James and Jane Milligan arrived in Australia as Bounty Immigrants on the "Margaret" arriving on 28 March 1841.   They were brought out by A.B. Smith & Co, Bounty Merchant.     The "Margaret" departed Liverpool on 23 October 1840.

James was 26 years old and listed as being in good health with the calling of Labourer.   His religion was Protestant and he was unable to read or write.   He was a native of the townland Edenamohill, Parish Magheraculmoney, County Fermanagh, Ireland being born in 1813.  He was baptised on 19th December 1813 at St Marys Church, Ardess under the name James Milliken.  

On his immigration papers James Milligan or Mulligan was listed as the son of Sandy Milligan, a Farmer and his wife Margaret Bell, his widow.   James and Jane had no children travelling with them, however they had a son baptised on 12 May 1839 named John Mulligan.     They married at St Marys Church, Ardess, Co Fermanagh, Ireland on 20th February 1838.   Both left Ireland with only their mothers still living as Widows.   James’s parents, Alexander “Sandy” Milligan and Margaret Bell married in about 1801.  It is believed they both came from Enniskillen in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland.    Alexander being born around 1777 and Margaret 1776.    Alexander was a Farmer and a Protestant. 

Alexander and Margaret had six children. John born 1802, Thomas born 1804, William born 1806, Alexander born 1809, then James born in 1813 and a daughter Mary Anne born in 1816.   Alexander “Sandy” Milligan died at the age of 42 and is buried in St Marys Church Cemetery, Ardess under the name of Alexander Milliken on 17th May 1819.  

His mother Margaret Milligan died in 1842 and is buried at St Marys Church, Ardess on 22 March 1842 under Widow Milligan.   His wife, Jane, listed as a married female immigrant was aged 23, her religion was Protestant and her health was listed as good.   Jane was a native of County Fermanagh, Ireland being born around 1817.   She was the daughter of John Wren (Rinn or Rin) a Farmer and Anne Barton, his widow.  Jane’s calling was a Spinner.  It is believed that they also came from Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland.   

The family lived around the Singleton district, with John being born or registered at Patrick Plains and Margaret at Wollombi Brook both old names for areas of Singleton, NSW, Australia.   Therefore it is assumed that they were assigned to work on a property in this area after their arrival.   The family then moved to the Tocal Estate, Patterson by the time Alexander was born in 1845 and remained there until at least 1856 when the last child William was born.   Two children, Mary and William died at Tocal and were buried in unmarked graves at Paterson Anglican Church Cemetery.    

James died on 2nd April 1885 at his home at Dunolly near Singleton.  He was 68 and the cause of death was Cancer of the Mouth which he had suffered for twelve months.   James was listed as a farmer at the time of death. His parents are listed as Alick Milligan and Margaret Bell.  The informant was his wife Jane Rinn. James is buried at the Church of England Cemetery (Whittingham) in Singleton in the same plot as his sons Joseph and John. Three children survived at the time of his death, Margaret, Alexander and James. Interestingly he is named as John on his death certificate not James, however James is on his grave stone.    

Jane died at the age of 89 on 28th January 1907 at the home of her daughter Mrs Margaret Needham, at “Morningside” George Street, Leichhardt.   The cause of death was due to injuries accidently received when falling out of bed according to the Coroner’s Inquest held. Jane is buried at Rookwood Cemetery Church of England section. Only two children survived her, Margaret aged 59 and James aged 53.

Additional Information
Date of Birth 1st Nov 1813 (circa) VIEW SOURCE
Date of Death 2nd Apr 1885 VIEW SOURCE
Place & Date of Baptism Ardess, Parish Magheraculmoney, Co Fermanagh, Ireland 19 December 1813 St Mary’s Church Ardess Births Recorded in St Mary’s Church Ardess, Parish of Magheraculmoney 1800-1829 Ireland Genealogy Project Archives.
Father (First Name/s and Surname) Alexander (known as Sandy or Alick) MILLIGAN or MULLIGAN
Mother (First Name/s and Maiden) Margaret BELL
Occupation Farmer
Townland born Edenamohill, Magheraculmoney, County Fermanagh, Ireland
Number of Siblings 5
Names of Siblings John, Thomas, William, Alexander and Mary Anne
Spouse (First Name/s and Maiden/Surname) Jane RINN
Place & Date of Marriage 20 Feb 1838 St Marys Church, Ardess, Magheraculmoney, Fermanagh, Ireland Name in Parish Recorded as Jane RIN Marriages recorded in St Marys Church, Ardess, Magheraculmoney 1767-1845. Ireland Genealogy Project Archives
Number of Children 8
Names of Children John Mulligan 1839-1840 Margaret Ann Milligan 1842-1936 John Milligan 1843-1884 Alexander Milligan 1845-1897 Mary Ann Milligan 1847-1855 James Milligan 1850-1910 Joseph Milligan 1853-1869 William Milligan 1856-1856
First Child John. Births Recorded as year 1839 in St Marys Church, Ardess. Lived at Townland Parkhill, Parish Magheraculmoney, County Fermanagh, Ireland. One deceased son unaccounted for on death of father, presume child died prior to coming to Aust.
Place of Death Dunolly, Hunter Valley, New South Wales, Australia
New Type Arrived in Sydney NSW Australia on 28 Mar 1841
View less entries

Comments

  • Reference for James and Jane MULLIGAN passengers on 1841 'Margaret', free online, http://indexes.records.nsw.gov.au/ebook/list.aspx?Page=NRS5316/4_4788/Margaret_28%20Mar%201841/4_478800008.jpg&No=1

    The passenger list is held at Records.NSW.Gov.au and catalogued as NRS5316/4_4788/Margaret_28 Mar 1841/

    I read James' age as 26, and for Jane 20 years.  James, a Labourer, and Jane is a Spinner.

    At 20 years, a marriage in February 1838, means Jane was only 17 years old. This is a very young age for an Irish girl to marry, based on my observations over 10 years of Irish research.

     

    General feedback: The project to build an "Ancestors Database" is a grand idea; highly commendable.

    However, to make it 'watertight', clear and validated references to life events {BDM, migration, education, employment, landownership, etc} should be part of this database build. This is particularly true when a wide range of primary and secondary evidence is available and free online,

    Eire2Go

     

    Eire2Go

    Sunday 17th May 2020 10:52PM
  • I have Jane Mulligan/Milligan (nee Rinn) as being 23 when she travelled to Australia according to the Assisted Immigrant documents showing her details available on Ancestry.

     

    IRELAND TO AUSTRALIA

    Monday 18th May 2020 12:04AM
  • Which set of documents?  There are multiple sets (mostly) for each voyage.

    Does the document state (nee Rinn) ?

    Have you sighted the originals, or quoting what someone transcribed and loaded into Ancestry?

    If it were not for CoVid-19 restrictions, I would be in the Reading Room at NSW Records reading the primary records.

    Too many errors float into Ancestry.  Always go for primary records.

     

    Eire2Go

    Monday 18th May 2020 12:14AM
  • Document:    Married Female Immigrant.   States father as John Wren and mother as Anne his widow.     I have other primary documents, death certificate of Jane and husband James.

    Are you related?    If so I am happy to email and share some information.        

    IRELAND TO AUSTRALIA

    Monday 18th May 2020 12:30AM
  • Thanks for information, but I did not mean what the document says. I mean the source of the document.  When published, author or authority?

    If a document states Jane Rin(n) wife of James Mulligan, has a father John Wren and mother "Anne", then it is time to start asking questons, and researching further

    Be mindful that not all Clerical Staff (clerks) were well educated and they wrote down what they heard, as they heard it at the time.  Also factor in accents:- from many parts of UK-Ireland.  A Scotsman will not say the name WREN as we do (today in Aus.) but it'd be more like RINN (emphasis of double N), a person from Yorkshire would say it in another way.

    Good to have the Primary BDM, and cite (quote) them by Registration number, and issuing Authority. 

    To my ears WREN is an English name. If her ancestors were WREN, perhaps British Soldiers/Army background then you've a greater scope for family history research as Britsh Army records are well preserved.

    On the other hand, her name may have been the Gaelic name O' Rinn, and was Anglicised by a British clerk as WREN.   Fascinating stuff, studying history as well as your ancestors.

    A good site to review Gaelic surname O' Rinn is https://www.libraryireland.com/    One way to determine British Wren or Gaelic O' Rinn, is via DNA: gives Ethnicity and also other people who share DNA with you.  If you find, say 50 families in England surname - Wren, then it's most probable that Mrs James MULLIGAN was a Miss Wren.  Otherwise, connection to Co. Cork suggests she was of Irish ethnicity and the surname is O'Rinn.

    I don't think there's any relationship though DNA has identified my surname arriving into Sydney, sponsored 100% by relatives in the Maitland area.  The NSW State Record show they could both read and write. The first one was employed in Sydney as a teacher as soon as he stepped off the ship. After a few years, he smelled GOLD and headed to the Hunter hinterland, found gold, farmed, sold the farm and built the biggest pub near the railway terminus. The other one (same name) 15 years younger, stopped a while in Maitland, then up to the hinterland plateau above Ballina (another Irish placename). His oldest son, and his sons after him, read Law, then ran a large legal practice at Parkes, NSW. 

    The Irish Hedge Schools were actually far superior to the National Schools the British introduced in (whatever year).   The British banned the Hedge Schools. There are books and doctoral theses that account for the high quality of Hedge School teachers, esp. Classical Greek, Latin and Mathematics.

    Eire2Go

    Eire2Go

    Monday 18th May 2020 01:10AM
  • Thank you for the information,  I will have a closer look at the DNA matches for the spelling of Wren or Rinn.

    State Records Authority of New South Wales; Kingswood New South Wales, Australia; Entitlement certificates of persons on bounty ships; Series: 5314; Reel: 1333

    Title   New South Wales, Australia, Assisted Immigrant Passenger Lists, 1828-1896

    also

    State Archives NSW; Series: 1396; Roll: 1783

    Source Information   Title  New South Wales, Australia, Registers of Coroners' Inquests, 1796-1942

    IRELAND TO AUSTRALIA

    Monday 18th May 2020 02:17AM
  • Brilliant work, good on you. Can you arrange to have those references inserted into your initial posting in the "Ancestor Database" ?

    As well as showing you know how to research, your work leads other people to emulate by realising 'these resources are at the tip of my fingers too'.  And so, the research quality increases and more people can use this XO Ancestor Database with confidence.

    I'm interested to know what you find re Wren v. Rinn. Please post.

     

    Eire2Go

    Eire2Go

    Monday 18th May 2020 03:27AM

Some communities associated with this ancestor

Some ancestors associated with these communities

Some buildings associated with these communities