Glasgow, age 64, son of
Thomas McAllister, Shoemaker and Betsy McAllister m.s. (maiden surname)
Low (both deceased), died from acute nephritis, registered by his son,
David McAllister, 59 Stirling Road, Glasgow.’ David’s birth is then found
in 1870 ‘on January 5th, 1.30 am at 8 McPherson Street, Glasgow’ and the
1871 census record shows the family at that address: ‘Thomas McAllister,
head of house, married, age 41, Shoemaker, born—Glasgow; wife Elizabeth
age 40 and children Jean 10, Thomas 6 and David 1, all born Glasgow’. Ten
years later we find ‘285 Argyle Street, Glasgow: Elizabeth Low McAllister,
head of house, widowed, Charwoman, age 48, born Dundee; daughter Jane,
unmarried, 19, Tobacco Stripper, Thomas, 16, a Reedmaker and 11 year old
David, a Scholar (at school)’ Their father, Thomas, had died in 1876 and
we find his baptism in 1829: ‘James McAllister, Shoemaker, Calton & Jean
Carrick had a lawful son, their 12th child, born 25 July 1829 baptized 16
August named Thomas. George Glen & William Black, witnesses’.