by Jerome
This I believe is new
research, which I sent to Bruce and Rachael a few weeks’ ago.
Many of those from
Scots-Irish stock who immigrated to America belonged to the Presbyterian
Church. The Russell family were no exception.
The first known to make
the journey was Charles Tays Russell, Uncle of our CTR. His obituary notes that
he came to America in 1823 and set up business in Pittsburgh in 1831. In fact, we now know that he joined the Presbyterian
Church there in 1834.
The 3rd
Presbyterian Church Pittsburgh was established in 1834, and as members joined
they were given a number. In the very first year of operation, Charles T
Russell, became a member, and was given the number 47. Here is his entry in the
church register.
The entry states he was
admitted on January 22, 1834, by certificate, which means he came from another
Presbyterian Church – somewhere – with a letter of introduction.
The right hand column
details what eventually happened to these members. For Charles T the entry
reads “suspended.” If he’d misbehaved in
some way and been expelled the entry would have specified this. If he’d
resigned and transferred to another church, the entry would have read
“dismissed” – which in modern language can give the wrong impression. In the
case of Charles T the entry “suspended” must mean something else. I suspect it
simply means that his membership lapsed as he stopped supporting the church by
attendance or contribution.
Nine years later, CTR’s
father Joseph Lytle Russell entered the picture. His obituary suggests he came
to America in 1845. However, his application for naturalization in 1848 stated
that he had been in America for at least five years. Assuming his application
was truthful that would pre-date 1845. However, it may be that he reached
Pittsburgh in 1845, because early in that year he, like his older brother
before him, chose to join the 3rd Presbyterian Church. His number
was 551. Here is his entry in the church register.
He was admitted on
March 7, 1845, by certificate, which means he had come from another Presbyterian
Church – somewhere. I cannot quite picture Joseph L travelling across the
Atlantic clutching a letter of introduction, so he likely belonged to another
American church before joining the 3rd Presbyterian Pittsburgh. But
where that was is unknown.
The right hand column
states he was “dismissed” which, as noted above, simply means he transferred to
another church.
Church session minutes give us the date when this happened, December 1, 1849.
As to where he went,
the answer is found in the church session minutes for the 2nd
Presbyterian Church of Pittsburgh. This confirms
that he had previously been with the 3rd Presbyterian.
It was an interesting
time for Joseph L to change churches. He was not long married and his first
child Thomas was on the way. The most logical reason for the transfer was him
relocating within the city.
Existing church records
do not mention his wife, Ann Eliza Birney. There is no record discovered as yet
of the actual marriage of Joseph L and Ann Eliza, and neither are any of their
children in the baptism registers of 2nd Presbyterian. Yet, a few
years later, Ann Eliza’s brother, Thomas, has at least six children baptised in
this church. But Thomas’ marriage is not in the register either.
Records of around 40
different Presbyterian churches in Pittsburgh are now available to researchers,
and I have personally checked them all. That wasn’t as difficult as it sounds –
many were outside the time frame which narrowed the search down considerably. But
these are the only results found for the Russell and Birney families. Of
course, absence of evidence is not evidence of absence – it may be that more
records will surface in the future to fill missing pieces in the jigsaw.
I have a theory that
maybe Ann Eliza was affiliated with a Philadelphian Presbyterian Church. We
know that later in her marriage she and Joseph lived in Philadelphia. We know that
she had business interests there (after his own business failed Joseph ended up
as her “agent in Philadelphia” in her will). And near the end of her life Ann
and Joseph were mentioned in a Philadelphian register (as detailed in Separate
Identity volume 1). The trouble is that while Pittsburgh had 40 odd
Presbyterian Churches, Philadelphia appears to have had far more. If an
Ancestry index doesn’t throw up any information, it would take a very long time
to search them all. A VERY LONG TIME. Sometimes, life is just too short.
Afterword
For the benefit of
fellow researchers who read this site, how was the above information
discovered? Remarkably easily, and basically in the reverse order to the way
the above article is presented.
Using Ancestry I did a
search for Ann Eliza Birney, CTR’s mother. Almost immediately a birth came up
in this name from 1855, in the records of the 2nd Presbyterian
Church of Pittsburgh. It turned out to be the daughter of Thomas and Mary Ann
Birney. Thomas was Joseph Lytle Russell’s brother-in-law. They had simply named
one of their children after her aunt. The 2nd Presbyterian records
showed that Thomas and May Ann had six children baptised there, although there
are no extant records of their marriage. Still, here was definite proof that
one branch of the family had been 2nd Presbyterian. With a little
help from the Presbyterian Historical Society the church sessions records
showed Joseph Lytle joining this church in 1849, and crucially that he had
transferred from the 3rd Presbyterian Church. All the extant records
for 3rd Presbyterian are online, and conveniently past church
members had compiled a rough alphabetical list of all members past and present.
There were several Russells on the list – some obviously no connection - but
two were. There was Joseph, who joined in 1845, and the extra big surprise, the
original Charles T(ays) Russell who joined in 1834, the year the church opened.
I still visually checked the complete listing of members in date order just in
case the compilers had omitted a stray Russell, but they hadn’t.