Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
|
JaneyCanuck
|
Report
|
16 Jul 2009 00:48 |
I'm still being unclear. ;)
I'm not really suggesting that the artist who is the subject of that article is your person.
The article just gives some interesting background info -- similar work, same time period, overlapping places. Your person *could* have been in Canada with the military, even if he was not a military artist.
What I meant, about the National Archives, is that they seem to have considerable expertise in this regard, and someone there might be able to make some educated guesses about the nature and origin of the works you have.
The website is geared to accessing documents in the collection, but you could start with any contact and get steered in the right direction.
http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/the-public/index-e.html
|
|
Allan
|
Report
|
15 Jul 2009 22:46 |
Many thanks for that, JaneyCanuck
I may just take you up on your suggestion, although given that he was in Quebec in 1837, and some of the sketches in the book are of Ireland and Scotland in the early1840's they are probably not by him.
I'm not sure how long the tour of duty was back then, but I know that these days it is usually about two years (in areas where peace reigns!)
Regards
Allan
|
|
JaneyCanuck
|
Report
|
15 Jul 2009 15:37 |
This one?
http://journals.sfu.ca/archivar/index.php/archivaria/article/download/11615/12562
It should prompt you to open a pdf file using your default viewer.
Like I said, it's tangential, but it's kind of interesting and could provide some little bit of background info.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Captain George St. Vincent Whitmore: A Newly Discovered Military Artist
In November 1987, the National Archives of Canada acquired a watercolour by Captain George St. Vincent Whitmore of the Royal Engineers, entitled Aurora Borealis, Quebec, (Fig. 1) and dated 1837. In addition to being an important and rare record of a spectacular phenomenon, this watercolour has also led to the identification of the artist responsible for an album of watercolours which has been in the Archives' holdings since 1970. This article relates the method by which the identity of Captain Whitmore was established by using records in the Manuscript Division and in the Cartographic and Architectural Archives Division in conjunction with records in the Documentary Art and Photography Division.
... Whitmore lived in Kingston for two years; however, no views by him of this area have yet been found. Since he did not sign his watercolours, these pictures - if indeed they exist - may be languishing in some collection, attributed to yet another unknown artist. Our discovery will perhaps lead to their identification.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You might even consider sending images of what you have to the National Archives in Canada to see whether they could tell you anything!
|
|
Allan
|
Report
|
15 Jul 2009 02:52 |
Hi JaneyCanuck
The Ireland/Scotland scenes are mainly landscapes. The Toronto ones may be of a military basis, but may have also just been "tourist" type sketches.
I did try the web site you posted was was unable to view the page
Regards
Allan
|
|
JaneyCanuck
|
Report
|
15 Jul 2009 02:32 |
Susan with numbers! Enjoy. ;)
Re the military artist bit -- I was mainly just offering that up as a possible explanation for the locales and times of the artwork you have, Allan, not meaning that the specific one in question was a person of interest. It would certainly fit the circumstances -- Ireland, Canada, and the subject matter?
|
|
Allan
|
Report
|
15 Jul 2009 01:47 |
Nudging for Susan with numbers
Regards
Allan
|
|
Allan
|
Report
|
29 May 2009 09:31 |
Hi Janey,
Forgive my late response but my OH and myself had to go to Perth today: left at 0800 and have only just returned.
The info re a Military Artist is tantalising, however earlier sketches in the pad, and dated 1844, are from Ireland.
I will visit the site you have given
My sincere thanks for your help
Allan
|
|
JaneyCanuck
|
Report
|
29 May 2009 01:05 |
Allow me! Since I'm here and all.
http://www.forthenry.com/
http://www.forthenry.com/goat.htm
The Guard has a mascot in memory of the mascot of the 23rd Regiment of Foot (Royal Welch Fusiliers), stationed at Fort Henry in 1842 and 1843, which was a goat named "Billy."
(My apologies to the, er, Welch for that one. Yeesh.)
Totally tangential, but a paper about a military artist at Fort Henry c1842:
http://journals.sfu.ca/archivar/index.php/archivaria/article/download/11615/12562
|
|
Allan
|
Report
|
29 May 2009 00:41 |
Yes Janey,
Many thanks: it appears that the sketch is of THE Fort Henry. I'll do a search on which British Army Units would have been posted there in the corresponding year.
Regards
Allan
|
|
JaneyCanuck
|
Report
|
28 May 2009 23:54 |
But you saw my post about Fort Henry / Cedar Island in your other thread!
|
|
Allan
|
Report
|
28 May 2009 22:50 |
Nudging up.
No new information but perhaps any newcomers to this site may be able to offer advice
Regards
Allan
|
|
Allan
|
Report
|
23 Apr 2009 01:26 |
Hi Evie,
No, the certificates didn't ring any bells except that with the information you have just provided I went back to Joseph George Rowland's birth certificate and had a good look ay his mother's maiden name which could well be Wigzell but I'm not sure that it helps matters.
I'll carry on ferreting around.
I'm hoping to catch up with my nephew who will be coming out to the uk sometime in the next couple of months.
I'll get him to check the records at Manchester's Southern Cemetery as I am pretty sure my grandfather was cremated and his ashes placed in a niche wall. From my own memory, although I did'n go to the service, my grandmother was cremated and her ashes placed in the same niche. The plaque may give a date of birth for him
I'll still follow up on some of the other information you have provided.
A big thank you for all your help
I should have called this thread Desperately Seeking Clifford...a bit like the X files, the truth is out ther somewhere.
I'll keep the thread open and post any more information that may come to light....and I promise, no more pm's
Regards
Allan
|
|
EvieBeavie
|
Report
|
23 Apr 2009 01:02 |
Aargh, did I cause all this?!
You don't have to send obsequious messages, Allan. ;) I see the new additions when I click on My threads.
Let me just sort it a bit so I can follow better.
John Mortimer Date of Birth: 6th July 1858 Registration District: BIRMINGHAM Father: Thomas Mortimer Occupation of Father: Brass Dresser Name of Mother Elvira? Mortimer formerly Clamp
Marriages Mar 1858 CLAMP Eliza Birmingham 6d 161 Mortimer Thomas Birmingham 6d 161
Joseph George Rowland Mortimer Date of Birth 12th(?) January 1842 Registration District: SAINT GEORGE HANOVER SQUARE Father: Joseph George Mortimer Occupation of Father: Cabinet Maker Mother: Harriett Ann Mortimer formerly Wignell
Date of Marriage September 24th 1877 Farnley (Bramley dist), County of York Joseph Clayton Mortimer, 21, batchelor, commercial traveller - father Jonas Clayton, Gentleman Annie Jemima Kitchen, 21, spinster - father Joseph Kitchen, Steward Date of Marriage September 24th 1877.
Uh, hmm. I'm not seeing any connection among them. Did I think I should? ;)
Alrighty. Mortimer/Clayton.
Marriages Mar 1857 > Clayton Jonas Leeds 9b 347 > Mortimer Ann Leeds 9b 347 Suart Ann Leeds 9b 347 (a groom missing)
? Would have been just the right timing for Ann Mortimer to have a child just before the marriage who was 21 in 1877.
This is the 1842 Joseph George Rowland Mortimer in 1851, in Holborn St Andrew, with solid middle-class neighbours:
Rebecca Clarke 37 Fredk John Clarke 12 Ann Wigzell 55 > Harriet Mortimer 32 - widow Emma Wigzell 30 John Wigzell 21 > Joseph Mortimer 9 - born Pimlico Thos Jennings 25
This is him in 1861, same place:
John Wiggett 31 (looks like Wigzell, this time) - builder Hester Wiggett 33 Joseph Mortimer 19 - born London, no occupation (and numerous others, lodgers)
1871, St Pancras:
Joseph Dore 52 (probably Rose) - pianoforte maker Sarah Dore 52 Sarah L Dore 24 John Dore 17 - pianoforte tuner Harry Dore 14 Emma Dore 11 Joseph Mortimer 28 - born Pimlico - pianoforte tuner
Ancestry has him as Son, but it's blobbed, and I doubt it.
And it looks like he became this one in 1881:
Name: Joseph Mortimer Age: 40 Estimated Birth Year: abt 1841 Relation: Boarder Spouse's Name: Annie (wife of boarder) Where born: London, London, Middlesex, England Civil Parish: Sheffield County/Island: Yorkshire
Joseph Mortimer 40 - born London - comedian Annie Mortimer 23 - born London Dennis Mortimer 3 - born Sheffield
There is no Joseph-Annie marriage. There is no Dennis Mortimer birth. There is no Dennis Mortimer in 1891. There are a few Dennis-s born in Sheffield in the 1891 some of whom match up with Dennis-s born in Sheffield 1879 ... for instance, a Driscoll with parents Joseph and Annie in Bethnal Green, but Joseph is a tea cooper. Seems unlikely. There's no Dennis Mortimer death.
Looks like Joseph Mortimer was maybe already married, Dennis was born under mother's surname, but what, ?
The question being, of course, whether this Joseph had other partners, other children, registered under other surnames ... Dennis is about as unusual a name for the time as Clifford was two decades earlier. But there were sooooo maaaany other Joseph Cliffords. ;)
Nope. I'm stymied. Did any of those certificates mean anything to you?
|
|
Allan
|
Report
|
23 Apr 2009 00:35 |
Hi Evie,
i can't believe it. I posted all the info and wanted to edit something and pressed the delete button by mistake....Arghhhh!
Here we go again
John Mortimer: Birth
Registration District BIRMINGHAM
Sub district St Thomas Birmingham County of Warwick
When And Where Born 6th July 1858 17 Court (Count?) William Street
Father Thomas Mortimer
Occupation Brass Dresser(?)
Mother Elvira Mortimer formerly Clamp
Informant Mother
Registered 16 August 1858
Next Joseph George Rowland (Birth)
Registration District SAINT GEORGE HANOVER SQUARE
Sub district Belgrave County of Middlesex
When and Where born 12th(?) January 1842, 9 Buckingham Place
Father Joseph George Mortimer
Occupation Cabinet Maker
Mother Harriet Ann Mortimer formerly Wignell (?)
Informant Mother
Registered 4th(?) March 1842
This certificate has been difficult to transcribe as the image is not very clear, but I think that all the salient points are correct.
Now, the Mariage between Joseph Clayton Mortimer and Annie Jemima Kitchen:
Marriage solemnized at St Michael's Church Parish of Farnley County of York
Age of Groom 20
Condition Batchelor
Profession Commercial Traveller
Fathers Name and Surname Jonas(?) Clayton
Profession Gentleman
Brides Age 21
Condition Spinster
Fathers Name and Surname Joseph Kitchen
Profession Steward
Witnesses John Hirst and Sarah Ann Hirst
The interesting thig with this one is that Joseph's fathers name and surname are Jonas(?) Clayton, but Joseph is now Joseph Clayton Mortimer
Where did the "Mortimer" spring from?
Allan
|
|
Allan
|
Report
|
9 Apr 2009 03:33 |
I'll do that with pleasure, after all the help and assistance that you have given me.
I'll order the certificates today so I should receive them in about two weeks time.....I must say the the GRO staff seem extemely efficient.
Have a nice day (night?)
Regards
Allan
|
|
EvieBeavie
|
Report
|
9 Apr 2009 03:01 |
Do report back! I'm becoming obsessed with circus families hereabouts it seems. ;)
|
|
Allan
|
Report
|
9 Apr 2009 02:32 |
Hi EvieBeavie
many thanks for the information provided.
I have located a birth in the Sept 1858 quarter:
Mortimer John: Birmingham 6d 43.
Also
March 1842 quarter:
Mortimer Joseph George Roland: St George Hanover Square 1 16
I will send of for the birth certificates as well as the marriage certificate for Joseph and Annie Kitchen.
Incidentally I have downloaded some historical directories which are on-line as part of a project by the University of Leicester
www.historicaldirectories.org/hd/index.asp
The 1841 Post Office London Directory lists a William Mortimer, coachmaker, 4 Marchmont Street, Brunswick Square.
It may be a conection but more likely a coincidence. Remember that my gt grandfather Joseph was listed as a coach trimmer.
Could possibly be related, nephew perhaps?
I'll let you know how I get on
Regards
Allan
|
|
EvieBeavie
|
Report
|
25 Mar 2009 00:20 |
And I'm still stuck on this one in 1881:
Name: Joseph Mortimer Age: 40 Estimated Birth Year: abt 1841 Relation: [boarder] Spouse's Name: Annie Where born: London, London, Middlesex, England Occupation: Comedian (Actor)
Civil Parish: Sheffield
Joseph Mortimer 40 - a nice round number Annie Mortimer 23 - born London Dennis Mortimer 3 - born Sheffield
There is no birth for that Dennis.
But there's this marriage:
Marriages Sep 1877 Kitchen Annie Jemima Bramley Mortimer Joseph Clayton Bramley 9b 435
And of course there's no identifiable birth for either of them.
|
|
EvieBeavie
|
Report
|
24 Mar 2009 23:28 |
So ... just continuing my occupation of your thread ... ;)
1881
Name: Alice Bowen Age: 35 Estimated Birth Year: abt 1846 Relation: Lodger Gender: Female Where born: Liverpool, Lancashire, England
Occupation: Equestrian (Perform) Condition as to marriage: Married
Alice Bowen 35 Mary Ann T. Bowen 12 William Hy. Bowen 5 Alfred E. Bowen 4 Arthur Bowen
No husband!!!! And in 1891 it's Charles, a cheese factor, then in 1901 it's John, a showman ...
Back to Stockport in 1871 ...
Alice Bowen 25 - showwoman - married Mary Ann Bowen 2 John W Bowen 3 months + two theatrical actors also in household
Married my eye, I think.
But no connection to the Mortimer in the 1891 and 1901 households to be seen!
|
|
EvieBeavie
|
Report
|
24 Mar 2009 23:14 |
If we could just find this person as a child:
1901
Name: John Mortimer Age: 45 Estimated Birth Year: abt 1856 Relation: Boarder Gender: Male Where born: Birmingham Civil Parish: Stockport
John Bowen 64 - showman Alice Bowen 56 - showwoman Arthur Bowen 20 - showman John Mortimer 45 - comedian *married*
-- this being the household in 1891:
Charles Bowen 54 - Cheese factor (maker's rep, I'd say) Alice Bowen 47 William H Bowen 14 Ayah E Bowen 13 Arthur C Bowen 10 John R Samwells 1 John Mortimer 40 - Brewer *single*
I'm just thinking we might have found a brother of your Clifford ... if not your Clifford by another name ...
|