Saturday 18 April 2020

The Story of our family - Generation Four: James Tait and the Taits


THE STORY OF OUR FAMILY

GENERATION FOUR

JAMES TAIT AND THE TAITS


Charles Tait (1801-75) and Agnes Smith (1804- ) – gggrandparents       
           William (1826-)
Robert (1829-1904)
            Jess (1830-)
            Henry (1833-)
            Georgina (1836-1909)
            Charles (1837-)
            James (1840-1919) and Charlotte Keeble (1839-1904) – ggrandparents
                       Ada Agnes (1879-1936) & James O’Donoghue (1874-1965) - grandparents

This blog continues the story of Ada Agnes Tait’s family, taking us to the north east of Scotland to the town of Arbroath.

Sadly I am unable to upload some of the great historic photographs of the area, as the copyright holder refused my request to use three or four of them.  So I have provided a link to the ones I would have used.  

James Tait (1840-1919) – my ggrandfather

Ada Agnes’s father, James was born in 1840 in Arbroath, Forfarshire (now Angus), Scotland to Charles Tait, a pilot, and Agnes Smith.  They lived in a street called Old Shore Head.  It is still there down near the harbour.  This is what it looked like in 1895
https://tour-scotland-photographs.blogspot.com/2018/09/old-photograph-shorehead-road-by.html

Arbroath is located on the North Sea Coast of Scotland, about 16 miles north east of Dundee and 45 miles south west of Aberdeen.  The town grew considerably during the Industrial Revolution owing to the expansion of firstly the flax and secondly the jute industries plus the engineering sector.  By 1817 Arbroath was Scotland’s biggest sailcloth producer.  From the 18th century shipbuilding and repair were important industries.  A new harbour was built in 1839 and by the 20th century, Arbroath had become one of the larger fishing ports in Scotland.  I have promised myself a trip up there sometime.
https://tour-scotland-photographs.blogspot.com/2010/04/old-photograph-harbour-arbroath.html

By 1861 James was working as a journeyman rope and sail maker.  In that year there appear to have been three shipbuilders in the town, so presumably he ranged between them.  During James’s time there was a serious accident.  In 1863 the barque Elmgrove, on launch, fell on her starboard side, wobbled and righted itself before capsizing with thirty men and boys aboard. All managed to scramble on top or swim to safety, only one boy slightly injured by a chain. 

In 1865 James married Mary Ann Simpson in Arbroath in the Wesleyan Methodist Church.

John Wesley visited Arbroath a total of 15 times. He opened this octagonal chapel in 1772. Nicknamed the 'Totum Kirkie' from 'totum', an eight-sided spinning top, and 'kirk', being the Scottish word for church. The premises contain a number of interesting features including stained glass windows showing the intimate relationship between life on the sea and this church's community. It was listed in 1971.

Mary Ann’s parents were Robert Simpson and Mary Smart.  Robert was a baker.  Mary Ann was born in 1845.

James and Mary Ann had two children in Arbroath: Mary Jane (1867-); James (1870-).  Then they moved to London, and in 1871 were in 18 Burcham Street, Poplar.  A third child, Margaret, was born in 1874.  

Mary Ann died in 1876, and by 1881 James was living with Charlotte Phillips (née Keeble) in 12 Sturry Street.  They were married in the same year.  Ada Agnes had been born two years before in 1879.  By 1883 they had moved to 66 Cotton Street and Albert Edward was born that year.  By 1891 they had relocated to 18 Cotton Street, just down the road from our O’Donoghues.  and were still there in 1901 with an 18-year-old son, Albert, and Lily, described as a daughter, but she was Charlotte’s from an earlier relationship to be described in the next blog.  Charlotte’s relationships were really quite hard to get my head round, which is one reason why she is worthy of a separate article.

Charlotte died in 1904 and by 1908 James had married again.  Alice Kerr was from Sunderland and 21 years younger than him.  They were living at 6 Clifton Road, Canning Town in 1911.

James seems to have changed the nature of his work over the years as sometimes he is described as a sailmaker and at others as a general labourer.  Like so many on the docks, employment was precarious and subject to the daily call up at the dock gates.

The best description I have of him was from Kate Hosford (née Phillips) who grew up next door to our lot.  She said that he was a big man with a long white beard and that when he and Thomas O’Donoghue, my great grandfather, got together and started to sing it was quite something.  After my father died, I found some very old sheets of a traditional Irish song – Shamus O’Brien.  I have always wondered if this was his memory of his childhood, hearing his family singing.  I’ve attached the words at Appendix One.

I was also told by someone that Gaelic was to be heard in the house.  Thomas would certainly have spoken the language, perhaps James spoke the Scottish version.  They are a bit different, but speakers of either can easily understand each other.

James Tait died in 1919 in Poplar – he was 79.

Now to look at his father and James’s siblings…

Charles Tait (1801-75) and Agnes Smith (1804- ) – gggrandparents

Charles Tait was born in around 1801 in St Vigeans, in his day a small village and parish immediately
north of Arbroath.  The old village consisted of a single street of red sandstone cottages flanking the foot of the church mound.  The church (right) has undergone some changes since Charles’s time.  Today St Vigeans has been absorbed within the growth of Arbroath.

Charles and Agnes married in Arbroath in 1829 in the Church of Scotland.  As shown above they had seven children.  As their eldest, William, was born before Charles and Agnes were married I wondered if he was the child of an earlier marriage for Charles, but I have not found one so must conclude he was born ‘out of wedlock’.

Illegitimacy in Scotland ran higher than in England and Wales in the nineteenth century: in 1859 6.5 per cent of births in England and Wales, but 9 per cent in Scotland, were illegitimate.  This statistic, called the illegitimacy ratio, disguises a great deal of variation among smaller localities, particularly in the case of Scotland where only 3.3 out of every hundred births in Orkney were illegitimate, but in the North Eastern counties of Nairn, Elgin, Banff, Aberdeen and Kincardine on average over 15 per cent of births were born outside marriage.

In 1841 two families of Smiths were living each side of our couple.  Peter Smith (age 50) was a Fish Manager; his sons Robert (age 25) and Thomas (age 20) were pilots.  John Smith (also age 50) is another pilot.  Peter and John were probably Agnes’s (age 40) siblings.

A pilot is a sailor who manoeuvres ships through dangerous or congested waters, such as harbours or river mouths. They are navigational experts possessing knowledge of the particular waterway such as its depth, currents, and hazards.  This is a very skilled job and I imagine that Charles was a fisherman before he gained the necessary experience.

Agnes Smith, Charles’s wife, may have been born in Arbroath either

            in 1796 to David Smith (a butcher) and Margaret Swankie or  
-                  in 1804 to David Smith (a writer) and Agnes Neish


The reason I am not sure as to date is that in the 1841 census Charles and Agnes are both said to be age 40.  By 1851 Agnes was recorded as age 55 i.e 5 years older than Charles and in 1861 as 6 years older.  I suspect Agnes didn’t tell Charles her correct age until after 1851.  I wonder what he said!  This points to the 1796 birth parents as the possible ones, but none of her children were named David or Margaret whereas Agnes was used, so we are left wondering.  I discuss Scottish naming practices and our family later.

Charles was still living by himself at 15 Old Shorehead in 1861; he was a widower as Agnes had died in the 1860s. By 1875 he had also gone; he is buried in the Western Cemetery in Arbroath.  I must try and find it.

Charles & Agnes’s children

As you will see although Charles was a pilot/fisherman many of his family were employed in the flax industry.  There are all sorts of different jobs in the records.  I will mention a few as we proceed.    I am listing their children’s names for reasons that will appear later.

Their eldest son, William (1826-), was employed as a flax dresser in 1841, a worker who separated the coarse part of flax or hemp with a hackle (a very large comb); they were also known as hacklers.  One of my mother’s ancestors in the late 18th/early 19th century was a hackler in Norfolk.  By 1851 all of Charles and Agnes's children, bar James (still at school) were employed in the flax industry.  But William had vanished from the records.  I checked to see if he had died or emigrated to USA or Australia without success. 

Robert (1829-1904) married Jessie Stuart/Stewart in 1852 and the children - Jacob, Jessie, Henry & Robert – followed. Then, I think, Jessie died (and he married Isabella (also Elizabeth) Johnston with whom he had another five – Mary Johnston, Charles, Isabella, Agnes Smith & Alexander Wood.  I have been in contact with a descendant of Mary Johnston in the US.

You will have noticed the second names that look like surnames.  This is a very early/mid-19th century thing. They are not today’s double-barrelled surnames ie Smith-O’Donoghue, but are true Christian names.  Their usage can be based on a number of circumstances.

It was common to use the mother’s or one of the child’s grandmothers’ maiden names.  We can see this above with Johnston (mother) and Smith (grandmother).  This also extended on rarer occasions back to the parents’ grandparents.  But it might also be the surname of the parish priest who baptised the child.

Robert’s jobs ranged from weaver to flax mill bleacher to yarn bundler.  In 1861 the family was living in 30 East Mill Wynd, Arbroath.  This is what the street looked like, not sure exactly when but probably in early 1900s judging by the lamp and the state of the street surface. A wynd is a narrow street or alley leading off a major thoroughfare in Scotland and Northern England; based on Old Norse venda.
https://www.scran.ac.uk/database/record.php?usi=000-000-150-567-C

Jessie (1830-) married James Bell in Arbroath and seven children arose: Ann Leuchars (James’s
mother), Agnes Smith (grandmother), Jessie, Jane, Jemima, Alexander Smith (grandmother) & William.  James was a flax canvas weaver on the power loom.  Again rather later in time but picture is at least representative of a flax mill

Henry (1830-) appears to have died young in the 1840s.  Well, I can’t find him

Georgina (1835-1909) was six years older than her husband, John McMillan, an Irishman from Ulster.  They were married in Arbroath in 1865 and had at least five children: John, Robert, Mary, Jane & Jessie.

In 1871 they were living in Elm Bank Cottage in St Vigeans where John was a domestic servant in the household of Andrew Lowson (1813-1897), the most important mill owner in the town. He was described as a “striking and loveable person”, and by 1864 had twice the horsepower at his disposal and employed twice the number of workers as his nearest competitor.  He employed one thousand people.  Baltic Works is shown left.


The main house Elm Bank is now a Category B listed building.  It is described as a small two-storey
classic mansion house, ashlar and slate, built around 1830, with extensive addition in the mid-19th century.

It all sounds very Downton Abbey as the family employed the following staff: coachman, gatekeeper, cook, table maid, house maid, lady’s maid, washerwoman, gardener and a general domestic servant (John).

By 1881, however, they were back in the town and Elm Bank Cottage doesn’t seem to exist anymore…strange.  She returned to flax spinning and John was a labourer.  They lived in 10 High Street from at least 1891 and this picture is of the High Street in the 1890s.
http://www.arbroathtimeline.moonfruit.com/1890-1899/4518446716  

Georgina died in 1909 and was buried in the Eastern Cemetery.

Charles (1837-) was living with his father until 1851, working as a machine flax dresser.  By 1861 he had gone somewhere else, but where?  It is possible that he had died as there is a burial of a Charles in 1868 in Arbroath, but where was he for those seventeen years?  

Looking outside the UK, did he emigrate?  There is a Charles b.1840 in Massachusetts in 1870 but not thereafter.  My best shot is a Charles in Essex in 1901 described as a retired soldier.  Looking through the Forces War Records there are two of them as possibilities in the record for 1861. No idea if they are relevant and I would have to go to the National Archives in Kew to check out their service record.  More work required.

Scottish naming practices

In order to see if we can establish who my gggrandfather, Charles’s, parents and siblings might have been, we need to fall back on naming practices.  

The Scottish ones were much the same as the Irish.  However, the latter first follow the paternal for both sons and daughters before moving to the maternal.

Sons:
First after paternal grandfather
Second after maternal grandfather
Third after father
Fourth after father’s eldest brother

Daughters:
First after maternal grandmother
Second after paternal grandmother
Third after mother
Fourth after mother’s eldest sister

I have read that in about 10% of cases the first and second paternal/maternal are reversed.

Who might gggrandfather Charles’s parents and siblings be?

Those of you less obsessive about family history may be saying ‘Oh lord, what’s he going on about?’, well like TV you can always turn the screen off!  Or just move on to the next section.  This bit is really for me to record my research.

What the naming practices suggest is that Christian names stayed in the family through the 19th century, even if they didn’t follow the sequencing precisely.  

There are records before Charles b.1801 but they are sparse.   I identified two possible parent combinations for Agnes earlier but neither really fit the pattern.

Our couple’s sons in order of birth are William, Robert, Henry, Charles, James.  So Charles’s father ought to be a William and Agnes’s a Robert, or, if we are one of the 10%, vice versa.

Their daughters are Jess and Georgina.  So if the naming practice was being followed Charles’s parents were a William and Georgina; Agnes’s would be Robert and Jess. 

Going right back into the 17th century there is a William Tait who had four children between 1633 and 1648: Isobell, James, Marie, Janet.  He lived in Arbirlot which is about two and a half miles west of Arbroath.

There is a William b.1761 in Arbroath who married a Christian Maver in 1784 and died in 1832. 

But this is all very tenuous, so let’s give up on that route.

We do, however, know Charles and Agnes’s children, so we can test how far they went in following the tradition on the paternal line.

Second son Robert, b.1829 had sons with Jessie Stuart: Jacob, Henry, Robert and a daughter Jessie.  And with Isabella Johnston: Charles & Alexander and daughters Mary, Isabella & Agnes.

First daughter Jess b. 1832 had sons with James Bell: Alexander and William and daughters Ann Leuchars (James’s mother), Agnes Smith (her mother) so in the reversed sequence but at least the right names.  Remember how earlier I said the mothers’ maiden names were used as Christian names.

Second daughter Georgina b.1835 married John McMillan and had sons John & Robert and daughters Mary, Jane & Jessie 

Charles gets one look in and Agnes two, so one has to say…so much for naming practices in the next generation.

But there is a lot of concurrence in the names used for these two generations.  Out of 30 names there are four times Jess(ie); three Robert, Agnes and Mary; two Henry, Charles, James, Alexander & Jane – so three quarters of the total.

Charles was born in 1801 in St Vigeans which was a separate parish in the first half of the century.  There aren’t many other Taits in this period there, so I suspect all these people born or living in St Vigeans are related to him either as uncles/aunts or siblings/cousins.

Uncles/aunts: 

James b. 1770s and Jane Gibb with son James b.1793
Jacob b.1770s and Agnes Brown with sons Henry b.1803, David b.1810, Jacob b.1811, Alexander b.1813 and daughter Elizabeth b.1806

Siblings/cousins:

Ann b.1802, David b.1813

A lot of work to prove nothing – very frustrating!

The Tait name

The Tait name is of Norse/Viking origin derived from teitr meaning glad or cheerful.

The Taits were an armigerous (with a coat of arms) clan who hailed from the area of Innerleithen, a
small town on the Scottish Borders.  Tait was the second most significant name in that town in the 1881 census.  There is a hill nearby called Pirn and this coat of arms is of the Taits of Pirn, possibly from 17th century.

The town first appears in manuscripts in the 12th century so perhaps Taits were there much earlier as today’s form of surnames started to be adopted from about the 12th century.

The counties with the most Taits in the UK 1881 census were Northumberland 1440; Edinburghshire (Midlothian) 1199; Lanarkshire 783; Shetland 528, Durham 521; Forfarshire (Angus) only 160.  It was the 479th most common name.

Arbroath and Inchcape

For the last twelve years of my working life I was employed by a company called Inchcape PLC, which was about 150 years old.  I knew there was a strong Scottish connection, and an Inchcape Rock, but not much else.

I was looking at today’s Arbroath street map and saw an Inchcape Park down by the seafront and looked further.

The Inchcape lighthouse lies 11 miles out to sea off the east coast of Arbroath. It stands on one of the most treacherous submerged reefs in the northern hemisphere and is one of the seven wonders of the Industrial Age.  I think this puts in context the tough job that our Charles Tait had as a port pilot, and why it was necessary.
Thanks to the pioneering spirit of a young engineer, Robert Stevenson, who dreamed of building the impossible, a lighthouse was planned on the 'Rock' that had claimed over 100 lives.
Despite many obstacles, Stevenson never lost faith in his plan, and by February 1811, the lighthouse on Inchcape Rock was finished. It is the oldest, sea-standing lighthouse in the world and today still saves lives.
100 years later, inspired by this pioneering spirit, Inchcape's founder James Lyle MacKay (1852-1932), when awarded a title for his services to industry became the first 'Baron Inchcape of Strathnaver' and so named the company that he led.  He was the second son of James Mackay of Arbroath a well-to-do shipmaster who died in 1862 while crossing the Atlantic.  
Arbroath today
From the visitscotland site

“Arbroath, settled in the 12th century, lies 15 miles to the north east of Dundee.
The attractive old harbour of Arbroath remains in action and long sandy beaches and stunning
sandstone cliffs stretch out on either side of the town. Arbroath Abbey, located near the centre of the town, is also well worth a visit.
The town's most famous product is the Arbroath Smokie, which was first created in the village of Auchmithie. It is line-caught haddock, smoke-cured over smouldering oak chips, and still made here in a number of family-run smokehouses tucked in around the harbour. One of the most approachable and atmospheric is MM Spink's tiny whitewashed premises at 10 Marketgate; chef and cookery writer Rick Stein described the fish here, warm from the smoke, as "a world-class delicacy".
Wander through the huddled cottages of the 'Fit o'the Toon' - the harbour district where the smell of Arbroath smokies usually hangs heavy in the air. Beyond it, the seafront road heads into Victoria Park. At the far end of the road, a path climbs up over the red sandstone cliffs of Whiting Ness, stretching endlessly onto the horizon and eroded into a multitude of inlets, caves and arches that warrant hours of leisurely exploration.”
Looking at the electoral roll for 2003-10 there have been 31 Taits still living in Arbroath in that period, so they are still very much around.





Sources & acknowledgements

https://tour-scotland-photographs.blogspot.com/
https://www.google.co.uk/maps/place/Elmbank+House,+St+Vigeans,+Arbroath+DD11+4RD/@56.5755244,-2.5938032,14z/data=!4m13!1m7!3m6!1s0x48868d0136a2538b:0x4476fd5dd2d1c8ba!2sElmbank+House,+St+Vigeans,+Arbroath+DD11+4RD!3b1!8m2!3d56.5755106!4d-2.5933446!3m4!1s0x48868d0136a2538b:0x4476fd5dd2d1c8ba!8m2!3d56.5755106!4d-2.5933446
https://www.ancestor.abel.co.uk/Angus/intro.html#tak
http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~steve/namingse.htm
https://www.inchcape.com/en/who-we-are/our-history.html#item-undefined
https://www.visitscotland.com/info/towns-villages/arbroath-p241591
http://britishsurnames.co.uk/surname/tait/1881census



APPENDIX ONE

SHAMUS O'BRIEN

A traditional Irish folksong

Oh, sweet is the smile of the beautiful morn,
As it peeps through the curtain of night;
And the voice of the nightingale singing his tune,
While the stars seem to smile with delight.
Old nature now lingers in silent repose,
And the sweet breath of Summer is calm;
While I sit and wonder if Shamus ever knows
How sad and unhappy I am!

Chorus.
Oh! Shamus O'Brien, why don't you come home?
You don't know how happy I'll be;
I've but one darling wish, and that is that you'd come,
And forever be happy with me!

I'll smile when you smile, and I'll weep when you weep.
And I'll give you a kiss for a kiss;
And all the fond vows that I've made you, I'll keep,
What more can I promise than this?
Does the sea have such bright and such beautiful charms
That your heart will not leave it for me?
oh! why did I let you get out of my arms,
Like a bird that was caged and is free!- Chorus.

Oh! Shamus O'Brien, I'm loving you yet,
And my heart is still trusting and kind;
It was you who first took it. and can you forget
That love for another you'd find?
No! no! if you break it with sorrow and pain,
I'll then have a duty to do:
If you'll bring it to me, I'll mend it again,
And trust it, dear Shamus, to you.- Chorus.