Mary "Polly" Young
Mary Young (28 January 1825 – 16 June 1885) was a Pitcairn Islander, a granddaughter of Mutiny on the Bounty survivor Edward "Ned" Young and his Tahitian wife Toofaiti. Mary and her husband, Thursday October Christian II, a grandson of Fletcher Christian and a longtime leader of the island's community, were the parents of seventeen children and the ancestors of subsequent leadership figures of the island.
Family
Ned Young (c.1762–1800) and Toofaiti (c.1773–1831) had four children, all born on Pitcairn: Polly (c.1794–1843), George (c.1797–1831), Robert (c.1799–1831) and William, Mary Young's father (1799–1839). Mary's mother, Elizabeth "Betsy" Mills (1792–1883), also born on Pitcairn, was the older of two children born to Bounty mutineer John Mills (1749–1793) and his Tahitian wife Vahineatua (c.1772–c.1808). In 1811 Elizabeth married Matthew Quintal (1791–1814), the eldest of five children born to Bounty mutineer Matthew Quintal (1766–1799) and his Tahitian wife Tevarua (1774–1799). Described as violent and quick-tempered, the elder Quintal was killed, within eyesight of seven-year-old Elizabeth, by Ned Young and the other Bounty mutineer, John Adams (1767–1829). Three years after her marriage and the birth of two sons, John (1812–1838) and Matthew (1814–1865), Elizabeth was widowed when the younger Quintal was lost at sea. Nine years later, in 1823, she married William Young and, between 1823 and 1837, bore seven children: Mayhew (died following birth in 1823), Mary, her first daughter, then William Mayhew (1827–1876), Miriam (1829–1911), twins Lydia (1832–1883) and Dorcas (1832–1917) and, five years later, Robert, who died five months after birth in 1837.
Marriage
In 1838 Pitcairn Island became a British colony and, the following year, Mary Young, who was nicknamed "Polly", after her father's sister, married, at age 14, Thursday October Christian II (1820–1911), the grandson of mutiny leader Fletcher Christian (1764–1793), and bore 17 children between 1840 and 1868. Her husband's father, Thursday October Christian I (1790–1831), so named to commemorate the day of his birth, was the first of three children born to Fletcher Christian and his Tahitian wife Mauatua (c.1762–1841), and the first child that came into the world on Pitcairn Island following the arrival of the Bounty. Thursday October I, who was three when his father was killed, married Teraura (c.1775–1850) in 1805, upon reaching his fifteenth birthday, and they became the parents of seven children: Joseph John (1806–1831), Charles (1808–1831), Mary (1810–1852), Polly (1814–1831), Arthur (1815–no date of death indicated), Peggy (1815–1884) and, finally, Thursday October II, who lived a decade into the 20th century, dying seven months past his 90th birthday.
Children of Mary Young and Thursday October Christian II
Name | Birth | Death | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Julia Christian | 23 July 1840 | 15 June 1850 | |
Agnes Christian | 6 October 1841 | 6 April 1911 | Married American (from Rhode Island) whaler Samuel Russell Warren, thus becoming the ancestor of all the Warrens on the island. |
Albert Christian | 31 March 1843 | 19 January 1861 | |
Elias Christian | 7 January 1845 | 7 October 1893 | Married Mary Young and became the ancestor of Jay Warren and Pitcairn mayor Mike Warren |
Alphonso Driver Christian | 3 August 1846 | 14 June 1921 | Married Sarah McCoy and became father of Gerard Bromley Robert Christian and grandfather of John Lorenzo Christian |
Anna Rose Christian | 31 July 1848 | 30 March 1851 | |
Julia Anna Rose Christian | 9 November 1851 | 30 August 1864 | |
Ernest Heywood Christian | 5 October 1853 | December 1926 | |
Daniel Christian | 27 July 1855 | March 1904 | Married Harriet McCoy and became father of Edgar Allen Christian and Frederick Martin Christian |
Elizabeth Saidley A. Christian | 27 April 1857 | 1863 | |
Francis Hickson Christian | 18 February 1859 | 3 January 1938 | Married Eunice Young and became father of Charles Richard Parkin Christian and ancestor of Ivan Christian and Steve Christian |
William Henry Gordon Christian | 1 September 1860 | 22 January 1934 | |
Albert Swain Christian | 8 May 1862 | 9 May 1862 | |
Harriet Christian | 22 August 1863 | 1864 | |
Harriet Christian | 23 August 1864 | 19 August 1937 | Married Matthew Edmond McCoy |
Charles Benjamin Christian | 1 August 1865 | July 1885 | |
Mary Elizabeth Saidley Christian | April 1868 | 1 June 1868 |
Later life
By mid-1850s the Pitcairn population seemed to have grown too large for the 4.6 km2 (2.9 sq.mi) island and its leaders appealed to the British government for assistance. They were offered another colonial possession, the 34.6 km2 (13.3 sq.mi) Norfolk Island and, on 3 May 1856, the entire community of 193 people set sail for Norfolk on board the Morayshire, arriving on 8 June after an unhappy, inconvenience-laden five-week voyage. After eighteen months on Norfolk, however, seventeen Pitcairners sailed back to their home island and, five years later, another twenty-seven followed. Nine of Mary Young's children were born on Pitcairn before the 1856 departure, five more were born on Norfolk, and the last three were born on Pitcairn, after she and Thursday October returned in 1864. Her last child, a daughter, born in 1868, when she was 43, died a few weeks after birth.
Mary Young was 60 years old when she died on Pitcairn Island from dropsy, an abnormal accumulation of fluids, referenced in modern medicine as edema.
References
Sources
- Nicolson, Robert (1997). The Pitcairners. Auckland, New Zealand: Pasifika Press