Friday, 30 September 2011

Richardsons of Bessbrook

The Richardsons of Bessbrook are most famous as being magnates of the Ulster linen trade in 19th century Ireland, and the founders of the model linen village, Bessbrook. They are also regarded as one of the main Quaker families of Ulster.

Origins

The following is from The Richardsons of Bessbrook, A Quaker Linen Family, a small book released by John Bradley to detail the story of the Richardsons of Bessbrook. It was created in response to the launch on 4th April 2009, of a scholarly business study into the Richardsons of Bessbrook, by Richard S. Harrison.

The only official written record on these Richardsons is titled Bessbrook. It was published in 1945 by the family itself to mark the 100th anniversity of them in Bessbrook.

The beginnings of these Richardsons in Ireland are sketchy, however it is claimed that members of a Richardson family from Warwickshire, England, settled in the Loughgall area of County Armagh.

From these Richardsons it is claimed a Zachary Richardson, settled in the townland of Eagerlougher, near to the village of Loughgall itself, and that the Richardsons of Bessbrook descend from him.

What is known for definate is that Jonathan Richardson, Zachary's son, converted from the Established Church to Quakerism in 1660.

Family Tree

This is only a start on the Richardsons of Bessbrook family tree, and will be expanded upon.

  • John Richardson (1719-1759) (m. 1753) Ruth Hogg (1719-1817)
    • Jonathan Richardson (1756-1817)
      • James Nicholson Richardson I
        (1781-1847)
        • John Grubb Richardson (2nd son of ten)
          (13 November 1813 - 1890)
          • James Nicholson Richardson III
            (7 February 1846 - 11 October 1921)
        • Thomas Richardson (born after 1813)
        • Jonathan Richardson

Tuesday, 2 August 2011

My Family Tree

It only makes sense to provide details of my own family tree first before any other Richardsons. The following is the result of a lot of research into church records, scouring online sites for clues, and following them up wherever I can.

As it appears to be common practice amongst family trees on the Internet, any relatives still living are marked as such rather than their details being giving out. Some names given without a birth or death date may still be alive.

So far I can trace my tree as far as back as James Richardson, my great-great-great grandfather (6 generations back). He lived in the townland of Fallalea in the civil parish of Killelagh. His son, William, would move to the townland of Crew in the neighbouring civil parish of Maghera, and most descendants would remain in that civil parish or the neighbouring civil parish of Kilcronaghan.

This family tree can be taken as concrete and backed up by sources, with no speculation or flaws in it, other than at the very start where I state who James's wife may possibly be.

If anyone can trace their own ancestry into the following or have relevant information then please by all means get in contact.

Click here to download the Microsoft Excel file.

Tuesday, 26 July 2011

Caution when researching

You should always throw caution to the wind and always take things with a pinch of salt, especially when researching ancestry on the Internet and even in historical sources.

One of the biggest problems is inaccurate transcriptions of records, intentional and unintentional inaccurate information given by the person themselves, and misleading information being supplied by researchers.

An example of someone unintentionally (as far as i can tell) providing inaccurate information is my great-great grandmother's sister Mary Anne Lyle. Mary Anne according to my local church records was born on 21 September 1856. According to the 1901 census she was 34, which would mean she would of had to have been born in 1867. Worse yet in the 1911 census her age is stated as 50. That's an increase of 16 years in 10 years! It would also mean she'd have been born in 1861. Luckily i have her baptism record which states her birth from my local church - otherwise i'd have been totally misled as to her year of birth which would of hindered further research.

That's just one example of inaccurate records. Some people copy other websites without doing a little more digging to verify some bits that are possibly wrong. The website in question is: Richardson Family - Coat of Arms. The editor of this site states near the top of this page:

...to establish that the first record of the name Richardson was found in Cheshire in 1067/68 where they were descended from Hugh d'Avranche, Earl Lupus, Earl of Chester if Chester who held one of the most highest domains in the whole country. His descendant, William Belwood or Belward, Lord of Malpas (Henry 1st) in Cheshire, had two sons, David and Richard. Richard's grandson John Richardson was of the first paternal name of the Richardson.

This is copied straight from House of Names (or maybe the other way round, or from somewhere else entirely). Whilst i have used the House of Names site in my previous post to highlight the earliest recorded versions of the Richardson surname - the paragraph quoted above is troublesome as the site Family History Monthly contradicts it:

The earliest found mention of the name Richard in the UK was in 1067 in Cheshire, where the man in question was the son of Hugh d’Avranche, the first Earl of Chester.

This informs us that its the forename Richard, not the surname Richardson, that first appears in English records in 1067 as the son (rather than just descended) of Hugh d'Avranches in Chesire.

Worse yet, The Peerage states that Richard d'Avranches, was born around 1094! This just typifies the problem with sources - we have conflicting websites, all of which provide a date that contradicts with another site. The Peerage however provides a source for its date, The Complete Peerage, volume III, which sounds more credible than the other sites that don't specify a source.

Another problem with the above is, is that the same Richard d'Avranches? Whilst Richard d'Avranches, born in 1094, is the son of Hugh d'Avranches, Hugh is credited with many illegitimate children, an older one of which may have been also called Richard - though The Peerage makes no mention of any other Richard.

Other websites to be careful of are Ancestry World Tree (courtesy of Ancestry.com) and the Church of Latter Day Saints Family Search website - both these sites contain records submitted by ordinary people and are highly susceptible to mistakes and errors - though they are still indisuptably useful resources that have helped me many times, mistakes or not.

All in all these are only a small handful of examples, and whilst some may contain an error or misleading information, doesn't mean that the rest of the information is wrong. If so i'd have never discovered a clue to my paternal great-great grandmother, from which i was able to go on and prove via church records was correct. So always do a little extra research to see if any inconsistencies can be found and corrected as best you can.

Sources

  • Black, George F., The Surnames of Scotland Their Origin, Meaning and History. New York: New York Public Library, 1946. Print. (ISBN 0-87104-172-3)
  • The Peerage

Monday, 25 July 2011

First post

This is my first post in a blog and as such is a simple welcome and brief explaination about this blog.

Firstly thanks for coming across my blog and if you read on, thanks for that as well.

The Richardsons of Ulster, as the title suggests is about the Richardson families of Ulster. This blog is intended to be a form of resource for anybody trying to trace their Richardson ancestry in Ulster. The information this blog will contain will be the result of my personal endevours to explore Richardson ancestry in Ulster. Most important of all the information will be free!

My blog name is Virtute acquiritur honos, which is the motto of the Richardson name going by any family crests that can be found. It means "Honour acquired by virtue".

There is claimed to be four distinct families of Richardson's in Ulster:

  • The Richardsons of Drum, County Tyrone
  • The Richardsons of Poplar Vale, County Monaghan
  • The Richardsons of Rossfad, County Fermanagh and Richill, County Armagh
  • The Richardsons of Eagerclougher (near Loughgall), County Armagh

To me this implies that unless a Richardson in Ulster can prove otherwise, they in theory descend from one of these four families.

My personal focus will primarily be on the Richardson's of Drum, to which i am close to connecting my family to, but have so far failed to find that elusive link in the chain. However i will also focus on the three other Richardson families where possible as well as any historical Ulster Richardson's of unknown ancestry i come across.

Hopefully this blog will help other people trace their Richardson ancestry in Ulster and help provide missing links.