So, I’m sitting at my computer, minding my own business—well,
at least the business of finding any connection between my Denis Tully and a
Darby Tully who pops up nearby in Ontario, Canada—and what should I find but
this off-the-wall document.
It's a death certificate—not an unusual find for someone
immersed in genealogical pursuits. Frustrated at not locating any more about
this Darby Tully of Blenheim Township in Oxford County, Ontario, I thought, at
the least, I could glean his parents’ names from a death certificate—if, that is, he survived until the
newly-minted government of Canada saw fit to record such information in
their vital statistics.
That was going to be a long shot. Best I could tell, this
Darby Tully was born sometime before the turn of the century—that other century. Like 1800. His chance of
living through an entire century to reach governmental enlightenment—at least
of the documentary kind—was extremely small.
I was game to take a look. I checked out Find A Grave.
I wandered through local cemetery websites, thanks to leads from Google. And I
put Ancestry.com through its paces, looking for death records.
At first, I looked for Darby. Finding no results there, I
reverted to the more formal Jeremiah. Still nothing positive. Frustrated, I
just entered the surname, and left the given name field blank. Seasoning that
search recipe lightly with a restriction to the “location” field, I did find
some possibilities. None, however, with the name I was seeking.
I know the given name James is not among my possibilities
for Tully ancestors—or, given the more recent date of 1911, possible Tully
descendants—but just in case this James turned out to be a son of one of my
Tully clan, I rationalized I could trace this further.
Oh, who am I fooling: it was what followed that first half
of the form that grabbed me, robbed me of all common sense and dragged me off,
kicking and screaming, to find out more about this guy.
On the “Medical Certificate of Death” section, where the
county official is supposed to “hereby certify” that he “attended the deceased,”
the only line that follows expected format was the first line. His name: “Tully,
James.”
Under that was a statement, “This is a case of being found
dead from natural causes, probably heart failure sudden.”
Ya think?
The rest of the form was left blank. There was no helpful
information on the lines meant to designate date or place of birth. No clue of
what his father’s or mother’s name might have been, or where they came from. No
listing of even a spouse. What the reporting party saw was what the document
got: his name—how that was obtained without gleaning anything else from whoever
discovered the death is a puzzle to me—his gender and race, that he was a
laborer, and the supposed date of death. Coroners are good at figuring that
out.
Oh, and that he died in a place called Ingersoll, in Oxford
County, not far from our (possible) Darby Tully in Blenheim Township there.
When I saw that, all I could think of was our Patrick
Flannery, the poor unfortunate distant relative who was found dead in a frozen mill race. Until I ran across Patrick’s death mentioned in a news article, I
didn’t even know there was such a thing as a mill race. The whole episode had
struck me as such an anonymous way to go.
Maybe the anonymity of it all was what made me determined to
learn something else about this James Tully, the guy who died alone (well, hopefully he didn’t have any assistance)
on the eleventh of August, 1911.
So, off to the census records it was. For speed of search, I
stuck with Ancestry.com for this one—some links won’t work for you if you’re
not a subscriber—because they have readouts on each of the decades I’d need.
Not knowing how old our unfortunate James might have been, I
started with the 1861 census. There, the only possibility in Oxford County
was right there in Ingersoll—same place as where it all ended for Mr. Tully.
In 1861, James was situated in the household of one Henry
Crotty, who gave as his occupation, “Gentleman.” A single man, James was
listed as laborer, and declared himself to be twenty years of age, having
arrived in Canada West from England—thus, in a piquant role reversal, becoming an English laborer serving an Irish gentleman.
He was an Episcopalian, as was his employer, which automatically nixed him from possibilities of connection to our Tully family.
James likely remained in the Crotty household for the 1871 census, as he did for the 1881 census. After that, he seems to have done a
disappearing act. Perhaps that’s when he went into a loner phase—a prelude to
his lonely passing twenty years later, I thought.
You know I couldn’t let it go at that. He had been such a
regular at the Crotty household. So I tried a different approach: I looked for
his employer in the 1891 census. And struck out again.
Realizing that the good gentleman was likely born in 1812,
and this was the 1891 census we were contemplating, I thought it might be
prudent to try a different tack: look for his wife.
Sure enough, Mrs. Crotty was listed as a widow, but was
still on the family property, along with her remaining children. In addition,
Ancestry.com had noted a laborer in the household by the name of James “Nelly.”
I took a peek. Yes, I’d take that for James Tully. At least
the birth year was consistent. What do you think?
By 1901, however, Mrs. Crotty had joined her husband, and
the land was left to her children—at least, those who had chosen to remain. As
for James Tully—or even James Nelly—there was no sign. Nor was there any
indication of such a man with a birth year of 1841 in the Ontario records at any other location. He
seemed to have simply vanished. Perhaps he was perfecting his Invisible Man
routine.
Likewise, there was no sign of James Tully in the 1911 census. But we know he had to be there, for if nothing else, the
official record indicates he was found somewhere in Ingersoll in Oxford County—the
same place where he had lived and worked since at least 1861—by August 11,
1911. Always a fixture around the farm, he slipped away into lone anonymity
when his services were no longer needed by the Gentleman.
You might consider compiling a book of mysterious deaths in the family.
ReplyDeleteYes, definitely submit an "alternative" to James Nelly.
Even though James was an Episcopalian from England, he's probably still one of your Tully clan. It's just too much coincidence for a bunch of unrelated Tullys to wind up in the same spot. If there was prejudice against Irish and against Catholics, he might have lied.
Well, I'm going to tuck away this James Tully record in a safe place, just in case something more turns up. It is interesting that so many from the same location ended up so near each other, though miles and miles from their homeland.
DeleteI think it says "Tully" and not Nelly myself.
ReplyDeleteYou will love this:
"He was born in the county of Tipperary, Ireland, January 12, 1812, his parents being Henry Crotty, gentleman farmer, and Mary Antony. His paternal grandmother was a Cashel, a somewhat noted Irish family. In 1831, Henry Crotty, senior, immigrated with his family to Canada, coming directly to Ingersoll. " and more... at
http://www.accessgenealogy.com/canada/biography-of-henry-crotty.htm
You always find the most amazing things, Iggy! Incredible that Henry Crotty also came from the same county in Ireland. Admittedly, County Tipperary is a large county, but it almost sounds as if someone of influence planned a group voyage and brought a good number of his fellow residents with him from County Tipperary.
DeleteThanks so much for sharing that link, Iggy!
Just another wrinkle. Apparently a William Tully/Tulley lived in Ingersoll, buying one of the first lots there. Another mystery Tully?
DeleteOh, Iggy, anything is possible at this point. Almost tempts me to turn this all into a One-Name Study on Tully.
DeleteI think it is Tully also. Frustrating for sure...where did he go? Was he visiting somplace else at the time of the Census:)
ReplyDeleteIt does make me wonder how some people slipped into the cracks during census time. He was definitely not the only one...
Delete