Mary LOGAN

Mary LOGAN[1]

Female Abt 1874 - 1952  (~ 78 years)

Personal Information    |    Notes    |    Sources    |    All

  • Name Mary LOGAN 
    Born Abt 1874 
    Gender Female 
    Buried 1952  Mont-Royal, Outremont, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Died 24 Jan 1952  Outremont, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I11001  Young Kent Ancestors
    Last Modified 4 Sep 2021 

    Father Alexander LOGAN 
    Mother Mary Jane ROSS 
    Family ID F5875  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 1 William RILLIE 
    Married 17 Mar 1896  Newton, Ayr, Ayrshire, Scotland Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. Mary Jane Ross RILLIE,   b. 3 Mar 1897, 29 Elmbank Street, Newton, Ayrshire, Scotland Find all individuals with events at this location
     2. William RILLIE,   b. 8 Jul 1899, Green Street Lane, Newton, Ayrshire, Scotland Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Abt 1976, Campbellford, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 76 years)
    Last Modified 20 Mar 2022 
    Family ID F3316  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 2 Robert MCALONEY,   b. 20 May 1875, Coleraine, Londonderry, Ireland Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 14 Dec 1961, St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 86 years) 
    Married 1 Dec 1902  269 High Street, Glasgow, Blackfriars District, Lanarkshire, Scotland Find all individuals with events at this location  [2
    Children 
     1. Agnes Davis MCALONEY,   b. 28 Mar 1904, Stevenston, Ayrshire, Scotland Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Aft 16 Sep 1970  (Age > 66 years)
     2. Robert Carson MCALONEY,   b. 21 Aug 1910, Maisonneuve, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 16 Sep 1970, Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.A. Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 60 years)
    Last Modified 20 Mar 2022 
    Family ID F68  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • Posted on: http://www.lancasterhunt.co.uk/family/message.php?family=Lancaster

      jlkristensen@primus.ca
      Hi...My grandfather's name was George Lancaster and I know he was born in England and married my grandmother Mary Rillie (she was born in Scotland)and they lived in Montreal, Quebec Canada. My Dad was born in 1933 so I am assuming George was born around 1911 or so. Judith Lancaster 20 December 2006

  • Sources 
    1. [S44] Passenger Arrival Record, Canadian Immigration Service, Ottawa, Canada: Ministry of Immigration, Naturalization and Citizenship, (Not published), Grampian, Glasgow to Quebec City, p. 2, fol 8, Oct 1909.
      Arrival at Quebec City October 1909 on board the Grampian out of Glasgow, sheet 8
      Instructions to Pursers - Each passenger should be given a card indicating the number of sheet and line on sheet on which name is to be found.
      This sheet to be used for "Steerage" passengers only.
      Columns:
      1. No. of Passenger; Line 14
      2. No. of S.S. Contract Ticket; 2749
      3. Amount of Cash in $; $25.00
      4. Name in Full. Mary McAloney
      5. age of adults male; Not answered
      6. age of adult female; 35
      7. children under 14 years male; Not answered
      8, children under 14 years female; Not answered
      9. married, single or widowed; Married
      10. have you ever been in Canada before? Not answered
      11. If so, When? Going to meet husband, a joiner, he'd been here 3 years
      12. if so, where? Not answered
      13. if so, how long? Not answered
      14 Do you intend to permanently reside in Canada? Yes
      15 Are you abe to read; Not answered
      16. Are you able to write; Not answered
      17. Country of Birth; Scotland
      18. No. of Passengers; line 14-#2749
      19. Race of People; Scotch
      20. Destination post office; Montreal
      21. destination province; Quebec
      22 what was your occupation in country from which you came? Housewife
      23. what is your intended occupation in Canada? Housewife
      24. have you ever worked as farmer, farm labourer, gardener, stableman, carter, hy surfacemen, navvy or miner? No
      25 if so which; not applicable
      26 if so how long; not applicable
      27 if so when; not applicable
      28 religious denomination; Presbyterian
      29 traveller inland on; Grand Trunk Railroad
      30. initials of civil examiner;
      31 no. of passengers

      Also with Mary McAloney were the following children travelling under authority of same ticket:
      Line 15: May Riley 11 bc 1897
      Line 16: William Riley 10 bc1898
      Line 17: Adelaide McAloney 9 bc1899
      Line 18: Malcolm McAloney 8 bc 1900
      Line 19: Agnes McAloney 5 bc 1903
      all children listed as having been born in Scotland, all Presbyterian, all travelling inland on Grand Trunk Railroad

    2. [S128] District Registration of Marriages, Scotland, (Edinburgh, Scotland: Registrar General for Scotland), District of Blackfriars, Burgh of Glasgow, Lanarkshire,1902 - 644/05-0255, 1 Dec 1902.
      Entry No. 255:
      1902 on the first day of December at 269 High Street, Glasgow by Declaration in presence of ROBERT LOGAN, Tailor, and ANNIE CARSON McALONEY, Mercantile Clerk.
      Groom: Robert McAloney (signed), joiner journeyman, bachelor, aged 28 years, usual residence 319 Parliamentary Road, Glasgow, parents James McAloney cab proprietor and Mary McAloney m[aiden] s[urname] Carson.
      Bride: Mary Logan (signed), spinster, aged 28 years, usual residence 319 Parliamentary Road, Glasgow, parents Alexander Logan formerly a stevedore and Mary Logan m.s. Ross.
      If a regular Marriage, Signatures of officiating Minister and Witnesses. If irregular, Date of Conviction, Decree of Declarator, or Sheriff's Warrant: Warrant of Sheriff substituted of Lanarkshire dated 1st December 1902.
      When and Where Registered and signature of Registrar: 1902 December 1st, at Glasgow by James B. McLaren, Registrar
      Interesting that this marriage was sanctified by way of an irregular marriage ceremony. Under the law of Scotland, the union of the couple was considered a legitimate marriage, yet the ceremony, itself, remained an unlawful act. Accordingly, the parties to an irregular marriage were liable to be prosecuted as soon as the Sheriff was able to serve them with a Warrant. It would appear from this marriage certificate that the Sheriff's Warrant was served almost immediately upon completion of the ceremony. To learn what penalties were imposed upon Robert and his bride further research would have to be carried out in the Sheriff's records in the archives at Edinburgh and the Sheriff's Court offices in Glasgow, Scotland.