Janet and Isabella McGregor, Lake Ainsley

Those of us who do genealogy know there are fewer records as we go back in time and often the interpretation is often harder. So here is the record I am trying to understand now.

Janet McGregor is my 2nd great grandmother’s sister. My 2nd great grandmother is Isabella or Isabel McGregor who married Alexander McKenzie. A few generations later I was born in the United States. I cannot find a baptismal record on Isabella, so I am hoping understanding her sister’s record may help me find out something about her.

So here is Janet’s baptism record as rendered in Family Search and the Prince Edward Island (PEI) archives.

It seemed rather confusing referencing both Lake Ainsley in Cape Breton (Nova Scotia) and PEI. By now I hope you have opened both records in separate windows or tabs.

So the records both indicate the baptism took place in Lake Ainsley and was performed by the Rev. John McLennan. They seem to be derived from the same original record in Belfast. But why was the baptism recorded in Belfast, PEI?

To try to understand this, I looked up Rev. John McLennan who in Dictionary of Canadian Biography and learned that although his base was in PEI seems to have travelled to many places in the area including Nova Scotia.

It seem to me that the most likely explanation is that the Reverend McLennan performed the baptism while traveling to Lake Ainsley for some reason, perhaps related to his ministry, and later recorded this baptism in his home church in Belfast, PEI.

I think I am interpreting this correctly but would be interested in hearing any alternatives.

Two McBrien – Allingham families of Leitrim and Donegal

These two McBrien – Allingham families in evaluation of family relationships. I have written about odd coincidences in genealogy before but this one is much more confusing. So this is just a note to say be careful.

I first encountered the family of John McBrien and Elizabeth Allingham when I expanded my study of the genealogy of the Allingham family of the Glencar area of Killasnet parish in County Leitrim Ireland. The first Allingham record we have of my great grandmother Ruth Allingham is her 1854 marriage in the small Church of Ireland near Glencar Lake (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FG6K-Y74).

In 1856 Elizabeth Allingham (who is probably her sister) married John Mcbrien in the same church (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FGFX-L78).

John McBrien and Elizabeth Allingham had quite a few children in Ireland and then moved to Ontario, Canada. I started tracing some of those children forward a bit in hopes of running into another genealogist who might know a bit more about the Allinghams and McBriens than I did.

I noticed that some traced these families back to John McBrien and Elizabeth Allingham of Donegal. Other had one from Donegal and the other from Leitrim. Both were was unexpected. Was it the same family I was researching? Perhaps they lived in Leitrim for a while, moved to Donegal and then on to Canada. Perhaps there were 2 families with the same names.

So I began to look at more records.

I found these records at IrishGenealogy.ie

Marriage 1873 in Donegal
https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_returns/marriages_1873/11286/8140160.pdf

Marriage 1856 in Leitrim
https://www.irishgenealogy.ie/files/civil/marriage_returns/marriages_1856/09515/5448812.pdf

Notice the marriages are in different counties and about 17 years apart. The Donegal Elizabeth is a dressmaker and her father Thomas is a fisherman. The Leitrim Elizabeth lists no occupation and her father Thomas is a farmer. Both Johns have a father named John but the Donegal John is a shoemaker but the Leitrim John is a farmer.