James Brady’s family

James had 5 siblings.  The oldest child of Thomas Bready and Sarah McComb was Joseph Bready.  He was born on October 19, 1861 in Bentham, Yorkshire, England and named for Thomas’ father.  He married in Fall River to Hannah (Emma) E. Bowler on July 3, 1888.  They had six children: George T. Brady, born October 24, 1889 and died April 14, 1897 (when he was 7-1/2 years old) in Fall River of a fractured skull (I can just picture this little boy falling from a tree he’d maybe climbed, and his parents’ anguish); Gertrude Brady, born February, 1893 in Fall River; Joseph, Jr., born December 30, 1895 in Fall River; Mabel, born on April 4, 1899 in Fall River; Emma E., born June 1, 1900 in Fall River; and Eleanor, born on July 24, 1901 also in Fall River.  There is no birth record for Joseph, Jr. but there is one on the same day for an Edward Brady born to the same parents.  I assume that Edward is really Joseph, Jr. and the name was never officially changed.  There seems to be a lot of that in the Fall River Bradys.  Gertrude is living at home in the 1900 census, and it is this data that I have gotten her birth date from.  I have not been able to locate a birth certificate for her on the website I normally use, that of the New England Historical Genealogical Society, or NEHGS, at http://www.newenglandancestors.org/.  This is another fee-based site, but again, I find it to be excellent, and worth the cost.  In the 1920 census, Gertrude is still living at home, and working as a weaver in the mill, but by 1930 she has left home.  Either she married or was deceased by that date.  It would be extremely unusual for her to be off adventuring as a single woman in those days, although she may have in later years.  Joseph, Jr. married a woman named Beatrice between the 1910 census and the birth of their son Frank G. Brady on December 20, 1918 in Fall River.  Joseph, Jr. was living at his sister Eleanor’s home in Fall River when he registered for the WWII draft, however, though whether Beatrice and Frank were also there I don’t know (although he listed his sister Eleanor (Mrs. John M. Christensen) as next of kin and not his wife).  Frank died on December 15, 1977 in Fall River.  I have no idea if he ever married or had children of his own.  The three youngest girls (Mabel, Emma E., and Eleanor) were living at home in 1930.  I found a death record for Emma Brady with her birth date in the SSDI on May 1968, so assume she never married, and know that Eleanor died in Jan 1991 and was survived by at least one child, but I have no further information for Gertrude or Mabel.

The second child of James’ parents was John Bready.  He was born in Beith, Ayrshire, Scotland on October 17, 1863.  He evidently died, as another son was given the name John in later years.  I haven’t been able to locate the family in the 1871 census, and suspect they may have been in Ireland then, so I can’t verify if this John was living then.  There is no death record in Scotland for him, so either he died shortly after birth or he died somewhere other than Scotland.

James was the third child.  The fourth was named Thomas, after his father.  Thomas was born on July 13, 1868 in Clifton, Bramham, West Yorkshire, England.   He married Gertrude Nichols in Rehoboth, Bristol County, Massachusetts on January 1, 1901.  They had four children, all born in Rehoboth: Milton Thomas Brady, born on March 21, 1903; Frederick Everett Brady, born on October 10, 1905 and who died at the age of 23 on February 16, 1929 in Rhode Island; Gertrude N. Brady, born on December 20, 1906; and Edward Clayton Brady, born on Jun 8, 1911.  I suspect Gertrude’s middle name was Nichols, for her mother’s maiden name.  Edward died on May 22, 1996 in New Bedford, Massachusetts, but I have no idea of any marriages or children Thomas’ children may have had.

Thomas and Sarah’s fifth child, and the only daughter, was Sarah Ann Bready.  She was born in Ireland in 1872.  The 1900 census gives her birth month as February, but there is no record of the day.  The family is in Habergham Eaves, Lancashire in the 1881 England census prior to their immigration to the United States, where Sarah is listed as born in County Down, Ireland, in the village of Comber.

Sarah married Albert Henry Taber on April 10, 1893 in Fall River, Massachusetts.  Their first child, Ellis Albert Taber, was born on April 18, 1895.  They had a second child, George Leonard Taber, born on June 30, 1900 who died less than 2 years later on May 21, 1902.  Sometime after George’s death and before the 1910 census, the family moved from Fall River to Seattle, Washington.  By the 1920 census, they had moved to Los Angeles, California.  Ellis married in California, sometime after he registered for the draft on June 5, 1917 when he listed himself as single, and they had a son Ellis Albert Taber, named for his father and born on August 24, 1918.  That Ellis also married and he had at least three children, including a set of twins.  Albert Henry Taber died on May 22, 1940 and Sarah was known to have remarried, though I have no record as to whom, or when.  Consequently, I have no death date for Sarah, as I have been unable to find the record.  I tried searching the California death records through Ancestry, but I found no matches for Sarah, born February 187*, in Other Country, with mother’s maiden name of McComb.  It’s possible the family lore is wrong and she died before Albert, but without the 1940 census I can’t be sure.  So for now it remains one more mystery to check back on in future years.

James Bready’s youngest sibling was the second John.  By 1874 the family had returned to Scotland from Ireland, and John was born in Lochwinnoch, Renfrewshire on April 16, 1874, although the 1900 census erroneously gives his birth as May 1873 in England.  Fortunately, I was able to locate the birth record in Scotland to clear up any confusion.  I suppose it’s possible there was ANOTHER John born in England in May 1873 who died before this John was born, but I’ve found no birth record to support that possibility.

John married twice.  His first wife was Mary or Margaret Conley, Connelly, or Canole, known as Mamie, and they were married in Fall River, Massachusetts on May 28, 1896.  Mamie gave birth to three children: a son on August 25, 1896, a daughter on February 12, 1898, and another son on April 12, 1899.  All were stillborn, and Mamie died in childbirth with her third child.  Interestingly, I came across a transcription of a newspaper clipping from the Fall River Daily Globe for Saturday, February 15, 1890.  It reported on the fourth annual ball of the Fair Play Athletic Club.  The director of the ball was none other than this same John Brady, and in attendance was his future wife Mamie Connelly, as well as his brother James, my ancestor.  John’s second wife was Honora M. Sullivan, called Nora.  They married on June 25, 1900 in Fall River.  John and Nora were blessed with 5 children, all born in Fall River.  The oldest child was Ellen G. Brady, and she was born on February 2, 1901.  Next came John J. who was born on January 6, 1903.  He is present in the 1910 census, living at home.  Mary V. was the third child.  She was born on September 21, 1905.  The fourth child is a bit of a mystery.  His birth record gives his name as Daniel T. Brady.  He was born on August 21, 1907, and he died on July 18, 1908 of cholera infantum.  However, on his death record his name is given as John J. Brady, though his age at death is given as 10 months, 27 days, which certainly identifies Daniel as the child that died. His father was the informant of the death, and it seems odd that he would state the name of the wrong child.  But John J. is clearly in the 1910 census, and Daniel is clearly not, so in his distress at losing yet another child John must have given the wrong name for the death certificate.  The last child, George F. Brady, was born on June 10, 1909.  I have no record of marriages or children for John and Nora’s children, though I have seen records for some of their deaths in the Social Security Death Index.  John died between the 1910 and 1920 census, as Nora has the surname Barlow in 1930 and is living with her son John and daughters Mary and Ellen (erroneously listed as Helen G. Beary) in Fall River.  In fact, all the children are transcribed on Ancestry with the surname Beary.

Just a quick word, here – while researching your ancestors, when you find a transcription error (as you most certainly will) please take the time to submit a correction to the database!  It takes so little time, but will benefit those who follow.  Most databases allow some form of error reporting, and it really is a mitzvah to help others by correcting transcription errors when you find them.

Again, I would like to take a moment here and praise the Social Security Death Index, which is another invaluable resource.  It can be accessed through both NEHGS and Ancestry accounts.  There have been times when I’ve been able to locate a date of birth here, if the name was uncommon enough and I was sure I had the correct record for a death.  I actually prefer the Ancestry access, as they also have some more recent state death records, making it easier to cross-reference and identify the correct person when the exact date of birth is not known.  On occasion, the wrong birth date is recorded in the death certificate, so it’s important to go back and search for the birth record, once you have the date.  For instance, Thomas Stewart Brady’s state death record lists his birth as being in 1889, but the actual birth record gives it as 1891, as does the SSDI record.  However, the SSDI record gives only the month and year of death, while the state record also includes the day.  It’s important to find the original source record, if at all possible.

© Deborah Ray and archivecookie.com, 2010.

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About archivecookie

I'm a Researcher, Archivist and Genealogist. I started researching my family tree in the mid-1970's before the internet made it so much easier, and more complicated. So much on the internet is NOT well researched, and copying it is a temptation too many succumb to. I hope to blog about what I've found in my own research - maybe you'll find your missing link here! ;-) Follow Me on Mastodon Follow Me on Twitter Follow Me on Post Social Follow Me on CounterSocial
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