Martha SEMPLE

Female 1682 -


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Martha SEMPLE was born on 17 Jun 1682 in Ceres, Fife, Scotland.

    Martha married David DONALDSON on 04 Jan 1706 in Ceres, Fife, Scotland. David was born in in Cameron, Fife, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Grizell DONALDSON  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Jan 1707 in Ceres, Fife, Scotland.
    2. 3. David DONALDSON  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 19 May 1710 in Ceres, Fife, Scotland.
    3. 4. Hellen DONALDSON  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 01 May 1715 in Ceres, Fife, Scotland.
    4. 5. Janet DONALDSON  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 08 Sep 1717 in Ceres, Fife, Scotland.
    5. 6. Martha DONALDSON  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 15 Mar 1724 in Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Grizell DONALDSON Descendancy chart to this point (1.Martha1) was born on 10 Jan 1707 in Ceres, Fife, Scotland.

  2. 3.  David DONALDSON Descendancy chart to this point (1.Martha1) was born on 19 May 1710 in Ceres, Fife, Scotland.

  3. 4.  Hellen DONALDSON Descendancy chart to this point (1.Martha1) was born on 01 May 1715 in Ceres, Fife, Scotland.

  4. 5.  Janet DONALDSON Descendancy chart to this point (1.Martha1) was born on 08 Sep 1717 in Ceres, Fife, Scotland.

  5. 6.  Martha DONALDSON Descendancy chart to this point (1.Martha1) was born on 15 Mar 1724 in Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland.

    Martha married John MILLIE on 12 Mar 1756 in Ceres, Fife, Scotland. John (son of James MILLIE) was born about 1720 in Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 7. Isabel MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 23 Dec 1756 in Cairneyhill, Fifeshire, Scotland; was christened on 26 Dec 1756 in Cairneyhill, Fifeshire, Scotland.
    2. 8. William MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 29 Jul 1759 in Backbraes, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland.
    3. 9. Henry MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 09 Sep 1761 in Cameron, Fife, Scotland; was christened on 20 Sep 1761 in Backbraes, Ceres, Fife, Scotland.
    4. 10. David MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Oct 1764 in Backbraes, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland; was christened on 14 Oct 1764 in Ceres, Fife, Scotland.
    5. 11. Martha MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 30 Sep 1766 in Backbraes, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland.


Generation: 3

  1. 7.  Isabel MILLIE Descendancy chart to this point (6.Martha2, 1.Martha1) was born on 23 Dec 1756 in Cairneyhill, Fifeshire, Scotland; was christened on 26 Dec 1756 in Cairneyhill, Fifeshire, Scotland.

  2. 8.  William MILLIE Descendancy chart to this point (6.Martha2, 1.Martha1) was born on 29 Jul 1759 in Backbraes, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland.

  3. 9.  Henry MILLIE Descendancy chart to this point (6.Martha2, 1.Martha1) was born on 09 Sep 1761 in Cameron, Fife, Scotland; was christened on 20 Sep 1761 in Backbraes, Ceres, Fife, Scotland.

    Notes:

    Reference David Thompson e-mail 5-15-02:

    Thomas MILLIE had brothers Robert, John and Andrew. Well, I found a family with all these children:
    MILLIE, John Bir 1791 Scot Fife Ceres
    Fa: Henry Millie
    Mo: Magdalene Rumgay
    MILLIE, Andrew Chr 1793 Scot Fife Ceres
    Fa: Henry Millie
    Mo: Magdaline Rumgay
    MILLIE, David Chr 1794 Scot Fife Ceres
    Fa: Henry Millie
    Mo: Magdaline Rumgay
    MILLIE, Henry Chr 1794 Scot Fife Ceres
    Fa: Henry Millie
    Mo: Magdaline Rumgay
    MILLIE, Thomas Chr 1796 Scot Fife Ceres
    Fa: Henry Millie
    Mo: Magdaline Rumgay
    MILLIE, Robert Chr 1798 Scot Fife Ceres
    Fa: Henry Millie
    Mo: Magdalene Rumgay
    I also found the following who may be an aunt of HH, her father was Thomas, she was in Dublin, and note her first and middle names, the same as Thomas above:
    LATIMER, William
    Wife: Magdalene Rumgay MILLIE
    Marriage Date: 23 Oct 1847 Recorded in: St. Peter, Dublin, Ireland
    Collection: Civil Registration
    Husband's Father: James LATIMER
    Wife's Father: Thomas MILLIE
    Source: FHL Film 101286 Dates: 1847 - 1847
    I still bet that Bob's Henry comes down this line. Likely a couple or all of the brothers went to Ireland together.

    NOTE 2./ CERES, ASSOCIATE CONGREGATION: BAPTISMS, 1738-1806, 1808, 1836-37, [CH3/54]
    <>
    [Seceding families came from all over Central and East Fife to have their children baptised at Ceres, and this has been reflected in the baptismal register, in the index below all parishes and place-names have been kept, apart from Ceres: where none is given, the family belongs to Ceres]
    MILLIE, HENRY & MAGDALENE RUMGAY by Easthill of Bandirran; John, Oct 25/0ct 30 1791; Andrew, Jan 20 1793; David, Oct 10 1794; Thomas, July 26 1796; Robert, Aug 12 1798

    NOTE 3./ Historical Note: The Year Was 1789

    The year was 1789 and in the U.S. a young government was beginning to take shape. In its first nationwide election, the popular Revolutionary War general, George Washington, became the country's first president and was sworn in at the first capitol of the United States, Federal Hall in New York City.

    In France, a rebellion was underway and with the storming of the Bastille prison, the French Revolution began. In its reporting on the subject, The Times of London, England had the following to say of the conflict:

    The spirit of liberty which so long lay in a state of death, oppressed by the hand of power, received its first spark of returning animation, by the incautious and impolitic assistance afforded to America. The French soldier on his return from that emancipated continent, told a glorious tale to his countrymen--"That the arms of France had given freedome to thirteen United States, and planted the standard of liberty on the battlements of New York and Philadelphia." The idea of such a noble deed became a general object of admiration, the [facets?] of a similar state were eagerly longed for by all ranks of people, and the vox populi had this force of argument--"If France gave freedom to America, why should she not unchain the arbitrary fetters which bind her own people.

    Later that year, the Marquis de Lafayette, with the advice of Thomas Jefferson who was at the time the American ambassador to France, drafted the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen. It was adopted by France's National Assembly in August and ratified by Louis XVI in October.

    There was unrest in other parts of the world as well. Sweden and Russia were at war, and briefly, Norway had joined the conflict, although a peace treaty was signed in July 1789.

    In a smaller, but well-known conflict, the mutiny on the H.M.S. Bounty was also in the year 1789. On April 28, part of the crew of the Bounty, led by Fletcher Christian, mutinied and set Captain William Bligh and eighteen crewmembers adrift. Bligh managed to get the boat some 3,600 miles to Timor. Some of the mutineers were captured and prosecuted--three were hanged, while others, including Fletcher Christian ended up on Pitcairn Island, where some of their descendants live to this day.

    In 1789, there was an epidemic of influenza in New England, New York, and Nova Scotia, which resulted in many deaths due to secondary cases of pneumonia. The new president was among those who fell ill. He caught a cold while visiting Boston, and later, was affected more seriously with influenza, which was dubbed Washington Influenza.

    Henry married Magdalene RUMGAY about 1790 in Easthill of Bandirran, Ceres, Fife, Scotland. Magdalene (daughter of AndrewSr RUMGAY and Mary (McKie) MACKIE) was born on 01 Sep 1765 in Cameron, Fife, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 12. John MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 25 Oct 1791 in Easthill of Bandirran Estates, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland.; died in in New York ?.
    2. 13. Andrew MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 19 Jan 1793 in Easthill of Bandirran Estates, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland..
    3. 14. David MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Oct 1794 in Easthill of Bandirran, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland.
    4. 15. Henry MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Oct 1794 in Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland; died after 1861 in Cupar, Fifeshire, Scotland.
    5. 16. Thomas MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 26 Jul 1796 in Easthill of Bandirran, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland; died in in Ireland.
    6. 17. Robert Rumgay MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 12 Aug 1798 in Easthill of Bandirran estates, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland; died before 05 Aug 1886 in not in 1841 Scotland census.
    7. 18. Mary MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1808 in Ceres, Fifeshire, Scotland; died after 1861 in Age 53, Cupar, Fifeshire, Scotland.

  4. 10.  David MILLIE Descendancy chart to this point (6.Martha2, 1.Martha1) was born on 10 Oct 1764 in Backbraes, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland; was christened on 14 Oct 1764 in Ceres, Fife, Scotland.

  5. 11.  Martha MILLIE Descendancy chart to this point (6.Martha2, 1.Martha1) was born on 30 Sep 1766 in Backbraes, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  John MILLIE Descendancy chart to this point (9.Henry3, 6.Martha2, 1.Martha1) was born on 25 Oct 1791 in Easthill of Bandirran Estates, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland.; died in in New York ?.

    Family/Spouse: Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 19. Malechild MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point

  2. 13.  Andrew MILLIE Descendancy chart to this point (9.Henry3, 6.Martha2, 1.Martha1) was born on 19 Jan 1793 in Easthill of Bandirran Estates, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland..

    Andrew married Esther STORY in 1838 in Kildare Diocese, Kildare, Ireland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 14.  David MILLIE Descendancy chart to this point (9.Henry3, 6.Martha2, 1.Martha1) was born on 10 Oct 1794 in Easthill of Bandirran, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland.

  4. 15.  Henry MILLIE Descendancy chart to this point (9.Henry3, 6.Martha2, 1.Martha1) was born on 10 Oct 1794 in Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland; died after 1861 in Cupar, Fifeshire, Scotland.

    Notes:

    NOTE 1./ 1861 Cupar, Fifeshire census

    Name Estimated birth year Birthplace Relation Civil parish County
    Henry Millie abt 1795 Ceres, Fifeshire Head Cupar Fife
    Henry Millie abt 1855 Cupar, Fifeshire Son Cupar Fife
    Mary Donaldson abt 1808 Ceres, Fifeshire Sister Cupar Fife

    Family/Spouse: UNKNOWN. died before 1861 in Cupar, Fifeshire, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 20. Henry MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1855 in Cupar, Fifeshire, Scotland; died after 1891 in Cupar, Fifeshire, Scotland.

  5. 16.  Thomas MILLIE Descendancy chart to this point (9.Henry3, 6.Martha2, 1.Martha1) was born on 26 Jul 1796 in Easthill of Bandirran, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland; died in in Ireland.

    Notes:

    David J. Thompson
    78 Shavian Blvd., London, ON, N6G 2P3
    Tel: 1-519-858-0239; Fax: 1-519-858-8223

    May 18, 2002

    Mr. R. Millie
    8700 North Shore Drive
    Jonesboro, GA, 30236.

    Ms. Melanie Maasdam
    2205 195th Street
    Clarion, Iowa 50525

    Dear Bob & Melanie:

    I wrote recently about some Millie's I found in Scotland I thought might be precursors of Melanie's H.H. Millie. Melanie asked me to explain, and I thought it would be a good exercise to see if it hangs together. I think Bob's line may well be connected as well, so here goes:

    We have these facts:

    " Henry (aka "Harry") H. Millie (H.H. Millie) was born in Ireland Feb 8, 1863. His brothers were Charles Thomas Millie and Samuel Boucher Millie. We know this from the information I got last year from the National Archives. The three emigrated to Canada in the early 1880's.

    " H.H. Millie's brother Samuel Boucher Millie joined the North-West Mounted Police force on September 1, 1899 and was discharged on March 25, 1904. The archive records refer to his next of kin, Miss Lily Hariot Millie of Ballymooney, Gashill, Kings. Co., Ireland. Another record identifies his next of kin as his sister, Margaret McDowell of Upper Edmonton, now a London suburb. Samuel joined the 179th Battalion in the Canadian Expeditionary Force in World War I. This relationship is confirmed in the Archives records, and per note received from Melanie apparently written by H.H.'s daughter Emma. Although reported to have died in Winnipeg during WWI, the archives records suggest he claimed a pension in British Columbia under the name William Thompson.

    " H.H. Millie's Charles Millie was found in Battleford, Saskatchewan. It appears that he was a member of the Battleford Home Guard Volunteers in the rebellion of 1885. He was given a land grant for services but took $$ instead. By 1901, when Henry had settled in Carman Manitoba, Charles was working for a rancher in Alberta near Wetaskiwin. In the letter from H. H. Millie in Carman, Manitoba to the Commissioner of the North-West Mounted Police it says that his brother Charles had died just previous to September 11, 1902. He died shortly after in Wetaskiwin. This relationship is confirmed in the Archives records, and per note received from Melanie apparently written by H.H.'s daughter Emma.

    H. H. Millie also had 4 sisters per information from Melanie, as well as from the archives records of Samuel.
    " Margaret Ellen Millie married a McDowell and was living in London, according to Samuel's next of kin record, at the time of WWI, at 16 Angel Road, Upper Edmonton, Enfield, England. A note from Melanie says she died December 5, 1921, aged 68, interred in Tottenham Cemetery. I found these records (LDS British Vital Records, 2nd Edition) which give the husband as Frederick, and two children, an unnamed boy and an unnamed girl, born in Dublin:
    MCDOWELL, Birth
    Gender: Male
    Birth Date: 4 Sep 1875 Birthplace: No 3 South City, Dub, Ire
    Recorded in: Dublin, Ireland
    Collection: Civil Registration
    Father: George Frederick MCDOWELL
    Mother: Margaret Ellen MILLIE
    Source: FHL Film 255935 Dates: 1875 - 1875
    ***********************
    MCDOWELL, Birth
    Gender: Female
    Birth Date: 4 Dec 1873 Birthplace: No 3 South City, Dub, Ire
    Recorded in: Dublin, Ireland
    Collection: Civil Registration
    Father: George Frederick MCDOWELL
    Mother: Margaret Ellen MILLER
    Source: FHL Film 255889 Dates: 1873 - 1875

    I couldn't find them in England yet in the 1881 census.
    " Lillian Hariot Millie - per note received from Melanie apparently written by H.H.'s daughter Emma, never married
    " Henrietta Millie - per note received from Melanie apparently written by H.H.'s daughter Emma, never married; and
    " Mary Millie, married Charles Castle.
    The parents of H.H. Millie and the others were identified by Melanie as Henry Millie and Mary Dempster. The death certificate for H.H. lists his father as Henry Millie, and his mother as Mary. Note that the death certificate says that the father, Henry Millie was born in Scotland.
    I found the following marriage record (in the LDS British Vital records CD's, 2nd edition) for Henry and Mary Dempster, which says Henry's father was Thomas and Mary's was Charles Dempster:
    MILLIE, Henry Age: 30
    Wife: Mary Jane DEMPSTER Age: 21
    Marriage Date: 31 May 1851 Recorded in: St Thomas, Dublin, Ireland
    Collection: Civil Registration
    Husband's Father: Thomas MILLIE
    Wife's Father: Charles DEMPSTER
    Source: FHL Film 101326 Dates: 1851 - 1851
    (I will call H.H.'s father Henry 1821, his approximate birth date, to minimize further confusion)
    According to notes from Melanie, extracts from the Kings County Chronicle report that Henry Millie Died January 7, 1891, in his 71st year at Ballymooney, Geashill, (which was where H.H. was born per his death certificate, and per his obituary in 1917 in Kelowna, B.C.). Henry's wife Mary Jane died May 20, 1899, aged 68.

    According to the letter dated January 1, 1920 from Aunt Margaret Ellen McDowell (H.H.'s sister) to her niece Emma Millie McGarrity (Melanie's grandmother), the Millie's settled in Scotland. Emma Millie McGarrity's grandfather's grandfather (ie: Henry Millie's grandfather) had 4 sons, John, Tom, Andrew and Robert. The letter says that all 4 went to Ireland. Tom Millie was Henry Millie's father according to this letter. This marriage record above is consistent with this information. I was previously unable to find a Millie family in Scotland, or anywhere else which included 4 sons named John, Tom, Andrew and Robert, let alone one which would fit the requisite time frame. With the new LDS British Vital Records collections however I found the following family in Fife with the right collection of sons. Better still, the unusual name of the mother make it virtually certain, for me anyway, that the son Thomas, born 1796, is went to Ireland, as presumably did the other sons as described in Ms. McDowell's letter. The following lists the 6 sons of Henry Millie (yes, yet another one) and Magdalene Rumgay (note the name):
    1. MILLIE, John Bir 1791 Scot Fife Ceres
    Fa: Henry Millie, Mo: Magdalene Rumgay
    2. MILLIE, Andrew Chr 1793 Scot Fife Ceres
    Fa: Henry Millie, Mo: Magdaline Rumgay
    3. MILLIE, David Chr 1794 Scot Fife Ceres
    Fa: Henry Millie, Mo: Magdaline Rumgay
    4. MILLIE, Henry Chr 1794 Scot Fife Ceres
    Fa: Henry Millie, Mo: Magdaline Rumgay
    5. MILLIE, Thomas Chr 1796 Scot Fife Ceres
    Fa: Henry Millie, Mo: Magdaline Rumgay
    6. MILLIE, Robert Chr 1798 Scot Fife Ceres
    Fa: Henry Millie, Mo: Magdalene Rumgay

    I found the marriage of this Henry and Magdalene on the LDS FamilySearch website:
    Marriage:

    Magdalene RUMGAY; Sex: F; Spouse: Henry MILLIE; Marriage: Abt. 1790; Banderran, Ceres, Fife, Scotland; Film # 457767

    I also found the following birth record of Magdalene-I presume it is her, how many can there be?:
    Magdalan RUMGAY; Sex: F; Christening: 1 September 1765, Cameron, Fife; Parents: Andrew RUMGAY, Mary Mackie. Reference: Batch # C114122, 1695-1819, Call # 1040151, Printout # 6900431.

    The real proof that Thomas of this family went to Ireland lies in the marriage record below:
    LATIMER, William
    Wife: Magdalene Rumgay MILLIE
    Marriage Date: 23 Oct 1847 Recorded in: St Peter, Dublin, Ireland
    Collection: Civil Registration
    Husband's Father: James LATIMER
    Wife's Father: Thomas MILLIE
    Source: FHL Film 101286 Dates: 1847 - 1847
    Magdalene Rumgay Millie of Dublin Ireland, daughter of Thomas Millie, MUST be the granddaughter of Henry Millie and Magdalene Rumgay of Fife. There surely can't be another Thomas Millie, of the same generation, who would name his daughter Magdalene Rumgay. Since we know that Thomas, father of Henry 1821, and grandfather of H.H Millie was born in Scotland, and moved to Ireland, and had brothers named Andrew, John and Robert, and there are so few Millie's generally, let alone in Ireland, he must be the same person as the father of Magdalene Rumgay Millie of Dublin, and she is an aunt of H.H. Millie and his siblings. Also note that like Henry 1821, she was married in Dublin, and only 4 years before Henry 1821.
    Next, who did Thomas marry? Who was Henry 1821's mother? Well, the LDS website has a marriage record for a Thomas Millie and Mary McWattie, 9 December 1818, Dundee, Angus, Scotland (batch # M112824, Source Call # 0993401, Printout call # 6902959). Is this the correct Thomas? Here we go back to the letter Margaret McDowell wrote in 1920 to her niece, Emma Millie. The transcribed copy Melanie sent says:
    There was a slip of paper enclosed in this letter from Aunt Maggie McDowell and this is the info as follows:
    "PRIVATE and don't tell acquaintances, does no good. My father's Grandfather committed suicide from loss of an awful large sum in speculation and I believe he was a Millie, French, but I may be mistaken, he may have been McQuatty."
    So yes, Thomas married Mary McWattie in Dundee. Margaret McDowell's father was Henry 1821, and his grandfathers would have been Henry Millie (married to Magdalene Rumgay) and Mary McWattie's father. This reference proves that this is the correct spouse for Thomas.

    Again searching the LDS site, we find a record for the christening of Henry Millie, 10 October 1819, Dundee, Angus, Scotland; father-Thomas Millie, mother-Mary McWattie (batch # C112827, Source Call # 0993425, Printout call # 6900646)

    So Melanie, I think we have you back to Scotland:
    1. Henry Millie married Magdalene Rumgay in Fife Scotland in 1790.
    2. Thomas, born 1796 in Ceres, Fife, Scotland, married Mary McWattie, 9 December 1818, Dundee, Angus, Scotland.
    3. Henry Millie born 10 October 1819, Dundee, Angus, Scotland, married Mary Dempster 1851 in Dublin
    4. Henry Herbert Millie (H.H. Millie) born February 1863 in Ireland, emigrated to Canada early 1880's, married Caroline Sarah Mills, abt. Feb. 1900 in Manitoba
    5. Emma Lily Millie born abt March 6, 1901, married Joseph Patrick McGarrity, 1919
    6. Lawrence Patrick Dempster McGarrity, born 1924, married Jean Anderson
    7. Melanie McGarrity

    I think this is pretty accurate based upon these published records. If you are energetic, you should order the microfilms from the LDS and copy the records yourself, ideally taking a print or the original registers. Not only will this document the facts, but the original registers may have additional information not picked up on the LDS indexes.

    The next question is what happened to the other brothers of Thomas who went to Ireland, who were their children and grandchildren, and did Thomas have any other children besides Henry 1821 and Magdalene.

    Bob's Henry Thomas Beale Millie (H.T.B.) was born September 14, 1862, in Kilkenny, Ireland, and emigrated to Canada around the time of H.H. and his brothers. H.T.B.'s parents were Robert Millie and Elizabeth Beale. (Although born in Ireland, I have always held out to Bob that he is Scottish in origin: Millie's all come from Scotland, and the south of England (perhaps French before that, but that is all beyond me), and H.T.B. was Presbyterian, basically a Scottish Protestant religion.) Was this Robert another son of Thomas, and a brother of Henry 1821 and Magdalene? Or was he a son of one of Thomas' brothers, Andrew, John or Robert, and a first cousin of Henry 1821 and Magdalene? I think given the scarcity of Millie's generally, and in Ireland in particular, these Irish Millie's of Scottish descent must be connected, and H.T.B. and H.H. were cousins, sharing common grandparents in either Thomas Millie and his wife ??, or in Henry Millie and Magdalene Rumgay. The common names, Henry, Henrietta, Robert and Thomas are all there (H.T.B also had a sister Henrietta). All were Presbyterian, indicating Scotch origin, and all came from the counties around Dublin.
    If I were a betting man, that's where I would put my money.

    Best regards
    David

    Thomas married Mary MCWATTIE on 09 Dec 1818 in Dundee, Angus, Scotland. Mary (daughter of David MCWATTIE and Margaret KID) was born about 1800 in Dundee, Angus, Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 21. Henry MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 16 Sep 1819 in Dundee, Angus, Scotland; was christened on 10 Oct 1819 in Dundee, Angus, Scotland; died on 07 Jan 1891 in Ballymooney, Geashill, Kings (Offaly) County, Ireland; was buried in Geasehill Churchyard.
    2. 22. Magdalene Rumgay MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1827 in Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.

  6. 17.  Robert Rumgay MILLIE Descendancy chart to this point (9.Henry3, 6.Martha2, 1.Martha1) was born on 12 Aug 1798 in Easthill of Bandirran estates, Ceres Parish, Fife, Scotland; died before 05 Aug 1886 in not in 1841 Scotland census.

    Notes:

    NOTE 1./ THE SURNAME MILLIE

    The research of the Millie Surname for my ancestors stops with Robert R. Millie. His name was obtained from the Ontario Marriage Registration of Henry Thomas Beale Millie and Grace Edith Melmer. The lost ancestors seem to be in the maze of Ireland's sons. ADDENDUM 10-12-02 : On the Marriage Registration of Henrietta Amelia Millie and Robert Scott, the parents are listed, showing that the individual previously known only as Robert R. Millie, was in fact Robert Rumgay Millie. This consequently opened the door to our Millie roots leading back from Ireland to that of Scottish origins. The single generation spent in Ireland, explains the uncommomality of the surname within her confines. Scotland however has many Rumgays, and several clans of Millies that may never be connected, in several different parishes, but to a high degree in Fife, and around central Scotland. There are several indications that our Millie surname or a derivative spelling, will lead back to France at about the time of the Hugenot Revolution.

    The surname Millie is a derivative of several different spellings. Millicent, Millier, Millay, Milly, de Milly, d'Milly, Milia, Mealy and others. Andrew J. Millie of NSW Australia, has done extensive research on the relationships of these variants. An example of his findings follows: ....... " de MILLY and MILCENT are definitely 100% guaranteed to be the same families. A lot of Nobility dropped their noble surnames during the Wars of Religion and were known by different names. de Milly/Milcent is just one example of this" ..........

    The derivatives surnames of Millie has it's origins in France and the family was Huguenot, '...a name given to the French Calvinist Protestants of the 16th and 17th centuries...largely inspired by Martin Luther...During the 17th century the Huguenots saw their power and privileges progressively undermined by the strongly Catholic kings Louis XIII and Louis XIV...In 1685 the Edict of Nantes was revoked, and thousands of Protestants chose to migrate from France rather than accept Catholicism.' Many, fled to England and Scotland.

    NOTE 2./ FIFE, SCOTLAND : FIFE in The 1830's

    POPULATION.
    In 1755, the population was 2540
    1793 2320
    1811 2407
    1821 2840
    1831 2762
    Number of families in the parish, 606
    chiefly employed in agriculture 183
    trade, manufactures, or handicraft 281

    Since 1831, there has been a great increase in the number of the people ; and, from the accounts of their establishments, which were lately given in by the several manufacturers in the parish, we are authorized to say, that the population must now be about 3000 at least. In 1793, 138 looms are said to have been employed in the parish. From 700 to 900 of the inhabitants are now employed in weaving and winding. From 170 to 200 are employed regularly in the mills; and, with the exception of about 30, who are employed in the lime-works, the greater part which remains of the working population is agricultural. The town of Cupar is so near to Ceres, that there are few shopkeepers or venders of any commodities in the latter place.

    CHARACTER and HABITS of the PEOPLE:.-The people are universally industrious, and in general they cultivate the sister virtues of temperance and frugality. Considerable attention to neatness and cleanliness also may be discovered among them. Dr Arnot, author of the former account, mentions, that among the women, the cloak and bonnet had become substitutes for the plaid; and among the men, that the bonnet was supplanted by the hat. It is singular enough, that the plaid and bonnet should now be both regaining their former estimation. There exists also among the people a considerable deal of information, and a general desire for knowledge. A subscription and circulating library was commenced by them in 1828. It consists now of 500 volumes, in which there is varied as well as much useful reading. There are 100 subscribers to this library.
    During the last three years, there were 3 illegitimate births in the parish.

    MANUFACTURES:-Since the date of the last Statistical Account three spinning mills have been built in the parish, and a bleachfield establishment has been erected at Duraden. In 1827, two mills were built on the grounds of Easter Pitscottie. The machinery is propelled partly by water, and partly by steam. The steam, in general, is only required in summer, occasionally when the water is light. The mills belong to Messrs William and James Yool, manufacturers, Ceres.
    There is accommodation for the families of the workers in the buildings at these mills ; and they contain altogether upwards of 150 individuals. There is a teacher and a small library attached to the mills. The other spinning-mill, which belongs to Mr David Yool, was erected at Tarvit in 1799. The machinery at this mill goes partly by water, and partly by steam; and the power is applied also to the turning of a saw-mill. The three spinning-mills are occupied in preparing and spinning flax, tow, and yarns. The raw material is obtained from Dundee and the yarns are sent partly to the Dundee market, and partly to manufacturers in Fife. 150 men, women, and young people are employed. The bleachfield establishment was erected in 1825 by some manufacturers in Ceres. It has received the name of St Ann's Bleaching Company, from a well of that name in the vicinity. The number of hands employed varies from 35 to 40. The supply of brown raw material for it, is chiefly obtained from the mills already mentioned. Previous to the erection of this bleachfield, little was manufactured by the weavers in Ceres except " Brown Silesias;" now the yarns are all cleaned and bleached, and the people are employed in weaving dowlas and sheeting. From 700 to 900 are engaged in this employment ; and from L. 50,000 to L. 60,000 Sterling worth of dowlas and sheeting are annually manufactured in the parish. To any one who reads this statement of the manufacture, it will be evident that the various works are most profitably arranged. The mills supply the bleacbfield, and the bleachfield supplies the weavers : and while there is a saving in this manner, as to the carriage of the various articles, there is also an encouragement to the manufacture of the place. There is every likelihood that the manufacture of this flourishing place will, in a few years, become more extended ; and there are, at present, some proposals of erecting another mill on a very extensive plan..

    PAROCHIAL ECONOMY
    MARKETS;- There is a weekly market in Cupar, the county town, distant only two miles and a half. But this widely extended parish has an easy access to markets in several places . and some of the farmers find it convenient to send their produce to Largo, some to St Andrews, and a very few to Dundee. There are two annual markets or fairs held in the village of Ceres, one on the 24th June, and the other on the 20th day of October; and both of them are most numerously resorted to, as excellent wool, and corn, and horse, and cattle-markets.

    MEANS OF COMMUNICATION;-A turnpike road runs from east to west through the whole length of the parish. There is also a road which runs from north to south, through the breadth of the parish. In summer, a daily-coach runs through Ceres, and joins the steamboat which leaves Largo for Edinburgh. A messenger, paid by the inhabitants of Ceres, carries letters or papers daily to Cupar, the post-town. There are regular carriers from Ceres to all the neighbouring towns.

    ECCLESIASTICAL STATE:- Ceres parish is a rectory, which, before the Reformation, belonged to the Provostry of Kirkhheugh, a religious house at St Andrews. A considerable part of the east end of the parish formerly belonged to the parish of St Andrews, and about the year 1620, was annexed to Ceres, quoad sacra tantum, (as it was long thought;) but the present incumbent discovered that there was no such reservation, and it is now annexed, quoad sacra et civilia. Ceres originally belonged to St Andrews presbytery. In the old church of Ceres, there was an aisle on the south, which belonged to the family of Craighall, and which, before the Reformation, was a chapel dedicated to St Ninian. The schoolmaster of Ceres uniformly receives a presentation to the Chaplainry. There used to be a salary of L. 3 Scots paid to him; but the houses in Cupar from which this salary was paid cannot now be discovered. The present church was built in 1806. It stands on a height, where formerly stood the old church and chapel : it was situated on the outskirts of the old town, but since the new town or Bridge-end was built, it may be said to be in the centre of the village. It is seated for 1100, but actually holds 1300, and the seats are very advantageously disposed both for bearers and speaker. These seats all belong to the heritors of the parish, and there is no rent charged for the use of them. Seats are appropriated for the proprietors and farmers, and the remainder are free and open to the people, and, except on very bad days, they are well filled. There are two meetings in the church, winter and summer. The average number of communicants is 1000. The right of patronage, by a grant from the Crown, was vested in the Crawford family.
    There are also two meeting-houses in the village of Ceres, one for the Associate Congregation of Antiburgher Seceders, which was built in 1744, the other for the Presbytery of Relief. To each of these are attached a settled clergyman and regular congregation. A brotherly feeling and Christian spirit pervades the greater number of the members of these three congregations and you will occasionally find them in each others place of worship.
    There are about 86 families in this parish attached to the Relief Church, and about the same number to the Secession.

    NOTE 3./ HISTORICAL reference: The Year Was 1829

    The year was 1829, and in Scotland, there was a catastrophic flood. According to a paper online at the website of Fettes College, Edinburgh, Scotland, the Muckle Spate (large flood) of 1829, began on August 3, 1829 in northeast Scotland and was "the most severe catastrophic flood in modern UK history." It extended across a large area of Scotland, from Inverness to Montrose, and devastated homes and agriculture in the affected areas. The Edinburgh Advertiser from August 11, 1829 provides detailed coverage of some of the affected areas, including the excerpt below:

    The Dee was first observed to increase about four o'clock on Monday afternoon, and it continued to rise until about eleven o'clock on Tuesday forenoon, when it remained stationary for a few hours; after which, it began to recede with considerable rapidity. In some places, it attained an elevation of eleven feet above its ordinary level. . . The low grounds in the vicinity of the river were completely inundated, and so great, in some parts of its course, was the space over which it extended, that it presented the appearance rather of a lake than a river. . . Vast quantities of hay, straw, timber, &c. have been swept away; and so great was the force of the torrent, that many fields were stript of their soil, and covered with sand and stones. A good many cattle and sheep may have been drowned; but as it is customary, in the upper parts of the country to leave numerous flocks scattered over the hills, it will be impossible, for some time to ascertain with accuracy the numbers that have perished. Fortunately, notwithstanding the imminent to which many people were exposed from the suddenness of the inundation, no loss of human life has arisen from the overflowing of the Dee. Several cottages have, at Ballaster and other places, been carried away; and so completely were others surrounded with water, that a stranger could scarce have told on which side of the river they stood. A good many people were rescued, by means of boats, from being drowned in their own houses, and were obliged to resign their furniture, &c. to destruction. With the exception of the bridge near Aberdeen, and that at Potarch, all the bridges over the Dee have either been swept away, or sustained more or less injury. . . .

    Robert married Elizabeth Margaret BEALE in 1840 in Kildare Diocese, Kildare, Ireland. Elizabeth was born about 1819 in Kildare Diocese, Kildare, Ireland; died before 05 Aug 1886; was buried in Leinster=Dublin, Kildare, Kilkenny, Laios, Meath, Offaly and others. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 23. Elizabeth MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point
    2. 24. Margaret MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born in in Ireland?.
    3. 25. Isabel Madeline MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1844 in Ireland; died after 1891 in Wimbledon, Surrey, England.
    4. 26. Henrietta Amelia MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1852 in Inverness, Scotland; died about 1901 in Dublin.
    5. 27. Sargeant Henry Thomas Beale MILLIE  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 14 Sep 1857 in Kilkenny, Ireland; died on 11 Jun 1918 in London, Ontario, Canada; was buried on 11 Jun 1918 in Mount Pleasant Cemetary, Section X, London, Ontario, Canada. ( Veterans Section).

  7. 18.  Mary MILLIE Descendancy chart to this point (9.Henry3, 6.Martha2, 1.Martha1) was born in 1808 in Ceres, Fifeshire, Scotland; died after 1861 in Age 53, Cupar, Fifeshire, Scotland.

    Family/Spouse: Unknown DONALDSON. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]