This article was written for the
January 2002 edition of the Family Tree Magazine by Gordon McPhail.
Scottish genealogy has a rich
variety of sources and when an emigrant ancestor comes into the picture
this becomes even more evident; basic research records are always of great
value but lesser known and even rare documents come into use, from both
the country of origin and the country in which the forebear settled.
One such case was the Walker family
of Glasgow, Scotland. By use of the basic sources of births/baptisms,
marriages/proclamation of banns, and deaths/burials, which in the
pre-1855
period in Scotland were church based and created, it was known that
Kennoway Walker, a weaver, and his wife Elizabeth Cross had several
children. One of these, Walter, their eldest, was born in 1801 as recorded
in the established Church of Scotland register of baptisms for Glasgow
city:
5 June 1801. Kennoway Walker, Weaver
and Elizabeth Cross, a is [lawful son] Walter. Witnesses: Robert Kyle,
James Donaldson.
These pre-1855 registers are to be
found for all Scottish parishes, over 900, in a single building at the
General Register Office for Scotland, New Register House, Edinburgh. Many
reference sections of local libraries hold microfilm copies for their
area.
From 1 January 1855 it became
compulsory to register a Scottish birth, marriage or death. Neither Walter
Walker’s marriage nor death were recorded in Scotland, the first clue of a
possible emigration. Lesser used, genealogically packed records now came
into play; at Glasgow’s city archive, the burgh registers of sasines
(titles to real estate) were searched, revealing a 15-page legal document
with much legal verbiage from which was extracted the following ancestral
data:
7 November 1832 Walker; heir of his
grandmother: ... Walter Walker; presently
Weaver in America, eldest lawful son born of the marriage of Kennoway
Walker; presently in America and the deceased Elizabeth Cross ...
one of the four daughters of the marriage
between Agnes Stevenson, now deceased and Walter Cross, Shoemaker in
Glasgow...
The history of the ownership of the
real estate is more fully related within the sasine so that we learn that
Walter Walker’s grandmother, Agnes Stevenson, came into her share of the
property through her grandfather, extending the family tree by four
generations from-Walter Walker:
...Registered Disposition dated the
sixth day of June 1764 years granted by Hugh Fulton, late Deacon of the
Wrights in Glasgow
...
to Hugh and Agnes Stevenson, his
grandchildren procreate betwixt Robert Stevenson, Maltman in Glasgow and
Margaret Fulton, his daughter of a former marriage...
All of the above findings were used
to great extent in searching the basic parish registers of baptisms etc,
but returning the immediate attention to Walter Walker, in a much later
real estate register of 1863 referring to other property which he had
inherited with his siblings, he is described as of the village of Napanee
in Canada. Some basic checking in an atlas/gazetteer revealed Napanee’s
location in the county of Lennox and Addington, a few miles inland from
northeastern shores of Lake Ontario. Original research in Canadian records
now seemed possible, and as well as Walter’s date of death being found and
the birth records of his children, obituaries for the family shed a more
accurate light on the time and situation of emigration. In the Perth
Courier (Ontario) on 25 January 1901 we find, from Walter’s wife’s
obituary, that her father from Paisley, Renfrewshire, Scotland, had seen
"times ... grown dark in Britain after its exhausting conflict with
Napoleon?" He came with "a large company of Scotch emigrants who set out
from Greenock to Canada in 1820 on the sailing ship Commerce and
were seven weeks on the voyage to Montreal ... bound for the township of
Lanark" where there were "primitive houses in the forests and like the
others drew land and began the pioneer’s hard life. Farming under such
conditions was uncongenial to the family and they moved to Utica, New York
where deceased in 1833 was married to Mr Walter Walker, a native of
Glasgow, Scotland, who had come to America also in the year 1820. In 1840,
the two with a young family moved to Napanee, in Upper Canada?"
Yet the overall atmosphere from
contemporary letters, would seem to have been joyful: "A narrative of the
rise and progress of emigration from the counties of Lanark and Renfrew to
the New Settlements in Upper Canada:" includes a letter from 1821
enthusing over:
The land
... pretty good ... never so happy ...
not desire to return to Glasgow ... for we would have to pay a
heavy rent and here we have none. In Glasgow I had to labor sixteen or
seventeen hours a day and could earn about six or seven shillings a week.
Here I can, by laboring about half that time, earn more than I had there /
was confined to a damp shop but here I have fresh air. There after I had
toiled until I could toil no more / would have the mortification of being
a burden. But here, two or three years labor will give me more than will
keep me in sickness as well as in health. There it is all dependence. Here
it is a fair prospect of independence. [A Boag, to his sister.]