Martha
Rawcliffe was my great grandmother Maria's youngest sister, who was born 20th
January 1863, and died 22nd May 1863. Yet her short life led to those
perennial mysteries that make family history. such an absorbing hobby.
Mystery One
Maria's two granddaughters (who are still alive) always referred to her as "Granny Maria". But there was a puzzle
in that many
official records, such as Maria's 1877 marriage certificate, the 1881
census entry, her burial record and my grandfather's 1907 birth
certificate all gave her Christian names as "Martha Maria". I sent away to the local Registrar for Maria's birth
certificate c.1859 and outlined my confusion over her Christian name.
To my great surprise the result was two certificates - for Maria, daughter of Robert Rawcliffe and Jane Carr of Hambletlon, Lancashire born 15th January 1859 and another daughter Martha, born to Robert and Jane on 20th January 1863.
Four months later Martha died. Maria would only have been just three years old then, so could hardly have remembered her youngest sister. Moreover their mother Jane died two years later, so could not have kept the memory alive of baby Martha for very long for her other daughters. So why did Maria adopt her name along with her own? We shall never know
My great grandmother Maria or Martha Maria Rawcliffe (1859-1919)
Mystery Two
Early on in my ancestral trail, I turned to Family Search
and was delighted to find entries for my Rawcliffe family, including
the name of "Martha Septima . This intrigued me - seventh daughter after Anne, Jane,
Margaret, Alice, Jennet and Maria.
But
how did her Ag. Lab. father and mother who only could make their
marks on their marriage certificate in 1846, come to know this Latin
tag? On Maria's certificate of 1859, Jane again is noted only
for making her mark, but there is no such indication on Martha's
entry.
These were the days on Family Search when the name was given of the submitter of the information - an American address and I suspect a descendant of Maria's sister Alice who emigrated to USA. I did write but the letter came back "unknown", so very frustrating. Many years later I traced the American connection, but no-one has come up with any clue to the "Septima" name.
The only other record I have found mentioning "Septima" was on Ancestry in the Lancashire, Church of England Births and Baptism.1813-1911.
Mystery 3
So baby Martha may have had only a short life, but her legacy lived on in the name of my great grandmother.
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