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My great granpa Robert (possibly middle name William) Hendrie or Henrie or Hendry moved to Scotland, the first date I have is his marraige in Lanark, Lanarkshire in 1882. Always wanted to , but never was able to find out about his family in Ireland. Excited after looking through UK census's to find one which added the detail, born in Co Monaghan, Ireland. This was real progress. Recently, I made another amazing breakthrough, documents online with regards to claiming a pension. An extract from census of 1851 quoting his known address in Lanark in 1920. So here's what I know briefly.

From 1851 census..  Robt Hendrie aged 2 months, a grandson along with twin brother Henry Hendrie. Their mother is Mary Anne White, aged 19 and unmarried living with her mother Anne Jane White the head of family aged 41. Address shown is Monaghan/Dartree/Ematris and Townland is Boyher/Drummulla/Monneill/Rochcorry Tn.  Seems a huge address, not sure what it all means. His death cert in Lanark in Scotland in 1921 aged 70, says his father was John Hendrie a police constable. I can only asume his mum Mary Anne white went on to marry John Hendrie. Where they married, how many of the family moved to Scotland and when, did Robert Hendrie come over alone after he had grown up?, I have no idea but would love to know. I found in the 1901/1911 census site mention of Mary Anne White living in Boyher, DED Dawsongrove aged 60. Age out a bit but may be her. Also Griffiths shows Anne Jane White in Town of Rockcorry, again, may be her.

I'd be very grateful for any help I receive, or direction in how to progress. Many Thanks, Rob.

ROB

Sunday 11th Sep 2016, 06:15PM

Message Board Replies

  • Rob:

    Welcome to Ireland Reaching Out!

    Boyher, Drumhalla and Monneill are all townlands within the civil parish of Ematris. Rockcorry is the "big" town or villahe in the parish. Dartree is the barony and you can ignore a barony.

    Can you tell me the religious denomination for the family? I did not see the family in the RC records which start in 1848.

    Roger McDonnell

    Castlemore Roscommon, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘

    Monday 12th Sep 2016, 03:51PM
  • hi Roger, kind of you to reply. Although religion or church life has always been a part of my family, I'm pretty sure we were never RC. After coming to Scotland, GG Robt Hendrie was married by Church of Scotland and his eldest son married Baptist. The 1901 census entry I found for Mary Anne White stated she was Church of Ireland (if thats the correct lady).

    On his marraige cert,1882,  he shows father as John Henrie, a bookbinder Deceased, and mother Mary Anne Henrie ms McGregor, still alive. His first son was Henrie also.His daughter was Hendrie and all from then on. On his 1920 pension related enquiry he was Robert William Hendrie or Henry. Only his mum is quoted, Mary Anne Hendrie ms White. A few months latter aged 70, his death cert showed dad as John Hendrie, police constable, deceased and mum shown as Mary Anne (or Ann) Hendrie ms White, also deceased. Why details change between marraige and birth, I,m not sure, maybe there was 2 marraiges or may be he thot it was McGregor, but after his pension enquiry, he found out it was White.

    On 'Familysearch' site last night, I found a Mary White born 1832 and died jan-mar 1904 in monaghan aged 72 (about right as she was 19 at 1851 census). Very little detail.

    on irish genealogy.ie i found a marraige in 1859 in monaghan of mary anne white, but again, no more details.

    Not sure if both of the above are relatives but details kind off fit....

    Again, many thanks for help given.

    Rob (Hendrie).

     

     

    ROB

    Tuesday 13th Sep 2016, 02:19PM
  • Rob,

    A little bit of background to explain the 1851 census information you have been using. The state pension was introduced in the UK and Ireland in 1909. To qualify you had to be 70 or over. You had to prove your age. Birth certificates were only introduced in Ireland in 1864 (as opposed to 1837 in England & Wales and 1855 in Scotland) so in the early years people born there wouldn’t have one. A baptism certificate was acceptable instead, as were military discharge papers and similar documents. For those without any such documentary proof, an option was to check the 1851 (and sometimes the 1841) census, to see what your age was then. If that made you 70 or over, then it was acceptable as proof of age.

    So Robert appears to have applied for a pension when he reached 70 years of age around 1921, and he evidently went for the 1851 census option. Now we know he was aged 2 in 1851, so in 1920 he probably couldn’t recall exactly which townland his family were living in. In such cases, people stuck down the names of any townland they thought the family may have been in. (I have seen that many times before). In your case that was Boyher, Drummulla, Monneill & Rockcorry. The person who searched the records would then search each townland given on the form. In this case he evidently found the family but it isn’t clear to me from looking at the document on the NLI site which townland they were actually living in. Though since Mary Anne White was in Boyher 50 years later, perhaps that was it.

    Mary Ann White in the 1901 census was Church of Ireland (ie Episcopalian). You could search the Ematris baptism records to see if you can find Robert and his brother Henry c 1849. That might give you a little extra information, including the father’s name. The baptism records for that parish start in 1811. There’s a free copy in PRONI (the public record office) in Belfast. Or you could contact the church (expect to pay a fee if the Vicar agrees to do the search).

    I note that John Hendrie is reported to have been a policeman. If you think he served in Ireland, then it was probably in the Royal Irish Constabulary. You may be able to trace his service record. There’s copies of the RIC records in various location eg NAS, Kew London, NAS Dublin, and PRONI in Belfast but if you can’t access them, then the police museum in Belfast will do a look up for you for a £25 fee. https://www.psni.police.uk/inside-psni/our-history/genealogy/

    It was RIC policy not to post a policeman to a county where he was born or had family connections in. So if he served in Monaghan, he wasn’t born there. The service record will normally tell you the county he was born in though.

    Having said that, Robert’s marriage certificate he gave his father’s occupation as bookbinder. The information on the marriage certificate is likely to be more reliable than the death certificate. The marriage certificate information came from Robert who was more likely to know his father’s occupation than the informant on the death certificate who almost certainly had never met Robert’s father and probably knew very little about him. Information on death certificates is often the informant’s best guess and consequently mistakes are common.

    The 1904 death you have spotted for Mary White isn’t the right one. That person was a farmer’s widow lived in Greagh. This is her in the 1901 census:

    http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1901/Monaghan/Kilmore/Greagh/1637615/

    Boyher falls within Cootehill registration area.  I searched Cootehill deaths. I think your Mary Anne died 26.1.1912 in Rockcorry. She was single, a labourer, aged 80, and cause of death was senile atrophy. Informant was Mary McBennet, who was present at the death. This looks to be Mary Anne in the 1911 census:

    http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1911/Monaghan/Dawsongrove/R…

    Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘

    Thursday 22nd Sep 2016, 11:55AM

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