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Hi folks I'm attempting to track down information about my irish ancestors on several lines of my family tree. My recent DNA test results were 60% Scottish 40% Irish. I live in Ayrshire Scotland. From what I've managed to piece together most of my Irish ancestors moved to Scotland around the late 1860s early 1870s. It would apear they'd worked as weavers then becoming ironstone miners when arriving in Scotland. I'm wondering if anyone can shed some light on this period off migration- how was life ffor the working class at that time in Ireland, did the weaving industry collapse or suffer a depression as a result of the American Civil War or was there a recruitment campaigh by the Scottish mining companys looking to exploit cheap Irish labour? I would also appreciate any help in finding out any further information about the Steele and Elliott families- I have traced them back to Ireland but now hit a brick wall. Did any of the family remain in Ireland? Are there "cousins" still living in tthe ancestral home or did any of them emigrate to the US/Canada or "down under" to Australia or New Zealand. I welcome any help in finding out more about my ancestors. Thanks for any help you might be able to offer, Kind regards, David Wilson.

 

 

Nosey

Thursday 23rd Dec 2021, 01:39PM

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  • The title to your post puts William & Mary in Cortown, Co Meath. The post itself is under Co Antrim. However when I search for a marriage for this couple I find what looks like them both living in Co Down in 1855. So some confusion there.  I’d be surprised if someone marrying in Co Down originated in Meath, though it’s possible. What’s the source of that birth information? (Hopefully it’s not just an Ancestry hint is it? If so, best disregarded).  There is a townland called Cotton near Newtownards. I wonder if there’s been some confusion between it and Cortown in Meath? William’s occupation was a miner and his address was Ballygowan, parish of Comber.  Father Alexander Steele, labourer. Mary was living in John St, Newtownards and her father Robert was another labourer.  Ballygowan and Newtownards are both close to each other in Co. Down.

    Tradition was to marry in the bride’s church which was Newtownards Church of Ireland (ie Episcopalian) so that's possibly where you might expect to find a record of Mary’s baptism and that of any siblings. Unfortunately that church’s records were destroyed in the 1922 fire in Dublin and they have no baptisms earlier than 1884 and no marriages before 1845. A Samuel Steele was a witness, so he’s presumably a close relation.

    https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_returns/marriages_1855/09497/5441862.pdf

    That William’s 1855 occupation was a miner suggests he was already working in Scotland. There are no mines anywhere near Ballygowan (and very few mines in Ireland generally) so he had probably just come home to marry.

    If William & Mary both died in Scotland, it should be possible to get their mothers’ names from the Scottish death certificates which would aid searching for their deaths in Ireland.

    Here’s a possible death for an Alexander Steele in Newtownards workhouse:

    https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/deaths_returns/deaths_1884/06329/4815198.pdf

    And another in Ballygowan:

    https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/deaths_returns/deaths_1883/06379/4831170.pdf

    I can see from Ancestry that there are trees that say William’s mother was Margaret McMeachan. (That’s likely to be McMeekin or McMeechan in Ireland. It’s a common Scottish name around Ballygowan). Here’s a death in 1875 in Ballygowan that probably fits. Informant Alexander Steele.

    https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/deaths_returns/deaths_1875/020638/7240982.pdf

    Griffiths Valuation of 1863 lists Robert Elliott in John St, Newtownards. He had a house, yard & small garden. This looks to be his death in 1876. Informant was Susan Elliott.

    https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/deaths_retu…

    You are obviously curious as to why William & Mary went to Scotland. Ireland lacks natural resources. No coal, oil, iron ore etc, and so apart from a modest amount of shipbuilding in Belfast and the Belfast linen mills, it did not really get the industrial revolution that benefited England and Scotland where mills, steelworks, ship building, coal mining and all their support industries were major employers creating hundreds of thousands of new jobs. Much better paid than subsistence farming or hand loom weaving. Agricultural mechanisation was also slowly reducing the need for farm labourers. (Labourers usually did weaving in the winter months when there wasn’t much farm work needed).

    Added to that you had the effects of a massive population explosion in Ireland – up from 3 million in 1750 to 8 million in 1841 (no-one is really sure of the reasons why but reduced neo-natal deaths seem to be a factor) and the famine. So some push factors and some pull factors saw huge numbers of people leave Ireland. Something like 8 million people emigrated from Ireland between 1801 & 1921.

    https://www.irish-genealogy-toolkit.com/emigration-Ireland-19th-century.html

    If you look at the Scottish censuses for the Glasgow area in the late 1800s, you will see that about every fifth person recorded there was born in Ireland. Scotland was a particularly popular place to go to work because it was easy and very cheap to get to. Several sailings every day from Belfast, plus regular sailings from Portrush, Ballycastle and Londonderry, not to mention Dublin. The shipping companies main business was cargo and the passengers were just top-up revenue. Competition was fierce and passenger fares very low. People working in Scotland could come home for weddings or the harvest, as well as holidays (Glasgow used to shut down for 2 weeks every July, known as the Glasgow Fair holiday and there would then be a huge exodus to Ireland).  You could also send children back to stay with their grandparents, thereby leaving the wife free to work. You couldn’t do all those things so easily from Australia, America or Canada.

    You ask about the weaving industry. Throughout the 19th century home weaving became uneconomic as it was replaced by water powered mills which turned out generally higher quality cloth, much more quickly and more cheaply. The mills tended to employ mostly women or teenagers (being cheaper and nimbler than men) and so that impacted on the average farm labourer/weaver too. The US civil war didn't impact the Irish weaving industry very much as it was mostly making linen, which comes from the flax plant which is grown locally in Ireland. So the lack of cotton imports in the 1860s didn’t have that much of an impact.  (The US war of independence c 1776 did have a major impact in Ireland and saw the switch from cotton to linen and other forms of weaving eg wool, but that was 80 years earlier).

    The main financial driver for the move to Scotland was simply the availability of much better paid jobs. Same thing that drew thousands from the Scottish highlands and lowlands for those jobs too.  I wouldn't see it as exploitation of the Irish, or even the Scots (who got the same wages), just economic betterment.

    As far as DNA is concerned, the Steele, Elliott & McMeechan families are likely to be descendants of Scots who moved to Co Down in the 1600s, as part of a major Scots migration there throughout that century.  (Half the county has the same roots).  So ultimately, your “Irish” DNA should take you back to Scotland. Those ethnicity tests are not very accurate. More of a guesstimate, so I wouldn’t rely to heavily on them for accuracy.

    Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘

    Thursday 23rd Dec 2021, 09:45PM
  • Elwyn, thanks for taking time to reply to my message. I'm impressed by the speed and the rich detail you've provided. As you mention Ancestry "hints" must be treated with caution! I've spent the past 6 months sifting through information and following up scraps of info that have lead to so many dead ends and family lines that have bcome entangled and can take day weeks months to unravel. You have given me so many solid leads and the background info gives so much local clour and context for the period. It certainly helps make more sense of the info and helps spot errors too. Thanks once again, your help is greatly appreciated. i'm extremely proud of my newly discovered Irish ancestors and hope to visit once the Covid Pandemic is behind us. Have a great Christmas and New Year, regards, David.

     

    Nosey

    Thursday 23rd Dec 2021, 11:59PM
  • Hi David,

    I was curious if you’ve been able to find more info about Alexander Steele or Margaret McMeekin? I’m also a descendent of Alexander and Margaret, through their son John Steele born 1838, who worked as an iron miner in Auchinleck, then moved his family to Pennsylvania in 1881, where they all continued in the coal mining industry. 
    Thank you :)

    Kellie

    LynnDo

    Monday 2nd Oct 2023, 02:21PM
  • Hi Kellie, thanks for taking time to contact me. My family tree/family history is recorded in detail on Ancestry.co.uk.  I'm happy to share what Information I have that might be of interest. I'm obviously interested to find out more about you and how we are connected. I have 9 children listed for John Steele & Anna Scott, which is your direct descendent?

    I look forward to hearing from you

    Kind regards

    David

    Nosey

    Tuesday 3rd Oct 2023, 06:29AM
  • Hi David,

    I will try to find you on ancestry website to share info. Here is my family tree from John & Anna:

    Mary Steele born 1871 in Old Cumnock, Scotland. I believe, based on census data, that her father John went to the US in 1880 and Anna and the children moved in 1881, after the Scottish census was conducted.

    Mary Steele married Charles Mellon/Mylen in 1898 (the spelling of his surname changed in his teens or early twenties) he was born in 1873 (as Mellon) and died in 1952 in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. He was a coal miner. They lived in South Fayette, Allegheny, Pennsylvania and had my great grandfather James Mylen in 1900.

    James Mylen became a railroad conductor and married Hazel Cohick in 1922. They had only one child, my grandmother, Phyllis Mylen who married James Dunn in 1947 in Allegheny, Pennsylvania. They eventually relocated and both passed away in California. 

    LynnDo

    Wednesday 4th Oct 2023, 09:11AM
  • Kellie, thanks again for reaching out on this site and Ancestry. You have provided vital information that has allowed me to extend your branch of the family tree to include your parents, brother, your husband and yourself, bringing everything up to date. Greatly appreciated!

    David

    Nosey

    Thursday 5th Oct 2023, 06:41AM

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