Author Topic: Wllm John JAMISON death 19thC Glasgow  (Read 1124 times)

Offline RLR500

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Re: Wllm John JAMISON death 19thC Glasgow
« Reply #18 on: Saturday 16 April 22 17:56 BST (UK) »
Yes I was just working on their deaths also - and as neither of them were living with the sons during the 1891 census records - so I am assuming for now death for both of them 1880s.

And Paterson was such a popular name in Glasgow - and some prominent  families also - which is a distraction as Jamison’s were well to do in a modest way - but not the fancy Jamison, Paterson Merchant Company I keep finding in the 1860s and 1870s. Was that the Wllm Paterson who founded the Bank of England? Can’t be connected to him.

I just wish I could connect the Joseph and Jane Paterson that had the twins and Joseph with the couple who had William Henry.
I have been through city directories, army enlistments, electoral rolls and census.
I feel now the only place that it might be is church records.
Philadelphia, USA: Linton, Shallcross, Beagle.
Northern Ireland: Co Derry: Linton, Ross. Co. Down: Jamison, Graham.

Offline Rosinish

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Re: Wllm John JAMISON death 19thC Glasgow
« Reply #19 on: Sunday 17 April 22 03:30 BST (UK) »
JAMIESON WILLIAM JOHN 70 - 1919 - 644/6 158 Springburn (Glasgow)

Annie, Thanks for this. I checked it out - seems so perfect doesn't with the middle name and all - but the parents don't match and neither does his wife. So its not him.

His wife, Mary Jane BOAL Jamison - was back in Ireland with her two grown unmarried sons (Robert and Wllm Henry) for the 1901 Ireland Census.
So we think that either William John was travelling for work - or was deceased by then. But the 1901 Census has Mary Jane as married.

Mary Jane died 22 Nov 1910, as a widow, at her son's residence at 30 Indiana St Belfast.
Would love to find her burial ground - as we think that is where we will find her son Robert (my g grandfather) who passed away at 47yrs old in 1921.
No one has ever known where he was buried. There are no online records.

Please can you transcribe the info. on the above DC.

You just never know if there may be a connection in some way which (if all info. is on here) will be picked up in a google search & may lead to more/other family connections?

I believe, it's a good thing to have info. (which we think isn't connected) put out there just in case.

I recall many yrs ago, I had a cert. I'd purchased which (at the time) didn't seem to be connected but on going through the usual (tying up loose ends) at a later date, it turned out to be for someone (unknown to me at the time), connected to my own family after all although not the connection I'd been looking for at the time!

Annie
South Uist, Inverness-shire, Scotland:- Bowie, Campbell, Cumming, Currie

Ireland:- Cullen, Flannigan (Derry), Donahoe/Donaghue (variants) (Cork), McCrate (Tipperary), Mellon, Tol(l)and (Donegal & Tyrone)

Newcastle-on-Tyne/Durham (Northumberland):- Harrison, Jude, Kemp, Lunn, Mellon, Robson, Stirling

Kettering, Northampton:- MacKinnon

Canada:- Callaghan, Cumming, MacPhee

"OLD GENEALOGISTS NEVER DIE - THEY JUST LOSE THEIR CENSUS"

Online Forfarian

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Re: Wllm John JAMISON death 19thC Glasgow
« Reply #20 on: Sunday 17 April 22 09:28 BST (UK) »
1910. Twenty second November. 30 Indiana Avenue. Mary Jane Jamison. F. Widow. 62 years. Widow of William John Jamison,  a commercial traveller. Carcinoma of stomach, 9 months, exhaustion, certified. Robert Jamison, son, present at death, 30 Indiana Avenue.

This being an Irish death cert, you are lucky that her occupation names and describes her husband :) Normally they don't name the spouse.

Never trust anything you find online (especially submitted trees and transcriptions on Ancestry, MyHeritage, FindMyPast and other commercial web sites) unless it's an image of an original document - and even then be wary because errors can and do occur.