"God will link the broken chain as one by one we meet again"
See also
James Teevan's other family: with Eliza Larkin (1840-1868)
James Teevan's siblings: Mary Teevan (1830- ) and John Teevan (1834-1879)
Elizabeth Hannah, Hannah Elizabeth, Elizabeth Anna, Elizabeth or Hannah! Bennett's other family: with John Hill (1840- )
Elizabeth Hannah, Hannah Elizabeth, Elizabeth Anna, Elizabeth or Hannah! Bennett's parents: John William Bennett (1815- ) and Grace Coram (1817- )
Elizabeth Hannah, Hannah Elizabeth, Elizabeth Anna, Elizabeth or Hannah! Bennett's siblings: Jane Bennett (1839- ), John Bennett (1840-1840), Harriet Bennett (1841-1842), Harriet Bennett (1844- ), John Bennett (1851- ) and Grace Caroline Bennett (1857-1922)

Family of James Teevan and Elizabeth Hannah Bennett

Husband: James Teevan (1839-1901)
Wife: Elizabeth Hannah Bennett (1846-1912)
Children: John James Teeven (1872-1944)
William Terrence Teevan (1877-1879)
William Teevan (1879-1954)
Thomas Teevan (1882-1959)
Elizabeth Grace Teevan (1884-1949)
Status: Never Married
Marriage

Husband: James Teevan

Name: James Teevan
Sex: Male
Father: Terence Teevan (1804-bef1860)
Mother: Elizabeth Walsh (1805?-bef1879)
Birth 1839 Ireland
Death 7 Sep 1901 (age 52 (!)) 40 Barrack Street, Hamilton, Lanarkshire
Occupation collier/coal miner
Education Could not write.
Religion RC

Additional Information

Death Cause: peritonitis

Wife: Elizabeth Hannah Bennett

Name: Elizabeth Hannah Bennett
Sex: Female
Father: John William Bennett (1815- )
Mother: Grace Coram (1817- )
Birth 6 Feb 1846 Lamerton, Devon
Occupation servant and later dressmaker, working at home in 1901
Death 6 Jan 1912 (age 65) Bellshill, Lanarkshire
Education Literate.

Child 1: John James Teeven

Name: John James Teeven
Sex: Male
Spouse 1: Sarah Clark (1873-1916)
Spouse 2: Mary Ann Creechan (1872-1939)
Birth 6 Feb 1872 Engine Street Lane, Bathgate, Linlithgow
Residence 1944 (age 71-72) Scott Place, Fauldhouse
Death 11 Sep 1944 (age 72) St Michael's Hospital, Linlithgow
Occupation coal miner
Religion RC
Education Literate

Additional Information

Death Cause: celebral haemmorage

Child 2: William Terrence Teevan

Name: William Terrence Teevan
Sex: Male
Birth 13 Jan 1877 Lanarkshire
Death 21 Mar 1879 (age 2) 16 Lamb Street, Hamilton, Lanarkshire
Burial West Cemetery, Hamilton - in "dressed ground" ie common ground

Additional Information

Death Cause: whooping cough and bronchitis

Child 3: William Teevan

Name: William Teevan
Sex: Male
Spouse: Mary Ann Rooney (1880-1974)
Birth 31 Jul 1879 3 Muir Street, Hamilton, Lanarkshire
Death 25 Feb 1954 (age 74) 72 Muirpark Rows, Bellshill, Lanarkshire
Occupation coal miner - shipper (refined)
Education Literate.
Religion RC

Additional Information

Death Cause: cardiovascular degeneration and benign enlargement of prostate

Child 4: Thomas Teevan

Name: Thomas Teevan 1
Sex: Male
Spouse: Margaret Hogg Brown (1883-1946)
Birth 1 Aug 1882 23 Pollock Street, Airdrie, Lanarkshire
Death 5 Nov 1959 (age 77) Hamilton, Lanarkshire
Occupation coal hewer and soldier; Coal Miner; Private: 8thBatt. Royal Scots Fusilier
Education Literate
Religion RC

Additional Information

Death Cause: arteric sclerosis and celebral haemorrage

Child 5: Elizabeth Grace Teevan

Name: Elizabeth Grace Teevan
Sex: Female
Spouse: Henry Boyle (1882-bef1949)
Birth 8 Jul 1884 Chapel Square, Cambusnethan, Lanarkshire
Death 20 May 1949 (age 64) 30 Bothwell Park Rows, Bellshill, Lanarkshire
Occupation tablemaid
Religion RC
Education Literate

Additional Information

Death Cause: carcinoma of gall-bladder

Note on Husband: James Teevan

Granda (John Teevan b.1911) referred to him as 'big Jimmy Teevan who swam over from Ireland'!

 

John Gaffney and Mary Larkin witnessed the wedding between James and Eliza in 1860.

 

Was a collier in Allanton mine in April 1877 when he walked into an area with a naked flame, thereby causing an explosion in which another miner died. Spent two months in jail, during which time he suffered rheumatism (in addition to the severe burns on his hands and face from the explosion) before being sentenced to a further fortnight for culpable neglect of duty.

 

In 1881 he, Elizabeth Hannah and their children John J and William were living at 31 Benhar Coal Coys Houses, Shotts, Lanark - listed as married.

 

In 1901, he was living at his son William's house and listed as a widower. He died there later that year. His eldest son James signed the certificate.

Note on Wife: Elizabeth Hannah Bennett

Elizabeth Hannah Bennett came from an apparently wealthy and long lineage which can be traced back to the year 1600 in Devon, England.

 

Although with such a common name it is hard to be certain, the probable entry in the 1861 census shows her as working as a servant.

 

She married John Hill in England and had no known children before he died. At some point she met James Teevan and ended up living in Scotland with him. My theory is that James met her while visiting his brother John who was stationed in England at around that time. This seems more likely than an initial meeting in Scotland, as Elizabeth would have had no obvious reason for moving away from Devon unless it was to go with James.

 

Yet they never married in the normal sense. The birth certificates of their first children show that they were illegitimate and no marriage can be found in any of the Scottish or English records. Theirs must have been a common law marriage, ie one recognised as legal due to living as man and wife and recognised as such by all who knew them. They did list themselves as married on the Scottish census returns and even on some of the later children's birth certificates, where they even gave a fictitious place and date of their marriage as Sunderland, England on 23/05/1864 or 1869. This was definately not a real date since their previous spouses were still alive and there were no James Teevan's married in England at all between 1868 and 1871.

 

So Elizabeth's story is apparently a Jane Austen-style romance. Being married at 19 and widowed in her 20s, she met another man who being poor, would have been a disgrace for her to marry - in those days, women would be disowned from their families and friends for marrying a lower class man. Yet she ran away with him to Scotland where she had his children and lived out the rest of her life.

 

And to add another twist to the tale - in the 1901 census Elizabeth was living with two of her grown-up children, Thomas and Grace, at 54 Brandon Street, Hamilton under the name Grace. She worked as a dressmaker from home, in a home with only one windowed room.

 

Meanwhile James stayed with his son William (our 'pop'). James died at his son's address later that year so it could be supposed that he was simply staying with his son in his last few months. However this doesn't make sense since William was not the eldest son and had a wife and infant of his own at the time. Also, in the 1901 census Elizabeth listed herself as married but James called himself a widower - true given his real marital status but surprising given the fact that they'd called themselves married for the previous 20 years and even made up a date and place of the fictinal wedding to put in their childrens' birth certificates! Perhaps they were seperated at the time and Elizabeth was trying to cling onto the marriage that James had given up on?

Sources

1Birth certificate