Friday, June 17, 2016

Chicago


Chicago in the latter half of the 1800s was one of the fastest growing cities in the country and dominated the Midwest as a center for transportation, commerce, and manufacturing.   From a population of just 4,000 when it was incorporated in 1837, the city grew to 93,000 in 1857, (about the time the Brown family made its way to the Midwest), to over 334,000 in 1871 at the time of the 
Chicago 1868 (see footnotes)
Chicago fire.1   In a large part, this was due to its strategic location on the southwest shore of Lake Michigan.  From the earliest times, the area around Chicago had been visited by all manner of water craft navigating the Great Lakes.  The phenomenal expansion of railroads and canal systems by 1850 facilitated movement of people, livestock and goods.2  Growth in commerce and manufacturing followed.  Livestock could be moved into Chicago from all parts of the Midwest creating vast stock yards which, in turn, rapidly turned Chicago into the meat-packing capital of the country.  Lumber was transported from Wisconsin for the building, millwork and furniture trades creating a need for warehousing and factories which further expanded the city.      


The burgeoning city was a magnet for anyone wanting to “get ahead,” including recent European emigrants.   The Irish quickly established themselves as part of the expanding city, organizing politically and developing an extensive support system through churches and social societies.3   While there was still prejudice against the Irish, and indeed against all emigrant nationalities, 4  Chicagoans in the 1850s were more interested in “making money” and less interested in a person’s background and pedigree.  Jobs were available for those willing to work hard.  It is easy to see why emigrants, including the Brown family, were drawn to the city.

The David Brown letter, (see copy of page 2 below right), states that the family went to Chicago through Ohio, perhaps Columbus or Cincinnati.5  The two oldest boys, Patrick and John, did travel to
Page 2-David Brown Letter (click to enlarge)
central Ohio, but, I have not found evidence that the rest of the family traveled with them.  The information in the letter has been, and continues to be, vital to my research into this family.  However, additional records have become available since the letter was written in 1943, and, more sophisticated methods have been developed to review these records.  At this point, it may be helpful to have a picture of the basic family tree to follow along.  This post, and the next one, is about Hannah Kelly Brown, the matriarch of the family.  In subsequent posts, we will look at each individual on the tree, and, expand the tree to clarify the story as it progresses.
Brown Tree showing first generation (click to enlarge)


Because Brown is such a common surname, to say nothing of the first names and use of “nicknames,” especially among the Irish, I found it helpful to look at the entire family as a group rather than at individuals to determine the locations of the family in Chicago.  I referred to Chicago city directories,6 city, state, and US census records, along with cemetery records to follow the family, often referring back and forth to multiple records as the family revealed themselves.

 
1860 US Census Mary, Johanna, James, Thomas Brown
(click to enlarge)
The first record I found was the 1860 US Census, (see left), for four of the Brown children.  The two youngest boys, James and Thomas, were living with their older sisters, Mary Brown Gray and Johanna Brown Roach, their husbands and families.7  Cross referencing the census record with the corresponding city directory puts them at 258 Wolcott (now State St).  Hannah Brown is shown at a different location, (124
1860 US Census - Hannah Brown
(click to enlarge)
Edina Pl, name changed to Fourth Ave), with “Kate Connor.”8  (see right)  No other record, besides the 1860 US Census, gives an occupation for Hannah Brown.  Using the “family group,” I have found them in multiple locations in Chicago over a number of years.   I have included a table below that identifies who was living at each address in each year.

USC = US Census                                       CCD = Chicago City Directory
Year
Source
Address
Residents
1860
USC & CCD
258 Wolcott
James & Thomas Brown; Mary Gray; Johanna Roach
USC & CCD
124 Edina Pl
Hannah Brown
1861
CCD
154 Washington
Mary Gray; Johanna Roach
1862
CCD
127 Illinois
Norah, wid of Timothy; James; Thomas; Johanna Roach
1863
CCD
45 N Dearborn
 Johanna, wid, ROACH
1864
CCD
45 N Dearborn
Johann, wid.; Johanna Roach
CCD
219 E Jackson
Mrs Nora K[Kelly?]
1865
CCD
221 Jackson
Johanna Roach,
1866
CCD
219 E Jackson
Norah, wid.; James; Thomas; Mary Gray; Johanna Roach
1867
CCD
219 ½ E Jackson
James; Thomas; Johanna Roach
1868
CCD
219 ½ E Jackson
Johanna Roach
1870
CCD
219 ½ E Jackson
Nora, wid.; James; Ellen, wid of John; Michael

 Because many of these addresses were for tenement houses or other rental properties, I did look in the city directories for additional people at the same address using a digital search function.9  While there were many, a few of the entries stand out as potential family members.

The Illinois State Census for 1865 shows the Roach family, (Thos with 2 males under age 10, and 1 male and 1 female ages 20 to 30), within two lines of a “D Brown” (1 male and 1 female ages 20 to 30).  The 1865 Chicago City Directory shows Thomas Roach (husband of Johanna Brown) AND David Brown at 221 Jackson.

A digital search of the 1870 city directory turns up Ellen Brown, widow of John, and Michael Brown at “r [rear] 219 Jackson.”  I did finally locate Hannah Brown in the 1870 census.  She is shown as
1870 US Census-Ellen Kelly/Johanna Brown
(click to enlarge)
“Johanna” (see right) with Ellen Kelly, Michael Brown, and a number of other “Brown” people. I had seen this entry years ago, and while Hannah’s maiden name is “Kelly,” I did not think this was the correct entry, (and actually agreed with the David Brown letter that Hannah was living with her oldest son Patrick), until I looked at the Chicago Census Report for 1871 available at the Newberry Library in Chicago.10   The records show the following persons at r [rear] 219 Jackson and, I believe, suggest family ties.

Brown, Ellen, wid. John, r. 219 Jackson, ward 2, born Ireland
Brown, Honora, wid. Timothy, r. rear 219 Jackson, ward 2, 2 male, 1 female, born in Ireland
Brown, James, tobacconist, r. rear 219 Jackson, ward 2, born Ireland
Brown, Michael, lab. R. 219 Jackson, ward 2, 1 male, 4 females, born Ireland.

There is another record that provides further evidence that these people are family.  A few years ago (2010), I found a burial record in Calvary Cemetery in Evanston, Illinois for James Roache.  I
Cemetery Records - Calvary - Chicago
(click to enlarge)
thought this may be a son of Johanna Brown and Thomas Roach, (more about the Roach family in a future blog post), and sent for a list of all persons buried in the lot.  The list I received is shown at the left.11  At the time, I really didn’t think this was the correct family until I started putting together census and directory records; now I think it very well could be.  It would make sense that if other members of the family immigrated to America that they would all eventually locate in the same vicinity.12 

I also searched church records for Patrickswell RC Church in County Limerick where I found the original church records for Timothy and Hannah Kelly Brown and their eight children.  I discovered that Ellen Kelly married John Brown on 13 Feb 1825.  (The Ellen in the 1871 city census is a widow of John; and, the 1870 US Census gives her surname as “Kelly.”)  There are baptismal records for five children: 

Johanna – 3 May 1825 – parents: Joanne Brown/Ellenora Kelly; sponsors: Thadeus Brown/Honora Kelly
Maria – 15 Jun 1828 – parents: Joanne Browne/Helena Kelly; sponsors: Jacobus Browne/Alicia O’Conner
Davidum – 5 May 1830 – parents: Joanne Browne/Ellina Kelly; sponsors: Thoma Brown/Catharina Lynch
Brigidam – 29 Jun 1832 – parents: Joanne Browne/Helena Kelly; sponsors: Patritius Kelly/Maria Beslon
Honora – 17 Aug 1837 – parents: Joanne Browne/Helena Kelly; sponsors: Allen Molony/Maria Molony

I did not find a baptismal record for Michael; however, these are pretty good matches for the cemetery records for Ellen, David, Hanora and Mary, (who could have married an O’Brien).  I believe the remaining burials are family members of Mary O’Brien.13

Are the individuals in Calvary Cemetery the same people in the Patrickswell church records?  Timothy had brothers in Fanningstown named John, James, and Thomas.  Is this family in Chicago headed by John Brown the brother of our Timothy?  Is Ellen Kelly a sister of our Hannah? While I cannot say with any certainty, the evidence certainly points to that conclusion.   It seems like every time we find additional records, we have more questions!

We will pick up the story of Hannah Kelly Brown during the time of the Chicago fire and how the fire affected her and her family in the next blog post.

 Ruger, A., Map of Chicago in 1868 from Schiller Street north side to 12th Street south side, Chicago Lithographing Co., available online at the Library of Congress,  https://www.loc.gov/item/73693350/   Birds-eye view of Chicago in 1868.  Zoom in on the map for incredible detail down to individual buildings.

1.       Andreas, A. T., History of Chicago from the Earliest Period to the Present Time, The A. T. Andreas Company, Publishers, Chicago, IL, 1884, p. 52, available online at: https://archive.org/stream/historyofchicago01inandr#page/n6/mode/1up 

2.       Cromie, Robert, The Great Chicago Fire, Illustrated Edition, Rutledge Hill Press, Nashville, TN, 1958 and 1994, p. 9-10.  By 1850 there were at least 20 mainline railroad lines servicing Chicago.  The Illinois and Michigan Canal completed in 1848 connected Chicago to the Illinois River at LaSalle, Illinois, and on to the Mississippi River.  

3.       Skerrett, Ellen, Encylcopedia of Chicago, Irish, available online at: http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/652.html  

4.       Cromie, op. cit., p.61.  There was an Irish “slum” in the city located in a “narrow strip south of Randolph Street, running from Wells Street – recently renamed Fifth Avenue – west to the river . . .The lower part of Fifth Avenue, known as Conley’s Patch, was particularly notorious.  It was lined with squat frame buildings which housed brothels, dance halls, pawnshops, tawdry boardinghouses, and saloons.” 

5.       Brown, David Earl, Kewanee, IL, 11 May 1943,  Letter to Esther _______, Columbus, OH.  Patrick, the oldest son, settled in Franklin and Delaware counties for a few years.  John, the next son, settled in Columbus.  However, both of these individuals lived outside the area which would have been covered by city directories making it difficult to determine if the remaining family members were with them.  I have checked both the Columbus and Cincinnati directories for inclusion of the family.  None was found in either city for any year.

6.       Chicago city directories from 1855 through 1887 have been reviewed for the family.  These directories are available from multiple sources.  I have used microfilms at the Cincinnati Public Library, Cincinnati, Ohio, and online records from Ancestery.com and Fold3 to gather data for the family.  Please note that directories are not available for all years, and that, at times, there are multiple, sometimes competing, directories for the same year.  Entries may be available in one source and not the other in the same year.

7.       1860 U.S. Census, Chicago, Ward 8, Cook, Illinois; Roll: M653_168; Page 114; Image 114; Family History Library Film: 803168. Note that the oldest child of Johanna and Thomas Roach was born in Wisconsin.  This may be where the family was located in the intervening years between Vermont and Chicago

8.       1860 U.S. Census, Chicago Ward 2, Cook, Illinois; Roll: M653_164; Page 426; Image 430; Family History Library Film: 803164.  Her occupation is given as “nurse.”  Would this occupation have precluded her from having the two youngest boys with her?  The distance between the two residences is about three miles.

9.       City directories at Fold3 are in a digital format; however, searches use OCR (Optical Character Recognition).  While this is a much better method than manually looking through each page in each directory, there are many false positives and likely other records where the OCR did not pick up the requested data.  Because of this, some records may be missing.  Also, note that not all persons appear in the directory for every year.  Just as today, inclusion in the directory is optional.

10.   Chicago Census Report; and Statistical Review, embracing a Complete Directory of the City, showing the Number of Persons in Each Family.  Available online at the Newberry Library, http://chicagoancestors.org/downloads/1871%20intro%20page.pdf 

11.   List of burials in Calvary Cemetery, Lot 35, Block 3, Section F, received November 2010.  There is an additional burial for Edward Ryan who died 27 Dec 1890, age 2.  A total of three burial graves were purchased by Michael Brown in November 1868.  Multiple people, a total of 13 altogether, were buried in the same three graves.  Additional information obtained by phone call to the cemetery on 14 Jun 2016.

12.   Recall from the post, Putting them on the Fanningstown Map, that the Sales Catalogue for Lot 13 shows Thomas Hogan who took over the property previously occupied by John Brown, a brother of Timothy, in 1856.  Perhaps John Brown died about this time and the family left Ireland sometime after to make their way to Chicago.  While I have not yet found evidence to state this conclusively, this was a common immigration pattern for the Irish.

13.   Nellie O’Brien married Edward Ryan 29 Nov 1885 in Chicago.  [Illinois, Cook County Marriages, 1871-1920,” database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1N7XH3V9 citing Cook, Illinois., Cook County Courthouse, Chicago; FHL microfilm 1,030,151.] 

Loretta, Ella, and Mary Ryan Judd are children of Nellie and Edward.  Nellie was born about 1859 in Wisconsin.  [1910 US Census, Chicago Ward 20, Cook, Illinois; Roll: T624_263; Page 17A; Enumeration District: 0885; FHL microfilm: 1374276.] 

Mary Ryan married Ray Judd on 2 Oct 1915 at St. Mel Parish in Chicago.  The names of Mary’s parents are given as Edward Ryan and Ellen O’Brien on the marriage record.  [Illinois, Chicago, Catholic Church Records, 1833-1925, database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QVMN-RF9Q)] 

Additionally, there is an entry for the family of Michael O’Brien (b. abt. 1832 in Ireland) in the 1860 US Census for Wilton, Rock County, Wisconsin. This record lists Mary (b. abt. 1832 in Ireland), Ellen (b. abt. 1859 in Wisconsin), and James Brown (b. abt. 1835 in Ireland).  [1860 US Census; Milton, Rock, Wisconsin; Roll: M653_1430; Page 486; Image 493; Family History Library Film: 805430]

The 1860 census for Johanna Brown and her husband Thomas Roach show a daughter, Emma, born in 1859 in Wisconsin.  See Footnote 7.




2 comments:

  1. Once again, absolutely brilliant, Mary! Thank you so very much for sharing this knowledge with all of us, the descendants of these noble ancestors.

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  2. Enjoying your posts very much. Glad you added a new post today, as I was just getting caught up since Joe Buggy blogged about you on his Townland of Origin blog. Did you attend the Celtic Connections Conference in Boston in 2014? I worked on the conference and your name is familiar.

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