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    1. [COOK-CO-IL] couple of questions
    2. You all are always so helpful so I thought I would get your take on this. On the IRAD site and LDS pilot site I find an Anna Radoy died 26 Jan 1891, and a Rosy Radoy died 17 Jun 1892. On both death cert. they say place of burial Bonifacious. I have the Interment record for the Catholic cemeteries and neither one is listed for St. Boniface. Are Bonifacious and St. Boniface one and the same? Question #2 - my Radoy family had 4 children. The parents and 3 of the children plus their ancestors records all point to them being Catholic. However, my great grandfather, one of the original 4 children and his wife were Lutheran. Back in the 1870s - 1890s would this have been unusual for one of the children to marry someone outside the families faith? Or did he leave the faith for love? Anyone else come across this? Thanks, Gail

    07/28/2010 08:23:36
    1. Re: [COOK-CO-IL] couple of questions
    2. Eliz Hanebury
    3. In my Irish Catholic Coogan family I have at least 3 of the children who married Protestants, one being my ggmother. The story is she married and it went seriously wrong and she divorced (and back in the 1860's that wasn't all that easy) which may have made it easier for her to marry a Protestant. But somehow they seem not to have been all that concerned with marrying out <G> Eliz On Wed, Jul 28, 2010 at 2:23 PM, <[email protected]> wrote: > > You all are always so helpful so I thought I would get your take on this. > > On the IRAD site and LDS pilot site I find an Anna Radoy died 26 Jan 1891, and a Rosy Radoy died 17 Jun 1892.  On both death cert. they say place of burial Bonifacious.  I have the Interment record for the Catholic cemeteries and neither one is listed for St. Boniface.  Are Bonifacious and St. Boniface one and the same? > > Question #2 - my Radoy family had 4 children.  The parents and 3 of the children plus their ancestors records all point to them being Catholic.  However, my great grandfather, one of the original 4 children and his wife were Lutheran.  Back in the 1870s - 1890s would this have been unusual for one of the children to marry someone outside the families faith?  Or did he leave the faith for love?  Anyone else come across this? > > Thanks, > > Gail > > > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    07/29/2010 07:18:19