See also

Family of George MCCULLAM and Fanny EMERY

  • Husband:

  • George MCCULLAM ( - )

  • Wife:

  • Fanny EMERY (1803-1864)

  • Marriage:

  • 24 Feb 1820

  • Liverpool, Lancashire1,2,3

  •  

  • Address: St Paul's

     

    By License which has Francis' age as 21 or over.

     

    Frances is reputed to be a spinster when she marries Henry Anders.

     

    No baptisms have been found. No deaths of a George or Frances McCullam have been found.

     

Husband: George MCCULLAM

  • Name:

  • George MCCULLAM

  • Sex:

  • Male

  • Father:

  • -

  • Mother:

  • -

  • Occupation:

  • 1820

  • Pilot1

  • Residence:

  • 1820

  • Liverpool, Lancashire1,2,3

Wife: Fanny EMERY

  • Name:

  • Fanny EMERY

  • Sex:

  • Female

  • Father:

  • William Henry EMERY (c. 1760-bef1837)

  • Mother:

  • Elizabeth DYES (1763-1843)

  • Birth:

  • 16 Jan 1803

  • Liverpool, Lancashire4,5,6,7

  •  

  • Address: Darwen Street

  • Baptism:

  • 5 Jun 1803 (age 0)

  • Liverpool, Lancashire7

  •  

  • Address: Our Lady and St Nicholas

     

    Also known as St Nicholas Chapel and the church of the sailors. On the waterfront.

  • Residence:

  • 1820 (age 16-17)

  • Liverpool, Lancashire1,2,3

  • Residence:

  • 1825 (age 21-22)

  • Walton on the Hill, Lancashire8,9

  • Residence:

  • frm 1828 to 1830 (age 24-27)

  • Liverpool, Lancashire10,11

  •  

  • Address: Queen Anne Street (back of)

  • Residence:

  • frm Nov 1831 to 1836 (age 28-33)

  • West Derby, Liverpool, Lancashire12,13,14

  •  

  • Address: Mason Street

     

    If we assume she is living with her husband.

     

    To confuse things, there is also a Mason Street near Salthouse Dock where her mother lives.

  • Residence:

  • 1840 (age 36-37)

  • West Derby, Liverpool, Lancashire15

  •  

  • Address: Brownlow Hill

  • Education:

  • 1841 (age 37-38)

  • Illiterate16

  •  

  •  

    Registered birth of John with mark of X

  • Residence:

  • 1841 (age 37-38)

  • West Derby, Liverpool, Lancashire5

  •  

  • Address: Blucher Street

  • Occupation:

  • 1851 (age 47-48)

  • Washerwoman; West Derby, Liverpool, Lancashire4

  •  

  • Address: 4 Blucher Street

  • Residence:

  • 1851 (age 47-48)

  • West Derby, Liverpool, Lancashire4

  •  

  • Address: 4 Blucher Street

  • Occupation:

  • 1861 (age 57-58)

  • Laundress17

  • Residence:

  • 1861 (age 57-58)

  • West Derby, Liverpool, Lancashire17

  •  

  • Address: 5 Blucher Street

  • Death:

  • 17 Aug 1864 (age 61)

  • Everton, West Derby, Liverpool, Lancashire18

  •  

  • Cause: febris

    Address: Union Work House, Mill Road

     

    Cause of death "certified".

  • Burial:

  • 19 Aug 1864

  • Liverpool, Lancashire19

  •  

  • Address: Grave No. 3037, St Mary's, Kirkdale

     

    Collective grave, mainly fever victims, where Fanny and her daughter Catherine are buried.

     

     

Note on Wife: Fanny EMERY (1) - shared note

Liverpool, St Peter with St Nicholas

 

Liverpool St Peter and St Nicholas, Lancashire Genealogy • FamilySearch

 

St Peter's was on the site of the Anglican cathedral.

 

St Nicholas' full name is Our Lady and St Nicholas, also known as the mariner's church.

Note on Wife: Fanny EMERY (2) - shared note

 

Liverpool Parish Church

 

1699 Liverpool was granted parish status (St Peters) until then it had been part of the Parish of Walton on the Hill which was outside the town boundary.

Liverpool aldermen aspired to self-governance without any central interference. For a large part of the period 1207 to 1800, they succeeded insofar as they controlled the fees from burgages, rents, trade, markets, the ferries, the town mills, etc. They also enjoyed certain legal privileges in respect of trade matters etc. However, there was a thorn in their side. They did not have a parish church and so religious matters were governed by the Parish of Walton on the Hill which was completely outside the Liverpool boundary (they had a chapel of ease, St Nicholas which Liverpool residents used). So there was no overlap as such Walton just dictated on religious points. It also had the only cemetery.

In 1699, they petitioned Parliament and eventually got their Parish church, St Peters in 1700. They also built St Georges in 1734. Liverpools councillors would ostentatiously parade from the Town Hall, down Castle Street, to St Georges every Sunday. The church was both owned and maintained by the City Council and it was the place of worship for the mayor, council and judiciary. Insofar, as the churches existence depended on the actions of the Council, the Vestry was probably quite closely aligned to Council membership in the 18th century.

 

Note on Wife: Fanny EMERY (3) - shared note

 

Liverpool: St Mary's Cemetery, Kirkdale

 

St. Mary's Cemetery, named for the nearby St. Mary's Church, was opened as a public cemetery in 1836. Upwards of 47,500 internments spanned sixty one years from 3 August 1837 to 5 November 1898. The church endured longer closing in 1973. It was demolished in 1979. The cemetery had no association with the church.

 

 

In 1897, the City of Liverpool petitioned Parliament to close several burial grounds, including St. Mary's Cemetery, Walton Road, Kirkdale, with the intent of converting them into ornamental open spaces. In 1898, the cemetery was acquired by Liverpool Corporation and officially closed on 28 Dec 1898. It was opened as Lester Gardens on 10 July 1905 and named for Canon Thomas Major Lester (1829-1903) who was vicar of St. Mary's Church for over 50 years. The entrance to the cemetery still stands adjacent to 61 Walton Road.

 

Source: https://www.findagrave.com/

Sources

1.

Parish Register for Marriage of Francis Amery and George McCullum, St Paul's, Liverpool, Lancashire, 24 February 1820, Liverpool Record Office.

2.

Cheshire Marriage Licence Bonds And Allegations 1606-1905, FamilySearch, (30 July 2023), Oath of George McCullam; Cheshire Archives and Local Studies.

3.

Bishop's Transcripts for Marriage of Frances Amery and George McCullam, St Paul's, Liverpool, Lancashire, 24 February 1820, Lancashire Archives.

4.

HO 107, 1851 Census England and Wales, (30 Mar 1851). The National Archives.

5.

HO 107, 1841 England and Wales Census, (6 Jun 1841). The National Archives.

6.

General Registrar, Certified Copy of an Entry of Death. General Registrar's Office.

7.

Parish Register for Baptism of Fanny Emery, Our Lady and St Nicholas, Liverpool, Lancashire, 5 June 1803, Liverpool Record Office.

8.

Secondary Index for Marriage of Henry Andrews and Frances Emery, St Mary's, Walton on the Hill, Lancashire, 17 July 1825, Family Search Inc.

9.

Bishop's Transcripts for Marriage of Henry Andrews and Francis Emery, St Mary's, Walton on the Hill, Lancashire, 17 July 1825, Lancashire Archives.

10.

Parish Register for Baptism of Catherine Anders, St Peter's, Liverpool, Lancashire, 28 January 1830, Liverpool Record Office.

11.

Parish Register for Baptism of William Anders, St Peters, Liverpool, Lancashire, 6 April 1828, Liverpool Record Office.

12.

General Registrar's Office, Registers of Births, Marriages and Deaths surrendered to the Non-parochial Registers Commissions of 1837 and 1857. Custom Id: RG 4; The National Archives.

13.

Parish Register for Baptism of John Anders, St Peter's, Liverpool, Lancashire, 15 May 1836, Liverpool Record Office.

14.

Parish Register for Baptism of Pheobe Anders, St Peter's, Liverpool, Lancashire, 15 January 1832, Liverpool Record Office.

15.

General Registrar, Certified Copy of an Entry of Marriage. General Registrar's Office.

16.

General Registrar, Certified Copy of an Entry of Birth. General Registrar's Office.

17.

RG09, 1861 Census England and Wales, (7 April 1861). The National Archives.

18.

General Registrar, Certified Copy of an Entry of Death. Fanny Lindsay. Cit. Date: 18 August 1864. General Registrar's Office.

19.

Burial Register for Fanny Lindsay and Cathering Titherton, St Mary's Cemetery, Kirkdale, Lancashire, 19 August 1864, Liverpool Record Office.