John Monteagle BROWNE page update
See: Photos of Co. Down BROWNE family.
Annie BROWNE b 1876, married Thomas Maxwell GILPIN June 9,
1897 in Ardglass, Co. Down. See: Wedding
photo (where is this? Janeville?). She died between 1903 and 1908 leaving
two children, Daisy Montgomery GILPIN born 1899 and James Alexander GILPIN, b. 10
Sep 1902, Shore Rd., Holywood, Co. Down. I have yet to find Annie’s exact birth
or death date, but it is possible that she died
in childbirth.
John Plunkett BROWNE b 1874 (I have yet to find his exact birth
date. Checked 1873-5) d. 11 Oct 1932 St. Bartholomews Hospital, London
James Carlyle Monteagle BROWNE b. 16 Jan 1877, at 144
Crumlin Rd. died on August 8th, 1910 residence D'Olier, Cherryvalley Park,
Knock.
Edgar Monteagle BROWNE, born 15 June 1878, 234 Crumlin Rd.
married Ozra HINSHELWOOD 22 Feb 1915. d.22 Aug 1950 Elm Park Gardens, Chelsea,
England
Jane Edgar BROWNE, born July 10, 1881, 234 Crumlin Rd.; married
Thomas
Jackson BROWN 27 Jan 1909 St. Columba’s Church, Knock, Belfast. d. 7 Oct
1964, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Hugh Alexander Edgar BROWNE,b 21 June 1885, 234 Crumlin
Rd., Belfast, married Eleanor Frances BOOTH 14 Aug 1919, St. Thomas, Heaton-Norris,
Lancashire.
Martin Monteagle George. BROWNE, born 14 Mar 1887, 234
Crumlin Rd., Belfast, married Ethel STEEL 1915 (I do not have their marriage
Cert – likely it was not in Ireland).
John Plunkett BROWNE.
· 1874. No birth certificate is recorded at either NI or irishgenealogy. His supposed birth date of 1874 is interesting. His father, John Monteagle BROWNE was a bachelor when he married Susannah EDGAR in September 23.
· 1901 Census, resident of House 55 Sandown Road, Pottinger, Co. Down. Age 17, architect pupil.
· 1903: The London Gazette, September 11th, 1903: 3rd Battalion, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers. John Plunkett Browne, Gent, to be Second Lieutenant. Dated 5th September 1903
· 1933. Probate: BROWNE John Plunkett of 57 Lansdowne-road Holland Park London. Probate London 4 January to Samuel Francis Peter Blythe, solicitor. Effects £1436 9s 8d. Resealed Cairo 24 April 1933.
· NOTE: It seems that he died unmarried.
· News clipping refers to Lieutenant J. Plunkett Browne,3rd Battalion Inniskilling Fusiliers inspecting the troops. He "complimented the lads on their fine and smart appearance". Addressing the company, he "spoke of the advantages of physical drill, especially to lads living in the city, and how necessary it was to have a sound body and good physique to take part successfully in the battle of life".
· 1915. The wedding announcement of his brother, Edgar, refers to Captain J. Monteagle Brown who attended, having been wounded at the front.
· Thanks to Margaret Ennis in Belfast who found the 1901 record for Albert. There are two houses shown on the Alan Godfrey maps. "On the back of one showing the KNOCK area there is an extract from the street directory at the time (1902). The very first entry to ALBERT VILLAS is at the start of Kings Road, running from the Sandown Road on the right hand side,. This could apply to two houses as the occupants are given as Wilson, J. solicitor and the Cuthbert, Gerald, elec. Engr."[source email, March 18, 2002] On March 20, 2002, Margaret went to the Linen Hall Library and found that the 1909 occupant of the Albert Villas as recorded in the 1909 Belfast Street Directory was Lieut. JP Browne of the 3rd Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers. This is probably the Albertville mentioned as June BROWNE's place of domicile in 1909.SOURCE email # 571 also email #607 "Just past your ancestor's house it says "Sandown Park intersects (in Belfast Directory for 1909).
· 1922 When John applied for one of his military medals, his address was 25 Sharia Tewf R, Cairo, Egypt. He was with the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, att to/2d Bn, Royal Irish Rifles, Royal Irish Regiment
Hugh Alexander Edgar BROWNE
SOURCE: Orders, Decorations and Medals. Spink. 22-23 Aug 2020. London. P221
Medals on Auction: x671 A Great War ‘Birthday Honours’ M.C. group of four awarded to Captain H. A. E. Browne,
Royal Engineers, scion of a large Irish family, who narrowly avoided the loss of the RMS
Lusitania and forged a long and successful career as an architect and engineer in Vancouver
Hugh Alexander Edgar Browne was born on 21 June 1885 at Belfast (Down), County Down,
Northern Ireland, the sixth child of John Monteagle Brown of Tullycarnet (actually Tullycarnan, Parish Ardglass, Barony Lecale Lower), Ardglass, formerly of Knock, Belfast. His family had followed two distinct pathways over the previous 50 years, those of engineering and the military, one relation being Captain Peter Brown, builder of the George Halpin designed lighthouse at St. John’s Point, County Down.
As a young man Browne was a prominent member of the Knock Rugby Football Club and captained the second XV when they won the Junior Cup. He also played for Ulster in the Junior-Inter provincial. Upon leaving school, Browne qualified as an architect and civil engineer and was employed as a member of the family firm Browne Brothers, architects and civil engineers of
Tullycarnan. The firm acted as architects for the new local Masonic Hall which was opened on 20 April 1912, and also for the Scottish Temperance Buildings in Belfast.
Emigrating to Canada after a brief spell working in Kensington, London, Browne decided to return to England in 1915 and join the British Army and ‘to follow the example of his brothers’. The eldest, Captain John Plunkett Browne was serving with the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers whilst another, Lieutenant-Colonel Edgar Monteagle Browne commanded a battalion of the Royal Munster Fusiliers. A third and the youngest Browne, Captain Martin G. Browne further served with the Royal Artillery. As a result, he purchased a ticket at New York and travelled across the North Atlantic aboard the Cunard liner RMS Lusitania, arriving at Liverpool on 11 April 1915.
Less than a month later on 7 May 1915 during the return voyage to North America, the Lusitania was identified and torpedoed by the U-20, sinking in 18 minutes 11 miles off the Old Head of Kinsale. 1198 persons aboard drowned, the sinking turning public opinion in many countries against Germany and heavily contributing to the American entry into the Great War, the mood heightened by iconic posters of innocent women and children going down with the ship. For Browne it had been a close call; the Lusitania had fallen victim to a torpedo attack relatively early in the war before tactics for evading submarines were properly implemented or understood.
Appointed to a commission in the Royal Engineers, Browne served in France from 5 November
1915, initially as a 2nd Lieutenant with the 9th Field Company. Serving as part of 4th Division, the 9th witnessed extensive service at Albert from 1-13 July 1916 and Le Transloy from 1-18 October 1918. They witnessed considerable action at Polygon Wood from 26 September - 3 October 1917 and were heavily engaged in operations around Drocourt-Queant and the Canal Du Nord.
Promoted Captain, Browne may have witnessed the visit of King George V to the 4th Division at Valenciennes on 4 December 1918. Having survived three years of trench warfare, Browne returned to England where he married Eleanor Frances Booth at St. Thomas, Heaton-Norris, Lancashire, on 14 August 1919. The couple returned to Canada and set up home in Montreal followed by Medicine Hat and Vancouver. The 1930 Vancouver Directory later shows them living at 2930 West 38th Street, Browne being employed by the City of Vancouver as a civil engineer. In 1936 he is described as a draughtsman at City Hall and in 1948 he moved to 3021 West 29th Street, Vancouver, being promoted to Assistant Engineer for the City. He died on 14 August 1962 in Vancouver, being buried in Mountain View Cemetery; sold with copied research and MIC details together with a contemporary Royal Engineers brass cap badge.
Miscellaneous Bits and sources.
My grandmother, Jane Edgar BROWNE, left me her ring with the motto Suivez la Raison and the image of an eagle. On the inside, is inscribed Jeannie from Kate. This referred to her friend Kate WATSON, my godmother. This ring and other clues suggest that “our” BROWNEs are most likely to be distantly connected to the BROWNE family of Mayo SEE: BROWNE Family Crests – 2004 post.. Either that or “my BROWNEs” are pretenders to such. Regardless. here is a grab bag of what I have collected so far:
· My grandmother saved a newspaper clipping from the Belfast Newsletter, Friday, June 24, 1955, "Historic St. John's Point"..
Legal
documents indicate many names in the title to St. John's Point when it passed
to lay hands, such as Donal M'Gwynne, the Earl of Kildare, Viscount Lecale, Sir
Robert Ward, Thomas Tipping Smyth, Captain Peter
Browne and others.
This reefy headland was indeed a terror to the mariners of long ago, and many a
brave ship foundered there. We learn from the records of the Commissioners of
Irish Lights that in one period of 18 months early in the last century 13 ships
were wrecked, 13 lives were lost, together with cargo valued at £57,800.
In 1832 the Killough Shipowners appealed to the Ballast Board in Dublin to
build a lighthouse and the scheme was finally approved in 1839. The new
lighthouse was designed by George Halpin, the lighthouse engineer, and the
Marquess of Downshire laid the foundation stone in 1840, the builder being
Captain Peter Browne and the first light shown in 1844.
JANEVILLE The quaint old estate of Janeville which we pass on our way to
the lighthouse is of interest. The Smyth family or O'Gavins were [one of] many
at St. John's Point. One of the family conformed with the Established Church
and laid the foundation of the Janeville house of whom we had Major T.T. Smyth,
of the South Down Militia, whose daughter, Mary Jane, married Captain P. R.
Montague-Browne of the 9th regiment who died in 1864. He was succeeded
by his son, Major-General A.S. Montague-Browne, who died in 1916.
Janeville had its ghost early in the last century when a lady who paid a visit
to St. Johnston, as it was called, relates that she saw the figure of a little
girl in a red silk frock, the deceased 10-year old daughter of Major SMYTHE
picking flowers in the garden. She hailed the child by name, when she vanished
into thin air. NOTE: See: BROWNE family connections from Cowdray, Sligo & Janeville
and Andrew Smythe Montague Browne b: 12 Jun 1836 d: 1916.
· The Captain Peter BROWNE, in this news clipping was Peter Rutledge Montague BROWNE b: 05 Mar 1796 d: 22 Apr 1864 in Janeville, Co. Down husband of Mary Jane SMYTHE. He was the agent for Lord Bangor who owned most of the land in and around Killough. Some families, such as the RANAGHAN who were Catholic tenant farmers at Kilbride, St. John's Point and Commonreagh in the 1830s were put off the land as a result of his actions.
· 25 June 1853. Down Recorder: a Major BROWNE of Janeville was a witness in an assault case.
· Ordinance Survey Memoirs list Peter BROWNE as a corn mill owner in 1836 (Vol 17, p. 35, 36, 49, 88).
· Killough, the Church by the Loch, p. 90, 91 indicates that General BROWNE of Janesville was a regular attendant at the Killough Lifeboat committee c. 1903 and his ancestors had provided a lifeboat service along the coast for 100 years.
· Lecale Miscellany Vol III (1993) "St. John's Lighthouse, Captain BROWNE, formerly of Mayo, served with the 9th East Norfolk Regiment".
· Based on saved family photos, the BROWNEs of both Janeville (Saint Johns Point, Parish Rathmullan, Barony Lecale Upper) and Tullycarnan, Parish Ardglass, Barony Lecale Lower), Ardglass seemed to have been socially connected.
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· 1901 Census. John BROWNE aka John Monteagle BROWNE (1849-1918) is listed at Tullycarnon, Ardglass.
· Brothers Architects of Tullycarnan were the architects of new Masonic Hall 20 Apr 1912. SOURCE: Ros Davies, Down Reporter Article. NOTE: I suspect this was the Masonic Hall on Crumlin St., Belfast.
· The Ordinance Survey Map of Belfast (Bloomfield) 1902 shows a J.C.M BROWN, architect and civil engineer living at Holly Park, Knock, Belfast. (aka James Carlyle Monteagle BROWNE) This was brought to my attention courtesy of Margaret Innis and it accords with the memory of Dorothy Robertson (granddaughter of the John Monteagle BROWNE) of visiting Holly Park as a child in the early 1920s. It seems that Holy Park was the home of John Monteagle & Susanna BROWNE before they retired to Ardglass and ownership was passed to their eldest son.
· In August 1910 (according to the obituary of James Carlyle Monteagle BROWNE), John Monteagle BROWNE lived at Ringfad, Ardglass, Co. Down. Before then, they had lived in Belfast. His granddaughter, Dorothy Robertson, recalls hearing that they had two residences for years, the other being in Knock, but they then moved full time to Ardglass. In their later years, the family lived in a house called "The White Lodge" near Coney Island.
· John Montague BROWNE owned a drapery business. The last person known to be running it was Hugh Martin in the 1950s. He sold it and a few years later there was an “accident” and it burned down. It was rebuilt and is now a clothing store in Ardglass called C.W. Wills. When the BROWNE family ran it, people came from the surrounding areas to have their clothes made up. The bolts of cloth were displayed on the ground floor and the tailors and seamstresses worked upstairs.
· In the 1909 marriage notice of his daughter, Jeannie (aka Jane) Edgar BROWNE, John Monteagle BROWNE was described as resident at Tullycarnan, in Ardglass and Knock in Belfast.
· Ardglass means Green Heights.
· Berni Sutton and her family currently own and live at "White Lodge” and have renamed the place “Heron Farm”. She is a ceramic artist and her husband is a furniture maker. They also board horses and have a gymkhana (horseback contests?) of sorts near the road. They are restoring the three cottages. In the past one cottage, was called “ONE TREE COTTAGE” and the other “NO TREE COTTAGE”. We are assuming that since the third had been used for housing poultry, that it no longer had the designation of “cottage”. They plan to be open for B&B business by Easter of 2002 Update: SEE: Coney Island Design. 'One Tree Cottage' is a NITB registered self catering cottage on Heron Farm, and you can stay there and take part in workshops run by Berni.
o Of further interest: Berni found an old slate sundial in the loft inscribed with the name “Lieutenant John Martin Esq. Ringfad. July 12th 1690, and on one my visits, she insisted that I take it home. It now has pride of place on the wall in our dining area. We still don’t know exactly who this Lieutenant John Martin Esq. is. The earliest MARTIN ancestor we have in Ardglass was Allan MARTIN born in 1743. This sundial could indicate an even earlier presence of the family.
· When Susanna BROWNE died, the remains of her estate was sold off on January 22nd, 1923, realizing proceeds of £165:5:3.:
· SOURCE: Tony BROWNE LDS 0101607. - Notes for JOHN MONTEAGLE BROWNE:
o Once lived at 234 Crumlin Road, Belfast, Ireland.
o Occupation listed as "Draper."
o Moved his family to Tullycarnen, near Ardglass (a port on the Irish Sea), in County Down, Ireland.
o Another Irish town of importance in the Browne family is Glencullen,south of Dublin [DED Glencullen & Parish Glencullen Townland Glencullen, Parish Kiltiernan, Barony of Rathdown borders on Glencullen Mountain, Parish Kiltiernan, Barony of Rathdown ]. Earlier members of the Browne family were born there.
· SOURCE: Notes written by his [John Monteagle's] grandson Michael Browne:
o "Christened at Rossorry Parish Church [Co. Fermanagh] Jan 28, 1849. Died age 70 years at Tullycarnon, near Ardglass, N. Ireland and buried with wife in Ardglass Parish Church Feb 21, 1919. Church of Ireland. John M. Browne left County Fermanagh for Belfast, Ulster, circa 1870 and had linen manufacturing and farming interests around there, living at Knock before his wife got left Tullycarnon, near the city of Mourne in 1895 when they all resided there. His parents home, Glencullen in County Fermanagh [aka Glencunny, Parish Rossorry, Barony of Magheraboy -on Sligo Road aka the A4] was the Browne family home for quite a few generations, 40 miles from Sligo."
· SOURCE : Letter from Jeanne (aka Jane Edgar) BROWNE (my grandmother),
o Feb 18, 1952 The family home burned down when his children were young - "Our home was burned to the ground when we were children. All the family jewels and records a complete loss." This was likely their home at 144 Crumlin – before they moved to 234 Crumlin Rd. A Brown, J, draper resided at 234 Crumlin Rd. in 1895 when the children were no longer young. (SOURCE: Belfast & Ulster Directory, 1895).
· SOURCE: RE: Fermanagh Ancestors. NOTE: It would be helpful to be able to see the crest on this grave marker (if it still exists).
Old Rossary Graveyard: compiled by Seamas Mac Annaidh BROWN – Thanks to IGP transcriptions.
Erected by James Brown in memory of his mother Jane Brown who departed this life Oct. 3rd 1763 aged 37 years. Also his 2 sons James and Chas. who died young & father John Brown died June 1799 aged 75 years.
This stone has a very fine crest but is cracked across the middle.
Jane Brown, Enniskillen, 5 February 1817 Margaret Brown, Mullaghy, 8 February 1827 Mary Brown, 74, 13 July 1827 John Brown of Ashwoods, 80, 4 April 1834 Mary Brown, Silverhill, Devenish, 85, 23 November 1835
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· SOURCE: In 2004, I received a lengthy and informative letter as well as family history from Norway from Raymond Douglas Monteagle BROWNE, who lived in Norway. We followed up with a few phone calls. Raymond’s oral history and the recollections of his mother (SEE: The Monteagle BROWNEs of Ardglass and Knock, Belfast) fit with the facts I have found so far. In the late 1950's, as a teenager, I visited Raymond’s mother and father, and felt an immediate and deep fondness for both of them.
· SOURCE: Letter from Raymond BROWNE 2Sept2004 Susannah BROWNE was quoted as saying, "Oh! I was never happier than I was when I was pregnant." (to the considerable annoyance of Ethel who suffered greatly from morning-sickness.)
· SOURCE: 1901 Census. John Monteagle BROWNE's occupation was recorded as Farmer. The house had a stable, a harness room, a cow house, a calf house, a piggery, a fowl house, a boiling house, a barn, a potato house and a shed for a total of 11 outhouses. The house was stone, brick or concrete with a roof of slate, iron or tile. There were 5-6 rooms (this would seem to indicate the addition happened after the census - likely when the family fully relocated from Belfast) and there were six windows in the front of the house (this might help to establish where the addition starts). There were only John & Susannah included as residents in 1901, which buttresses the notion that the grown children were all living elsewhere.
· SOURCE: Tony BROWNE - The EDGARs were reportedly from West Meath County, Ireland.
· SOURCE: 1641 Depositions (Fermanagh)
·
And this deponent did credibly
hear that some of the said rebellious company did murder Christopher Cotes the
elder Christopher Coates the younger Christopher Bowcer the elder Christopher
Bowcer the younger, William Marshall, Thomas Bulmin (?), Charles Randall,
Francis Wilkinson, Henry Wilkinson, Peter Maddeson, Humphrey Brockhowse, William Browne, Maximilian Tibbs, Thomas Sergeant,
George Dickenson, Richard Lewis, Stephen Ripon (?), Anthony Barlow, Edward
Poulter, John Maine, coroner of that county, Thomas Presley, Francis Somner,
Richard Butler, John Chadwick and divers other men women and children, this
deponent not now remembering their names.
And further deposeth that there is one
hundred of the said parishioners that lived in good "ranck" and
fashion that were driven out of their habitations and banished by the said
rebellious Irish and that near all English protestants perished and dead. And
this deponent is the rather confident that there is one hundred or more dead by
reason the daily die in such abundance, this deponent well knowing the said
parishioners being his neighbours and being a butcher by trade had some
dealings with the most of them. And further sayeth that some of the said rebels
said that they had a king of their own in Ireland.
Sworn 10th January 1641 before John
Watson and William Aldrich. [Examined]
·
69. Anne Booth of Littergreene
of parish of Drumully in County of Fermanagh wife to James Booth of the same
tailor (now one of His Majesty's soldiers gone for Droghedah under the command
of Edward Aldrich [duly sworn] deposeth that her said husband was robbed and
dispoiled of all his goods [chattels and means] the 25th day of October last
about "ten a clock in the foornoone" worth £205 [in all amounting to
the sum of £205] by the hands action and means of Captain Rory Maguire and one
of the sons of James Netterville of the barony of Magharistaphanie in the said
county Esquire whose christain name she knoweth not and other irish rebels
assembled in their company to the number of 400 or thereabouts. And that she
her husband and two children were all stripped and all their clothes taken from
them the said day in the churchyard at Newtowne in the said parish, and her
other two children stripped and their clothes taken from them within two miles
of the said town the next day following, saying they had a warrant from the
said Captain Rory to strip all the English that they met with all in the said
county [that when they stripped this deponent "they ript downe her smock
with a skeane" she did see some of them with a "skeane" give
unto William Browne of the said parish one great
wound in his hand?] and the same night that this deponent and her husband where
robbed the said rebels imprisoned this deponent and about 20 more in Newtown
aforesaid and kept a guard about them all which time one of the soldiers and
servants of the said Rory Maguire said that they would show no favour to any
for they intended not to leave an Englishman in Ireland but they would have
their lands again or else they would lose but their lives goods and lands or to
that effect.
And saith that about two days before they
robbery aforesaid the said rebels killed one Mr Christopher Cotes and by report
they also killed one Abraham James George Dicconson George Randale John Mange
gent and Stephen Rickson.
Sworn 8th January 1641 before William
Hitchcock and Henry Brereton. [Examined]
· SOURCE: Seatholders.Enniskillen Parish Church.(Fermanagh) Extracted from the Enniskillen Vestry Book: 1710-1713- Jo. Brown
· 1766 Religious Census:
o BROWN, George Protestant
o BROWN, John Protestant
o BROWN, William Protestant