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General => The Common Room => The Lighter Side => Topic started by: earley-bird on Friday 19 October 07 18:19 BST (UK)
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Looks like my GGrandfather may have been a bigamist :o :o :o
http://www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php?topic=262753.msg1482050#msg1482050
Edwin Charles Early (born in 27-01-1848 at Moorfields) changed his name to Earley when he married Catherine Theresa Kangiesser in 1877 St Olave 1D 456 (noted as a batchelor)
However 6 years earlier in 1871 there is an Edwin Early married to a Jane Susannah Young , Islington 1B 317 ( the age is right) Their marriage is recorded in Islington June 1867 1B 317
This might explain why he was 29 years old when he married his lodger Catherine Kangiesser
Sooo did he leave Jane ? did she die ? can't find any record prior to 1901 . An interesting challenge to find out. Not quite sure where to start though ???
Thank you Jennifer C for finding this for me. :-[
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if you knew all the answers you'd get bored and give up !!!!!!!!!!!
Regards
Half Pint
ps which marriage are you descended from?
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I'm decended from the later marriage Edwin Charles Earley & Catherine Kangiesser ::)
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hi earley
looking at my rellies in 1861 wales census they had come over from ireland
by 1871 wife and all the children bar one vanish but he is there married to another woman and there eldest child is 9!
no deaths makes you think! did she go back home?
well something fishy me thinks
only child is working on a farm as a labourer lying about his age
need to do more digging
berni
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must have been lots of strange things going on back them. Most folk couldn't write or read , few records were kept people moved about a lot to go where the work was. My family spent part of the year in London and part in Lancs between the two docklands where ever the work was.
Census night families must be split up all over the country.
Sounds like work dried up for your rellies and the missus and kids had to go back home to Ireland The eldest kid stayed because he was capable of bringing in some money I guess. The other kids could have been farmed out to other rellies as was my relies when their parents both died.
good luck with your research
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hi earley
you probably right
berni
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Years ago divorces were not common and sometimes a couple would just split up, go their separate ways and then marry or take up with another partner.
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Never mind the bigamy, at least you can find the marriages. I'm quite jealous ::)
Years ago divorces were not common and sometimes a couple would just split up, go their separate ways and then marry or take up with another partner.
I've got a few of these. Very difficult to piece it all together with comparitively common names like Baker >:(
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Hi early bird
In the on-line 1881 census there is a widowed Jane Early, age 29, born Camden Town, Middlesex, living with unmarried servant Annie Lee, age 52.
There is also the family of Ed Clunes Earley, age 32, born Bishopsgate City, general labourer, married to Catherine, with children Catherine and Susannah. (a mistranscription of Charles)
I suspect that there were two men who have become muddled in your research.
If you ask for a look up in 1871 you may be able to find them in their separate lives.
Beth
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Quite early on in my search I found out that my paternal great grandfather was a bankrupt bigamist - he abandoned his wife and youngest child, left his 18 year old pregnant daughter out in the lurch (my great grandmother), ran away to Nottingham, added a "de" into his name and had a child with a woman who we (a half cousin and I) believe that he never married.
I'm glad though, otherwise I wouldn't have that said cousin, and who knows, I may not have been here!