Maria’s was a story of eight daughters, born to my great great grandparents, the early death of their mother; a stepmother who came to the marriage with two illegitimate daughters, and subsequently bore two half sisters. The life of the Rawcliffe family illustrated the vicissitudes of Victorian society with infant deaths, illegitimacy, early widowhood, remarriages, plus the discovery of my first emigrant ancestor seeking a new life in the USA.
My great great grandfather Robert Rawcliffe lived 1821-1904, dying at the age of 83. He married Jane Carr in 1846, withe birth of Maria's sisters as follows:
1. Anne (1847-1928)
- was the first first
of eight daughter. named after her
paternal grandmother. In the 1861 census she was living away from
home as a 13 year old servant. Aged about 25 she had an illegitimate
daughter Jane Alice, and a year later married gamekeeper Robert
Roskell. One of her three daughters was named Maria, after her
youngest (surviving) sister, my great grandmother (I liked that link).
But burial records revealed early deaths in the family - infant twin son
Matthew died at three weeks old in 1882 and eldest daughter Jane died in
1887, aged only fourteen; with husband Robert dying in 1894 at the
young age of 42.
By
the time of the 1901 Census, Anne, a grocer/shopkeeper had moved
from a small rural village to the town of Fleetwood, where she married
her second husband John Jenkinson. She died 4 April 1928 and was buried, not in Fleetwood, but beside
her first husband and young children at St. Anne's Church, Singleton.(right) Her age on her gravestone was given as 79.
2. Jane (1850-1926)
- was the second daughter, named after her mother and paternal
grandmother. She married Thomas Riley in 1873. The photograph below
came from an
internet contact descendant and shows four generations of their family.
Jane Riley, nee Rawcliffe with her son George (left)
grandson (Jack) and Jack's baby son George Robert who did not survive infancy.
3. Margaret (1852-1852) - third daughter was born 11th November 1852, but only lived for three weeks, buried 4th December 1882.
4. Alice (1853-1930) - the fourth
daughter was christened Alice Margaret, perhaps in remembrance of the
baby sister who had died a year earlier. In the 1871 census she was a
domestic servant, and two years later married John Mason, a general
labourer. Six children were born and then In 1886-87 the they took the
momentous decision to leave the fishing port of Fleetwood for the
teeming tenements of Brooklyn, New York. where they had a further five
children. Alice is my blog success story, as my third cousin, a
descendant of Alice's youngest daughter Florence, found my blog and gave
me a wonderful collection of stories and photographs.
Alice (centre) with her husband John Mason, and their eight surviving children.
5. Jennet (1956-1902) - in 1873 she was a witness at the marriage of her sister Jane
to
Thomas Riley, with the other witness Thomas's brother Richard. Five years later, Jennet and Richard married. But happiness was short lived
for Richard died in 1891 aged just 33. The census of that year saw Jennet a widow with son Thomas 9 years old. Daughter Jane was traced to the home of Jennet's sister. Jennet remarried a seaman Edward
Alexander Braham. But again their marriage was cut short with the
death of Jennet in 1902, aged 45 - the first of the five surviving Rawcliffe
sisters to die. 6. Peggy (1861-1861) - was the last of the Rawcliffe sisters to be traced. Her short life lasted only sixteen days.
7. Martha (1863-1863) - the baptism entry for Martha was a puzzle, for she was given the middle name "Septima" meaning seventh daughter, - yet she was the eighth. Also how did her parents, with Robert an agricultural labourer, and with Jane making their mark on their marriage certificate know about the Latin inspired name? The third puzzle - why did my great grandmother Maria adopt the name Martha Maria for many official records, including her marriage certificate? Maria could hardly have remembered her baby sister.
So Robert's wife, Jane, gave birth to eight children in a sixteen year period Jane was aged 44 at the birth of her youngest daughter Martha and died two years later, buried on 4th May 1865, leaving her five young daughters motherless at the ages of 6, 8, 11, 14 and 17. Jane and her baby daughters were all buried at the Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Hambleton. Unfortunately there are no gravestones, and no listings in monumental inscriptions for Robert Rawcliffe's family.
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In 1875 Robert married his second wife Elizabeth Brekall, twenty years his junior and they had four children in six years, including two daughters - half sisters to my great grandmother.
8. Grace (1876-?) - perhaps named after Robert's sister, Grace.
9. Margaret (1881-?)
No baptism records were traced for this second group of Rawcliffe children and more research needs to be done into their lives.
But there was a second dimension to Robert's second marriage. For Elizabeth Brekall came to the marriage with three children of her own, including two daughters:
10. Dorothy
11. Mary Ellen
So at the age of 16, Maria acquired two new step sisters. I naturally assumed they were children of Elizabethan's first husband - the classic family history mistake - do not assume! For her wedding certificate to Robert identified Elizabeth as a spinster.
One cannot help speculate on the circumstances that led Elizabeth to bear three illegitimate children over a thirteen year span. The children were all baptised, but no father named on their record. The earlier census returns showed that Elizabeth and her children were living with her parents, with her father an agricultural labourer, so times must have been hard.
The 1881 census showed a crowded Rawcliffe household with father Robert 61, a farmer of three acres, Elizabeth 41 and six children, ranging from 2 months old to eleven years .
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Maria (1859-1919)
Perhaps not surprisingly, my great grandmother Maria appears to have left home not long after her father's second marriage. She married James Danson in 1877 at the age of 18, with the address on her marriage certificate that of her eldest married sister Anne.
The sisters remained close, judging by the tradition of naming their daughters after their sisters, with Anne, Jane and Jennet all ending their lives in the town of Fleetwood.
Maria is at the heart of my family history research and writing, featuring regularly on my blog. Ironically, as one of so many sisters, she went on to have ten sons (eight surviving infancy), and finally her only daughter Jennie.
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12 sisters is insane. We have 12 to 13 siblings in our tree, but not that many sisters.
ReplyDeleteWow that is a lot of sisters. I loved this post. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteWonderful research and post about your great-grandmother's family, Sue! Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteGreat post - that's a heck of a lot of sisters! Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThis is such a lovely post. It is wonderful to see fellow genealogists researching those 'collateral' lines -- and how fortunate for Robert to have so many daughters!
ReplyDeleteGoodness! That is a lot of sisters. I love your comment about the sisters' naming their daughters after their sisters.
ReplyDeleteThank you all for your kind comments .
ReplyDelete