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Walker/Heisler/Orme/Harford

Who’s On First?

William Zed Walker

I have a lot of ancestors that I’d like to have just five minutes with so I can ask them pertinent question of who’s your daddy. Okay, it’s usually more of a “who’s your mommy?” question. We all have questions for our brick wall crowd. However, we also have the list of relatives that we need more than just a couple minutes with so we can ask about the family stories. William Zed Walker is a man that I might need a few hours with if I were going to accomplish that one. My grandmother, mother, and uncle all had stories about William. We’ll talk about those, but first, let’s clear out the basic facts about the man.

William Zed Walker was born 2 Aug 1860 in Philadelphia and baptized 9 Sep at the Church of the Redemption (Spring Church).1 He was the seventh known child of Abraham and Ann (Orme) Walker.

On 14 Apr 1882, he married Nannie M. Heisler in the rectory at the Church of the Redemption.2 Nannie Melvina Heisler was born on 10 Jan 1864 in Baltimore, Maryland, the daughter of William H. Heisler (1834-1903) and Mary Ann Harford (1836-1894).3,4

William passed away on 10 Apr 1941 and was buried 14 April in Greenount Cemetery.5 Nannie died 13 Apr 1948 and was buried beside William on 16 April.6

They had nine known children together: William Leslie, Eleanor May, Edna, Frank Orme, John E., William Harry, Ralph, Marion Edith, and Ruth. I’ll discuss the children in the next post.

Those are the basic facts. It’s everything between the birth and death date of these people that has made my cousins and me a little crazy over the years.

The stories about William Z. are entertaining. The first story about him is that he was known as “Pete.” Even Nannie called him Pete. However, no one has been able to tell me why he was called that. Nor have I found any records, notes, or papers that referred to him that way. While nicknames aren’t unusual, we often know the history or story behind them, but we have no clue here. It’s one of those strange damn stories that linger long after the person has died and we’ll never find out why. I tend to refer to him as William Z to differentiate him from the many other Williams.

When I asked my grandmother (his daughter-in-law Margaret) what he did for a living, I was told that he was loom man in the carpet mills. His father had been a spinner and weaver and that’s how William Z started. However, William Z had mechanical skills and hadn’t stayed in the spinning and weaving department. He’d become the man who fixed the looms and kept them running. My grandmother and mother always said this in a way that made it clear they revered his skill. Mechanical skills in the 1920s, 30s, and 40s were prized as they often meant jobs even in hard times. This is one of the few stories that I could verify. William Z is actually enumerated as a “loom fixer” on the 1900 Census.

My cousins and I were also told two very specific stories throughout the years. The first one has really made us insane. My grandmother, who was not known for passing along stories that weren’t true, told us that William Z had played baseball and was friends with the great Connie Mack. When I was little, I remember seeing my grandmother’s photo album with pictures of William Z (as an older man) at the ball field with a man my grandmother said was Connie Mack. Those pictures of Connie Mack, matched other historical images that I have seen of him since.

Connie Mack was a nationally known figure in baseball and hugely popular amongst the people of Philadelphia. My grandmother, Margaret (MacLean) Walker, said he’d been to William Z’s house for dinner back in the day and the two men had remained friends until William Z’s death. In the pictures, I believe they were from the 1920s, William Z had white hair and a mustache and looked a lot like Mark Twain. Those pictures disappeared years ago, so we can’t trot them out to show anyone with a clue. However, my uncle recalled them well so I don’t think I’m crazy in my memory. I’m also very realistic – having your picture taken with a guy, doesn’t mean you actually knew the guy, or that you played ball with him, but this was a consistent story in our family. Even our distant cousins that we’d never met until we began researching had the same story – Pete played baseball and was friends with Connie Mack. However, I have found absolutely nothing that supports this story beyond the ancient memory (both mine and other relatives) of the photographs that no longer exist. There are many wonderful sites that deal with the early years of baseball, but my searches have turned up nothing. I searched under both William Z and (just in case) Pete. The search continues.

The other one is that William Z actually drew up a design for a cowcatcher on the front of a locomotive, but his friend bogarted the design and put in for the patent. If it was cowcatcher, then the story is absolute balderdash. The cowcatcher has been around since the 1830s, well before William Z’s birth. If it was some other mechanical item that he invented, I could probably get on board with the story. I am inclined to believe (without a lick of proof) that William Z could and did fix anything mechanical. All of William Z’s brothers and his sons seem to have been good with their hands and had an affinity for machinery. These men were not just spinners and weavers, but listed in numerous records as machinists, engineers, and mechanics. In the textile industry during that era, machinists and engineers were the men who operated and repaired the machines that produced the product. They’re the men with hands-on talent who can keep your mill in operation. The ones who didn’t work in the mills later became mechanics, carpenters, or general contractors.

These were men who knew how to create, build, and repair things. That’s a nice line to come from.

I’ll cover William Z and Nannie’s annoyingly hard-to-track-down children in my next post. Nannie and her family will be a separate series of posts.


Footnotes:
1.Church of the Redemption (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia County), “Church records, 1845-1956 Church of the Redemption, Episcopal, Books of George A. Durborow,” Baptism 9 Sep 1860 William Walker Born 2 Aug 1860; FHL microfilm 1,731,982, item 6-7.
2. Church of the Redemption (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia County), “Marriages 1875-1912,” 1882, February 14, William Walker to Nannie M. Heisler, ages 23/19, Rectory, Rev Thomas List, Witness: William Lucas & Annie Knight; FHL microfilm 2048217, item 1.
3. Pennsylvania Department of Health, death certificate 39291 (1948), Nancy M. Walker, born 10 Jan 1874, died 13 Apr 1948; Department of Vital Statistics, New Castle.
4. Pennsylvania Department of Health, death certificate 33947 (10 Apr 1941), William Zed Walker; Department of Vital Statistics, New Castle.
5. ibid
6. Pennsylvania Department of Health, death certificate 39291 (1948), Nancy M. Walker, born 10 Jan 1874, died 13 Apr 1948; Department of Vital Statistics, New Castle.

July 2, 2017 By Sharon

McLean/Frith/Brimlow/Brown

Turner and Rigby

Happy Dancing

The joy and sorrow of genealogy is that just when you find the most exciting things… you run into the reality that you may not find anything else for that family due to the lack of extant records. There just aren’t that many things from the 1700s. The other reality is that there are even fewer if your people were poor. About the best you can hope for is christening and marriage records from the local church. These are all I’m working with right now.

Based on the records in Wigans All Saints we know that the mother of our immigrant ancestor William Bromilow (1800-1873) was Jane/Jenny Turner. The baptism record for her first child George stated the family’s abode was Shevington, a small town near Standish. Through the Lancashire OnLine Parish Clerk Project, I was able to locate Jenny’s christening record (as shown in the previous post) in St. Wilfrid’s in Standish. I can’t tell you how excited I was and how much giggling ensued. The name William Turner got to me immediately. I had visions of Orlando Bloom as Will Turner in The Pirates of the Caribbean. I immediately downloaded a picture of him and made it his profile picture on Ancestry. I’ll eventually replace it with an image of one of his records, but just allow me my moment…
Orlando-Bloom-Out-of-Fourth-Pirates-of-the-Caribbean-Film-2

[Read more…] about Turner and Rigby

December 9, 2015 By Sharon

McLean/Frith/Brimlow/Brown

Brimlow/Bromilow & Chaddock & Turner

Reaching Back

We always hope that a marriage in a specific church will lead to the baptism records of those individuals in the church. If William Bromilow and Ann Chaddock married in All Saints than it made sense to look for their records there. I used the Lancashire OnLine Parish Clerk Project (did I mention how much I love this site) and found two Ann Chaddocks – one born/christened in All Saints in 1801, the daughter of Matthew and Peggy (Chisnall) Chaddock of Hindley,1 and the other christened in St Aidan in 1799 the illegitimate daughter of Betty Chaddock of Billinge.2 Both records lead to more questions than answers.
Ann 1801 With one of William and Ann’s daughters named Margaret, I could easily have just accepted Matthew and Peggy, since Peggy is a pet name for Margaret. However, William and Ann have 3 sons after this and none of them are named Matthew, nor is there a grandchild named Matthew or Margaret. The other problem is that the few records we have for Ann show her as being older than William with ages that equate to a birth year of 1797 or 98. The Ann in All Saints is born and baptized in 1801. While age variant isn’t unusual, this one seems a little big. I’m not saying it isn’t them, I’m just saying it doesn’t feel right.
Ann 1799 As for the Ann born in Billinge, we get no help with a birth date so the child could be anywhere from 1 week to 3 years. I find I’m much more comfortable with the age of this Ann baptized in 1799 over the Ann born/baptized in 1801. Also, the fact that Ann’s daughters Margaret and Jane are born in Billinge could lend meaning to this location/relationship – perhaps they had moved closer to Ann’s family for the birth of their second/third child. There are many Elizabeths in the tree below this level, but it’s such a common name and Ann’s son George married an Elizabeth that we can’t take any specific meaning from the name. As much as I’d like to accept this record, I can’t.

There simply isn’t enough evidence at this time to declare a parent for Ann Chaddock. The most we can say comfortably (based on the available records) is that she was from Wigan Parish in Lancashire. I’m not done researching, but I am setting her aside for now.

There was much better luck in locating a matching record for William. I was fairly certain that William was born in January or February of 1800 based on the multitude of records, including his New York death record, so I began with that date in mind and quickly located the following:3
1800 William Baptism While I was excited to find William’s birth and baptism, I was ecstatic to see the additional information with the name of his mother’s parents. There was a whole bunch of genealogical happy dancing going on when I found this. These names were confirmed through several more records. Once again the Bishop’s Transcripts found on Ancestry were not as good, since they erroneously state William’s mother’s name is Mary and said nothing about Jenny’s parents.

After a few days of digging through the parish records, this is the family as I now know it:
William Bromilow and Jenny/Jane Turner had the following children:
1. George Bromilow/Brimalow born 3 May 1791, Shevington, baptized 21 May 1791 All Saints Wigan, 1st son. He died Jun 1857 Orrell and was buried 11 Jun 1857 at St Thomas the Martyr, Upholland. George married Mary Knowles (2 Apr 1784 – Aug 1851), daughter of Thomas and Margaret Knowles on 4 Feb 1808 in All Saints. They had 9 known children together. They lived their life in Orrell and all the children were baptized in All Saints. They along with many of their children are buried in St Thomas the Martyr in Upholland near Orrell.
2. Unknown 1st daughter – I have not yet found any baptism or burial records, but daughter Betty is listed as the 2nd daughter. It is probable daughter #1 died shortly after birth and prior to being baptized.
3. Betty Bromilow born 3 Mar 1797, Wigan, baptized 18 Mar 1797 All Saints Wigan 2nd dau., died May 1804 Orrell, buried 6 May 1804 St Thomas the Martyr, Upholland.
4. William Bromilow/Brimlow, born 16 Jan 1800 Wigan, baptized 8 Feb 1800 All Saints Wigan, 2nd son. Married Ann Chaddock 5 Sep 1819 All Saints Wigan.
I have found no other records of children for William and Jenny/Jane, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t more out there. Nor have I found a birth/baptism record for William Bromilow born between 1850-1875.
*Note – All sources are up in the BurgraffScott tree on Ancestry and also in FamilySearch.

However I did locate the 18 Jun 1758 baptism record for Jenny Turner thanks to having the name of her parents from her children’s baptism records.4
Jenny Turner 1758 - Copy
I’ll post more on William and Eleanor Turner later. But, yeah… I was doing a lot of happy dancing. **Note – Jenny/Jinny are pet names for Jane.

I have not yet found a marriage record for William and Jenny. What I can prove is that they are NOT the William Brimilow and Jane Turner who married in Saint Helens on 6 Sep 1790 for the following reasons:
1. The St Helens Jane Turner was a widow so her maiden name would not be Turner. Our Jenny/Jane Turner’s parents were named as William and Eleanor Turner in Jenny’s children’s baptismal records.
2. Our William and Jenny/Jane had a son George Bromilow born 3 May 1791 and baptized 21 May 1791 in Wigan. That William and Jane Brimilow had a son named John Brimelow born 26 Dec 1791 and baptized on 13 Jan 1792. Seven months is possible, but they continue to have children at the same time our William and Jenny/Jane are having children.
3. Our Jenny/Jane was born in Shevington (as was her first son George) and she was baptized in St Wilfrid, Standish. Her children were all baptized in Wigan, which is only 4 miles away while Saint Helens is almost 20 miles from her known home. It is southwest of Billinge in the map below – it’s in the Parish of Precot.
Lancashire Parish map



1. All Saints, Wigan, Lancashire, Baptismal Registers 1799-1812, p.51, Ann Chaddock, born 8 Mar, bap 29 Mar 1801, parents Matthew and Peggy [Chisnall] Chaddock, Hindley, Weaver, wife parents William & Betty Chisnall, Original registers.
2. Christening records (accessed 28 Nov 2015), St Aidan Billinge, Lancashire, Baptismal Register 1787-1812, p24, Ann Chaddock, bap 2 Jun 1799, illigitimate daughter of Betty Chaddock, abode Billinge.
3. Christening records (accessed 27 Nov 2015), Wigan All Saints, Lancashire, Register of Baptisms 1799-1812, Page 20. Baptism 8 Feb 1800, Born 16 Jan, William Bromilow 2nd son of William Bromilow & Jinney Turner (dau of Wm & Elnor Turner).
4. Christening records (accessed 3 Dec 2015), St Wilfrid, Standish, Lancashire, Baptismal Registers 1733-1771 p107, Jenny Turner, 18 Jun 1758, William & Eleanor Turner, Shevington, FHL Film 1526140.

December 7, 2015 By Sharon

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