Charles Thomas Wickham and Christianna Stouts

From Islington to New York and the Saginaw Valley

Reconstructing the lives of early nineteenth-century immigrants often requires correlating records created in different countries and under varying record-keeping practices. In the case of Charles Thomas Wickham and Christianna Stouts, parish registers, marriage records, passenger lists, Michigan documents, and contemporary newspapers together form a consistent and well-supported narrative. These records identify Charles Thomas Wickham and Christianna Stouts as my third great-grandparents and trace their journey from London to New York and ultimately to the Saginaw Valley of Michigan.


Charles Thomas Wickham: Origins in London

Charles Thomas Wickham was born about 1800 in London, England, the son of George Wickham and Fanny Bonner Farrand.¹ Parish records place the Wickham family in the Islington and Clerkenwell area of Middlesex during the early nineteenth century.

By the 1820s, Charles Thomas Wickham appears in parish records as a husband and father and is identified as a cheese monger and egg dealer, occupations consistent with small-scale food trade in urban London.² This occupational identification helps distinguish him from other men of the same name and provides useful context for his life prior to emigration.


First Marriage: Ann Philippa Evans

On 16 June 1822, Charles Thomas Wickham married Ann Philippa Evans at St Mary, Newington, Surrey.³ Two children were born to this marriage:

  • Charles Henry Wickham, born 6 December 1823
  • Ann Philippa Wickham, baptized 11 August 1825 in Islington³

Ann Philippa Evans Wickham died shortly after the birth of her daughter and was buried on 24 August 1825, leaving Charles a widower with two young children.⁴


Second Marriage: Christianna Stouts

On 1 April 1827, Charles Thomas Wickham married Christianna Stouts at St James, Clerkenwell, Middlesex.⁵ Christianna was born in 1807 and baptized at St Mary’s, Islington, placing her within the same parish network as the Wickham family.⁶

This second marriage produced a growing family during the late 1820s and early 1830s.


Children Born in England

The following children of Charles Thomas Wickham and Christianna Stouts were born in England:

  • John George Wickham, baptized 21 June 1828
  • Reuben Thomas Wickham, baptized 12 April 1831
  • Joseph Wickham, baptized 22 November 1832¹

These dates are later corroborated by American records and obituaries, demonstrating continuity of identity across the family’s migration.


Emigration to the United States

In 1833, Charles Thomas Wickham emigrated to the United States, arriving at New York.⁷ The following year, his wife Christianna, recorded on passenger lists as Hannah Wickham, followed with several children.⁸

Among those listed on the 1834 passenger list was Charles, age ten, whose age corresponds precisely with Charles Henry Wickham, born in December 1823, the son of Charles Thomas Wickham by his first wife, Ann Philippa Evans. None of the younger children of the second marriage would have been of that age, making this identification the only plausible interpretation.

The absence of Charles Henry Wickham’s sister, Ann Philippa Wickham, from American passenger lists suggests that she either died in childhood or remained in England, a common outcome for orphaned children placed with relatives.


“They Lived in the East”

Christianna’s obituary later states that after arriving in America, the family *“lived in the east.”*⁹ This phrase does not identify a specific state. When evaluated against dated and independent records, New York State is the only interpretation supported by evidence:

  • Both Charles and Christianna arrived through New York
  • Their American-born children were born in New York
  • No Massachusetts records have been identified
  • The family’s migration path proceeds logically from New York to Michigan

Move to Michigan and Charles’s Death

In 1840, the Wickham family relocated from New York to Saginaw County, Michigan, then a developing frontier region. According to Christianna’s obituary, Charles Thomas Wickham died only one month after arriving, bringing his American life to an abrupt end.⁹

He was buried in what is now Tittabawassee Township, Saginaw County, Michigan.¹⁰


Christianna Wickham Green: Pioneer Widow

In 1841, Christianna married Edward C. Green in Saginaw County.¹¹ She spent the remainder of her life in Michigan.

Her obituary, published in 1891, provides a detailed narrative of her life, confirming her English birth, marriage to Charles Wickham, emigration to New York, residence in the eastern United States, relocation to Saginaw, Charles’s death shortly after arrival, and her second marriage.⁹


Confirmation from the Next Generation

The obituary of Reuben Thomas Wickham, published in 1903, independently confirms the family narrative. It states that he was born in London, England, came to New York as a small child, and moved to Saginaw in 1840 with his parents, Charles T. and Christina Wickham.¹²


The Unresolved Question of Charles Henry Wickham

While the passenger list establishes that Charles Henry Wickham immigrated to the United States in 1834, his later life has not yet been documented. He does not appear in Michigan records or family obituaries. His absence may reflect an early death, separate residence, or use of a name variation, but no definitive conclusion can be drawn.

Importantly, his presence on the passenger list strengthens the identification of Charles Thomas Wickham by confirming the structure of two marriages and the blending of children from both unions.


Conclusion

Through parish registers, marriage records, passenger lists, Michigan documents, and contemporary newspapers, the lives of Charles Thomas Wickham and Christianna Stouts can be traced with clarity and consistency. The evidence demonstrates a single family moving from London to New York and then to the Saginaw Valley, without contradiction or competing identities.

Together, these records establish Charles Thomas Wickham and Christianna Stouts as my third great-grandparents, preserving their story as part of the broader nineteenth-century immigrant experience.


Footnotes

  1. Parish baptism records for Wickham children, Islington and Clerkenwell, Middlesex, England, 1828–1832.
  2. Parish baptism records noting occupation of Charles Thomas Wickham as cheese monger and egg dealer, Islington and Clerkenwell, Middlesex.
  3. Marriage record of Charles Thomas Wickham and Ann Philippa Evans, St Mary, Newington, Surrey, 16 June 1822; baptism of Ann Philippa Wickham, Islington, 11 August 1825.
  4. Burial record of Ann Philippa Wickham, England, 24 August 1825.
  5. Marriage record of Charles Thomas Wickham and Christianna Stouts, St James, Clerkenwell, Middlesex, 1 April 1827.
  6. Baptism record of Christianna Stouts, St Mary’s, Islington, 1807.
  7. Passenger list, Sovereign, arrival New York, 1833, Charles Wickham.
  8. Passenger list, Canada, arrival New York, February 1834, Hannah Wickham and children.
  9. Obituary of Christianna (Stouts) Green, Saginaw Courier-Herald, 12 March 1891.
  10. Burial record of Charles Thomas Wickham, Freeland area, Saginaw County, Michigan, 1840.
  11. Marriage record of Christianna Wickham and Edward C. Green, Saginaw County, Michigan, 1841.
  12. Obituary of Reuben Thomas Wickham, Saginaw Herald, 27 January 1903.

Who are Mr. & Mrs. Potter?

One of the many brick walls that I have is figuring out who the parents of Mary Potter Hickmott are. Mary Potter was born sometime between 1794 and 1801 (most likely before 1797) in England. I know this from several census records starting with the 1841 census for Horsmonden, Kent, England.

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The Potter surname is confirmed from a marriage index (no image of the original is found online – just an index, which of course could be wrong).

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When I first saw the 1841 census and saw there was a James Potter living with the Hickmotts, and that he was aged appropriately to be a brother of Mary, it turned me onto the name. So, combined with the marriage record, I’m fairly certain of the surname Potter.

So, who were Mary and James Potter’s parents? Darned good question. I still don’t know. Given that I know the Hickmotts were in Horsmonden for a number of years prior to this, it stands to reason the Potters may also be from there. However, there isn’t a record for a baptism of a Mary or James Potter in the 1790-1810 timeframe. So, I expanded my search to the surrounding area. I found a few possibilities – but not all of the parents are recorded, and of the ones that are recorded, there isn’t one couple that stands out as the possible parents of Mary and James (they all have different parents). There’s one baptism for a Mary Potter that catches my eye – but I discount it because the baptism date is my birthday (obviously different years) – so I think it catches my eye only because of that. Of course, it is certainly possible that Mary and James are not siblings – but close cousins (or not even related – just a coincidence of same surname). However, I tend to think that if something happened to James’ wife and he ended up a single parent of a young girl, that a female family member would step in to help out for a bit – which is why I hold the belief they were siblings.

This is one puzzle that may go unsolved….

Ruben Thomas Wickham

reuben

This is my favorite picture of the older generations of the family. I have no idea when it was taken or where. The younger man holding the dog is William Wickham and the younger lady is either his sister Ettie or his wife Emma. I tend to think it’s his sister. The old couple in the center? Well, some say it’s John Rivers and his wife Francis Jane Munson – they would be the aunt and uncle to William and Ettie. Somehow, I don’t think it’s John and Jane. I think it is more likely to be Reuben Thomas Wickham and Mary Emmaline Munson – the parents of William and Ettie.

Ruben was born in England on April 12, 1831. He immigrated with his mother, Christianna and his brothers John George and Joseph. Ruben’s father Charles had come over prior to the rest of the family.

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Passenger Manifest showing Ruben and his family immigrating from London, England and landing in New York on the ship Canada on February 24, 1834.

Ruben’s mother, Christianna is listed as Hannah on the passenger manifest – which could be a nickname. The puzzle is the 10 year old boy named Charles. I know it is not a “typo” for Ruben’s father Charles due to this excerpt from the memorial for Ruben’s mother Christianna:

“They lived for six years in London and then Mr. Wickham came to America to seek a more healthful climate.  Finding that his health improved here he wrote to his wife that he would return to England for her and the children and close up their business there.  She thought it unnecessary for him to come, however, and after writing him to that effect arranged to leave her English home with her three small children.”

The three small children would be John, Ruben and Joseph. It is possible that the 10 year old Charles is a son of Charles (and therefore a half brother of Ruben, John and Joseph) from a previous marriage. But I don’t know for sure. It is also unknown at this time what happened to that 10 year old Charles.

The family came to Michigan on an oxcart after living in New York for a few years. Charles and Christianna would have 2 daughters born in New York about 1836 and 1839. Charles would only live one month after arriving in Tittabawassee Township of Saginaw County Michigan in 1840. Christianna, with 5 small children to care for, re-married on April 14, 1841 to Edward Green – who helped raise her children.

Ruben would live the rest of his life in Tittabawassee Township and Thomas Township. He married on April 26, 1858, Mary Emmaline Munson. Ruben bought 65.03 acres of land in Tittabawassee Township (Lot number 4 of Section 32 inTownship 13 North of Range 3 East) 6 years after his marriage – on April 25, 1864.

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Receipt for Land purchased by Ruben Wickham from his Land Entry File at the National Archives.

Ruben had to provide certain proofs in order to purchase the land under the Homestead Acts. The following is an affidavit made by his brother, Joseph and another gentleman by the name of William Burleson filed on behalf of Ruben.

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I LOVE the detail in this document. Ruben had built for his young family a board house that was about 14×16, an addition of about the same size. The house had a board roof and floors, with 3 outside [doors] and 2 windows. It was a comfortable house to live in. He had cultivated about 12 acres of the land, cleared another 3 acres, built a log stable, an outdoor cellar, dug a well and planted a bunch of fruit trees and shrubbery. Not bad for just under 6 years.

Now looking back at my favorite picture (above) – and keeping in mind this description of his house and land – I am convinced that my thought that the old couple was Ruben and his wife Mary is correct.

Ruben died on January 16, 1903 and is buried in Owen Cemetery.

Rueben Wickham Remberance plate

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Saginaw Herald, January 27, 1903; Page 3

Stephen Hickmott

Stephen Hickmott

Stephen Hickmott was born July 27, 1823 in Horsmonden, County Kent, England. He immigrated to the United States in May of 1851, landing first in New York City and then migrated to Avon Township, Oakland County, Michigan. He was a passenger on the ship Wisconsin that set sail from London on May 20, 1851. He was reportedly a carpenter at this time. Stephen immigrated with his brother James. Another brother, William also immigrated, but he came on a different ship landing in a different area with his family. Stephen and James were single at the time of their immigration.

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 First page of the passenger manifest for the ship Stephen Hickmott immigrated on.

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The page showing Stephen and his brother James immigrating together.

In April of 1856, he petitioned to become a naturalized citizen of the United States. The immigration process at the time required a 5 year wait after the initial application, but so far no other naturalization records have been found for Stephen. It could be that he had applied initially in New York when he arrived, and the document found in 1856 in Oakland County, Michigan was in reality the “final” paperwork, but I haven’t been able to determine that. Regardless, in 1900 he reported himself as a naturalized citizen.

In August of 1859, Stephen married Eliza J. Powell in Avon Township. The entry is found at the bottom of the page and continued on the top of the next page of the Michigan County Marriage Records 1822-1940 book for Oakland County.

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Sometime between 1860 and 1870, Stephen moved his new family to New Haven in Shiawassee County. The community is just north of Owosso. Eliza died there on September 15, 1894. Stephen died on March 15, 1910 in Chesaning in Saginaw County Michigan. He is buried in West Haven Cemetery in New Haven, Shiawassee County, Michigan next to his wife.

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