Thank you both for your replies.
Yes, Mary is a Burns and John Burns is acknowledged as her father on her 1889 birth certificate. His occupation at the time was ships cook.
Mary was left in the care of Grace Wilberforce and although single, Grace registered the child and advised that Mary's parents John William Burns and Grace Burns (formerly Wilberforce). Mary grew up with spinster sisters Grace and Ida Wilberforce in Toxteth Park. Eventually Grace Wilberforce and John Burns married in 1897.
Mary Ida (or Ida as she was known) hardly mentioned her family, but three comments stand out -
- She was born on a barge in Scotland
She always praised Grace Wilberforce and had "no idea what would have happened to her if Grace hadn't taken her in"
John wanted to married Grace years earlier but she would have none of it until "he changed his wild ways"
"Wild ways" could have meant anything from enjoying too many glasses of beer to Walton Gaol!
My biggest challenge is the large number of John Burns' in Liverpool and I'm gradually working my way through everyone. The latest family to have me stumped is
1861 census - living 20 Edgar Street, Vauxhall, Liverpool
John Burns, 25, labourer, born Ireland
Maria Burns, 28, born Ireland
John Burns, 2, born 1859 in Liverpool
Mary Burns, 3 mths/weeks born Liverpool.
I know from John's marriage certificate that his father was also called John William Burns and perhaps John jnr named his daughter after mother Maria or sister Mary. It looks like John senior died at an early age and mother Maria spends her life in the Workhouse. No obvious sign of sister Mary.
However, there are just as many Mary Burns' in Liverpool as there are John's.
And the 1881 census with John in Walton Gaol could very well be him. Carole commented that it wasn't John's first offense and he could very well have fathered a child in the probably short periods between incarceration.
Best wishes
Wilbs