This is half of a rant and a few questions.
In background, I’ve got an ancestor, John Richards, who moved from Cornwall to Plymouth and got married. His wife, according to the birth cert of their eldest, was Ellen formerly Gill. According to my elderly cousin, Ellen was actually born Jane Ann. Now, yes, there was a Jane Ann Gill of the right date born in Tavestock but there is also an Ellen Gill of the right date born in the more specific (and correct) area of Whitchurch, Tavestock. So, I’m not sure if that’s all a load of baloney, but when I asked in what I thought was a polite way if she had any paperwork or if it was word of mouth, she stopped talking to me. The thing is, my cousin’s mother knew Ellen personally so it’s entirely possible that it was direct family word, but she hasn’t confirmed that.
Anyways, the marriage has proved somewhat elusive. There are no marriages for a John Richards to an Ellen Gill, or even a Jane Ann Gill. What I did find, however, was a marriage in a registry office for 1867 (two years after their first child would have been born) of a John Richards to an Ellen Richards. John’s details mainly match, with the right area, right occupation, right father and right father’s occupation (although it specifies the type of miner he was and I don’t know what specific John’s father was) and was correct in putting that his father was dead. Ellen is more awkward because obviously her name should have been Gill and to make it more awkward, she has her father as William Richards, labourer (the Ellen Gill I found on census had father William Gill, labourer) but her father puts his mark as witness. The ages don’t quite match; they should have been around 24 and 26 respectively but on the cert they are both put as 23 (I know these things aren’t 100% accurate but if they could do it on census, why not on the cert? It wasn’t like they were underage…)
I can’t find any other possible marriages… and on the next census, the only John Richards with wife Ellen living in Plymouth are mine.
What does everyone think about this? Perhaps Ellen and John had some kind of civil arrangement beforehand where she took his name? Perhaps her father introduced himself as the father of the bride rather than William Gill and the registrar assumed, and since William couldn’t read he didn’t notice? I’m really just frustrated because I can’t definitively prove or disprove the marriage and if I disprove it… I have nothing else.
Thanks.
~ Edited to correct date