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  1. #1
    Knowledgeable and helpful DebbieAnn's Avatar
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    Default Moses Wellwood, missionary in Africa

    I have been trying to locate Moses Wellwood, my gr-gr-grandmother's brother, born in Belfast, Northern Ireland in the early 1800's. In my gr-grandmother's diary, she says that he was a missionary in Africa for five years before returning and marrying his childhood sweetheart. Trouble is, the rest of the family had moved to Glasgow by this time. I can find no record of Moses (whose father's name was also Moses Wellwood) in either Scotland, England, or America. I have no idea exactly when he was born. I don't know the name of his childhood sweetheart, or what country (Ireland or Scotland) she lived in. I don't know where he studied for his missionary work, or how old he was when he went to Africa, or where in Africa he went.

    I have ordered The Clergy List 1858 by Cox hoping it will show his name, but it will take a while to recieve. Meanwhile, does anyone have access to any other Clergy Lists? And does the name Moses Wellwood appear in it anywhere?

    Any help would be gratefully appreciated!

    Debbie

  2. #2
    AnnB
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    Hello Debbie
    I don't know much about missionaries, but there is a Church Mission Society who seem to have quite a lot of archives, Their web site is at https://www.cms-uk.org/library.htm He may, of course, have been a Catholic, Methodist or one of the many other denominational missionaries, so if you put 'missionary history' into a Google or some such, you'll come up with a lot of 'hits'.
    I couldn't find a Moses Wellwood, but (again in Google) the phrase 'Wellwood missionary' seems to get a lot of 'hits', so maybe they were well up in missionary circles
    Hope this might help a bit
    Best wishes
    Ann

  3. #3
    Procat
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    Hello Debbie,

    I thought it highly unlikely given his age but, a search of the 1897 clergy list did not find him.

  4. #4
    Knowledgeable and helpful DebbieAnn's Avatar
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    Thank you both. This is the one search that got me into genealogy more than twenty years ago, and the one person I have had absolutely no luck with whatsoever. If he had not been named in the diary, I would not even know of his existence. Over these many years, I have found not a single other shred of evidence that he ever lived on the face of the earth. Nothing. Anywhere.

    The oldest known brother, James Wellwood, was born abt 1806 - other children were born abt 1808, 1810, 1813, 1815, 1817, 1819, 1822, 1824, 1827, 1829, and 1835, so I suspect that Moses was actually the first born, before 1806 (after all, he carried his father's name), or the last son, born in the early 1830's in the only significant gap between children. One of the sons married in Glasgow in the fall of 1830, but there is no evidence any of the others were in Scotland until at least three years later, and they appear to have come over in bunches, not all at once, over the course of the next twenty years. The youngest child, Fanny, born abt 1835, was raped in Ireland when she was 15, and bore a child from it that was born in Ireland, but in 1860 she married in Scotland. She appears to have been the last to come over.

    I'm leaning towards Moses having been born first, which would put his birth around 1803-1805 in Belfast. How could I possibly find out about his birth? Are there resources available online for No. Ireland? He must have been in Africa around 1830-35, assuming he would not have had enough training until about age 25 and he spent 5 years there. So he must have married in the early - to - mid 1830's. You would think he would show up in SOME census SOMEWHERE!!! Even by 1861, he would at most have been in his mid-50's. Were censuses taken in Ireland? Perhaps he returned there to live, and that's why he appears to have dropped off the face of the earth!!
    Last edited by DebbieAnn; 20-07-2005 at 2:01 PM.

  5. #5
    Geoffers
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    Would he have had a university education?

    I've never had to use the records myself (me and my lot are as thick as two short planks) but have you tried any universities so see what their records show?

    Did he leave a will?

    Do you have a marriage certificate for your chap? This should hopefully show his age.

    Do you know where in Africa he served as a missionary

    Geoffers

  6. #6
    A fountain of knowledge mary elms's Avatar
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    I've looked at the Methodist Minister lists and can't find him -

    I can check in the books themselves - but not till the end of August.

    Do you know for certain that he was a minister - doctors & teachers were also common on the mission field.


    Mary.
    Last edited by Guest; 11-10-2007 at 3:22 PM.

  7. #7
    Knowledgeable and helpful DebbieAnn's Avatar
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    No one else in that family had any significant formal education, so I doubt very much that he went to University. Perhaps he wanted to, and becoming a missionary was as close as he could come. I have found no marriage record, no birth record, no death record, no census records which include him. As far as I know, he was a missionary, but not a minister. He was in Africa for 5 years in the missionary field. The Africans did not want him to leave at the end of his time there and he had to escape from their near-constant surveilance of him. This is what was in the diary. One Sunday, one of his nephews was listening to a story about Moses being a deeply religious man, and with awe he turned to his father and said something like 'Wow! Daddy, they even knew about Uncle Moses in the Bible!' which became a family joke, also written in the diary.

    His parents seem never to have left Ireland, but had to have been living there when Moses returned from Africa as Fanny was born there in 1835. If his childhood sweetheart was there, it's possible he returned there and never left, taking care of his parents or at least living near them. They would have been in their early-to-mid 50's when Fanny was born (I expect she was a change-of-life surprise).
    Last edited by DebbieAnn; 20-07-2005 at 3:36 PM.

  8. #8
    cdave151
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    Default Moses Wellwood, missionary in Africa

    Have you made any further progress on Moses?
    I am researching his supposed son, John Wellwood b abt 1823 Belfast, d 03 Sep 1885 who married to
    Margaret Thomson on 03 Jun 1845 at Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland.

    I found a Belfast burial record on a Moses Wellwood: Clifton Street Cemetery (Belfast) 30 January 1852,
    age 70 of Asimatic Complaint, inmate of the Belfast Charitable Institution, born at Broomhedge, and came from Hillsboro, buried in Poor's ground.

    I also found a burial record for Jane Wellwood, Clifton Street Cemetery, 18 January 1872, aged 74 of Bronchitis, servant, Belfast Charitable Society, native of County Antrim, buried in Stranger's ground

  9. #9
    Jan1954
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    Hello cdave151 - welcome to Brit-Gen,

    Although still a member, DebbieAnn has not visited the forum for about 18 months. However, if you wish to contact her direct, click on her user name on the left and a drop-down menu will appear. There is an option to send her a private message, which in turn should generate an email.

  10. #10
    Knowledgeable and helpful DebbieAnn's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by cdave151 View Post
    Have you made any further progress on Moses?
    I am researching his supposed son, John Wellwood b abt 1823 Belfast, d 03 Sep 1885 who married to
    Margaret Thomson on 03 Jun 1845 at Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland.

    I found a Belfast burial record on a Moses Wellwood: Clifton Street Cemetery (Belfast) 30 January 1852,
    age 70 of Asimatic Complaint, inmate of the Belfast Charitable Institution, born at Broomhedge, and came from Hillsboro, buried in Poor's ground.

    I also found a burial record for Jane Wellwood, Clifton Street Cemetery, 18 January 1872, aged 74 of Bronchitis, servant, Belfast Charitable Society, native of County Antrim, buried in Stranger's ground
    Oh, thank you!! Moses is likely the father of the children I've found! I have John and Margaret's entire line, and am in touch with some of their descendants, if you need any info...

    Debbie

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