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Widow remarried!
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Ann | Report | 19 May 2015 13:09 |
You may think this a daft question but here goes - can anyone tell me if in 1907 a widow remarried she would have had to give evidence of death of previous spouse by law - this marriage took place in a Register Office. I cannot seem to get a definite answer to this given the applicable time of the event. I know you have to do this these days but any information doesn't seem to be available on googling and am running out of ideas! Have somewhat of a mysterious plot going on in a family I am researching and if it is the case that evidence had to be shown, then I would definitely know that the husband had died and when approximately. This then would discount a couple of scenarios I have in my mind and help me go forward - thanks in anticipation - Ann |
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+++DetEcTive+++ | Report | 19 May 2015 13:44 |
From the scenarios other people have mentioned, its unlikely. All the Registrar would want would be a declaration that she was widowed. |
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Ann | Report | 19 May 2015 13:56 |
Thank you so much for your reply - I rather think you are correct and that is what I have been thinking! I can only find reference to present day practice and what is required. My widow had already been deserted by him once before at least and she and her children ended up in the workhouse but they must, later, have got back together again as I found them all together on the 1901 census. She 'remarries' in 1907 stating she is a widow, and on her daughter's marriage certificate in 1917 her father is stated as deceased so I was trying to find out for sure because I cannot find a death record for him. I'm beginning to think he had done another 'bunk' and she perhaps told her daughter he was dead - unfortunately we shall never know for sure! |
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Gwyn in Kent | Report | 19 May 2015 14:06 |
Would you like to give some names, rough birth year and locations and see if anyone else can find a death for him.? |
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Ann | Report | 19 May 2015 15:09 |
Hi Gwyn - thanks for your input - yes I have used any of his given names, full, with initials, partial names and initials and his given family pet name! I have so much information about him that has been verified with certificate and records etc. but I just can't find a definite birth and death for him. However any help would be appreciated so his name was Henry Dean but called Harry by his wife (my husbands grandmother) and his family: born 1870 St. Leonard's Shoreditch, Haggerston, Middlesex. His father's name was Alonzo Edward Dean, mother Eliza Ann Pailthorpe. I have researched this family thoroughly on three major family history sites that I subscribe to. |
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Shirley~I,m getting the hang of it | Report | 19 May 2015 17:19 |
What about this death |
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ArgyllGran | Report | 19 May 2015 17:38 |
Just for our reference - I know you'll have this yourself: |
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ArgyllGran | Report | 19 May 2015 17:40 |
And again, just for helpers' reference: |
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Ann | Report | 19 May 2015 17:48 |
Hi Shirley - I had taken this one into account in the fact that his wife came from Bucks but having researched into this family so much, my gut feeling tells me they didn't stray from London and go back to her family or area - I don't feel that he would have been welcome in the circumstances. Also she remarried in December 1907 in St. Marylebone and can't see why she would return to London as a widow to face yet another uncertain future in the metropolis, and she would have remarried in a very short time but one never knows considering the position she was in. However I appreciate your input and will certainly bear this one in mind if all else fails - thanks! |
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Ann | Report | 19 May 2015 17:50 |
Hi Argyll - yes have them and those are the ones! Thanks anyway! |
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Shirley~I,m getting the hang of it | Report | 19 May 2015 19:13 |
Well there used to be a story/myth that if someone disappeared and they not heard of/ from for 7 years then they are presumed dead so you could remarry |
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mgnv | Report | 19 May 2015 20:50 |
If you read the Bigamy law, it doesn't even require that the "widow"'s hubby be dead, so is the marr bigamous? |
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SylviaInCanada | Report | 19 May 2015 22:34 |
I remember helping someone on here years ago .............. |
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Ann | Report | 19 May 2015 23:48 |
Many thanks everyone for your info and help - has highlighted some possible things that I hadn't thought of and will bear in mind on resuming my search. As I said he was entered as 'deceased' on their eldest daughter's marriage certificate in 1917 but as has been pointed out there could be any number of reasons for that fact. I have found a Harry Dean Short Attestation form filled out in 1915 for 1916 for those men who were conscripted following the raising of the age of men to go to war when they were running short of 'cannon fodder' - all the information on that points to him except for the age, but then again he could have been lying or didn't want to be found. It seems a shame not to be able to find closure on him as I have been able to do with his wife Amy, his four children and indeed his parents and siblings but maybe something will come along in the future as new records unfold - in the meantime if anyone should find anything that would be great - thanks again Ann |
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Gritty | Report | 20 May 2015 07:00 |
According to the poor law records on Ancestry, when Harry deserted Amy in 1900, he was believed to be in Mardlin, Northampton- could he have returned to Northampton? |
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Ann | Report | 20 May 2015 23:28 |
Hi Gritty - I have all this information from the poor law records and have no idea how Mardlin, Northampton is connected at this time, but if he did go there at all, he returned and the family were together again on the 1901 census. On the examination sheet it stated "appears Hackney" along with the note about the rates (I think those notes were added at a later date) so maybe he had been seen in the vicinity. After Amy and the children were resettled to the Hackney Workhouse July/August 1900, he followed suit in January 1901 and must have been discharged before the census was taken. Whatever happened to them as a family after that time, I suspect happened circa 1904 as this is when the youngest child, Helena, also known as Victoria Helen, was 'deserted', was returned to the Hackney Union and within a month had been sent to the Trowbridge Boarding Out Committee, boarded out with an elderly couple in Trowbridge and was there in 1911 at 10 years old. She was my husbands Grandma so the rest of her history is known. |
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Gwyn in Kent | Report | 21 May 2015 08:05 |
Have you been able to find any school records for the children? |
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Ann | Report | 21 May 2015 14:53 |
Hi Gwyn - In 1901 there was only Dorothy left aged four - two had died as babies, and Grandma was only 2 months old and by 1904 she was in Trowbridge. So if there any school records between 1901 and 1911 to be seen, then I haven't found them. 1911 Dorothy was again with her mother after her mothers second marriage aged 14 and after that the only record I can find for her is her marriage certificate in 1917 stating that Harry was deceased. I don't think he was, probably just dead to that family. |