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    1. [CoTyIre] Traveling to Ireland and Need Info
    2. Anne Hetu
    3. I will be traveling to Ireland next year, and I would love to find the area where my grandparents lived in County Tyrone. The problem is, I have not been able to find a parish by the same name as is written on the family tombstones. My 2nd great grandfather, Bernard (or Barnet) Mc Menamon (and his son John as well) are buried in the Old Norton Cemetery in Norton, New Brunswick, Canada. He was born in 1766 and emigrated to Canada around 1817. Bernard died on July 28, 1853 and the inscription on his headstone reads: "Native of the parish of Caurmon, County Tyrone, Ireland." The inscription on his son John's grave who died in 1874 and is buried right next to him reads exactly the same.....Caurmon. The stones are well-preserved and the writing is clear. I have searched and searched, and cannot find any such parish as Caurmon. Does anyone have any light they can shed on this mystery?

    07/20/2013 03:21:28
    1. [CoTyIre] McCue-Birth&Death
    2. Maura McCormick
    3. Daniel McCue was born in Lisnaclin, Dungannon, county Tyrone, September 10, 1836 to Charles and Mary (nee Connelly) McCue. He died in Cleveland, Ohio in November 16, 1889. Dan's tombstone was destroyed by time and trauma but he is buried at St. Joseph Catholic Cemetery in Cleveland, Ohio. Daniel had 3 known siblings: John, Charles, Mary McCue all from Dungannon, County Tyrone. Maura McCormick

    07/20/2013 01:38:10
    1. [CoTyIre] WINSLOW / DEVLIN / BOONE
    2. Fred Kligge
    3. Dear Folks: I am searching for the above names in County Tyrone. A biographical sketch circa 1901 of one of my ancestors states that my 3rd great grandfather John Winslow b. 19 September 1806 m. Eliza Devlin 31 July 1833, both "natives of County Tyrone." They had 10 children: Sarah, Robert, Eliza, William, Thomas, William Thomas, John, Olivia, Eliza and Jane. They moved to Dublin, Ireland 1842 or earlier. They left Dublin for America on the ship Constantine and arrived in NY in 1856 and then went to "Canada West" where John ran a hotel until 1860 when the family moved to Connecticut and linked up with my Boone family whom they knew in Dublin and possibly knew in County Tyrone. My 4th great grandfather is Andrew Boone, a farmer and his son is John Boone who m. 1. Sarah (?) and 2. 1850 m. Sarah Winslow, daughter of John Winslow. Both families were involved in the carpet making business in Dublin and Connecticut. Does anyone have any suggestions or information that would lead me back to earlier generations? Thank you Fred Kligge

    07/20/2013 10:54:48
    1. [CoTyIre] CoTyroneIreland.com - New Content
    2. Jim McKane
    3. *Kilskeery* Parish Death Announcements 1835-68<http://www.cotyroneireland.com/burial/kilskeery.html>

    07/19/2013 04:20:32
    1. [CoTyIre] CoTyroneIreland.com - New Content
    2. Jim McKane
    3. Born Co. Tyrone, *Buried British Columbia*<http://www.cotyroneireland.com/bornburied/BornTyroneDiedBC.html>- includes surnames Bates, Brown, Campbell, Destobel, Frizell, Jones, McCauley, McCusker, Patrick, Quin, Smyth, Tenner

    07/19/2013 03:14:47
    1. [CoTyIre] CoTyroneIreland.com - New Content
    2. Jim McKane
    3. Marriage of James Black to Matilda Henderson<http://www.cotyroneireland.com/marriages/marriages_misc.html#James_Black>

    07/19/2013 01:00:29
    1. Re: [CoTyIre] James Wright
    2. Deliberately not cutting previous contributions to the thread here as anyone dropping into it for the first time (like me) will want to see what else was said. Dennis, I am assuming that the three brothers were all born after the marriage of James Wright in Dec 1831 and so you were looking for a marriage just before the earliest birth or baptism. You have been given good advice by both Maureen and Ray. Put the marriage on your tree beside the births of the three boys and leave it there not linked til you have more proof. It seems a good working assumption that he is the father but you do need some proof. The name James in itself is not enough as half of Ireland was called James at this time. Looking at the placenames you have given, there is no townland called Arboe but there is a parish of that name and the townland of Brigh is in the adjacent parish of ballyclog. Close but not that close. In my experience most people married within the parish but that is not a hard and fast rule, especially if they had money. You do not say what you found for the Wrights in the TABs which might answer that question. You can tnow wait for something to turn up as was suggested OR you can start to do a full research project on that area by noting all of the Wrights in the area and where they feature in the TABs, the GV, any church records or graveyards and any Civil MBDs especially deaths which are likely to be people alive at that time. Slowly you will build up a picture of the Wright families and you will get a feel for that area and you will almost know if you are correct. You are also likely to stumble across that one record you need. And do not neglect the overseas records. If you find a brother or sister who emigrated and died in Australia, for example, you are in clover as Oz death records give the names of both parents. This has cracked open a project for me on more than one occasion. In fact it has just given me a treble great grandmother for a lady in the US who I am currently helping. I say "I" but in fact it was my gen partner, Barbara, who made the discovery. We had a James Starrett in Canada who we were fairly sure was a son of a Samuel Starrett we were researching in Tirkernaghan in Donaghedy Parish. He named a daughter Margaret McIntosh Starrett. Barbara wondered if that might be Samuel's wife and sure enough, when she checked the GV, there WERE McIntoshes in Tirkernaghan. She did a bit more research (some of it googling) and found this on the cotyroneireland.com website: Victoria, Australia Marriages & Deaths 1853-1911 People Born in Co. Tyrone CLARKE Sarah D; Father: Sterrett Samuel Mother: Mary MCINTOSH Age: 66 Birth: TYRONE Death: 1879 9974 Cracked it!!!! Barbara went all the way around the world from Ireland to Canada to Australia in order to find the name of a woman back in Ireland. Boyd Gray http://familytrees.genopro.com/boydgray26/Boyd/default.htm http://www.westulstergenealogy.com/ http://www.facebook.com/westulstergenealogy -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Maureen Chalmers Sent: 17 July 2013 23:46 To: ray15 Cc: [email protected]; Dennis Wright Subject: Re: [CoTyIre] James Wright Good advice Ray. Patience is definitely a virtue in family history research. I have been researching my family for 26 years with many years of little or no progress, but every so often you get a great lead and uncover new information. I can see on research sites that people are not checking detail and adding people to family trees with little or no supporting factual sources. Keep good notes and potential family member details and check back regularly to see if these still fit. But don't add to your tree until you have couple of sources confirming family relationship. Best wishes Maureen Sent from my iPad On 17 Jul 2013, at 22:30, "ray15" <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello Dennis. > I guess that we all have different standards of proof which we find acceptable. > > For me, with just the name connection and the nearby geographical closeness, I would certainly NOT make any statement of certainty about such a family connection. > > However, I would use it as the starting-point of a working hypothesis that they MIGHT be such relations. > Then from that starting point I would follow every clue that I could to TRY to find further information to help prove or disprove that hypothesis. > > In my own Ulster family lines, I have not proceeded very far backwards in time, because I will NOT make such assumptions, but instead I just wait -- frequently for many years -- until I can find other information which might assist. > > For example, with my County Tyrone and County Donegal MOORHEAD families, for decades I had a lot of people here in Oz with that surname as only hypothetical relations; but it was only last year when a previously unknown researcher in Canada published transcriptions of MOORHEAD family letters which were in his family's possession, that all of the pieces fell in place, and finally PROVED my hypothesis. > > But I still have a further hypothesis to be proved -- and perhaps I never will do so -- that my James MOORHEAD who married Margaret MOORHEAD of Raphoe in Donegal, married a kinswoman. > > Taking this back to your family, my suggestion would be that by following up ALL THREE BROTHERS, you might amass enough OTHER information to help prove or disprove your working hypothesis that that those who married at Arboe were their parents. For example perhaps marriage and death certificates for each brother might provide other evidence; along with obituaries in local newspapers if they emigrated outside Ireland (where mostly it seems that only 'notables' had their BDM information recorded in local newspapers); and of course to see how EACH of their families might have fitted within the Irish naming patterns. > > Hopefully others will chip in with further ideas for you in trying to obtain those other proofs or disproofs. > > Good luck. > Ray in Oz > > > > On 18/07/2013, at 12:41 AM, "Dennis Wright" <[email protected]> wrote: > > I have been trying to Identify my Great-Grandfather James Wright's parents. > Recently, I looked up his (and his two brothers) birth announcements, that > show there father was also named James Wright and they were born in Brigh. > I then "clicked" onto the GS Film Number and searched for any Wright in the > file. There was one James Wright associated with this file. It was a > Marriage dated 31 Dec 1831 in nearby Arboe. Is it safe to say this is My > Great-Great Grandparents? > > Dennis > ------------- > > > ------------- > Our community web-site: http://cotyroneireland.com/ > > ------------------------------- > 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 ------------- Our community web-site: http://cotyroneireland.com/ ------------------------------- 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

    07/18/2013 08:11:27
    1. [CoTyIre] Quinn Research
    2. Seeking Francis Quinn,do not know his year of birth, son Andrew who was born 1848,family was Catholic i believe, both born Ireland i believe Ulster, maybe Cookstown, Tyrone, came to America about 1860. lived mostly in Chicago, Illinois. Thank you, Rosemarie Quinn [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])

    07/18/2013 05:23:41
    1. Re: [CoTyIre] James Wright
    2. Dennis Wright
    3. -Thank you all for your guidance. I am awaiting some information about James Wright's brothers family from a newly found cousin. And will keep trying Regards, Dennis

    07/18/2013 03:47:23
    1. Re: [CoTyIre] James Wright
    2. ray15
    3. Hello Dennis. I guess that we all have different standards of proof which we find acceptable. For me, with just the name connection and the nearby geographical closeness, I would certainly NOT make any statement of certainty about such a family connection. However, I would use it as the starting-point of a working hypothesis that they MIGHT be such relations. Then from that starting point I would follow every clue that I could to TRY to find further information to help prove or disprove that hypothesis. In my own Ulster family lines, I have not proceeded very far backwards in time, because I will NOT make such assumptions, but instead I just wait -- frequently for many years -- until I can find other information which might assist. For example, with my County Tyrone and County Donegal MOORHEAD families, for decades I had a lot of people here in Oz with that surname as only hypothetical relations; but it was only last year when a previously unknown researcher in Canada published transcriptions of MOORHEAD family letters which were in his family's possession, that all of the pieces fell in place, and finally PROVED my hypothesis. But I still have a further hypothesis to be proved -- and perhaps I never will do so -- that my James MOORHEAD who married Margaret MOORHEAD of Raphoe in Donegal, married a kinswoman. Taking this back to your family, my suggestion would be that by following up ALL THREE BROTHERS, you might amass enough OTHER information to help prove or disprove your working hypothesis that that those who married at Arboe were their parents. For example perhaps marriage and death certificates for each brother might provide other evidence; along with obituaries in local newspapers if they emigrated outside Ireland (where mostly it seems that only 'notables' had their BDM information recorded in local newspapers); and of course to see how EACH of their families might have fitted within the Irish naming patterns. Hopefully others will chip in with further ideas for you in trying to obtain those other proofs or disproofs. Good luck. Ray in Oz On 18/07/2013, at 12:41 AM, "Dennis Wright" <[email protected]> wrote: I have been trying to Identify my Great-Grandfather James Wright's parents. Recently, I looked up his (and his two brothers) birth announcements, that show there father was also named James Wright and they were born in Brigh. I then "clicked" onto the GS Film Number and searched for any Wright in the file. There was one James Wright associated with this file. It was a Marriage dated 31 Dec 1831 in nearby Arboe. Is it safe to say this is My Great-Great Grandparents? Dennis -------------

    07/18/2013 01:27:22
    1. Re: [CoTyIre] James Wright
    2. Maureen Chalmers
    3. Good advice Ray. Patience is definitely a virtue in family history research. I have been researching my family for 26 years with many years of little or no progress, but every so often you get a great lead and uncover new information. I can see on research sites that people are not checking detail and adding people to family trees with little or no supporting factual sources. Keep good notes and potential family member details and check back regularly to see if these still fit. But don't add to your tree until you have couple of sources confirming family relationship. Best wishes Maureen Sent from my iPad On 17 Jul 2013, at 22:30, "ray15" <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello Dennis. > I guess that we all have different standards of proof which we find acceptable. > > For me, with just the name connection and the nearby geographical closeness, I would certainly NOT make any statement of certainty about such a family connection. > > However, I would use it as the starting-point of a working hypothesis that they MIGHT be such relations. > Then from that starting point I would follow every clue that I could to TRY to find further information to help prove or disprove that hypothesis. > > In my own Ulster family lines, I have not proceeded very far backwards in time, because I will NOT make such assumptions, but instead I just wait -- frequently for many years -- until I can find other information which might assist. > > For example, with my County Tyrone and County Donegal MOORHEAD families, for decades I had a lot of people here in Oz with that surname as only hypothetical relations; but it was only last year when a previously unknown researcher in Canada published transcriptions of MOORHEAD family letters which were in his family's possession, that all of the pieces fell in place, and finally PROVED my hypothesis. > > But I still have a further hypothesis to be proved -- and perhaps I never will do so -- that my James MOORHEAD who married Margaret MOORHEAD of Raphoe in Donegal, married a kinswoman. > > Taking this back to your family, my suggestion would be that by following up ALL THREE BROTHERS, you might amass enough OTHER information to help prove or disprove your working hypothesis that that those who married at Arboe were their parents. For example perhaps marriage and death certificates for each brother might provide other evidence; along with obituaries in local newspapers if they emigrated outside Ireland (where mostly it seems that only 'notables' had their BDM information recorded in local newspapers); and of course to see how EACH of their families might have fitted within the Irish naming patterns. > > Hopefully others will chip in with further ideas for you in trying to obtain those other proofs or disproofs. > > Good luck. > Ray in Oz > > > > On 18/07/2013, at 12:41 AM, "Dennis Wright" <[email protected]> wrote: > > I have been trying to Identify my Great-Grandfather James Wright's parents. > Recently, I looked up his (and his two brothers) birth announcements, that > show there father was also named James Wright and they were born in Brigh. > I then "clicked" onto the GS Film Number and searched for any Wright in the > file. There was one James Wright associated with this file. It was a > Marriage dated 31 Dec 1831 in nearby Arboe. Is it safe to say this is My > Great-Great Grandparents? > > Dennis > ------------- > > > ------------- > Our community web-site: http://cotyroneireland.com/ > > ------------------------------- > 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

    07/17/2013 05:46:02
    1. Re: [CoTyIre] James Wright
    2. Mike Kelly
    3. I like to know with some certainty what records and information I have found is correct. I am way too impatient to wait though. I persistently search for clues and I will research every possible relation in order to make a connection. But sometimes you just have to accept it when there is not enough information and just come back to it later on as Ray advised. It is likely there is a relation there, but not for certain. You've got to find at least just one really solid connection if not more. I do think you are on the right track. Don't give up yet. Is there a way to find this James Wright in the Griffiths Valuations and Revisions Lists and make an association this way? Regards, Michael Kelly Emporium, Cameron County, Pennsylvania, United States of America -----Original Message----- From: Margaret Donnelly Sent: Wednesday, July 17, 2013 7:14 PM To: 'Maureen Chalmers' ; 'ray15' Cc: [email protected] ; 'Dennis Wright' Subject: Re: [CoTyIre] James Wright Agree, Maureen. I keep a private tree, where I save possible connections. If and when I find enough information to satisfy my very picky requirements, it is easy, then, to pull those people into my main family tree. Some of the adverts make it seem so quick and easy, but that is just not how it really happens. Margaret -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Maureen Chalmers Sent: Wednesday, 17 July, 2013 6:46 PM To: ray15 Cc: [email protected]; Dennis Wright Subject: Re: [CoTyIre] James Wright Good advice Ray. Patience is definitely a virtue in family history research. I have been researching my family for 26 years with many years of little or no progress, but every so often you get a great lead and uncover new information. I can see on research sites that people are not checking detail and adding people to family trees with little or no supporting factual sources. Keep good notes and potential family member details and check back regularly to see if these still fit. But don't add to your tree until you have couple of sources confirming family relationship. Best wishes Maureen Sent from my iPad On 17 Jul 2013, at 22:30, "ray15" <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello Dennis. > I guess that we all have different standards of proof which we find acceptable. > > For me, with just the name connection and the nearby geographical closeness, I would certainly NOT make any statement of certainty about such a family connection. > > However, I would use it as the starting-point of a working hypothesis that they MIGHT be such relations. > Then from that starting point I would follow every clue that I could to TRY to find further information to help prove or disprove that hypothesis. > > In my own Ulster family lines, I have not proceeded very far backwards in time, because I will NOT make such assumptions, but instead I just wait -- frequently for many years -- until I can find other information which might assist. > > For example, with my County Tyrone and County Donegal MOORHEAD families, for decades I had a lot of people here in Oz with that surname as only hypothetical relations; but it was only last year when a previously unknown researcher in Canada published transcriptions of MOORHEAD family letters which were in his family's possession, that all of the pieces fell in place, and finally PROVED my hypothesis. > > But I still have a further hypothesis to be proved -- and perhaps I never will do so -- that my James MOORHEAD who married Margaret MOORHEAD of Raphoe in Donegal, married a kinswoman. > > Taking this back to your family, my suggestion would be that by following up ALL THREE BROTHERS, you might amass enough OTHER information to help prove or disprove your working hypothesis that that those who married at Arboe were their parents. For example perhaps marriage and death certificates for each brother might provide other evidence; along with obituaries in local newspapers if they emigrated outside Ireland (where mostly it seems that only 'notables' had their BDM information recorded in local newspapers); and of course to see how EACH of their families might have fitted within the Irish naming patterns. > > Hopefully others will chip in with further ideas for you in trying to obtain those other proofs or disproofs. > > Good luck. > Ray in Oz > > > > On 18/07/2013, at 12:41 AM, "Dennis Wright" <[email protected]> wrote: > > I have been trying to Identify my Great-Grandfather James Wright's parents. > Recently, I looked up his (and his two brothers) birth announcements, > that show there father was also named James Wright and they were born in Brigh. > I then "clicked" onto the GS Film Number and searched for any Wright > in the file. There was one James Wright associated with this file. > It was a Marriage dated 31 Dec 1831 in nearby Arboe. Is it safe to > say this is My Great-Great Grandparents? > > Dennis > ------------- > > > ------------- > Our community web-site: http://cotyroneireland.com/ > > ------------------------------- > 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 ------------- Our community web-site: http://cotyroneireland.com/ ------------------------------- 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 ------------- Our community web-site: http://cotyroneireland.com/ ------------------------------- 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

    07/17/2013 03:35:40
    1. Re: [CoTyIre] James Wright
    2. Margaret Donnelly
    3. Agree, Maureen. I keep a private tree, where I save possible connections. If and when I find enough information to satisfy my very picky requirements, it is easy, then, to pull those people into my main family tree. Some of the adverts make it seem so quick and easy, but that is just not how it really happens. Margaret -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Maureen Chalmers Sent: Wednesday, 17 July, 2013 6:46 PM To: ray15 Cc: [email protected]; Dennis Wright Subject: Re: [CoTyIre] James Wright Good advice Ray. Patience is definitely a virtue in family history research. I have been researching my family for 26 years with many years of little or no progress, but every so often you get a great lead and uncover new information. I can see on research sites that people are not checking detail and adding people to family trees with little or no supporting factual sources. Keep good notes and potential family member details and check back regularly to see if these still fit. But don't add to your tree until you have couple of sources confirming family relationship. Best wishes Maureen Sent from my iPad On 17 Jul 2013, at 22:30, "ray15" <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello Dennis. > I guess that we all have different standards of proof which we find acceptable. > > For me, with just the name connection and the nearby geographical closeness, I would certainly NOT make any statement of certainty about such a family connection. > > However, I would use it as the starting-point of a working hypothesis that they MIGHT be such relations. > Then from that starting point I would follow every clue that I could to TRY to find further information to help prove or disprove that hypothesis. > > In my own Ulster family lines, I have not proceeded very far backwards in time, because I will NOT make such assumptions, but instead I just wait -- frequently for many years -- until I can find other information which might assist. > > For example, with my County Tyrone and County Donegal MOORHEAD families, for decades I had a lot of people here in Oz with that surname as only hypothetical relations; but it was only last year when a previously unknown researcher in Canada published transcriptions of MOORHEAD family letters which were in his family's possession, that all of the pieces fell in place, and finally PROVED my hypothesis. > > But I still have a further hypothesis to be proved -- and perhaps I never will do so -- that my James MOORHEAD who married Margaret MOORHEAD of Raphoe in Donegal, married a kinswoman. > > Taking this back to your family, my suggestion would be that by following up ALL THREE BROTHERS, you might amass enough OTHER information to help prove or disprove your working hypothesis that that those who married at Arboe were their parents. For example perhaps marriage and death certificates for each brother might provide other evidence; along with obituaries in local newspapers if they emigrated outside Ireland (where mostly it seems that only 'notables' had their BDM information recorded in local newspapers); and of course to see how EACH of their families might have fitted within the Irish naming patterns. > > Hopefully others will chip in with further ideas for you in trying to obtain those other proofs or disproofs. > > Good luck. > Ray in Oz > > > > On 18/07/2013, at 12:41 AM, "Dennis Wright" <[email protected]> wrote: > > I have been trying to Identify my Great-Grandfather James Wright's parents. > Recently, I looked up his (and his two brothers) birth announcements, > that show there father was also named James Wright and they were born in Brigh. > I then "clicked" onto the GS Film Number and searched for any Wright > in the file. There was one James Wright associated with this file. > It was a Marriage dated 31 Dec 1831 in nearby Arboe. Is it safe to > say this is My Great-Great Grandparents? > > Dennis > ------------- > > > ------------- > Our community web-site: http://cotyroneireland.com/ > > ------------------------------- > 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 ------------- Our community web-site: http://cotyroneireland.com/ ------------------------------- 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

    07/17/2013 01:14:22
    1. [CoTyIre] New York City Naturalizations
    2. Margaret Donnelly
    3. For anyone searching for family naturalized in New York City, ancestry.com has just added a good database of New York Petitions 1794-1906. I was able to find a much better copy of the record for my great grandfather from 1875. I had obtained a copy from the NYC Archives a couple of years ago, but the quality of the images on ancestry is far better. If you don't have an ancestry subscription, pass me details (name, approximate DOB and date of arrival) and I'll be happy to look. Margaret

    07/17/2013 11:54:17
    1. [CoTyIre] Irish DNA
    2. Claire K.
    3. Not surprising that Irish and Scottish DNA have a lot in common--after all, the Irish first went to Scotland in the 400s--but the Basques? The Milesian myth is not so much of a myth? Read all about it in the latest report on Irish DNA analysis-- http://www.sott.net/article/263587-DNA-shows-Irish-people-have-more-complex-origins-than-previously-thought Claire K.

    07/17/2013 06:44:32
    1. [CoTyIre] James Wright
    2. Dennis Wright
    3. I have been trying to Identify my Great-Grandfather James Wright's parents. Recently, I looked up his (and his two brothers) birth announcements, that show there father was also named James Wright and they were born in Brigh. I then "clicked" onto the GS Film Number and searched for any Wright in the file. There was one James Wright associated with this file. It was a Marriage dated 31 Dec 1831 in nearby Arboe. Is it safe to say this is My Great-Great Grandparents? Dennis

    07/17/2013 01:41:16
    1. [CoTyIre] prison records
    2. Hi, can anyone tell me where I can access prison records for Cork 1915 and Mountjoy in Dublin in 1909. also any ideas on where people from Tyrone in that era were most likely imprisoned ? Eamonn ----------------------------------------------------------------- Find the home of your dreams with eircom net property Sign up for email alerts now http://www.eircom.net/propertyalerts

    07/14/2013 01:39:52
    1. Re: [CoTyIre] prison records
    2. Margaret Donnelly
    3. I should clarify my comment - the index is viewable online. The images of the registers are only viewable at a FHL facility. Apologies for any confusion. Margaret -----Original Message----- From: Margaret Donnelly [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Sunday, 14 July, 2013 3:02 PM To: [email protected]eircom.net; [email protected] Subject: RE: [CoTyIre] prison records FamilySearch has the prison registers, but they are only viewable at a FHL Facility: https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2043780 Margaret -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected] Sent: Sunday, 14 July, 2013 2:40 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [CoTyIre] prison records Hi, can anyone tell me where I can access prison records for Cork 1915 and Mountjoy in Dublin in 1909. also any ideas on where people from Tyrone in that era were most likely imprisoned ? Eamonn ----------------------------------------------------------------- Find the home of your dreams with eircom net property Sign up for email alerts now http://www.eircom.net/propertyalerts ------------- Our community web-site: http://cotyroneireland.com/ ------------------------------- 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

    07/14/2013 09:03:36
    1. Re: [CoTyIre] prison records
    2. Margaret Donnelly
    3. FamilySearch has the prison registers, but they are only viewable at a FHL Facility: https://familysearch.org/search/collection/2043780 Margaret -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected] Sent: Sunday, 14 July, 2013 2:40 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [CoTyIre] prison records Hi, can anyone tell me where I can access prison records for Cork 1915 and Mountjoy in Dublin in 1909. also any ideas on where people from Tyrone in that era were most likely imprisoned ? Eamonn ----------------------------------------------------------------- Find the home of your dreams with eircom net property Sign up for email alerts now http://www.eircom.net/propertyalerts ------------- Our community web-site: http://cotyroneireland.com/ ------------------------------- 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

    07/14/2013 09:02:04
    1. [CoTyIre] CoTyroneIreland.com - New Content
    2. Jim McKane
    3. Address Presented to Mr. *John Fyffe*, (Land Steward of the Marquis of Abercorn) at *Liggartown, Strabane*, 1835<http://www.cotyroneireland.com/misc/address_fyffe.html>

    07/14/2013 02:28:48