Author Topic: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"  (Read 57086 times)

Offline Matt R

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #81 on: Sunday 23 November 08 20:18 GMT (UK) »
Nothing But Bad Times, Chapter Six, Part Two


The following year seems to have gone by with little happening in this story. It can be viewed as a good thing, for it gave the family little if any restbite from events of the last eighteen months. However, it was short lived. Catherine had applied again for relief, and was refused this time, due to her children being able to provide for her. Her eldest son Charles was now 22 and he had an income of his own, as he had not yet married. Elizabeth seems to have got by without any relief, which I find hard to believe, but there is no record of her applying for parish relief.

Around this time (late 1903), things were taking a turn for the worse again at 69 Piccadilly Street. John Devaney had begun to feel the effects of being refused relief now, and had become depressed, and had turned to the bottle. Eliza felt her husband slowly slipping away from her, and found that she couldn't talk to him anymore. He told her that he felt like he had failed her, and that he had not been a good husband of late. She comforted him, but it seems that a row broke out between the two of them. Devaney, now severely drunk, stormed out of the house, and headed for the relief application office. On entry, he was rowdy, waving his crutch at the inspector, swearing at him. He collapsed onto the hard wooden floor of the office and tugged at the inspector's cloak, in an almost pathetic plea for help. "Please help me" he drooled. "For God's sakes, I cannot work, I cannot eat. My wife is losing faith in me". Devaney was aided to his feet, and was now in tears. "Help me" he screamed. This was the last desperate plea of a man completely fed up with life, completely finished, so it seemed. His life was slowly draining away, and Eliza's future was on a knife edge. The result of this plea was that his case was reviewed, and Devaney was told to wait weeks before he would be sen by the insepctor again.

In this dark hour, we see a glimmer of light. Back in Holytown, Mary Ann had given birth to her fifth child, and chose to call her after her younger sister Ellen. Ellen is my own great granny. She was born on November 17 1903 in Napier's Square.

If we now return back to Devany's struggle with both himself and the poor inspectors, we see them perhaps giving in to his pursuit. On May 3 1904, he was approved to receive three shillings for four weeks, to support Eliza. In a cruel twist of fate, the very next day, Devaney was rushed to Stobhill Hospital, suffering from what is suspected to be a heart attack. Two months later he was taken to Gartloch Asylum in Glasgow. He and Eliza knew now, it was unlikely that he would ever get out alive.

For Catherine, things had gotten much worse than before. She, like her step father, ws refused relief time and time again. In the months from July 11 1904 until September 1905, she applied seven times, and was refused every time. It doesn't make any sense why, but she was. She had been very much abandoned aswell. She lived in severe poverty, for the majority of the next twelve months. In September 1905, she wa given some relief to pay for her children's clothes and schoolbooks. That was all she got. A whole four shillings, for one week.

Surely, this was the worst things were ever going to get? Think again...


Copyright © Matthew Reay, 2008
UK Census info. Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Offline Blondie1

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #82 on: Sunday 23 November 08 21:29 GMT (UK) »

Blimey Matt where are the tissues.  Come on what happened next????????

Val
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Offline mrs louis

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #83 on: Sunday 23 November 08 21:51 GMT (UK) »
Matt

I really dont know how on earth you do it but this is excellent material

cant wait for next bit ..... i need to go to the shops to purchase more hankies.

lou xxxx

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EDWARDS northumberland
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Offline craizi daizi

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #84 on: Sunday 23 November 08 21:57 GMT (UK) »
Matty

Why do you always stop and leave us hanging,   

Come back...............................


Daizi
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Offline JDC

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #85 on: Sunday 23 November 08 22:12 GMT (UK) »
Good job of keeping up the suspense for us Matt,
keep it up :-)

JDC
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Offline lil growler

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #86 on: Monday 24 November 08 05:08 GMT (UK) »

We want more  ;D

lil
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Offline majm

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #87 on: Monday 24 November 08 13:01 GMT (UK) »
Matt, please send this to a publisher, even in this raw format.  Tis the very best work I have ever read.  I read avidly. 

Many Cheers, GGD of Mary Ann (Hunt)

Tis just the very best, Matt.  T h e   V E R Y  B  E  S  T
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Offline Matt R

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #88 on: Monday 24 November 08 17:18 GMT (UK) »
Nothing But Bad Times: Chapter Seven, Part One.

Twenty years had now passed since the Owens famly had left the shores of their homeland, in search of better fortune. That had bore them little fruit in their pursuit. In fact, as 1906 approached them, things had sunk to an all time low. It is interesting to note that the male children were seemingly well off. John, Bernard and Joseph were settled and married, and although I have not managed to track Bernard down yet, if he was suffering, it would be known by this point.

It's always been a taboo subject in my family when I talk about an accident that happened in early 1906, concerning Mary Ann's daughter, Ellen (Nellie). Nellie, who is my great grandmother, was by this time just over two years old, and something that is still unclear happened which resulted in her losing one of her legs. I am told two different stories by two different relatives. One tells me that she had a nasty accident when her leg was caught in bedding that was attached to the wall in the household, another rellie tells me that simply her leg became infected and her blood would not circulate. Either way, it must have been very hard for a two year old girl to recover from such trauma. For Mary Ann and Michael, it was another severe trauma involving one of their children. It brought back horrifying memories of Lizzie's death in 1897. Maybe I'll never know how the accident happened?

At this very same time not too far away in Anderston, Mary Ann's sister Catherine and her step father John Devaney were at a wits end with regards their financial situations. Although Devaney had received some - though very little relief to support his wife Eliza - Catherine had been refused more times than one might think to be ethically tenable. Devaney had been in decline for the best part of nine years now, and was suffering terribly from his carcinoma. Eliza knew it wouldn't be long before she would become a widow for the second time.

John Devaney had been transferred to Gartloch Asylum and had been in there now for eighteen months. After declining rapidly and consequently only just stopping short of actually lunging himself at the poor inspectors, he had pleaded and begged for them to help him and his wife. He was now exhausted, and he died on February 18 1906. Eliza was a widow once more, and just three weeks later on March 8, a shock came from Stirling. Her first born child Catherine had collapsed and died in her home, leaving her eleven children orphaned. Eliza now found herself burying her husband and eldest child in the space of a month. The majority of Catherine's children were taken in by her eldest, Charles, and other elder siblings. Some went to live as servants with family. It was now up to Mary Ann to bring her family together. She was now beginning to take on her mother's role as head of the family. She took in her widowed mother, and also Catherine's son, Peter McMillan, the same age as her son Patrick. She did this also whilst pregnant, and found that with another little one on the way, she and Michael needed to find a new place to live. They moved from Napier's Square into the newly built miner's row houses, known as Nimmo's Row. The family actually came to inhabit three houses in this row, also occupying numbers 7 and 18 at different points in time. 2 Nimmo's Row's would be Mary Ann's last home. She never moved again. After the birth of her sixth and final child in September 1906, Mary Ann named her after her recently deceased sister, Catherine...


Copyright © Matthew Reay, 2008
UK Census info. Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Offline Matt R

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Re: Blog: "Nothing But Bad Times"
« Reply #89 on: Monday 24 November 08 17:19 GMT (UK) »
Nothing But Bad Times: Chapter Seven, Part Two

Perhaps it is true what they say, that for every death in the world, there is also a birth to replace it. It was certainly true in 1906, and Mary Ann had made sure that Catherine's name would live on in her own daughter. However, unbeknown to my great great granny at the time, she would have to face another tragedy just two years later. Her daughter Catherine died at just sixteen months old, on February 8 1908, after a battle with pneumonia. Mary Ann and Michael had lost another child. The Hughes' could not afford to bury Catherine in a Lair of her own, and she was buried with James Rice, in the Globe Cemetery in Motherwell.

On April 26 1907, Elizabeth Rice, whose husband James had been killed six years previous on a railway line, reamarried, to a man called James Carey. They married in St Francis Xavier's Chapel, in Carfin. I am not entirely sure yet if they had any children, as Scotland has yet to allow acces to birth certificates for this period.

After this light relief from again more and more tragedy, it seems that the next year was somewhat peaceful, until in April 1909, two more deaths brought Ellen Owens life to a grinding halt. On April 3, after battling a long illnes that had put him out of work for nearly a decade, her husband, William Chamberlain died in the Western Infirmary, Glasgow. In the folowing November, William's father John died. With him, died any financial support that she had previously been receiving. However, Ellen didn't find herself on her own for long. In July 1910, she remarried, this time to an irishman called James Donnachie. By this time she had moved to Holytown. They had two children, Bridget in 1912, and Lizzie n 1915.

For a family that had now grown as the Owens' had, it is no surprise why things are so busy...the pace of events is almost nonstop, and for the next two years, things slow down...alot. Be that as it may however, Mary Ann had a nasty urprise in store. Sometimes I wonder how she really got through these things. If her faith did it, she must have been second to a nun to still have belief in her God. For in the summer of 1911, something would happen that would bring back heartbreaking memories for my great great grandmother. God was not finished with her yet...


Copyright © Matthew Reay, 2008
UK Census info. Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk