Mary Jane Wilson

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  • Debra A
    replied
    Originally posted by MayBea View Post
    I'm not the only one who thinks a delayed registration is suspicious. A genealogy.com article on Missing Fathers seems to agree:



    The author seems to consider "recent times" to be the Victorian times and afterwards.

    http://www.genealogy.com/52_donna.html
    41 days was cutting it a bit fine as well though?

    The context of the "Love child" scenario you link to is different to that you are proposing. The article is describing the practice of couples registering the children of their unmarried daughters as their own to avoid the stigma of illegitimacy.

    Maybe they just forgot? It doesn't seem like it was uncommon.

    This from 1907:

    Leave a comment:


  • GUT
    replied
    Late Registration

    I don't find a registration late by 2 weeks suspicious, there could have been illness, or birth difficulties or a number of reasons.

    My cousin's middle child was sx months late in being registered because they kept changing their mind about the name.

    Leave a comment:


  • MayBea
    replied
    I'm not the only one who thinks a delayed registration is suspicious. A genealogy.com article on Missing Fathers seems to agree:

    In more recent times, a delayed birth certificate could indicate an irregularity, especially if the other children had timely certificates registered.
    The author seems to consider "recent times" to be the Victorian times and afterwards.

    Donna Przecha helps you id illegitamate children (and their fathers), explains terms like "bastardy bonds", and gives you a history of out-of-wedlock births.

    Leave a comment:


  • MayBea
    replied
    1875 was not a Leap Year so I calculate that the delay between the birth and the registration of Robert Jr.'s birth as 41 days, or 1 day less than the legal limit. The Wilson's seem to be law-abiding.

    Christina was registered 19 days after her birth (I incorrectly said 9 on the Son of Jack thread).
    http://forum.casebook.org/showthread.php?t=7913&page=2

    William's registration 54 days after his birth remains suspicious, being 12 days past the legal limit of 42.

    I forgot about Rosa who died in infancy. Her cerificate might also be helpful.

    Leave a comment:


  • MayBea
    replied
    The birth certificate for Mary Wilson's first-born has arrived.

    Robert Bruce Wilson, born February 12th, 1875.
    Attached Files

    Leave a comment:


  • MayBea
    replied
    Originally posted by Roy Corduroy View Post
    So are we getting close to making the list? The list of her relatives who to the best of our knowledge were alive in November 1888. Who did not come forward to identify her, if she was the murder victim at Millers Court. Or do we suppose none of them knew this was her...
    May I add, Roy, that only one of the descendants today will speak of their ancestor Mary Jane Wilson ne. Kelly. And she mostly tries to debunk her.

    The rest of the family (5 or 6, at least) will not respond to inquiries, or will cut them off immediately, when they realize they realize it has something to do with Jack the Ripper and one of his victims.

    This would be entirely consistent with MJK's family's response to her murder, if we assume they recognized her from the papers and yet did not come forth publicly to identify her.

    Leave a comment:


  • MayBea
    replied
    In summation, FreeBMD Search proves there are no Mary Jane Wilson's age 28-41 in all of Lancashire who died between Sept 1887 and August 1890, dates of our MJW's second son's birth and her daughter entering an orphanage, when we can assume she must have died.

    There are six Mary Wilsons in that age bracket and time frame in Lancashire who died and we now have the death records of both of those from Liverpool. Neither is our MJW.

    If anyone really thinks she reverted to Kelly upon death, we have one Mary Jane Kelly and five Mary Kellys deaths in Liverpool. Wrong age, wrong name, and our MJW's mother was still alive and the one who put her daughter in the orphanage in 1890.

    Leave a comment:


  • MayBea
    replied
    You're welcome, Debra. And, may I say, I didn't waste my time and money.

    Now I'm waiting on Robert Bruce Wilson's 1875 birth certificate.

    My hope is to prove that William John Wilson's 1887 birth certificate is suspicious by comparison.

    Leave a comment:


  • Debra A
    replied
    Originally posted by MayBea View Post
    The certificate was in the mail today. Finally!

    I haven't looked at it. I'll attach the image in a few minutes without comments.
    What a weird coincidence it coming the very day I asked about it!...Spooky.
    Not her then.Thanks for posting it.

    Leave a comment:


  • MayBea
    replied
    Mary Wilson, died Mar. 5, 1889, Toxteth Park
    Attached Files

    Leave a comment:


  • MayBea
    replied
    The certificate was in the mail today. Finally!

    I haven't looked at it. I'll attach the image in a few minutes without comments.

    Leave a comment:


  • Livia
    replied
    I don't know why, but malwarebytes would not allow
    me to access lancashirebmd.org, warning me of an
    attempt to download "potentially malicious software".

    Leave a comment:


  • MayBea
    replied
    We've had a problem with the post lately, Debra. I think it was backed up during the snow. I'm hoping it arrives today.

    If I was in Lancashire, I could have ordered online and received a copy electronically at LancashireBMD.org. But I have to wait.

    I also ordered the birth certificate of her first child, Robert Bruce.

    Leave a comment:


  • Debra A
    replied
    Originally posted by MayBea View Post
    So Debra, you would take Barnett's witness statements or non-statements, over the unexplained and extremely compelling lack of a documented death IDing someone as someone else?

    Wow! I guess I wasted my time and money ordering the death certificate of the Mary Wilson you found.
    Just wondering what the details were from the death certificate eventually?

    Leave a comment:


  • MayBea
    replied
    Originally posted by MayBea View Post
    P.S. By 1871, cotton broker, Augustus Agelasto, was in London and Angelica ...[by] 1881 ... is living in Westminster ...
    Correction: Augustus Stephanos Agelasto did not live in London.

    His son, Stephen Augustus Agelasto, is in London by 1885. http://www.agelastos.com/genealogy/g...I106&tree=main

    There is also an Augustus Cosi Agelasto in London at Hyde Park Square from 1871. I believe it is a cousin.

    Leave a comment:

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