Has anyone had any luck getting records or help from Transfiguration Catholic Church on Mott Street in NYC? Any advice would be appreciated. Liz
Could you possibly look up Bridget SHARKEY emigrated about 1876 from Dromahaire, Leitrim Thomas CARROLL emigrated about 1850 from Westmeath James MCCULLOUGH emigrated about 1849 Any information would be greatly appreciated. Thank you Susan in CT
----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Tuesday, March 22, 2005 8:36 PM Subject: Re: [IRISH-NYC] Emigrant Savings Bank > Hi Annie, > I did not find any of the of the people you were looking for. I found the > same names but none were from county Fermanagh and the dates did not > match. > Please be aware that the books only go up to 1883. So Mary Ann Clark and > Patrick > Murphy would not have been found based on the dates you gave for their > arrival. > Sorry I could have been of more help. > Diane K > > > ==== IRISH-NEW-YORK-CITY Mailing List ==== > Please visit the list websites: > http://www.irishinnyc.freeservers.com > http://www.inyc.freeservers.com > They are works in progress. Thank you for your patience! > > ============================== > Search the US Census Collection. Over 140 million records added in the > last 12 months. Largest online collection in the world. Learn more: > http://www.ancestry.com/s13965/rd.ashx > >
Hi I have asked this question and I have been told that they are not online but you can order the microfilm from the FHC. I have just ordered two, that covers the addresses in New York that I am interested in. http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/fhlcatalog/supermainframeset.asp?display=titlefilmnotes&columns=*%2C0%2C0&titleno=125056&disp=New+York+County%2C+New+York%2C+census+re++ The Steven Morse site allows you to search by address to find the film # http://stevemorse.org/ Best wishes Yvonne Birmingham, England On Wed, 23 Mar 2005 10:34:45 -0500, Donna Luzzi <[email protected]> wrote: > Dear Folks, > Would anyone know if NY or NJ had a 1905 or 1915 census?? and is it online?? > > thanks for any help > best regards and this very wet day here in Va. Bch., Va. > donna > > ==== IRISH-NEW-YORK-CITY Mailing List ==== > Have you added your research interests to the Irish-in-New-York-City surname database yet? > http://www.irishinnyc.freeservers.com/photo6.html > > ============================== > Search Family and Local Histories for stories about your family and the > areas they lived. Over 85 million names added in the last 12 months. > Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13966/rd.ashx > > -- web page: http://www.thomassheridan.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/
Hi, Based on the dates you gave me your relatives would not be in the online Emigrant Savings Bank records. These records only go up to 1883. I am not sure about where the street is located...I live thousands of miles away. Perhaps someone else on line can help with this request. I do know there was website where you could locate Streets in New York. Good Luck
Does anyone know of any way to figure out which church was probably the home parish for someone, based on address? There are _so_ many RC churches in NYC! Specifically, I'm interested in: 339 W. 39 St., New York (c. 1916) 2149 Belmonte Ave., Bronx, New York (from 1918 draft registration) 808 E. 180 Street, Bronx, New York (1920 census) Thanks! Lorena /|\ Searching for: F l a n a g a n (NY state), F l o r i o, C o c c i a, M a r t i n g a n o; F o l e y, F e r g u s o n, M o r g a n <http://users.ev1.net/~ljwolfe/fam-tree/>
Diane, Thank you for the lookup for Kerwin/Murphy. Pat
John, Apparently records can be found here: St. Paul's Roman Catholic Church Founded 1836, NL = Not Listed Records at St Peter, Paul, and Our Lady of Pilar 234 Cogress Street Brooklyn, NY 11201 Good luck in your research, Ro John McGill <[email protected]> wrote: Does anyone know the address for St Paul's Church (RC) in Brooklyn? My Grandmother was baptized there in 1907. If it still exists? Thanks John Va Beach __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com ==== IRISH-NEW-YORK-CITY Mailing List ==== List Administrators: Tracy Cassidy [email protected] Jim McCarthy [email protected] ============================== Census images 1901, 1891, 1881 and 1871, plus so much more. Ancestry.com's United Kingdom & Ireland Collection. Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13968/rd.ashx
Dear Folks, Would anyone know if NY or NJ had a 1905 or 1915 census?? and is it online?? thanks for any help best regards and this very wet day here in Va. Bch., Va. donna
At 09:13 PM 3/22/05, [email protected] wrote: >Type in Otherdays.com as the address. You have to include the www (i.e. www.otherdays.com), or you get a page that says "otherdays.com is coming soon" :-). Lorena /|\ Searching for: F l a n a g a n (NY state), F l o r i o, C o c c i a, M a r t i n g a n o; F o l e y, F e r g u s o n, M o r g a n <http://users.ev1.net/~ljwolfe/fam-tree/>
Thank you Diane. ---- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Tuesday, March 22, 2005 3:54 PM Subject: Re: [IRISH-NYC] Emigrant Savings Bank Records > Hi Yvonne, > I found no information on Winfield S. Brown or John S. Donnelly. I am not > sure of the dates you gave me. The bank record at this time only go up to 1883. > So nothing from the 1900s is listed. > Sorry I could not have been of more help > Diane K > > > ==== IRISH-NEW-YORK-CITY Mailing List ==== > Please visit the list websites: > http://www.irishinnyc.freeservers.com > http://www.inyc.freeservers.com > They are works in progress. Thank you for your patience! > > ============================== > Search Family and Local Histories for stories about your family and the > areas they lived. Over 85 million names added in the last 12 months. > Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13966/rd.ashx > >
Please if you have the time to spare, could you look up the following 2 names Elizabeth(eliza) Keleher (22 yrs) Thomas Keleher(23yrs They are brother and sister, my Uncle and Aunt they sailed on the SS Umbria from Queenstown May 1st 1904 arrived New York May 8th 1904 ( Ellis Island manifest ) Their destination address was 232 East 76th St NY They were born in Doocastle Mayo(nearest sizeable town was Tubbercurry (Sligo) Which area of new NY is the above address in? Thank you for your kind help Partick Keleher
Hi donna, Please let me know i anyone responds to this question? It would be very helpful to me as well. Thanks, Erin Donna Luzzi <[email protected]> wrote: Dear Folks, Would anyone know if NY or NJ had a 1905 or 1915 census?? and is it online?? thanks for any help best regards and this very wet day here in Va. Bch., Va. donna ==== IRISH-NEW-YORK-CITY Mailing List ==== Have you added your research interests to the Irish-in-New-York-City surname database yet? http://www.irishinnyc.freeservers.com/photo6.html ============================== Search Family and Local Histories for stories about your family and the areas they lived. Over 85 million names added in the last 12 months. Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13966/rd.ashx --------------------------------- Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Small Business - Try our new resources site!
Does anyone know the address for St Paul's Church (RC) in Brooklyn? My Grandmother was baptized there in 1907. If it still exists? Thanks John Va Beach __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com
Louise, Type in Otherdays.com as the address. The Home sheet is attractive and one can search using an example. To use your own search criteria you have to join. I believe they have 72 hour, monthly, quarterly. For some reason, I could not obtain any maps, copies of documents( i.e. Griffith's), images or books. I was able to find frequency of names in counties and Griffith's. Origins.net is better. Cathy Good Luck. Cathy
First I'd like to thank everyone for their kindness in providing these lookups. You guys deserve a big round of applause! Several people have emailed me off-list to share their joy in bringing down that brickwall. I hope it would be alright if I intruded for a lookup? I seriously doubt they're in there. Bridget and John Larkin years: 1880-1883 ages: early to mid 20s They are brother and sister and are from Roscommon. Thank you!!! Take care, Tracy IRISH-NEW-YORK-CITY list admin http://www.irishinnyc.freeservers.com http://www.inyc.freeservers.com
Hi Ro, During the late 1700s and into the 1800s, nativist groups would make these giant effigies of St. Patrick or an Irishman, which were called 'paddies'. On St. Patrick's Day, these dummies were usually either marched through an Irish neighborhood, propped up outside a local bar or taken down to the parade where the nativists would use them to taunt the marchers. The dummies could range from just plain insulting in appearance to downright obscene. Usually they showed St. Patrick or the Irishman dressed in rags, with potatoes around his neck and a bottle of whiskey in his pocket. Take care, Tracy IRISH-NEW-YORK-CITY list admin http://www.irishinnyc.freeservers.com http://www.inyc.freeservers.com
Message forwarded from [email protected] Would greatly appreciate a lookup for John Joseph Carroll, arrived NYC about 1847, died 1880, spouses Mary died 1869, 2nd spouse Mary Ann He was born in either Dublin Ireland or Wales Thank you
A man working on a wagon pulled by a team of horses was called a "teamster," which is how the Teamsters Union got its name. A man who went through the city streets selling his goods (such as a teamster selling fruits, vegetables, etc) was called a "hawker." Dorothy
Tracy, Thanks for respondng...I truly learn something new on this list every day...that is why it is my favorite. Ro [email protected] wrote: Hi Ro, During the late 1700s and into the 1800s, nativist groups would make these giant effigies of St. Patrick or an Irishman, which were called 'paddies'. On St. Patrick's Day, these dummies were usually either marched through an Irish neighborhood, propped up outside a local bar or taken down to the parade where the nativists would use them to taunt the marchers. The dummies could range from just plain insulting in appearance to downright obscene. Usually they showed St. Patrick or the Irishman dressed in rags, with potatoes around his neck and a bottle of whiskey in his pocket. Take care, Tracy IRISH-NEW-YORK-CITY list admin http://www.irishinnyc.freeservers.com http://www.inyc.freeservers.com ==== IRISH-NEW-YORK-CITY Mailing List ==== Have you added your research interests to the Irish-in-New-York-City surname database yet? http://www.irishinnyc.freeservers.com/photo6.html ============================== New! Family Tree Maker 2005. Build your tree and search for your ancestors at the same time. Share your tree with family and friends. Learn more: http://landing.ancestry.com/familytreemaker/2005/tour.aspx?sourceid=14599&targetid=5429