Sunday 11 November 2018

The Maxwell Brothers Give Their Lives for Their Country


It has become a bit of an annual tradition during Remembrance Day that I take the time to research ancestors that served in wars.  Today I focused on the Maxwell family.

David Maxwell
John Rennie Maxwell














Among my ancestors who died in WWI were cousins of my grand-mother Isobel Maxwell: John and David Maxwell.  She wrote once that she was very fond of both of them.  They were the sons of David Maxwell Sr., a farmer in Ballindarg, Scotland (and Isobel's uncle).  His first wife, Jane Rennie, died when their sons were just ten and eleven years old.  Thereafter David Sr., was solely responsible for their upbringing (he married his second wife much later).  In their memory, I offer a little of their story as soldiers of the Great War.

Forfarshire reportedly was hard hit by the muster in 1914, with businesses, farms and factories losing many young men in the service of the war.  Local residents were asked for patience as public and private services and industries adapted to the depletion of employees.  By 1918, there was widespread concern that the losses the area had suffered was having an impact on its ability to produce food and goods to support the population.  Local newspapers reported that 75 per cent of the young men were called up from Forfarshire, where in other counties the numbers were closer to 44 per cent.

Among those who heeded the general mobilization in Forfarshire were David Maxwell (1890-1918) and his younger brother John Rennie Maxwell (1891-1915).  They joined up with the Fife and Forfar Yeomanry early in the war – and while their fates were ultimately the same, their paths were quite different. 

John “Jack” Rennie Maxwell

John Rennie Maxwell was known as Jack to his friends.  He and his brother David both helped their father in his potato farming and mercantile businesses.  John’s cousin Isobel was supposed to have resembled him somewhat, and John had previously worked with his uncle, Isobel’s father, at the Commercial Bank.  I wrote about Jack’s Gallipoli experience a few years ago.  Details of the battle which killed Jack are outlined in that blog post.

Jack joined the Fife and Forfar yeomanry with his brother David at the age of 20 prior to the mobilization.  As part of the Royal Scots Regiment, 11th Battalion, he is remembered for his gallantry and bravery, which won him a Military Medal.  By the time he went into action in the Gallipoli Campaign, he was a Corporal.  He sadly didn’t last long, killed with two others on October 18, not even a month after their landing in Egypt on September 26, 1915.

The Forfar Dispatch November 11, 1915 reports the death of Corporal John Maxwell of Fife and Forfar Yeomanry in the Dardanelles:
This news has caused wide-spread regret not only on account of the sympathy which is felt for the bereaved parents but also on account of the fact that Corporal Maxwell was well-known and a general favourite on account of his bright, friendly and humoursome ways.  He has laid down his life at the call of duty when life is most alluring and he has paid his share of the heavy price by which we are purchasing for the world freedom and peace.

GSM Wilkie
On November 26, 1915, Kerriemuir’s Parish Church held a service to honour the fallen of the parish.  It was a well-attended service which included local elected officials, 80 members of the Boys’ Brigade and members of the Army Service Corps.  Among those memorialized was Corporal John Rennie Maxwell.  Also memorialized at the same service was one George Spence McLean Wilkie (1890-1950).  Some decades later, George’s brother Jeffrey would marry John’s cousin Isobel (my grand-mother).  John was sadly commemorated as the first member of the Forfar Company to die in the war, at the age of 24.  He was David Maxwell Sr.’s younger son. 

John Rennie Maxwell is buried at Green Hill cemetery near Anzac in Turkey where there is a stunning monument to all of the fallen of Gallipoli.




David Maxwell Jr., Captain of the Black Watch

David, like his brother Jack, worked with his father.  Also like his brother Jack, he was called up at the outbreak of the war and joined the Fife and Forfar Yeomanry with the general mobilization.   After a few months of training, in November 1915, the same month his brother died, David obtained a commission in the Black Watch.

David’s Battalion of the Black Watch (the 5th Angus and Dundee Battalion) spent the war in France after their initial deployment as part of the Scottish Coastal Defences.  David would have taken part in the Battle of Neuve Chapelle, the Battle of Aubers and the action of Bois Grenier.  In all of these there was fierce fighting with Maxwell’s side trying to breach German lines.  Trench warfare and ongoing fighting had destroyed the countryside, and the trenches themselves were muddy and cold with water running through them.  It was in these circumstances that David demonstrated his bravery.

David’s Battalion formed the 4/5th Battalion on 15th March 1916.  David was awarded the Military Cross on two separate occasions for “conspicuous acts of gallantry”, the first time was July 1917.  He served as second lieutenant until he was promoted to Captain in January 1918.  His promotion reads:

Sec. Lieut. David Maxwell, Royal Highlanders, for conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty.  He took up twenty-four pack mules with barbed wire to an important position under considerable shell fire, and, on an enemy counter-attack developing, collected all available men and consolidated the position in close support to the infantry.  Throughout the day he displayed the greatest courage and devotion to duty.

David Jr.’s understated bravery was evident in his medals and his promotion.  On June 13, 1918, the Forfar Dispatch reported that Captain David Maxwell, Black Watch, son of Mr. Maxwell Ballindarg, was awarded a bar to his Military Cross:
With characteristic modesty he has said nothing about it, but others have not let him hide his light under a bushel, and the news is out.  It is all in the day’s work, and Fortune’s buffets and smiles he takes with equal thanks.  We congratulate the fearless and popular officer on this additional and well deserved honour.

David's Headstone in Senlis
It is small consolation that David Jr. was able to visit his home and receive his well-deserved accolades, for three months later was he shot in the chest.  His died of his injuries two days after he was shot, on August 3, 1918.  David Maxwell, Captain on the Black Watch, is buried in Senlis French National Cemetery in Oise, France.

The Evening Telegraph and Post, Dundee reported on Tuesday August 6, 1918 that Captain Maxwell died of his wounds:
A War Office telegram was received by Mr Maxwell yesterday evening stating that his son had been seriously wounded in the chest.  A later wire communicated the news that he had succumbed to his injuries on Saturday night.

Maxwell Memorial in Padanaram, Scotland

There is no doubt that David Maxwell Sr. was heartbroken at the loss of his second son, and with no surviving children needed an outlet for his grief and a way to properly memorialize his only children.  Padanaram (also known as “Paddy” to the locals) is a small residential village between Forfar and Kirriemuir.  It is near the town of Glamis, birthplace of at least one of David’s sons.  There, visible from the A926, lies the Village Hall, which is a memorial to David and John Rennie Maxwell.  Inside the Memorial Hall hang their photos, and outside there is a plaque which reads:

This hall is erected by

David Maxwell, Ballindarg
in memory of his two sons
Capt. David Maxwell, M.C. bar
Cpl. John Rennie Maxwell
Who Fell in the Great War
1914-1919


While the hall had fallen into some disrepair, it has reportedly recently been renovated.  The large glass window in the front facing the road is flanked by the portraits of the Maxwell boys.

Not too far down the road in Glamis sits another memorial to World War I fallen.  The Maxwell brothers are named on that plaque along with the others from the area who lost their lives.

David Sr. had no other children and no descendants to keep his sons in their memories.  I imagine this is why he built a village memorial hall in Padanaram so their names and sacrifice would be remembered by generations a century after their death in faraway fields of war.  I am honoured to be part of keeping that memory alive this Remembrance Day, November 11, 2018 – 100 years after the conclusion of the War to End All Wars. 

Monday 8 October 2018

An Allison Wins the Nobel Prize for Immunological Research and Allison Family Genealogists Go Crazy!




Dr. James Patrick Allison, winner of the Nobel Prize for Medicine 2018



On October 1, 2018, James Patrick Allison shared a Nobel prize for medicine with Tasuku Honjo.  Their grand-breaking research on cancer therapy harnesses the body’s immune system to fight the disease.  Genealogists researching the Allison family tree were quick to claim James Patrick Allison as one of their own, particularly those hailing from Ulster in 1718.  But can we prove it?  I set out to find out – in a weekend! 

Obviously time and geography (along with lack of personal connection) have complicated matters, so my conclusions aren’t, well, conclusive.  I will tell you what I determined with relative certainty, then some guesses about Dr. Allison’s possible roots and why I think so.  Let’s go!

James Patrick Allison’s biography tells the story of his immediate family, and his personal interest in ending cancer’s deadly course.  Dr. Allison, a native Texan, spends his off hours when not pursuing ground-breaking discoveries in immunological research, playing harmonica in a garage band of immunologists (“The Checkpoints”) and enjoying a good Texas barbeque.  His Texan drawl comes from his upbringing in a small town in Alice, Texas, a city of less than 20,000, where his father was a doctor.  Dr. Allison lost his mother, two of her brothers, and his own brother to cancer.  This and a talent for science got Dr. Allison interested in medicine and researching the cure for cancer.

Dr. Allison’s parents were Albert Murphy Allison (1909-1973) and Constance “Connie” Kalula Lynn (1915-1961).  Connie’s family I am sure has a storied history, but for the purposes of this research, I am tracing the Allison roots.  Albert Murphy, a physician in Alice, Texas, was raised in that state by parents Albert Sidney Allison (1881-1951) and Jimmie Irene Murphy (1888-1974).  Albert Sidney Allison was also raised in Texas.  He was a man of medium stature, with grey eyes and dark golden hair.  He lived in Marlin Falls, Texas and was a shoe clerk.  He married Jimmie Irene Murphy and together they had Albert Murphy Allison. 

Albert Sidney Allison’s parents were Charles Allison (1850-1888) and Sallie Chandler (1856-1929).  This is when our story mixes facts with some deductive reasoning.  There are some things about which we are absolutely certain:  birth and death dates, marriage date, and children.  Charles and Sallie married in Texas on March 6, 1879.  Together they had four children.  Edwin, born in 1880, and died young.  Albert Sidney of course married, lived and died in Texas, having one child who went on to be a doctor, and his son became a Nobel prize winner!  Mamie, a daughter (1884-1948), married Edward Bernard Crawford and they had two daughters.  Their son Charles Lee Allison (1886-1938) had a career as a brakeman and Texas ranger, and eventually died on the streets of Odessa, Texas, shot to death by Zep Franklin after an argument.  It was worth checking into that story just a little.

Charles Lee Allison
mugshot
In 1915, Charles Lee was given ten years for manslaughter, which time was spent in Folsom prison.  The records suggest he may well have escaped (a fairly extraordinary feat) and a $50 reward was issued for his re-capture. It appears he was indeed re-captured as his sister wrote a letter to the Warden at Folsom prison in August 1924 seeking the release of her brother.  His past seemed to have caught up with him that night in 1938.  Although the newspaper reports are unclear, Zep and Charles had engaged in a heated argument on the street.  After Zep shot and killed Charles Lee, he turned himself over to the police.  Charles Lee was, at that time of his death, living on his own in a rooming house (also occupied by Zep). 

Back to Charles Allison, who married Sallie Chandler in 1879 in Texas: prior to which this branch of the family tree becomes somewhat more complicated.  Their children’s death certificates state Charles was born in Alabama, but of course they all died long after their father Charles’s passing in 1888, so I turned to the only piece of primary evidence that Charles himself would have contributed to: the 1880 Federal census.  In that document, Charles himself says he was born in Maryland.  At the time of the census, he worked in a sawmill.  It was only eight years later that Charles died. 

We know with certainty that Charles married Sallie Chandler in Texas, and that he was likely born in Maryland (rather than Alabama).    His birth year is consistent throughout all the records, so we can confirm it was around 1850.  So the search started for a Charles Allison born in Maryland in 1850 (I also searched Alabama to rule that out).  I got lucky, there was only ones Charles Allison that fit our description, born to James Smith Allison (1824-1894) and Mary E Baxley (1829-1860).  Admittedly there is some element of conjecture here, but I used another reliable source to help me in narrowing my search:  The History of the Alison or Allison Family in Europe and America by Leonard Allison Morrison (1893).  I have turned to this source often and rarely found any inaccuracies.  The research L.A. Morrison did was extensive and often in person.  He is clear when he is not sure of a particular family’s origins, and equally clear when he is certain.  Any time I have found a discrepancy, it has been minor and mostly a result of the biases of the day.  There is a copy of this book online, and I searched for our Charles, and also for James Smith, to no avail.  Of the many Allison families L.A. Morrison researched, this branch does not appear to be one of them.  I was on my own.

Other genealogists had linked Charles to James Smith, and primary sources certainly point us in that direction.  James worked in a feed store in 1860, by which time his wife Mary had died, and his mother and sister in law had moved in with him (likely to help take care of his three young children: Charles (9), Margaret (12), and James S Jr. (6)).  They all were born and lived in Baltimore. 

By 1870, the men of the family were living and working together in what appears to be a working class neighbourhood of Baltimore.  Charles was working as a painter, James Sr. and James Jr. were both clerks.  Interestingly in this census, James Sr. is listed as being born in Pennsylvania, and this piece of evidence is important for tracing the preceding generation.  

1870 census showing James S Sr., Charles, and James S. Jr.

In 1880, James Jr. had married and was working as a travelling salesman.  He and his wife Maggie had two daughters, and his father, James Smith Sr. was living with him at home at age 55.  This 1880 census reveals even more about James Smith Sr.’s ancestry: he is listed as born in Pennsylvania (confirming the 1870 census), his father born in Scotland and his mother Maryland.  This is the first clue to James Smith Sr.’s ancestry, and a possible clue to when his branch of the Allisons landed in North America. Another secondary confirmation of our assumptions about Charles, by the time of the 1880 census he is no longer in Baltimore, and we find him married (1879) and living now in Texas.  The timelines help us to confirm our assumptions that the son of James Smith Sr. is indeed our Charles.


1880 Census document showing James S. Allison Sr. living with his son. 
The last columns are: birthplace, father's birthplace, mother's birthplace
I should mention that in my experience both those from Scotland and Ulster Scots often list Scotland as their birthplace.  It is rarely listed as Ireland (although this is admittedly inconsistent), and Ulster Scots consistently identify their roots as “Scotch” or “Scottish”, never “Irish”.  Nonetheless, this piece of evidence shows Scottish ancestry, and the likelihood that James Smith Sr. was a first generation immigrant born in Pennsylvania in 1824 (or thereabouts).

We have a couple of things going for us.  One is that James Smith Allison is a rather unusual name in the Allison family.  Smith is likely a maiden name for a mother or grand-mother of this branch of the tree.  So we search for a James Smith Allison, born around 1824 in Pennsylvania, and lucky for us there is only one record:  James Smith Allison, christened September 4, 1824, in Hopewell Pennsylvania – and his father’s name is Joseph Allison.  If our other assumptions based on the evidence are correct, we have traced the first Allison of this branch of the tree to have landed in North America:  Joseph.

We believe that Joseph was not born in North America, so he either came over on his own or with his father.  His child, James Smith Allison, was born in 1824, so we can estimate Joseph’s birth date as likely between 1780 and 1800.  We know he settled in Hopewell.  The 1810 census of Hopewell shows a number of Allisons.  Joseph Allison is living with an adult female.  Another household has a William Allison, with three males and three females in the household.  These are the only Allisons listed in the town of 1578 persons, 759 white males, 795 white females, and 24 “other persons”.

Morrison’s book does not list the Hopewell Allisons, although he does have a chapter on Pennsylvania Allisons.  He states that Allisons came over in 1718 and 1740 and settled in Allen Township.  This timeline would not work for James Smith and Joseph Allison.  Morrison describes a number of other Allison descendants, but no James Smith.  Morrison does say that three Allison brothers, Robert, Andrew and James, landed in Philadelphia in July 1750 and their descendants scattered across the United States.  A review of their progeny suggests this is an unrelated branch.  It would seem that the Hopewell Allisons are not related to any of the Allisons in Morrison's book, as far as can be determined.  Since Joseph is James Smith Allison’s father, it could be the Joseph listed in the census 1810, or it could be a child of William (their names are not listed).  Let’s assume that William and Joseph emigrated together.  Is there a record of their emigration?

A Joseph and Robert Alleson emigrated in 1816 on the Halifax Packet from Londonderry.  If this is our Joseph, then it confirms he is from Londonderry.  However, the timeline does not work:  he has to be in Hopewell in 1810 for the census.  If he followed other Allisons to Hopewell, there married and there had James Smith Allison, it could be our Joseph.  However, this Joseph could have gone anywhere – and there is no record of what happened next (and lots of Joseph Allisons).

The history of Hopewell may hold a clue.  It was a first settled by the Indigenous peoples.  The early European settlers were apparently Scotch-Irish and they began their work clearing land for settlement in the late 1770s.  It is possible that Joseph came from elsewhere to Hopewell as the land began to clear.  Remember, though, that James Smith Allison was born in 1824 in Pennsylvania, and he lists his father as being from “Scotland”.

In the end, without more time and evidence, the only clear link to Ulster-Scots is the settlement of Hopewell which was mostly populated by Ulster-Scots in its beginnings.    Further, our link to Hopewell is James Smith Allison’s birth certificate.  While we are therefore relatively certain of James Smith Allison’s parentage, our link from James Smith Allison to Charles Allison is somewhat tenuous based on process of elimination and clues hidden in primary sources.  We can definitely trace back to Charles Allison.  I would be interested in hearing other theories or receiving other information to confirm whether or not Dr. James Patrick Allison, winner of the Nobel prize, is descended from the Allisons of Londonderry.