Monday, September 2, 2013

Bessie Davidson Lyle


Bessie Davidson Lyle
 
 
Birth 1893 16 Mar

Haddington, East Lothian

 Married  June 5, 1919 to John Mccullum Lyle
Montreal Canada at St Matthews Presbyterian Church


 
 
 
St Matthews 'Scotch' Presbyterian Church
St. Gabriel Street, Montreal
Residence 1930— Age: 37

Hoboken, Hudson, New Jersey

Age: 37; Marital Status: Married; Relation to Head of House: Wife


 Residence 1935— Age: 42

Hoboken, Hudson, New Jersey
 

Residence 1940 1 Apr— Age: 47

Hoboken, Hudson, New Jersey, United States

Age: 47; Marital Status: Married; Relation to Head of House: Wife
 

Death 1962 26 Jan— Age: 68

Morristown, Middlesex, New Jersey, USA


Sunday, September 1, 2013

John McCullum Lyle Jr Military Service Records


 In 1908 John McCullum Lyle Jr., aged 18, joined the Gordon Highlanders, 1st Battalion. He served for a little over a year.   He was living in Scotland at the time and enlisted in Aberdeen.
Below is his attestation.





 
                                             Uniforms of the Gordon Highlanders in 1908
This photo was NOT of John Lyle it was taken two weeks before he enlisted!
Many of the highland regiments were referred to as
The Ladies from Hell
 
Cock O' the North was the regimental marching song.

More information on the Gordon Highlanders can be found here.




CME Badge.jpg
 
After he arrived in Canada World War I broke out and John enlisted with the 4th Field Co Canadian Engineers on September 23rd 1914 and served in Europe. 
 
Details of his service can be found here.


Background Information
Organized at the Canadian Engineers Training Depot, Ottawa.

Commanded by Major G. A. Inksetter.

Authorization published in General Order 36 of 15 March 1915.

Left Halifax 18 April 1915 aboard NORTHLAND.

Arrived England 29 April 1915.

Arrived in France 16 September 1915. 2nd Canadian Divisional Engineers.

Absorbed by 4th Battalion, Canadian Engineers in June 1918.
http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/obj/005/f2/005-1142.29.005-e.pdf

See also 4th Battalion, Canadian Engineers

 
Rank: SPR
Regimental number(s): 5026
Reference: RG 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 5805 - 29
Date of Birth:09/01/1890

 
  
 
 


 
LYLEJohn Mccullum1890Dunfermline, FifeWO97 ChelseaVIEW
 

Saturday, August 31, 2013

Life in the Rows

The Dixon Rows in Blantyre


Miners depended on the Mining Company to provide housing.  Some  developments were better than others.
In 1910 a commision reported on the housing provided to miners. It was entitled "The Housing Condition of Miners”  by the Medical Officer of Health, Dr John T. Wilson".  An exerpt appears at http://scottishmining.co.uk/  .
Exerpts related to the Mulveys and McCartneys are provided below in italics.

The Mulveys

The Mulvey Family lived in Tannochside in Uddingston.   It was company housing torn down in the 50"s for a Catepillar plant. That was torn town in the 80's and the area is now occupied by an industrial park.  At the time that Ann Mulvey made her crossing to Canada in 1923 the Mulvey family  lived at 51 Laidlaw St. 

"Archibald Russell Ltd

Tannochside Mine - Situated near Uddingston
Persons employed underground 760, above ground 172, total 932
The employees reside in the following localities:-
In mine owners' houses, situated at Tannochside 260
In rented houses, situated at Tannochside, Thorniewood, Nackerty, Uddingston, Bellshill, Baillieston, Cambuslang, Shettleston, Rutherglen, Airdrie and Coatbridge 672
The mine owners' houses situated at Tannochside number 210 and are described in 3 groups as follows:-
.........................................
3. Laidlaw Street:-
88 Two-apartment houses
  • 40 being erected about 9 years ago under Building Bye-Laws, and the others about 20 years ago. Rental of old houses £8 3s, Rental of new houses £9 2s
  • Brick building - Damp-proof course - Plastered on solid - Wood floors, ventilated - Internal surfaces of walls good
  • No overcrowding – apartments good size
  • No garden ground – wash houses – coal cellars
  • 40 houses have sculleries with sinks and gravitation water, others open channels in front and stand pipes
  • In connection with the above houses there are 36 WC and 30 privies with 5 ashpits attached, which gives one WC or privy to every 4 houses. Here the 40 houses erected about 9 years ago are provided with privy middens, while the older houses have been provided with WC and ashbins. The channels are kept well flushed with pit water from a 1 ½ inch pipe
  • Scavenged daily at owners expense"

Today I found four YouTube Videos of life in Tannochside and some of it's erly history.  The man who made this amateur video was born on the street on which the Mulvey family lived.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i2puZp4eCFU

Ann Mulvey lived with family at 51 Laidlaw when she came to North America
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OhT6Q2QVZuM

The families McCartney and McQuades are mentioned, but our MCartneys and McQuades lived in Blantyre.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZnRSuVCcRGg

The 4th video deals with the 30's and 40's and I didn't add it.
    The McCartneys
The McCartneys lived two or three miles away in Blantyre in company housing as well.  They lived in the Dixon Rows aka The Raws, named as such becasue the living there was raw and rough.  The last of the Raws was torn down in the 1950s and replaced by government housing. 


From "The Housing Condition of Miners” by the Medical Officer of Health, Dr John T. Wilson.

"William Dixon Ltd

Blantyre Mines Pits No 1, 2 and 3 are situated at High Blantyre, No 4 at Larkfield
Persons employed underground 865, above ground 210, total 1075
The employees reside in the following localities:-
In mine owners' houses, situated at Stonefield 420
In rented houses, situated at Blantyre and Hamilton 443
In houses owned by employees at Blantyre 2
The mine-owners' houses are known as Dixon's Rows and are situated at Stonefield. They consist of:
149 Two-apartment houses Rental £5 17s. to £6 10s
157 One-apartment houses Rental £3 18s to £4 11s
  • Erected about 33 years ago - One storey, brick - no damp-proof course - Walls not strapped and lathed, plastered on brick - A few wood floors, unventilated; majority brick floors - Some walls slightly damp - Internal surface of walls and ceilings good
  • No overcrowding – apartments large
  • No garden ground available, wash houses with water, no coal cellars
  • Water closets recently introduced, in the proportion of one closet to every 4 tenants
  • No sinks - drainage by open channels
  • Water supply from stand pipes in street, the well being at a distance varying from about 12 feet to 200 feet from the houses.
  • Scavenged at owners' expense, but houses are now included in Blantyre Special Scavenging District"

The Blantyre site below offers looks inside the houses of miners from different periods.
The 1901 census reports that infant Edward McCartney lived in his house with his father James, mother Rose, half brother John Reid, brother James and his maternal Uncle Terrance.
James Mccartney30
Rose Mccartney35
James Mccartney5
John Reid14
Edward Mccartney1m
Terence Mcquade38

Susan Clark Mulvey



Susan Clark Mulvey
Bronx NY 1926

Susan Clark Mulvey
 
 
 
 
I haven't found any pictures of Susan Clark Mulvey smiling.  Story has it that while living in Uddinston Scotland she decided that none of her children were going to die in the mines and sent them, one by one, to North America.  I think that determination shows on her face.
 
She also decreed that her children would learn to play a musical instrument which led to a lot of singing and dancing at family get togethers.
 
Her father was Edward Clark born in Ireland in 1834 died in Lanarkshire Scotland in 1904.  Her mother was Bridget Curran Clark born in 1841 in Ireland and died in Lannarkshire Scotland in 1902.
I do not have any pictures of her parents but records indicated that Bridget Curran's parents were Thomas Curran born 1811 in Ireland died 1868 and Catherine Nicholl born 1817 in Ireland and died 1864.


Birth

1870 22 Mar
Heywood, Lanarkshire
 
  • Residence

    1871Age: 1
    Carnwath, Lanarkshire, Scotland
     
  • Residence

    1881Age: 11
    Bothwell, Lanarkshire, Scotland
     
  • Residence

    1881Age: 11
    Bothwell, Lanarkshire, Scotland
     
  • Marriage to Francis Mulvey

    1891 29 AprAge: 21
    Uddingston, Lanarkshire, Scotland
    Roman Catholic Chapel. Witnesses Thomas Mulvey and Jane Clark
     
  • Residence

    1891Age: 21
    Bothwell, Lanarkshire, Scotland
    Age: 20; Relation to Head of House: Daughter
     
  • Residence

    1901Age: 31
    Bothwell, Lanarkshire, Scotland
     
  • Visiting the McAlindens in Montreal

    

    The family entered the US through Canada and the McAlinden branch of the family stayed in Canada.  In these photos Frank (Francis) and Susan Mulvey along with thier daughter Mary Mission and her children are visiting.


    Francis Mulvey, Susan Mulvey McAlinden, Susan Clark Mulvey
    Montreal Canada
    Early 1920s
    John Mission wrote on the back of this photo
    "Do you know this family I think you should. John
    Mother is having a little nap"
    Mother refers to his wife Mary Misson
     
     
    L-R Thomas Mulvey Susan Clark Mulvey, Susan Mulvey McAlinden, John Mulvey
    Monteal Early 1923
     
    L-R Thomas Mulvey, Patrick McAlinden (m Susan Mulvey) ?? Francis Mulvey, Frances Misson
    Early 1920s


     
     

    Back Row L-r Flory Mission and Francis Mulvey holding Frances Mission
    Front L-R Dorothy Mission  Boy??
    Early 1920s
     
     

     
    Mary Mulvey Mission and Susan Clark Mulvey
    Montreal Cananda Early 1920s
     



     
    Mary Mulvey Mission holding John Mission Susan Clark Mulvey with Frances Mission

    Frank Mulvey







     

    Birth

    1863  9 Nov
    Cowdenbeath, Fife, Scotland
     

    Residence

    1871Age: 8
    Beath, Fife, Scotland
     

    Marriage to Susan Clark

    1891  29 AprAge: 27
    Uddingston, Lanarkshire, Scotland
    Roman Catholic Chapel. Witnesses Thomas Mulvey, the grooms brother and Jane Clark, the brides's sister.  Thomas and Jane were also married that day and their witnesses were......Frank and Susan!
     

    The Mulvey Family Tree

    Mulvey Family Tree
    Won't let me Crop out my computer screen!


    In 1922 the Dublin office that held census records burned down.  This makes searching Irish geneology difficult.  Many birth certificates did not contain the mother's maiden name.
    
    

    Great Grandma Susan Clark


                                                              Bronx NY circa 1928
                                L Susan Clark Mulvey holding her grand daughter Frances McCartney
                   R Ann (Anne Annie) Elizabeth Mulvey McCartney holding Catherine (Rena Kitty) McCartney

    My mother Frances called her little sister Rena because their Uncle by marriage to their Auntie Kate Mulvey, Gerard Quiros, was from Cuba.  He called baby Catherine "Catarina"  and since Frances was only two and half years old at the time and Rena was what she could pronounce,  Rena it was.  Later Catherine's husband Edward Bart knick-named her Kitty.

    We Were Almost Cowboys


    From the Visit Montana website. Photographer not creditedhttp://visitmt.com/listing/categories_NET/MoreInfo.aspx?IDRRecordID=12925

    From the Mulvey Gluch Ranch Website:

    "William Mulvey and his wife, Catherine, arrived in Montana and the North Boulder River valley in 1864. The trip took them from their home land in Ireland to the United States and by wagon to St. Louis, Missouri and then Montana. They homesteaded the original 160 acre headquarters building site of today’s Mulvey Gulch Ranch. The ranch has grown in size to today’s approximately 21,000 acres of deeded ground and 65,000 of leased ground. The ranch is also adjacent to enormous areas of remote State and Federally owned forest and grass lands.

    The North Boulder River flows through the ranch for several miles on its way to the Jefferson and Missouri Rivers. Trout fishing is available in the Boulder, Jefferson, Madison, Gallatin and numerous other rivers.

    The ranch is home to herds of elk, whitetail and mule deer, moose, antelope, black bear, mountain lions and an endless variety of birds including bald eagles and golden eagles. The vast majority of the ranch can be traversed only by foot or horseback.

    Bev and Randy Kirk manage the Mulvey Gulch Ranch operations today and reside in a restored 1893 handhewn log home at headquarters. The view out the front door is of Elkhorn Mountain and Crow Peak towering near 10,000 ft. These mountains typically have snow on them from September through June. The view out the back door is of the Bull Mountains stretching 30 miles north to south and rising to 8600 ft. Our ranch lands reach into both mountain ranges."


    When the family left Dumshanbo Ireland my great great grandfather Francis Mulvey (b 1821) (you young 'uns will have to count your OWN greats)  left for mining work outside of Glasgow Scotland,  but his brother William left for America and homesteading.  My mom and her couins remember talk of cattle drives their great grandfather had been on in the American West but, frankly, chalked it up as blarney.  Turns out the story was more than likely true but Francis chose a hard miner's life over a hard cowboy's life.  It seems that William and Catherine Mulvey did not have children, so there are not cowboy cousins to look up. 


    http://www.mulveygulch.com/

    A blogger who is familiar with the ranch has taken some great photos.

    http://annieophoto.blogspot.com/2012/07/blog-post.html
    http://annieophoto.blogspot.com/2010/11/one-and-onlybeautiful-mulvey-gulch.html

     


     
    Mulvey Family Uddingston Scotland circa 1906
    Back row L - R Catherine Mulvey (Auntie Kate) Francis (Frank ) Mulvey Jr., Susan Mulvey (Auntie Susie), Mary Mulvey (early photoshop she was alreading in NY and was added in to the family photo), Row 2 L-R Francis Mulvey Sr. holding Thomas Mulvey, Ann Mulvey (grandma) James Mulvey, John Mulvey, Susan (Clark) Mulvey.