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'Tattie Kirk' Linlithgow
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Prevalence
of the Binnie surname in 1881
and 1998.
The Binnie name has several variations
in spelling, including Benny and Bennie, sometimes changing
between generations and back again.
The surname of Binnie or Binny
is evidently a contraction of Binning, which appears to
have been originally French, Benigne being the name of several
persons of learning and distinction both in France and Italy.
The first archbishop of Dijon
was named St Benigne. In the county of Linlithgow there
is an eminence called Binnie Crag, which rises to the height
above four hundred and fifty feet.
In 1307, during the wars of independence
under Robert the Bruce, a peasant named Binny, styled the
William Tell of Scotland, by a successful stratagem, obtained
possession of the castle of Linlithgow, which was held by
an English garrison under Peter Lubard. This daring exploit
is related by Tytler in his History of Scotland,
Please let me know where you
are all coming from |
The earliest record would seem
to be of John BINNIE who married
Margaret HARDIE in 1703 in Borrowstouness
(pronounced Bo'ness), although this is not a proven link,
so please treat with caution.
They had a son, John
BENNY born in 1704 in Borrowstouness
which is on the coast of the Firth of Forth in West Lothian,
Scotland. He married Agnes RAMSAY
of Linlithgow,
daughter Mathew RAMSAY and Margaret AITKEN. They had three
sons and two daughters, all born at Bo'ness.
Their son, Andrew
BENNIE married Elizabeth SQUAIR
in Linlithgow
in 1779. She was the daughter of John SQUAIR and Margaret
ADAM.
Their eldest son, John
BENNIE was born in 1780 at Firestone, near Broxburn.
He married Marion NICHOL, daughter
of Alexander NICHOL
and Catherine GLEN.
They married in the Parish
of Bathgate. John's occupation was variously described
as 'cadger' and 'carter. Census
information for 1841 and 1851 places them in Linlithgow.
The couple died within days of each other in December 1856
at Strawberry
Bank.
Strawberry
Bank is sandwiched between the railway and the Union
Canal. Linlithgow
remains much as it was then. Birth place of Mary
Queen of Scots, you can still wander the palace by the
side of Loch Linlithgow and St
Michael's Church, founded in 1138 by charter by King
David. The present nave was finished in 1426, the chancel
50 years later, and the apse in 1531. Other places of BINNIE
residence can also be found, such as New
Well Wynd (the latter word meaning lane or alley) and
High
Street, all within close proximity to each other.
Much of what they knew would be recognisable today; the
palace, the dovecote,
the tunnel beneath the railway and the bridge over the canal.
John's
son Christopher was born
in Uphall
in 1818 and married Jean
SMITH, daughter of shoemaker, Thomas
SMITH, and Agnes RULE.
Her first name is also given as Jane and Janet in other
records.
Christopher was an iron
moulder, one of the major industries in the Falkirk
area, along with the manufacture of pit props (wood from
Scandinavia via Bo'ness), mining, brickworks, pottery, papermaking,
soap, hosiery, beer, water, and, of course, farming.
He lived at various addresses in Grahamston
in Falkirk around what is now Grahamston Station. Without
access to old maps, I can only assume that what is now Meeks
Road is associated with what was then Meeks Avenue,
and that Russel
Street (one l) is the Russell Street mentioned in the
1871
census. Given where he lived and his occupation, it
is possible that he worked at at the famous Carron
Iron Works (see BBC
film clips). Iron moulding stayed in the family down
the years. My grandad moulded iron to make a money box in
the shape of a bear. I wish I still had it.
According to the census
information, Christopher
gave Edinburgh as his place of birth. They had eight children,
although two are just listed as unknown. There is a record
of the second being buried at the age of 18 months, but
none of a baptism. Christopher
died in 1874, but his wife Jean
emigrated with her daughters' families first to Canada and
then to Wadena County,
Minnesota. I am grateful to Brad
REINHART for this information
and for more detail about Falkirk.
You can also use this link for
a brief history of the town.
Their third son, James,
was born in 1855. He married Mary
BELL, daughter of Henry
BELL . He also continued to work in iron moulding, while
his wife's father was a blacksmith. They had two sons, Christopher
and my great-grandfather, Henry
Bell BINNIE. They had at least four daughters
Agnes, Marion, Ella and the
youngest, Jane Smith Binnie,
named after James' mother.
Albert Road today |
Some time after the 1881 Census,
the family left Scotland for Lancashire. It must have been
between 1882 and 1888 when his sisters Agnes and Mary
were born. Certainly, James'
second daughter, Marion was born in Lancashire in 1890,
while Ella was born at 8
Albert Road, Preston in 1893, the same house in which
they were living at the time of the 1891
Census. The area was quite rural and not particularly
built-up, as can be seen from Brown's
1889 map of the area. By April 1896, they were living
in Ashton-under-Lyne where Ella
died, having contracted whooping
cough.
Henry Bell Binnie |
Although I do not know exactly
when Henry Bell BINNIE moved
south, he was old enough to have acquired a strong Scottish
accent which my father still remembers, especially when
Henry was in his cups.
He married Emma Jane SHORROCKS
whose father Thomas had been
born in Liverpool. As with the BINNIEs, his family had moved
to south east Lancashire, presumably in search of work in
the burgeoning cotton, coal and engineering industries.
Ironically, they ended up living
on Clive
Street in Waterloo, an area on the road from Ashton
to Oldham. I say this because I decided to embark on this
project, having been my uncle Ronnie's funeral at the 'paras
pub'. The car par was full, so we cut off to a side street.
Yes, you've guessed it - Clive Street.
However, their first home was
in Dukinfield, at 75
Cecil Street, close to Dukinfield Park. They were living
there in 1898 when their eldest child, Ella,
was born, perhaps named after Henry's young sister who had
died of whooping cough at the age of two just two years
previously. However, the birth took place at 92
Victoria Road, probably the home of Emma's parents,
Thomas Shorrocks
and Emma Caldwell. Assuming
the house numbering is the same today as it was then, this
was the Victoria public house.
Henry and Emma had five children,
as far as I can tell, although this is an area for further
research. They eventually lived at 298
Higher King Street (as it was then) in Dukinfield Cheshire.
Their son James and daughter
Mary lived opposite at 399 and 397 respectively. Both attended
the wedding of grand-daughter, Jean
BINNIE to Jeremiah
RHODES in 1949, but Emma died before I was born in 1953
and Henry in 1957.
Henry's son, James
BINNIE, was born in Waterloo in 1900. He too worked
with metal as fitter and married Deborah
PRESTWICH. He was self-taught on the piano and the spoken-word
has it that he was working as an MC when he wooed. In any
event, they married at Old
Chapel Unitarian Church in Dukinfield in 1924. Deborah's
sisters had married either at St
Michael's and All Saints in Ashton when they lived near
there, or earlier at St
Peter's. I can only assume that they chose to marry
at the Old Chapel because he played for their cricket team.
There is more about him in his obituary
from the Ashton Reporter.
James and Deborah had two children,
another James BINNIE born in 1924 and who is living, so
his details are kept private, Their daughter, Jean
BINNIE, married Jeremiah RHODES in 1949. She died in
1985.
Acknowledgements
Most of the information on my BINNIE pages came from the
work of Christine
Glover, She is an independent researcher living in Falkirk.
Much of what you see is the result of just two days work
which was probably my best investment in family history.
Certainly cheaper than petrol and hotel costs to try myself
and probably more effective. Also, my fourth cousin, Brad
REINHART, who provided the Minnesota
information.
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