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At a Scottish Dance in Rochester he met his future wife, Isobella Scott, who emigrated from Glasgow in July of 1922. He recognized her immediately because he had seen her before, eating her lunch in George’s Square in Glasgow the year before while she was on a break from her secretarial job in the city, and he had been running an errand in the city for his uncle. They married on February 20
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1926 in Amsterdam, New York. Denise 2007
On December 31
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1875 he married Susan Cochrane, daughter of James Cochrane and Matilda Williams, The family lived at first on Crawford Street and then moved to his workshop building on West Quay, known as the Customhouse Quay Building. He worked and is listed in census returns as a Master Carver and Gilder and later as a stone carver as well
John Roberts
John Roberts was born in 1849 in Liverpool to Welsh parents, John Roberts and Mary Ann Lewis.
He first arrived in Port Glasgow in 1870 at age 20 and lived at 14 Knight Road as a lodger, sharing a room with James Shewan age 18, both of them working as wood carvers.
John Roberts was able to continue working as a carver despite his wife, Susan Cochrane’s early death in 1895 with the help of his mother-in-law, Matilda Williams Cochrane who then died in 1898. By that time his elder sons were also working a joiners and his eldest daughter, Susan Mary Roberts at age 13 kept the house and took care of the younger children with the help of a paid day servant. John Roberts died in 1920 at Allison Place and is buried in Port Glasgow Cemetery
Andrew Roberts Christie
Andrew was born in Port Glasgow the 5
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of June 1903 at 2 Laird Street to Neil Christie, a carpenter and Susan Roberts. He spent his early life going to the local schools, church and rambling all over the neighboring hills and shoreline, playing with his many cousins. He went into the carpentry trade working on the ships at dock.
He told the story of being stopped for driving his uncle’s car without a license, and the local constable, taking one look at him, knew he played for the local football team, said "ach get off with you"! At age 19 in 1922 he left his parents living at 21 Allison Place in Port Glasgow and sailed to America on the ship Columbia arriving in the USA on September 10
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1922. James Cochrane, an uncle who had previously emigrated from Port Glasgow to the USA was listed on the ship manifest as his contact in Rochester, New York.
When Denise found the site she was pleased to be able to see so much information about the town having grown up hearing stories of the area and the people who lived here. She described her ancestors as " not rich or famous, but include some interesting characters." From my grandfather, Andrew Roberts Christie, grandson of John Roberts, I received correspondence and a newspaper article dated 1974, that he had from his niece in Australia about the figurehead from the ship Glenpark , which had gone down off Wedge Island in Coffin Bay in 1901. This was a figurehead John Roberts carved in Port Glasgow for A. Roger and Company in 1897 and had been found and restored by an Australian couple. This figurehead now is in the South Australian Maritime Museum in Port Adelaide, Australia. There is at least one other figurehead in existence that was carved by John Roberts in Port Glasgow, the figurehead from the Port Stanley, a windjammer, built in 1890 by Russell and Company. The Port Stanley was broken up for scrap in Troon the 1920’s. Stories tell of how the figurehead was floated across the harbor to be anchored on a building in Troon harbor. This figurehead nicknamed the “Painted Lady” is now in the ownership of a maritime antique specialist in Irvine.
© Carol McG 2000-2007 all rights reserved, all trademarks hereby acknowledged. The photographs in this site have not to be shared or otherwise used without permission! This page last modified on Saturday, January 20, 2007
My thanks to Denise for taking the time to share the information on this page.
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