I am trying to piece together the ancestry of my great, great grandfather John Bowes. I have bits of information from various sources but am not sure if they all relate to my ancestor. I have part of a family tree given to me by a relative which states that John Bowes was born in 1816 in Enniskillen and emigrated to Australia in 1841. He married my great, great grandmother Euphemia Bridges Allen in 1842 but on the marriage certificate it clearly says that he was a widower so I am assuming that he had been married in Ireland before he came to Australia and perhaps his first wife died and that is why he emigrated. I have read that he was a baker and a Wesleyan lay preacher when he came to Australia and I have found a John Bowes listed as a Grocer and baker in Main Street of Enniskillen in1839 ( Ulster Ancestry site). The other information I have is a reference to John Bowes marrying Rebecca, daughter of Hugh and Mary Wallace in Enniskillen church on 13 December 1837 (Reference from the Enniskillen Chronicle and Erne Packet according to a list compiled by Seamas Mac Annaidh). The other record I have found is a list of births recorded at the Knockmanoul Methodist church in Enniskillen which has a child called Mary being born on 3/5/1840 and baptised on 22/5/1840. Her parents were John and Rebecca Bowes of Enniskillen. I cannot find any other records for Rebecca or Mary Bowes. I am wondering if they both died as I cannot find any record of John emigrating with a family. Of course it may be a different John Bowes and I am barking up the wrong tree. I would appreciate any enlightenment anyone could give me. Thank you.
Saturday 13th Sep 2014, 06:59AM
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The clue that looks most promising to me is the baker you mentioned.. occupations are often a good way to establish likely connections, especially for a distinctive trade like a baker.
Early Methodist baptisms and marriages often took place in the established church, i.e. Church of Ireland, so that marriage could fit, and slightly later in 1846 the Slater's directory listing for Enniskillen mentions a 'Wesleyan Methodist Chapel' and Preaching Lane, Enniskillen, with 'ministers various'. Pigot's 1824 and Lewis mention a Methodist place of worship in or near the town, but neither include a detailed location.
Knockmanoul Methodist Meeting house was located in the townland of the same name, which is on the road to Ballinamallard in Magheracross civil parish and about 5 miles to the north east of Enniskillen see : here (c1837 OSI map)
It might be worth chasing up a death cert for John in Australia to see if there is any mention of his parents, if the informant knew the details, and these were recorded by the state he lived in at the time - if so this could provide a little more detail on him.
Shane Wilson, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘
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Hello AHHOY
I believe we are distant relatives through Euphemia Allen.
Her family tree as I have it is here:
http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Allen-5956
My g-g-grandmother, Isabella Oxley nee Syme was sent out from Edinburgh to NSW, Australia, to stay with her Aunt, Euphemia Bowes nee Allen. I would be interested in comparing notes. You can email me at gattaga@gmail.com
Paulmorbieus
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Ahhoy,
If you are on facebook I can invite you to a large group of Bowes from the Fermanagh/Monaghan region. You won't find the group searching facebook, but if you friend my Bowes surname study page then I can add you to it. I hope you're on facebook? https://www.facebook.com/bowesonenamestudy
Martha Bowes
Bowes One-Name Study https://sites.google.com/site/bowessurnames/home
Bowes DNA Project https://www.familytreedna.com/public/bowes/default.aspx?section=yresults
Kilkenny_Home
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Rebecca Bowes is an ancestor of mine. Hugh and Mary Wallace are my 4 x Great Grandparents. I have had the same problem tracing what happened to Rebecca and Mary. There was also a David, born on 23 November 1838 to John and Rebecca Bows, and baptised in Knockmanoul Methodist Chapel on 17th December 1838. I believe this is John and Rebecca Bowes and that the surname has been misspelt. I have been unble to find any records of Rebecca, David or Mary after John Bowes emigrated to Australia in 1840.
I hope to be in Enniskillen at the end of October and will check further, but it seems unusual not to find ny records of all three.
Benchar
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Methodism took a lot longer to become established in Ireland as a separate denomination than in England. In Ireland there was considerable resistance to separating from the Church of Ireland. It was 1815 before Methodists started to conduct their own baptisms. However because of continuing loyalty and other factors, many continued to use the Church of Ireland for baptisms and marriages for years after this and it was 1871 before all Methodists routinely performed their own baptisms.
For Methodist marriages, the earliest that I am aware of, date from 1835 (Belfast Donegall Square, the first Methodist church in Ireland). However in the mid 1800s there were only a few Methodist Ministers (Methodism relied heavily on lay preachers). So the shortage contributed to the continuing practice of marrying in the Church of Ireland. In addition, in the early years, many Methodist Meeting Houses were not licensed for marriages so that too contributed to couples marrying in the Church of Ireland.
So to summarise, you are unlikely to find many Methodist baptisms before 1820. Few marriages before the 1840s and only a handful for many years after that. If there are no Methodist records in the location you are researching, I would search Church of Ireland records instead, as that’s the most likely place to find the relevant event.
Not many Methodist Meeting Houses have graveyards and so they may be buried in public or Church of Ireland graveyards (which are open to all denominations).
The other thing to remember about marriages is that tradition was to marry in the bride’s church, after which she’d usually attend her husband’s, so even if your John Bowes was Methodist, his first wife may not have been, and their marriage could be in a different church. Church of Ireland being the most likely in this case, though Presbyterian is another possibility.
The bad news is that Enniskillen Church of Ireland lost most of its early records in the 1922 fire in Dublin. Only some fragments survive. They have been copied and can be viewed in PRONI in Belfast:
Extracts of baptisms, 1667-1789, marriages, 1668-1794, and burials, 1667-1781; burials, 1879-1907 and 1941-50;vestry minutes, 1731-1920; copy deeds, 1796-9; select vestry minutes, 1871-80; register of church members, 1871 and 1946-50; preachers’ book, 1895-1928.
Extracts from baptism, marriage and burial registers, 1666-1826.
Copies of records for Enniskillen Wesleyan meeting house are also in PRONI, as follows:
Enniskillen [Wesleyan Methodists]
Baptisms, 1823-1953; marriages, 1864-1906; circuit schedule book, 1866-80; quarterly meeting minutes,1877-93. Baptisms, 1823-43.
So, as explained above, Enniskillen Methodists were baptizing from 1823 onwards but they evidently still married in the Church of Ireland until 1864. Methodists don’t keep burial records, so if John’s first wife died a Methodist there’s no church burial record to look for. I searched the statutory death records (which start in 1864) up to 1921 but did not find a Rebecca Bowes who died anywhere in Ireland. There were 39 John Bowes deaths including 1 in Enniskillen, in 1869 aged 3.
Knockmanoul is in the parish of Magheracross and is about 5 miles north of Enniskillen. There used to be 2 Methodist meeting houses there, one Wesleyan and the other a Primitive Wesleyan.
Records in PRONI (all free to view):
Ballinamallard [Wesleyan Methodists]
Baptisms, 1829-1919; marriages, 1882-1937; circuit schedule books, 1881-91 and 1895-1908; membership rolls,1881-92 and 1898-1900; circuit stewards’ book, 1879-94.
Knockmanoul [Wesleyan Methodists]
Baptisms, 1879-1919 [there may be earlier baptisms in MIC1E/15]; circuit schedule books, 1866-1908; membership rolls, 1881-1900; circuit stewards’ book, 1879-94.
If you think the family lived near Knockmanoul, rather than in Enniskillen itself then you might want to check Magheracross Church of Ireland records, for marriages anyway (copies in PRONI):
Magheracross (Clogher diocese)
Baptisms, 1800-40 and 1846-91; marriages, 1800- 1919; burials, 1800-1979; vestry minutes, 1847-1966; preachers’ books, 1843-65 and 1930-61; register of vestrymen, 1870-1919.
It is possible that there was more than one John Bowes in Enniskillen around 1840. Here’s a link to an 1861 marriage for Elizabeth Bowes of Enniskillen whose father was John Bowes, an agricultural steward:
In the 1901 Irish census of Co. Fermanagh there were 29 people named Bowes, a mix of Church of Ireland and Methodist. 4 were named John. Statistically it seems likely there would have been a similar number in 1840. There were 131 people named Wallace, most were Church of Ireland but with some Methodists, Presbyterians and 2 Catholic households. There were 4 named Rebecca. Not the Rebecca who married John Bowes obviously but I mention it simply because many families kept the same names going generation after generation and sometimes a much later generation can hint at an earlier one.
Your underlying problem with this piece of research – as I am sure you are well aware – is that there are very few comprehensive records for Enniskillen for the period you need. There’s no easy way around that.
If visiting next month, be aware that Covid restrictions mean that at present only people with existing PRONI reader’s tickets can access the records (and you have to book 3 weeks in advance, specifying the documents you want to search - max 10 per visit). Some churches are open eg many Church of Ireland but with various restrictions, and some are not eg the Methodist church’s general advice at present is not to open. Libraries remain shut and there are restrictions on other museums too. Accessing local records may prove difficult.
There are some quarantine restrictions in Northern Ireland depending on where you are coming from and it’s not permissible to enter a private house at present (unless you live there). The Covid rules keep changing across Ireland at the moment so it’s best to keep an eye on government websites to keep track of the latest situation.
Good luck anyway.
Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘
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I have recently found information concerning David Bowes, the son of John and Rebecca Bowes, baptised in Knockmanoul Methodist Chuch, Enniskillen, County Fermanagh in 1838.
On the 17th February 1864 he enlisted in Company D of the 8th Illinois Infantry Regiment as a private soldier and fought in the American Civil War. He was promoted to 2nd Lieutenant on 27 November 1864. His enlistment records confirm that he is the son of John and Rebecca Bowes and gives his date of birth. He was discharged at Baton Rouge on 4th May 1866. .
He lived in Olney, Richland, Illinois and remained single until his death on 31st January 1920 at the age of 81. His headstone in Haven Hill Cemetery gives his name, military rank and his Regiment. Documents associated with his death validate the information from his enlistment and appear to confirm that he is the same David Bowes who was bapitised on 17th December 1838 in Enniskillen, recorded as the son of John and Rebecca Bowes. If he is the son of the same John Bowes who married Euphema Bridges in NSW in 1842, why is there no reference to his son in the various newspaper reports at the time of his death in 1891, when David Bowes was still alive and living in Illinois? His "other" children are mentioned. It may raise some doubts that they are both the same person, at least until more information is found concerning Rebecca and Mary Bowes.
Benchar
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I located a report attributed to an Enniskillen newspaper, dated 9th September 1841, that on the 2nd Instant, Rebecca Bowes, wife to John, baker of this town,of decline, bore her long illness with fortitude and died.
Benchar