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Mary Greenaway (1818-c1853) |
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PART 1:BYRNES FAMILY
ANCESTORS’ CHARTS : (Parents of Peter Byrnes):
INDIVIDUAL SUMMARIES (Scroll down for full list): |
Line of Descent to Peter Byrnes:
Mary Gould Greenaway
(Great
Great Grandmother) |
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| Father | Charles Greenway (1794-1845) | ||
| Mother  | Mary Gould  | ||
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Birth/Baptism  |
Nov 12, 1818, Holy Trinity, Coventry[1] |
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Marriage |
Samuel ARCHER (no documentation found |
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Children |
Emma ARCHER
(1842-1911),
married
Felice Pobar,
1858, Strathfillan (Vic)
[John] Arthur ARCHER (1848 - 1931 Frederick Samuel ARCHER (1850 - 1931) |
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The city of Coventry, in
Warwickshire, in the first quarter of the 19th
By 1829 more than 29,000
people lived within a two-and-a-half mile circuit. Cottages were built in what had been the gardens of larger
houses, forming enclosed courts of up to fifteen small, crowded dwellings
with only one entrance from the street. Ribbon manufacturers,
slaughterhouses, shops, hotels, warehouses, public buildings and stables
were built right up to the walls of Holy Trinity church,[2]
where Mary Greenaway was baptised on
November 12, 1818.
Holy Trinity Church, Coventry, where Mary
Greenaway was baptised in 181 |
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Mary
was born into a working class artisan family – both her parents and
generations before them, worked in the silk trade of Coventry, as ribbon
weavers[3]. Mary’s grandfather
James Greenaway is recorded in an index of master weavers in 1797, when
his eldest son James, Mary’s uncle, was apprenticed to him.[4]
The tradition of the Greenway/Greenaway family of incorporating the
wife’s maiden name as the middle name of subsequent children is a good
clue to which children belong to which family, as the surname is a very
common one among the silk trade workers in Coventry. Mary’s parents had married in 1815, at Chilvers Coton, an area now integrated into the Coventry suburb of Nuneaton. In later years in Australia, Mary’s family always listed her name as “Mary Gold Greenaway” – the middle name probably a clerical corruption of “Gould”, her mother’s maiden name. Mary was one of six children born to Charles Bird Greenway and Mary Gould, while Charles himself was one of eight born to the master weaver James Greenway and his wife, Mary Bird. The only surviving documentation in which Mary is then mentioned are her children's birth, marriage and death certificates, and her husband’s death certificate. Her husband Samuel also came from a long-time Warwickshire family, in his case, though, not from the silk industry. Samuel, like his father, was an Army man, and at the time of his presumed marriage to Mary, was a sergeant in the 12th (Infantry) Regiment. So far, Mary's own marriage and death certificates have not been located, but it's probable she died in the 1850s in Mauritius, when Samuel was stationed there with his regiment, as she did not accompany him and their surviving children in 1856, when they made a new life in Australia. As well as those three children, Mary and Samuel had three others, two boys and a girl, who died in childhood.[5] Back in Warwickshire, as Mary was starting her years in Mauritius, her father, Charles Bird Greenway had succumbed to a particularly virulent bronchitis attack, and died at the comparatively young age of 51. At the time of his death in 1845, Charles and his wife were living in Much Park Street, Coventry. After Charles’ death, his widow continued to work in the silk industry, but by 1851, she was living in Union Street with her daughter Sarah, son John, and two grandchildren.[6] |
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![]() A Coventry street, Butchers’ Row, as it was in the 19th century |
and today, a canal in the old area of Coventry |
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[1] IGI, Batch no 041921
[2]
http://www.vision.net.au/~dburbury/texts/part_2.htm
[3]
1851 Census of Warwickshire, and the death certificate of Charles
Greenway [4] Joan Lane (ed), Coventry Apprentices and their Masters 1781-1806, Dugdale Society, Shakespeare Centre, Stratford upon-Avon, Warwickshire, 1983, p46.
[5]
Samuel Archer’s death certificate [6] UK 1851; PRO REF HO/107/2067; Folio 358, Page 10, FHL Film 0087330.
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