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    1. [FIANNA-L] HARRIS, Richard Tullow near Carlow
    2. Josie Taylor
    3. Is anyone researching a HARRIS family. Richard HARRIS of Tullow near Carlow, SE Ireland was born about 1822. He served in the 99th Regiment of Footfrom 1840 to 1861. In Tasmania until 1856 then in Cork and also in China. Josie Taylor

    06/23/1999 09:40:08
    1. [FIANNA-L] Gen.ie service
    2. Terry Mattison
    3. Last week I posted a request for any of you who had used that Gen.ie service for Irish ancestor records. As of today, June 23, I've received no replies.....not complaining mind you.....just decided to post this to the list in case anyone else was curious or interested in that service. It appears none of us have used it! I would be curious to hear from any of you who ever do choose to try it in the future....maybe I'll get brave and do it! Terry Mattison, Kelso, WA

    06/22/1999 12:16:55
    1. [FIANNA-L] genbooks
    2. Ann, Can one sub to your new list w/o visiting your site? What info is avail? I-net access all screwed up right now. Walter Remember, it's God's Plan not ours. Besides His never fails Walter & Joan MCELLIGOTT <[email protected]> P.O.Box 161, Peotone, IL 60468-0161 Proud Rootsweb sponsor

    06/22/1999 10:17:13
    1. [FIANNA-L] Australia
    2. mdaly
    3. Is there any one out there researching the name GORE. I would love to hear from you.

    06/22/1999 03:34:09
    1. [FIANNA-L] New Genealogy Books Announcement List
    2. genbooks
    3. New Genealogy Books Announcement List Join for free: http://members.theglobe.com/genbooks/default.html

    06/21/1999 06:56:58
    1. [FIANNA-L] Sullivan??
    2. Anne
    3. Please respond to the inquirer, not to chirho or the list! FORWARDED: We are looking for information regarding Jeremiah Sullivan from Meenygorman, New Market Parish, County Cork. He lived between 1778 and 1848. in Ireland and then emigrated to the USA. He is thought to be one of the founders of the IRA. Thank you, Kathleen Gillis [email protected]

    06/20/1999 05:50:09
    1. [FIANNA-L] Sullivan/Foley, Kerry Co., IRELAND
    2. I am searching for information on: Denis Sullivan b. 1832 in Ireland Married to Honora Foley b. 11/5/1834 in Kerry Co. They had several children but I have located lots of info. on one of them: #7 Johanna (Anna) Sullivan b. July 26, 1868 in Kerry Co. Ireland Placename: Beaufort County: Kerry Civil Parish: Knockane Poor Law Union: Killarney Catholic Parish: Killorglin All came over to US around 1874 (possibly a year or so earlier for Denis) and came to PA, then settled in IOWA. If you have any info for me then please email me! :-) Thank you Jodi Critser [email protected]

    06/19/1999 04:55:41
    1. [FIANNA-L] OBIT LOOKUP List is now Ready
    2. --part1_eaa8e1f7.249a942f_boundary Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit I wanted to let everyone know of a new list starting up! Be patient with the listowner! It's his first list! I think it's an awesome genealogical tool that can help everyone! Desiree << Hi Everyone, I just wanted to let you know that the OBIT-LOOKUPS list is now ready to go. This list will allow people to volunteer for and request obituary lookups. I also hope it will be a forum to discuss finding obituaries, libraries with good newspaper holdings and other such information. I have a website that will be the temporary home for the volunteer list. There is additional information there if you are interested in volunteering: <A HREF="http://members.aol.com/Sjhcamp/index.html">EarthVision</A> or http://members.aol.com/sjhcamp/index.html To subscribe, put the singel word: subscribe in the body of your email message and send to: for Mail Mode - [email protected] for Digest Mode - [email protected] To send mail to the list: [email protected] If there are any questions or suggestions about the list feel free to email me. Susan Hovencamp >> --part1_eaa8e1f7.249a942f_boundary Content-Type: message/rfc822 Content-Disposition: inline Return-Path: <[email protected]> Received: from rly-yh04.mx.aol.com (rly-yh04.mail.aol.com [172.18.147.36]) by air-yh01.mail.aol.com (v59.51) with SMTP; Thu, 17 Jun 1999 13:54:09 -0400 Received: from bl-14.rootsweb.com (bl-14.rootsweb.com [204.212.38.30]) by rly-yh04.mx.aol.com (vx) with SMTP; Thu, 17 Jun 1999 13:53:58 -0400 Received: (from [email protected]) by bl-14.rootsweb.com (8.9.3/8.9.3) id KAA01640; Thu, 17 Jun 1999 10:51:39 -0700 (PDT) Resent-Date: Thu, 17 Jun 1999 10:51:39 -0700 (PDT) From: [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Date: Thu, 17 Jun 1999 13:50:11 EDT Old-To: [email protected] MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Mailer: AOL 3.0 16-bit for Windows sub 41 Subject: [CEMETERY-PHOTOS-L] OBIT LOOKUP List is now Ready Resent-Message-ID: <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Resent-From: [email protected] X-Mailing-List: <[email protected]> archive/latest/1409 X-Loop: [email protected] Precedence: list Resent-Sender: [email protected] Hi Everyone, I just wanted to let you know that the OBIT-LOOKUPS list is now ready to go. This list will allow people to volunteer for and request obituary lookups. I also hope it will be a forum to discuss finding obituaries, libraries with good newspaper holdings and other such information. I have a website that will be the temporary home for the volunteer list. There is additional information there if you are interested in volunteering: <A HREF="http://members.aol.com/Sjhcamp/index.html">EarthVision</A> or http://members.aol.com/sjhcamp/index.html To subscribe, put the singel word: subscribe in the body of your email message and send to: for Mail Mode - [email protected] for Digest Mode - [email protected] To send mail to the list: [email protected] If there are any questions or suggestions about the list feel free to email me. Susan Hovencamp ==== CEMETERY-PHOTOS Mailing List ==== To submit yourself as a volunteer to take photo please send your information to Our Volunteer Co-Ordinator at [email protected] --part1_eaa8e1f7.249a942f_boundary--

    06/17/1999 08:10:55
    1. [FIANNA-L] Bonnie FOUNTAIN
    2. If any of you know Bonnie, would you please contact me. Thank you, Carell Jantzen

    06/17/1999 06:02:01
    1. [FIANNA-L] Gen.ie
    2. Terry Mattison
    3. Just curious if any of you have used the Gen.ie system located at http://www.ireland.com/ancestor/index.html They ask some pertinent questions about your irish ancestor, then search numerous databases, etc. You can then view a listing of databases where your surname was found. Then, if you send $25. you will receive the information found (in detail). It lists the databases it searches, including many church records. Am wanting to know if the information they send was helpful, or just another gimmick. Thanks, Terry Mattison researching the surnames Park and Henry in North Ireland.

    06/16/1999 07:02:30
    1. Re: [FIANNA-L] James John Hurley
    2. Ellen Naliboff
    3. Registration of non-Catholic marriages began in 1845 in Ireland. Registration of births, marriages and deaths, regardless of religion, began January 1, 1864. The obligation to register these events rested on the public and failure to do so carried hefty fines. Certificates for births, marriages and deaths for all of Ireland until 1922 are housed in Dublin. Belfast has the records for Northern Ireland from 1922 to present. Clues to family history and genealogy are found in the civil records. The occupation or title give clues to the family’s lifestyle. The family historian may also use occupational clues to find additional information, either in general or specific to the family. Guild records, apprenticeship records, military regimental records, land records, borough records, and other sources may be useful. Probate, peerage books, and land records are sources if there is a title involved. If the birth or death occurred in the workhouse look for records under the Irish Poor Law. Birth certificates include the date and place of birth; the name; the sex; the name, surname and residence of the father; the name, surname, maiden surname of the mother; the rank, profession or occupation of the father; and the name and qualifications of the informant, usually a family member. A given name was not obligatory, so some entries are Kelly, Male or Clarke, Female. The FHLC holds microfilm copies of the index and certificates for 1864-1955. Marriage certificates include the date and place of marriage; groom’s name, age, marital status, occupation or title, and residence; bride’s name, marital status, age, occupation or title, and residence. The names of the fathers of both parties and their occupations or titles are given which makes them particularly relevant to genealogy. The church and the names of two witnesses are also listed. Witnesses to the marriage are commonly family members and may add clues to family linkages. Full age indicates that the person was at least 21 years old. Registration of non-Catholic marriages began in 1845 in Ireland. Registration of births, marriages and deaths, regardless of religion, began January 1, 1864. Certificates for births, marriages and deaths for all of Ireland until 1922 are housed in Dublin. Belfast has the records for Northern Ireland from 1922 to present. General Register Office, Joyce House, 8-11 Lombard St. East, Dublin 2 Open 9:30-12:30 and 2:15 - 4:30 Fees are payable in Irish punts and cash (Irish, Sterling, US dollars) for any amount. A photocopy of an entry will contain the same details as a certificate but is not suitable for administrative matters. However, it is ideal for genealogical purposes. Photocopy (including search fee) is Irpunts 3.00 and Certificate (including search fee) is Irpunts 5.50. If more than one certificate relating to the death of the same person is required an additional fee of 4.00 Irpunts should be sent for each extra certificate. What is required for search: Name in full, date of event, place of event, age of deceased, occupation of deceased, whether single, married, widow. http://quote.yahoo.com/m3?u or http://www3.travelocity.com/converter/ to get the currency exchange rate for the day. Ellen

    06/14/1999 09:01:51
    1. [FIANNA-L] James John Hurley
    2. Hi Rooters. My James John Hurley was born in 1873 in Ireland. He had a brother named Jeremiah Hurley who was a little older. James married Eleanor Jane Casey 2/12/1903 in SF,CA and died in Richmond, CA 1/18/1920. Thanks for any help. John. ___________________________________________________________________ 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.

    06/14/1999 08:01:40
    1. [FIANNA-L] Lincoln, RI Births Register
    2. Just received this info from a friend who did some research for me and this is what it says: When registered March 12, 1889, date of birth, Full name, sex, color, no. child, birth. Please feel free to post whereever on the net, where you think it would most helpful. August 31, 1888 Annie F. Pettis F W 4 Lincoln August 31, 1888 Marie B. Sorrell F W 1 Lincoln September 1, 1888 James Smith M W 7 Lincoln September 1, 1888 Philena E. Crocker F W 3 Lincoln Setpember 1, 1888 Aurore Saporte F W 1 Lincoln September 1, 1888 Charles E. Rain M W 7 Lincoln September 1, 1888 Mary H. Carroll F W 2 Lincoln September 5, 1888 Catharine Henderson F W 7 Lincoln September 5, 1888 Alice Mc Gorian F W 8 Lincoln September 5, 1888 Thomas J. Cannon M W 3 Lincoln September 6, 1888 Edwin E. Brackett M W 2 Lincoln September 6, 1888 Elizabeth Bosworth F W 4 Lincoln September 6, 1888 Walter Hamilton M W 1 Lincoln September 6, 1888 (blank) Hamel (twins) M W 11 Lincoln - died September 6, 1888 (blank) Hamel (twins) F W 12 Lincoln - died September 8, 1888 Aime Sanville M W 9 Lincoln September 8, 1888 Margaret A. Mc Hale F W 9 Lincoln September 9, 1888 Cordelia Peloquin F W 8 Lincoln September 9, 1888 George S(c or e)alley M W 6 Lincoln September 9, 1888 Amedee Guillette M W 2 Lincoln September 10, 1888 (blank) Nadeau M W 2 Lincoln September 10, 1888 Francois X. Caron M W 1 Lincoln September 11, 1888 Rose E. Savin F W 5 Lincoln September 11, 1888 Thomas Bogan M W 4 Lincoln September 11, 1888 George Boulais M W 3 Lincoln September 12, 1888 Katie M. Bassett F W 2 Lincoln September 12, 1888 Elizabeth Arse(man??) F W 10 Lincoln Last name listed is on the bottom of the page and is partially cut off, I have sort of guessed to the best that I could with the letters or partial letters shown. If any of these names are yours, please let me know and I will send you the names of the parents and their occupations etc., Hope this helps someone! Desiree

    06/12/1999 09:17:58
    1. Re: [FIANNA-L] Mooney/what county?
    2. Ellen Naliboff
    3. Do a frequency and distribution of the surnames by using The Householders Index, (FHLC#919,001-7) a surname index of tax records in Griffith's Primary Valuation and Tithe Applotment Books or the CD-ROM Index to Griffith’s Valuation. Griffith's identifies people between 1840 and 1864. Tithe Applotment covers the period of 1820 to 1840. This gets you to the parish level. These records give the names of the individuals (heads of households only), where they lived, the acreage, and the value of the land and building. These records do not give specific information about ages, birthplaces, and other members of the family. However, they point to the parish to search for baptismal and marriage information. The index is arranged by county in two sets of surname lists. The first list covers the whole county. The second set is arranged by civil parish within the county. Before you begin, you need to know the name you are searching for and the county where the person lived. You might find this information in obituaries, family histories, vital records, RC sacramental registers in the U.S., naturalization records, etc. When you have this information, you can use the 6-step plan outlined in the hand-out at the Family History Center (item 34070). The microfilms are listed under IRELAND-LAND AND PROPERTY-INDEXES. If you can't find you ancestor you may be looking for someone who was not a head of household or who did not own or lease taxable land. These urls are primers in beginning Irish research: http://www.bess.tcd.ie/roots_ie.htm http://www.rootsweb.com/~fianna/ http://www.familytreemaker.com/issue4.html http://www.familytreemaker.com/00000384.html for Scotch-Irish http://www.familytreemaker.com/4_pocket.html http://www.bess.tcd.ie/roots/guide.htm http://proni.nics.gov.uk/research/family/griffith.htm Ellen

    06/11/1999 05:57:52
    1. [FIANNA-L] Mooney/what county?
    2. Ellen Byrne
    3. My ancestor Eliza Mooney age 16, her sister Mary, age 18, listed as shoe binders, to NY 1848. Eliza m 1852, St Patricks Church, Rochester, NY Henry Bue, who came from Lincolnshire, Harlaxton Co England. They went to Lake Co IN, Mo. No trace of Mary, or who their parents were..They were Catholic bu no idea which county they were from. Henry did not have any brothers, only sisters, he and Eliza named their sons, John, William, Daniel, Charles. Any clues appreciated. Ellen, [email protected]

    06/11/1999 02:40:55
    1. [FIANNA-L] FYI: Pretty Park
    2. jeanne
    3. I am sure you've heard this on the news... Here's the lowdown. HTH -jeane ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Thu, 10 Jun 1999 17:21:55 GMT From: "Mikko H. Hypponen" <[email protected]> Newsgroups: alt.comp.virus Subject: Re: Any news of "zipped_files.exe" virus? In article <[email protected]>, "Eric Ray" <[email protected]> wrote: > I looked on McAfee's and Datafellows web sites and couldn't find anything in > the virus section or the hoax section. Please see more information here: http://www.Europe.DataFellows.com/v-descs/zipped.htm And download a F-Secure Anti-Virus update that will detect and disinfect it from here: ftp://ftp.europe.datafellows.com/anti-virus/updates/fsupdate.exe Here's what we know now: ---- A new e-mail worm spreading globally 'ZippedFiles' or 'ExploreZip' spreads like Melissa A new e-mail worm has been detected spreading in the internet. This virus works like a chain letter and carries a destructive payload. So far it has been reported from a dozen countries, including USA, Germany, Norway, Israel and Czech Republic. The virus is expected to spread globally within hours. This virus is known as either 'ZippedFiles' or 'ExploreZip'. It arrives to a user via an e-mail attachment. When the attachment is opened, the virus will browse through the inbox of the Microsoft Outlook e-mail program and will send a reply to every message. As a result, if a user called John Doe has recently received an e-mail from Jane Smith with the subject 'Please check these numbers', John's machine will automatically send a message which will look like this: From: John Doe To: Jane Smith Subject: RE: Please check these numbers Hi Jane I have received your email and I shall send you a reply ASAP. Till then take a look at the attached zipped docs. Sincerely John. Attachment: zipped_files.exe The attachment looks like a WinZip archive file. When the received tries to unpack it by double-clicking it, he will get a WinZip error message complaining about a broken archive: Cannot open file: it does not appear to be a valid archive. If this file is part of a ZIP format backup set, insert the last disk of the backup set and try again. Please press F1 for help. In addition to spreading like a chain letter, the virus will try to overwrite users files on any accessible drives, including all network drives. The files that get overwritten must have one of these extensions: DOC - Microsoft Word documents XLS - Microsoft Excel spreadsheets PPT - Microsoft PowerPoint presentations ASM - Assembler source files CPP - C++ source files -- Mikko Hermanni Hypp�nen, [email protected] Manager, Anti-Virus Research, Data Fellows Corp. Integrated Solutions for Enterprise Security Tel +358 9 8599 0513 - fax +358 9 8599 0713 http://www.DataFellows.com/staff/hermanni/

    06/11/1999 01:40:31
    1. Re: [FIANNA-L] Surnames
    2. Sharon Carberry
    3. Oh, yes, absolutely I have Clare ancestors but not of the truly old families. There was a small cluster of Carberrys in East Clare in the early to mid 1800s; they were all gone by the 1880s. A large group of Donnellans from Co. Galway came down, probably in the 1700s, and populated Clare to the tune of about 300 individual families in the 1800s. There are still a few Donnellans in Kilkishen, where mine lived until the 1850s. It was Catharine Donnellan who married Patrick Carberry in 1850 there and then they had two children in another parish before em- barking for Canada, where Patrick died in 1855. Sharon Carberry

    06/08/1999 09:51:58
    1. Re: [FIANNA-L] SHIPS - IRL to NYC, The New World 1853
    2. Sharon Carberry
    3. Diane, Good luck - hope the lookup turns up something for you. You have my email address, so contact me if need be. Sharon Carberry

    06/08/1999 09:12:55
    1. Re: [FIANNA-L] Surnames
    2. Ellen Byrne
    3. Sharon-do you have Co Clare ancestors? My husbands ancestors were Denis Allen & Bridgit Cleary. Their dau Bridgit b 1846, to San francisco m 1872. Their dau Susan also to San Francisco. Ellen, [email protected] -----Original Message----- From: Sharon Carberry <[email protected]> To: [email protected] <[email protected]> Date: Tuesday, May 18, 1999 2:48 PM Subject: Re: [FIANNA-L] Surnames :Colleen, : My suggestion is to check out the Householders Index :at your LDS FHC, which is a combined index for the :Tithe Applotment and Griffiths Valuation, tax assessment :lists done in the 1820s and 1850s, respectively. Look first :in Co. Clare, because the names you list are commonly :found in that county in the 1800s. : : Sharon Carberry : an East Clare researcher : : :==== 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! : : : : : : :

    06/08/1999 12:10:29
    1. Re: [FIANNA-L] mack165: ALAN BROWN/MERRIE RIORDAN
    2. Ellen Naliboff
    3. Registration of non-Catholic marriages began in 1845 in Ireland. Registration of births, marriages and deaths, regardless of religion, began January 1, 1864. The obligation to register these events rested on the public and failure to do so carried hefty fines. Certificates for births, marriages and deaths for all of Ireland until 1922 are housed in Dublin. Belfast has the records for Northern Ireland from 1922 to present. Clues to family history and genealogy are found in the civil records. The occupation or title give clues to the family’s lifestyle. The family historian may also use occupational clues to find additional information, either in general or specific to the family. Guild records, apprenticeship records, military regimental records, land records, borough records, and other sources may be useful. Probate, peerage books, and land records are sources if there is a title involved. If the birth or death occurred in the workhouse look for records under the Irish Poor Law. Birth certificates include the date and place of birth; the name; the sex; the name, surname and residence of the father; the name, surname, maiden surname of the mother; the rank, profession or occupation of the father; and the name and qualifications of the informant, usually a family member. A given name was not obligatory, so some entries are Kelly, Male or Clarke, Female. The FHLC holds microfilm copies of the index and certificates for 1864-1955. Marriage certificates include the date and place of marriage; groom’s name, age, marital status, occupation or title, and residence; bride’s name, marital status, age, occupation or title, and residence. The names of the fathers of both parties and their occupations or titles are given which makes them particularly relevant to genealogy. The church and the names of two witnesses are also listed. Witnesses to the marriage are commonly family members and may add clues to family linkages. Full age indicates that the person was at least 21 years old. Registration of non-Catholic marriages began in 1845 in Ireland. Registration of births, marriages and deaths, regardless of religion, began January 1, 1864. Certificates for births, marriages and deaths for all of Ireland until 1922 are housed in Dublin. Belfast has the records for Northern Ireland from 1922 to present. General Register Office, Joyce House, 8-11 Lombard St. East, Dublin 2 Open 9:30-12:30 and 2:15 - 4:30 Fees are payable in Irish punts and cash (Irish, Sterling, US dollars) for any amount. A photocopy of an entry will contain the same details as a certificate but is not suitable for administrative matters. However, it is ideal for genealogical purposes. Photocopy (including search fee) is Irpunts 3.00 and Certificate (including search fee) is Irpunts 5.50. If more than one certificate relating to the death of the same person is required an additional fee of 4.00 Irpunts should be sent for each extra certificate. The exchange rate is 1 IRL to US$1.32. What is required for search: Name in full, date of event, place of event, and, for deaths, age of deceased, occupation of deceased, whether single, married, widow. Ellen

    06/08/1999 09:19:28