For
a long time I wondered what the maiden name of my 3rd great-grandmother,
Mary PEARSON was.
Census
records showed that she was born in Ashow, Warwickshire. The 1851 and 1861 censuses
indicated her birth year was 1800; the 1841 and 1871 censuses said 1801. The
1881 census, however, said her birthday was in 1796. At least I had a place of
birth, if not an exact date.
I
had a document that came from my grandfather, showing accounting records for
property she had owned in Leamington Priors. It was a summary of the income and
expenses of her estate, dated March 1896. So I knew she had died before then. I
did not find her on the 1891 census which seemed to narrow down her death as
happening before that year.
A
search of the death index from FreeBMD
resulted in a couple of possibilities for her death, one in 1882 and one in
1884. Wouldn’t you know it – I ordered the wrong certificate from the General
Record Office to start with. When the probate records finally came online
on Ancestry, I was able to confirm that
Mary had died in 1884 and ordered the real death certificate. That document
showed she was aged 81 at the time of her death, putting her birth year as
1803.
1885
probate calendar entry for Mary PEARSON (downloaded from Ancestry; source Principal
Probate Registry, Calendar of the Grants of Probate and Letters of
Administration made in the Probate Registries of the High Court of Justice in
England)
1884
death certificate for Mary PEARSON of Leamington, Warwickshire (acquired form
the General Record Office of England and Wales)
|
But
I was not satisfied that I still had the right information about Mary. The
death record, official as it was, still did not fit the census data. The
informant for the death was Mary’s granddaughter and I wondered if she really knew how old her grandmother was. None of this was helping me determine
what Mary’s maiden name was.
Working
from the 1851 Census I found that Thomas (age 51) and Mary (age 51) PEARSON
were living in Leamington with their son, Charles (age 22), and an aunt, Mary
JONES (age 78), a widow. Although the aunt was indicated as being an aunt of
the head of the household (Thomas), she was actually born in Ashow, as was Mary
PEARSON, suggesting that it was the two women who were related directly. That
being the case I might have assumed that Mary PEARSON's mother's name would be
something other than Mary if this older Mary was a sister of her mother. Of
course, she could equally be the sister of Mary’s father so I tread carefully
in trying to track down the both of them.
1851
census record for Thomas and Mary PEARSON (downloaded from Ancestry July 2nd,
2007; source Census Returns of England and Wales, 1851, Kew, Surrey, England:
The National Archives of the UK)
A
search of marriages for Thomas PEARSON and a Mary between 1820 and 1830, in
Warwick, turned up only three, two of which were most likely: Mary SMITH on October
23rd, 1823, in Solihull and Mary CARE on April 16th,
1828, in Saint Phillips, Birmingham. Solihull is very near Sheldon where Thomas
was born and the surname of SMITH seemed right as well as you will see below.
1823
marriage entry in Solihull, Warwickshire parish marriage register for Thomas
PEARSON and Mary SMITH (downloaded from Ancesty on April 21st, 2015;
source Warwickshire Anglican Registers, Warwick, England: Warwickshire County
Record Office) Witnesses may have been Thomas’ brother and sister-in-law.
I
contacted Susan Tall, the Online
Parish Clerk for Ashow, to see if see could find more information about
baptisms for a girl named Mary, baptized in Ashow around 1800. She mentioned
that, according to her records, a daughter of Joseph and Mary SMITH was baptized August 6th,
1797.
I
looked up on IGI all of the girls named Mary baptized between 1798 and 1802 and found
Mary SMITH's parents to be Joseph and Ann, not Mary. So my first question was:
Did the microfiche records of the church registers show Mary or Ann SMITH as the
mother? In a later message from Susan Tall, she told me, "Well today I was
allowed to look at the originals – and what a mess they are – all loose pages
as the register had completely disintegrated. And each page is very fragile
(can understand now why they won't let the general public use them). But when I
turned to 1797 someone had straightened the edge of the page out (it was just
folded over) and there as clear as clear was Mary daughter of Joseph and Ann
Smith baptised August 6th, 1797. Just one note – I see there is a
Joseph Smith baptised March 13th, 1747 at Ashow on the IGI – could
well be the father of Mary Smith (1797). However I also noticed on the
microfilm the burial of a Joseph Smith on April 27th, 1797. If this
is him he died before Mary was baptised."
1797
baptism entry for Mary Smith (shown after edge of page folded down from photo of page sent to me by Susan Tall)
Then
I looked for a marriage for Joseph SMITH in the area around Ashow. I found an
Ann SPRASON married a Joseph SMITH on October 11th, 1796 in Offchurch. The marriage
was also recorded in Milverton on the same day. Both locations are very close
to Ashow.
I
looked up all of the girls named Mary – the possible sister of Ann shown on the
1851 census – baptized in Ashow between 1771 and 1775 and found only four: Mary
TURNER, Mary HODGINS, Mary SPRAWSON and Mary BILLINGTON. I then looked to see
if any of them had married a JONES. None had directly but Mary SPRAWSON married
John SALMON in Claverdon on January 2nd, 1806 and then Mary SALMON, a widow, married William JONES, also in Claverdon on September 9th, 1810.
The
surname SPRAWSON is very like the surname of Ann SPRASON and it would not
surprise me to see that one or both of them were mis-transcribed on IGI or are
variants of the same surname. The IGI shows four children with parents of John
and Mary SPRAWSON including an Ann baptized in 1769 and a Mary baptized in 1772.
So those fit. Others were John, 1775 and Thomas, 1778. All
of this data was confirmed later when I was able to see the actual register
entries on Ancestry.
After
all of the round-about searches I could confidently say that this 3rd
great-grandmother’s maiden name was SMITH.
Ann
SMITH did end up remarrying, to a John SHARP, in Ashow, on October 14th,
1799. The record shows she was a widow then, seeming to confirm that the Joseph
SMITH buried in 1797 was my 4th great-grandfather.
The
story and conclusions all hinge, of course, on the relationship of Mary PEARSON
and Mary JONES on the 1851 census, and on the entry for the unknown female
SMITH child in 1797. I like the answers I came up with. Thank goodness for
relatives living with other relatives and Online Parish Clerks like me.
Wayne
Shepheard is a volunteer with the Online Parish Clerk program in
England, handling four parishes in Devon, England. He has
published a number of articles about various aspects of genealogy and is a past
Editor of Chinook, the quarterly journal
of the Alberta Family Histories Society. Wayne also provides genealogical
consulting services through his business, Family History Facilitated
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