Saturday, 19 January 2019

2019 - #52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks. Week 4, Prompt: ‘ I’d Like to Meet...’

#52ancestors

I’d Like to Meet...
                                   my grandmothers and grandfathers so they could tell me who all these people are in the photos I have inherited from my mother and father, with no names on them.
I believe this is not an uncommon happening, as I have read and heard other historians saying the same thing.

It is such a shame, as I would love to put names to faces and add them all to my family tree.  It would help me see them more clearly and I would have a lovely record for descendants. 

Dating photographs is an interesting exercise, but how sure can I be, when these people lived in different parts of Australia, England, and Scotland.  I don’t know whether they were up-to-date with the fashions of the time, which we rely on to establish time.
Distinguishing between the same gender members of the same family can be quite difficult, especially if there are strong family resemblances.

I have managed to work out a few, through matching them to named photos that cousins had of the same relatives, sometimes even a copy of the same photo. 
But sadly, there still remains a box of lost people who I will probably never meet.



This is one photo I have worked hard at naming.  
I believe it to be Rees Coventry Rees  1842-1920 and Eliza Wells (My mother’s Aunt) 1854 – 1892.  
Photo was taken at Broken Hill by G F Jenkinson

Tuesday, 8 January 2019

2019 - #52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks. Week 3, Prompt: ‘Unusual Name'


#52ancestors

‘Unusual Name’

I have chosen Jonnet Mash for my person with an unusual name this year. Jonnet is one of my 7th great grandmothers on my paternal side.

I have not done any research on Jonnett as yet so I will see what I can find now.

In looking for Jonnett’s birth I discover her parents' names – my 8th great-grandparents.  Firstly there are two baptism dates –  03 March 1633 and 1641.
  1. The 1633 entry has Janet Mash daughter of James Mash and Janet Bukise.  (Ancestry: FHL Film 1067782, Ref ID: 2:1850HHR, Scotland Select Births and baptisms 1564 – 1950.)
  2. In the 1641 entry, her name is given as Jonnet, other researchers or records have her listed as Janet Mash.  Her mother is Jonnet Buccasie,  whereas other researchers or records have her listed as Janet McCaskie, Mukasie, Muckassie, Muckarsie or Bucise.  Her father is James Mash whereas other researchers or records list him as Mash, Mashe or Masche.  (Ancestry: FHL FILM, 1067782,  Ref ID: 2:1850Z8Q, Scotland Select Births and Baptisms 1564 – 1950.)
So, it seems that the parents have trickier names to unravel than the daughter!

Researching further I find a marriage record for James Mash and Janet Mackasie, 12 Dec 1628. ( in Scotland Extracted Parish Records 1571-1997)
Next, I find (so far)  baptisms for five siblings of Janet’s all at Liberton, Midlothian, Scotland. 
The children were born in the  following order:
Margaret- 28 Jan 1630, (Janet- 03 Mar 1633),  Marione- 31 July 1638, (Janet- 25 Feb 1641), William- 17 Dec 1643, Issobell- 22 Nov 1646 and David- 13 Jan 1653.  There are a few gaps there so there could be more children or some died.
As I have two baptismal dates for Janet with the same parents, one possibility is that the first Janet died, and they used the same name later for another daughter to carry on mother Janet’s name.  I have not been able to find a death record as yet.  
I will research all of this further when I have a membership with ‘Scotland’s People’.
***
Direct line of Ancestors down from Janet’s parents:
Janet McCaskie/Buccasie, etc + James Mash
Janet Mash + Donald MacKintosh
Donald MacKintosh + Anna McBean
Alexander MacKintosh + Christian Ross
John McIntosh + Margaret Morrison
Alexander McIntosh + Isabel Cairns
Richard McIntosh + Elspeth Gray
         Isabella McIntosh + James Finlay Lumsden
         Isabella McIntosh Lumsden + Francis George Pearce
         William Louden Pearce+ Lilian Agnes Cottam
                  Me

***


· ‘Liberton Wynd from the Cowgate, Edinburgh’
· Artist: Henry Gibson Duguid- Scottish (1805-1860)
· National Galleries of Scotland: William Finlay Watson Bequest 1881





The Liberton Inn and Kirk at the crossroads that was the centre of the village, now swallowed up into southern Edinburgh city.
Photo taken 15 May 2005. 
Copyright: Richard Webb & licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0 http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/9988

***


NB: See link for a history of Liberton http://www.southedinburgh.net/history/liberton
Liberton was once home to Arthur Conan Doyle, who lived in a small cottage near the Braid Burn, which is now inside the grounds of the Cameron Toll Shopping Centre car park and is now a small school. (Wikipedia, 08 Jan 2019)

Monday, 7 January 2019

2019. #52Ancestors in 52 Weeks. Week 2, Prompt: ‘Challenge'

#52ancestors

‘Challenge’

A Challenge for many in the Cottam ancestry line of my family has been coping with the genetic skin disease “Hailey-Hailey”

Those members of the family who I know have suffered from it are circled in this rough family tree:



(I have since learned that George's daughter also has it.)

I probably won’t be able to trace it back any further as none of the 6 siblings are still alive.

My mother (4. Lilian) said that her father (Joseph COTTAM) had a bad rash at times but they didn’t know what it was.

Genetic and Rare Diseases Information Centre (GARD)
  ( Last updated: 31/05/2017)
Hailey-Hailey disease is a Congenital and Genetic Skin Disease.
Also known as Benign familial pemphigus; Benign chronic pemphigus; Familial benign pemphigus.

Hailey-Hailey disease causes blistering. Signs and symptoms include a painful rash and blistering in skin folds, such as the armpits, groin, neck, under the breasts, and between the buttocks. 
Secondary bacterial, fungal and/or viral infections are common and may exacerbate an outbreak. Some people have found that outbreaks are triggered by certain foods, hormone cycles, and stress.  Symptoms are often worse in the summer months due to heat, sweating, and friction. 
Hailey-Hailey disease is caused by mutations in the ATP2C1 gene and is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner.[2] 
 A mutation on one copy of the gene causes only half of this necessary protein to be made and the cells of the skin do not adhere together properly due to malformation of intercellular desmosomes, causing acantholysis, blisters, and rashes. There is no known cure.
The differential diagnosis includes intertrigo, candidiasis, and frictional or contact dermatitis. A biopsy and/or family history can confirm. The lack of oral lesions and intercellular antibodies distinguishes familial benign pemphigus from other forms of pemphigus.

Treatment focuses on reducing symptoms and preventing flares and may include topical medication, laser, and other procedures.[1][3][4]


I have found that it has a peculiar action: a blister forms and then there is a spread of blisters outwards in a sort of circular fashion across the skin. As they heal – they leave a reddened area which turns to a brownish discolour and takes a long time to disappear. If the blisters break, crust scabs form and become itchy as they are irritated by clothing, etc. The process can go on for months, with other blisters forming close by or in more areas of my body.  
With sores often over my back, under my arms, chest, knees, and on my neck. I stay inside waiting for healing.  I have tried many so-called cures but the only thing that works is time and patience as the blisters seem to have their own idea of when to give in. At their most debilitating I take prednisone tablets, which do help in healing the current ones, but have the side effect of thinning the skin!  And make me feel queerer than usual as if I am 'out of my body' and as hungry as a hunter.

My blisters form when my body gets heated in any way such as hot weather; body being heated up from warm clothes or temperatures in cold weather; skin rubbing together as in folds or body parts; anything rubbing on skin such as tight elastic, wrinkles in sheets, a loose thread or tag on clothing; stress causing build-up of heat as in being ‘hot under the collar’.
It is a case of always being aware of my body and changes in temperature and mood.

I will research further to find out if any more family members have also been unlucky in inheritance.

Having said all of this though I do appreciate that many people inherit far worse things than I have done.

Friday, 4 January 2019

2019 Challenge #52ancestors . Week 1, Prompt: ‘First'

#52ancestors  Week 1 Prompt: 'First'

Mary Anne Cottam was the first on my mother's ancestral side - the Cottam family to be born in Australia.  
Her parents were Englishman James Cottam from Lancashire and Eliza Shanks from Co. Down, Northern Ireland who were married in 1860 in Kilmore, Victoria. (as per Marriage Certificate)

Anne (as she was known) was born in March 1862 at Darraweit Guim, a country town near Lancefield, Victoria and was still living there in 1909.  The Census says at Chintin near Lancefield.

Anne was 51 when she married Alfred George Holt in 1913 and was his second wife.  Alfred's first wife, Agnes who was Anne's sister died aged 39 in 1912.


Death Notice for Agnes Holt in 'The Argus'.

I was told by a family member that Anne had no children but reared the five children of her sister Agnes.  The Holt children were - Gordon Ernest, Elizabeth Beryl, Harold Lindsay, George McLeod and Irene.
I am yet to prove that the last daughter born - Irene Agnes HOLT - was a daughter of Agnes or Anne, but so far it seems she was born in 1914.
It would have been a hard task for Anne at age 51 taking over the care of all the children aged from eight years old down to babies. She would have known them being their Aunt, but to suddenly have a family of five to care for and a new husband must have come as a shock to her as a middle-aged spinster.

Anne was more than ten years older than Agnes her sister, the youngest of the family, and would have been about six years older than her husband Alfred.
Once married she lived at ‘Wahroonga’ 43 Kent St, Kew.  (1919 Census)



‘Wahroonga’ Kew 2007: Google Earth.

Anne was 71 when she died on 30 Jan 1935 and is buried in the Boroondara Cemetery at Kew (nearby their home) with her sister Agnes and their husband Alfred George Holt.



Grave for Anne, Agnes and Alfred Holt, Booroondara Cemetery, Kew.