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I have very little to go on with this particular couple. I wrote about them back in 2017 and have not managed to progress much further. I have a copy of a transcription of their marriage which reads 

IFHF
Church Marriage Record
Date of Marriage: 23-Mar-1826
Parish / District: BELFAST County: Co. Antrim
Husband Wife
Name: James Wallace Eleanor Allen
Address: Dunmurry Ballylesson Co Antrim
Denomination: Presbyterian Presbyterian
Occupation:
Age:
Status:
Husband's Father Wife's Father
Name: James Wallace George Allen
Address:
Denomination:
Occupation:
Husband's Mother Wife's Mother
Name:
Address:
Denomination:
Occupation:
Witness 1 Witness 2
Name: George Allen George Watson
Address:
Notes:
Church: ROSEMARY ST PRESBYTERY Presbyterian
REV S HANNA MGR THIRD WITNESS ENTERED AS JOHN WALLACE MGR THE MARRIAGE TOOK PLACE AT THE REQUEST OF MRS MONTGOMERY OF THE INSTITUTION.
I have several questions from this record.
1) On a genealogy website Eleanor & James wedding is announced with the wording that Eleanor is the daughter of the late George....  I am having trouble finding anything about George, as to when he died, Eleanor's birth in the hope I would find her mothers name

2) In the witness part was George ALLEN, Eleanors brother or father and I have no idea who George WATSON is. 

3) I am guessing that the third witness will be James WALLACE father or perhaps brother but leaning towards his father. 

4) What does MGR stand for

5) last question is why would the marriage have been at the request of Mrs Montgomery of the Institution. Was Eleanor living there? What was the Instution? Lots of questions really around the Instution as to why Eleanor was there and why was marriage requeste. Was it an arranged marriage or because Eleanor was pregnant

I would be so grateful for any answers to my questions. I thought I had been clever and broken a brick wall but it has just put up smaller walls around and lots of hurdles

Many thanks

donna bridgeman

 

grrlgypsy

Tuesday 7th Jan 2020, 09:44PM

Message Board Replies

  • Donna,

    James & Eleanor married in Rosemary St Presbyterian church. That’s in the centre of Belfast and is one of the oldest churches in the city. (It’s records start in 1723). It was popular with the leading families in Belfast. For example, Thomas Andrews, the builder of the Titanic attended it. Their family box pew is still there. However the addresses you have for the couple (Dunmurry and Ballylesson) are some way out of town. Dunmurry is about 6 miles south of the city centre.  There are several places called Ballylesson/Ballylessan near Belfast. There are two both about 25 miles north of the city, one near Ballymena and another near Larne.  There’s one near Dunmurry (actually Ballylessan) in Co. Down, again on the southern perimeter of Belfast. I suspect that's the one Eleanor came from as it’s close to Dunmurry. So I wonder what led the couple to marry in Belfast?

    Q1. You ask about George’s death. Which was evidently pre 1826. Death registration didn’t start till 1864 so you won’t find a death certificate. Presbyterians generally didn't keep burial records, so the only mention of his passing might be in the papers or on a gravestone (which is presumably likely to be in the Ballylesson area).

    I looked in a Newspaper site and found the mention in the Belfast Telegraph of 29.4.1927 of a Thomas Allen, farmer and teacher of Ballylessan who had died.   This looks to be him in the 1911 census. Perhaps a descendant of Eleanor’s family?

    http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1911/Down/Breda/Ballylessan/247624/

    It might be worth searching graveyards around Ballylessan for the Allen family. I’d start with Drumbo Presbyterian as that seems the nearest. (Presbyterians don’t use the parish system in Ireland and which church you attended was often a matter of personal preference and not always the nearest to where you lived).  Drumbo’s records start in 1699, so if that’s the family church you may get Eleanor’s baptism there, and  perhaps quite a bit before. There’s a copy in PRONI in Belfast.

    Q2 & 3. You ask who the witnesses were.  The answer is there’s no way of telling. Could be relatives or just friends.  With hurried marriages they can even be passers by dragooned into attending. Not likely in this case, but the point I am making is that there were no rules about who they should be nor was any record kept of their relationship to the couple, if any. Yes they were often relatives but frequently they were just their friends. I’d guess George Allen was related to the bride and George Watson the groom’s friend. The law only required 2 witnesses but you do sometimes see 3 especially if one is a child.  There’s no minimum age at which you can be a witness but most Ministers advise an extra witness if one is particularly young.

    Q4 No idea what MGR is. I think you would need to see the original register to try and answer that. It could be a mistranscription.  It’s not something I have seen before in a Presbyterian record. (In a Catholic context MGR is Monsignor, but the Presbyterian church doesn’t have any ranks other than Minister, so it doesn’t mean that here).

    Q5. I think the reference to the marriage taking place at the request of Mrs Montgomery of the Institution was because neither bride nor groom normally attended that church, and so the Minister was not obliged to perform their marriage. Mrs Montgomery has approached the Minister and asked him to conduct the service for some reason or other.  Normally it would take place at the bride’s church (which could be Drumbo Presbyterian) but somebody wanted it in Belfast.  

    The Institution will be the Royal Belfast Academical Institution. A top school founded in the early 1800s which is still functioning today. Known informally today as “Inst.”  The English Master from 1817 onwards was a Rev Henry Montgomery, so I’d guess that Mrs Montgomery was his wife.

    http://rbai.org.uk

    Rev Montgomery was a leading thinker and theologian of his time, and now has a commemorative blue plaque at Dunmurry Non Subscribing Presbyterian church:

    https://www.newsletter.co.uk/news/blue-plaque-for-liberal-presbyterian-minister-at-dunmurry-1-7124244

    (Non Subscribing Presbyterians are sometimes also known as Unitarians. They don’t believe in the Trinity, believing instead there is just a single unified entity  -  God. Hence the term Unitarian.)

    It’s just a few hundred yards from Rosemary St Presbyterian church to Inst. So one of the families probably had some connection with the school.  I don’t think it was an arranged marriage etc, nor was Eleanor necessarily pregnant nor being held in an “institution.” Possibly just someone pulling strings to get the marriage held there for their own reasons which we may not easily find out at this distance. 

    Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘

    Tuesday 7th Jan 2020, 11:27PM
  • OMG Many thanks Elwyn. I will take this to my cousins (the ones found when I smashed the brick wall) and we can digest this and see where we can take it all.
    There is a lot to absorb and work thu here. The most the three of us have come up with. We will quite probably come up with more questions from working thru all this

     

    Many many thanks again

    donna bridgeman

    grrlgypsy

    Wednesday 8th Jan 2020, 08:48AM
  • Would you believe it and typical of some of my relatives. When I was telling some of my cousins about my further research at seeking new information on our Wallace and Allen ancestors he responded by saying he had been to Dunmurry Church where he saw a large plaque showing a James and Ellen Wallace nee Allen in memory of their daughter and no he did not take a photo.

    So I am wondering if anyone is going to be near there and if it is possible to get a photo of this plaque and have it emailed to me. No worries if that is not possible but many thanks in advance 

    if it is possible

    Regards

    donna bridgeman

     

     

    grrlgypsy

    Friday 10th Jan 2020, 02:27AM
  •  

    Donna,

    You didn’t say which of the two Presbyterian churches in Dunmurry your relative found the plaque. I think it must have been the Non Subscribing because the “mainstream” Presbyterian church now operates from a newer building only built in 2011. I doubt it would have a plaque going back to the 1800s. Here’s a link to the Non Subscribing church:

    https://firstchurchdunmurry.com

    And one to the Presbyterian Church:

    https://www.dunmurrypresbyterian.org/gallery.htm

    Why not e-mail the Non Subscribing church and ask them if the plaque is there, and if so whether someone would take a photo for you? If you want to learn more about the Allen family you could even write a short letter asking if anyone in the congregation knows anything about them. (Mention they lived in Ballylessan townland). The church might put that in their newsletter. Perhaps it might ring a bell with someone, though obviously it was nearly 200 years ago.

    Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘

    Saturday 11th Jan 2020, 01:52AM
  • Thank you Elwyn, many thanks for your ideas. Will definitly follow up with an email to the Non Sunscribing church. I have a few things from your replies that will keep me busy for a while :)

    donna

    grrlgypsy

    Saturday 11th Jan 2020, 12:09PM

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