Author Topic: William KEPPLE "soldier" at his marriage in Cork City in 1912  (Read 6051 times)

Offline Keith Sherwood

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William KEPPLE "soldier" at his marriage in Cork City in 1912
« on: Thursday 10 December 09 12:51 GMT (UK) »
Hi, Everyone,
I'm completely in the dark about the Irish military situation in 1912, and was wondering whether there are experts out there who could point me in the right sort of direction to discover what regiment a certain individual might have been in in that year.  He was a William KEPPLE, stated as being a "soldier" when he was married on August 12th 1912 in Cork City Cathedral.  Would there have been any likely regiments stationed in the area?
By 1928, when I have the birth certificate of one of his children, he has reverted to "labourer", and much later when this child marries he is referred to as a "docker".
Any useful ideas about where I should look...?
Very best wishes, keith

Offline km1971

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Re: William KEPPLE "soldier" at his marriage in Cork City in 1912
« Reply #1 on: Thursday 10 December 09 14:36 GMT (UK) »
Hi Keith

Cork was one of four military districts in Ireland. It was under the command of a Major General so he would have had about 5-6000 troops in his district. In Co Cork there were barracks in Cork City, Buttevant and on the islands in Cork Harbour off Queenstown (now Cobh). But the district probably extended to the rest of Munster.

William Kemble is likely to have been serving in WW1 so you should start by looking at surviving WW1 records on Ancestry, and you need to post his age, place of birth and his wife’s name. Have you found him in 1901?

Ideally you should try and find birth certificates of his first children as one should give his regiment/unit. You should also look at the regimental/overseas BMDs on Findmypast as these include some ‘home’ births. If you get a hit you can order them from the (UK) GRO in the usual manner.

If he served after 1920 his papers will still be with the MOD

Ken

Offline Keith Sherwood

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Re: William KEPPLE "soldier" at his marriage in Cork City in 1912
« Reply #2 on: Thursday 10 December 09 17:48 GMT (UK) »
Ken,
All very interesting - thank you so much for your input.  I don't even know the true situation regarding WW1 and the involvement of Irish troops, and whether they fought on Britain's side from the outset, or whether this happened as the war progressed.  (And also the question of who volunteered and when exactly conscription might have come into the equation)
But you've given me plenty to chew over!
very best wishes, keith

Offline liverpool annie

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Re: William KEPPLE "soldier" at his marriage in Cork City in 1912
« Reply #3 on: Friday 11 December 09 01:43 GMT (UK) »

Hi Keith !  :D

Have you tried Irish 1911 census ? ( its free on line !! ) you might check there for your family names - theres a family of Kepple's in Mallow Cork even a William too ... but I think he's too young - unless they wrote down the wrong age !!

http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/search/

Where was he from ? do you know if his wife came from Cork ?

Annie  :)
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Offline km1971

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Re: William KEPPLE "soldier" at his marriage in Cork City in 1912
« Reply #4 on: Friday 11 December 09 08:56 GMT (UK) »
Hi Annie

That's why I was asking about age. Anyone in an 'institution', including barracks, in the 1911 census is only listed by initials, of surname as well as forename.

So Keith if you search for W Ks in Co Cork there are a few that match. Two in Cork aged 29 and 20, from memory, and one on Spike Island, which was one of the fortified islands in Cork Harbour.

Ken

Offline Keith Sherwood

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Re: William KEPPLE "soldier" at his marriage in Cork City in 1912
« Reply #5 on: Friday 11 December 09 09:28 GMT (UK) »
Hi again, Annie! And thank you so much for your very helpful input, Ken!
Firstly, I've been having a look on the Irish BMD's.  Having seen that William's father was a Maurice KEPPLE (deceased) on the 1912 marriage certificate, I noticed a death registration for someone of that name in Sept. quarter 1910 in Cork City, birth given as 1860, but no precise registration details given for his birth.
In the 1911 Census, at the address William gave as his place of residence on his marriage cert. - 5, Hillgrove Lane - there is a Mary KEPPLE, aged 48, widow, and a Katey KEPPLE aged 8; I'm pretty sure that these two must be his recently widowed mother and his young sister.
And Annie, I barked up the wrong tree with that Mallow KEPPLE family for a while before I realised that that could not be the correct William Jonas KEPPLE I was after.
So, Ken, the fact that you mention about initials being used for people in institutions in the 1911 census comes into play, surely.  One can only guess at one of the "W Ks" being the man I'm after, but if one had to put one's money on it, then I would definitely plump for the one on Spike Island.  Could one find out more details about which regiment was there in 1911, maybe...?
Regards, keith

K

Offline Keith Sherwood

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Re: William KEPPLE "soldier" at his marriage in Cork City in 1912
« Reply #6 on: Friday 11 December 09 09:41 GMT (UK) »
Ken,
I've just looked up those three entries for WK in Cork on the 1911 Census, and I see that both the 20 and 29 year olds so described (how infuriating that they're therefore made almost anonymous!) are in Victoria Barracks.  The age given on the 1912 marriage certificate is, again, frustratingly vague - of full age - so any of those three could fit the man I'm after.  From memory, in the Irish BMD's there's an 1880, an 1889 and an 1892 birth registration for a William KEPPLE in Cork City.  Perhaps the one born in 1892 might reveal a Maurice as his father's name on a birth certificate if I sent away for it...
keith

Offline aghadowey

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Re: William KEPPLE "soldier" at his marriage in Cork City in 1912
« Reply #7 on: Friday 11 December 09 10:01 GMT (UK) »
Just a few comments-
1911 census- 5 Hillgrove Lane, Cork
Luke Wills 28 general labourer born 35 Baileys La Cork City
wife Mary Wills married 1 yr. born Cork City
mother-in-law Mary Kepple 48 widow born Cork City
sister-in-law Katey Kepple 8 scholar born Cork City

Civil registration index- marriage- Luke WILLS Apr./Jue 1910 Cork volume 5 page 101 (Mary KEPPLE matching details)

Civil registration index has a marriage which might be William's parents-
Morris KEPPEL July/Sept.1880 Cork registration district volume 5 page 79

I don't even know the true situation regarding WW1 and the involvement of Irish troops, and whether they fought on Britain's side from the outset, or whether this happened as the war progressed.
At the time of WWI Ireland was British and there was no 'Irish Army.'

Firstly, I've been having a look on the Irish BMD's.  Having seen that William's father was a Maurice KEPPLE (deceased) on the 1912 marriage certificate, I noticed a death registration for someone of that name in Sept. quarter 1910 in Cork City, birth given as 1860, but no precise registration details given for his birth.
Not sure what you mean by 'no precise registration details given for his birth.' Civil registration of births started in 1864 so this Maurice Kepple will not have a birth certificate. Death certificates for that date list age in years (not exact birthdate) and do not list place of birth.
Away sorting out DNA matches... I may be gone for some time many years!

Offline Keith Sherwood

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Re: William KEPPLE "soldier" at his marriage in Cork City in 1912
« Reply #8 on: Friday 11 December 09 10:22 GMT (UK) »
Aghadowey,
Thanks again for sorting my muddled reasoning out and pointing me back in the right direction!  I completely missed the family connection between the WILLS and the KEPPLE clan at 5, Hillgrove Lane.  So the William I'm trying to identify had at least a sister called Mary, who married a Luke WILLS in 1910. (Plus, of course, a little sister Katey KEPPLE.)  Sister Mary's age is given as 28 - I could read that, but hadn't got round to enlarging the tiny writing that would have revealed the family relationships, as it was getting late and I was getting weary!), so she must have been born in 1882/3.  That would fit with that 1880 marriage for Morris (sic) KEPPEL (sic).  Beginning to realise that I ought to send for that 1880 marriage cert. and hope the wife's forename is Mary...
And I hadn't realised that there are no birth registrations before 1864.  Does that mean that the dates of birth given are simply worked out based on the age given on the death certificates?
Regards, keith