[email protected] wrote: > Anyone working on this line?: > Daniel Casey( born 7/29/1828 in derryfinnan, Cork, IRE) married to > Margaret Lucy(born abt 1825) on 2/9/1864 in kilnamartery, Cork, IRE.They > had at least these 3 kidsAll born in Slieveragh, Cork, IRE)= > Honora , born 3/9/1865 ; Ellen, born 5/27/1866; John, born 4/8/1868. > Thanks, John(Napa, CA) > ___________________________________________________________________ > Get the Internet just the way you want it. > Free software, free e-mail, and free Internet access for a month! > Try Juno Web: http://dl.www.juno.com/dynoget/tagj. > > ==== FIANNA Mailing List ==== > Visit both these pages > Fianna favorite sites > http://www.rootsweb.com/~fianna/ Thank You Chirho! > http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Meadows/4404/ > Please turn off your Stationery, Backrounds & HTML! > Messages to list in plain text only!
Anyone working on this line?: Daniel Casey( born 7/29/1828 in derryfinnan, Cork, IRE) married to Margaret Lucy(born abt 1825) on 2/9/1864 in kilnamartery, Cork, IRE.They had at least these 3 kidsAll born in Slieveragh, Cork, IRE)= Honora , born 3/9/1865 ; Ellen, born 5/27/1866; John, born 4/8/1868. Thanks, John(Napa, CA) ___________________________________________________________________ Get the Internet just the way you want it. Free software, free e-mail, and free Internet access for a month! Try Juno Web: http://dl.www.juno.com/dynoget/tagj.
Anyone working on a Thomas Healy married to Mary Connel abt 1820 in Kilnamartyra ?, Cork, IRE. I think their daughter is my Johanna Healy(Born abt 1830 ) and married to John(Daniel) Casey. Thanks, John(Napa, CA). ___________________________________________________________________ Get the Internet just the way you want it. Free software, free e-mail, and free Internet access for a month! Try Juno Web: http://dl.www.juno.com/dynoget/tagj.
[email protected] wrote: > Anne, > > The listing is of 351 people. I guessed on most of the names below as > possibly being Irish. Some probably are, some probably aren't. Some names > included are: > > Abbott, Bagley, Ballard, Bean, Brenneman, Byrne, Byrns, Callaghan, Conlee, > Crumpler, Doughty, Drummond, Ellis, Everson, Finlay, Flynn, Fowler, Hill, > Hiteshew, Hubbard, Lasiter, LeBlanc, Lewis, Lockhart, Logan, Lollar, > Mc Cuistion, Mc Daniel, Mc Dow, Mc Knight, Mc Manus, Mc Murray, Mc Nish, > Mott, Murphy, Myers, Newcomb, Nix, O'Neil, Padgett, Page, Risner, Seeber, > Shanahan, Shively, Sigler, Spencer, Sterling, Sullivan, Talley, Trimble, > Vaughan, > Waggoner, Webb, > ************** > Dexter, Diehl, Grubb, (names of those that died while in captivity.) > > Please let me know if it would be appropriate to put on up on the Fianna > pages. > > Desiree > > ==== FIANNA Mailing List ==== > Irish Researchers helping Irish Researchers > Irish research in the United States and in Ireland! > > http://www.rootsweb.com/~fianna/ ***Award Winner*** Thanks to Chirho > http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Meadows/4404/
A.J. Ellis <[email protected]> asks; > I am stuck at the proginiter, in South Africa, of my line of ELLISes, one Patrick (Henry?) ELLIS. It appears that he married a Margaretha Magdalena JOUBERT on 14 August 1803. His death certificate is very unclear, but it gives the following information: > > Name of Deceased: Patrick Hendrik ELS (I suspect that it should be Henry. The surname is definitely wrong here as all other references are ELLIS. I suspect that the clerk who completed the record got the sound of the name wrong). > Birth Place of Deceased: Dublin. > Names of parents of the Deceased: ELS (Again this is wrong). > Age of the Deceased: seventy five years (This is unclear and only by elimination I conclude the second word to be "five"). > Condition in Life: Blacksmith. > Day of decease: Seventh August 1850. > Place: Very unclear but may be Louws Berg (the "berg" is clear but the fist word not). > All my searches on Patrick ELLIS brought up nothing. Neither here nor any place in Ireland - primarily because so many of their records were destroyed. > > I hope to find shipping records of the time to trace his route back to his origins in the hope that some info will come up. Hi..In the Townland Index of 1851 there is only one townland that might come close to 'Louws Berg' but it is Louisburg in Co.Mayo...across the nation from Co.Dublin. Also, In the Griffith's Index, taken in Co.Dublin in 1848-54, there were 35 households headed by an ELLIS....In Co.Mayo there were 4, but none in Louisburg or the parish of Kilgeever (where Louisburg is located). Sometimes genealogy research consists of 'closing doors'...Wish the news had been better...JJ. May God Bless You and Keep You [email protected]
Any information re: Robert Fulton, born about 1735 in Kilkenny of Scottish ancestry; then moved to Pennsylvania, USA, where he fathered the well-known inventor of the steamboat CLERMONT, Robert Fulton. Like to know roots back to Scotland. Thank you, Bob Fulton
Looking for information re the O'HARE family from Dublin. O'HARE, Edward father Mary daughter Peggy daughter Susie daughter Edward son ??? daughter Moved to England in early 1900's, maybe Essex. Thank you. Mimi Rhodes
I am stuck at the proginiter, in South Africa, of my line of ELLISes, one Patrick (Henry?) ELLIS. It appears that he married a Margaretha Magdalena JOUBERT on 14 August 1803. His death certificate is very unclear, but it gives the following information: Name of Deceased: Patrick Hendrik ELS (I suspect that it should be Henry. The surname is definitely wrong here as all other references are ELLIS. I suspect that the clerk who completed the record got the sound of the name wrong). Birth Place of Deceased: Dublin. Names of parents of the Deceased: ELS (Again this is wrong). Age of the Deceased: seventy five years (This is unclear and only by elimination I conclude the second word to be "five"). Condition in Life: Blacksmith. Day of decease: Seventh August 1850. Place: Very unclear but may be Louws Berg (the "berg" is clear but the fist word not). The death notice is signed by one of his sons, Daniel ELLIS. He signed his name ELLIS and all the other children have their names as ELLIS. Family lore has it that three brothers came to South Africa, but "two went back". There is no confirmation that "back" means Ireland. I know that Daniel ELLIS was a farmer at Hoeko - Ladismith. Some of Patrick's children were born in Swellendam. All my searches on Patrick ELLIS brought up nothing. Neither here nor any place in Ireland - primarily because so many of their records were destroyed. An interesting bit is that one source actually gives the origin of Patrick as Norway - I do not know on what facts this is based. This leads me to think that Patrick's ship came here via Norway. I also therefor presume that he came here in a private capacity. My reasoning is that if he was a convict, or in the service of the UK at the time, he may have come here directly by official ship or something. Another interesting thing is the Wicklow rebellion during 1798 as well as the fact that the Cape changed hands (Dutch and British) a number of times over this period. I hope to find shipping records of the time to trace his route back to his origins in the hope that some info will come up. Any advice that you may have will be much appreciated. Thank You Kindly Adré Ellis [email protected] http://users.iafrica.com/e/el/ellis
I am stuck at the proginiter, in South Africa, of my line of ELLISes, one Patrick (Henry?) ELLIS. It appears that he married a Margaretha Magdalena JOUBERT on 14 August 1803. His death certificate is very unclear, but it gives the following information: Name of Deceased: Patrick Hendrik ELS (I suspect that it should be Henry. The surname is definitely wrong here as all other references are ELLIS. I suspect that the clerk who completed the record got the sound of the name wrong). Birth Place of Deceased: Dublin. Names of parents of the Deceased: ELS (Again this is wrong). Age of the Deceased: seventy five years (This is unclear and only by elimination I conclude the second word to be "five"). Condition in Life: Blacksmith. Day of decease: Seventh August 1850. Place: Very unclear but may be Louws Berg (the "berg" is clear but the fist word not). The death notice is signed by one of his sons, Daniel ELLIS. He signed his name ELLIS and all the other children have their names as ELLIS. Family lore has it that three brothers came to South Africa, but "two went back". There is no confirmation that "back" means Ireland. I know that Daniel ELLIS was a farmer at Hoeko - Ladismith. Some of Patrick's children were born in Swellendam. All my searches on Patrick ELLIS brought up nothing. Neither here nor any place in Ireland - primarily because so many of their records were destroyed. An interesting bit is that one source actually gives the origin of Patrick as Norway - I do not know on what facts this is based. This leads me to think that Patrick's ship came here via Norway. I also therefor presume that he came here in a private capacity. My reasoning is that if he was a convict, or in the service of the UK at the time, he may have come here directly by official ship or something. Another interesting thing is the Wicklow rebellion during 1798 as well as the fact that the Cape changed hands (Dutch and British) a number of times over this period. I hope to find shipping records of the time to trace his route back to his origins in the hope that some info will come up. Any advice that you may have will be much appreciated. Thank You Kindly Adré Ellis [email protected] http://users.iafrica.com/e/el/ellis
Send your questions to [email protected] Ask anything about your Irish research (ancestors or how to go about it) and yes, more than likely one or two folks will have either suggestions for you, answers for you or will see what they can find for you. Laura ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Saturday, July 31, 1999 11:05 PM Subject: (no subject) > I was given this email address for researching my Irish relatives. What > questions may I ask. will i get a reply/ >
Desiree, I went to Cyndi's list to see if there might be a more appropriate web site for this, and found none. Will gladly post it in the Searching other countries: US section. Please send in an email to [email protected] Thank you :) Anyone else have something they've transcribed that would fit on the Fianna site? ! Peace. Anne At 07:30 AM 7/30/99 EDT, you wrote: >Anne, > >The listing is of 351 people. I guessed on most of the names below as >possibly being Irish. Some probably are, some probably aren't. Some names >included are: > >Abbott, Bagley, Ballard, Bean, Brenneman, Byrne, Byrns, Callaghan, Conlee, >Crumpler, Doughty, Drummond, Ellis, Everson, Finlay, Flynn, Fowler, Hill, >Hiteshew, Hubbard, Lasiter, LeBlanc, Lewis, Lockhart, Logan, Lollar, >Mc Cuistion, Mc Daniel, Mc Dow, Mc Knight, Mc Manus, Mc Murray, Mc Nish, >Mott, Murphy, Myers, Newcomb, Nix, O'Neil, Padgett, Page, Risner, Seeber, >Shanahan, Shively, Sigler, Spencer, Sterling, Sullivan, Talley, Trimble, >Vaughan, >Waggoner, Webb, >************** >Dexter, Diehl, Grubb, (names of those that died while in captivity.) > >Please let me know if it would be appropriate to put on up on the Fianna >pages. > >Desiree > > >
Anne, The listing is of 351 people. I guessed on most of the names below as possibly being Irish. Some probably are, some probably aren't. Some names included are: Abbott, Bagley, Ballard, Bean, Brenneman, Byrne, Byrns, Callaghan, Conlee, Crumpler, Doughty, Drummond, Ellis, Everson, Finlay, Flynn, Fowler, Hill, Hiteshew, Hubbard, Lasiter, LeBlanc, Lewis, Lockhart, Logan, Lollar, Mc Cuistion, Mc Daniel, Mc Dow, Mc Knight, Mc Manus, Mc Murray, Mc Nish, Mott, Murphy, Myers, Newcomb, Nix, O'Neil, Padgett, Page, Risner, Seeber, Shanahan, Shively, Sigler, Spencer, Sterling, Sullivan, Talley, Trimble, Vaughan, Waggoner, Webb, ************** Dexter, Diehl, Grubb, (names of those that died while in captivity.) Please let me know if it would be appropriate to put on up on the Fianna pages. Desiree
Desiree, if it's Irish Air Force folk, Fianna will post it. Otherwise don't know... but sure you'll find a good place. Peace. Anne for the Fianna Webmasters At 07:35 AM 7/29/99 EDT, you wrote: >I have been transcribing a list of the "351 Air Force members who were at one >time or another held captive by Communists in North Vietnam, South Vietnam, >Laos, Cambodia, or China, 18 reportedly died during the captivity." > >This information was taken from Air Force Magazine. The source of the >information is the Library of Congress database as of Dec 15, 1997. > >Does anyone know of a place where I can have this list placed on the web for >reference? > >Desiree > > >==== FIANNA Mailing List ==== >Visit both these pages >Fianna favorite sites >http://www.rootsweb.com/~fianna/ Thank You Chirho! >http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Meadows/4404/ >Please turn off your Stationery, Backrounds & HTML! >Messages to list in plain text only! > > > > > > > >
The single most important item of information for Irish family history research is a precise place of origin, and the most important tool in identifying Irish placenames is the 1851 Townlands Index. They've altered their site recently, this is the new URL for any Townland questions : http://www.ireland.com/ancestor/placename/index.cfm" Irish Ancestors;Placenames http://www.caughey.demon.co.uk and then click on: Irish Ancestors. This should make it possible for you to search 65,000 Irish placenames. -- Also this incomplete but very handy townland data base here: http://www.thecore.com/cgi-bin/ire-srch IreAtlas TOWNLAND DATA BASE http://www.expediamaps.com/PlaceFinder.asp Can get to parish level but not townlands. Ellen
A researcher recently gave me some info on my Riordan line and Casey line. This researcher provided a bunch of names/dates/etc from a search of KILNAMARTYRA ROMAN CATHOLIC Baptism/marriage records. The people she identified were born/married in Derryfinnan & Knockroe. Are Derryfinnan and Knockroe in the same area? would their baptism/marriage records actually be located in Kilnamartyra RC records/? Thanks for any help, John(Napa, CA). ___________________________________________________________________ Get the Internet just the way you want it. Free software, free e-mail, and free Internet access for a month! Try Juno Web: http://dl.www.juno.com/dynoget/tagj.
I have been transcribing a list of the "351 Air Force members who were at one time or another held captive by Communists in North Vietnam, South Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, or China, 18 reportedly died during the captivity." This information was taken from Air Force Magazine. The source of the information is the Library of Congress database as of Dec 15, 1997. Does anyone know of a place where I can have this list placed on the web for reference? Desiree
I am researching the name Deery .Co.Monoghan circa 1800 to date. My g.g.Grandfather was born there and eventually settled in the UK during the Famine...I have been unable to locate the name in the area..is there anyone else looking for Deery? Regards Christine. Also researching OBrien /Bryan/Slattery..Co.Tipperary. McEvoy and Bailey. Dublin and Co.Antrim ntrim
Dear Fianna Listers, If anyone is researching, or has run across the name NALTY in their research, would appreciate an exchange of info. Best regards, Bill Also seeking: Dooley, Finnerty, Golden/Golding, Lynagh, Macken, Sweeeny.
Mathesons Special Report on Surnames of Ireland shows surnames with five or more entries in the birth indexes of 1890, and the main counties in which they were found. The birth rate was 1:44 at that time so you can estimate the number of people of the name at that time. The great value of Matheson's report is that it indicates how common a particular surname is countrywide, provincially and also within a county. The distribution of surnames has not changed significantly since the publication of the Report - so it is reasonable to presume the same pattern prior to 1890. Matheson's Report http://www.rootsweb.com/~irish/ir-names/math-nam.htm Ellen
The single most important item of information for Irish family history research is a precise place of origin, and the most important tool in identifying Irish placenames is the 1851 Townlands Index. They've altered their site recently, this is the new URL for any Townland questions http://www.ireland.com/ancestor/placename/index.cfm" Irish Ancestors;Placenames http://www.caughey.demon.co.uk and then click on: Irish Ancestors. This should make it possible for you to search 65,000 Irish placenames. -- Also this incomplete but very handy townland data base here: http://www.thecore.com/cgi-bin/ire-srch IreAtlas TOWNLAND DATA BASE http://www.expediamaps.com/PlaceFinder.asp Can get to parish level but not townlands. Ellen