Let's take a look at Catherine Martyn as an example.
She was born to Donald Martyn and Margaret Ann MacDonald on 17 Sep 1908 in Goderich, Ontario, Canada1. In my research I've seen her father, Donald, referred to as Daniel and also as "Black Dan"2. The MacDonald surname can also be recorded as McDonald in the various civil registrations. But this branch of the Goderich MacDonalds spell their own name with "Mac".
In her Michigan marriage license and certificate of marriage for her marriage to Harold W. Ellswood something got my attention but I initially put it aside.
Can we discover if that was case and to whom was Catherine married?
I had Catherine arriving in Detroit, Wayne County, Michigan on 31 Dec 1925 to attend school and to permanently reside in the United States of America.
3. By 1940 she was married to Harold, had an almost one year old baby boy, and was living in Akron, Summit County, Ohio, USA4. This would suggest that sometime between 1 Apr 1930, the date of the census, and 17 Nov 1934 when her marriage license with Harold Ellswood was completed she was previously married.
This is where her sister Christena comes into the picture, to help possibly muddle the picture and add to the confusion.
In Christina5 Martyn's 22 Aug 1928 arrival in Detroit she lists her sister Catherine Smale living at 8080 Ruedidale Street as the person she is going to join in the USA.
There are two possible approaches I could take to find Catherine's first husband.
- Look for a first marriage in both Ontario, her birth province, or in Michigan, her new home, or
- See if I can find her and her husband in the city directory of Detroit.
There she is with an Albert E Smale. He is a machinist and she is a clerk. There is no 1929 city directory for Detroit available on Ancestry but in the 1930 city directory I no longer see Catherine living with Albert at that address even though Albert is still there.
Can I find a marriage for Albert Smale and Catherine Martyn in Michigan in the "Michigan, Marriage Records, 1867-1952" collection on Ancestry? Well, here is it, their 10 Dec 1925 marriage.
I'm guess that Catherine had a bit of explaining to do to the authorities and possibly her parents since on her 31 Dec 1925 entry she stated she was single and was planning to attend school. The attending school part might have been true but the single definitely wasn't!
About the "Div." found on the license application for the second marriage, the one to Harold, once I put her marriage to Albert into my cousin-bait tree on Ancestry I did a manual search for additional possible records and up popped a divorce for her from Albert that was granted on 29 Jan 1930.
When I look at the various suggested Ancestry member trees that match the family only one other tree has a marriage to someone other than Harold Elmswood and in that tree they only has a surname of "Sanale" listed.
So always read the full record for those little details that can shine a light on a hidden corner of an ancestor's life.
1. Ancestry.com, "Ontario, Canada Births, 1869-1913," database on-line, Ancestry.com (www.ancestry.com : accessed 6 Jan 2019), entry for Catherine Martyn, born 17 Sep 1908; citing Archives of Ontario; Series: MS929; Reel: 8.
2. CanadaGenWeb, CanadaGenWeb Cemetery Project, digital images (cemetery.canadagenweb.org : accessed 6 Jan 2019), entry for Black Dan Martyn. died 5 Jan 1919, Maitland Cemetery, Huron County, Ontario.
3. 1930 U.S. census, Wayne County, Michigan, population schedule, Detroit, enumeration district (ED) 563, sheet 7B, dwelling 71, family 14, Catherine Martyn; digital images, Ancestry.com (www.ancestry.com : accessed 7 Jan 2019); citing National Archives and Records Administration microfilm T626, roll 1056; Original data: United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Fifteenth Census of the United States, 1930. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1930. T626, 2,667 rolls.
4. 1940 U.S. census, Summit County, Ohio, population schedule, Akron, enumeration district (ED) 89-181, sheet 12A, household 229, Harry W Ellswood; digital images, Ancestry.com (www.ancestry.com : accessed 7 Jan 2019); citing National Archives and Records Administration microfilm T627, roll 3179.
5. Based on other research it seems that her name is "Christena". This name had been seen in previous generations of the family.
Love it! I find the richest source of information in the sources I've already found, but didn't read for every last fact.
ReplyDeleteMy grandfather too got a divorce in Detroit in 1912. He lived there a year to establish residency. One month after the divorce was final my grandmother went to Detroit (with her mother) and they were married there.
ReplyDelete