#52AncestorsIn52Weeks Week32/52 Peter SINCLAIR 1802?-1887
Ahnentafel Number 62
Context for discovery:
This biography was written as part of the 52 ancestors in 52 weeks exercise devised by Amy Johnson Crow. You can join in too here. The theme for this week is "At the Library"
Amy says:
One of my favorite things to do when I was little was go to the library. (It still is!) It's really no surprise that I ended up getting my Masters degree in library science. This week's theme is "At the Library." Do you have any librarians in your family? What about fond memories of going to the library or help that you've received from a librarian?
Peter Sinclair was my 3rd
great-grandfather on my mother’s side.
This blog post is a
compilation of several blog posts I previously wrote about my great-grandfather. You will have to read quite a bit before you find the library connection :)
Childhood
Birth Date/Place:
It is not clear exactly when Peter was born.
He died aged 84 in 1887 which indicates he was born 1803. From Peter’s death certificate, his parents are recorded as Donald Sinclair and Margaret (formerly Bell). But we all know how unreliable death certificates can be, so we take this with a grain of salt.
Just to
confuse things, in the 1841 Census there is a Donald Bell living with Peter and
his wife Isabella Sinclair. I suspect Donald may have been his uncle (i.e. his
mother’s brother) who was perhaps like a father to him.
In the 1841
Census, Peter is recorded as being 30 years old. According to these explanatory notes on FindMyPast this could mean that
Peter was as old as 34 as ages were rounded down so it could mean he was born
anywhere between 1807 and 1811. If in fact he was 38 or 39 years old, why would he say he was 30 years old? This needs further investigation.
Based on the
naming of Peter’s children below Peter’s parents’ names could have been
Margaret and James John.
A birth was
found for Peter Sinclair in Glasgow in 1802 of Margaret Bell and John
Sinclair.[i] These parents names match the names of the parents of his supposed older
brother John referred to in this blog post. I cannot however find a baptism for
this John.
The only
other sibling I could find born to Margaret and John was:
Malcolm baptised 23 April 1800 Glasgow[ii]
Baptism
Date/Place:
6th
February 1802 Glasgow, John Sinclair Clothlapper & Margaret Bell, a L. Son,
Peter born 7th. Witnesses: John Bell & John McCallum[iii]
I wonder what if any other records we could find of Peter's childhood? School? apprenticeship records? What would life have been like in Glasgow in the early 1800s and how did Peter end up in Inverary? This requires further research
Married Life
Marriage
Dates/Places:
Civil
marriage registration didn’t start in Scotland until 1855 so we can only find a
church register entry for his marriage. Peter
married Isabella Birrell on 18 September 1838 in Argyle, Inverary,
Scotland.[iv]
Unfortunately, there is no record of Peter’s or Isabella’s ages or parents’ names.
Based on the
naming of their children below Isabella’s parents’ names would have been
Isabella and Peter Birrell and Peter’s parents’ names would have been Margaret
and James John.
Children’s
Birth Dates/Places:
My father
did some research at the LDS library back in 1992 and found the following.[v]
1. Isabella born 3rd March and baptised
8th March1839[vi],
father Peter merchant of Inveraray (supposedly named after maternal
grandmother)
2. Margaret born 23rd March and
baptised 25th May1841[vii]
father Peter merchant of Inveraray (supposedly named after paternal
grandmother)
3. Agnes or Anna born 26th July and
baptised 20th December 1842, father Peter fish curer of Inveraray [viii]
(supposedly named after mother)
4. James John born 15 October and
baptised 9th December 1845[ix],father
Peter fish curer of Inveraray (supposedly named after paternal grandfather)
5. Ann born 1846[x]
6. Helen born 5th September and
baptised 10th September1848[xi],
father Peter fish curer of Inveraray
7. Peter born 12th December and
baptised 29th December 1850[xii],
father Peter fish curer of Inveraray (supposedly named after maternal
grandfather)
8. Emma Maria born 26th July and
baptised 15th August 1853, father Peter Sinclair fish curer of Inveraray[xiii]
Life in Scotland
Fellow
researcher Mary Sinclair advised me in a message that:
“Peter Sinclair the fish curer vociferously objected to the design of the new pier in Inveraray between 1835-1837. “
Mary advised
she has records of letters from him to the Fishery Board suggesting alterations
to the design. She states that:
"he also shows up in the Fishery Board records in 1831 having had a fish barrel seized for being made of fir (apparently the wrong wood to use!)."
1841 Census
The Sinclair household in Relief Main Street, Inveraray, Argyllshire, Scotland is as follows:
· Peter aged 30 born Scotland, merchant (born circa 1811)
· Isabella aged 25 born Argyllshire
· Isabella aged 2 born Argyllshire
· Margaret baby born Argyllshire
· Jean Brown aged 20 born Argyllshire
· Donald Bell aged 70 born Argyllshire –
Shoe Manufacturer (we have to assume that this is Peter’s maternal grandfather)
I have highlighted shoe manufacturer because if you read about the Clan Birrell on this site here, you will note that Henry Birrell of Fifeshire was a shoemaker so I do wonder if the Birrells did move from Fifeshire to Argyl. Further research is required here.
Mary Sinclair further advised that on 22nd April 1842 Peter was declared bankrupt.
"A creditors meeting was advertised in the Caledonian Mercury 19 April 1852 Legal documents related to this show he had a brother Malcolm and a younger brother John and an aunt Mrs Govan."
I have been able to locate these newspaper articles.
24 February
1842 Perthshire Courier from British Newspaper Archives
I found the most amazing book online called The Harvest of the Sea: A contribution to the natural and economic history of the British food fishes by James Glass Bertram. He gives some insight into the tricky business of commerce in herring which he describes as follows:
"The way of dealing in herring is pretty much as follows:—Owners of boats are engaged to fish by curers, the bargains being usually that the curer will take two hundred crans of herring—and a cran, it may be stated, is forty-five gallons of ungutted fish; for these two hundred crans a certain sum per cran is paid according to arrangement, the bargain including as well a definite sum of ready money by way of bounty, perhaps also an allowance of spirits, and the use of ground for the drying of the nets. On the other hand, the boat-owner provides a boat, nets, buoys, and all the apparatus of the fishery, and engages a crew to fish; his crew may, perhaps, be relatives and part-owners sharing the venture with him, but usually the crew consists of hired men who get so much wages at the end of the season, and have no risk or profit. This is the plan followed by free and independent fishermen who are really owners of their own boats and apparatus. It will thus be seen that the curer is bargaining for two hundred crans of fish months before he knows that a single herring will be captured; for the bargain of next season is always made at the close of the present one, and he has to pay out at once a large sum by way of bounty, and provide barrels, salt, and other necessaries for the cure before he knows even if the catch of the season just expiring will all be sold, or how the markets will pulsate next year. On the other hand, the fisherman has received his pay for his season’s fish, and very likely pocketed a sum of from ten to thirty pounds as earnest-money for next year’s work. Then, again, a certain number of curers who are men of capital will advance money to young fishermen in order that they may purchase a boat and the necessary quantity of netting to enable them to engage in the fishery—thus thirling the boat to their service, very probably fixing an advantageous price per cran for the herrings to be fished and supplied. Curers, again, who are not capitalists, have to borrow from the buyers, because to compete with their fellows they must be able to lend money for the purchase of boats and nets, or to advance sums by way of bounty to the free boats; and thus a rotten unwholesome system goes the round—fishermen, boat-builders, curers, and merchants all hanging on each other, and evidencing that there is as much gambling in herring-fishing as in horse-racing."
1851 Census[xiv] –
- Isabella aged 35 is living at Inveraray, Argyllshire, Scotland, wife of Peter Sinclair, writer
- 12 year old daughter Isabella
- 10 year old daughter Margaret
- 8 year old daughter Anna
- 6 year old son James John
- 4 year old daughter Helen
- Baby Peter Sinclair and
- Unmarried 18 year old female servant Effy McKellar
On the Scotland's People website, I found Peter Sinclair on the Valuation roll for the Burgh of Inveraray as a tenant, living in a house owned by the Duke and paying 10 pounds per annum. He was recorded as a Clerk. On the same page I found Isabella's mother Mrs Margaret Birrell listed as renting a house for 9 pounds per annum.[xv]
Life in Australia
The family emigrated to Melbourne, Australia in 1857.[xvi]This was right in the middle of the gold rush period. To give an idea of the time here is a quote from Basil Lubbock's book (available on the Gutenberg Library) The Colonial Clippers:
"In the year 1852 102,000 people arrived in the Colony of Victoria, and in the 18 months following the discovery of Ballarat the population of Melbourne sprang from 23,000 to 70,000, and that of Geelong from 8000 to 20,000.
In the five years 1852-7, during which the rush to the diggings was at its height, 100,000 Englishmen, 60,000 Irish, 50,000 Scots, 4000 Welsh, 8000 Germans, 1500 French, 3000 Americans, and no less than 25,000 Chinese—not to speak of the other nationalities of the world, all of whom were represented—landed on the shores of Port Phillip."
On the
shipping list, Peter is described as 50 years of age and a fish curer. Wife Isabella is 38 years old, daughter
Isabella 16, Margaret 14, Ann, 11, James 9, Ellen 7 and Emma 4.
One can only imagine what it must have been like moving from a small fishing town like Inveraray with a population of maybe 1000 people to the bustling metropolis of Melbourne. But it seems like there would have been a friendly face waiting to greet the family when they arrived.
Newly
discovered cousin Jessica has alerted me to the fact that John Sinclair, a
builder and contractor was in business with a Peter Steel Sinclair at that time
and living in Melbourne. John was born
1807 in Inveraray and we are pretty confident he was Peter Sinclair Senior’s
brother. She supplied a death certificate
for John who died in Healesville in 1890 aged 83. The certificate shows his
father as being John and his mother Margaret (nee Bell).[xvii]
Jessica supplied a small biography obtained from the Victorian Trades Hall Council and it states John Sinclair was the first contractor for the Melbourne University Building, took a great interest in the labour question, as well as being President of the Eight Hours League. He was MLA for Norther Melbourne October 1859-August 1864. I found an obituary in Trove to support these assertions.[xviii]
The Library Connection!
Greenham Studios. (1901). Victorian Parliament House, Federal Parliamentary Library, Melbourne, [1920?] Retrieved January 30, 2017, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-136761356
In my research for this post I found the following newspaper article which I thinks proves John and Peter were brothers.
1859 09 12 Page 2 Ovens and Murray Advertiser Beechworth Vic Electioneering Revelations
He still seems to
have been clerk according to a directory in 1871 at the age of 69. So he would have worked for Librarians
Charles Ridgway and James Smith. I
wonder how he obtained this position.
Previously, on his daughter Isabella's marriage certificate he was
described as a contractor. That could
mean anything really yes?
A bit more
digging on Trove and I found a couple of articles which indicated how the
position might have become available. It
seems that there was a young book-sewer by the name of Jessie Gallie who fell
pregnant with the assistance of Alfred Britter, a clerk in the Parliamentary
Library. According to the morals of the time, she lost her job due to her
condition and was forced, through destitution, to take him to court for
maintenance. If you want to get a sense
of the times this article and this article will enlighten you. I suspect Mr Britter didn't suffer too much
though and that he was just moved sideways into the Post Office according to
this article - sigh.
What would
it have been like working in the Parliamentary Library I wonder?
This article
gives us some idea.
MELBOURNE.
(1862, December 12). Bendigo Advertiser (Vic. : 1855 - 1918), p. 2. Retrieved
February 4, 2017, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article87904272
Sue Reynolds
in her paper Libraries, Librarians and Librarianship in the Colony of Victoriaquotes Patrick Gregory who wrote a history of the Library as saying:
"that the true work of the library was performed by the Committee, with Ridgway (the Librarian) the "fetcher and carrier" who had "little to do with the development of the collection, a task that fell to the Committee and its London agents...his work consisted more of checking the inventories against the contents of ever-increasing number of creates, cataloguing the unpacked books and doling them out to members."
Dr. Diane
Heriot's paper Integrated Library and Research Services in the Australian Parliament
here quotes Biskup and Goodman:
"Parliamentary libraries grew up in the nineteenth century tradition of the cultured gentlemen’s library and were, for many years, little more than well-appointed clubs where members could read their favourite newspapers and find the occasional literary allusion or quotation for speeches."
If you are interested in the history of the Parliamentary Library in Melbourne, click here and here.
From about
1867[xix]
there is a Peter Sinclair living in Napier Street Fitzroy (numbers 44 and 54)
and he seems to move to Best Street in about 1884.[xx]
Senior
Years
Date and
place of Death
Peter died on 30th December 1887.[xxi] Peter was described as a Gentleman - 84 years old. He died of Senile Decay. His father is described as Donald Sinclair. There is something written in brackets after his name which says occupation not known and his mother is described as Margaret Sinclair formerly Bell. The record states he was born in Glasgow coming to Victoria about 30 years before. The informant was Charles Stuart, authorized agent, 178 Fitroy Street Fitzroy. I do not know how he was related, if at all, to Peter. The certificiated recorded that Peter was married at Inverness about 40 years before to Bella Birrell and his children were listed as follows:
Bella 43
Anne 40
James 38
Helen 36
Emma 32
Date and
Place of Burial:
He was
buried on 31st December at Melbourne Cemetery[xxii]
in Section N Grave Number 115/116 – Religion Presbyterian. The transcription reads:
Erected by his wife in the memory of Peter SINCLAIR late of Inverary Argyleshire Scotland who died at North Fitzroy 30 Dec 1887 Isabella wife of the above who died 14 Jan 1891 also James John dearly loved son of the above who entered into rest 2 Dec 1895 also their beloved daughters Ann beloved wife of Peter Steel SINCLAIR who died 8 Jan 1922 Helen who died 16 Feb 1922 both dearly loved Emma ROACH who died 9 Oct 1933.
Estate
I tracked
down Peter's will and probate on the PRO site.[xxiii] Peter basically left everything to his wife
and then in the event of her death, it was to go to his unmarried daughters and
son. Son James died in 1895. Wife Isabella died in 1891. Daughter Helen Sinclair applied to the
Supreme Court to administer the estate in 1901 declaring that the only persons
entitled to a share in the distribution of the estate were sisters Anna and
Emma. Their eldest sister Isabella was
still alive at that time but perhaps they considered she was well provided for.
Conclusion
References
[i] Ancestry.com.
Scotland, Select Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT,
USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014.
[ii]
Scotlands People 23/04/1800 SINCLAIR, MALCOLM (Old Parish Registers Births
644/1 200 17 Glasgow) Page 17 of 564
[iii]
Scotlands People 07/02/1802 SINCLAIR, PETER (Old Parish Registers Births 644/1
200 91 Glasgow) Page 91 of 564
[iv] Ancestry.com.
Scotland, Select Marriages, 1561-1910 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA:
Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. Original data: Scotland, Marriages,
1561-1910. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013.
[v] LDS
Roll No. 1041067
[vi] Ancestry.com.
Scotland, Select Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT,
USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. Original data: Scotland, Births and
Baptisms, 1564-1950. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013.
[vii] Ancestry.com.
1851 Scotland Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com
Operations Inc, 2006. Original data: Scotland. 1851 Scotland Census. Reels
1-217. General Register Office for Scotland, Edinburgh, Scotland.
[viii]
Ancestry.com 1851 Scotland Census Parish: Inveraray; ED: 1; Page: 16; Line: 5;
Roll: CSSCT1851_109; Year: 1851
[ix] Ancestry.com
Scotland, Select Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950
[x] Ancestry.com.
Australia, Death Index, 1787-1985 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA:
Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2010. Death Index Victoria 1921-1985
[xi] Ancestry.com,
Scotland, Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch,
2013.
[xii] Ancestry.com.
Scotland, Select Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT,
USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. Original data: Scotland, Births and
Baptisms, 1564-1950. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch, 2013.
[xiii]
Ancestry.com. Scotland, Select Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950 [database
on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. Original data:
Scotland, Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950. Salt Lake City, Utah: FamilySearch,
2013.
[xiv]
Ancestry.com, 1851 Scotland Census, Parish: Inveraray; ED: 1; Page: 16; Line:
2; Roll: CSSCT1851_109; Year: 1851 Ancestry.com Operations Inc 2006
[xv] Scotland's
People - Valuation Rolls VR004000001-/2, INVERARAY BURGH Page 2 of 25 1855
SINCLAIR, PETER
[xvi] Inward
Overseas Passenger Lists (see Microfiche Copies: VPRS 7666 United Kingdom
Ports; VPRS 7667 Foreign Ports; VPRS 13439 New Zealand Ports)VPRS 947/P0000, Oct
- Dec 1857
https://prov.vic.gov.au/archive/3B0750BA-F96C-11E9-AE98-19084F8A768F?image=314
[xvii]
Email from Jessica Prestedge to Alex Daw 1/11/2021
[xviii]
DEATH OF AN EIGHT HOURS PIONEER. (1890, December 8). The Age (Melbourne, Vic. :
1854 - 1954), p. 5. Retrieved February 20, 2022, from
http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article196976870
[xix]
Ancestry.com, Australia, City Directories, 1845-1948, Melbourne Directory
(Sands) 1867 and Victoria, Australia, Rate Books, 1855-1963 City of Fitzroy
page
[xx]
Ancestry.com, Australia, City Directories, 1845-1948, Melbourne Directory
(Sands) 1884, p 132
[xxi]
Death Certificate Peter Sinclair, 30th December 1887 but registered 1888, District of North Fitzroy, Colony of Victoria No. 2820, Australia, 87/36441
[xxii]
Ancestry.com, Victoria, Australia, Cemetery Records and Headstone
Transcriptions, 1844-1997 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com
Operations, Inc., 2016.
[xxiii]
Public Record Office of Victoria, 78/981 Peter Sinclair: Grant of
administration,Probate and Administration Files ( 28 ),VPRS 28/P0000,
78/981,https://prov.vic.gov.au/archive/D168EC07-F1CB-11E9-AE98-BF1388C10E75?image=1
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