Rejoining the list after a long absence - reposting my family history interests: Researching: UK England: Surrey: Filce (Chertsey), Snelling, Webber, Potter, Wayland, Chillman, Gate Sussex: Potter(Horsham, Warnham), Pickett, Milham (East Ssx), Webber, Vick, Tullett, Snelling. Norfolk: Filby, Boswell Somerset: Webber (Wiveliscombe), Dowling Gloustershire (Bristol); Dowling Yorkshire: Leaf, Temple. Hants: Alexander. Ulster: Antrim: MacLauglin,(Cushendall) Down: Torpey Scotland: Midlothian: Stevenson Fife: Allan, Stevenson, Batchelor Dundee: O'Connor Irish Republic: Cork: Midleton: Barry, McCarthy Cloyne: McCarthy Bantry: Crimmins Cavan: McKay Thanks, Don Barry Dr D.N. & Mrs J.C.Barry 11 Toolara Circuit Forest Lake Brisbane Qld, 4078 AUSTRALIA Ph.07 3271 4197
Hi Jeannine, I have World Ancestry, if that is of any help? Best wishes Heather ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jay Kubik" <[email protected]> > Dear Listers - > I am needing a lookup in the UK. If anyone has the Deluxe World > membership > on ancestry and would be willing to do this I would greatly appreciate it.
Hi, Charleville (north) Cork is on the Limerick Co. Line and its nowhere near Midleton (south) although both are in Diocese of Cloyne. Dave Blair ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
Tell us what you need. Joan -------------- Original message -------------- From: "Jay Kubik" <[email protected]> > Dear Listers - > > > > I am needing a lookup in the UK. If anyone has the Deluxe World membership > on ancestry and would be willing to do this I would greatly appreciate it. > If this is possible please contact me off list at [email protected] > > > > Many thanks, > > Jeannine > > North Carolina > > > ------------------------------- > 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
Hi Don, For Midleton Parish, Cloyne Diocese, Cork 1766 Religious Census (Catholic) BARRY John, David, James, Maurice, Thomas, James, James, Thomas, Maurice, Garret, Thomas, Richard, Garret, Richard and Richard MCCARTHY Maurice, Daniel and George 1833 Tithe Applotment Castleredmond, McCarthy, John, 30acres, 50ac & 43ac Ballincurra, Barry, Robert 157acres " Widow 21 ac McCarthy, Dr. Denis 64ac Broomfield, McCarthy Patrick 17ac Barry, Michael, 20ac & 4ac " Edmond 6ac Knocksturkin McCarthy, Denis 20ac & 10ac " John 20ac & 10ac Hope this helps your search? Dave Blair, Pembroke, MA USA ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
Sharie, One explanation for finding immigrant ancestors in unexpected locations is the fact that people emigrated to places where family, friends, and neighbors had gone. That begs the question about why the original immigrants wound up in places like Iowa. More than likely, the reason was the promise of work, or in the case of the settlement of the West, the promise of land. David Collins Hudson, MA, USA [email protected] wrote: Today's Topics: 3. Re: Hayes married Wolfe in cork ross marriage bonds index -Healy, Murphy 1880 (Sharie Paulson > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > Subject: > Re: [COUNTYCORK] Hayes married Wolfe in cork ross marriage bonds index > - Healy, Murphy 1880 > From: > "Sharie Paulson" <[email protected]> > Date: > Sun, 22 Apr 2007 18:41:47 -0500 > To: > <[email protected]> > > > My great grandmother was Julia Anne Healy. She came to the US abt > 1878. It appears that she came alone. It is possible that she came > with a friend. I found a passenger list with a Julia Healy spinster. > There were other spinsters on the boat. Possibly one could have been > a friend. I found her in 1880 in Iowa. The question is why Iowa. > Most Healy's went to New York. She married in Iowa and eventually died > there. In 1880 she was living in a hotel and working there. It was a > small town. Why would she be in this small town???? She was from > County Cork. I have been trying to find info about her parents, > Patrick and Ellen Murphy Healy. So far nothing. > > Sharie > Moss Bluff, LA >
Dave, Would the message you just answered also apply to Charleville in the Cloyne Diocese? Am interested in the Barrys mentioned. [email protected] wrote: >Hi Don, For Midleton Parish, Cloyne Diocese, Cork > >1766 Religious Census > (Catholic) > BARRY John, David, James, Maurice, Thomas, James, James, Thomas, >Maurice, > Garret, Thomas, Richard, Garret, Richard and Richard > > MCCARTHY Maurice, Daniel and George > >1833 Tithe Applotment > > Castleredmond, McCarthy, John, 30acres, 50ac & 43ac > > > Ballincurra, Barry, Robert 157acres > " Widow 21 ac > > McCarthy, Dr. Denis 64ac > > Broomfield, McCarthy Patrick 17ac > > Barry, Michael, 20ac & 4ac > " Edmond 6ac > > Knocksturkin McCarthy, Denis 20ac & 10ac > " John 20ac & 10ac > > >Hope this helps your search? Dave Blair, Pembroke, MA USA > > > > > > > > >************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.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 > > > >
Hi Barbara My husband's great great grandfather, Denis Thomas Donoclift married Elizabeth Wolfe at Desertserges on 10 March 1831. That is the only information I have of these two. I would love to find their parents and siblings. Regards Lyn Doncliff Westport New Zealand -------Original Message------- From: Barbara G Clark Date: 23/04/2007 6:31:43 a.m. To: [email protected] Subject: [COUNTYCORK] Hayes married Wolfe in cork ross marriage bonds index Am looking for info on any of the marriages of Wolfes noted in Cork Ross marriage bonds index. In particular Richard Wolfe married to Mary Hayes or any Hayes-Wolfe marriages in co Cork that anyone has in their genealogy work. So many of the marriages in the Cork Ross Marriage bonds index are my family lines and it is so heartbreaking not to have more information on them.Those 1700 and early 1800 records are so important.(the boohoo of many of us I expect) Were there any fragments left anywhere? How did the index survive but not the actual records? The Irish records would have been in British hands in those years did they never store Irelands records over in England anywhere? Were all Irish records always and completely stored in Ireland only.(guess I do not know my history) There would likely have been 1881 census for Ireland at same time as England .....were none of those kept in England either...were they destroyed in England in time of the troubles by the English or were they all kept in Dublin and destroyed in the fires there completely.(sorry if this stirs the hornets nest) I have copies of the 1881 census for the British Isles which includes Scotland, Wales and England etc so why was there none for Ireland? When county Cork people immigrated to England was there some particular areas where they tended to go. When county Cork folk went to USA was there particular states that drew them more than others, assumably where other family or friend had gone before? The census records often just list Ireland as place of birth, nothing so wonderful as county they came from it seems to me. Barbara ------------------------------- 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 -- No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.5.463 / Virus Database: 269.5.6/770 - Release Date: 20/04/2007 6:43 p.m. .
Dear Gill & Joan Thank you so much for the response. I have access to ancestry U.S. Deluxe Membership; but the info I am seeking is obtainable from the World Deluxe Membership. SKS in the UK (Heather) has sent me info I am seeking. Again, many thanks. Jeannine North Carolina -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Gill Smith Sent: Tuesday, April 24, 2007 11:08 AM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [COUNTYCORK] UK ancestry lookup I can do one too if necessary. Cheers Gill N Wales ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Tuesday, April 24, 2007 3:58 PM Subject: Re: [COUNTYCORK] UK ancestry lookup > Jeanine > Has anyone replied to you? I hesitate to jump in when people ask for > replies off list as there may be several other people searching. I do not > have the Ancestry at home but many local libraries have it free but only > if you go to the library. I will do so if you are still waiting. As for > the marriage you have the necessary info to obtain the cert to see if it > is the right one. The cert will give you location, father's name and > witnesses. It costs 7 pounds and takes about 2 weeks. Do a google for GRO > to do it online with a cc. Joan > > -------------- Original message -------------- > From: "Jay Kubik" <[email protected]> > >> Dear Listers - >> >> >> >> I am needing a lookup in the UK. If anyone has the Deluxe World >> membership >> on ancestry and would be willing to do this I would greatly appreciate >> it. >> If this is possible please contact me off list at [email protected] >> >> >> >> Many thanks, >> >> Jeannine >> >> North Carolina >> >> >> ------------------------------- >> 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 > > ------------------------------- > 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 > > ------------------------------- 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
Barbara If you are looking for any Cork and Ross marriages apart from Hayes and Wolfe, have a look at www.radleysofcork.bigpondhosting.com Some on there also Nash datatree has Wolfe marriages on it. Lorraine ----- Original Message ----- From: "Barbara G Clark" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Monday, April 23, 2007 4:32 AM Subject: [COUNTYCORK] Hayes married Wolfe in cork ross marriage bonds index > Am looking for info on any of the marriages of Wolfes noted in Cork Ross > marriage bonds index. In particular Richard Wolfe married to Mary Hayes or > any Hayes-Wolfe marriages in co Cork that anyone has in their genealogy > work. > > So many of the marriages in the Cork Ross Marriage bonds index are my family > lines and it is so heartbreaking not to have more information on them.Those > 1700 and early 1800 records are so important.(the boohoo of many of us I > expect) > > Were there any fragments left anywhere? > > How did the index survive but not the actual records? > > The Irish records would have been in British hands in those years did they > never store Irelands records over in England anywhere? Were all Irish > records always and completely stored in Ireland only.(guess I do not know my > history) > > There would likely have been 1881 census for Ireland at same time as England > ....were none of those kept in England either...were they destroyed in > England in time of the troubles by the English or were they all kept in > Dublin and destroyed in the fires there completely.(sorry if this stirs the > hornets nest) > > I have copies of the 1881 census for the British Isles which includes > Scotland, Wales and England etc so why was there none for Ireland? > > When county Cork people immigrated to England was there some particular > areas where they tended to go. > > When county Cork folk went to USA was there particular states that drew them > more than others, assumably where other family or friend had gone before? > > The census records often just list Ireland as place of birth, nothing so > wonderful as county they came from it seems to me. > > Barbara > > > ------------------------------- > 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 >
Hi, My Richard /Porter/ Born, Bet 1596 and 1605 Weymouth, Dorsetshire, England Died, Bef 6 Mar 1688/1689 Weymouth, MA US Anny connection? Cheers, Tom Keyes Wisconsin, US ----- Original Message ----- From: "Don Barry" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Monday, April 23, 2007 3:27 AM Subject: [COUNTYCORK] Midleton: Barry, McCarthy; Churchtown: McCarthy;Bantry: Crimmins > Rejoining the list after a long absence - reposting my family history > interests: > > Researching: > > UK > > England: > > Surrey: Filce (Chertsey), Snelling, Webber, Potter, Wayland, Chillman, > Gate > > Sussex: Potter(Horsham, Warnham), Pickett, Milham (East Ssx), Webber, > Vick, Tullett, Snelling. > > Norfolk: Filby, Boswell > > Somerset: Webber (Wiveliscombe), Dowling > > Gloustershire (Bristol); Dowling > > Yorkshire: Leaf, Temple. > > Hants: Alexander. > > Ulster: > > Antrim: MacLauglin,(Cushendall) > > Down: Torpey > > > > Scotland: > > Midlothian: Stevenson > > Fife: Allan, Stevenson, Batchelor > > Dundee: O'Connor > > Irish Republic: > > Cork: > > Midleton: Barry, McCarthy > > Cloyne: McCarthy > > Bantry: Crimmins > > > > Cavan: McKay > > > > Thanks, > > Don Barry > > Dr D.N. & Mrs J.C.Barry > 11 Toolara Circuit > Forest Lake > Brisbane > Qld, 4078 > AUSTRALIA > Ph.07 3271 4197 > > ------------------------------- > 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 > > >
My great grandmother was Julia Anne Healy. She came to the US abt 1878. It appears that she came alone. It is possible that she came with a friend. I found a passenger list with a Julia Healy spinster. There were other spinsters on the boat. Possibly one could have been a friend. I found her in 1880 in Iowa. The question is why Iowa. Most Healy's went to New York. She married in Iowa and eventually died there. In 1880 she was living in a hotel and working there. It was a small town. Why would she be in this small town???? She was from County Cork. I have been trying to find info about her parents, Patrick and Ellen Murphy Healy. So far nothing. Sharie Moss Bluff, LA ----- Original Message ----- From: "Barbara G Clark" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Sunday, April 22, 2007 1:32 PM Subject: [COUNTYCORK] Hayes married Wolfe in cork ross marriage bonds index > Am looking for info on any of the marriages of Wolfes noted in Cork Ross > marriage bonds index. In particular Richard Wolfe married to Mary Hayes or > any Hayes-Wolfe marriages in co Cork that anyone has in their genealogy > work. > > So many of the marriages in the Cork Ross Marriage bonds index are my > family > lines and it is so heartbreaking not to have more information on > them.Those > 1700 and early 1800 records are so important.(the boohoo of many of us I > expect) > > Were there any fragments left anywhere? > > How did the index survive but not the actual records? > > The Irish records would have been in British hands in those years did they > never store Irelands records over in England anywhere? Were all Irish > records always and completely stored in Ireland only.(guess I do not know > my > history) > > There would likely have been 1881 census for Ireland at same time as > England > ....were none of those kept in England either...were they destroyed in > England in time of the troubles by the English or were they all kept in > Dublin and destroyed in the fires there completely.(sorry if this stirs > the > hornets nest) > > I have copies of the 1881 census for the British Isles which includes > Scotland, Wales and England etc so why was there none for Ireland? > > When county Cork people immigrated to England was there some particular > areas where they tended to go. > > When county Cork folk went to USA was there particular states that drew > them > more than others, assumably where other family or friend had gone before? > > The census records often just list Ireland as place of birth, nothing so > wonderful as county they came from it seems to me. > > Barbara > > > ------------------------------- > 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 >
Am looking for info on any of the marriages of Wolfes noted in Cork Ross marriage bonds index. In particular Richard Wolfe married to Mary Hayes or any Hayes-Wolfe marriages in co Cork that anyone has in their genealogy work. So many of the marriages in the Cork Ross Marriage bonds index are my family lines and it is so heartbreaking not to have more information on them.Those 1700 and early 1800 records are so important.(the boohoo of many of us I expect) Were there any fragments left anywhere? How did the index survive but not the actual records? The Irish records would have been in British hands in those years did they never store Irelands records over in England anywhere? Were all Irish records always and completely stored in Ireland only.(guess I do not know my history) There would likely have been 1881 census for Ireland at same time as England ....were none of those kept in England either...were they destroyed in England in time of the troubles by the English or were they all kept in Dublin and destroyed in the fires there completely.(sorry if this stirs the hornets nest) I have copies of the 1881 census for the British Isles which includes Scotland, Wales and England etc so why was there none for Ireland? When county Cork people immigrated to England was there some particular areas where they tended to go. When county Cork folk went to USA was there particular states that drew them more than others, assumably where other family or friend had gone before? The census records often just list Ireland as place of birth, nothing so wonderful as county they came from it seems to me. Barbara
Dear Listers - I am needing a lookup in the UK. If anyone has the Deluxe World membership on ancestry and would be willing to do this I would greatly appreciate it. If this is possible please contact me off list at [email protected] Many thanks, Jeannine North Carolina
Subject: Re: [COUNTYCORK] COUNTYCORK Digest, Vol 2, Issue 91 From: David Collins <[email protected]> Date: Wed, 18 Apr 2007 13:44:09 -0400 To: [email protected] I believe Dan Murphy is referring to the place at Willowhill where my 1c2r cousin, John Mescall, is buried. I visited the site in 2000 with two Mescall cousins who told me the following story: "John was buried in the grounds of the ruins of Kilpatrick church at Willowhill after his request to be buried on the land in Kilpatrick from which he and his parents were evicted when he was a child." John was born ca 1884 in Kilpatrick and died on 7 May 1960. He was the son of Denis Mescall and Mary Looney. As Dan mentioned, you need a guide to find the graves; the place isn't on any tourist maps. There are two or three other graves there, but the area is not considered a cemetery. It is, or was in 2000, a working hay field. David Collins Hudson, MA, USA Pete Schermerhorn (in the glorious Berkshire hills of western Massachusetts) replied to the Willowhill/Kilpatrick burial ground query, as follows: Here's a bit of information on the Kilpatrick burial ground (it's actually in Kilpatrick townland, just "across the road" from the Willowhill/Kilpatrick townland boundary). The location is clearly shown on Discovery map 87, and identified by the letters, in red, "ch".....marking the site of the graveyard which contains the scant ruins of the late medieval parish church of Kilpatrick. The church ruin has walls only 4 or 5 feet high remaining, and is located at the N end of the graveyard. Here is the description of the cemetery from the Archaeological Inventory of County Cork -Vol 2, East and South Cork. The "road" reference is to the side road (which eventually leads to Tracton) off of the Carrigaline to Minane Bridge road. "On E side of road, land falls away steeply to E; rectangular graveyard (c. 40m N-S; c. 25m E-W) enclosed to E, S and W by stone-faced earthen bank and to N by stone wall and ruined parish church of Kilpatrick; partially overgrown. Filled with N-S rows of low uninscribed grave markers; three inscribed headstones, one dated 1790, two recent." The above information was based on a visit to the site by archaeologists in June 1991, so there may have been more burials since that time. That's about it. Mitchell's book, A Guide to Irish Churches and Graveyards, also mentions the location, but has no maps or grid coordinates - just the listing of the townland of Kilpatrick. I'm not able to post to any of the Rootsweb lists these days. Two months ago, AOL added their HTML tagline to all of my letters - which, because of the particular version of AOL which I use, causes the RW filters (and those at Yahoo, too) to reject my letters. Supposedly, someone is working on it. But if either of you feel that this information would have general interest to someone else on the list, feel free to forward my letter - or whatever part of its contents might be pertinent - to the list......... as I can't. Pete Schermerhorn in the glorious Berkshire hills of western Massachusetts .............................................................................. > ------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thank you Dan and Peter, Your information adds to my understanding of my great grand mother Catherine (Meskill) Sullivan and her parents David Meskill and Ellen (Cronan) Meskill .David Meskill and his family were evicted from their farm in the townland of Willowhill in the civil parish of Kilpatrick while their children were young, probably before 1850. Every bit counts. All the best. David Campbell Ottawa [email protected] wrote: Passed on from Pete Schermerhorn, in the glorious Berkshire hills of western Massachusetts Here's a bit of information on the Kilpatrick burial ground (it's actually in Kilpatrick townland, just "across the road" from the Willowhill/Kilpatrick townland boundary). The location is clearly shown on Discovery map 87, and identified by the letters, in red, "ch".....marking the site of the graveyard which contains the scant ruins of the late medieval parish church of Kilpatrick. The church ruin has walls only 4 or 5 feet high remaining, and is located at the N end of the graveyard. Here is the description of the cemetery from the Archaeological Inventory of County Cork -Vol 2, East and South Cork. The "road" reference is to the side road (which eventually leads to Tracton) off of the Carrigaline to Minane Bridge road. "On E side of road, land falls away steeply to E; rectangular graveyard (c. 40m N-S; c. 25m E-W) enclosed to E, S and W by stone-faced earthen bank and to N by stone wall and ruined parish church of Kilpatrick; partially overgrown. Filled with N-S rows of low uninscribed grave markers; three inscribed headstones, one dated 1790, two recent." The above information was based on a visit to the site by archaeologists in June 1991, so there may have been more burials since that time. That's about it. Mitchell's book, A Guide to Irish Churches and Graveyards, also mentions the location, but has no maps or grid coordinates - just the listing of the townland of Kilpatrick. ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.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
Passed on from Pete Schermerhorn, in the glorious Berkshire hills of western Massachusetts Here's a bit of information on the Kilpatrick burial ground (it's actually in Kilpatrick townland, just "across the road" from the Willowhill/Kilpatrick townland boundary). The location is clearly shown on Discovery map 87, and identified by the letters, in red, "ch".....marking the site of the graveyard which contains the scant ruins of the late medieval parish church of Kilpatrick. The church ruin has walls only 4 or 5 feet high remaining, and is located at the N end of the graveyard. Here is the description of the cemetery from the Archaeological Inventory of County Cork -Vol 2, East and South Cork. The "road" reference is to the side road (which eventually leads to Tracton) off of the Carrigaline to Minane Bridge road. "On E side of road, land falls away steeply to E; rectangular graveyard (c. 40m N-S; c. 25m E-W) enclosed to E, S and W by stone-faced earthen bank and to N by stone wall and ruined parish church of Kilpatrick; partially overgrown. Filled with N-S rows of low uninscribed grave markers; three inscribed headstones, one dated 1790, two recent." The above information was based on a visit to the site by archaeologists in June 1991, so there may have been more burials since that time. That's about it. Mitchell's book, A Guide to Irish Churches and Graveyards, also mentions the location, but has no maps or grid coordinates - just the listing of the townland of Kilpatrick. ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.
My grandmother Nora Carmody,( born in Kanturk Ireland 1858, was a widow when she married John Carmody.(her name then was Nora/Hanora ) Mulcahy) Sullivan, widow of John Sullivan) Nora and John Carmody had one living child- John J Carmody who became a NYC Policeman, born 1902 died 1966. When they married she had living children of 8 born. Margaret, Denis and Patrick. She came to USA approx. 1886, from Kanturk,Co. Cork where she was born. She died in 1914 NYC. Last seen on US census of 1910 living on Second Ave. Manhattan. Denis married Alice Mc Phillips about 1912-13. I think I have the right Alice (Mc Phillips) Sullivan found in 1920 census living as widow with her children and possibly her parents, or close to her parents.9 (all info seems to fit). Alice and Denis had a son, Daniel or Denis born 1913, who died about age 12-15 months old and buried in Calvary with grandmother. Denis may have died in WWi or from wounds or illness before 1920. Margaret probably married and I do not know her married name. Patrick probably married and is thought to have moved upstate NY to or near Cornell. I have a memory of my Father getting info his (step) brother had died, This was possibly late 1930's early 1940. I remember a discussion about my Father having to drive a 17 hour trip to get there and then return home for work. I am hoping for any information regarding this above Patrick Sullivan and any of family. Perhaps they can fill in blanks of my family since shortly after 1940 I was taken from family and placed in a home. I have been trying to piece my Carmody (and Sullivan) family for over 40 years with little luck, since I had no family to ask any questions, so any help would be appreciated. And hoping for info from Patrick Sullivans family Thank you.
I believe Dan Murphy is referring to the place at Willowhill where my 1c2r cousin, John Mescall, is buried. I visited the site in 2000 with two Mescall cousins who told me the following story: "John was buried in the grounds of the ruins of Kilpatrick church at Willowhill after his request to be buried on the land in Kilpatrick from which he and his parents were evicted when he was a child." John was born ca 1884 in Kilpatrick and died on 7 May 1960. He was the son of Denis Mescall and Mary Looney. As Dan mentioned, you need a guide to find the graves; the place isn't on any tourist maps. There are two or three other graves there, but the area is not considered a cemetery. It is, or was in 2000, a working hay field. David Collins Hudson, MA, USA [email protected] wrote: >Today's Topics: > > 1. Old Burial Grounds ([email protected]) > 2. Pre- Famine Burial Practices (Gill Smith) > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > Subject: > [COUNTYCORK] Old Burial Grounds > From: > [email protected] > Date: > Tue, 17 Apr 2007 09:22:37 EDT > To: > [email protected] > >Good Morning Cork List: > > There is a Burial Ground in the middle of a large field in Minane Bridge >as well. I wanted to record every headstone on a visit there in 1999, but >since it had rained for three straight days, the field was waterlogged and >impossible to walk on. > > If anyone else would like to visit this Burial Ground, it is known to >the local farmers, as one took me to the gate and pointed to the burial ground >80 yards across the field. > > The burial ground is off a side road (right turn) on the way from >Carrigaline to Minane Bridge. > > If anyone visits and records the headstones, or has already done so, >please share that info. > > Good luck and thank you. > > Dan Murphy: Boston > > > > >
Hello, I am looking for anyone who may live or know of someone to help out with some questions in searching for Buckley / Reardon relation. We are "basically" sure that the families came from Dromtarriff parish and they were definately from Co. Cork. Looking at the LDS microfilm has shown possible christening for gg grandfather in Dromtarriff and a mar. of gggg grandparents but we have not found anything to prove it for sure. Would love to have a bit of personal in county / parish help suggestions to go from here with. Thank you, Ruth and cousins in IL, USA