John Graham born 11 Oct 1837 County Antrim. Parents John Graham and Agnes or Nancy Agnew. Married Ann Donahue 19 May 1859 in Bathgate, Midlothian, Scotland. Immigrated to America 1861. Looking for birth/baptismal record and/or any information on the parents.
Tim
Thursday 5th Mar 2020, 02:02PMMessage Board Replies
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Tim,
Statutory birth, death and marriage registration (in some jurisdictions called Vital Records) only started in Ireland in 1864, save for non RC marriages which were recorded from 1845 onwards. So you won’t find a birth certificate for John if he was born around 1837.
For earlier years you usually need to rely on church baptism records, where they exist. You need to know the precise denomination in order to search the correct records. Not all churches have records for that period and not all are on-line.
RC records are mostly on-line on the nli site:
https://www.nli.ie/en/family-history-introduction.aspx
For other denominations, the churches usually hold the originals but there are also copies in PRONI, the public record office, in Belfast. A personal visit is required to access them. Access to the records there is free. This link explains what records exist, parish by parish:
https://www.nidirect.gov.uk/publications/proni-guide-church-records
You haven’t said what happened to John junior’s parents. If they died in Ireland after 1864 you should be able to get death certificates for them. However the names are both very common, so it’s almost impossible to identify the correct ones without some idea of where they stayed and their occupations. Taking the 1901 census of Ireland as an example, there are 174 John Graham in the county and 172 Agnes/Nancy or Ann Graham (all 3 names are interchangeable). So care needs to be taken not to get the wrong family.
One clue I can give you is that the 1859 Scottish marriage cert should tell you whether John & Agnes Graham (the parents) were alive on 19th May 1859. If dead, it will say (dcd) after their names. If alive, it will not say anything. The Scottish records are pretty meticulous about that. And it should record John’s father’s occupation. Again an important piece of information in ensuring you find the right man.
I’d view John Graham’s date of birth with a little care. Most people in Ireland in the 1800s didn’t celebrate birthdays, nor did they often know exactly how old they were. When officialdom asked for a date of birth, they frequently just made one up. So his actual birth and baptism dates might be a few years either side of the date you have.
There is a tree on Ancestry (Ward/Niederer tree) which has this family. There are a couple of aspects which make me wonder how accurate it is. It has John Graham senior 1805 – 1860, born and died in Armagh. Agnes Agnew 1815 – 1901 born Armagh and died in Co. Antrim. John Graham junior is shown as born Antrim on the date in 1837 you have. He then has 5 siblings born in Carlisle 1838 – 1849, including a brother also named John Graham. Having 2 sons of exactly the same name both alive at the same time doesn’t seem very likely to me. I wonder if this is the right family? England introduced birth certificates in 1837, so it should be possible to verify those births, and the parents names, from birth certificates if you wished to do so. It has Agnes living in Little Bampton, Cumberland in the 1871 English census, followed by her death in Antrim in 1901. I would wonder, if the family lived in Cumberland for at least 30 years whether she did die in Antrim, a county she had little or no connection with. I suspect that’s possibly a different Agnes Graham. I’d have expected her to have died in Cumberland. But perhaps the owners of the tree may be able to clarify where they got the information.
The tree has John Graham b 1837 married twice. First to Ann Donahue 1839 – 1872 and then to Mary Bridget Sheridan 1834 – 1890.
Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘
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I have a copy of the marriage record from the parish of Bathgate. It is very difficult ro read. From what I can make out, John Graham was an Iron Miner from the villahge of Whitburn. . His father. also John says Agricultural labourer? Mother Agnes Maiden name Agnew (Deceased).
Ann Donacho from Blackburn some sort of Mill Worker father John labourer looks like CHemical something and cannot make out mathers name except maiden name Sheridan. Familt kore says her name was Bridget but the unreadable name is even close to that.
That's what I have.
Tim
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Tim,
The 1859 marriage certificate says the couple married according to the Catholic faith. John Graham, 24, village of Whitburn, Iron Miner (bachelor) son of John Graham Agricultural labourer and Agnes Graham, maiden name Agnew (deceased). Ann Donnachi 19, Blackburn, Cotton Mill Hackler, Spinster, daughter of John Donnachi, labourer chemical …. And Elizabeth Donachi, maiden name Sheridan.
So that tells you that all the parents were still alive in 1859, save for Agnes Graham. It also suggests to me that John Donnachi/Donaghy and his wife were probably in Scotland. Ireland didn’t have many chemical works but Scotland did. Worth checking for the family there in censuses and death records.
A hackler is a skill in the weaving industry. (Separating the coarse and fine parts from cotton, flax and hemp).
I had a look at the Irish Catholic baptism & marriage records on Ancestry. I didn’t find a marriage for John Graham & Agnes Agnew. There is a baptism of a John G to father John G on 29.12.1834 in Annaghone, Co Down. But there’s no mother's name. So can’t say that is your family. Many parishes in Ireland don’t have any records for the 1830s so you can’t assume it’s the right event just because it’s the only one in on-line records..
Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘