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This biography was partly auto-generated by a GEDCOM import supplemented with research by Alan Runciman, a 4th grand-nephew.
Whaupknow was a cluster of cottages provided by Auldham Farm for its workers. The last reference to it in local parish records appears in the 1770s at which time it fell victim to the development of Seacliff House. Read here what life was like for the family at Whaupknow.
No records or references to Jean have been found following her baptism. It wasn’t usual for burials/deaths to be recorded by the church but one would expect to find a marriage & family baptisms almost as a matter of course. Several options can account for an absence of these records after baptism:
The index of the marriage register at Tyninghame on Scotland's People reveals that there is indeed a gap in the register from 1739 onwards until that church ceased in 1760. This period covers the most likely range for Jean, b 1736, to marry so such a gap is a possible explanation. However it would further require there to be no children of the marriage after 1761 when records at Whitekirk commence again.
At the time of writing (October 2020) church records after baptism for a number of Richard's & Jennet's children have not been found either. This indicates that some explanations put forward above can probably be discounted, such as emigration or Scottish relocation. The possibility of an absence of church records needs more research to determine whether any of the other siblings appear as contenders as parents themselves after the records resume at Whitekirk, or at other adjoining parishes.
At this stage unfortunately the most likely explanation is that there was a number of infant/child deaths in the family. The siblings for whom no records have yet been found after their baptism are -
Another peripheral factor ties in with this conclusion. On William’s drowning his orphaned children were then cared for by Richard, the childrens’ grandfather. Richard was 64 in that year & doesn’t appear the most likely candidate to take on the care of 4 young children aged from 9 to 2, particularly if he’s still working. His wife Jennet is not mentioned in the records of the Widows Fund, so no conclusion can be drawn about her. If any of these 5 uncles & aunts listed above were alive they would be aged in their 30s & would present a better option for care. Is this the reason not one stepped forward?
Jean’s brother was William Runciman of Crail , who drowned at an early age in a fishing tragedy,
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some facts and comments about the early Runciman ancestors are summarised in The Early Generations.
There are also 3 other Runciman 'lineages' which thanks to DNA testing are now discovered to be branches of the same lineage with a Most Recent Common Ancestor (MRCA) in the 1600s, most likely in East Lothian or the Scottish Borders. Lorna Henderson manages a Runciman One Name Study which gives a good insight to our Crail Line's relationship to the other DNA-related lines - as well as the non-related lines.
Wiki profiles relating to the Crail Lineage:
Whaupknow, describes where the family was born and lived until adulthood.
Runciman Lineage 1b-The Early Generations As the name implies this Profile covers the latest research known of the earliest ancestors on the 'Crail' Line.
Crail Fishing Disaster History and Latest News. Jean is a sister of William of Crail who drowned with 7 others in the 1765 Crail Fishing Disaster. A 250th anniversary commemoration for the drownings was held in Crail on 16 May 2015.
Scotland and Beyond In 2004 a history of the William Runciman of Crail line was published. The latest research & continuing updates are now published on the web rather than in print. As Scotland and Beyond has been out of print for some time Jen Jelley & Diane Middleton, compilers & publishers of the 2004 book, kindly agreed to make their publication available in PDF format. This Profile contains the link.
The Runciman Cradle Tour provides the reader interested in seeing some of our ancestral locations with a suggested itinerary and their association to the family.
Similarily there is a Crail Trail for those who wish to visit where William of Crail spent his married/working life and eventually to meet his early death from drowning.
[A] There is one weak candidate as mother of several children with Edward Stoddart in Whitekirk & Tynninghame parish between 1749 & 1764 who was usually recorded as Jane, but once as Jean which are interchangeable with each other. Jean’s age does not strongly support that she is the mother, but it is possible. The mother is more likely to be the Jean who was born 1725 in Gladsmuir, whose age fits the date range much better.
Thank you to Alan Runciman for creating WikiTree profile Runciman-625 through the import of RUNCIMANAlansPaternal4WikiTreeAug2013.ged on Aug 29, 2013. Click to the Changes page for the details of edits by Alan and others.
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Featured National Park champion connections: Jean is 20 degrees from Theodore Roosevelt, 24 degrees from Stephanus Johannes Paulus Kruger, 18 degrees from George Catlin, 21 degrees from Marjory Douglas, 29 degrees from Sueko Embrey, 21 degrees from George Grinnell, 29 degrees from Anton Kröller, 21 degrees from Stephen Mather, 19 degrees from Kara McKean, 22 degrees from John Muir, 20 degrees from Victoria Hanover and 30 degrees from Charles Young on our single family tree. Login to find your connection.