The christening of "Richard Brough" is listed in the parish register of Burslem, Staffordshire (FHL Book #: 942.46, B4pr, Vol.61, Part 1, p.265; and FHL Film # 7566311), which states that he was christened on 3 June 1759 at St. John's church in Burslem, Staffordshire, and that he was the "son of Richard and Mary Brough".
The 1777 marriage of Richard Brough and Ellen Parrot is listed in the parish register of Trentham (FHL Film # 1526192, Item #1, and FHL Book # 942.46, B4pr, V.39, page 307), which states that the marriage was by Banns and took place on 6 October 1777, and that Richard Brough and Ellen Parrot were both of "this parish". The marriage was witnessed by Richard Woolley, John Smith and William Clark.
Richard Brough was a "Labourer", as mentioned in the christening of his youngest son, Richard Brough, as follows: The christening of Richard Brough (chr. 1787) is listed in the IGI (via the LDS Extraction Program, Trentham parish register--FHL Film # 873647, p.291). Also, the christening date of Richard Brough is listed in the parish register of Trentham (FHL Film # 1526191, Item #17), which states that his father--also named Richard Brough--was a Labourer.
Richard Brough is probably the person listed as a witness in the marriage of his daughter, Alice, to Charles Hassal in 1801, as follows: The marriage of "Charles Hassal" and "Alice Brough" is listed in the parish record of St. Giles, Newcastle under Lyme (FHL Film # 1040775, Item #5), which states that they were married by Banns on 14 June 1801, that they were both "of the Parish of Stoke", that Charles Hassal was a "Potter, and that the marriage was witnessed by "Wm. [William] Hill" and "Richard Brough"--who was probably Alice's father.
Richard Brough apparently died after 14 June 1801, as he is probably the same person who witnessed the marriage of his daughter, Alice, to Charles Hassal in 1801, as follows: The marriage of "Charles Hassal" and "Alice Brough" is listed in the parish record of St. Giles, Newcastle under Lyme (FHL Film # 1040775, Item #5), which states that they were married by Banns on 14 June 1801, that they were both "of the Parish of Stoke", that Charles Hassal was a "Potter, and that the marriage was witnessed by "Wm. [William] Hill" and "Richard Brough"--who was probably Alice's father. Also, Richard Brough apparently died sometime after his wife, Ellen--who died in 1789, as follows: "The burial of Ellen Parrott, which occurred on 13 June 1789, is listed in the Trentham Parish Register (FHL book # 942.46, B4pr, Vol. 39): "Ellen w[ife] of Rich. Brough, Labr. Tr. 38 [years old]."
Family record taken from the 2000 RBFO book "The Broughs of Staffordshire, England and their English, American and Australian Descendants."
In February 1986, Ann Brough Hind of Yorkshire, England, mentioned the following to the RBFO (see RBFO Hind Research Reports, page 60 and 66): "A Mrs. Eva Beech, who is an expert in felons of Staffordshire, sent me a Brough entry, from the Register of Felons (W/1723/5 p.8): Mr. Richard Brough. May 31st (1814?) age 59. Brickmaker; guilty: 3 months in Stafford Gaol." Somewhat similarly, according to the website: http://www.uyk/transcriptions.accessgenealogy.com/, a "Richard Brough" of Staffordshire committed an act of "violence" against a "Charles Porter" in "1810", and served "3 months" in "prison" for "assault". The RBFO is currently conducting further research into whether the Richard Brough christened on 3 June 1759--or a different Richard Brough born in about 1755--is the same person or related to the same person(s) mentioned above as having served "3 months" in the Staffordshire prison.
The 1777 marriage of Richard Brough and Ellen Parrot is listed in the parish register of Trentham (FHL Film # 1526192, Item #1, and FHL Book # 942.46, B4pr, V.39, page 307), which states that the marriage was by Banns and took place on 6 October 1777, and that Richard Brough and Ellen Parrot were both of "this parish". The marriage was witnessed by Richard Woolley, John Smith and William Clark.
The burial of "Ellen [the] w[ife] of Rich. [Richard] Brough, Lab[oure]r [of] Tr[entham" is listed in the parish register of Trentham, Staffordshire, England (FHL Book # 942.46, B4pr, V.39, page 267), which state that she was buried on 13 June 1789 in Trentham, Staffordshire, and that she died when she was "38" years old (born about 1751).
Marriage Notes for Richard Brough and Ellen Parrott-86
The 1777 marriage of Richard Brough and Ellen Parrot is listed in the parish register of Trentham (FHL Film # 1526192, Item #1, and FHL Book # 942.46, B4pr, V.39, page 307), which states that the marriage was by Banns and took place on 6 October 1777, and that Richard Brough and Ellen Parrot were both of "this parish". The marriage was witnessed by Richard Woolley, John Smith and William Clark.
The christening of "Susannah Brough" is listed in the parish register of Trentham, Staffordshire, England (FHL Film # 96895), which states that she was christened on 7 February 1779 in Trentham, Staffordshire, and that her parents were "Rich [Richard] and Ellen Brough".
The burial of "Susannah Brough" is listed in the parish register of Trentham, Staffordshire, England (FHL Book # 942.46, B4pr, V.39, page 257), which states that she was buried on 26 February 1779 in Trentham, Staffordshire, and that she was the daughter of "Rich. Brough".
The christening and burial dates for Susannah Brough are listed in the IGI and LDS Ordinance Index (via the LDS Extraction Program, taken from FHL Film # 96895--which was a copy of Trentham Parish Register in book form: FHL Book # 942.46, B4, Volume 38). Also, the christening and burial dates for Susannah Brough are listed in the parish register of Trentham (FHL Film # 1526191, Item #17).
The 1768 christening of "Elizabeth Hollison" is listed in the Bishop's Transcript of Bucknall, Staffordshire (FHL Film # 417175, Item #2), which states that she was christened on 6 March 1768 as the daughter of Thomas and Mary Hollison". Also, the christening of "Elizabeth Hollison" is listed in FamilySearch (via FHL Film #: 1278889, Item #15), which states that she was christened on 6 March 1768 in Bucknall, Staffordshire, and that her parents were Thomas Hollison and Mary.
In the 1841 Census, "Elizabeth Hollison" is listed as being 70 years old (born between 1767 and 1771), born in Staffordshire, and residing with her son, Richard Hollison (age 40), and her grandson, James Hollison (age 20) and his wife, Mary (age 25), and their young son William (age 1), in Wetley Moor, Bucknall Cum Bagnall, Bucknall, Staffordshire.
The 1843 death certificate of "Elizabeth Horleston" was obtained from the GRO in England, and states that she died on 14 October 1843 at Buchnall, Staffordshire, England, that she died of natural causes when she was 75 years old (born about 1768), and that the informant of her death was her son Richard Horleston of Wetley Moor, Bucknall, Staffordshire, England, who was present at her death.
The 1843 burial of "Elizabeth Horleston" is listed in the parish register of Bucknall, Staffordshire (FHL Film # 1278909, Item #6), which states that she was buried on 17 October 1843 when she was 75 years old (born about 1768). Note: The top of the parish register page containing the burial listing for Elizabeth Horleston is mistakenly written as "1833" when it should have been written as "1843"--as can be determined by looking at the flow of months from the previous pages and entry dates.
The "Will" of "Elizabeth Horleston" (FHL Film # 96721--located about halfway through the microfilm), was probated in Newcastle, Staffordshire, on 27 October 1843, but was written on 13 December 1829. In her Will, Elizabeth Horleston states that "the whole of my estate...consists of nothing but a lease of a cottage at Whetley Moore [Wetley Moor]...which lease expires at the death of my son William Horleston, and the premises of the said cottage consists of two small dwelling houses with about three acreas of land...and the said land is divided into three small crofts". (Note: a "croft" is a small enclosed field or pasture near a house.) The Will of Elizabeth Horleston also named three children: her son "William Horleston"--who was a "Collier", her son "Richard Horleston", and her daughter, "Mary Brough"--who was the wife of "Richard Brough", a "Labourer"; and the Probate section of the Will stated that Elizabeth Horleston died on 14 October 1843. In addition, an "Estate Duty Death Reference" notice (FHL Film # 1485063), states that "Elizabeth Horleston" was "of Stoke-upon-Trent", that she died on 14 October 1843, that her Will was dated 13 December 1829, that she had a "Leasehold [of a] Cottage at Whetley Moor [Wetley Moor] which expires at the death of [her] son William", and that the Executors were: William Horleston--her son, Richard Horleston--her son, and Mary Brough--her daughter.
Research Note: The family of Elizabeth Hollison was extensively researched and documented by Marie B. Nielson in the late 1990's, and is listed in the RBFO book: The Broughs of Staffordshire, England, and their English, American and Australian Descendants" (2000, pages 100-126).
Extensive research by the Brough Family Organization has found NO reliable reference or documented source to support the claim that a "John Sparrow"--who reportedly was the landowner of some property that Elizabeth leased for a number of years--was ever the husband of Elizabeth Hollison.
The 1793 christening of "John Hurlisson" is listed in the Bishop's Transcript of Bucknall, Staffordshire (FHL Film # 417175, Item #2), which states that he was christened on 14 July 1793 as the "illegt" son of "Elizabeth Hurlisson" of "Bucknall". Also, the 1793 christening of "John Hurlison" is listed in FamilySearch (via FHL Film # 1278889, Item #15), which states that he was christened on 14 July 1793 in Bucknall, Staffordshire, and that his mother was Elizabeth Hurlison.
The 1811 burial record of "John Holeston" is listed and shown in FindMyPast, which states that he was buried on 7 March 1811 at St. Mary's church in Bucknall, Staffordshire, England.
Research Note: The family of Elizabeth Hollison was extensively researched and documented by Marie B. Nielson in the late 1990's, and is listed in the RBFO book: The Broughs of Staffordshire, England, and their English, American and Australian Descendants" (2000, pages 100-126).
The burial of "Joshua Hollinson" is listed in the Bishop's Transcript of Bucknall, Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire (FHL Film # 426501, Item #1), which states that he was buried on 19 June 1825 in Bucknall and that he died when he was "26 y[ears]" old (born about 1799) and that he was of "Whitley Moor".
Research Note: In December 2016 members of the BFO Research Committee determined that "Joshua Hollinson" was "probably" the son of Elizabeth Hollison. This determination was made after extensive review of available parish records in and near Bucknall, and after careful review of known Hollinson family history in Staffordshire.
The 1827 marriage of "John Ogden" and "Catherine Brennan" is listed in the IGRS Marriages Database of the Irish Genealogical Research Society (https://www.irishancestors.ie/search/marriage/index.php), which states that they were married on 28 November 1827 at the German Lutheran Church in Dublin, Ireland. Also, the marriage of "John Ogden" and Catherine Brennen" is listed in FamilySearch (FHL Digital Film # 7944795), which states that they were married on 28 November 1827 in Ireland.
In the 1841 Census, "John Ogden" is listed as being 30 years old (born about 1807-1811), NOT born in Middlesex, England, working as a "Hatter", and residing with his apparent wife, Catherine (age 30), and their apparent four children (Margt--age 10, Mary Ann--age 7, Hannah--age 4, and Emely--age 5 months), at: No.11, St. Andrew Hill, St. Ann Blackfriars, City of London, Middlesex, England.
The 1862 marriage record of "John Ogden" and "Ellen Brough" is listed in the parish record of St. Mary, Lambeth, Surrey, England (FHL Film # 1041669), which marriage record states that they were married by Banns on 30 May 1862 in St. Mary, Lambeth; that John Ogden was "of full age" and a "Widower" and "Labourer" of "New Cut", and that his father was "James Ogden (deceased)", a "Hatter"; and that Ellen Brouigh was "of full age" and a "Spinster" of "New Cut", and that her father was "Richard Brough", a "Brick Maker". The marriage was witnessed by Henry Hilliard and Sarah Hilliard. Note: "New Cut [now called 'The Cut'] is a street in London which runs between Waterloo Road in Lambeth and Blackfriars Road in Southwark. [It] formed the commercial heart of the area from the early 19th century." (Source: Wikipedia: "The Cut, London".)
The 1872 death certificate of "John Ogden" was obtained from the GRO in England by the Brough Family Organization in February 2019, and states that he died from "Pneumonia" on 17 February 1871 at "29 Henley Street, Battersea, County of Surrey, England, that he died when he was "59 Years" old (born about 1812), that his "Occupation" was that of an "Annuitant", and that the informant of his death was "M. Wills, Present at the Death".
In 1825, Ellen Brough was born in Lane End, Staffordshire, England, on about 9 January 1825. This location is often referred to as "Lane End, Longton". For example: "Lane End, Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire: Confusion often arises over the location and names of Lane End and Longton. Originally they were two separate and contiguous townships which were incorporated in the Borough of Longton in 1865. Longton was adjacent to Longton Hall and encompassed the Longton Hall Colliery and Brickworks. Even in 1900 the area was mainly fields. Lane End was centered on the area around Market Street and the bottom part of Anchor Road and contained the Markets, Churches and main potworks." (Source: http://www.thepotteries.org/did_you/009.htm)
The 1825 birth of "Ellen Brough" is listed in the LDS Salt Lake Temple Ordinance Records (FHL Film # 184086, 2nd Floor U.S. Section), which states that she was born on 9 January 1825 in Lane End, Longton, Staffordshire. This information was submitted by her younger sister, Elizabeth Brough Tipton, who performed the following LDS ordinances for Ellen: LDS Baptism on 13 November 1894, and LDS Endowment on 16 November 1894.
The 1825 christening of Ellen Brough is listed in the parish register of St. John, Longton, Staffordshire, England (FHL Film # 1471086, Item #12), which states that she was christened on 9 January 1825 as the daughter of Richard and Mary Brough of Lane End, and that Richard Brough was a "Labourer".
In the 1841 Census, "Ellen Brough" is listed as being 16 years old (born about 1825), born in Staffordshire, working as a "Potter Apps", and residing with her parents, Richard Brough (age 55) and Mary (age 45), and her siblings, at: 28 Sutherland Road, Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England.
In the 1853, "Ellen Brough" is listed in the birth certificate of her daughter Ellen Brough, as follows: The 1853 birth certificate of "Ellen Brough" was obtained from the GRO in England by the Brough Family Organization in March 2026, and states that she was born on 4 January 1853 at Caldewgate Workhouse, St. Mary (subdistrict), Carlisle (district), Cumberland, England, and that her mother's name was "Ellen Brough". (Note: The name of the father is not listed on the birth certificate.)
The 1862 marriage record of "John Ogden" and "Ellen Brough" is listed in the parish record of St. Mary, Lambeth, Surrey, England (FHL Film # 1041669), which marriage record states that they were married by Banns on 30 May 1862 in St. Mary, Lambeth; that John Ogden was "of full age" and a "Widower" and "Labourer" of "New Cut", and that his father was "James Ogden (deceased)", a "Hatter; and that Ellen Brough was "of full age" and a "Spinster" of "New Cut", and that her father was "Richard Brough", a "Brick Maker". The marriage was witnessed by Henry Hilliard and Sarah Hilliard. Note: "New Cut [now called 'The Cut'] is a street in London which runs between Waterloo Road in Lambeth and Blackfriars Road in Southwark. [It] formed the commercial heart of the area from the early 19th century." (Source: Wikipedia: "The Cut, London".)
The 1879 death certificate of "Ellen Ogden" was obtained from the GRO in England by the Brough Family Organization in December 2018, and states that she died on 11 October 1879 at "57 Heath Road" in "Clapham", "County of Surrey", England; that she was "54" years old (born about 1825) when she died of "Ashma and Heart disease"; that she was the "Widow of John Ogden" a "General Labourer"; and that the informant of her death was "Ellen Roberts, Daughter, present at the death" that took place at "51 Heath Road, Clapham". Also, the death of "Ellen Ogden" is listed in the online GRO Index and FreeBMD, which combined states that her death was registered in October-December 1879 in Wandsworth district, Surrey, England, and that she died when she was "54" years old. Note: Elizabeth Brough Tipton--a younger sister of Ellen Brough---performed an LDS Sealing of Ellen Brough to her parents, Richard Brough and Mary Horleston, on 28 February 1895 in the Salt Lake Temple, during which Elizabeth indicated that Ellen Brough had died "about 1885" (see FHL Film # 184652, in Special Collections).
The 1879 burial of "Ellen Ogden" is listed in the "Norwood Cemetery, Norwood Road, Lambeth" records (via Ancestry.com), which states that she was buried on "15 October 1879" in the Norwood Cemetery, that she was of "51 Heath Road, Clapham", and that she died when she was "54" years old (born about 1825). Also, the burial of "Ellen Ogden" is listed in FamilySearch (FHL Film # 1519472), which states that she was buried on 15 October 1879 in Lambeth, Surrey, England, and that she died when she was "54" years old (born about 1825).
Brief History of Ellen Brough and Her Descendants
Ellen Brough (1825-1879), the eldest daughter of Richard Brough (1786-1873) and Mary Horleston (1795-1879), was born in Lane End, Longton, Staffordshire, England. Between 1841 and 1851, Ellen moved from Longton, Staffordshire to Westminster, London, probably because her uncle, William Parrott Brough (1783-1853), and his family, had already settled in the Middlesex (London) area in the 1820’s.
In 1853, Ellen Brough had a daughter, also named Ellen Brough (1853-1918), who was born in Carlisle, Cumberland, England.
In 1862, Ellen (the mother), married John Ogden, at St. Mary, Lambeth, Surrey. In 1841, John Ogden worked as a “Hatter”. John Ogden died in 1871 in Wandsworth Surrey, and his wife, Ellen Brough Ogden, died in 1879 in Wandsworth, Surrey. Ellen is buried in an unmarked “common grave site” in West Norwood Cemetery in Lambeth, Surrey.
In 1868, Ellen (the daughter)--who was listed as "Helen Ogden Brough" on her marriage record--married William Burdock Roberts (1849-1915), at St. Paul Wilton Place, Middlesex, England. William worked as a “Mason” and he and Ellen had four children: William Frederick Roberts (1868-1870), Eliza Roberts (b.1870), John Roberts (1871-1871), and Henry Ogden Roberts (1873-1945).
Eliza Roberts (b.1870) married Charles Edward West (b.1864) in 1894 in Wandsworth London. Charles worked as a “Carman” and he and Eliza had a son: Edward Henry West (b.1898). (Historical note: A “Carman” drove a horse-drawn vehicle and was often employed by railway companies to deliver and collect goods and packages.)
Henry Ogden Roberts (1873-1945) married his first wife, Edith Cullen (1875-1909), in 1894 in Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire. Henry worked as a “Gas Stoker” and he and Edith had one daughter: Edith Eliza Roberts (b.1896). After Edith died (in 1909), Henry married his second wife, Elizabeth Mary Grant (1884-1916), in 1916 in Thanet, Kent. They also had a daughter: Ethel Ellen Pauline Roberts (1917-1979).
At the present time the Brough Family Organization is continuing to research the descendants and relatives of Ellen Brough (1825-1879).
Marriage Notes for John Ogden and Ellen Brough-75
The 1862 marriage record of "John Ogden" and "Ellen Brough" is listed in the parish record of St. Mary, Lambeth, Surrey, England (FHL Film # 1041669), which marriage record states that they were married by Banns on 30 May 1862 in St. Mary, Lambeth; that John Ogden was "of full age" and a "Widower" and "Labourer" of "New Cut", and that his father was "James Ogden (deceased)", a "Hatter; and that Ellen Brouigh was "of full age" and a "Spinster" of "New Cut", and that her father was "Richard Brough", a "Brick Maker". The marriage was witnessed by Henry Hilliard and Sarah Hilliard. Note: "New Cut [now called 'The Cut'] is a street in London which runs between Waterloo Road in Lambeth and Blackfriars Road in Southwark. [It] formed the commercial heart of the area from the early 19th century." (Source: Wikipedia: "The Cut, London".)
The christening of Richard Brough is listed in the parish register of St. John, Longton, Staffordshire, England (FHL Film # 1471086, Item #12), which states that he was christened on 23 September 1827 as the son of Richard and Mary Brough of Lane End, and that Richard Brough was a "Brickmaker".
In the 1841 Census, Richard Brough is listed as being about 13 years old (born about 1828), born in Staffordshire, working as a "Miner [of] Iron", and residing with his parents, Richard and Mary Brough, at: 28 Sutherland Road, Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire.
The marriage of Richard Brough and Rosannah Myatt is listed in the Bishop's Transcripts for Fulford Chapel, Stone, Staffordshire (FHL Film # 426546), which states that they were married by Banns on 2 August 1846; that Richd [Richard] Brough was of "full age" and a Bachelor and Collier of Star and Garter [Road], and that his father was Richd [Richard] Brough, a Brickmaker; and that Rosanna Myatt was of "full age" and a Spinster of Star and Garter [Road], and that her father was Thos [Thomas] Myatt, a Pot Sellor. The marriage was witnessed by James Brian and Edwd [Edward] Baker. Background Information about Fulford Chapel: Source: https://www.stnicholascenter.org/gazetteer/585/ : "St. Nicholas Parish Church, Fulford-in-Stone, Staffordshire, England, UK (Church of England - Anglican): A chapel has been on the site since the 14th century. The present church, built in 1825, replaced an older, smaller chapel. In the early 1800s Fulford was the Gretna Green of North Staffordshire as many runaway couples, mostly from Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, were married in St.Nicholas Church. Around 1872 it was discovered that the new Church of St. Nicholas had not been consecrated or licensed for the solemnisation of marriages. An Act of Parliament passed in 1873 stated that marriages conducted there should be deemed legal and St. Nicholas was duly consecrated and licensed for marriages.https://www.stnicholascenter.org/gazetteer/585/ . Source: https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Fulford,_Staffordshire_Genealogy : "Fulford St Nicholas is an Ecclesiastical Parish in the county of Staffordshire, created in 1774 from chapelry in Stone, Staffordshire Ancient Parish. Fulford, a chapelry, in the parish and union of Stone, S. division of the hundred of Pirehill, N. division of the county of Stafford, 4¾ miles (N.E.) from Stone."
In the 1851 Census, Richard Brough is listed as being about 23 years old (born about 1828), born in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, married to "Susannah"--which was apparently a mistake by the census-taker for her correct given-name of Rosannah, working as a Coal Miner, and residing with his wife and children on: Stone Road in Blurton, Trentham, Staffordshire.
In the 1861 Census, Richard Brough is listed as being about 33 years old (born about 1828), born in Longton, Stafforsdshire, married to "Rosanna", working as a Beer Seller, and residing with his wife and children at: 16 & 18 Russell Street, Longton, Staffordshire.
In the 1871 Census, Richard Brough is listed as being about 44 years old (born about 1827), born in Longton, Staffordshire, married to "Rose", working as a Brick-burner, and residing with his wife and their daughter's Annie and Sarah, along with son-in-law's John Kelshall and Thomas Lockett (and grandson John Lockett) at: 16 & 18 Russell Street, Longton, Staffordshire.
In the 1881 Census, the wife of Richard Brough, "Rosette Brough", is listed as being about 57 years old (born about 1824), born in Trentham, Staffordshire, still "married" (although her husband Richard is not listed with her), and residing as a "mother in law" with John and Ann Kellsall on: Spring Road, Normacott, Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire. Note: Richard Brough has not yet been found in the 1881 Census.
According to Samuel Richard Brough missionary journal (Book F, page 84), he states that on Monday, November 10, 1890, he "visited Aunt Rose (widow) [of] Uncle Richard Brough...." So Richard Brough died sometime between 1881 (when his wife still listed herself as "married" in the 1881 Census) and 1890. (Note: Richard's wife listed herself as a "Widow" in the 1891 Census.)
Research Note: In April 2021, Adrian Brough of Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, personally visited the Holy Evangelists Church in Normacot, Staffordshire, and viewed the graves that were still visible in the church graveyard--which churchyard was in poor condition. Unfortunately he could not find the grave of Rosannah Brough (nee Myatt) and/or her husband, Richard Brough.
The christening of Rosannah Myatt is listed in the parish register of St. John, Lane End (Longton), Staffordshire (FHL Film # 1471086, p. 65), which states that she was christened on 23 May 1824 as the daughter of Thomas Myatt and Jane.
The marriage of Richard Brough and Rosannah Myatt is listed in the Bishop's Transcripts for Fulford Chapel, Stone, Staffordshire (FHL Film # 426546), which states that they were married by Banns on 2 August 1846; that Richd [Richard] Brough was of "full age" and a Bachelor and Collier of Star and Garter [Road], and that his father was Richd [Richard] Brough, a Brickmaker; and that Rosanna Myatt was of "full age" and a Spinster of Star and Garter [Road], and that her father was Thos [Thomas] Myatt, a Pot Sellor. The marriage was witnessed by James Brian and Edwd [Edward] Baker. Background Information about Fulford Chapel: Source: https://www.stnicholascenter.org/gazetteer/585/ : "St. Nicholas Parish Church, Fulford-in-Stone, Staffordshire, England, UK (Church of England - Anglican): A chapel has been on the site since the 14th century. The present church, built in 1825, replaced an older, smaller chapel. In the early 1800s Fulford was the Gretna Green of North Staffordshire as many runaway couples, mostly from Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, were married in St.Nicholas Church. Around 1872 it was discovered that the new Church of St. Nicholas had not been consecrated or licensed for the solemnisation of marriages. An Act of Parliament passed in 1873 stated that marriages conducted there should be deemed legal and St. Nicholas was duly consecrated and licensed for marriages.https://www.stnicholascenter.org/gazetteer/585/ . Source: https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Fulford,_Staffordshire_Genealogy : "Fulford St Nicholas is an Ecclesiastical Parish in the county of Staffordshire, created in 1774 from chapelry in Stone, Staffordshire Ancient Parish. Fulford, a chapelry, in the parish and union of Stone, S. division of the hundred of Pirehill, N. division of the county of Stafford, 4¾ miles (N.E.) from Stone."
In the 1851 Census, Rosannah (Brough) is listed as being named "Susannah"--which was apparently a mistake by the census-taker for her correct given-name of Rosannah--and being about 26 years old (born about 1825), born in Trentham, Staffordshire, married to Richard Brough, and residing with her husband and children on: Stone Road, Blurton, Trentham, Staffordshire.
In the 1861 Census, "Rosanna" (Brough) is listed as being about 36 years old (born about 1825), born in Longton, Stafforsdshire, married to Richard Brough, working as a Potter, and residing with her husband and children at: 16 & 18 Russell Street, Longton, Staffordshire.
In the 1871 Census, "Rose" (Brough) is listed as being about 47 years old (born about 1824), born in Longton, Staffordshire, married to Richard Brough, and residing with her husband and their daughter's Annie and Sarah, along with son-in-law's John Kelshall and Thomas Lockett (and grandson John Lockett) at: 16 & 18 Russell Street, Longton, Staffordshire.
In the 1881 Census, "Rosette Brough" is listed as being about 57 years old (born about 1824), born in Trentham, Staffordshire, still "married" (although her husband Richard is not listed with her), and residing as a "mother in law" with John and Ann Kellsall on: Spring Road, Normacott, Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire.
In the 1891 Census, "Rosanna Brough" is listed as being about 70 years old (born about 1821), born in Longton, Staffordshire, and "living on her own means" as a "Widow" with her daughter Ann and son-in-law John Kelsall at: "60 Anchor Road, Longton".
In December 2012, the BFO obtained a copy of the death certificate of Rosannah Brough from England, which stated that she died on 20 June 1892 at 60 Anchor Road, Longton, Staffordshire, that she died when she was "64 years " old (born about 1828) from "Inflammation of Corcum", that she was the "Widow of Richard Brough a brickmaker", and that the informant of her death was "Ann Kelsall, daughter, present at the death [at] 60 Anchor Road, Longton".
The burial of "Rosannah Myatt" is listed and shown in FamilySearch (FHL Film # 100960096), which states that she was buried on 23 June 1892 at the Church of the Holy Evangelists in Normacot, Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire, England, that her "Abode" was "60 Anchor Road, Longton", and that she died when she was "64" years old (born about 1828). (Note: Church of the Holy Evangelists is located at: 99 Upper Belgrave Rd. Stoke-on-Trent, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, ST3 4QL England.)
Research Note: In April 2021, Adrian Brough of Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, personally visited the Holy Evangelists Church in Normacot, Staffordshire, and viewed the graves that were still visible in the church graveyard--which churchyard was in poor condition. Unfortunately he could not find the grave of Rosannah Brough (nee Myatt) and/or her husband, Richard Brough.
Research Note: Marie B. Nielson, RBFO Genealogist, did extensive research on the Myatt line in 2003-2004, and discovered that the Broughs and Myatts have multiple family cconnections. For example, Rosannah Myatt's father was Thomas Myatt (b.1790). Thomas Myatt's parents were Thomas Myatt (b.1764) and Margaret Brough (b.1772). Margaret Brough's father was John Brough (b.1732). John Brough's (b.1732) father was John Brough (b.1705). John Brough's (b.1705) father was John Brough (b.1672). John Brough's (b.1672) father was Richard Brough (b.1620) of Kingsley and New Grange, Staffordshire, England. Interestingly, Richard Brough (b.1620) was also the direct ancestor of Richard Brough (b.1786) who married Mary Horleston, and whose child, Richard Brough (b. 1827), married Rosannah Myatt in 1846.
Marriage Notes for Richard Brough and Rosannah Myatt-88
The marriage of Richard Brough and Rosannah Myatt is listed in the Bishop's Transcripts for Fulford Chapel, Stone, Staffordshire (FHL Film # 426546), which states that they were married by Banns on 2 August 1846; that Richd [Richard] Brough was of "full age" and a Bachelor and Collier of Star and Garter [Road], and that his father was Richd [Richard] Brough, a Brickmaker; and that Rosanna Myatt was of "full age" and a Spinster of Star and Garter [Road], and that her father was Thos [Thomas] Myatt, a Pot Sellor. The marriage was witnessed by James Brian and Edwd [Edward] Baker. Background Information about Fulford Chapel: Source: https://www.stnicholascenter.org/gazetteer/585/ : "St. Nicholas Parish Church, Fulford-in-Stone, Staffordshire, England, UK (Church of England - Anglican): A chapel has been on the site since the 14th century. The present church, built in 1825, replaced an older, smaller chapel. In the early 1800s Fulford was the Gretna Green of North Staffordshire as many runaway couples, mostly from Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, were married in St.Nicholas Church. Around 1872 it was discovered that the new Church of St. Nicholas had not been consecrated or licensed for the solemnisation of marriages. An Act of Parliament passed in 1873 stated that marriages conducted there should be deemed legal and St. Nicholas was duly consecrated and licensed for marriages.https://www.stnicholascenter.org/gazetteer/585/ . Source: https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Fulford,_Staffordshire_Genealogy : "Fulford St Nicholas is an Ecclesiastical Parish in the county of Staffordshire, created in 1774 from chapelry in Stone, Staffordshire Ancient Parish. Fulford, a chapelry, in the parish and union of Stone, S. division of the hundred of Pirehill, N. division of the county of Stafford, 4¾ miles (N.E.) from Stone."
The birth certificate for "William Brough" states that he was born on 27 March 1850 on John Street in Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, and was the son of "Richard Brough" and "Rossanah Brough formerly Myatt."
In the 1851 Census, "William Brough" is listed as being about 1 year old (born about 1850), born in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, and residing as a "son" with her parents "Richard Brough" and "Susannah"--which was apparently a mistake by the census-taker for her correct given-name of Rosannah (Myatt), on: Stone Road in Blurton, Trentham, Staffordshire.
The burial of "William Brough" is listed in the parish register of St. James, Longton, Staffordshire (FHL Film # 1471086), which states that he was buried on 12 February 1854 at St. James church in Longton, Staffordshire, that he was of "Normicott", and that he was "3" years old when he died.
William is not listed with the family of Richard and Rosannah Brough in the 1861 Census, FHL Film # 542891, p.26, which suggests that he died prior to the census.
Birth Certificate states that "Thomas Brough" was born on 21 April 1852 at Stone Road, Trentham, Staffordshire, England, and that his father was "Richard Brough" (a brickmaker) and his mother was "Rosannah Brough, formerly Myatt." A copy of the Birth Certificate is in possession of Marie B. Nielson, RBFO Research Committee.
The burial of "Thomas Brough" is listed in the parish register of St. James, Longton, Staffordshire, England (FHL Film # 1471086, Item #5), which states that he was buried on 18 December 1853 at St. James church in Longton, Staffordshire, that he was of "Blurton Parish", and that he was "1 year 8 months" old when he died.
Thomas is not listed with the family of Richard and Rosannah Brough in the 1861 Census, FHL Film # 542891, p.26, which suggests that he died prior to the census.
The 1824 birth and 1828 christening of "Joseph Hinton Smith" is listed in the IGI (via FHL Film # 825395), which states that he was born on 8 November 1824 and christened on 6 January 1828 at: Bethesda Chapel, Albion Street, Methodist New Connextion, Shelton, Staffordshire, England, and that his parents were Thomas Smith and Ellener Thorn.
In November 2012, the BFO obtained a copy of the death certificate of "Joseph Smith" from England, which stated that he died of "Apoplexy" on 1 July 1871 at: 51 Wood Street, Longton, Staffordshire; that he was "47 years" old when he died (born about 1824); that he was a "Potter" and "Thrower"; and that the informant of his death was "Ann Whitehouse" of "Raglan Street, Fenton" who was "present at his death".
In the 1861 Census, "Joseph Smith" is listed as being 36 years old (born about 1825), born in Hanley, Staffordshire, married and working as a "Potters China Thrower", and residing with his wife, Adria, and their two children (Sarah Ann Smith and Joseph B. Smith), at: 20 Park Hall Street, Longton, Staffordshire.
In the 1871 Census, "Joseph Smith" is listed as being 45 years old (born about 1826), born in Hanley, Staffordshire, a "Widower" working as a "Potter Thrower", and residing with his three children (Sarah A. B. Smith, Joseph B. Smith, and Lucy Smith), at: 51 Wood Street, Longton, Staffordshire.
Research Note: Some of the genealogical information on Joseph Hinton Smith was initially provided by Marie B. Neilson to R. Clayton Brough, on August 23, 2002. See FHL Film # 825395.
The 1831 christening of "Adry Brough" is listed in the parish register of St. John, Longton, Staffordshire, England (FHL Film # 1471087, Item #1), which states that she was christened on 13 March 1831 as the daughter of Richard and Mary Brough of Lane End, and that Richard Brough was a "Brickmaker".
In the 1841 Census, "Adra Brough" is listed with her parents and siblings as follows:
Richard and Mary Brough were living at: 28 Sutherland Road, Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England:
Richard Brough, age 55, Male, Occupation: Pen [Pensioner], Born: Staffordshire
Mary (Brough), age 45, Female, Born: Staffordshire
Ellen Brough, age 16, Female, Occupation: Potter Apps., Born: Staffordshire
John Hollison, age 22, Male, Occupation: Pott[er], Born: Staffordshire
Richard Brough, age 13, Male, Occupation: Miner Iron, Born: Staffordshire
William, age 11, Male, Occupation: Miner Iron, Born: Staffordshire
Thomas, age 9, Male, Occupation: App. Potter; Born: Staffordshire
Adra, age 8, Female, Born: Staffordshire
Elizabeth, age 7, Female, Born: Staffordshire
Mary, age 5, Female, Born: Staffordshire
Samuel, age 7/10 months, Born: StaffordshireIn 1857, Adry [or Adria] Brough (Smith) was baptized a member of the LDS Church on 25 April 1857 by C.C. Shaw of the LDS Longton Branch, Staffordshire, England. FHL Film # 0087016.
In the 1861 Census, "Adria Smith" is listed as being 30 years old (born about 1831), born in Longton, Staffordshire, married and working as a "Potters China Figurer", and residing with her husband, Joseph Smith, and their two children (Sarah Ann Smith and Joseph B. Smith), at: 20 Park Hall Street, Longton, Staffordshire.
The death certificate of "Adria Smith" was obtained in August 2020 from the GRO by the Brough Family Organization. It states that "Adria Smith" died on 7 April 1863 at "Wood Street" in Longton, Staffordshire, that she died of "Phthisis" (or tuberculosis) when she was "34 years" old (born about 1829), that she was the "wife of Joseph Smith" a "Pot Thrower", and that the informant of her death was "Lucy Smith" (her daughter) who was "Present at the death" which took place at Wood Street in Longton, Staffordshire. The death certificate was registered on 11 April 1863 by L.P. Goddard, Registrar.
The burial of "Adria Smith" is listed in the parish register of St. James, Longton, Staffordshire (FHL Film # 1471086, Item #6), which states that she was buried on 12 April 1863 when she was "34 years" old (born about 1829) and that she was of "Longton".
Marriage Notes for Joseph Hinton Smith and Adry Brough-78
In November 2012, James H. Brough of Alsager, Staffordshire, England, provided the BFO with information from the marriage certificate of "Joseph Hinton Smith" and "Adria Brough", which stated that they were married on 29 May 1852 in St. Peter, Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire; that Joseph Hinton Smith was of "full" age and a Bachelor and [Pottery] Thrower of Fenton, and that his father was Thomas Smith, a [Pottery] Turner; and that Adria Brough was of "full" age and a Spinster of Fenton, and that her father was Richard Brough, a Brick Maker. The marriage was witnessed by Charles Smith and Lucy Hinton.
The 1849 birth certificate of "Joseph Brough" was obtained from the GRO in England by the Brough Family Organization in November 2024, and states that he was born on 4 April 1869 in "Upper Hill Street" in Longton, Staffordshire, England, and that his mother was "Adria Brough" also of "Upper Hill Street in Longton. No father is listed in the birth certificate. However, location and patronymics suggest that Joseph Brough may have been the son of Joseph Hinton Smith, who married Adria Brough in 1852 in Longton.
The 1849 death certificate of "Joseph Brough" was obtained from the GRO in England by the Brough Family Organization in November 2024, and states that he died on 8 April 1849 at Sutherland Road in Longton, Staffordshire, England, that he was the son of "Adria Brough" and that he died when he was "4 days" old from "Premature" conditions, and that the informant of his death was "Mary Brough" who was "Present at the Death" in Sutherland Road, Longton.
The 1849 burial of "Joseph Brough" is listed in FamilySearch (FHL Film # 1471086), which states that he was buried on 10 April 1849 at St. James church in Longton, Staffordshire, England, and that his abode had been "Upper Hill Street" in Longton and that died when he was an "Infant".
The 1859 birth certificate of "Thomas Smith" was obtained from the GRO in England by the Brough Family Organization in November 2024, and states that he was born on 14 September 1859 at "Park Hall Street" in Longton, Staffordshire, England, and that his parents were "Joseph Smith" a "China Thrower" and "Adria Smith formerly Brough".
The 1859 death certificate of "Thomas Smith" was obtained from the GRO in England by the Brough Family Organization in November 2024, and states that he died on 14 September 1859 at "Park Hall Street" in Longton, Staffordshire, England, and that he was the "Son of Joseph Smith" a "China Thrower" and died "11 hours" after he was born from "Debility" and that the informant of his death was "Joseph Smith in attendance" at Park Hall Street, Longton.
The 1860 birth certificate of "Charles Smith" was obtained from the GRO in England by the Brough Family Organization in November 2024, and states that he was born on 13 November 1860 at "Park Hall Street" in Longton, Staffordshire, England, and that his parents were "Joseph Smith" a "Pot Thrower" and "Adria Smith formerly Brough".
The 1861 death certificate of "Charles Smith" was obtained from the GRO in England by the Brough Family Organization in November 2024, and states that he died on 24 March 1861 at "Park Hall Street" in Longton, Staffordshire, England, and that he was the "Son of Joseph Smith" a "China Thrower" and died "14 months" after he was born from "Muco Enteritis" and that the informant of his death was "Joseph Smith [who was] Present at the death" at Park Hall Street, Longton.
The 1860 birth of "Charles Smith" is listed in the online GRO Index and Staffordshire BMD, which combined states that his birth was registered in October-December 1860 in Longton subdistrict, Stoke upon Trent district, Staffordshire, England, and that his mother's surname was "Brough".The 1861 death of "Charles Smith" is listed in the online GRO Index and Staffordshire BMD, which combined states that his death was registered in January-March 1861 in Longton subdistrict, Stoke upon Trent district, Staffordshire, England, and that he died when he was "0" years old--or under the age of one year old.
The christening of "Samuel Cartlidge" is listed in FamilySearch (FHL Film # 825393: RG4 3298), which states that he was christened on 5 February 1832 in High Street Chapel or Lower Chapel Wesleyan, Longton, Staffordshire, England, and that his parents were John Cartlidge and Mary.
In the 1841 British Census, "Samuel Cartlidge" is listed as being 10 years old (born about 1831), born in Staffordshire, and residing with his apparent parents, John Cartlidge (age 40 and a "Coal Miner") and Mary (age 39), and five apparent siblings (Joseph--age 17, Margarett--age 14, John--age 12 Horatia--age 8, and Eliza--age 3), in High Street, Longton, Staffordshire.
In the 1851 British Census, Samuel Cartledge is listed as being about 19 years old (born about 1832), born in Longton, Staffordshire, working as a "Miner" and residing as a "Lodger" in Wigan, Longton, Staffordshire.
In August 2007, the RBFO obtained a copy of the marriage certificate of Samuel Cartlidge and Elizabeth Brough, which stated that they were married on 25 January 1852 at St. Peter's Church, Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire, and that at the time of their marriage, Samuel Cartlidge was of "full age" and a "Bachelor" and "Collier" and that his father was John Cartlidge (a Collier), and that Elizabeth Brough was of "full age" and a "Spinster" of "Fenton" and that her father was Richard Brough (a Brickmaker), and their marriage was witnessed by Thomas Brough and Mary Ann Brough--who were Elizabeth's brother and sister.
In the 1860 U.S. Census, "Samuel Carthaledge" is listed as being 29 years old (born about 1831), born in England, working as a "Coal Miner", and residing with his wife, Elizabeth (age 26), at: Upper Alton (post office), Madison Co., Illinois.
In 1863, a “Samuel Cartlidge” was listed in the "U.S. Civil War Draft Registrations Records, 1863-1865“ (via Ancestry.com), which stated that he was “subject to do military duty” in “June and July, 1863” in the 12th Congressional District of Illinois--which included the counties of Clinton, Madison, Monroe, Randolph St. Clair and Washington--and that he was about "33" years old on "1st July 1863" (born about 1830), "White", a "Col[l]ier", "married", born in "England“, and residing at “Wood River Coal” in Madison Co., Illinois. This individual may be the same “Samuel Cartlidge” who married “Elizabeth Brough” in 1852 in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England. For instance: 1) Samuel is listed as a “Collier” in his 1852 marriage record, similarly as a “Coal Miner” in the 1860 U.S. Census, and again as a “Col[l]ier” in the above shown 1863 record; 2) Samuel is listed in the above shown 1863 record as still being officially “married”--which would fit into the facts that Elizabeth filed for divorce from Samuel on 9 February 1864 and stated in May 1864 that he had earlier “left her” on 25 February 1861 and “has ever since remained absent and has absconded and gone to England and is now living with another woman”; and 3) Samuel and Elizabeth are listed as residing in Upper Alton, Madison Co., Illinois, in the 1860 U.S. Census, while Samuel is listed as residing in Wood River Coal, Madison, Co., Illinois, in the above shown 1863 record, and the travel distance between Upper Alton and Wood River is only about four miles.
On February 9, 1864, "Elizabeth [Brough] Cartlidge" filed for divorce from Samuel Cartlidge in Madison County, Illinois. In May 1864, Elizabeth's court record stated that her reasons for requesting a divorce from Samuel included: "That on or about the 15th day of February A.D. 1853 she [Elizabeth] was lawfully married to one Samuel Cartlidge [which marriage actually took place on 25 January 1852 at St. Peter's church in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England] and lived with him discharging all her duties as a faithful prudent and affectionate wife, until the 25th of February AD 1861 at which time without any just cause or provocations the said defendant [Samuel] left her and has ever since remained absent and has absconded and gone to England and is now living with another woman. ...[And] that the said defendant has willfully deserted and absented himself from" her "for now these 2 years and that she had one living child by said defendant, to wit, Josephine Cartlidge who is 3 years old, and that the said defendant has made no provisions for her or said child for said 3 years and is fully determined never to live with" her "again under any status or circumstances".
Samuel and Elizabeth Cartlidge departed from England on 25 May 1856 and arrived in Boston 30 June 1856 on the ship Horizon with her brother Thomas and his wife Jane Patterson and children.
The US Census, dated 11 July 1860, Upper Alton, Madison, Illinois, USA, states:
Samuel Carthaledge, 28, Male, Coal Miner, birthplace: England
Elizabeth, 26, Female, birthplace: EnglandSamuel Cartlidge is not in the 1870 census for Illinois, WY or UT. The 1870 census reads that Elizabeth had married Enoch Tipton and the family then consisted of Josephine age 9 and Eva age 2.
In May 1864, Elizabeth Brough--who married Enoch Tipton on 20 February 1864--stated that on "25th of February AD 1861" Samuel Cartlidge had "absconded and gone to England and is now living with another woman." Based on Elizabeth's statement, Samuel Cartlidge possibly died in England sometime after May 1864.
History of Elizabeth Brough (1834-1896) and her two Husbands: Samuel Cartlidge and Enoch Tipton. Originally written by Lezlie Ann Anderson and John M. Broughin July 2004; updated by R. Clayton Brough in May 2021.
Elizabeth Brough was born on 17 May 1834 to Richard Brough and Mary Horleston in Lane End, Longton, Staffordshire, England. She was christened on 1 June 1834 in St. John's Parish Church (of England), Lane End, Longton. In 1840, Elizabeth Brough's father, Richard Brough, had joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (L.D.S. Church), and when Elizabeth was 13 years old she decided to join her father's new-found religion and became the first child of Richard Brough and Mary Horleston to join the L.D.S. Church. Elizabeth was baptized into the L.D.S. Church on 17 May 1847 in the L.D.S. Longton Branch.
On 25 January 1852, Elizabeth married Samuel Cartlidge in St. Peter, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire (Samuel Cartlidge was christened in 1832 in Longton, Staffordshire). By 1856, she and Samuel, along with her older brother Thomas Brough and his wife Jean (Jane) Paterson and their two children, prepared to leave their native England to emigrate to America, where they wanted to join the rest of the L.D.S. "Saints" in Utah.
On 25 May 1856, Elizabeth Brough and Samuel Cartlidge, along with Thomas Brough and Jane and their two children, left on the ship Horizon, from Liverpool, England. The Horizon was commanded by a Captain Reid, and the "Mormon company" aboard this vessel was under the direction of Edward Martin. Aboard the Horizon there were 692 adults, 136 children and 26 infants, totaling 854 passengers. Thomas and Jane and their children-and possibly Elizabeth and Samuel-paid their own fares and were therefore booked as ordinary passengers, while the majority of the Mormon immigrants aboard were funded by the Perpetual Emigration Fund of the L.D.S. Church. The ship Horizon reached Boston Harbor, Massachusetts, on 30 June 1856.
Shortly after arriving in the northeastern United States, Thomas's money ran out, and he and Jane were forced to stop in Pennsylvania where Thomas then worked just long enough in the surrounding coal mines to obtain enough money to get him and his family to Madison County, Illinois. It is possible that Elizabeth and Samuel went with Thomas Brough and his family to Pennsylvania because Samuel Cartlidge and Thomas Brough were both described as "Coal Miners" in the 1860 Census.
By the middle of 1857, Thomas and Jane Brough had settled in, Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois. There Thomas rented a farm, and for the next seven years, from 1857 to 1864, he grew corn and raised hogs and other farm animals. Also in 1857, Elizabeth and Samuel moved to Illinois, where their first child, Mary Jane, was born on 14 December 1857 in Bellville, St. Clair, Illinois. Unfortunately, Mary Jane's health was very poor and she died the following year, in 1858.
In 1860, Elizabeth and Samuel Cartlidge were living in the same area of Illinois as was Thomas and Jane Brough. According to the 1860 Census, both families were living in Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois on 11 July 1860. Two months after the Census was taken, Elizabeth gave birth to their second child, Josephine Cartlidge, on 7 September 1860, in Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois. Unfortunately, in February 1861, Samuel deserted his wife and daughter and reportedly returned to England. On 9 February 1864, Elizabeth filed for divorce from Samuel Cartlidge. (Note: There is no record of Samuel Cartlidge ever joining the LDS Church.)
On 20 February 1864, Elizabeth married Enoch Tipton in Madison County, Illinois. (Enoch Tipton was born in 1835 in Asterley, Pontesbury, Shroprshire, England, and baptized into the L.D.S. Church in April 1854. Enoch and his brother, Elijah, and Elijah's wife Emma and their one-year old daughter, Sarah, came on the same ship "Horizon" as did Elizabeth Brough and Samuel Cartlidge. In 1860, Enoch Tipton was residing--along with his widowed mother, Sarah Tipton--in Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois. In fact, it appears from the 1860 Census report that Elizabeth Brough and Samuel Cartlidge, Thomas Brough and Jean (Jane) Paterson, and Enoch Tipton, all lived in close proximity to each other while they resided in Bethalto, Madison, Illinois. Also, Thomas Brough and Enoch Tipton were living "next door" to each other while residing in Bethalto.)
Sometime between 1864 and 1867, Elizabeth and Enoch Tipton left Illinois for Utah. (Note: Thomas and Jane Brough made the three month trip to Utah between 15 June 1864 and 18 September 1864.) They are considered as being Mormon Pioneers because they arrived in Utah prior to the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad in 1869.
Elizabeth Brough and Enoch Tipton had their first child, Eva Nell, on 2 October 1867 in West Porterville, Utah. In 1871, Elizabeth's younger brother, Samuel Brough, had moved his wife (Elizabeth Bott) and family from Porterville to Randolph. During the summer, Samuel Brough was a farmer and brickmaker, but during the winter he went to Almy, Wyoming to work in the coal mines. Like Samuel Brough, Enoch Tipton may have also done something similar, for Enoch is listed in the 1870 Census as a "Farmer" and in the 1880 Census as a "Coal Miner." On 1 October 1872, Elizabeth gave birth to their second child, William Enoch, in Almy, Wyoming.
In the mid 1870's, Elizabeth and Enoch were still residing in Randolph, where their third and last child, John Tipton, was born on 26 March 1875. Unfortunately, John died two days later on March 28.
In the 1880 Census, Elizabeth and Enoch are listed as living in Kaysville, Utah-where Enoch probably assisted Thomas and Samuel Brough at the Brough Brick Yard located in east Kaysville. Also, the 1880 Census reports that their family then consisted of three children: Josephine (Cartlidge), Eva Nell and William Enoch.
Enoch Tipton died on 21 June 1888. Elizabeth Brough Tipton died on 15 February 1896. They were both buried in the center of the Randolph City Cemetery.
Elizabeth Brough was born in Lane End, Staffordshire, England, on 17 May 1834. This location is often referred to as "Lane End, Longton". For example: "Lane End, Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire: Confusion often arises over the location and names of Lane End and Longton. Originally they were two separate and contiguous townships which were incorporated in the Borough of Longton in 1865. Longton was adjacent to Longton Hall and encompassed the Longton Hall Colliery and Brickworks. Even in 1900 the area was mainly fields. Lane End was centered on the area around Market Street and the bottom part of Anchor Road and contained the Markets, Churches and main potworks." (Source: http://www.thepotteries.org/did_you/009.htm)
The christening of "Eliz. Brough" is listed in the parish register of St. John, Longton, Staffordshire, England (FHL Film # 1471087, Item #1), which states that she was christened on 1 June 1834 as the daughter of Richard and Mary Brough of Lane End, and that Richard Brough was a "Collier"--which occupational listing was probably a mistake based on the previous entry for another Richard Brough (married to a Jane) who was also listed as a "Collier".
In August 2007, the RBFO obtained a copy of the marriage certificate of Samuel Cartlidge and Elizabeth Brough, which stated that they were married on 25 January 1852 at St. Peter's Church, Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire, and that at the time of their marriage, Samuel Cartlidge was of "full age" and a "Bachelor" and "Collier" and that his father was John Cartlidge (a Collier), and that Elizabeth Brough was of "full age" and a "Spinster" of "Fenton" and that her father was Richard Brough (a Brickmaker), and their marriage was witnessed by Thomas Brough and Mary Ann Brough--who were Elizabeth's brother and sister.
In the 1860 U.S. Census, "Elizabeth Carthaledge" is listed as being 26 years old (born about 1834), born in England, and residing with her husband, Samuel Carthaledge (age 29), at: Upper Alton (post office), Madison Co., Illinois.
In 1863, a “Samuel Cartlidge” was listed in the "U.S. Civil War Draft Registrations Records, 1863-1865“ (via Ancestry.com), which stated that he was “subject to do military duty” in “June and July, 1863” in the 12th Congressional District of Illinois--which included the counties of Clinton, Madison, Monroe, Randolph St. Clair and Washington--and that he was about "33" years old on "1st July 1863" (born about 1830), "White", a "Col[l]ier", "married", born in "England“, and residing at “Wood River Coal” in Madison Co., Illinois. This individual may be the same “Samuel Cartlidge” who married “Elizabeth Brough” in 1852 in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England. For instance: 1) Samuel is listed as a “Collier” in his 1852 marriage record, similarly as a “Coal Miner” in the 1860 U.S. Census, and again as a “Col[l]ier” in the above shown 1863 record; 2) Samuel is listed in the above shown 1863 record as still being officially “married”--which would fit into the facts that Elizabeth filed for divorce from Samuel on 9 February 1864 and stated in May 1864 that he had earlier “left her” on 25 February 1861 and “has ever since remained absent and has absconded and gone to England and is now living with another woman”; and 3) Samuel and Elizabeth are listed as residing in Upper Alton, Madison Co., Illinois, in the 1860 U.S. Census, while Samuel is listed as residing in Wood River Coal, Madison, Co., Illinois, in the above shown 1863 record, and the travel distance between Upper Alton and Wood River is only about four miles.
On February 9, 1864, "Elizabeth [Brough] Cartlidge" filed for divorce from Samuel Cartlidge in Madison County, Illinois. In May 1864, Elizabeth's court record stated that her reasons for requesting a divorce from Samuel included: "That on or about the 15th day of February A.D. 1853 she [Elizabeth] was lawfully married to one Samuel Cartlidge [which marriage actually took place on 25 January 1852 at St. Peter's church in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England] and lived with him discharging all her duties as a faithful prudent and affectionate wife, until the 25th of February AD 1861 at which time without any just cause or provocations the said defendant [Samuel] left her and has ever since remained absent and has absconded and gone to England and is now living with another woman. ...[And] that the said defendant has willfully deserted and absented himself from" her "for now these 2 years and that she had one living child by said defendant, to wit, Josephine Cartlidge who is 3 years old, and that the said defendant has made no provisions for her or said child for said 3 years and is fully determined never to live with" her "again under any status or circumstances".
The marriage of "Enoch Tipton" and "Elizabeth [Brough] Cartledge" took place in Madison County, Illinois, on February 20, 1864. This marriage is listed in the Illinois Statewide Marriage Index website (http://www.ilsos.gov/isavital/marriageSearch.do).
Information on Elizabeth Brough and Enoch Tipton is listed in the LDS "Salt Lake Temple Records [for] Sealings for Dead Couples, Book B, 1894-1896" (FHL Special Collections Film # 184588, p.12), which states that on 14 November 1894, Elizabeth Brough was sealed to her deceased husband, Enoch Tipton, in the LDS Salt Lake Temple; that Elizabeth Brough was born on 17 May 1834 in Longton, Staffordshire, England; that Enoch Tipton was born on 24 February 1835 in Shropshire, England, and died on 21 June 1888; and that Elizabeth and Enoch were sealed by Adolph Madson, and that the sealing was witnessed by George Romney and Elijah F. Sheets. Also, on December 19, 2002, Alison U.B. Allred, an RBFO Genealogist, discovered that the LDS Ward Records for Randolph, Utah (FHL US/CAN Film # 0026439), listed the birth of Elizabeth Brough Tipton as being "17 May 1834." (Elizabeth Brough's LDS baptism and endowment dates are listed in the TIB, FHL Film # 1267255.)
A "History of Elizabeth Brough Tipton," written by Delle Snowball McKinnon and obtained from the Daughters of Utah Pioneers, states the following about her grave marker: Elizabeth Tipton died at Randolph, Utah, February 15, 1896. Her funeral services were held February 18, 1896. ...After many years the wood markers rotted and the sun and rain washed away the names and dates [on the original tombstones of Enoch and Elizabeth Tipton]. So the neices and nephews of this good woman decided to each help and buy markers for the graves. So today the graves of this good woman and her husband are marked by granite markers."
The tombstone of Elizabeth Brough and Enoch Tipton in the Randolph Cemetery (Coordinate: 11-L) in Randolph, Utah, originally listed Enoch Tipton as having died in 1870. This was incorrect because Enoch died in 1888. Prior to Memorial Day in 2003, John M. Brough corrected the date, and Richard L. Brough and James H. Brough reset the tombstone.
According to Warren D. Brough, RBFO Genealogist (and published in the 1988 RBFO book, p.78), Elizabeth Brough was baptized a member of the LDS Church on 17 May 1847. This undoubtedly happened in the LDS Longton Branch of Staffordshire, England.
Elizabeth Brough spelled the surname of her first husband as "Cartlidge", as can be seen in the FHL Temple Index Bureau entry (Film # 184652, page 419) for Mary Jane Cartlidge that reads: "Mary Jane Cartlidge, born 14 Dec 1857, Bellville, St. Clair, Illinois. Died 1858. Sealed to Enoch Tipton [stepfather] and Elizabeth Brough (Cartlidge) Tipton on 28 February 1895. Heir: Samuel R. Brough. Proxy: Emily E. Brough." Elizabeth Brough married her second husband, Enoch Tipton, on 20 Feb 1864 in Bethalto, Madison Co., Illinois.
History of Elizabeth Brough (1834-1896) and her two Husbands: Samuel Cartlidge and Enoch Tipton. Originally written by Lezlie Ann Anderson and John M. Broughin July 2004; updated by R. Clayton Brough in May 2021.
Elizabeth Brough was born on 17 May 1834 to Richard Brough and Mary Horleston in Lane End, Longton, Staffordshire, England. She was christened on 1 June 1834 in St. John's Parish Church (of England), Lane End, Longton. In 1840, Elizabeth Brough's father, Richard Brough, had joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (L.D.S. Church), and when Elizabeth was 13 years old she decided to join her father's new-found religion and became the first child of Richard Brough and Mary Horleston to join the L.D.S. Church. Elizabeth was baptized into the L.D.S. Church on 17 May 1847 in the L.D.S. Longton Branch.
On 25 January 1852, Elizabeth married Samuel Cartlidge in St. Peter, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire (Samuel Cartlidge was christened in 1832 in Longton, Staffordshire). By 1856, she and Samuel, along with her older brother Thomas Brough and his wife Jean (Jane) Paterson and their two children, prepared to leave their native England to emigrate to America, where they wanted to join the rest of the L.D.S. "Saints" in Utah.
On 25 May 1856, Elizabeth Brough and Samuel Cartlidge, along with Thomas Brough and Jane and their two children, left on the ship Horizon, from Liverpool, England. The Horizon was commanded by a Captain Reid, and the "Mormon company" aboard this vessel was under the direction of Edward Martin. Aboard the Horizon there were 692 adults, 136 children and 26 infants, totaling 854 passengers. Thomas and Jane and their children-and possibly Elizabeth and Samuel-paid their own fares and were therefore booked as ordinary passengers, while the majority of the Mormon immigrants aboard were funded by the Perpetual Emigration Fund of the L.D.S. Church. The ship Horizon reached Boston Harbor, Massachusetts, on 30 June 1856.
Shortly after arriving in the northeastern United States, Thomas's money ran out, and he and Jane were forced to stop in Pennsylvania where Thomas then worked just long enough in the surrounding coal mines to obtain enough money to get him and his family to Madison County, Illinois. It is possible that Elizabeth and Samuel went with Thomas Brough and his family to Pennsylvania because Samuel Cartlidge and Thomas Brough were both described as "Coal Miners" in the 1860 Census.
By the middle of 1857, Thomas and Jane Brough had settled in, Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois. There Thomas rented a farm, and for the next seven years, from 1857 to 1864, he grew corn and raised hogs and other farm animals. Also in 1857, Elizabeth and Samuel moved to Illinois, where their first child, Mary Jane, was born on 14 December 1857 in Bellville, St. Clair, Illinois. Unfortunately, Mary Jane's health was very poor and she died the following year, in 1858.
In 1860, Elizabeth and Samuel Cartlidge were living in the same area of Illinois as was Thomas and Jane Brough. According to the 1860 Census, both families were living in Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois on 11 July 1860. Two months after the Census was taken, Elizabeth gave birth to their second child, Josephine Cartlidge, on 7 September 1860, in Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois. Unfortunately, in February 1861, Samuel deserted his wife and daughter and reportedly returned to England. On 9 February 1864, Elizabeth filed for divorce from Samuel Cartlidge. (Note: There is no record of Samuel Cartlidge ever joining the LDS Church.)
On 20 February 1864, Elizabeth married Enoch Tipton in Madison County, Illinois. (Enoch Tipton was born in 1835 in Asterley, Pontesbury, Shroprshire, England, and baptized into the L.D.S. Church in April 1854. Enoch and his brother, Elijah, and Elijah's wife Emma and their one-year old daughter, Sarah, came on the same ship "Horizon" as did Elizabeth Brough and Samuel Cartlidge. In 1860, Enoch Tipton was residing--along with his widowed mother, Sarah Tipton--in Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois. In fact, it appears from the 1860 Census report that Elizabeth Brough and Samuel Cartlidge, Thomas Brough and Jean (Jane) Paterson, and Enoch Tipton, all lived in close proximity to each other while they resided in Bethalto, Madison, Illinois. Also, Thomas Brough and Enoch Tipton were living "next door" to each other while residing in Bethalto.)
Sometime between 1864 and 1867, Elizabeth and Enoch Tipton left Illinois for Utah. (Note: Thomas and Jane Brough made the three month trip to Utah between 15 June 1864 and 18 September 1864.) They are considered as being Mormon Pioneers because they arrived in Utah prior to the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad in 1869.
Elizabeth Brough and Enoch Tipton had their first child, Eva Nell, on 2 October 1867 in West Porterville, Utah. In 1871, Elizabeth's younger brother, Samuel Brough, had moved his wife (Elizabeth Bott) and family from Porterville to Randolph. During the summer, Samuel Brough was a farmer and brickmaker, but during the winter he went to Almy, Wyoming to work in the coal mines. Like Samuel Brough, Enoch Tipton may have also done something similar, for Enoch is listed in the 1870 Census as a "Farmer" and in the 1880 Census as a "Coal Miner." On 1 October 1872, Elizabeth gave birth to their second child, William Enoch, in Almy, Wyoming.
In the mid 1870's, Elizabeth and Enoch were still residing in Randolph, where their third and last child, John Tipton, was born on 26 March 1875. Unfortunately, John died two days later on March 28.
In the 1880 Census, Elizabeth and Enoch are listed as living in Kaysville, Utah-where Enoch probably assisted Thomas and Samuel Brough at the Brough Brick Yard located in east Kaysville. Also, the 1880 Census reports that their family then consisted of three children: Josephine (Cartlidge), Eva Nell and William Enoch.
Enoch Tipton died on 21 June 1888. Elizabeth Brough Tipton died on 15 February 1896. They were both buried in the center of the Randolph City Cemetery.
Marriage Notes for Samuel Cartlidge and Elizabeth Brough-79
In August 2007, the RBFO obtained a copy of the marriage certificate of Samuel Cartlidge and Elizabeth Brough, which stated that they were married on 25 January 1852 at St. Peter's Church, Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire, and that at the time of their marriage, Samuel Cartlidge was of "full age" and a "Bachelor" and "Collier" and that his father was John Cartlidge (a Collier), and that Elizabeth Brough was of "full age" and a "Spinster" of "Fenton" and that her father was Richard Brough (a Brickmaker), and their marriage was witnessed by Thomas Brough and Mary Ann Brough--who were Elizabeth's brother and sister.
On February 9, 1864, "Elizabeth [Brough] Cartlidge" filed for divorce from Samuel Cartlidge in Madison County, Illinois. In May 1864, Elizabeth's court record stated that her reasons for requesting a divorce from Samuel included: "That on or about the 15th day of February A.D. 1853 she [Elizabeth] was lawfully married to one Samuel Cartlidge [which marriage actually took place on 25 January 1852 at St. Peter's church in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England] and lived with him discharging all her duties as a faithful prudent and affectionate wife, until the 25th of February AD 1861 at which time without any just cause or provocations the said defendant [Samuel] left her and has ever since remained absent and has absconded and gone to England and is now living with another woman. ...[And] that the said defendant has willfully deserted and absented himself from" her "for now these 2 years and that she had one living child by said defendant, to wit, Josephine Cartlidge who is 3 years old, and that the said defendant has made no provisions for her or said child for said 3 years and is fully determined never to live with" her "again under any status or circumstances".
The L.D.S. FHL Temple Index Bureau entry (Film # 184652, page 419) for Mary Jane Cartlidge reads: "Mary Jane Cartlidge, born 14 Dec 1857, Bellville, St. Clair, Illinois. Died 1858. Sealed to Enoch Tipton [stepfather] and Elizabeth Brough (Cartlidge) Tipton on 28 February 1895. Heir: Samuel R. Brough. Proxy: Emily E. Brough."
The marriage of "Enoch Tipton" and "Elizabeth [Brough] Cartledge" took place in Madison County, Illinois, on February 20, 1864. This marriage is listed in the Illinois Statewide Marriage Index website (http://www.ilsos.gov/isavital/marriageSearch.do).
Information on Enoch Tipton and Elizabeth Brough is listed in the LDS "Salt Lake Temple Records [for] Sealings for Dead Couples, Book B, 1894-1896" (FHL Special Collections Film # 184588, p.12), which states that on 14 November 1894, Elizabeth Brough was sealed to her deceased husband, Enoch Tipton, in the LDS Salt Lake Temple; that Elizabeth Brough was born on 17 May 1834 in Longton, Staffordshire, England; that Enoch Tipton was born on 24 February 1835 in Shropshire, England, and died on 21 June 1888; and that Elizabeth and Enoch were sealed by Adolph Madson, and that the sealing was witnessed by George Romney and Elijah F. Sheets.
Enoch Tipton’s surname is “Tipton” and not “Typton”. While he was alive Enoch personally identified and signed his own surname as “Tipton”. Also, Enoch's surname is recorded as “Tipton” in the 1841 and 1851 British Census; in the 1860, 1870 and 1880 U.S. Census; in his property and warrantee deeds in Randolph, Utah, in his will, probate and burial records in Randolph, Utah, and in his LDS Church records. In addition, all available birth and christening records of Enoch’s siblings in Shropshire, England, identified their surname as “Tipton”.
The tombstone of Elizabeth Brough and Enoch Tipton in the Randolph Cemetery (Coordinate: 11-L) in Randolph, Utah, originally listed Enoch Tipton as having died in 1870. This was incorrect because Enoch died in 1888. Prior to Memorial Day in 2003, John M. Brough corrected the date, and Richard L. Brough and James H. Brough reset the tombstone.
Research Notes on Enoch Tipton by the RBFO Research Committee, dated 2 January 2003:
RBFO genealogists have obtained the following information about Enoch Tipton:
1) Property and Warrantee Deeds from the area of Randolph, Utah, state that on "the 14th day of June in the year of our Lord one thousand and eight hundred and eighty-eight [or 14 June 1888],...Enoch Tipton and Elizabeth Tipton his wife of Randolph in the county of Rich, and Territory of Utah...[sold to] Samuel Brough of same county and territory aforesaid...thirty-six acres and one hundred and twenty square rods of ground [ in Randolph]." This indicates that Enoch Tipton was still alive in 14 June 1888.
2) Probate (#6) and Petition Records from the Rich County Clerk Office in Randolph, Utah, dated December 13, 1892, state that "Enoch Tipton died on or about June 16, 1888, that previous to his death, he being then in immediate expectation of death, he then and there in said Randolph Rich Co Utah executed and signed a will, making disposition of his property which will was duly witnessed and accompanies this petition."
3) According to the Randolph (Rich County) Court Minutes (FHL US/CAN Film # 0480877) dated December 24, 1892, "In the matter of the Will and Estate of Enoch Tipton, Deceased," William Rex testified (to which Samuel Brough and Elizabeth Brough Tipton both agreed) that Enoch Tipton died "on his homestead near Randolph, Rich County, Utah," from "intestinal trouble from lifting."
4) According to Randolph Cemetery records, Elizabeth was “buried on the north side of Enoch Tipton her husband” in Randolph, Utah. In 2003, RBFO officers corrected the tombstone inscription in the Randolph Cemetery that had earlier--and incorrectly--listed Enoch Tipton's death date as "1870". This earlier--but incorrect--death date for Enoch Tipton was mistakenly inscribed on a "replacement" tombstone during the 1900's. For instance, according to a historical account written by Delle Snowball McKinnon, entitled the "History of Elizabeth Brough Tipton" (and obtained from the Daughters of Utah Pioneers), "Elizabeth Tipton died at Randolph, Utah, February 15, 1896. Her funeral services were held February 18, 1896. ...After many years the wood markers rotted and the sun and rain washed away the names and dates [on the original tombstones of Enoch and Elizabeth Tipton]. So the neices and nephews of this good woman decided to each help and buy markers for the graves. So today [in the 1900's] the graves of this good woman and her husband are marked by granite markers."Census Records containing Enoch Tipton and family:
British 1841 Census for Asterley, Pontesbury, Shropshire, England (FHL Film #474585):
William Tipton, Male, 40, Coal miner, born in same country: Yes
Sarah (do), Female, 40, born in same country: No
John (do), Male, 15, Coal miner, Yes
Elijah (do), Male, 12, Coal miner, Yes
Hannah (do), Female, 7, Yes
Enoch (do), Male, 6, Yes
Jacob (do), Male, 2, Yes
William (do), Male, 4 monthsBritish 1851 Census for Pontesbury, Shropshire, England (FHL Film #87391, Folio 358, p.17):
Sarah Tipton, Head, Widow, 50: Montgomery, Llansaidfrayid [Wales]
John (do), Son, Unmarried, 25, Coal Miner, Salop, Alberbury [Shropshire, England]
Elijah (do), Son, Unmarried, 21, (do), Salop, Pontesbury
Hannah (do), Daughter, Unmarried, 17, Salop, Asterley
Enoch (do), Son, 16, Coal Miner, (do) (do)
Jacob (do), (do), 12, (do), (do) (do)
Mary (do), (do), 5, Scholar, (do) (do)USA 1860 Census (dated 11 July 1860) for Upper Alton, Madison, Illinois, USA (FHL Film # 0803208, p.233-236):
Sarah Tipton, 59, Female, Estate: $100, birthplace: England
Enoch, 25, Male, birthplace: England
Mary, 13, Female, birthplace: EnglandUSA 1870 Census (dated June 1870) for Morgan, Utah (FHL Film #25542, p.385)
Tipton, Enoch, 34, Male, Farmer, Estate: $700, birthplace: England
Elizabeth, 36, Female, keeping house, birthplace: England
Josephine, 9, Female, birthplace: Utah
Eva, 2, Female, birthplace: UtahUSA 1880 Census (dated 11-12 June 1880) for Kaysville, Utah, (FHL Film #1255336, p.16):
Tipton, Enoch, Male, 45, Coal Miner, birthplace: England, Father: England; Mother: Wales
Elizabeth, Female, 46, Wife, Keeping house, birthplace: England; Father: England; Mother: Eng.
Josephine, Female, 19, Daughter; at home, birthplace: Illinois
Eve, Female, 12, Daughter; at home, birthplace: Utah
William Enoch, Male, 7, Son, birthplace: UtahHistory of Elizabeth Brough (1834-1896) and her two Husbands: Samuel Cartlidge and Enoch Tipton. Originally written by Lezlie Ann Anderson and John M. Broughin July 2004; updated by R. Clayton Brough in May 2021.
Elizabeth Brough was born on 17 May 1834 to Richard Brough and Mary Horleston in Lane End, Longton, Staffordshire, England. She was christened on 1 June 1834 in St. John's Parish Church (of England), Lane End, Longton. In 1840, Elizabeth Brough's father, Richard Brough, had joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (L.D.S. Church), and when Elizabeth was 13 years old she decided to join her father's new-found religion and became the first child of Richard Brough and Mary Horleston to join the L.D.S. Church. Elizabeth was baptized into the L.D.S. Church on 17 May 1847 in the L.D.S. Longton Branch.
On 25 January 1852, Elizabeth married Samuel Cartlidge in St. Peter, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire (Samuel Cartlidge was christened in 1832 in Longton, Staffordshire). By 1856, she and Samuel, along with her older brother Thomas Brough and his wife Jean (Jane) Paterson and their two children, prepared to leave their native England to emigrate to America, where they wanted to join the rest of the L.D.S. "Saints" in Utah.
On 25 May 1856, Elizabeth Brough and Samuel Cartlidge, along with Thomas Brough and Jane and their two children, left on the ship Horizon, from Liverpool, England. The Horizon was commanded by a Captain Reid, and the "Mormon company" aboard this vessel was under the direction of Edward Martin. Aboard the Horizon there were 692 adults, 136 children and 26 infants, totaling 854 passengers. Thomas and Jane and their children-and possibly Elizabeth and Samuel-paid their own fares and were therefore booked as ordinary passengers, while the majority of the Mormon immigrants aboard were funded by the Perpetual Emigration Fund of the L.D.S. Church. The ship Horizon reached Boston Harbor, Massachusetts, on 30 June 1856.
Shortly after arriving in the northeastern United States, Thomas's money ran out, and he and Jane were forced to stop in Pennsylvania where Thomas then worked just long enough in the surrounding coal mines to obtain enough money to get him and his family to Madison County, Illinois. It is possible that Elizabeth and Samuel went with Thomas Brough and his family to Pennsylvania because Samuel Cartlidge and Thomas Brough were both described as "Coal Miners" in the 1860 Census.
By the middle of 1857, Thomas and Jane Brough had settled in, Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois. There Thomas rented a farm, and for the next seven years, from 1857 to 1864, he grew corn and raised hogs and other farm animals. Also in 1857, Elizabeth and Samuel moved to Illinois, where their first child, Mary Jane, was born on 14 December 1857 in Bellville, St. Clair, Illinois. Unfortunately, Mary Jane's health was very poor and she died the following year, in 1858.
In 1860, Elizabeth and Samuel Cartlidge were living in the same area of Illinois as was Thomas and Jane Brough. According to the 1860 Census, both families were living in Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois on 11 July 1860. Two months after the Census was taken, Elizabeth gave birth to their second child, Josephine Cartlidge, on 7 September 1860, in Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois. Unfortunately, in February 1861, Samuel deserted his wife and daughter and subsequently returned to England. On 9 February 1864, Elizabeth filed for divorce from Samuel Cartlidge. (Note: There is no record of Samuel Cartlidge ever joining the LDS Church.)
On 20 February 1864, Elizabeth married Enoch Tipton in Madison County, Illinois. (Enoch Tipton was born in 1835 in Asterley, Pontesbury, Shroprshire, England, and baptized into the L.D.S. Church in April 1854. Enoch and his brother, Elijah, and Elijah's wife Emma and their one-year old daughter, Sarah, came on the same ship "Horizon" as did Elizabeth Brough and Samuel Cartlidge. In 1860, Enoch Tipton was residing--along with his widowed mother, Sarah Tipton--in Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois. In fact, it appears from the 1860 Census report that Elizabeth Brough and Samuel Cartlidge, Thomas Brough and Jean (Jane) Paterson, and Enoch Tipton, all lived in close proximity to each other while they resided in Bethalto, Madison, Illinois. Also, Thomas Brough and Enoch Tipton were living "next door" to each other while residing in Bethalto.)
Sometime between 1864 and 1867, Elizabeth and Enoch Tipton left Illinois for Utah. (Note: Thomas and Jane Brough made the three month trip to Utah between 15 June 1864 and 18 September 1864.) They are considered as being Mormon Pioneers because they arrived in Utah prior to the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad in 1869.
Elizabeth Brough and Enoch Tipton had their first child, Eva Nell, on 2 October 1867 in West Porterville, Utah. In 1871, Elizabeth's younger brother, Samuel Brough, had moved his wife (Elizabeth Bott) and family from Porterville to Randolph. During the summer, Samuel Brough was a farmer and brickmaker, but during the winter he went to Almy, Wyoming to work in the coal mines. Like Samuel Brough, Enoch Tipton may have also done something similar, for Enoch is listed in the 1870 Census as a "Farmer" and in the 1880 Census as a "Coal Miner." On 1 October 1872, Elizabeth gave birth to their second child, William Enoch, in Almy, Wyoming.
In the mid 1870's, Elizabeth and Enoch were still residing in Randolph, where their third and last child, John Tipton, was born on 26 March 1875. Unfortunately, John died two days later on March 28.
In the 1880 Census, Elizabeth and Enoch are listed as living in Kaysville, Utah-where Enoch probably assisted Thomas and Samuel Brough at the Brough Brick Yard located in east Kaysville. Also, the 1880 Census reports that their family then consisted of three children: Josephine (Cartlidge), Eva Nell and William Enoch.
Enoch Tipton died on 21 June 1888. Elizabeth Brough Tipton died on 15 February 1896. They were both buried in the center of the Randolph City Cemetery.
Elizabeth Brough was born in Lane End, Staffordshire, England, on 17 May 1834. This location is often referred to as "Lane End, Longton". For example: "Lane End, Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire: Confusion often arises over the location and names of Lane End and Longton. Originally they were two separate and contiguous townships which were incorporated in the Borough of Longton in 1865. Longton was adjacent to Longton Hall and encompassed the Longton Hall Colliery and Brickworks. Even in 1900 the area was mainly fields. Lane End was centered on the area around Market Street and the bottom part of Anchor Road and contained the Markets, Churches and main potworks." (Source: http://www.thepotteries.org/did_you/009.htm)
The christening of "Eliz. Brough" is listed in the parish register of St. John, Longton, Staffordshire, England (FHL Film # 1471087, Item #1), which states that she was christened on 1 June 1834 as the daughter of Richard and Mary Brough of Lane End, and that Richard Brough was a "Collier"--which occupational listing was probably a mistake based on the previous entry for another Richard Brough (married to a Jane) who was also listed as a "Collier".
In August 2007, the RBFO obtained a copy of the marriage certificate of Samuel Cartlidge and Elizabeth Brough, which stated that they were married on 25 January 1852 at St. Peter's Church, Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire, and that at the time of their marriage, Samuel Cartlidge was of "full age" and a "Bachelor" and "Collier" and that his father was John Cartlidge (a Collier), and that Elizabeth Brough was of "full age" and a "Spinster" of "Fenton" and that her father was Richard Brough (a Brickmaker), and their marriage was witnessed by Thomas Brough and Mary Ann Brough--who were Elizabeth's brother and sister.
In the 1860 U.S. Census, "Elizabeth Carthaledge" is listed as being 26 years old (born about 1834), born in England, and residing with her husband, Samuel Carthaledge (age 29), at: Upper Alton (post office), Madison Co., Illinois.
In 1863, a “Samuel Cartlidge” was listed in the "U.S. Civil War Draft Registrations Records, 1863-1865“ (via Ancestry.com), which stated that he was “subject to do military duty” in “June and July, 1863” in the 12th Congressional District of Illinois--which included the counties of Clinton, Madison, Monroe, Randolph St. Clair and Washington--and that he was about "33" years old on "1st July 1863" (born about 1830), "White", a "Col[l]ier", "married", born in "England“, and residing at “Wood River Coal” in Madison Co., Illinois. This individual may be the same “Samuel Cartlidge” who married “Elizabeth Brough” in 1852 in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England. For instance: 1) Samuel is listed as a “Collier” in his 1852 marriage record, similarly as a “Coal Miner” in the 1860 U.S. Census, and again as a “Col[l]ier” in the above shown 1863 record; 2) Samuel is listed in the above shown 1863 record as still being officially “married”--which would fit into the facts that Elizabeth filed for divorce from Samuel on 9 February 1864 and stated in May 1864 that he had earlier “left her” on 25 February 1861 and “has ever since remained absent and has absconded and gone to England and is now living with another woman”; and 3) Samuel and Elizabeth are listed as residing in Upper Alton, Madison Co., Illinois, in the 1860 U.S. Census, while Samuel is listed as residing in Wood River Coal, Madison, Co., Illinois, in the above shown 1863 record, and the travel distance between Upper Alton and Wood River is only about four miles.
On February 9, 1864, "Elizabeth [Brough] Cartlidge" filed for divorce from Samuel Cartlidge in Madison County, Illinois. In May 1864, Elizabeth's court record stated that her reasons for requesting a divorce from Samuel included: "That on or about the 15th day of February A.D. 1853 she [Elizabeth] was lawfully married to one Samuel Cartlidge [which marriage actually took place on 25 January 1852 at St. Peter's church in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England] and lived with him discharging all her duties as a faithful prudent and affectionate wife, until the 25th of February AD 1861 at which time without any just cause or provocations the said defendant [Samuel] left her and has ever since remained absent and has absconded and gone to England and is now living with another woman. ...[And] that the said defendant has willfully deserted and absented himself from" her "for now these 2 years and that she had one living child by said defendant, to wit, Josephine Cartlidge who is 3 years old, and that the said defendant has made no provisions for her or said child for said 3 years and is fully determined never to live with" her "again under any status or circumstances".
The marriage of "Enoch Tipton" and "Elizabeth [Brough] Cartledge" took place in Madison County, Illinois, on February 20, 1864. This marriage is listed in the Illinois Statewide Marriage Index website (http://www.ilsos.gov/isavital/marriageSearch.do).
Information on Elizabeth Brough and Enoch Tipton is listed in the LDS "Salt Lake Temple Records [for] Sealings for Dead Couples, Book B, 1894-1896" (FHL Special Collections Film # 184588, p.12), which states that on 14 November 1894, Elizabeth Brough was sealed to her deceased husband, Enoch Tipton, in the LDS Salt Lake Temple; that Elizabeth Brough was born on 17 May 1834 in Longton, Staffordshire, England; that Enoch Tipton was born on 24 February 1835 in Shropshire, England, and died on 21 June 1888; and that Elizabeth and Enoch were sealed by Adolph Madson, and that the sealing was witnessed by George Romney and Elijah F. Sheets. Also, on December 19, 2002, Alison U.B. Allred, an RBFO Genealogist, discovered that the LDS Ward Records for Randolph, Utah (FHL US/CAN Film # 0026439), listed the birth of Elizabeth Brough Tipton as being "17 May 1834." (Elizabeth Brough's LDS baptism and endowment dates are listed in the TIB, FHL Film # 1267255.)
A "History of Elizabeth Brough Tipton," written by Delle Snowball McKinnon and obtained from the Daughters of Utah Pioneers, states the following about her grave marker: Elizabeth Tipton died at Randolph, Utah, February 15, 1896. Her funeral services were held February 18, 1896. ...After many years the wood markers rotted and the sun and rain washed away the names and dates [on the original tombstones of Enoch and Elizabeth Tipton]. So the neices and nephews of this good woman decided to each help and buy markers for the graves. So today the graves of this good woman and her husband are marked by granite markers."
The tombstone of Elizabeth Brough and Enoch Tipton in the Randolph Cemetery (Coordinate: 11-L) in Randolph, Utah, originally listed Enoch Tipton as having died in 1870. This was incorrect because Enoch died in 1888. Prior to Memorial Day in 2003, John M. Brough corrected the date, and Richard L. Brough and James H. Brough reset the tombstone.
According to Warren D. Brough, RBFO Genealogist (and published in the 1988 RBFO book, p.78), Elizabeth Brough was baptized a member of the LDS Church on 17 May 1847. This undoubtedly happened in the LDS Longton Branch of Staffordshire, England.
Elizabeth Brough spelled the surname of her first husband as "Cartlidge", as can be seen in the FHL Temple Index Bureau entry (Film # 184652, page 419) for Mary Jane Cartlidge that reads: "Mary Jane Cartlidge, born 14 Dec 1857, Bellville, St. Clair, Illinois. Died 1858. Sealed to Enoch Tipton [stepfather] and Elizabeth Brough (Cartlidge) Tipton on 28 February 1895. Heir: Samuel R. Brough. Proxy: Emily E. Brough." Elizabeth Brough married her second husband, Enoch Tipton, on 20 Feb 1864 in Bethalto, Madison Co., Illinois.
History of Elizabeth Brough (1834-1896) and her two Husbands: Samuel Cartlidge and Enoch Tipton. Originally written by Lezlie Ann Anderson and John M. Broughin July 2004; updated by R. Clayton Brough in May 2021.
Elizabeth Brough was born on 17 May 1834 to Richard Brough and Mary Horleston in Lane End, Longton, Staffordshire, England. She was christened on 1 June 1834 in St. John's Parish Church (of England), Lane End, Longton. In 1840, Elizabeth Brough's father, Richard Brough, had joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (L.D.S. Church), and when Elizabeth was 13 years old she decided to join her father's new-found religion and became the first child of Richard Brough and Mary Horleston to join the L.D.S. Church. Elizabeth was baptized into the L.D.S. Church on 17 May 1847 in the L.D.S. Longton Branch.
On 25 January 1852, Elizabeth married Samuel Cartlidge in St. Peter, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire (Samuel Cartlidge was christened in 1832 in Longton, Staffordshire). By 1856, she and Samuel, along with her older brother Thomas Brough and his wife Jean (Jane) Paterson and their two children, prepared to leave their native England to emigrate to America, where they wanted to join the rest of the L.D.S. "Saints" in Utah.
On 25 May 1856, Elizabeth Brough and Samuel Cartlidge, along with Thomas Brough and Jane and their two children, left on the ship Horizon, from Liverpool, England. The Horizon was commanded by a Captain Reid, and the "Mormon company" aboard this vessel was under the direction of Edward Martin. Aboard the Horizon there were 692 adults, 136 children and 26 infants, totaling 854 passengers. Thomas and Jane and their children-and possibly Elizabeth and Samuel-paid their own fares and were therefore booked as ordinary passengers, while the majority of the Mormon immigrants aboard were funded by the Perpetual Emigration Fund of the L.D.S. Church. The ship Horizon reached Boston Harbor, Massachusetts, on 30 June 1856.
Shortly after arriving in the northeastern United States, Thomas's money ran out, and he and Jane were forced to stop in Pennsylvania where Thomas then worked just long enough in the surrounding coal mines to obtain enough money to get him and his family to Madison County, Illinois. It is possible that Elizabeth and Samuel went with Thomas Brough and his family to Pennsylvania because Samuel Cartlidge and Thomas Brough were both described as "Coal Miners" in the 1860 Census.
By the middle of 1857, Thomas and Jane Brough had settled in, Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois. There Thomas rented a farm, and for the next seven years, from 1857 to 1864, he grew corn and raised hogs and other farm animals. Also in 1857, Elizabeth and Samuel moved to Illinois, where their first child, Mary Jane, was born on 14 December 1857 in Bellville, St. Clair, Illinois. Unfortunately, Mary Jane's health was very poor and she died the following year, in 1858.
In 1860, Elizabeth and Samuel Cartlidge were living in the same area of Illinois as was Thomas and Jane Brough. According to the 1860 Census, both families were living in Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois on 11 July 1860. Two months after the Census was taken, Elizabeth gave birth to their second child, Josephine Cartlidge, on 7 September 1860, in Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois. Unfortunately, in February 1861, Samuel deserted his wife and daughter and reportedly returned to England. On 9 February 1864, Elizabeth filed for divorce from Samuel Cartlidge. (Note: There is no record of Samuel Cartlidge ever joining the LDS Church.)
On 20 February 1864, Elizabeth married Enoch Tipton in Madison County, Illinois. (Enoch Tipton was born in 1835 in Asterley, Pontesbury, Shroprshire, England, and baptized into the L.D.S. Church in April 1854. Enoch and his brother, Elijah, and Elijah's wife Emma and their one-year old daughter, Sarah, came on the same ship "Horizon" as did Elizabeth Brough and Samuel Cartlidge. In 1860, Enoch Tipton was residing--along with his widowed mother, Sarah Tipton--in Bethalto, Madison County, Illinois. In fact, it appears from the 1860 Census report that Elizabeth Brough and Samuel Cartlidge, Thomas Brough and Jean (Jane) Paterson, and Enoch Tipton, all lived in close proximity to each other while they resided in Bethalto, Madison, Illinois. Also, Thomas Brough and Enoch Tipton were living "next door" to each other while residing in Bethalto.)
Sometime between 1864 and 1867, Elizabeth and Enoch Tipton left Illinois for Utah. (Note: Thomas and Jane Brough made the three month trip to Utah between 15 June 1864 and 18 September 1864.) They are considered as being Mormon Pioneers because they arrived in Utah prior to the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad in 1869.
Elizabeth Brough and Enoch Tipton had their first child, Eva Nell, on 2 October 1867 in West Porterville, Utah. In 1871, Elizabeth's younger brother, Samuel Brough, had moved his wife (Elizabeth Bott) and family from Porterville to Randolph. During the summer, Samuel Brough was a farmer and brickmaker, but during the winter he went to Almy, Wyoming to work in the coal mines. Like Samuel Brough, Enoch Tipton may have also done something similar, for Enoch is listed in the 1870 Census as a "Farmer" and in the 1880 Census as a "Coal Miner." On 1 October 1872, Elizabeth gave birth to their second child, William Enoch, in Almy, Wyoming.
In the mid 1870's, Elizabeth and Enoch were still residing in Randolph, where their third and last child, John Tipton, was born on 26 March 1875. Unfortunately, John died two days later on March 28.
In the 1880 Census, Elizabeth and Enoch are listed as living in Kaysville, Utah-where Enoch probably assisted Thomas and Samuel Brough at the Brough Brick Yard located in east Kaysville. Also, the 1880 Census reports that their family then consisted of three children: Josephine (Cartlidge), Eva Nell and William Enoch.
Enoch Tipton died on 21 June 1888. Elizabeth Brough Tipton died on 15 February 1896. They were both buried in the center of the Randolph City Cemetery.
Marriage Notes for Enoch Tipton and Elizabeth Brough-79
The marriage of "Enoch Tipton" and "Elizabeth [Brough] Cartledge" took place in Madison County, Illinois, on February 20, 1864. This marriage is listed in the Illinois Statewide Marriage Index website (http://www.ilsos.gov/isavital/marriageSearch.do).
The LDS Temple Index Bureau record (Film # 184652) states the following:
John Tipton. Born: 26 March 1875, Randolph, Rich, Utah. Died: 28 March 1875. Parents: Enoch Tipton and Elizabeth Brough. Heir: Samuel R. Brough. Proxy: Eber Case.
In December 2012, the BFO obtained a copy of the birth certificate of "Robert Evans" from England, which stated that he was born on 5 January 1844 in Lane End [Longton], Staffordshire, and that his father was Robert Evans, a Collier, and his mother was "Emma Evans formerly Almarack", and that the informant of his birth was "Robert Evans [the] Father [of] High Street, Lane End", Staffordshire.
The christening of "Robert Evans" is listed in the IGI (via the LDS Extraction Program, FHL Film # 1471085, Item #7 page, 103), which states that he was christened on 28 January 1844 at St. James, Longton, Staffordshire, and that his parents were Robert and Emma Evans of High Street, and that Robert Evans was a "Miner".
In December 2012, the BFO obtained a copy of the death certificate of Robert Evans from England, which stated that he died on 25 May 1897 at: 110 Lower Spring Road, Longton, Staffordshire; that he died at the age of "54 years" old (born about 1843) from "Chronic Bronchitis [and] Morbus Cordis", that he was a "Coal Miner"; and that the informant of his death was "Samuel Evans [his] Son [who was] present at the death [at] 110 Lower Spring Road, Longton".
The 1865 marriage of Robert Evans and Mary Ann Brough is listed in the parish register of Blurton (FHL Microfiche # 6114783, 3 of 6), which states that they were married by Banns on 25 December 1865; that Robert Evans was 22 years old (born about 1843), a Bachelor and Miner of Longton, and that his father was Robert Evans, a Miner; and that Mary Ann Brough was 25 years old (born about 1840), a Spinster of Warrens Lane, and that her father was Richard Brough, a Brickmaker. The marriage was witnessed by William Evans and Eliza Lucas.
The 1871 British Census (FHL Film #836372) lists the family of Robert Evans and Mary Ann Brough as lilving at:
Russell Street, Trentham, Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire, England.
Robert Evans, Head, Married, 27, Coal Miner, birthplace: Longton, Stafford, England
Mary Ann Evans, Wife, Married, 33, birthplace: do
Samuel Evans, Son, 2, do
Thomas Evans, Son, 4 months, doThe 1881 British Census (CD, FHL Film #1341655) lists the family of Robert Evans and Mary Ann Brough as living at:
180 Normacott Road, Stoke-upon-Trent, Stafford, England.
Robert Evans, Head, Coal Miner, Married, 37, Male, birthplace: Longton, Stafford, England
Mary Ann Evans, Wife, Potters Transferer, Married, 44, Female, birthplace: Longton, Stafford, England
Samuel Evans, Son, Crate Makers Assistant, 12, Male, birthplace: Warrens Lane, Trentham, Stafford, Eng.
Thomas Evans, Son, Scholar, 10, Male, birthplace: Warrens Lane, Trentham, Stafford, EnglandThe 1891 British Census (via Ancestry.com):
58 Lord Street Longton, Staffordshire, England.
Robert Evans, Head, Married, Coal Miner, 47, employed, birthplace: Longton, Staff.
Samuel Evans, Son, Single, 22, Green Grocer, birthplace: Longton, Staff.
Thomas Evans, Son, Single, 20, Potter Crewman, birthplace: Longton, Staff.In August 2003, James H. Brough of England, sent a letter to R. Clayton Brough of Utah, stating that Mary Ann Brough Evans (who died on 24 July 1891 at 28 Lord Street, Longton) and Robert Evans (who died in May 1897 in Longton) were both buried in Grave Block #29 (Row 1, Grave 3) in the Longton Cemetery (near Spring Garden Road), Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England.
Robert Evans is listed in FamilySearch Tree, PID#: KHBQ-Q3Q.
Mary Ann Brough was born in Lane End, Staffordshire, England, on 3 May 1836. This location is often referred to as "Lane End, Longton". For example: "Lane End, Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire: Confusion often arises over the location and names of Lane End and Longton. Originally they were two separate and contiguous townships which were incorporated in the Borough of Longton in 1865. Longton was adjacent to Longton Hall and encompassed the Longton Hall Colliery and Brickworks. Even in 1900 the area was mainly fields. Lane End was centered on the area around Market Street and the bottom part of Anchor Road and contained the Markets, Churches and main potworks." (Source: http://www.thepotteries.org/did_you/009.htm)
The christening of "Marianne Brough" is listed in the parish register of St. John, Longton, Staffordshire, England (FHL Film # 1471087, Item #1), which states that she was christened on 15 May 1836 as the daughter of Richard and Mary Brough of Lane End, and that Richard Brough was a "Brickmaker".
In December 2012, the BFO obtained a copy of the death certificate of "Mary Ann Evans" from England, which stated that she died on 24 July 1891 at 58 Lord Street, Longton, Staffordshire; that she died at the age of "54 years" old (born about 1837) from "Cancer of Face [and] Exhauston"; that she was the "Wife of Robert Evans a coal miner"; and that the informant of her death was "Robert Evans [the] Widower of deceased [who was] present at the death [at] 58 Lord Street, Longton", Staffordshire.
Mary Ann Brough was baptized a member of the LDS Church on 25 April 1857 by C.C. Shaw of the LDS Longton Branch, Staffordshire, England. FHL Film # 0087016.
In the 1851 Census, Mary Ann Brough was listed as being about 14 years old (born about 1837), born in Trentham, Staffordshire, working as a "Potter", and residing with her parents, Richard and Mary Brough, at: 109 Stone Road, Trentham, Staffordshire.
In the 1861 Census, Mary Ann Brough was listed as being about 24 years old (born about 1837), born in Longton, unmarried and working as a "Potter's Transferer", and residing with her father, Richard Brough, on: Warrens Lane, Blurton, Staffordshire.
The 1865 marriage of Robert Evans and Mary Ann Brough is listed in the parish register of Blurton (FHL Microfiche # 6114783, 3 of 6), which states that they were married by Banns on 25 December 1865; that Robert Evans was 22 years old (born about 1843), a Bachelor and Miner of Longton, and that his father was Robert Evans, a Miner; and that Mary Ann Brough was 25 years old (born about 1840), a Spinster of Warrens Lane, and that her father was Richard Brough, a Brickmaker. The marriage was witnessed by William Evans and Eliza Lucas.
In the 1871 Census, Mary Ann (Evans) was listed as being about 33 years old (born about 1838), born in Longton, married and residing with her husband, Robert Evans, and their two children (Samuel and Thomas) at: 332 Russell Street, Dresden, Trentham, Staffordshire.
In the 1881 Census, Mary Ann (Evans) was listed as being about 44 years old (born about 1837), born in Longton, married and working as a "Potters Transferer", and residing with her husband, Robert Evans, and their two children (Samuel and Thomas) at: 180 Normacott Road, Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire.
In the 1891 Census (taken on 5 April 1891), Mary Ann (Evans) was listed as being about 54 years old (born about 1837), born in Longton, and a "Patient" in the "North Staffordshire Infirmary and Eye Hospital" in Punkhull, Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire. (Mary Ann Brough Evans died on 24 July 1891.)
In August 2003, James H. Brough located the death certificate of Mary Ann Brough Evans and sent it to the RBFO. She died of "cancer of face [and] exhaustion" on 24 July 1891 at her home at "58 Lord Street, Longton."
In August 2003, James H. Brough of England, sent a letter to R. Clayton Brough of Utah, stating that Mary Ann Brough Evans (who died on 24 July 1891 at 58 Lord Street, Longton) and Robert Evans (who died in May 1897 in Longton) were both buried in Grave Block #29 (Row 1, Grave 3) in the Longton Cemetery (near Spring Garden Road), Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England.
Marriage Notes for Robert Evans and Mary Ann Brough-80
The 1865 marriage of Robert Evans and Mary Ann Brough is listed in the parish register of Blurton (FHL Microfiche # 6114783, 3 of 6), which states that they were married by Banns on 25 December 1865; that Robert Evans was 22 years old (born about 1843), a Bachelor and Miner of Longton, and that his father was Robert Evans, a Miner; and that Mary Ann Brough was 25 years old (born about 1840), a Spinster of Warrens Lane, and that her father was Richard Brough, a Brickmaker. The marriage was witnessed by William Evans and Eliza Lucas.
In January 2013, the BFO obtained a copy of the birth certificate of Robert Evans from England, which stated that he was born on 11 September 1866 in Warren's Lane, Trentham, Staffordshire, and that his father was Robert Evans, a Collier, and his mother was "Mary Ann Evans formerly Brough".
In January 2013, the BFO obtained a copy of the death certificate of Robert Evans from England, which stated that he died on 1 December 1869 at Warren's Lane, Trentham, Staffordshire, from "Measles and Bronchitis [for] 12 Days [and] Croup 7 hours", that he died when he was "3 years and 3 months" old, and that he was the son of Robert Evans, a "Collier".
The burial of Robert Evans is listed in the parish register of Dresden, Staffordshire (FHL Film # 1470944, Item #9), which states that he was buried on 5 December 1869, that he was of "Warren Lane", and that he was "3 years" old when he died (born about 1866). Note: The Dresden parish church is known was the "Dresden Church of the Resurrection". The church is now closed (2013) and parts of its building and many ofits churchyard gravesites are in poor condition.
In February 2013, the Brough Family Organization (BFO) obtained a copy of the birth certificate of Samuel Brough from England, which stated that he was born on 16 September 1839 in Lane End, and that his father was Richard Brough, a Brick Maker of Sutherland Road, Lane End, and that his mother was "Mary Brough formerly Holliston". Interestingly, Samuel Brough's live LDS Endowment record (recorded by clerk Joseph F. Smith, FHL Special Collections Film # 183405, pages 90-91) took place on 2 February 1867 in the Endowment House in Salt Lake City, Utah, and stated that he was born on 17 September 1839 in Longton, Staffordshire, England, and that he was baptized into the LDS Church on 7 April 1856 as the son of Richard Brough and Mary "Allison" (mistaken for "Hollison").
Samuel Brough was born in Lane End, Staffordshire, England, on 16 September 1839. This location is often referred to as "Lane End, Longton". For example: "Lane End, Longton, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire: Confusion often arises over the location and names of Lane End and Longton. Originally they were two separate and contiguous townships which were incorporated in the Borough of Longton in 1865. Longton was adjacent to Longton Hall and encompassed the Longton Hall Colliery and Brickworks. Even in 1900 the area was mainly fields. Lane End was centered on the area around Market Street and the bottom part of Anchor Road and contained the Markets, Churches and main potworks." (Source: http://www.thepotteries.org/did_you/009.htm)
The christening of Samuel Brough is listed in the parish register of St. John, Longton, Staffordshire, England (FHL Film # 1471087, Item #1), which states that he was christened on 13 October 1839 as the son of Richard and Mary Brough of Lane End, and that Richard Brough was a "Brickmaker".
Samuel Brough was baptized a member of the LDS Church on 1 May 1857 by Thomas Orgill of the LDS Longton Branch, Staffordshire, England. FHL Film # 0087016. Also, an RBFO Research Report from Jane Moffitt to R. Clayton Brough, 1992-1996, p.40, quotes Longton LDS Branch Records that state Samuel Brough was baptized on 1 May 1857 by Thomas Orgill, and that he moved--with his wife Elizabeth--from Longton to Badley Edge on 30 December 1860 and from Badley Edge back to Longton on 24 February 1861.
Samuel Brough was listed as an "Elder" in the LDS Church by 24 February 1861, in the LDS Longton Branch of Staffordshire, England. FHL Film # 0087016.
According to the 1851 British Census (taken on 30 March 1851), Samuel Brough was working as a "Coal Miner" when he was only "11" years of age.
Much of the information for this family group record (on the family of Samuel Brough and Elizabeth Bott) comes from genealogical material supplied by Ronald D. Rex to R. Clayton Brough in July 2004.
History of Samuel Brough
History of Samuel Brough and Elizabeth Bott. Edited by Ronald Dee Rex, R. Clayton Brough and John M. Brough, June 2004. Updated by R. Clayton Brough in September 2020. Edited from material that originally appeared in the 1999 book by Ronald Dee Rex (pp. 65-69): "History, Descendants, & Ancestry of William Rex & Mary Elizabeth Brough of Randolph, Utah".
Samuel Brough was born 16 September 1839 to Richard Brough and Mary Horleston in Lane End, Longton, Staffordshire, England. He was christened on 19 October 1839 in St. John's Parish (Church of England), Lane End, Longton. As a young man, Samuel worked in the coal mines around Longton and practiced the trades of masonry and carpentry. In fact, British census records state that Samuel was working as a "Coal Miner" when he was only "11" years of age. As a young man, Samuel also gained a good education through extensive reading.
On 7 February 1858, Samuel Brough married Elizabeth Bott in Edensor, Staffordshire. Elizabeth was born on 9 March 1838 in Lane End, Longton, Staffordshire, the oldest of nine children born to Benjamin Bott and Elizabeth Abbott. Prior to their marriage, Elizabeth had worked in the Staffordshire potteries in the china-painting department. When Elizabeth started keeping company with Samuel, her parents bitterly opposed it because they belonged to the Church of England and Samuel's father, Richard Brough, was a "Mormon"--having joined The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (or "LDS." or "Mormon" Church) in 1840--and Samuel and Elizabeth were actively investigating the LDS Church. Samuel and Elizabeth joined the LDS Church on the same day, both being baptized on 1 May 1857 by Thomas Orgill of the L.D.S. Longton Branch. After Elizabeth joined the LDS Church, her parents turned her away from their home, but in later years she and her siblings often communicated by letters which she sent from Utah or they sent from England.
On February 1, 1858, Samuel Brough and Elizabeth Bott were privately married in the home of Thomas Orgill by William Franklin Pace Sr., a LDS missionary serving in England (during 1856-1858). Then on February 7, 1858 they were married in the parish church of Edensor, Staffordshire. On February 24, 1861, Samuel was made an "Elder" in the LDS Priesthood at the LDS Longton Branch.
After Samuel and Elizabeth were married in February 1858, Samuel built one room onto his father's house. They lived in this one room until they came to America. Four children were born to them in England: Mary Elizabeth (born 20 December 1858), Jane (born 22 February 1860), Samuel (born 9 September 1861) and Eliza (born 3 March 1863).
Samuel and Elizabeth and their four children left Liverpool on 30 May 1863 on the ship "Cynosure" and came with a company of 754 Saints under the direction of David M. Stewart. They arrived in New York Harbor on July 19. While on board ship there was an epidemic of measles. Their little son, Samuel, became very sick with the measles. Several times they were afraid he would die and be buried at sea. He finally improved, but never was very healthy after this.
Soon after arriving in New York, Samuel and Elizabeth and their four children started westward, traveling part of the way to Florence, Nebraska in cattle cars. They crossed the Missouri River near Florence on the ferry. Shortly after arriving in Nebraska, Samuel died on 7 August 1863 with complications from the measles. He was buried in the Mormon cemetery in a dry-goods box at Florence, Nebraska. He was dressed in a little colored nightgown. Elizabeth took the crepe from her bonnet (that she had worn to her father's funeral the year before) to stuff the cracks in the box.
They remained in Florence until 15 August 1863, waiting for the pipes for the Salt Lake Tabernacle organ to arrive. They then started across the plains in the Samuel D. White Company. Several families were allotted to each wagon. A bedridden woman rode in their wagon. Elizabeth walked much of the way and carried her baby, 5 month old Liza. Mary walked part way but Jane rode because she was a cripple.
Samuel walked and drove a team all the way to Utah. Every morning and evening they had company prayers and everyone was supposed to attend. The company stopped one-half day each week for the women to wash. They washed their clothes in the creek (without soap) and hung them on bushes to dry.
Snow had fallen before they reached Salt Lake City on 15 October 1863, making it cold and miserable. They lived in Bountiful the first winter and in the spring, moved to Porterville in Morgan County. They lived in a dugout in the hillside. It was lined with adobes, and there was a fireplace in one end. In the spring when the snow started to melt, the frost came out of the ground and the water washed down the chimney and part of the wall caved in. A little daughter, Emma, was born in this dugout 25 March 1865. Mother and baby had to move to the Thomas Brough home. This same year (1865) little Eliza died. They watched her all night before she died in the light of the fireplace. During her illness, Eliza had cried for a potato but there were none available. Later in the time of plenty, this death grieved Elizabeth because she felt her little girl had died of starvation. The family was able to move into a two-room house and it was here their son, William Thomas, was born on 11 December 1866. The following February, they went to Salt Lake City, to the old Endowment House and took out their endowments. In February 1867, the Union Pacific Railroad was starting down the Weber Canyon. They moved to Henefer and found employment. Prudence was born in Henefer on 24 September 1868. Samuel then moved his family back to Porterville and another son, George Henry, was born on 9 July 1870.
In May 1870, Samuel went to Randolph and built a two-room log house. It was located on the corner of Field Street and Second East. He went to Laketown, Utah, for a grist of flour and bran and then returned to Porterville to harvest his crops and move his family to Randolph. The trip to Randolph took Samuel quite some time and before he returned, Elizabeth feared for his life. She was sitting by the side of the house crying when she saw Samuel walking over the hill.
When Samuel's family left Porterville, Samuel sold his farm to his older brother, Thomas Brough, and their house to Charles White. With a horse, a pair of oxen and a prairie schooner, Samuel, Elizabeth and their six children left for Randolph. Ducks, pigs, chickens and all their belongings were packed in the wagon, which also had a box on the back. Their three cows along with some other cattle were driven. It took a week to make the trip. It was after dark when they reached Big Creek. The wagon got stuck in the mud and they all walked into Randolph and stayed at Samuel Henderson's while Mr. Henderson went back to help Samuel get the wagon out. It was near midnight when they finally reached the little log house. Samuel had gathered the chips from the hewed logs and piled them in the center of the room. A fire was soon started in the fireplace in the west end of the room. At the time, it did not have any doors or windows in it.
Elizabeth and the children stayed and milked and fed the cows, pigs, chickens and ducks while Samuel went to Almy, Wyoming to work in the coal mines during the winter. In the spring Samuel cleared a piece of land and planted grain and had a small vegetable garden. They gathered hay from the "bottoms" east of town for the cattle. They cut the hay with a sickle and raked it with a rake not much larger than a garden rake. They carried their water from "Little Creek" for household purposes until a well could be dug-they called it the "Old Windless." They still had hard times as their crops were not certain. Samuel was a very good farmer and worked at this in the summertime, and worked in the coal mines in Almy during the winter.
Three more children, Hannah (born 27 May 1872), Benjamin Richard (born 6 July 1874) and Adria (born 17 July 1876) were born in Randolph. This made a total of eleven children, nine of which were living at the time. Elizabeth and her daughters, Mary Elizabeth and Jane, were among the first members of the LDS Relief Society in Randolph.
Samuel did much for the building of Randolph. He made the brick for most of the brick homes there-including the LDS Church and the old high school. He also had a lime kiln. They used lime in plaster. He also surveyed a water ditch without any instruments and in many ways helped conditions in Randolph.
In addition to manufacturing bricks in Randolph, Samuel also assisted his brother, Thomas, in making bricks in Porterville. Also, Samuel and Thomas operated a brickyard in east Kaysville between about 1867 and 1881. However, Samuel moved to Randolph in 1870, and likely didn't have much to do with the Brough Brick Yard after he had moved to Randolph. This large brickyard was known as the "Brough Brick Yard on Cemetery Street," Today, the ground on which the Brough Brick Yard was once located is owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and is occupied by the LDS Kaysville Crestwood Wardhouse--located at 1039 East Crestwood Road, Kaysville, Utah.
Elizabeth was always good to those in need and without mothers. She took Lena Hanney and Opal Brough into her home after their mothers died. Bessie Brough also lived with her for awhile. She was always clean and neatly dressed. She always had pretty bonnets that tied under her chin. The way she tied her aprons was to tie the bow in front so she could get the bows even and then slip the bow around to the back. She never regretted the sacrifices and hardships she went through to come to Zion.
Samuel was a long time building his new brick home. Money was scarce and he would have to stop for awhile, harvest his crops, and sell some to obtain more money. He made his own brick, lime, and did the mason work on his home-the first brick home to be built in Randolph. These bricks were packed in straw and hauled to the building site. The family was very proud of this new home. Samuel had a lot of grandsons and furnished employment for most of them while they grew up. He surveyed the canal that runs west of town-the one you cross on the way to the cemetery. He had only a spirit level and a foot board. Samuel experimented with all kinds of grass and hay seeds to find out which grew the best. He had a herd of cattle and many horses.
Samuel Brough was a religious man and attended to his LDS Church affairs with real dedication. He died on 29 May 1911 at the age of 71, leaving Elizabeth a widow for eleven years. Elizabeth was the only one of her family to join the LDS, but she always defended her faith and encouraged her children and other Latter-day Saints to remain faithful to their beliefs. She died on 23 November 1921 at the age of 83. Both are buried in the southeast corner of the Randolph City Cemetery.
Elizabeth Bott (Brough) was listed as a member of the LDS Church in the LDS Longton Branch, Staffordshire, England. FHL Film # 0087016. However, no specific date is listed in this record for her baptism. However, on 2 February 1867, Elizabeth Brough performed her live LDS Endowment (as recorded by clerk Joseph F. Smith, FHL Special Collections Film # 183405, pages 90-91) in the Endowment House in Salt Lake City, Utah, and stated that she was born on 9 March 1838 in Staffordshire, England, was baptized into the LDS Church on 3 May 1857, and was the daughter of Benjamin Bott and Elizabeth Abbotts.
Marriage Notes for Samuel Brough and Elizabeth Bott-119
In March 2012, the RBFO obtained a copy of the marriage certificate of "Samuel Brough" and "Elizabeth Bott" from England, which stated that they were married by Banns on 7 February 1858 in the parish church of Edensor, Staffordshire, and that Samuel Brough was 19 years old (born about 1839), a Bachelor and Brick Maker of Furnace Road [which is in Longton, Stoke-on-Trent], and that his father was Richard Brough, a Brick Maker; and that Elizabeth Bott was 20 years old (born about 1838), a Spinster and Potter of Sutherland Terrace [which was in Longton, Stoke-on-Trent], and that her father was Benjamin Bott, a Potter. The marriage was witnessed by William Pace and William Buxten.
Samuel Brough and Elizabeth Bott were privately married on February 1, 1858 in the home Thomas Orgill by William Franklin Pace Sr., a LDS missionary serving in England (1856-1858). Then on February 7, 1858 they were married in the parish church of Edensor, Staffordshire. (Source: William Franklin Pace Sr., Missionary Journal, 1856-1858, FamilySearch PID# LZPW-H6N; online at: https://catalog.churchofjesuschrist.org/assets?id=78fad59d-3842-40c6-87d1-470c4f08e691&crate=0&index=0 .)
In March 2012, the RBFO obtained a copy of the birth certificate of "Samuel Brough" from England, which stated that he was born on 9 September 1861 at Stone Road, Trentham, Staffordshire, and that his father was Samuel Brough, a Brickmaker, and that his mother was "Elizabeth Brough formerly Bott".
The death and burial of Samuel Brough is described as follows in the "History of Samuel Brough and Elizabeth Bott": "Soon after arriving in New York, Samuel and Elizabeth and their four children started westward, traveling part of the way to Florence, Nebraska in cattle cars. They crossed the Missouri River near Florence on the ferry. Shortly after arriving in Nebraska, Samuel died on 7 August 1863 with complications from the measles. He was buried in the Mormon cemetery in a dry-goods box at Florence, Nebraska. He was dressed in a little colored nightgown. Elizabeth took the crepe from her bonnet (that she had worn to her father's funeral the year before) to stuff the cracks in the box."
In March 2012, the RBFO obtained a copy of the birth certificate of "Eliza Brough" from England, which stated that she was born on 3 March 1863 at Warrens Lane, Trentham, Staffordshire, and that her father was Samuel Brough, a Brick Manufacturer, and that her mother was "Elizabeth Brough formerly Bott".
The following information about Eliza Brough--who died and was buried in 1865 in the Porterville Cemetery--appears in the RBFO obline history of Samuel Brough and Eliza Bott:
"Snow had fallen before they [Samuel Brough and Elizabeth Bott] reached Salt Lake City on 15 October 1863, making it cold and miserable. They lived in Bountiful the first winter and in the spring, moved to Porterville in Morgan County. They lived in a dugout in the hillside. It was lined with adobes, and there was a fireplace in one end. In the spring when the snow started to melt, the frost came out of the ground and the water washed down the chimney and part of the wall caved in. A little daughter, Emma, was born in this dugout 25 March 1865. Mother and baby had to move to the Thomas Brough home. This same year (1865) little Eliza [who was born on 3 March 1863 in Longton, Staffordshire, England] died. They watched her all night before she died in the light of the fireplace. During her illness, Eliza had cried for a potato but there were none available. Later in the time of plenty, this death grieved Elizabeth because she felt her little girl had died of starvation. The family was able to move into a two-room house and it was here their son, William Thomas, was born on 11 December 1866...."
The christening of "James Hollison" is listed in the Bishop's Transcript of Bucknall, Staffordshire (FHL Film # 426501, Item #1), which states that he was christened on 30 June 1816 as the "illg" (or illegitimate) son of "Mary Hollison" of "Whetley Moor" (Wetley Moor). Also, the christening of James Hollison is listed in FamilySearch (via FHL Film # 1278889, Item #16, page 16--which is the parish register for Bucknall), which states that he was christened on 30 June 1816 in Bucknall, Staffordshire, as "James [the] illegitimate son" of "Mary Hollison" of "Whitley Moor [Wetley Moor]". In addition, the christening of James Hollison is listed in FamilySearch (via FHL Film # 426501, p.15--which is the Bishop's Transcript for "Stoke-upon-Trent at Bucknall"), which states that he was christened on 30 June 1816 in Bucknall Cum Bagnall, Staffordshire, as "James [the] illegitimate son" of "Mary Hollison" of "Whetley Moor [Wetley Moor]".
In 2006, the RBFO obtained a copy of the marriage certificate of "James Holison" and "Mary Harper" from England, which stated that they were married by Banns on 27 August 1837 in St. Peters Church in Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire; that James Holison was "of full age" and a Bachelor and Collier of Lane End [Longton], and that his father was James Holison, a Potter; and that Mary Harper was "of full age" and a Spinster of Lane End [Longton], and that her father was Thomas Harper, a Labourer. The marriage was witnessed by John Steels and Thomas Lake.
Research Note: The "birth father" of James Hollison (chr.1816) may have been a "James Holison"--as described in the following 1837 marriage record of James Holison (chr.1816) and Mary Harper (chr.1815): In 2006, the RBFO obtained a copy of the marriage certificate of "James Holison" and "Mary Harper" from England, which stated that they were married by Banns on 27 August 1837 in St. Peters Church in Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire; that James Holison was "of full age" and a "Bachelor" and "Collier" of Lane End [Longton], and that his father was James Holison, a Potter; and that Mary Harper was "of full age" and a Spinster of Lane End [Longton], and that her father was Thomas Harper, a Labourer. The marriage was witnessed by John Steels and Thomas Lake.
In the 1841 Census, James Hollison is listed as being 20 years old (born after 6 June 1816 and before 6 June 1821), born in Staffordshire, working as a "Collier", and residing with his wife, Mary, and their one-year-old son, William, along with his 70-year-old grandmother, Elizabeth Hollison, in Wetley Moor, Bucknall Cum Bagnall, Bucknall, Staffordshire.
"James Hollison" died prior to the 1861 Census--which was taken on 7 April 1861, as his wife, "Mary Hollins" is listed as being a "Widow" in the 1861 Census, as follows: In the 1861 Census, "Mary Hollins" is listed as being 46 years old (born about 1815), born in Longton, Staffordshire, a "Widow", and residing with her married daughter, Elizabeth Shaw (age 20) and her husband, Enoch Shaw (age 28), at: 41 Chadwick Place, Longton, Staffordshire, England.
In 2016 the BFO Research Committee listed "James Hollison" in its Brough Global Database as having been "Adopted" by Richard Brough.
The christening of "Mary Harper" is listed in the parish register fo St. John, Longton, Staffordshire (FHL Film # 1471086, Item #10, page 83, entry #664), which states that she was christened on 27 November 1815, that she was the daughter of "Thomas and Elizabeth Harper" and that Thomas Harper was a "Labourer".
Research Note: The "birth father" of James Hollison (chr.1816) may have been a "James Holison"--as described in the following 1837 marriage record of James Holison (chr.1816) and Mary Harper (chr.1815): In 2006, the RBFO obtained a copy of the marriage certificate of "James Holison" and "Mary Harper" from England, which stated that they were married by Banns on 27 August 1837 in St. Peters Church in Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire; that James Holison was "of full age" and a "Bachelor" and "Collier" of Lane End [Longton], and that his father was James Holison, a Potter; and that Mary Harper was "of full age" and a Spinster of Lane End [Longton], and that her father was Thomas Harper, a Labourer. The marriage was witnessed by John Steels and Thomas Lake.
In the 1841 Census, Mary (Hollison) is listed as being 25 years old (born about 1816), born in Staffordshire, and residing with her husband, James Hollison, and their one-year-old son, William, along with his 70-year-old grandmother, Elizabeth Hollison, in Wetley Moor, Bucknall Cum Bagnall, Bucknall, Staffordshire.
In the 1861 Census, "Mary Hollins" is listed as being 46 years old (born about 1815), born in Longton, Staffordshire, a "Widow", and residing with her married daughter, Elizabeth Shaw (age 20) and her husband, Enoch Shaw (age 28), at: 41 Chadwick Place, Longton, Staffordshire, England.
In the 1871 Census (which was taken on 2 April 1871), "Mary Hollison" is listed as being 59 years old (born about 1812), born in Longton, Staffordshire, working as a "Potter Paintress", and residing with her probable married daughter, Elizabeth Shaw (age 31), and her husband, Enoch Shaw (age 38), and their seven children, at: 65 Normacott Road, Longton, Staffordshire, England.
Marriage Notes for James Hollison and Mary Harper-131
In 2006, the RBFO obtained a copy of the marriage certificate of "James Holison" and "Mary Harper" from England, which stated that they were married by Banns on 27 August 1837 in St. Peters Church in Stoke-upon-Trent, Staffordshire; that James Holison was "of full age" and a Bachelor and Collier of Lane End [Longton], and that his father was James Holison, a Potter; and that Mary Harper was "of full age" and a Spinster of Lane End [Longton], and that her father was Thomas Harper, a Labourer. The marriage was witnessed by John Steels and Thomas Lake.
In March 2015, the BFO obtained a copy of the birth certificate of "James Hollison" from England, which stated that he was born on 16 January 1838 at "3 o'Clock AM" in "Lane End", Longton, Staffordshire, and that his father was "James Hollison", a "Collier" of "Sutherland Road", and that his mother was "Mary Hollison formerly Harper".
In March 2015, the BFO obtained a copy of the death certificate of "James Hollison" from England, which stated that he died on 24 February 1838 in "Lane End" in Longton, Staffordshire, England; that he died of "Convulsion" when he was "5 Weeks" old; and that his father was "James Hollison" of "Sutherland Road, Lane End".
The death of "James Hollison" is listed in the online FreeBMD and Staffordshire BMD, which states that his death was registered in January-March 1843 in Longton subdistrict, Stoke-upon-Trent district, Staffordshire, England.
The burial of "Jas: Hollinson" is listed in the the parish register of St. John, Longton, Staffordshire (FHL Film # 1471087, Item #11, page 152, entry #1222), which states that he was buried on 27 February 1838, and that he was of "Lane End" and an "Inft" (or Infant) when he died.
In March 2015, the BFO obtained a copy of the birth certificate of "William Hollistone" from England, which stated that he was born on 25 September 1840 in "Lane End" in Longton, Staffordshire, England, and that his father was "James Hollistone" a "Collier" of "New Street, Lane End", and that his mother was "Mary Hollistone formerly Harper."
In March 2015, the BFO obtained a copy of the death certificate of "William Hollison" from England, which stated that he died on 6 November 1842 in "Lane End" in Longton, Staffordshire, England; that he died of "Phthisis" when he was "2 years" old (born about 1840); that he was the "son of James Hollison" a "Collier"; and that his father "James Hollison" was "Present at the death" and that he was of "Wood Street, Lane End".
The birth of "William Hollistone" is listed in the online FreeBMD and Staffordshire BMD, which combined states that his birth was registered in July-September 1840 in Longton subdistrict, Stoke-upon-Trent district, Staffordshire, England; and that his mother's surname was "Harper".
The christening of "William Hollinson" is listed in the parish register of St. John, Longton, Staffordshire (FHL Film # 1471087, Item #2, page 32), which states that he was christened on 1 November 1840 and that he was the son of James and Mary Hollinson of Lane End, and that James Hollinson was a "Collier".
The death of "William Hollison" is listed in the online FreeBMD and Staffordshire BMD, which combined states that his death was registered in October-December 1842 in Longton subdistrict, Stoke-upon-Trent district, Staffordshire, England.
The burial of "Wm Hollinson" is listed in the parish register of St. John, Longton, Staffordshire (FHL Film # 1471087, Item # 12, page 46, entry #750), which states that he was buried on 9 November 1842 and that he was of "Lane End" and was "2" years old when he died (born about 1840).
In the 1841 Census, William Hollison is listed as "one year" old (born about 1840), born in Staffordshire, and residing with his parents, James and Mary Hollison, and his 70-year-old great-grandmother, Elizabeth Hollison, in Wetley Moor, Bucknall Cum Bagnall, Bucknall, Staffordshire.