Ally, The information below is misleading if not plain wrong. They have Deaths from 1864. I order about 20 a month. Don't order them online. They cost €20. Go to this website, download the snailmail form and fill it in and send it off. They will reply within ten days. You will need a credit card. Send them €4. http://www.groireland.ie/apply_for_a_cert.htm Use the Familysearch index of BMDs to find the year, the registration district, the volume and page number and write these onto the form wherever seems suitable because the form is not designed for family history but it IS used for that. https://familysearch.org/search Send them €4. If you give me the name I will get the details you need. Regards, 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 [email protected] Sent: 31 May 2013 18:26 To: [email protected]; [email protected] Subject: [CoTyIre] Ordering Records Online from GRO I send an email to GRO asking about online ordering policies. I received the following reply. I think I still have a question. The below response says that deaths are from 1924-present. So where do I send for a death cert from 1897? Thanks, Ally -------Original Message------- From: MBX-General Register Office Date: 5/30/2013 6:37:53 AM To: Allison White Subject: RE: Ordering Records Online Dear Ms White, Please see attached our procedures and application forms. We accept application forms by fax if you have a credit card or alternatively by post. The cost of a full certificate is €20 or a photocopy is €4. (Both show the same information). The on-line facility available on our website is a link to the website of the Dublin Civil Registration Office and the only certificates that can be obtained online from that Office are the following : Births Births occurring in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland from January 1864- December 1921 >From 1922 – present, births occurring in the Republic of Ireland only Adoptions If the adoption was domestic and has been registered the Register is held by the Office of the General Register in Roscommon and if the adoption has been registered with the Office of the General Register it can be purchased on this site. Please note that Inter-Country Adoption records are held by the Adoption board and are not available for purchase on this site. Stillbirths If a stillbirth has been registered in the Register of Stillbirths which is held by the Office of the General Register in Roscommon it can be purchased on this site. Marriages Marriages occurring in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland from January 1913- December 1921 >From 1922 - present, marriages occurring in the Republic of Ireland only. Deaths Deaths occurring in the Republic of Ireland from 1924 - present www.certificates.ie Hope this is of help to you. Yours Sincerely, Marie Murray. General Register Office. Government Buildings. Convent Road. Roscommon. [email protected] Phone number : +353 (90) 6632941. ------------- 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
Hello All. Cross-posting apology as usual. For the interest/benefit of anyone with County Londonderry family. Oh what a wonderful achievement this is. I have already spent a long time delving into it, and I'm likely to spend a lot more time there too. I'd suggest first reading the page on the link below; then go to their home page to watch the video; and then start exploring the book. It is searchable by SURNAME, Place-Name, and by London Livery Company. http://www.greatparchmentbook.org/2013/05/30/the-great-parchment-book-website-has-gone-live/ Hoping that you will find ancestor surnames mentioned. Ray in oz ==============================
Are these forma just for Ireland or do they work for Northern Ireland too? If not how would I go about ordering certificates? Lauren iPhone says goodbye! :-) On May 31, 2013, at 3:32 PM, [email protected] wrote: > Ally, > > The information below is misleading if not plain wrong. They have Deaths from 1864. I order about 20 a month. > > Don't order them online. They cost €20. Go to this website, download the snailmail form and fill it in and send it off. They will reply within ten days. You will need a credit card. Send them €4. > http://www.groireland.ie/apply_for_a_cert.htm > > Use the Familysearch index of BMDs to find the year, the registration district, the volume and page number and write these onto the form wherever seems suitable because the form is not designed for family history but it IS used for that. > https://familysearch.org/search > > Send them €4. > > If you give me the name I will get the details you need. > > Regards, > > 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 [email protected] > Sent: 31 May 2013 18:26 > To: [email protected]; [email protected] > Subject: [CoTyIre] Ordering Records Online from GRO > > I send an email to GRO asking about online ordering policies. I received the > following reply. I think I still have a question. The below response says > that deaths are from 1924-present. So where do I send for a death cert from > 1897? > > Thanks, > Ally > > > > > > -------Original Message------- > > From: MBX-General Register Office > Date: 5/30/2013 6:37:53 AM > To: Allison White > Subject: RE: Ordering Records Online > > Dear Ms White, > > Please see attached our procedures and application forms. > We accept application forms by fax if you have a credit card or > alternatively by post. > The cost of a full certificate is €20 or a photocopy is €4. (Both show the > same information). > > The on-line facility available on our website is a link to the website of > the Dublin Civil Registration Office and the only certificates that can be > obtained online from that Office are the following : > > Births > Births occurring in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland from > January 1864- December 1921 > From 1922 – present, births occurring in the Republic of Ireland only > > Adoptions > If the adoption was domestic and has been registered the Register is held by > the Office of the General Register in Roscommon and if the adoption has been > registered with the Office of the General Register it can be purchased on > this site. > Please note that Inter-Country Adoption records are held by the Adoption > board and are not available for purchase on this site. > > Stillbirths > If a stillbirth has been registered in the Register of Stillbirths which is > held by the Office of the General Register in Roscommon it can be purchased > on this site. > > Marriages > Marriages occurring in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland from > January 1913- December 1921 > From 1922 - present, marriages occurring in the Republic of Ireland only. > > Deaths > Deaths occurring in the Republic of Ireland from 1924 - present > www.certificates.ie > > Hope this is of help to you. > > Yours Sincerely, > > Marie Murray. > General Register Office. > Government Buildings. > Convent Road. > Roscommon. > > [email protected] > Phone number : +353 (90) 6632941. > ------------- > 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
I send an email to GRO asking about online ordering policies. I received the following reply. I think I still have a question. The below response says that deaths are from 1924-present. So where do I send for a death cert from 1897? Thanks, Ally -------Original Message------- From: MBX-General Register Office Date: 5/30/2013 6:37:53 AM To: Allison White Subject: RE: Ordering Records Online Dear Ms White, Please see attached our procedures and application forms. We accept application forms by fax if you have a credit card or alternatively by post. The cost of a full certificate is €20 or a photocopy is €4. (Both show the same information). The on-line facility available on our website is a link to the website of the Dublin Civil Registration Office and the only certificates that can be obtained online from that Office are the following : Births Births occurring in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland from January 1864- December 1921 From 1922 – present, births occurring in the Republic of Ireland only Adoptions If the adoption was domestic and has been registered the Register is held by the Office of the General Register in Roscommon and if the adoption has been registered with the Office of the General Register it can be purchased on this site. Please note that Inter-Country Adoption records are held by the Adoption board and are not available for purchase on this site. Stillbirths If a stillbirth has been registered in the Register of Stillbirths which is held by the Office of the General Register in Roscommon it can be purchased on this site. Marriages Marriages occurring in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland from January 1913- December 1921 From 1922 - present, marriages occurring in the Republic of Ireland only. Deaths Deaths occurring in the Republic of Ireland from 1924 - present www.certificates.ie Hope this is of help to you. Yours Sincerely, Marie Murray. General Register Office. Government Buildings. Convent Road. Roscommon. [email protected] Phone number : +353 (90) 6632941.
Hi Boyd and all I received a reply back regarding my enquiry about the announcement that the GRO indexes would be being made available online I asked if there was anything new in the proposed access Part of the reply, which made me smile was :- "You are also correct that versions of this data already exist online though not with the approval of the General Registers Office." So the upshot is much fanfare but its hot air :-( Nothing new as its the same data as already available By the way I have just invented the wheel <g> Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) On 24/05/2013 13:19, [email protected] wrote: > Nivard, > > I do not wish to pour cold water on this and will be delighted if someone can tell me that I have read it wrong but it seems to me that this is merely the GRO putting online what the LDS has had online at their familysearch website for years - the INDEX to BMDs. > > There is no mention of the actual records. However, while trumpeting how the Irish database will be free where the GRONI initiative will be pay per view, they do state in passing that GRONI IS putting records online: "GRONI will be making ‘historic’ indexes and records available online". Now records I WOULD pay for though not at the rate the GRO is currently charging for an electronic copy of a BMD - €20!!! > > Looks like a lot of arm waving and credit taking by yet another quango for something that has already been done. > > Boyd Gray
Your English wife and my English husband may have memories of thousand year old buildings, but they have nothing like the rock art of the Australian “first arrivals” who managed without buildings, and were here for thousands of years. this gives me an opportunity to say how much I enjoy the discussion on this website, even if no one has been able to link my McCrea and Galbraith ancestors with others who were also teachers in Tyrone. I have lots of interesting families who share surnames that have been middle names in my known kin, but no confirmed marriages. One day! Barbara Bolt.
Ha ha. And here in Oceania, Judith, we didn't receive white settlers until well after you did over there. BUT… look at the great lifestyles which we enjoy nevertheless. My English-born wife used to laugh at me when I pointed out 100-year-old structures to her here in Oz, saying that in her schoolyard they had the remains of a Roman bridge -- probably dated around 400 A.D. However in the roughly 40 years since then she has acclimatised to our situation and is now an avid Oz history buff. Of course in both your country and mine, the indigenous populations have a MUCH longer/older history; which more is being learned about all the time. Regards. Ray in Oz On 30/05/2013, at 7:39 AM, "Judith Hayman" <[email protected]> wrote: > This year they are celebrating 400 years since the establishment of the Irish Society in order to > further the plantation of County Londonderry. Oh, my, you have no idea quite how that feels. We didn't have much in the way of European civilization here (in Canada) then, let alone actual Societies. Judith
>This year they are celebrating 400 years since the establishment of the Irish Society in order to >further the plantation of County Londonderry. Oh, my, you have no idea quite how that feels. We didn't have much in the way of European civilization here (in Canada) then, let alone actual Societies. Judith
Hi Ally I sincerely hope that Boyd is right and that you can indeed find an image at PRONI. However, when I was there last May, I could not get access to any documentation for "Letters of Administration" dated 1893 and 1895 (all listed under the Wills Calendars as "No image"). Further to your entry for James Mitchell, you can get an image of the printed Wills Calendar Book at the National Archives in Dublin -- see online at http://www.willcalendars.nationalarchives.ie (downloaded image attached). Presume you also saw Michael Murphy dd 1886 at PRONI (see extract below). PRONI also list a lease at Annaghmakeonan in favour of John Murphy, dd. 1808 (details below) You should be able to get a copy of that document. Good luck with your endeavours. Kind regards Dave Mitchell Cape Town South Africa ----------------------------- Title : Date of Death : 8 August 1886 Surname : Murphy Date of Grant : 16 March 1889 Forename : Michael Reseal Date : Registry : Armagh Effects : Effects £147.00 No Image Full Abstract : Letters of Administration of the personal estate of Michael Murphy formerly of Dredolt County Tyrone and late of Barrow-in-Furness in England Farmer who died 8 August 1886 at Barrow-in-Furness were granted at Armagh to Dominick Hart of Annaghmakeown County Tyrone Farmer the Attorney of Anne Murphy the Widow. (Limited Grant.) ------------------------------------ Repository : Public Record Office for Northern Ireland PRONI Reference : D671/L/1/1/8 Level : Item Access : Open Title : 21 years. Annaghmakeonan. Wm. Newton, Armagh Dates : 15 June 1808 Description : 21 years. Annaghmakeonan. Wm. Newton, Armagh Gent farmer to Daniel Kelly of Ballygunahn John Murphy, Anaghanoon, Down. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----Original Message----- From: Allison White Sent: Wednesday, May 29, 2013 12:59 PM To: Dave Mitchell Subject: [SPAM]Re: [CoTyIre] Ordering Document from PRONI Hi Dave, The name is James Murphy of Annaghmakeown, died 19 Feb 1897. It's an administration granted 24 Mar 1897. I'm hoping there is more written than what is on the web site. Thank you, Ally Dave Mitchell <[email protected]> wrote: >Hi Ally > >What's the name/person? > >I was at PRONI last year working extensively with these records. > >Generally if it's pre-1900 and they say No Image then there isn't one >(typically these a letters of administration not wills). > >Dave Mitchell >Cape Town >South Africa >-----Original Message----- >From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> >Sender: [email protected] >Date: Tue, 28 May 2013 20:11:38 >To: [email protected]<[email protected]>; ><[email protected]> >Subject: [CoTyIre] Ordering Document from PRONI > >I just found in the Will Calendars a will for someone who may be an >ancestor > I checked the PRONI site and it is indeed listed, but it says 'No Image'. >Does that mean there is no image online -OR- no image at all? Also, how >would I go about ordering a copy of this will? > >Thanks, >Ally >------------- >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
Hello again everyone. Once more: aplogies for the cross-postings, but trying to cover areas contiguous to county Londonderry. Here is another interesting posting from the LMA site for the Great Parchment Book, about the latest on their assistance with the Derry Guildhall's exhibition: http://greatparchmentbook.wordpress.com/2013/05/28/the-guildhall-exhibition-plantation-people-process-perspectives/ I noticed within that posting, a reference to the Irish Society, which I had visited MANY years ago in London, and given that this Society is ALL about county Londonderry, I decided to re-visit its web-site, here: http://www.honourableirishsociety.org.uk/about-us/our-history/city-london In doing so, I was interested to see that they now have an office in Colerain, County Londonderry. http://www.honourableirishsociety.org.uk/contact-us/coleraine This year they are celebrating 400 years since the establishment of the Irish Society in order to further the plantation of County Londonderry. http://www.honourableirishsociety.org.uk/about-us/400th-anniversary I also note on that last-mentioned page, references to at least 3 lectures/talks/seminars. Perhaps they could be enticed to provide them in text form on their web-site also? Now, after all of that preamble, here is a thought or two. I initially went to their web-site, in the, vain as it turns out, hope that they might have put up fascinating documents online for us. Oh what a pity that they have nothing there! Yet the topmost posting from the LMA (London Metropolitan Archives) mentions that they (the LMA) now hold the archival records for the Irish Society, including old maps. So, my thought is that, with some prompting from many of us, the Irish Society might perhaps see it as part of their service to descendants of county Londonderry residents, to provide some online documents on their own web-site -- both originals and transcriptions. It would certainly entice a LOT more people to visit their web-site and thereby to learn about their part in Derry history -- and as they seem to have plenty of money to allocate for grants connected with Derry, so they could surely allocate some of that funding to that end as well. From their Contacts page, here are the contact e-mail addresses which they provide: This is to Edward MONTGOMERY in Coleraine: [email protected] And this is to Candya FARMER in the Guildhall in London (England). [email protected] They also provide a web-based Contact Form at this location: http://www.honourableirishsociety.org.uk/contact-us/contact-form I am about to cut and paste a copy of this posting to each of the above e-mail addresses. Perhaps others might like to provide them with your thoughts on some of the things mentioned above. Regards to all. Ray in Oz
Hi Ally, It means there is an image but it is not online yet. Just email PRONI with the details and ask them to send it to you: http://www.proni.gov.uk/index/contact_us.htm 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 [email protected] Sent: 29 May 2013 01:12 To: [email protected]; [email protected] Subject: [CoTyIre] Ordering Document from PRONI I just found in the Will Calendars a will for someone who may be an ancestor I checked the PRONI site and it is indeed listed, but it says 'No Image'. Does that mean there is no image online -OR- no image at all? Also, how would I go about ordering a copy of this will? Thanks, Ally ------------- 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
Hello Ally, Are you sure there is a Will? Does the description make mention of "Letters of Administration"If so, the person died intestate so there was no WillWhat is the name and the year ? I can check it out for you in PRONI if you like. best regardsRobertwww.ulsterancestry.com > Date: Tue, 28 May 2013 20:11:38 -0400 > From: [email protected] > To: [email protected]; [email protected] > Subject: [CoTyIre] Ordering Document from PRONI > > I just found in the Will Calendars a will for someone who may be an ancestor > I checked the PRONI site and it is indeed listed, but it says 'No Image'. > Does that mean there is no image online -OR- no image at all? Also, how > would I go about ordering a copy of this will? > > Thanks, > Ally > ------------- > 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
*Strabane* Birth Announcements 1828-69 - *Updated*<http://www.cotyroneireland.com/births/strabane1828_69.html>
I just found in the Will Calendars a will for someone who may be an ancestor I checked the PRONI site and it is indeed listed, but it says 'No Image'. Does that mean there is no image online -OR- no image at all? Also, how would I go about ordering a copy of this will? Thanks, Ally
Certificate of Irish Heritage at this link. http://www.heritagecertificate.com/ I got one and it was beautiful. Only thing is, you had to choose between the townland or the parish when you supply the info and you need the townland or parish of birth because of the way the certificate is structured... -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected] Sent: May-28-13 3:01 AM To: [email protected] Subject: COTYRONEIRELAND Digest, Vol 8, Issue 143 You are receiving this email because you subscribed to the CoTyroneIreland-D mailing list. If you no longer wish to receive these messages, or if you wish to search or browse the archives, or if you wish to unsubscribe from digest mode and subscribe in list mode, see http://lists.rootsweb.com/index/intl/NIR/CoTyroneIreland.html for links and instructions. See http://cotyroneireland.com/ for our associated web site. Today's Topics: 1. TWISS family--re: Irish Certs. (Ava Woods) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Mon, 27 May 2013 06:41:46 -0600 From: Ava Woods <[email protected]> Subject: [CoTyIre] TWISS family--re: Irish Certs. To: [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]om> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Hello, I hope this request is not too far away from any discussions on this list. If it is, I do apologize but, even, it might be of great interest to others. I was reading a website on Irish Certs. for sale for genealogists from Ireland, celebrating certain ancestors and my dear sweet pc lost it! I was wondering, please, if SKS might have received this particular website? I would love to have it back in my hands. :) Why, I do not even recall who had sent it. It was not spam or anything like that. Thank you everyone. : Shannah TWISS from Canada [email protected] ------------------------------ To contact the COTYRONEIRELAND list administrator, send an email to [email protected] To post a message to the COTYRONEIRELAND mailing list, send an email to [email protected] __________________________________________________________ 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 email with no additional text. End of COTYRONEIRELAND Digest, Vol 8, Issue 143 ***********************************************
Thank you Ray for the link. And for many other of your postings. My apologies too for the same cross postings - but worth it I think. I'd heard a snippet on my national radio station about this. It is so intriguing and wonderful, if that's the right word, that the course of history - and I don't use the term lightly - could be changed by a miniscule fungal pathogen. I, in the antipodes, am here because of it, and I guess many worldwide could say the same with where they ended up. So the Irish influence has spread far and wide by a microbiological organism. I for one am grateful for it albeit sad for the sufferings of those involved in it. Bryan Christchurch New Zealand - from Tyrone and Down and Kerry and Galway and....
Hello, I hope this request is not too far away from any discussions on this list. If it is, I do apologize but, even, it might be of great interest to others. I was reading a website on Irish Certs. for sale for genealogists from Ireland, celebrating certain ancestors and my dear sweet pc lost it! I was wondering, please, if SKS might have received this particular website? I would love to have it back in my hands. :) Why, I do not even recall who had sent it. It was not spam or anything like that. Thank you everyone. : Shannah TWISS from Canada [email protected]
Amen, Jane. All the best, Jim -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of - Jane Conway Sent: Sunday, May 26, 2013 11:35 AM To: Len Fluhrer; Judith Hayman; Mike Kelly Cc: [email protected] Subject: Re: [CoTyIre] Quebec Ship Arrival More importantly, our thanks to all --including our ancestors -- who sacrificed in those wars. Jane M. Conway ----- Original Message ----- From: Mike Kelly<mailto:[email protected]> To: Len Fluhrer<mailto:[email protected]> ; Judith Hayman<mailto:[email protected]> Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> Sent: Sunday, May 26, 2013 11:22 AM Subject: Re: [CoTyIre] Quebec Ship Arrival "Think that's called plausible deniability. If the records don't it exist it never happened!" I like this. It is kind of like how American's refuse to believe we lost the War of 1812 and seem to have made the facts disappear. Tomorrow is memorial day in the United States and I would like everyone to remember how awful War is. Regards, Michael Kelly Emporium, Cameron County, Pennsylvania, United States of America -----Original Message----- From: Len Fluhrer Sent: Saturday, May 25, 2013 1:36 PM To: Judith Hayman Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> Subject: Re: [CoTyIre] Quebec Ship Arrival Hello Judith: It's not that the ship lists were not done, but a number of events in Canadian History helped to destroy these documents: The burning of York (Toronto) by the Americans during the War of 1812 creates a great gap in our records in parts of Canada. The Cholera Epidemic of the 1830s, for example, resulted in the burning of many areas where Irish Immigrants occupied both at the ports and all over areas affected. Here in London, Ontario they burnt the schools, hospitals, records office where the immigrants were required to first report, any place they figured was infected by the cholera. The three main Irish ships said to cause the Cholera Epidemic in the first place are missing from the Canadian Records, I found the list in American Medical reports on the event in New York City! Our Government it would appear made these records vanish as they made the Smallpox outbreak of 1870s disappear here. Think that's called plausible deniability. If the records don't it exist it never happened! The Smallpox and Typhoid as well caused gaps in Canadian History ignorance of the causes of many illness caused the mass burning of items. The same thing happened again for the Influenza Out-Break at the end of WW I. Factor in Fires, the use of high acid based paper, rodents at records offices, poor cataloging practices and you get all types of reasons for missing or destroyed documents in Canada. This is the reason that since the time of John Graves Simcoe, in the 1790s, the British liked to keep records in triplicate. Sadly, only one of the copies was kept in Canada that includes ship records. The other copy went to the British War Office in care of whoever was the Lt. Col. of that Command at the time and therefore was stored in some Lords Private Library. The third copy went to the Tower of London and you could try writing there to see what they might have although I understand that they sent most of the records to the various regiments museums in the UK. I've tried tracing down some of this data for years which was impossible before the internet. Much of the British War office data ends up in the Regimental Command Museums of the Officers in Question. For example, Lord Lt. Col. John Maitland's 3,000 troops that come to put down the McKenzie Rebellion aren't listed on the ship list site nor are Lt Col. By's men who build the Canals. Missed also is Lt. Col. Richard Talbot and his men in 1818 (Lord Bathurst had these files) and all the Queen's Rangers their ships who records are at Albany, New York and the list of men on board Lt. Col. John Grave's Simcoe ship. All these records exist(ed) and I have found many of them not a one to my knowledge is at the The Ships Site. I don't believe a single site could store all what is possible over 516 years since John Cabot first ship landed in what is now Canada. Leonard G. Fluhrer III [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> ------------- Our community web-site: http://cotyroneireland.com/<http://cotyroneireland.com/> ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected]<mailto:[email protected] .com> with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ------------- Our community web-site: http://cotyroneireland.com/<http://cotyroneireland.com/> ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected]<mailto:[email protected] .com> 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
Hello All. Apologies for the cross-postings. The 1845 and later potato famines in Ireland, impacted on the genealogies of very many of us world-wide. This item from a British BBC report, tells of new research on it. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-22596561 Regards: ray in oz
I agree Jane. Well said. Regards, Michael Kelly Emporium, Cameron County, Pennsylvania, United States of America From: - Jane Conway Sent: Sunday, May 26, 2013 2:34 PM To: Len Fluhrer ; Judith Hayman ; Mike Kelly Cc: [email protected] Subject: Re: [CoTyIre] Quebec Ship Arrival More importantly, our thanks to all --including our ancestors -- who sacrificed in those wars. Jane M. Conway