Originally posted by MrBarnett
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Mary Kelly. Where Else Can We Look?
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Originally posted by markmorey5 View PostJean is the French equivalent of Jane (just as Marie is equivalent to Mary), and Jeanette means 'little Jean' or little Jane. It was common in French brothels of the time for the working women to adopt the diminuitve of their name, such as Jeanette rather than Jean, and the records of two brothels I saw had more than 3/4s of the women having a diminuitive name ending in 'ette'. This points to Mary Kelly probably having worked in a French brothel, which ties in with her story of going to France. But not as a tourist or the escort of a rich gentleman.
MrB
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Originally posted by Amanda Sumner View PostWell, I have done some digging , as expected nothing concrete has come up yet.
BUT, I have found a Mary Kelly born in Limerick on the 19th April 1864 to a John Kelly and and Ann McCarthy.
I also found out that John McCarthy named one of his daughters Ann.
Is it too much of a stretch of the imagination to suggest that Mary Jane Kelly was actually McCarthy's niece? Might explain why he was so lenient with the rent arrears if that was indeed the case...
I could not find Mary, John or Ann McCarthy after that find, but I shall keep looking....
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Hi Debra,
It was bit of a rhetorical question. My wife's family have an Irish Catholic background and she and her sisters have middle names such as Jeanette, Bernadette and Mary Veronica that reflect this. As far as I know, none of them has ever worked in France.;-)
MrB
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View PostHi Debra,
It was bit of a rhetorical question. My wife's family have an Irish Catholic background and she and her sisters have middle names such as Jeanette, Bernadette and Mary Veronica that reflect this. As far as I know, none of them has ever worked in France.;-)
MrB
It was a very good point you made.
Another point that isn't related to your point but I wanted to make anyway- there are no census records for Ireland until 1901. Tracking someone born in 1860s Ireland is almost impossible.
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View PostSo, following your logic, any woman who is named Jeanette or Bernadette has probably spent time in a French brothel?
MrB
And then there would have been language difficulties for her, because English wasn't a common second language in the nineteenth Century (English only became a common second language after World War Two).
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View PostHi Debra,
It was bit of a rhetorical question. My wife's family have an Irish Catholic background and she and her sisters have middle names such as Jeanette, Bernadette and Mary Veronica that reflect this. As far as I know, none of them has ever worked in France.;-)
MrB
I think she was either born plain Mary Jane or it was not her name at all. However, as Debra says, so many records are not available yet and with no census, almost impossible to find any leads. The Welsh census is available though, but having trawled through the records , cannot find any family that fits her story.
Amanda
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Hi Amanda.
Mary Kelly born 1864 in Castletown Limerick has been known about for years, if you check old MK threads.[ Limerick the key] She had two brothers John born 1866 and Peter born 1868 and sister Alice born 1871
I have never been able to find any other children of this family, or anything else, if you could that would great. Kelly is the 11th commonest name in Limerick.
Other Mary's born in Limerick are
1863 11th May Askeaton Limerick
1864 Kilfannane 27th Nov.
1864 Charlesville 5th Dec
1864 Limerick 25th Feb
1864 St Michael's 31st May
1865 Castletown 16th Aug.
Miss Marple
OLast edited by miss marple; 10-02-2014, 04:05 AM.
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Hello, Miss Marple,
I guess Mary could still have been born in Limerick but the odds are very low that she was born there in the mid 1860s.
The Irish-born populations stats suggest the timeline of her family's immigration is probably sometime prior to 1861, with declining and then falling immigration to England after that time, with immigration to American increasing thereafter.
Irish-born populations of England, Scotland & Wales, 1841-1921
1841 415,725
1851 727,326
1861 805,717
1871 774,310
See more at: http://www.irish-genealogy-toolkit.c....xiVIPz7Y.dpuf
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