Mary Jane Wilson

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  • MayBea
    replied
    Originally posted by MayBea View Post
    I'm planning to order Ann's marriage certificates for 1885 and 1877, for marriages to Henry Dagnall and George Dixon respectively, to see if Mary Jane Wilson shows up as a witness.
    The 1885 certificate has arrived and I've attached the image. As you can see, the witnesses are Thomas Dagnall and Ellen Dixon. Ellen would be Ann's sister-in-law from her first marriage to George Dixon.

    Ann's sister, Mary Jane Wilson, is not a witness.
    Attached Files

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  • MayBea
    replied
    Here are two records of Angelica Peyton, ne. Gould:

    The 1869 parish record of her second marriage to John Peyton after her marriage to Adam Rawlinson/Rollinson.

    The 1877 marriage certificate of her sister with her as a witness.


    Therefore, Angelica went to London sometime between 1877 and 1881. Her daughter, Margaret Ellen, would have arrived sometime after 1881, perhaps after she turned 16 in 1883.
    Attached Files

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  • MayBea
    replied
    Originally posted by miss marple View Post
    ... Mary Kelly supposedly [went] to Knightsbridge to claim back some dresses she was owed. If that story is true then she did spend time in a high class brothel...
    Miss Marple
    Doesn't the documented fact that Mary Jane Wilson had a brother Henry, whose niece follows Mary Jane Kelly's alleged trail, by going to London where her tailoress mother lived in the West End and then ending up getting married to a tailor living on Thrawl Street* in 1887, raise your eyebrows?

    *I'm guessing Daniel Reardon, at least if not both, was living at the address they gave on the marriage certificate (not an after banns lie on his part to save money) since his occupation was tailor and you said it was a common form of employment in Whitechapel.

    Marriage Cert. Post #69
    http://forum.casebook.org/showthread.php?t=7913&page=7

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  • MayBea
    replied
    Originally posted by MayBea View Post
    ... What about a woman who calls herself a tailor? ...(I seem to remember one of the Goulds calling herself a tailor.
    From Post #40 of this thread:

    1881
    15 Broad Street, London

    Angthia (Angelica) Peyton (formerly Gould and Rawlinson)

    Age:32
    Estimated birth year: abt 1849
    Relationship to Head:Wife
    Where born: Yorkshire, Yorkshire, England
    Marital Status: Married
    Occupation: Tailoress

    Leave a comment:


  • MayBea
    replied
    Here is the 91 Census record for Elsie Searle. She is, of course, the future wife of William John Wilson, a.k.a. Jack, and the alleged goddaughter of the Earl of Carnarvon.

    Mother and grandmother are dressmakers. They are also servants of the Duke of Teck and his family who lived nearby at White Lodge. Elsie was a playmate of Princes May.


    1891

    2 Red Lodge Cottage
    Eliza Ryan, Head Widow 71 Dressmaker, Cork, Ire.
    Frances Searle, Daughter Widow 46 Dressmaker, Clapham, Surrey
    Elsie Searle, Gdaughter 9 Bristol

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  • curious4
    replied
    Dress lodger

    Originally posted by miss marple View Post
    Dress lodgings. I wrote about these in the thread, French women in Knightsbridge. Dress lodgings , the Madame who ran the brothel would do a deal with a dressmaker to make fancy dresses for the prostitute, who was then in hock to the Madame and had to spend a lot of time on her back to pay off of the dresses. Of course that never happened, and the Madame's kept the dresses. Some dressmakers did operate as part time brothel keepers, it was a good cover. These were higher class operations usually in the West End.

    Mary Kelly supposedly when to Knightsbridge to claim back some dresses she was owed. If that story is true then she did spend time in a high class brothel/
    It is also true that a lot of prostitutes described themselves as seamstressess.
    But Tailoring and sweat shops were the most commen form of employment in the East End

    If Elsie was described as a dressmaker in 1891, shorely some mistake. She was 10 years old [ BORN 1881]and would have been at school

    Miss Marple
    Hello Miss M

    Thank you, just goes to show that however much you read, there is always something new to learn. I have read about the old "retired" prostitutes whose job it was to watch the girls on the streets, but not come across the term dress lodger.

    Best wishes,
    C4

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  • MayBea
    replied
    Thanks for explaining what a dress lodging is, miss marple. I'll try and get the 1891 record for Elsie Searle. She was living with her grandmother and mother in Mortlake, Surrey.

    Here is another thread about Elsie from 2004 entitled Mistresses and Royal Lines.

    http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.co...-11/1100957326

    Leave a comment:


  • miss marple
    replied
    Dress lodgings. I wrote about these in the thread, French women in Knightsbridge. Dress lodgings , the Madame who ran the brothel would do a deal with a dressmaker to make fancy dresses for the prostitute, who was then in hock to the Madame and had to spend a lot of time on her back to pay off of the dresses. Of course that never happened, and the Madame's kept the dresses. Some dressmakers did operate as part time brothel keepers, it was a good cover. These were higher class operations usually in the West End.

    Mary Kelly supposedly when to Knightsbridge to claim back some dresses she was owed. If that story is true then she did spend time in a high class brothel/
    It is also true that a lot of prostitutes described themselves as seamstressess.
    But Tailoring and sweat shops were the most commen form of employment in the East End

    If Elsie was described as a dressmaker in 1891, shorely some mistake. She was 10 years old [ BORN 1881]and would have been at school

    Miss Marple
    Last edited by miss marple; 02-20-2014, 12:06 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • curious4
    replied
    Dressmaker

    Originally posted by MayBea View Post
    Thanks, C4. You are correct but I have a couple of more questions.

    What about a woman who calls herself a tailor? Wouldn't that be the same as a seamstress? Or is that the same as a dressmaker?

    (I seem to remember one of the Goulds calling herself a tailor. I'll look for her if your answer warrants it.)

    Secondly, how does seamstress fit in with the so-called "dress lodgings"?
    Hallo MayBea,

    In general a dressmaker employed seamstresses. The dressmaker would meet the customer, show various designs and take the order. A tailor would make men's clothes. Then, of course, there were the sweatshops, where the employees worked under very poor conditions. Many poor people would work at home "finishing" garments and were badly paid.

    I am not familiar with the term "dress lodgings".

    Best wishes,
    C4

    Leave a comment:


  • Roy Corduroy
    replied
    1881
    Address: 19 Penrhyn St 7 Ct
    Event Place: Liverpool, Lancashire, England
    Head Robert Wilson M 27 Baker L Pool, Lancashire, England
    Wife Mary Wilson F 26 L Pool, Lancashire, England
    Son Robert Wilson M 7 L Pool, Lancashire, England
    Daughter Christina Wilson F 10 [Error] L Pool, Lancashire, England
    Visitor John Kelly M 57 Joiner Ireland

    Click image for larger version

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    Inside the blue box is a small segment of Penrhyn Street accesible on the old fire insurance maps online.

    Click image for larger version

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    Its almost their address. Notice the layout of the courts. The Wilsons lived in a court.

    Leave a comment:


  • MayBea
    replied
    Roy C asked me to find some interesting neighbours of Mary Wilson.

    I thought her street was decidedly Welsh but only 1 percent were born in Wales. Six of 600 people on Penrhyn Street in 1881.

    However, I found a "Davies" living at 8 Penrhyn at the end of her court, born in Liverpool.


    Walter Davies

    Age: 33
    Estimated birth year: abt 1848
    Relationship to Head: Head
    Spouse: Rose Ann Davies
    Gender: Male
    Where born: L pool, Lancashire, England
    Civil Parish: Liverpool
    County/Island: Lancashire
    Country: England
    Street address: 8 Penrhyn St
    Marital Status: Married
    Occupation: Lab In Iron Works

    Leave a comment:


  • MayBea
    replied
    Thanks, C4. You are correct but I have a couple of more questions.

    What about a woman who calls herself a tailor? Wouldn't that be the same as a seamstress? Or is that the same as a dressmaker?

    (I seem to remember one of the Goulds calling herself a tailor. I'll look for her if your answer warrants it.)

    Secondly, how does seamstress fit in with the so-called "dress lodgings"?

    Leave a comment:


  • curious4
    replied
    Seamstress

    Originally posted by MayBea View Post
    Mary Jane Wilson was living seven blocks up from Horatio Street. Her brother Henry, Margaret's uncle, was living two doors over at 3 Cellar Horatio St.

    Margaret Rawlinson came from a family of tailors and dressmakers which is often synonymous with prostitution.
    Hello MayBea,

    No, not dressmaker, seamstress. Prostitutes would often put down their occupation as seamstress (someone who took in sewing) and this became a euphemism for prostitute, but a dressmaker was something different.

    Best wishes,
    C4

    Leave a comment:


  • MayBea
    replied
    Father-in-law James Wilson in 1871.

    1871

    James Wilson, 50, shoemaker
    b. abt. 1821, County Down, Ire.
    8a Foley St. Kirkdale, Lanc.
    Lodger
    Widwr

    Leave a comment:


  • MayBea
    replied
    The Medal Card of Mary Jane Wilson's first son, Robert Bruce.
    Medal Card of Wilson, Robert Bruce. Place of Birth: Liverpool. Date of
    Birth: 1873.
    Registry of Shipping and Seamen: Index of First World War Mercantile Marine
    Medals and the British War Medal. Medal Card of Wilson, Robert Bruce. Place
    of Birth: Liverpool. Date of Birth: 1873.
    Collection: Records of the Board of Trade and of successor and related
    bodies
    Date range: 1914 - 1925
    Reference:BT 351/1/153453
    Subjects:Medals | Merchant seaman | Operations, battles and campaigns |
    Conflict

    Leave a comment:

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