I am third generation Irish American and I did not come to
Ireland looking for my family.
To be fair, I specifically didn’t come looking for family
because I knew I wouldn’t find any. For the Jermyn’s, Walsh’s, and Davis’, the
early 20th century was the perfect time to uproot themselves and
head to America. However, after finding out that the class would make a trip to
Belfast, I did create a goal for myself: I wanted to go to the Titanic Museum
and look at the passenger manifest. When I did so, I was looking for one
specific name: Ms. Annie Jane Jermyn.
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The exterior of the museum at night. I found it this to be in slightly poor taste but the whole thing is supposed to resemble an iceberg |
When I was in fourth grade, my class did a project on the
heritage of each individual student. My Nana was the keeper of the records and
my main source of information for this project.
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My cousin Jake, my Nana, and I |
She told me all about my Great
Grandmother who came over from Italy at the age of 18 and was the first woman
in her community to learn how to drive and get her license. She let me make
scans of the immigration papers of both of her parents and told me all about
her life growing up during the great depression but what she left out was
information about my Grandfather’s side of the family, the side that gave me my
surname. After continuously asking for more information in what was probably a
pestering manner, she offered me three facts:
1. The
names of my Great Grandparents were Mary and Elmer Jermyn and they had a turkey
farm
2. My
Great Great Grandfather’s name was George
3. We
did have a relative on the Titanic. She was 3rd class and she still
survived
At this point in my life, I was just beginning to develop my
acute obsession with all things related to the Titanic and this final fact was
the one that really stuck with me but at that point in my life, jumping on
Google and digging into records wasn’t easy as it is for me now.
Going to the Titanic Museum in Belfast last week rekindled
my desire to know more about this family member. As I got to the section of the
gallery that talked about the aftermath of the disaster, visitors were invited
to browse through the passenger manifest on digital tablets. I immediately
searched for the name Jermyn. Annie, age 26, popped up immediately but
something was wrong: her nationality was listed as Danish.
I didn’t know that a mistake like that would affect me so
much but I realized that the error was still in the back of my mind as we got
back to Dublin that night so I decided to send a note of complaint to the
museum. I informed them of the problem and even directed them to an article
from Annie’s hometown and an article from an American newspaper talking about her experience as proof of her
nationality. As of this time, I still have yet to hear back from anyone.
After I sent that message, I felt compelled to do some more
digging. I wanted to know more about Annie because I felt a strange connection
with her. She was only a few years older than me when she left for America. I
could imagine her being as scared as I was to come on this trip.
I ended up finding a family photograph that must have been
taken just a few years before she made her journey to America.
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Annie Jane is in the top row, the third from the left |
I also found a
census record for her family, taken in 1901. It was very sobering to see her
siblings’ names listed out.
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It must have been so hard to leave them behind. I
know how hard it is to say goodbye to my brother when I go back to school.
My brother Cole and I in Millennium Park the month before I started college |
No one seems to know what happened to Annie in the end.
Supposedly she fell in love with a man who was deemed unsuitable and her family
estranged her. Not much has been recorded after that point but it was still
important for me to find out about this part of my heritage that I knew so
little about before. Now I can consider myself the family expert.
Hello and thanks for this post! I have a special research interest in Annie Jane Jermyn too. May I please ask your permission to use her family photo in my upcoming research work?
ReplyDeleteBest regards and thanks in advance,
Eugene.
Fascinating blog - thank you. I too would like permission to use the family photograph on her profile at Geni.com. I hope I hear from you!
ReplyDelete