A funny thing happened on the way to determine whether our
Patrick Flannery had moved to Brantford, the
county seat of Brant County, to be close to his brother: I found another name in that 1891 census, one which I had seen back in
Patrick’s old home in Paris,
Ontario.
If you remember my first mention of Patrick and Margaret,
as newlyweds in the 1881 census, you may have noticed the curious configuration
given to his household listing by FamilySearch.org. That website had included a
second surname in the enumeration of everyone in Patrick’s family. Beside his wife,
Margaret, and their two young daughters Mary and Margaret, there was another
family by the name of O’Neial.
I wasn’t sure about this name—not because of the unusual
spelling, of course, because spelling contortions like that were bound to
happen back then, but because of its placement in the same household as Patrick’s.
To check it out, I located the same entry at Ancestry.com to look at the
actual document for myself.
Though the digitized copy of the 1881 census was quite
faded, sure enough, there appeared to be two families in the same household on
the document itself. The O’Neial family was comprised of thirty five year old
Ellen plus twelve year old John and ten year old Edward—if you are an
Ancestry.com subscriber, you can see for yourself by clicking here.
Why did Patrick’s young family include these other people?
Sometimes, poring over all these census records is enough to
turn one’s brain to mush, as names tumble around and become jumbled with other
names. But I thought I had seen that name before.
I took a look at the previous census to see if I could
locate what I thought I had remembered. I did find an Ellen combined with an Edward
and a John—ages conveniently reduced by ten years on the earlier record—but this
time, they were in the separate household of one Thomas O’Neil.
More importantly, they were right next door to a Flannery
household. But it wasn't Patrick’s. Instead, Thomas and Ellen O'Neil were living next to the household
of the now elderly Edward and Margaret Flannery. Hmm.
Taking it yet another step backwards to the 1861 census,
there in Edward and Margaret Flannery’s household, was a single woman by the name
of Ellen Flannery.
Could this Ellen Flannery born in Ireland in 1843 be the twenty five
year old wife of Thomas O’Neil in the 1871 census? We’ve already seen how fluid
those birth dates seem to have been in that era. Can I trust it to be so for
this instance? Why else would this same O’Neil family later move in tandem with
Edward Flannery's son Patrick when his family relocated from Paris
to Brantford?
Not sure to rely solely on a possibility like shifting ages, I’ll first have
to do some searches for records for any of this O’Neil—or O’Neail—foursome.
Tomorrow.
This turns you head into mush... it just makes mine ache!
ReplyDelete:)
Well, in this case, no pain, no gain. It was worth it!
Delete