Hello, has anyone researched Brown and Watson family
connections in Crail please?
I would like to discover who the parents of James Brown were.
James Brown (no birth place or date) married Anne Innes (b1806 Anstruther)
in the parish of Kingsbarns 1832.
They had three children all born in Kingsbarns
James (b 1833) Ann (1835) and John Watson Brown (1839)
John Watson Brown married Joahan Walker Watson
1862 at the Manse of Crail Parish Church.
I’m wondering why the groom has his bride’s surname
Watson as his middle name…?
Hello Winnie. I've enjoyed reading your query and all the helpful answers from other people on this forum. Having done a lot of research on my home town of Cellardyke, I knew that a James Brown, born in Kingsbarns, showed up in some of the 19th century censuses of Cellardyke, but I didn't know about the Innes connection. That's what interests me most. I knew that several females called Innes, born in Kingsbarns, lived in Cellardyke in the 19th century, and I know about the Innes family of Anstruther, from whom I'm descended myself, but until now I thought they were unrelated. Now, I'm not so sure.
The Ann Innes who married James Brown in 1832 at Kingsbarns was born in Anstruther in 1806 to Alexander Innes, shoemaker, and Ann Dougal. This couple were married at South Leith, Edinburgh, in 1802. Alexander Innes was then a cooper, and Ann Dougal was the daughter of James Dougal, cooper in Anstruther. The IGI shows that James "Dowgal" married Anna Duncan at Anstruther in 1781.
Although Alexander Innes is a cooper in Leith, I think he may well have been from Anstruther originally. A lot of men from the East Neuk of Fife sailed out of Leith on merchant navy vessels and whalers, and tradesmen may also have moved there for work.
At some point, Alexander Innes and Ann Dougal must have moved from Anstruther to Kingsbarns. Their daughters Mary and Catherine Innes, both born in Kingsbarns, married James and William Wood respectively, fishermen in Cellardyke and sons of Alexander Wood and Christian Moncrieff. In 1861 James Wood was a widower and his sister-in-law Janet Innes, also born in Kingsbarns, was his housekeeper. The Woods were a very large and well-known fishing family in Cellardyke and Pittenweem, and there are still lots of them around in the East Neuk.
Coming back to the Browns, your John Watson Brown married Johan Walker Watson in Crail in 1862, and they share a page in the Crail marriages register with Charles Black and Margaret Peebles, both of Sorbie, Kingsmuir, Crail. Margaret Peebles was a 1st cousin of my great-great-grandfather James Peebles (1827-1869).
Johan Watson was the daughter of Alexander Watson and Margaret Patrick of Crail. I haven't come across this couple before.
I hope some of this is of interest.
Harry