Here is a Rootsweb list where they address the AOL-Rootsweb problems. They discuss who to contact and when...etc. http://lists.rootsweb.com/index/other/RootsWeb_Support/AOLers-RootsWeb.html Many are writing to me and I don't have the answers, so I am passing this list on for help. -- Pat Connors, Sacramento CA, list admin http://www.connorsgenealogy.com All outgoing mail virus free, scanned by Norton
1891 San Francisco Examiner SULLIVAN, In this city, February 2, Michael, beloved husband of Mary Sullivan, and brother of Mrs. Robert McLeod, Mrs. Julia Finnerty, Mrs. Mollie Reynolds, and brother in law of John, William, Daniel and Patrick O'Connell, a native of Kanturk, County Cork, Ireland, aged 40 years. Friends and acquaintances are respectfully invited to attend the funeral services to-morrow (Wednesday) at 8:45 o'clock a.m. from his late residence, 10 Clyde St. off Townsend between Third and Fourth, thence to St. Rose's Church, Brannan Street, where a solemn requiem mass will be celebrated for the repose of his soul, commencing at 9:00 o'clock a.m., Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. San Francisco Examiner September 3, 1891 SULLIVAN, In this city, February 3, Michael of diptheria, beloved son of Michael and the late Ellen Sullivan, and brother of John, Patrick, William, Hannah, Nellie, and Mary Ann Sullivan, a native of Mitcheltown, County Cork, Ireland, age 10 years. The funeral will take place today (Wednesday) at 12:00 o'clock m. from the residence of the parents, 1128 Harrison Street. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. San Francisco Examiner February 4, 1891 Irishnana01@hotmail.com O'LEARY/KILGANNON: http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/p/r/o/Pat-Procida/index.html _________________________________________________________________ Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! Download today - it's FREE! http://messenger.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200471ave/direct/01/
SNIPPET: In the Nov-Dec 1998 issue of Dublin's "Ireland of the Welcomes" magazine, readers expressed their feelings about the Emerald Isle: Michael J. FEENEY, Ocean City, NJ, wrote: "Saw my first issue of IOTW (Mar-April 1998) and the Byways article "A breath of Londonderry Air" brought back memories of a visit 52 years ago. It was at the end of WWII, and while stationed with the U. S. Army in France, I hd the opportunity to make a trip to Ireland and England before we returned to the U.S. Both my father (in 1911) and mother (in 1919) had come to the U. S. from a small town (Altinure Park) just outside of Derry. Two uncles still live there where my parents came from. I arrived in Nov 1945 and had a most enjoyable and warm visit. Saw the Sperrin Mountains and Faughan River, traversed many of the spots mentioned in your Byways article. It was wonderful and quite a respite after 18 month of war in France and Germany. I wish I could have returned over the years, but time may have passed me by, now that I am 76 years old. My new subscription to your magazine is now tempting me to possibly give it another tr! y before too long." Maureen McILWAIN, Stanhope, Prince Edward Island, Canada, penned: "It is with pleasure and fascination that I peruse your beautiful publication, and have done so for some years. I was introduced to the lush enduring beauty and generosity of Ireland through my parents' exploration of the threads of family history throughout the Emerald Isle. There is a bittersweet quality to my pleasure now, as sadly I have lost both my parents in the past year. However I will return to Ireland with my husband (who has a few Irish ancestors) himself - as all the best people seem to do -and enjoy all the fond memories again and salute my parents' spirit. Likewise I will continue my subscription and enjoy the connection as each issue arrives." Brett Lee MORRISe, St. Louis, MO, shared: "Firstly, let me say what a delight it is to be a subscriber... your magazine always brightens my day, allowing glimpses of a place I visited in 1996. I was fortunate enough to visit Dublin, a beautiful and magical city. I alo went to a small town call Ratoath, in county Meath - a truly enchanting village with extraordinary warmth and charm. Ratoath also has much to offer in the way of idyllic beauty and tranquility. I stayed at 'Pinehill' Bed and Breakfast run by the RYANs. I highly recommend it! I didn't mean to ramble on, but it's difficult not to be passionate about Ireland once you have visited there." Katheleen HANSEN, Brown Deer, WI, wrote: "I have been promising myself to write and let you know how much your magazine means to this 94 years old Irish lady. I was born in Dundalk, Co. Louth and came to America when I was 24 years old. I arrived in NYC in 1929, just in time for the Great Depression. I had hoped that I would find work at hand sewing in the 'Brooks Brothers' store, but at that time not too many men were buying suits. I was lucky enough to find work in a large Estate in NJ, helping the cook. There were two other Irish girls there, so I felt right at home. I met my Danish husband in NYC and was married in 1936. We were married 61 years (he died just 14 months ago, he was 92 years old.) We had one daughter and four sons. They all have been to Ireland quite a few times, and of course they always take me along. You know when I started to write to you it was just to let you know how much I enjoyed reading about the Wicklow Light-house, and also the journ! ey of Mary BEAUFORT and her husband from Collon. I have been there several times. My oldest son Noel and I are planning a trip to Ireland and England in September. Looking forward to my next magazine."
I am sending this to all my lists to alert AOLers that last week when Rootsweb moved some of the lists from the defunct server to a new server, it has now caused AOL to read the new server as spam and is bouncing their mail which will lead to the AOL subscribers to be automatically unsubbed from those lists after three bounces. So, if you are on the following lists that I admin, you will need to first, inform AOL about the the new server and secondly, once AOL starts accepting mail from those lists, you will probably have to resub to the list. NY-Rensselaer Irish-in-UK Roe Maclean McGinty McAtee The above are the lists I have on the new server. There are many others on the server that are huge and busy and you will probably know who they are because those are the ones that you didn't get mail from last week. If you need help, email me off list and I'll do what I can do to help you. -- Pat Connors, Sacramento CA, list admin http://www.connorsgenealogy.com All outgoing mail virus free, scanned by Norton
More names have been added to the Newry marriages, also i have started putting on births for Newry, on my website. The names just added to the marriages and births will not be picked up by the website search engine till Monday, to browse through them, go to the Mourne index page, click on Newry, and the best of luck in your research. Raymond http://www.raymondscountydownwebsite.com
MGallagher connection: My maternal grandmother's sister, Isabella Brennan, married a guy named Charles Aloysius "Charlie" Gallagher. Charlie was born about 1877 in Manhattan, the son of Cornelius Gallagher and Catherine Kelly. His parents disappeared at some point, and poor Charlie ended up living with his dad's sisters at different times ... Bridget Gallagher (married to Jeremiah Murphy) and Ellen Gallagher (married Michael Kedney). Charlie had 2 sisters and a brother: Mary, Helen (Nellie) and Cornelius. I have no idea what became of them. In 1918, Charlie married Isabella Brennan, my grandmother's sister. Family legend has it they had one child who died at or soon after birth. Charlie and Bella lived in the Irishtown section of Brooklyn, in the shadows of the Brooklyn Navy Yard. Charlie died in 1931. One puzzler: a Michael Gallagher (have no idea who he was) appears as Godfather on my grandmother's Baptismal certificate ... Mary Ellen Brennan, born Jan. 22, 1879. Another possible connection, though perhaps not bloodwise ... Patrick and Maria Quinn served as godparents for Margaret Brennan, sister to my grandmother Mary Ellen and and grand-aunt Isabella Brennan, in 1881. Again, I have no idea who these folks are and how/if they are related. I suspect they were all living in the same area ... Gold Street or thereabouts in the Irishtown section of Brooklyn. The Baptisms took place at St. Anne's Church, corner of Gold and Front Streets ... the church is now closed, like so many of the old ones, sad to say. Lauren lmpetit@cox.net
Msgr. Quinn established the first African-American parish in Brooklyn, then went on to found an orphanage for black kids and a children's home out at Wading River on Long Island. Barbara : ) Irish: BARRETT, BURKE, BYRNE, CORRIGAN, GALLAGHER, McNALLY, QUINN German: BAUER, BEARE, BEIMANN, BEEKMAN, BEUSCHER, BLANKENMEYER, CASTLE, DECKER, ENGLEHARD/T, HELMKEN, HOHLER, HURRINUS, JOHNSON, KELLER, KITTELBERGER, LOW, MILLER/MEULLER/MULLER, RINGEISEN, ROLLMANN, SCHNEIDER, SOFFEL, STERRITT, STRATTON, TRAVER, UMBROLIA, VETTER, WAGNER, WEIGAND, WILLIAMS Polish: BUDARZ, ROMANSKI
Office of the Chancellor Request for following infomation: Name Bernard John Quinn date and place of birth 1/15/1888 Newark, NJ Collegiate studies, where made St. Charles College, Ellicott City, MD. & St. Peter`s Jersey City, NJ date and place of ordination 6/1/1912 St John The Baptist Church Bklyn Ordained for diocese of Brooklyn Dates & assignments as assistant St. Patricks, Ft. Hamilton, Mineola [filling in] 11/1912 to 5/1914 St. Gregory`s 5/1914 to 6/1918 Chaplain U.S. Army 6/1918 to 7/1919 St. James Pro-Cathedral 7/1919 to 10/1919 Holy Immaculate as A[unreadable] 10/1919 5/1920 Dates & assignments as Rector 5/1920 To start Colored Mission of Bklyn. This information is sought for the purposes of completing certain Diocesan records at this site. By order of the Rt. Rev. Bishop, Francis X. Driscoll OBIT card of: Right Reverend Monsignor Bernard J. Quinn Church of st. Peter Claver Bklyn, NY born 1/15/1888 ordained 6/1/1912 died 4/7/1940 [picture included] All info above from the Deceased Priests Files Archives Diocese of Bklyn, NY. BTW-- Yes, he`s one of mine. Barbara : ) Irish: BARRETT, BURKE, BYRNE, CORRIGAN, GALLAGHER, McNALLY, QUINN German: BAUER, BEARE, BEIMANN, BEEKMAN, BEUSCHER, BLANKENMEYER, CASTLE, DECKER, ENGLEHARD/T, HELMKEN, HOHLER, HURRINUS, JOHNSON, KELLER, KITTELBERGER, LOW, MILLER/MEULLER/MULLER, RINGEISEN, ROLLMANN, SCHNEIDER, SOFFEL, STERRITT, STRATTON, TRAVER, UMBROLIA, VETTER, WAGNER, WEIGAND, WILLIAMS Polish: BUDARZ, ROMANSKI
I sent to the Archives Diocese of Bklyn, NY. and this is what I got: St. Patricks Cathedral Newark, NJ 9/4/1906 4/10/1883 Bernard Quinn cor Colden & Bleecker St. Teamster, age 27 years, born in Ireland of Bernard Quinn and Catherine McGear to Sarah Shields 25 Colden St, age 30 years, born in Ireland o Joseph & Ellen Fitzgerald Witnesses Earnest oran & Bridget Butler. Rev. James J. Hall The above is a copy of the marriage record of St. Patricks Church. Thomas Walsh Sexton St. Patricks Cathedral Newark, NJ 9/4/1906 9/4/1906 Bernard Quinn born 1/15/1888 of P.W. Quinn & Sarah Berghman baptised 1/29/1888 Sponsors: Corcoran, Andrew & Molynaux, Anastasia Rev. T. A. Wallace The above is a copy of the baptism record of St. Patricks Church. Thomas Walsh Sexton The P.W. Quinn here named is said to be the same with Bernard Quinn in the marriage certificate accompanying and to be consequently, the father of Bernard John. This name "Berghman" is said to be an erronious form of "Bergen". Bergen was the maiden name of Mr. Bernard J. Quinn`s mother, and the Sarah Shields mentioned in the marriage certificate was Sarah Bergen who first married a man named Shields and, after his death, Bernard Quinn, father of Bernard J. Quinn. Thus stated Mr. Bernard J. Quinn to me, 11/11/1906. Wm. C. Hoctor C.M. Director of seminarians St. Patricks Cathedral Newark, NJ 11/11/1906 Bernard Aloysius Quinn was confirmed by the Rt. Rev. Bishop Wigger at St. Patricks Cathedral, Newark, NJ on 5/11/1899. The above is a copy of the confirmation record of St. Patricks Church. Thomas Walsh Sexton
1891 San Francisco Examiner SULLIVAN, In this city, February 2, Michael, beloved husband of Mary Sullivan, and brother of Mrs. Robert McLeod, Mrs. Julia Finnerty, Mrs. Mollie Reynolds, and brother in law of John, William, Daniel and Patrick O'Connell, a native of Kanturk, County Cork, Ireland, aged 40 years. Friends and acquaintances are respectfully invited to attend the funeral services to-morrow (Wednesday) at 8:45 o'clock a.m. from his late residence, 10 Clyde St. off Townsend between Third and Fourth, thence to St. Rose's Church, Brannan Street, where a solemn requiem mass will be celebrated for the repose of his soul, commencing at 9:00 o'clock a.m., Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. San Francisco Examiner September 3, 1891 SULLIVAN, In this city, February 3, Michael of diptheria, beloved son of Michael and the late Ellen Sullivan, and brother of John, Patrick, William, Hannah, Nellie, and Mary Ann Sullivan, a native of Mitcheltown, County Cork, Ireland, age 10 years. The funeral will take place today (Wednesday) at 12:00 o'clock m. from the residence of the parents, 1128 Harrison Street. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. San Francisco Examiner February 4, 1891 Pat Irishnana01@hotmail.com O'LEARY/KILGANNON: http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/p/r/o/Pat-Procida/index.html _________________________________________________________________ Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! Download today - it's FREE! hthttp://messenger.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200471ave/direct/01/
THURSDAY. Greetings from Australia, My GG Grandmother MARY McMAHON was transported to Australia in 1849 from Co.Clare. She was 23 years old then. Her prison record states that she had a brother JOHN MICHAEL McMAHON who emigrated to the U.S. Regrettably, this is the only information I have of him... I could presume(I know this is against "research rules"!!)that he emigrated prior to 1849. Her death certificate(in 1890) shows that her parents were named as Patrick and Catherine. I am hoping to locate descendents of John Michael McMahon.......... Would any kind lister have any information? Thank you so much for reading this posting. Cheers from Ellen in Tasmania
-I need some advice. I have family in Lufkin and Huston, Texas. Timothy O'Donovan, died in Feb. 1912 and according to a "Funeral Record" from a Texas Genealogy library, he died and was buried in Lufkin Texas. I can find no death certificate. I was told, "I guess no one bothered to fill one out." According to this record, he was buried in Glendale Cemetery in Lufkin. Many calls to Lufkin stated there was no such cemetery even though there is a lot, section, and ? other information on the funeral record for his burial in this cemetery. I finally started calling funeral homes and with much difficulty found there was a Glendale Cemetery. There is no office at the property and apparantly poor records at best with people very unwilling to reveal any information. The first person I called denied there was a place known as Glendale Cemetery and had me call a gentleman at his home. He gave me the name and number of the person I had just called, and when I called the woman back she said the book with the information in it had a note on it that said not to give information or phone numbers out. I asked her to look up records of this family members and she seemed to become confused and gave the phone to a gentleman there. He called me today and said "apparantly we did not bury this gentleman. We have no such records and the body in that grave belong to a man named McCarthy." P.A. McCarthy is the son-in-law of Timothy O'Donovan. P.A. paid the funeral expenses and made the arrangements for Timothy's funeral. He was buried, after his death, in Houston, TX. I beleive P.A. McCarthy owned the plot in the cemetery. Does anyone have any idea where I can get information that is real. For the life of me , I can not imagine why these people seem to want to conceal this informtion. Is there any city, state agency where these records may be kept? The "Funeral Record" which I received looks just like the one I have for two other family members who died in New York in the 20's but does not include the name of the funeral parlor. It contains very vague information such as the place of the service --"Catholic Church" I have called every catholic church in Lufkin, and they all claimed they did not exist in 1912. Thanks for any thing you can offer . Virginia
Hi Leigh, If your grandfather was born in 1912, then his father, John McHugh, would be born before 1900. Those records are easily accessible. I checked the Worcester Vital Records at the Worcester Public Library. I found several John McHugh births, but don't know which one, if any, is your great-grandfather. These are just from the index. The complete records are available at the library, but I didn't know which ones might be him. The complete records have more information, such as parents' places of birth, etc... These are the ONLY John McHughs listed in the Worcester Vital Records before 1900: NAME.....DATE OF BIRTH....FATHER....MOTHER McHUGH, John J...Sept 8, 1868...Patrick McHugh...Bessy Sherlock McHUGH, John...Nov 21, 1885...Michael McHugh...Anna Sommers McHUGH, John...Oct 6, 1888...Thomas McHugh...Kate T. Ryan McHUGH, John Thomas...Oct 19, 1888...James McHugh...Bridget Healy McHUGH, John...Feb 24,1893...Patrick McHugh...Maria Curry McHUGH, John...Jan 28, 1897...Bernard McHugh...Hannah Conlin McHUGO, John...Feb 28, 1857...Thomas McHugh...Elizabeth ? (The record says McHugo) ----- Original Message ----- From: Lejax99@aol.com To: IRISH-AMERICAN-L@rootsweb.com Sent: Saturday, July 17, 2004 10:53 PM Subject: Re: [Irish-American] On what documents/parents names be given? I have a copy of my grandfathers baptism certificate.. it lists that his fathers name was John Francis McHugh and that he was born in Worchester, Mass... my grandfather was born in the year 1912... any suggestions on what my next step should be in tracking any info on John??? where should i go? where should I look?? thanks Leigh
SNIPPET: In the 1870s, adventurers would explore the magnificent wilderness that would become America's first national park. In 1870, the Washburn Expedition - dignitaries led by the surveyor-general of the Montana Territory, Gen. Henry WASHBURN - first beheld the dramatic geysers. Cornelius HEDGES, a member of the group, reported "our great astonishment on entering this basin, to see at no great distance before us an immense body of sparkling water, projected suddenly and with terrific force into the air to the height of over one hundred feet. We had found a real geyser." On March 1, 1872, Congress passed a bill declaring some two million Rocky Mountain acres to be "set apart as a public park or pleasuring-ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people." Yellowstone, in 1872, was still a remote, mysterious region largely unmapped, although scarcely uninhabited: a Native American group known as the Sheepeaters (because they hunted the local bighorn) had survived its bitter winters for centuries and were still resident. As late as 1869, eastern magazines refused to print stories about Yellowstone, for fear tht travelers' claims of natural geysers, hot springs and steam vents amounted to little more than wild exaggerations. The hardy explorers of the Washburn expedition, and the subsequent Hayden Survey of 1871, began to catalog some 250 active geysers and an estimated 10,000 hot springs, mud pots (a bubbling mixture of sulfuric acid, clay and water), hot pools and steam vents. At first, the federal government's decision to protect this isolated wilderness had little effect on Yellowstone itself. There was no precedent for managing such an enormous "park." The first superintendent, Nathanial LANGFORD, received no salary, ! had no budget or staff, and visited Yellowstone only twice in his five-year tenure. The pioneering sightseers who did make their way here - wealthy Easterners like conservationist George Bird GRINNELL; socially prominent citizens of MT; Army officers on hunting junkets; nature-loving aristocrats from Europe - often endured severe privations just to reach Yellowstone. Form the east, the easiest approach was via the new transcontinental railroad, passing through Omaha, NE, to the sleepy settlement of Corinne, UT. From there, a stagecoach ran to the gold-rush town of Virginia City, MT. That dusty, bone-shaking 430-mile journey lasted four grueling days and nights. "Ther is nothing to break the dull monotomy," reported a 35-year-old Irish aristocrat, the EARL of DUNRAVEN in 1876. "Clouds of the salt dust .... covered our clothes, and filled our eyes, ears, noses and mouths." (Several years earlier, a stagecoach carrying a 17-year-old English adventurer, Sidford HAMP, had been held up by two ruffians, who passed around a bottle of whiskey after robbing the ! passengers: "I took some (whiskey) just for the joke of it and because I was cold with standing out with my hands up," HAMP wrote his mother back home. Arriving in Virginia City, weary travelers hired guides (frontiersmen) and outifitted their expeditions in the style of African safaris, with cooks, attendants and mounds of equipment. Most entered the park from the north, traveling via Bozeman and Gardiner, MT; a few took a more rugged route along the Madison River. At the time, the only byways within the park itself were bridle paths and animal trails. In 1877 Thomas SHERMAN, son of the famous Civil War general, wrote from the northern edge of the park: "Here vehicles must be left behind, for there is no highway into Wonderland, and the visitor who dares to trespass on Dame Nature's secret fastnesses, must bear the fatigues of rough riding, and trust his baggage to the mercy of a pack animal." Most travelers, crossing over a a nearly impassable stretch of fallen pine trees, headed straight to Upper Geyser Basin. Some overnighted at the only accommodation available, McCARTNEY's Hotel, built in 1871 at Mammoth Hot Springs, near the park's northern entrance. Although the lodgings were promoted in local newspapers as an elegant spa, government surveyor Ferdinand HAYDEN found McCARTNEY's, "very promitive... the fare simple and remarkable for quantity rather than for quality or variety." For his part, the EARL of DUNRAVEN called it the! "last outpost of civilization," a distinction apparently earned in his eyes by the sale of whiskey." But the hardships of the journey were soon forgotten. "Our first sight of the geysers, with columns of steam rising from innumerable ventes and the smell of the Inferno in the air from the numerous sulfur springs, made us simply wild with eagerness of seeing all things at once...," wrote 28-year-old Emma COWAN, a resident of Radersburg in the MT territory, in 1877. They wandered among such wonders as the Castle and Giantes geysers and Minerva Terrance, a massive travertine formation. They poured soap in the mouths of geysers, to hasten eruptions (the detergent added a viscous film that decreased the surface tension of the water). They washed clothes in the hot pools, marveling as soiled shirts were sucked into the earth by down-draft currents, only to be spat up clean an hour later. Little thought was given to environmental damage. Many visitors carved their names on rock walls, littered, chopped off delicate geological formations for souvenirs. Those of a more scie! ntific bent timed geyer eruptions and recorded the temperatures of hot pools. Visitors descended Yellowstone Canyon's rock walls with ropes to gape at the thundering Upper and Lower falls and scaled Mount Washburn. Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce, forced to abandon ancestral homelands, led his people across the park in late August, early September in 1877 in a doomed attempt to reach Canada. In August of that year, Emma COWAN and her husband George and seven others were attacked by a splinter groups of Nez Perce renegades; while all escaped or were released unharmed, George COWAN was left for dead. For four days he dragged himself across brutal terrain until found by an Army patrol. In later years, fully recovered after removal of the bullet, he wore it as a watch fob. As for Chief Joseph, he and his followers surrended to U. S. Army forces within 40 miles of the Canadian border on October 5. -- Excerpts, six-page photo-article by Tony PERROTTET, NYC, in "Smithsonian" magazine/May 2004. --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.725 / Virus Database: 480 - Release Date: 7/19/2004
Valerie I saw your email re BARRY. My ggggrandmother was a Margaret Barry married into RADLEYs. I have gen. papers wherein Barrys are mentioned frequently. Radleys were wealthy landed gentry from CORK. Lorraine EGAN AUSTRALIA Researching RADLEY LEAHY NASH from CORK ----- Original Message ----- From: "Valerie Kuhn" <vkuhn@sbcglobal.net> To: <IRISH-AMERICAN-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wednesday, August 04, 2004 1:37 AM Subject: Re: [Irish-American] Obituary index > Thanx Pat, this is a great site. I am looking for BARRYs and this site had several references to Barrys. > > Valerie > Sacramento (also) > > ConnorsGenealogy <nymets11@pacbell.net> wrote: > This page is an index of 45,936 obituaries of people who were born > and/or died in Ireland, or whose deaths were mentioned in Irish > newspapers. The actual obituaries are not necessarily available online. > They have been indexed from newspapers all over the U.S. and Canada, as > well as Ireland and elsewhere, including 20,398 entries from The Cork > Examiner of the 19th and early 20th century, and 1,226 entries from the > 19th century [New York] Irish-American. > http://tiara.ie/obframe.htm > > -- > Pat Connors, Sacramento CA > http://www.connorsgenealogy.com > All outgoing mail virus free, scanned by Norton > > > > > > > ==== IRISH-AMERICAN Mailing List ==== > The IRISH-AMERICAN Mailing List Website and Lookup Service > http://www.connorsgenealogy.com/IrishAmerican/ > Use this to unsub, change your subscription, links, etc. > > > > ==== IRISH-AMERICAN Mailing List ==== > The IRISH-AMERICAN Mailing List Website and Lookup Service > http://www.connorsgenealogy.com/IrishAmerican/ > Use this to unsub, change your subscription, links, etc. >
Thanx Pat, this is a great site. I am looking for BARRYs and this site had several references to Barrys. Valerie Sacramento (also) ConnorsGenealogy <nymets11@pacbell.net> wrote: This page is an index of 45,936 obituaries of people who were born and/or died in Ireland, or whose deaths were mentioned in Irish newspapers. The actual obituaries are not necessarily available online. They have been indexed from newspapers all over the U.S. and Canada, as well as Ireland and elsewhere, including 20,398 entries from The Cork Examiner of the 19th and early 20th century, and 1,226 entries from the 19th century [New York] Irish-American. http://tiara.ie/obframe.htm -- Pat Connors, Sacramento CA http://www.connorsgenealogy.com All outgoing mail virus free, scanned by Norton ==== IRISH-AMERICAN Mailing List ==== The IRISH-AMERICAN Mailing List Website and Lookup Service http://www.connorsgenealogy.com/IrishAmerican/ Use this to unsub, change your subscription, links, etc.
This page is an index of 45,936 obituaries of people who were born and/or died in Ireland, or whose deaths were mentioned in Irish newspapers. The actual obituaries are not necessarily available online. They have been indexed from newspapers all over the U.S. and Canada, as well as Ireland and elsewhere, including 20,398 entries from The Cork Examiner of the 19th and early 20th century, and 1,226 entries from the 19th century [New York] Irish-American. http://tiara.ie/obframe.htm -- Pat Connors, Sacramento CA http://www.connorsgenealogy.com All outgoing mail virus free, scanned by Norton
I forgot to mention this is for County Cork: Is anyone willing to do lookups on 1901 & 1911 census for Goleen townland, Kilmoe civil parish? Please let me know. Thanks, rosemwc@yahoo.com --------------------------------- Do you Yahoo!? New and Improved Yahoo! Mail - Send 10MB messages!
Judy, Rosemary Clooney was married to Jose Ferrar, the actor. The one son of theirs that I know about is Gabriel Ferrar who is married to Pat Boone's daughter, Debbie. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Judy Dawe" <dawejudy@charter.net> To: <IRISH-AMERICAN-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, July 31, 2004 4:32 PM Subject: Re: [Irish-American] Singer Rosemary CLOONEY - On the Cover of "Time" Magazine 1953 > Jean, you said Rosemary Clooney had several children. Would one of them > have been Andy Clooney, the singer of the Irish song mentioned on this list > a few days ago? Or did I miss parat of the thread? Thanks, Judy Dawe > > > ==== IRISH-AMERICAN Mailing List ==== > The IRISH-AMERICAN Mailing List Website and Lookup Service > http://www.connorsgenealogy.com/IrishAmerican/ > Use this to unsub, change your subscription, links, etc. > > >
----- Original Message ----- From: "Dorothy Yereance" <dorothy8@optonline.net> To: <IRISH-AMERICAN-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, July 29, 2004 11:18 AM Subject: Re: [Irish-American] Newry marriages on website > Hi Raymond, > Do you have marriages for Warrenpoint? I'm searching for the marriage of > John J. McVeigh to Mary Crenney in 1878, Sr. Peter's church, Warrenpoint, Co > Down, NI. > Thank you in advance for any help you may be able to give. > Dorothy > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "The Researcher" <the_researcher@btopenworld.com> > To: <IRISH-AMERICAN-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Wednesday, July 28, 2004 4:38 PM > Subject: [Irish-American] Newry marriages on website > > > > I have started putting the Newry marriages on my website, they should all > be completed by the weekend, the names on this section will not be picked up > by the website search engine till Monday, so please go to the Mourne index > page of the website and click on Newry, the information given is the > husbands name, the brides maiden name, her father and her husbands fathers > names, date of marriage and most of them give their ages, > > Raymond > > http://www.raymondscountydownwebsite.com > > > > > > ==== IRISH-AMERICAN Mailing List ==== > > The IRISH-AMERICAN Mailing List Website and Lookup Service > > http://www.connorsgenealogy.com/IrishAmerican/ > > Use this to unsub, change your subscription, links, etc. > > > > > ==== IRISH-AMERICAN Mailing List ==== > The IRISH-AMERICAN Mailing List Website and Lookup Service > http://www.connorsgenealogy.com/IrishAmerican/ > Use this to unsub, change your subscription, links, etc. > None at present Dorothy, mebbe in a couple of weeks time, Raymond