Yes, Sorry about that. It is internment.net. There is a search box in the top left panel where you can enter a surname or full name if you get to many hits, it's free. Good luck with your searhing. Maggie the adub On 4 Aug 2011, at 17:24, "Killeen, Meaghan" <[email protected]> wrote: I have tried accessing the page, and I think it actually might be www.interment.net. ________________________________________ From: [email protected] [[email protected]] on behalf of [email protected] [[email protected]] Sent: Thursday, August 04, 2011 12:22 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 146 I think Maggie meant Interment. com. Common mistake made by many professional authors too. . . Internment.org is a good source for burials. . ------------------------------ ====================================== Remember to stay on Topic. If you have a problem with anything please contact the list admin [email protected] ------------------------------- 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 ====================================== Remember to stay on Topic. If you have a problem with anything please contact the list admin [email protected] ------------------------------- 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
I have tried accessing the page, and I think it actually might be www.interment.net. ________________________________________ From: [email protected] [[email protected]] on behalf of [email protected] [[email protected]] Sent: Thursday, August 04, 2011 12:22 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 146 I think Maggie meant Interment. com. Common mistake made by many professional authors too. . . Internment.org is a good source for burials. . ------------------------------ ====================================== Remember to stay on Topic. If you have a problem with anything please contact the list admin [email protected] ------------------------------- 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
I am searching for any later generations of the following. Patrick O'KEEFFE who married Bridget CULLINAN in mid 1800's Their children were Thomas b1887 Minnie b1888 John b 1889 Joseph b 1891 Frank b 1894 Michael b 1898 In the 1901 census it shows Bridget's parents John & Mary CULLINAN living with them. Mary CULLINAN's maiden name was CROWE Thanks for ANY help/information Helen McNamara New Zealand
I think Maggie meant Interment. com. Common mistake made by many professional authors too. . . Internment.org is a good source for burials. . ------------------------------
It seems the person who paid for the memorial must have everything registered in his or her name. They should be able to give you that info, after all, it can only be for geneological purposes now. Have you searched for a will? + death/obit listings in local/National papers? Maybe that would throw some light on the storey. Maggie the Dub
Hi, Im inclined to think there are two families, Casey is such a common name in Ire. There are two James Caseys on glasnevintrust.ie deaths in 1868 but this is a Dublin graveyard. I only mention it to show how common this name is. Internment.org is a good source for burials. Maggie the Dub Yes Casey is so common that I've begun approaching it from the sides. Patrick CASEY b. abt 6 May 1847 in Ireland married first to Mary O'GRADY or Grady b. 1844 possibly in Kilshanny . Together they had 7 children 1st 2 born in Ireland and the rest born in Holliston. Several of the folks that work at St Mary's helped me years ago with locating some marriages of the children and christenings but they were unable to answer why the memorial to James Casey stood there without a death in the records they were able to tell me that the person who paid for it didn't have the surname Casey. Another frustrating thing is that I can find no record in the Censuses of James widow and she isn't supposed to have died until March 1913 in Holliston.
I found this on Ancestry.com. I know it's a long shot, being in NY, but there was a lot of travel between New England states at that time for work and other reasons, and the dates are pretty close. Name: Patrick Casey Age: 58 Gender: Male Birth Year: abt 1812 Place of Birth: Ireland Month of Death: Feb Cause of Death: Pneumonia Place of Death: New York, New York, New York Census Year: 1870 Family Number: 19 ----- Original Message ----- James Casey is said to have died on Dec 1868 in Holliston MA have paid the state to search several times and no record exists of his death.
In a message dated 8/3/2011 4:22:33 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, [email protected] writes: James Casey is said to have died on Dec 1868 in Holliston MA have paid the state to search several times and no record exists of his death. I find that hard to believe that Holliston doesn't have a death record, specially at that late date. Have you contacted the town of Holliston, or only the State? I would call them on the phone at Town Hall and ask to speak with the Town Clerk. They may be able to verify that they have it and maybe even give some details over the phone. If so, you can order a full unabridged certificate by mail and they probably will charge $5 like most other Mass. towns. If they don't have it, ask why that might be. It could be you have the wrong place of death. Try surrounding towns. Len
Hi, Im inclined to think there are two families, Casey is such a common name in Ire. There are two James Caseys on glasnevintrust.ie deaths in 1868 but this is a Dublin graveyard. I only mention it to show how common this name is. Internment.org is a good source for burials. Maggie the Dub
I have a mystery It has stumped me for too many years now, My ancestors even those not blood related were masters at hiding any trails. This one is about my nana's second husbands family his grandfathers name was James Casey b. 1813 parish of Kilfenora married to Margaret Lacy b. 1828 parish of Kilfenora d 14 March 1913. Supposedly James Caseys father was Anthony Casey and mother was Honora Dooney or Droney. Margaret Laceys /parents were supposed to have been Patrick Lacey and Ellen Droney James Casey is said to have died on Dec 1868 in Holliston MA have paid the state to search several times and no record exists of his death. After his son Patricks b. 1847 first wife died Patrick remarried a much younger woman who was born in Ireland in 1876. They had one child my nanas second husband my step grandfather James Casey b. in 1915 his father was 68yrs old and his mother was 39 yrs old. What I'm stuck with is that I'm unable to travel and to unravel whether there were two Casey families or only one. There is a monument in St Mary's graveyard Holliston,MA to the original James Casey b. 1813 but it looks like he may never have even been in MA. please H.E.L.P. I haven't even started on my own Irish Bloodlines
Jeannie, In future, if you have data, you should outline as much as you have so we don't need to look it up again. It's hard to work with just a surname. But no matter. In this case it was easy to find 1911 census again. And it's quite straight forward. I love it when they are living with earlier generations. In 1911, you have Thady Marrinan b1875 and wife Bridget Scully b1875 with children Michael b1904, Mary b1905, Patrick b1906, Francis b1907, John b1908 and Anne b1910. The head of the household is Bridget's widowed mother, also Bridget b1867 and her blind sister Mary Moroney b1845. As Mary Moroney has never married we know her sister Bridget Moroney married a man named Scully. If we go back to 1901 census, Bridget Scully was widowed before 1901. I'd look on the new Family Search site for a Scully / Moroney marriage in Civil Registrations post 1864, and the find her husband's death We also know from 1911 that she only had one child. Also in 1901 census, we get the parents and siblings of Thady Marrinan. Parents are Michael b1826 and Mary b1848. Children are Bridget b1868, William b1871, Thady b1875, Mary b1877 and John b1882. Then it's a case of going back to 1911 and find the other family members, and using the Civil Registrations on the new Family Search to fill in precise BDM details. It couldn't be easier. Peter
Some info on the Marrinan clan gathering on the Clare Roots Society website at http://www.clareroots.org/index.php/clare-gene-news >From Miltown Malbay Genealogy & Faith By Done Garrihy. Ennistymon Road, Miltown Malbay. Laurence Malony from Freigh and Siobhan Marrinnan from Ballyvaskin were parents of Francis Malony. Francis Maloney b.1859, Stone Mason, was married to Margaret Murray. They had a daughter, Mary and a son Michael b. 1902. Michael Maloney married Ellen Cleary, Illane, New York to where they both emigrated in the late 1920. Main Street Miltown Malbay. John Sullivan b. 1848 married Winifred Marrinan . They had five daughters: Mary, Monica, Florence, Honoria & Alice. They had three sons. Michael, Joe & John b.1893. William Marrinan b.1836 married Bridget. They had two daughters: Mary & Maggie. Pat Marrinan b. 1865 married Ann Clancy Islandbawn. They had three sons: John b. 1895, Joseph, Jimmy and a daUGHTER mARY. B. 1900. jIMMY mARRINAN MARRIED kATHLEEN mORONEY OF kNOCKLISCRANE. ETC. ETC. ETC. Joseph Marrinan Main St., Miltown Malbay currently has his own Plumbing & Heating Contrators Firm. James Marrinan also of main street is a Publican. Please add further to your information with your next posting. Regards, Larry. ----- Original Message ----- From: "jeannie" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Tuesday, August 02, 2011 1:59 PM Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 142 i am not sure how to ask or reply sorry i am new at this....my grandmothers surname was marrinan and i am trying to find her family she came over with her two brothers in 1926 they lived in miltownmalbay on ennistymon road..i have the census from 1911.. this is the first time i have seen mention of marrinan anywhere..if anyone can be of help i have very little infomation on my family and someday hope to be able to afford a trip to eire and find them. if anyone can help or tell me what i am suppose to do i would be indebted thank you jeannie ________________________________ From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Sent: Monday, August 1, 2011 9:15 PM Subject: IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 142 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ DELETE all extra text in the Digest Today's Topics: 1. Re: Photos of Ancestors Wanted! (Jackie Hoare) 2. Re: IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 141 ([email protected]) 3. Re: IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 141 (Christina Hunt) 4. Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee (John M Dooley) 5. Re: Photos of Ancestors Wanted! (Alanna L Scanlon) 6. Photos for Ireland today (Christina Hunt) 7. Re: Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee ([email protected]) 8. Re: Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee (Chris Goopy) 9. New Genealogy Records Online ? July 2011 (Chris Goopy) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Mon, 01 Aug 2011 19:13:20 +1000 From: Jackie Hoare <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] Photos of Ancestors Wanted! To: <[email protected]> Message-ID: <CA5CAB50.36662%[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="ISO-8859-1" I have an equally sad story on family photos.... When my mum was young she remembered seeing photos of who would have been my great great grandmother hanging on a wall at a great aunt's. When this aunt died the photos were sent up to another Great Aunt in Cairns. My mum was talking to her aunt and mentioned these photos she remembered and asked if she knew what happened to them. Mum's aunt told her that she had no interest in the photos and didn't think anyone else would so she dug a big hole on her cane farm and buried them! ARGH! On 1/08/11 3:52 AM, "Alanna L Scanlon" <[email protected]> wrote: > I may be speaking for others other than myself when I describe my > situation. > ? > First is that there are great gaps between each of my generations, huge is > another description. > ? > Second is that my people were very poor.? Third is that they lived way out > in > the county as it was when they were alive.? Fourth is that they did not > believe in such nonsense or expense. > ? > I found a letter from Ireland telling that my father had written to his > brother asking about the picture on the wall of a "John."? I think that my > father had said that this "John" was a handsome man.? From what this > letter > said was that he did not know about this picture.? So what happened to it > and > why was a picture taken of him with the cost, etc. > ? > This may be the John where the words?"beloved brother"?written on his > tombstone by his brother and sister in 1899.? Was the picture given away > or > was it thrown away as not important, as has happened in my family.? > Valuable > information or items. > ? > Just had to respond to what to me is a sad subject -- lack of information > in > my family. > > Alanna > > --- On Sun, 7/31/11, Christina Hunt <[email protected]> wrote: > ? > I put out a call on a few Irish lists for Ancestor photos to put in the > IGP Archives this month. We got a few. If you have one or more to share > (assuming you know the county) you can use our Photo uploader to add > them. We are about preserving our ancestors faces as well as their names. > http://www.genrecords.org/irfiles/photos.html > > Example: > http://www.igp-web.com/IGPArchives/ire/longford/photos.htm > > All the best...Christina > ? > ====================================== > Remember to stay on Topic. > If you have a problem with anything please contact the list admin > [email protected] > ------------------------------- > 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 > ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2011 08:28:05 -0500 (GMT-05:00) From: [email protected] Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 141 To: [email protected], [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]link.net> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 I have a number of photos from ancestors from County Clare and Conty Sligo. What is the best way for me to upload them? JIM ________________________________ > >Message: 2 >Date: Sun, 31 Jul 2011 13:32:21 -0400 >From: Christina Hunt <[email protected]> >Subject: [IRL-CLARE] Photos of Ancestors Wanted! >To: [email protected], irl-clare <[email protected]>, > LIMERICK <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" > <[email protected]> >Message-ID: <[email protected]> >Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed > >I put out a call on a few Irish lists for Ancestor photos to put in the >IGP Archives this month. We got a few. If you have one or more to share >(assuming you know the county) you can use our Photo uploader to add >them. We are about preserving our ancestors faces as well as their names. >http://www.genrecords.org/irfiles/photos.html > >Example: >http://www.igp-web.com/IGPArchives/ire/longford/photos.htm > >All the best...Christina > > Mizzi in sunny and pleasant wintery weather in North >Queensland Australia. > ------------------------------ Message: 3 Date: Mon, 01 Aug 2011 09:32:39 -0400 From: Christina Hunt <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 141 To: [email protected], [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed The easiest thing for us is if you use our uploader. We can get the html text from that and it goes quickly from there. http://www.genrecords.org/irfiles/photos.html Thanks! Christina [email protected] wrote: > I have a number of photos from ancestors from County Clare and Conty > Sligo. What is the best way for me to upload them? > > JIM > ------------------------------ Message: 4 Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2011 10:08:09 -0500 From: "John M Dooley" <[email protected]> Subject: [IRL-CLARE] Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee To: <[email protected]> Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee???? ------------------------------ Message: 5 Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2011 10:45:51 -0700 (PDT) From: Alanna L Scanlon <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] Photos of Ancestors Wanted! To: [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 I even have more.? A nasty aunt said that whatever I did not know would not hurt me. ? She is the one who wrote to her sister and whose letter was shown to my mother.? This sister really liked my mother.? She wrote that my name was "rather heathensh."? My mother was born in Missouri and came from highly educated and highly intelligent people.? This creep said?my mother was Hawaiian meaning she was trash and black. ? >From what I understand, she thought she had some kind of claim on my >father, as he Should have made sure she came to the States.? My father had >no money!!!! ? My own father would not talk about his family except to his brother as per reply letters from his brother he did not destroy.? He would not keep family papers or letters. ? All so very sad!!!!!!? Yes, these are sad things to say about one's own family, but they are the ones who caused it.? My father sent them moeny that should have been used by his legal family.? My mother who was Always cold sent her good heavy coat to them.? She sent them other things.? So, I guess we were resented for doing so.? The nice sister told my mother and wrote in a letter I still have not to send them anything as they have more than we do.? More sadness. ? Alanna --- On Mon, 8/1/11, Jackie Hoare <[email protected]> wrote: ? I have an equally sad story on family photos.... When my mum was young she remembered seeing photos of who would have been my great great grandmother hanging on a wall at a great aunt's.? When this aunt died the photos were sent up to another Great Aunt in Cairns.? My mum was talking to her aunt and mentioned these photos she remembered and asked if she knew what happened to them.? Mum's aunt told her that she had no interest in the photos and didn't think anyone else would so she dug a big hole on her cane farm and buried them!? ARGH! ------------------------------ Message: 6 Date: Mon, 01 Aug 2011 13:58:43 -0400 From: Christina Hunt <[email protected]> Subject: [IRL-CLARE] Photos for Ireland today To: irl-clare <[email protected]> Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed I have received these photos in the last 24 hours. They are from all over Ireland but I thought it was cool to see them. http://goo.gl/PzC6R Some of these are still in process of being linked to the index. Also, let's stay on topic please. Thanks, Christina List admin aka Webmaster IGP Archives ------------------------------ Message: 7 Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2011 16:25:23 -0400 (EDT) From: [email protected] Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee To: [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" MARRINANS - A very unusual surname. I'm not sure it's Irish BUT here goes -: "Houses of Clare", by Hugh W.L. Weir, (C) 1986, Ballinakella Press, Whitegate, Co. Clare , page 232: ROCKVIEW HOUSE, CARREN - View of Burren Rocks (Eng.) -?; Associated families, etc. - Macnamara, Roche, Marrinan. Townland - Cahergrillaun (Carran) Location - N of the Kilcorney Road, 3 km W of Carran Present Condition - House - Standing, uninhabited; - Demesne - A quantity of mature trees, including beech. A few walls standing. Features - Originally taller and thatched, Rockview is now a small, one story, four bay, gable-ended nineteenth century lodge, with chimney stacks in each gable, facing south with magnificent views down a fertile valley. There are three large four-pane sash windows in front, and a lower unlit front door. There is a small garden, and the house is approached from the road by a short straight drive. History - Standing in 1841, Rockview House and its ninety acre farm was leased to Captain Francis Macnamara in 1855. The estate comprised the whole of Cahergrillaun townland. The house was reconstructed by the Marrinan family in around 1950. \\ It seems your family name is rare and was in possession of this house in 1950. Thus there must be people in the area, possibly relatives, who would either know or remember your relatives. From the entry in "Houses of Clare" it's not certain that there was a relationship to the earlier occupants, but quite possibly there was. Burren Rocks (unknown to me - can't find on map) but probably in Burren area) is not near Kilkee, but in Co. Clare nothing is VERY far away ! Check both areas-: Tithe Applotment Books, Griffith's Evaliuation, etc, for MARRINAN; also Letter to Editor of local newspapers, briefly giving all known details, might well bring replies - 'Clare Champion'. Do Internet search. Hope this helps. Len Keane (O'Cathain) In a message dated 8/1/2011 11:08:51 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, [email protected] writes: Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee???? ====================================== Remember to stay on Topic. If you have a problem with anything please contact the list admin [email protected] ------------------------------- 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 ------------------------------ Message: 8 Date: Tue, 2 Aug 2011 09:00:12 +1000 From: Chris Goopy <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee To: [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii I've sent John Dooley a notice re a Marrinan clan gathering which is to happen at the end of August in Ennystymon. This may be of interest to others. Larry Brennan is to give a talk re Marrinans as well... From what I understand, there are a number of references to Marrinan on both the Rootswen and Ancestry boards, which you should be able to find by Googling. Hope this helps a bit. On 02/08/2011, at 6:25 AM, [email protected] wrote: > MARRINANS - A very unusual surname. I'm not sure it's Irish BUT here goes > -: Chris [email protected] http://www.flickr.com/photos/crissouli/ ------------------------------ Message: 9 Date: Tue, 2 Aug 2011 11:14:47 +1000 From: Chris Goopy <[email protected]> Subject: [IRL-CLARE] New Genealogy Records Online ? July 2011 To: Irish <[email protected]>, Clare <[email protected]>, Clare Projects <[email protected]>, [email protected], [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252 With recent posts re new records coming online, I thought this would be of interest to many ... this comes from Gould Genealogy, Australia... I have no further information. > Date: 26 July 2011 1:40:57 PM AEST > Subject: New Genealogy Records Online ? July 2011 > Source: Genealogy & History News > Author: Alona Tester > > We?re not quite at the end of the month, yet July has been a has been a > BIG, BIG month for new genealogy records online, particularly with the big > players in the field. Military records, Wills, Business records, Convicts, > Civil Registrations, Parish Registers, Directories, and Cemetery records ? > it?s all here. > > So here?s a rundown of the new records that have just been added ? > > Ancestry.co.uk > - London Wills and Probate 1525-1858 > The beginning of July saw the release of Ancestry UKs London Wills and > Probate collection. As we all know wills are truly personal documents, > often written by your ancestor?s own hand, and they can provide a real > insight into how they lived, telling you how much money they had, what > sort of possessions they owned and even which of their relatives they > preferred. > > Before 1858, the place where a will was proved depended not on where > someone lived, but on where they owned property. As you can imagine, > plenty of people lived outside London but had second houses, business > premises or simply land in the city. You may well find these people?s > probate records in this new collection. [PHOTO] > http://search.ancestry.co.uk/search/db.aspx?dbid=1704 > > - British Postal Service Appointment Books, 1737-1969 > An unusual source of information, but still very important, are the > British Post Office appointment books, which contains about 1.5 million > names on 39,864 images, in the indexes to the Postmaster General?s minute > books. They show Name, Date of appointment, and Location, which includes > when they started a new position within the Post Office. Some records > contain the job the worker was appointed to. The books were kept from 1831 > until 1969, when they stopped being kept because of legislation and human > resource procedures. > http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=1933 > > Ancestry.com.au > - Australian Immigration Collection 1788-1923 > Earlier this month Ancestry.com.au announced the launch their new > Australian Immigration Collection 1788-1923, which claims to be the > largest online collection of historic Australian immigration records in > existence. This collection documents the names and journeys of more than > 14.5 million people who travelled to Australia between 1788 and 1923 in > search of a new life. > http://www.ancestry.com.au/immigration > > - New South Wales, Australia, Wives and Children of Irish Convicts, > 1825-1840 > This index contains lists of wives and children of convicts transported to > New South Wales who, at their husband?s or father?s request, were brought > to New South Wales at the government?s expense to join their spouse or > parent. The index also includes female convicts whose children were > transported with them. This index was compiled from musters and other New > South Wales records. This index gives you the name of convict, spouse or > child; the ship name; the departure year of the ship; and any remarks > (which can these can include place information or even birth dates). The > index includes names of some individuals who refused the request to be > transported to New South Wales. > http://search.ancestry.co.uk/search/db.aspx?dbid=2377 > > Deceased Online > The burial and cremation records for Edinburgh, Scotland that are now > online at Deceased Online comprises over 1 million records, and this on > top of nearly a million burial records from the UK?s largest cemetery > added in February this year. Deceased Online is constantly growing, and > now has records for nearly 450 cemeteries and crematoria around the UK, > and by early August they expect to add another 1.25 million burial and > cremation records from the north of Scotland to South Devon. > www.deceasedonline.com > > FamilySearch > The world?s largest FREE genealogy website, FamilySearch grows at an > incredible rate. Here?s details of the new records that have been added > online in July: > - Australia, Miscellaneous Genealogical Records 1776-1980 (4275 images) > - Austria, Upper Austria Seignorial Records 1537-1888 (116,182 images) > - Belgium Civil Registration 1795-1920 (328,045 records, 6,408,769 images) > - Czech Republic Church Books 1552-1935 (39,869 records, 302,046 images) > - England and Wales Census 1901 (34,138,362 records) > - England, Cheshire Bishop?s Transcripts 1538-1900 (2,180,763 records > - England, Cheshire Parish Registers 1538-2000 (4,140,534 records) > - England, Lancashire, Cheshire, Yorkshire Parish Registers 1603-1910 > (947,377 records, 332,814 images) > - France, Coutances Catholic Diocese 1802-1907 (269,828 records, 553,957 > images) > - Germany, Pomerania Church Records 1544-1945 (140,256 images) > - Germany, Westfalen, Minden Citizen Lists 1574-1902 (14,707 records, 902 > images) > - Italy, Civil Registration 1806-1940 (102,724 records, 3,844,256 images) > - Italy, Waldensian Evangelical Church Records (63,714 images) > - Poland, Roman Catholic Church Books 1600-1950 (1,002,155 records, > 2,249,867 images) > - South Africa, Methodist Parish Registers 1822-1996 (18,726 images) > - Sweden, S?dermanland Church Records, 1640-1860 (90,102 records) > - Wales, Probate Abstracts 1773-1780 (69,525 images) > > Please note I am not meaning to offend any of my American friends by not > including the details of the new collections from the Canada, the US and > South American regions. There have been some enormous collections added > online for the US and Mexico in particular in this past month. These have > been well covered by fellow geneabloggers. But you can always find the > full list of collections for these areas here. > > Findmypast.co.uk > - Business Index Collection 1892-1987 > The Business Index Collection, published by www.findmypast.co.uk and in > association with the Society of Genealogists, is available online for the > first time, over 100 years after the indexes were first published in > print. The Business Indexes are directories of how Britain?s business > landscape shaped up between the early 1890s and 1927. They contain images > and details of Britain?s shopkeepers, businessmen and women, as well as > captains of industry. The records also feature a short biography, > detailing the entrant?s prominence in local society, their memberships of > corporations and/or clubs, the hobbies or leisure activities they enjoyed, > as well as charities and other institutions that they may have been > involved in. This information provides a unique insight into the > individual?s character, which is extremely difficult to find elsewhere in > such a comprehensive form. > http://www.findmypast.co.uk/search/business-index/ > > - 19th and 20th Century Military Records > FMP UK have just release four new military sets of records. These contains > over half a million records covering 100 years of the militia ? the > forerunner of The British Territorial Army ? have just been published > online. Records provide unique descriptions of what your ancestors > actually looked like. These are everyday workers including butchers and > bakers fighting for their country. The records provide useful detail > including attestation and leaving dates, achievements made in service and > soldiers? physical appearance. And, certainly in the case of the 1861 > records, the records can fill in gaps left by the census. The releases are > the: > 1861 Worldwide Army Index > Royal Fusiliers Collection 1863-1905 > Paddington Rifles 1860-1912 > Surrey Recruitment Registers 1908-1933 > > - More Parish Records > FMP UK added another 290,000 new parish records going back to the 1700s. > These records comprise: > Suffolk 1753-1837 (50,608 marriages) > Suffolk 1812-1905 (75,258 baptisms) > Warwickshire, Rugby 1564-1837 (1,436 marriages) > Warwickshire, Handsworth Cemetery 1909?1991 (62,252 burials) > Yorkshire, Sheffield 1558-1934 (99,611 baptisms) > http://www.findmypast.co.uk/parish-records-collection-search-start.action?redef=0&event=B > > Findmypast.com.au > All is quiet from FMP Australia at this stage, with no new collections > added since June. > > Findmypast.ie > FMP Ireland continues to grow bit-by-bit with a few more additions to > their collection over the last past month. > > - Burke?s Landed Gentry of Ireland 1899 > This was the first specifically Irish edition of Burke?s Landed Gentry, > and is considerably more detailed on Irish families than what had appeared > in previous years in the general British series. It contains about 80,000 > records, which contain detailed genealogies of all the ?landed gentry? in > Ireland. > > http://www.findmypast.ie/content/burkes_landed_gentry_launch > > - Ulster Parish Registers: Derry Cathedral 1642-1703 > 10,000 new BMD records have been released online to help you piece > together your Irish family history. The Register of Derry Cathedral > includes records of the baptisms, marriages and burials for the parish of > Templemore, which included Derry City, from 1642 to 1703. > http://www.findmypast.ie/content/register_of_derry_cathedral > > - Dublin Post Office Directories > Two more excellent sources of information for those researching their > Irish family history have just gone live, The Post Office Annual Directory > and Calendar for 1843 and 1858. The directories are extremely rare and > valuable sources of information for anyone researching their Dublin > ancestors. Containing 650 and 700 pages respectively, the directories list > all the government, military, religious, educational, medical, legal and > police establishments in the city and county. > http://www.findmypast.ie/content/post_office_annual_directory_and_calendar > > HAPPY SEARCHING! > > Read more? > Chris [email protected] http://www.flickr.com/photos/crissouli/ ------------------------------ To contact the IRL-CLARE list administrator, send an email to [email protected] To post a message to the IRL-CLARE mailing list, send an email to [email protected] __________________________________________________________ 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 email with no additional text. End of IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 142 ***************************************** ====================================== Remember to stay on Topic. If you have a problem with anything please contact the list admin [email protected] ------------------------------- 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
Some info on the Marrinan clan gathering on the Clare Roots Society website at http://www.clareroots.org/index.php/clare-gene-news >From Miltown Malbay Genealogy & Faith By Done Garrihy. Ennistymon Road, Miltown Malbay. Laurence Malony from Freigh and Siobhan Marrinnan from Ballyvaskin were parents of Francis Malony. Francis Maloney b.1859, Stone Mason, was married to Margaret Murray. They had a daughter, Mary and a son Michael b. 1902. Michael Maloney married Ellen Cleary, Illane, New York to where they both emigrated in the late 1920. Main Street Miltown Malbay. John Sullivan b. 1848 married Winifred Marrinan . They had five daughters: Mary, Monica, Florence, Honoria & Alice. They had three sons. Michael, Joe & John b.1893. William Marrinan b.1836 married Bridget. They had two daughters: Mary & Maggie. Pat Marrinan b. 1865 married Ann Clancy Islandbawn. They had three sons: John b. 1895, Joseph, Jimmy and a daUGHTER mARY. B. 1900. jIMMY mARRINAN MARRIED kATHLEEN mORONEY OF kNOCKLISCRANE. ETC. ETC. ETC. Joseph Marrinan Main St., Miltown Malbay currently has his own Plumbing & Heating Contrators Firm. James Marrinan also of main street is a Publican. Please add further to your information with your next posting. Regards, Larry. ----- Original Message ----- From: "jeannie" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Tuesday, August 02, 2011 1:59 PM Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 142 i am not sure how to ask or reply sorry i am new at this....my grandmothers surname was marrinan and i am trying to find her family she came over with her two brothers in 1926 they lived in miltownmalbay on ennistymon road..i have the census from 1911.. this is the first time i have seen mention of marrinan anywhere..if anyone can be of help i have very little infomation on my family and someday hope to be able to afford a trip to eire and find them. if anyone can help or tell me what i am suppose to do i would be indebted thank you jeannie ________________________________ From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Sent: Monday, August 1, 2011 9:15 PM Subject: IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 142 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ DELETE all extra text in the Digest Today's Topics: 1. Re: Photos of Ancestors Wanted! (Jackie Hoare) 2. Re: IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 141 ([email protected]) 3. Re: IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 141 (Christina Hunt) 4. Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee (John M Dooley) 5. Re: Photos of Ancestors Wanted! (Alanna L Scanlon) 6. Photos for Ireland today (Christina Hunt) 7. Re: Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee ([email protected]) 8. Re: Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee (Chris Goopy) 9. New Genealogy Records Online ? July 2011 (Chris Goopy) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Mon, 01 Aug 2011 19:13:20 +1000 From: Jackie Hoare <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] Photos of Ancestors Wanted! To: <[email protected]> Message-ID: <CA5CAB50.36662%[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="ISO-8859-1" I have an equally sad story on family photos.... When my mum was young she remembered seeing photos of who would have been my great great grandmother hanging on a wall at a great aunt's. When this aunt died the photos were sent up to another Great Aunt in Cairns. My mum was talking to her aunt and mentioned these photos she remembered and asked if she knew what happened to them. Mum's aunt told her that she had no interest in the photos and didn't think anyone else would so she dug a big hole on her cane farm and buried them! ARGH! On 1/08/11 3:52 AM, "Alanna L Scanlon" <[email protected]> wrote: > I may be speaking for others other than myself when I describe my > situation. > ? > First is that there are great gaps between each of my generations, huge is > another description. > ? > Second is that my people were very poor.? Third is that they lived way out > in > the county as it was when they were alive.? Fourth is that they did not > believe in such nonsense or expense. > ? > I found a letter from Ireland telling that my father had written to his > brother asking about the picture on the wall of a "John."? I think that my > father had said that this "John" was a handsome man.? From what this > letter > said was that he did not know about this picture.? So what happened to it > and > why was a picture taken of him with the cost, etc. > ? > This may be the John where the words?"beloved brother"?written on his > tombstone by his brother and sister in 1899.? Was the picture given away > or > was it thrown away as not important, as has happened in my family.? > Valuable > information or items. > ? > Just had to respond to what to me is a sad subject -- lack of information > in > my family. > > Alanna > > --- On Sun, 7/31/11, Christina Hunt <[email protected]> wrote: > ? > I put out a call on a few Irish lists for Ancestor photos to put in the > IGP Archives this month. We got a few. If you have one or more to share > (assuming you know the county) you can use our Photo uploader to add > them. We are about preserving our ancestors faces as well as their names. > http://www.genrecords.org/irfiles/photos.html > > Example: > http://www.igp-web.com/IGPArchives/ire/longford/photos.htm > > All the best...Christina > ? > ====================================== > Remember to stay on Topic. > If you have a problem with anything please contact the list admin > [email protected] > ------------------------------- > 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 > ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2011 08:28:05 -0500 (GMT-05:00) From: [email protected] Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 141 To: [email protected], [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]link.net> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 I have a number of photos from ancestors from County Clare and Conty Sligo. What is the best way for me to upload them? JIM ________________________________ > >Message: 2 >Date: Sun, 31 Jul 2011 13:32:21 -0400 >From: Christina Hunt <[email protected]> >Subject: [IRL-CLARE] Photos of Ancestors Wanted! >To: [email protected], irl-clare <[email protected]>, > LIMERICK <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" > <[email protected]> >Message-ID: <[email protected]> >Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed > >I put out a call on a few Irish lists for Ancestor photos to put in the >IGP Archives this month. We got a few. If you have one or more to share >(assuming you know the county) you can use our Photo uploader to add >them. We are about preserving our ancestors faces as well as their names. >http://www.genrecords.org/irfiles/photos.html > >Example: >http://www.igp-web.com/IGPArchives/ire/longford/photos.htm > >All the best...Christina > > Mizzi in sunny and pleasant wintery weather in North >Queensland Australia. > ------------------------------ Message: 3 Date: Mon, 01 Aug 2011 09:32:39 -0400 From: Christina Hunt <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 141 To: [email protected], [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed The easiest thing for us is if you use our uploader. We can get the html text from that and it goes quickly from there. http://www.genrecords.org/irfiles/photos.html Thanks! Christina [email protected] wrote: > I have a number of photos from ancestors from County Clare and Conty > Sligo. What is the best way for me to upload them? > > JIM > ------------------------------ Message: 4 Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2011 10:08:09 -0500 From: "John M Dooley" <[email protected]> Subject: [IRL-CLARE] Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee To: <[email protected]> Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee???? ------------------------------ Message: 5 Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2011 10:45:51 -0700 (PDT) From: Alanna L Scanlon <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] Photos of Ancestors Wanted! To: [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 I even have more.? A nasty aunt said that whatever I did not know would not hurt me. ? She is the one who wrote to her sister and whose letter was shown to my mother.? This sister really liked my mother.? She wrote that my name was "rather heathensh."? My mother was born in Missouri and came from highly educated and highly intelligent people.? This creep said?my mother was Hawaiian meaning she was trash and black. ? >From what I understand, she thought she had some kind of claim on my >father, as he Should have made sure she came to the States.? My father had >no money!!!! ? My own father would not talk about his family except to his brother as per reply letters from his brother he did not destroy.? He would not keep family papers or letters. ? All so very sad!!!!!!? Yes, these are sad things to say about one's own family, but they are the ones who caused it.? My father sent them moeny that should have been used by his legal family.? My mother who was Always cold sent her good heavy coat to them.? She sent them other things.? So, I guess we were resented for doing so.? The nice sister told my mother and wrote in a letter I still have not to send them anything as they have more than we do.? More sadness. ? Alanna --- On Mon, 8/1/11, Jackie Hoare <[email protected]> wrote: ? I have an equally sad story on family photos.... When my mum was young she remembered seeing photos of who would have been my great great grandmother hanging on a wall at a great aunt's.? When this aunt died the photos were sent up to another Great Aunt in Cairns.? My mum was talking to her aunt and mentioned these photos she remembered and asked if she knew what happened to them.? Mum's aunt told her that she had no interest in the photos and didn't think anyone else would so she dug a big hole on her cane farm and buried them!? ARGH! ------------------------------ Message: 6 Date: Mon, 01 Aug 2011 13:58:43 -0400 From: Christina Hunt <[email protected]> Subject: [IRL-CLARE] Photos for Ireland today To: irl-clare <[email protected]> Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed I have received these photos in the last 24 hours. They are from all over Ireland but I thought it was cool to see them. http://goo.gl/PzC6R Some of these are still in process of being linked to the index. Also, let's stay on topic please. Thanks, Christina List admin aka Webmaster IGP Archives ------------------------------ Message: 7 Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2011 16:25:23 -0400 (EDT) From: [email protected] Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee To: [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" MARRINANS - A very unusual surname. I'm not sure it's Irish BUT here goes -: "Houses of Clare", by Hugh W.L. Weir, (C) 1986, Ballinakella Press, Whitegate, Co. Clare , page 232: ROCKVIEW HOUSE, CARREN - View of Burren Rocks (Eng.) -?; Associated families, etc. - Macnamara, Roche, Marrinan. Townland - Cahergrillaun (Carran) Location - N of the Kilcorney Road, 3 km W of Carran Present Condition - House - Standing, uninhabited; - Demesne - A quantity of mature trees, including beech. A few walls standing. Features - Originally taller and thatched, Rockview is now a small, one story, four bay, gable-ended nineteenth century lodge, with chimney stacks in each gable, facing south with magnificent views down a fertile valley. There are three large four-pane sash windows in front, and a lower unlit front door. There is a small garden, and the house is approached from the road by a short straight drive. History - Standing in 1841, Rockview House and its ninety acre farm was leased to Captain Francis Macnamara in 1855. The estate comprised the whole of Cahergrillaun townland. The house was reconstructed by the Marrinan family in around 1950. \\ It seems your family name is rare and was in possession of this house in 1950. Thus there must be people in the area, possibly relatives, who would either know or remember your relatives. From the entry in "Houses of Clare" it's not certain that there was a relationship to the earlier occupants, but quite possibly there was. Burren Rocks (unknown to me - can't find on map) but probably in Burren area) is not near Kilkee, but in Co. Clare nothing is VERY far away ! Check both areas-: Tithe Applotment Books, Griffith's Evaliuation, etc, for MARRINAN; also Letter to Editor of local newspapers, briefly giving all known details, might well bring replies - 'Clare Champion'. Do Internet search. Hope this helps. Len Keane (O'Cathain) In a message dated 8/1/2011 11:08:51 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, [email protected] writes: Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee???? ====================================== Remember to stay on Topic. If you have a problem with anything please contact the list admin [email protected] ------------------------------- 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 ------------------------------ Message: 8 Date: Tue, 2 Aug 2011 09:00:12 +1000 From: Chris Goopy <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee To: [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii I've sent John Dooley a notice re a Marrinan clan gathering which is to happen at the end of August in Ennystymon. This may be of interest to others. Larry Brennan is to give a talk re Marrinans as well... From what I understand, there are a number of references to Marrinan on both the Rootswen and Ancestry boards, which you should be able to find by Googling. Hope this helps a bit. On 02/08/2011, at 6:25 AM, [email protected] wrote: > MARRINANS - A very unusual surname. I'm not sure it's Irish BUT here goes > -: Chris [email protected] http://www.flickr.com/photos/crissouli/ ------------------------------ Message: 9 Date: Tue, 2 Aug 2011 11:14:47 +1000 From: Chris Goopy <[email protected]> Subject: [IRL-CLARE] New Genealogy Records Online ? July 2011 To: Irish <[email protected]>, Clare <[email protected]>, Clare Projects <[email protected]>, [email protected], [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252 With recent posts re new records coming online, I thought this would be of interest to many ... this comes from Gould Genealogy, Australia... I have no further information. > Date: 26 July 2011 1:40:57 PM AEST > Subject: New Genealogy Records Online ? July 2011 > Source: Genealogy & History News > Author: Alona Tester > > We?re not quite at the end of the month, yet July has been a has been a > BIG, BIG month for new genealogy records online, particularly with the big > players in the field. Military records, Wills, Business records, Convicts, > Civil Registrations, Parish Registers, Directories, and Cemetery records ? > it?s all here. > > So here?s a rundown of the new records that have just been added ? > > Ancestry.co.uk > - London Wills and Probate 1525-1858 > The beginning of July saw the release of Ancestry UKs London Wills and > Probate collection. As we all know wills are truly personal documents, > often written by your ancestor?s own hand, and they can provide a real > insight into how they lived, telling you how much money they had, what > sort of possessions they owned and even which of their relatives they > preferred. > > Before 1858, the place where a will was proved depended not on where > someone lived, but on where they owned property. As you can imagine, > plenty of people lived outside London but had second houses, business > premises or simply land in the city. You may well find these people?s > probate records in this new collection. [PHOTO] > http://search.ancestry.co.uk/search/db.aspx?dbid=1704 > > - British Postal Service Appointment Books, 1737-1969 > An unusual source of information, but still very important, are the > British Post Office appointment books, which contains about 1.5 million > names on 39,864 images, in the indexes to the Postmaster General?s minute > books. They show Name, Date of appointment, and Location, which includes > when they started a new position within the Post Office. Some records > contain the job the worker was appointed to. The books were kept from 1831 > until 1969, when they stopped being kept because of legislation and human > resource procedures. > http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=1933 > > Ancestry.com.au > - Australian Immigration Collection 1788-1923 > Earlier this month Ancestry.com.au announced the launch their new > Australian Immigration Collection 1788-1923, which claims to be the > largest online collection of historic Australian immigration records in > existence. This collection documents the names and journeys of more than > 14.5 million people who travelled to Australia between 1788 and 1923 in > search of a new life. > http://www.ancestry.com.au/immigration > > - New South Wales, Australia, Wives and Children of Irish Convicts, > 1825-1840 > This index contains lists of wives and children of convicts transported to > New South Wales who, at their husband?s or father?s request, were brought > to New South Wales at the government?s expense to join their spouse or > parent. The index also includes female convicts whose children were > transported with them. This index was compiled from musters and other New > South Wales records. This index gives you the name of convict, spouse or > child; the ship name; the departure year of the ship; and any remarks > (which can these can include place information or even birth dates). The > index includes names of some individuals who refused the request to be > transported to New South Wales. > http://search.ancestry.co.uk/search/db.aspx?dbid=2377 > > Deceased Online > The burial and cremation records for Edinburgh, Scotland that are now > online at Deceased Online comprises over 1 million records, and this on > top of nearly a million burial records from the UK?s largest cemetery > added in February this year. Deceased Online is constantly growing, and > now has records for nearly 450 cemeteries and crematoria around the UK, > and by early August they expect to add another 1.25 million burial and > cremation records from the north of Scotland to South Devon. > www.deceasedonline.com > > FamilySearch > The world?s largest FREE genealogy website, FamilySearch grows at an > incredible rate. Here?s details of the new records that have been added > online in July: > - Australia, Miscellaneous Genealogical Records 1776-1980 (4275 images) > - Austria, Upper Austria Seignorial Records 1537-1888 (116,182 images) > - Belgium Civil Registration 1795-1920 (328,045 records, 6,408,769 images) > - Czech Republic Church Books 1552-1935 (39,869 records, 302,046 images) > - England and Wales Census 1901 (34,138,362 records) > - England, Cheshire Bishop?s Transcripts 1538-1900 (2,180,763 records > - England, Cheshire Parish Registers 1538-2000 (4,140,534 records) > - England, Lancashire, Cheshire, Yorkshire Parish Registers 1603-1910 > (947,377 records, 332,814 images) > - France, Coutances Catholic Diocese 1802-1907 (269,828 records, 553,957 > images) > - Germany, Pomerania Church Records 1544-1945 (140,256 images) > - Germany, Westfalen, Minden Citizen Lists 1574-1902 (14,707 records, 902 > images) > - Italy, Civil Registration 1806-1940 (102,724 records, 3,844,256 images) > - Italy, Waldensian Evangelical Church Records (63,714 images) > - Poland, Roman Catholic Church Books 1600-1950 (1,002,155 records, > 2,249,867 images) > - South Africa, Methodist Parish Registers 1822-1996 (18,726 images) > - Sweden, S?dermanland Church Records, 1640-1860 (90,102 records) > - Wales, Probate Abstracts 1773-1780 (69,525 images) > > Please note I am not meaning to offend any of my American friends by not > including the details of the new collections from the Canada, the US and > South American regions. There have been some enormous collections added > online for the US and Mexico in particular in this past month. These have > been well covered by fellow geneabloggers. But you can always find the > full list of collections for these areas here. > > Findmypast.co.uk > - Business Index Collection 1892-1987 > The Business Index Collection, published by www.findmypast.co.uk and in > association with the Society of Genealogists, is available online for the > first time, over 100 years after the indexes were first published in > print. The Business Indexes are directories of how Britain?s business > landscape shaped up between the early 1890s and 1927. They contain images > and details of Britain?s shopkeepers, businessmen and women, as well as > captains of industry. The records also feature a short biography, > detailing the entrant?s prominence in local society, their memberships of > corporations and/or clubs, the hobbies or leisure activities they enjoyed, > as well as charities and other institutions that they may have been > involved in. This information provides a unique insight into the > individual?s character, which is extremely difficult to find elsewhere in > such a comprehensive form. > http://www.findmypast.co.uk/search/business-index/ > > - 19th and 20th Century Military Records > FMP UK have just release four new military sets of records. These contains > over half a million records covering 100 years of the militia ? the > forerunner of The British Territorial Army ? have just been published > online. Records provide unique descriptions of what your ancestors > actually looked like. These are everyday workers including butchers and > bakers fighting for their country. The records provide useful detail > including attestation and leaving dates, achievements made in service and > soldiers? physical appearance. And, certainly in the case of the 1861 > records, the records can fill in gaps left by the census. The releases are > the: > 1861 Worldwide Army Index > Royal Fusiliers Collection 1863-1905 > Paddington Rifles 1860-1912 > Surrey Recruitment Registers 1908-1933 > > - More Parish Records > FMP UK added another 290,000 new parish records going back to the 1700s. > These records comprise: > Suffolk 1753-1837 (50,608 marriages) > Suffolk 1812-1905 (75,258 baptisms) > Warwickshire, Rugby 1564-1837 (1,436 marriages) > Warwickshire, Handsworth Cemetery 1909?1991 (62,252 burials) > Yorkshire, Sheffield 1558-1934 (99,611 baptisms) > http://www.findmypast.co.uk/parish-records-collection-search-start.action?redef=0&event=B > > Findmypast.com.au > All is quiet from FMP Australia at this stage, with no new collections > added since June. > > Findmypast.ie > FMP Ireland continues to grow bit-by-bit with a few more additions to > their collection over the last past month. > > - Burke?s Landed Gentry of Ireland 1899 > This was the first specifically Irish edition of Burke?s Landed Gentry, > and is considerably more detailed on Irish families than what had appeared > in previous years in the general British series. It contains about 80,000 > records, which contain detailed genealogies of all the ?landed gentry? in > Ireland. > > http://www.findmypast.ie/content/burkes_landed_gentry_launch > > - Ulster Parish Registers: Derry Cathedral 1642-1703 > 10,000 new BMD records have been released online to help you piece > together your Irish family history. The Register of Derry Cathedral > includes records of the baptisms, marriages and burials for the parish of > Templemore, which included Derry City, from 1642 to 1703. > http://www.findmypast.ie/content/register_of_derry_cathedral > > - Dublin Post Office Directories > Two more excellent sources of information for those researching their > Irish family history have just gone live, The Post Office Annual Directory > and Calendar for 1843 and 1858. The directories are extremely rare and > valuable sources of information for anyone researching their Dublin > ancestors. Containing 650 and 700 pages respectively, the directories list > all the government, military, religious, educational, medical, legal and > police establishments in the city and county. > http://www.findmypast.ie/content/post_office_annual_directory_and_calendar > > HAPPY SEARCHING! > > Read more? > Chris [email protected] http://www.flickr.com/photos/crissouli/ ------------------------------ To contact the IRL-CLARE list administrator, send an email to [email protected] To post a message to the IRL-CLARE mailing list, send an email to [email protected] __________________________________________________________ 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 email with no additional text. End of IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 142 ***************************************** ====================================== Remember to stay on Topic. If you have a problem with anything please contact the list admin [email protected] ------------------------------- 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
And for events before 1864, see the Miltown Malby parish records. The National Library of Ireland has baptisms to 1831, marriages to 1856, but you'll have to hire a researcher. Diane
Australia... The end of July marks the beginning of National Family History Week, which runs from 29 Jul through until 8 August. More details here... http://www.familyhistoryweek.org.au New Zealand... you can read full details here... http://www.gouldgenealogy.com/2011/08/new-zealand-family-history-fair-26-27-august-2011/ For those who aren't aware of Trove, it has to be one of the very best resources available and it's free... don't dismiss it as a totally Australian resource... just go to search and type in say, " Ennis, Co Clare" or simply "Ireland" whatever you are looking for and you will be surprised at what results you will get. If the paper you’re after isn’t here, sit tight, it will in time … in the meantime simply look at the millions that have already been digitised and are online. They certainly make fascinating reading for anyone. They’ve just released their 2011-2012 schedule, which includes over 100 different newspapers around Australia.You can view the currently available historical Australian newspapers online here. I can't wait for these to come online... saves me spending even more hours searching in libraries... just a small sample... NSW The Australian, Windsor, Richmond, and Hawkesbury advertiser 1873 – 1899 NSW Hawkesbury Chronicle and Farmers Advocate 1881 – 1888 NSW Hawkesbury Courier and Agricultural and General Advertiser 1881 – 1888 NSW Hawkesbury Advocate 1899 – 1900 NSW Hawkesbury Herald 1902 – 1945 NSW Windsor and Richmond Gazette 1888 – 1921 NSW Windsor Express and Richmond Advertiser 1843 – 1844 More details here... http://www.gouldgenealogy.com/2011/07/historical-australian-newspapers-digitisation-schedule-for-2011-2012/ Chris [email protected] http://www.flickr.com/photos/crissouli/
With recent posts re new records coming online, I thought this would be of interest to many ... this comes from Gould Genealogy, Australia... I have no further information. > Date: 26 July 2011 1:40:57 PM AEST > Subject: New Genealogy Records Online – July 2011 > Source: Genealogy & History News > Author: Alona Tester > > We’re not quite at the end of the month, yet July has been a has been a BIG, BIG month for new genealogy records online, particularly with the big players in the field. Military records, Wills, Business records, Convicts, Civil Registrations, Parish Registers, Directories, and Cemetery records … it’s all here. > > So here’s a rundown of the new records that have just been added … > > Ancestry.co.uk > - London Wills and Probate 1525-1858 > The beginning of July saw the release of Ancestry UKs London Wills and Probate collection. As we all know wills are truly personal documents, often written by your ancestor’s own hand, and they can provide a real insight into how they lived, telling you how much money they had, what sort of possessions they owned and even which of their relatives they preferred. > > Before 1858, the place where a will was proved depended not on where someone lived, but on where they owned property. As you can imagine, plenty of people lived outside London but had second houses, business premises or simply land in the city. You may well find these people’s probate records in this new collection. [PHOTO] > http://search.ancestry.co.uk/search/db.aspx?dbid=1704 > > - British Postal Service Appointment Books, 1737-1969 > An unusual source of information, but still very important, are the British Post Office appointment books, which contains about 1.5 million names on 39,864 images, in the indexes to the Postmaster General’s minute books. They show Name, Date of appointment, and Location, which includes when they started a new position within the Post Office. Some records contain the job the worker was appointed to. The books were kept from 1831 until 1969, when they stopped being kept because of legislation and human resource procedures. > http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=1933 > > Ancestry.com.au > - Australian Immigration Collection 1788-1923 > Earlier this month Ancestry.com.au announced the launch their new Australian Immigration Collection 1788-1923, which claims to be the largest online collection of historic Australian immigration records in existence. This collection documents the names and journeys of more than 14.5 million people who travelled to Australia between 1788 and 1923 in search of a new life. > http://www.ancestry.com.au/immigration > > - New South Wales, Australia, Wives and Children of Irish Convicts, 1825-1840 > This index contains lists of wives and children of convicts transported to New South Wales who, at their husband’s or father’s request, were brought to New South Wales at the government’s expense to join their spouse or parent. The index also includes female convicts whose children were transported with them. This index was compiled from musters and other New South Wales records. This index gives you the name of convict, spouse or child; the ship name; the departure year of the ship; and any remarks (which can these can include place information or even birth dates). The index includes names of some individuals who refused the request to be transported to New South Wales. > http://search.ancestry.co.uk/search/db.aspx?dbid=2377 > > Deceased Online > The burial and cremation records for Edinburgh, Scotland that are now online at Deceased Online comprises over 1 million records, and this on top of nearly a million burial records from the UK’s largest cemetery added in February this year. Deceased Online is constantly growing, and now has records for nearly 450 cemeteries and crematoria around the UK, and by early August they expect to add another 1.25 million burial and cremation records from the north of Scotland to South Devon. > www.deceasedonline.com > > FamilySearch > The world’s largest FREE genealogy website, FamilySearch grows at an incredible rate. Here’s details of the new records that have been added online in July: > - Australia, Miscellaneous Genealogical Records 1776-1980 (4275 images) > - Austria, Upper Austria Seignorial Records 1537-1888 (116,182 images) > - Belgium Civil Registration 1795-1920 (328,045 records, 6,408,769 images) > - Czech Republic Church Books 1552-1935 (39,869 records, 302,046 images) > - England and Wales Census 1901 (34,138,362 records) > - England, Cheshire Bishop’s Transcripts 1538-1900 (2,180,763 records > - England, Cheshire Parish Registers 1538-2000 (4,140,534 records) > - England, Lancashire, Cheshire, Yorkshire Parish Registers 1603-1910 (947,377 records, 332,814 images) > - France, Coutances Catholic Diocese 1802-1907 (269,828 records, 553,957 images) > - Germany, Pomerania Church Records 1544-1945 (140,256 images) > - Germany, Westfalen, Minden Citizen Lists 1574-1902 (14,707 records, 902 images) > - Italy, Civil Registration 1806-1940 (102,724 records, 3,844,256 images) > - Italy, Waldensian Evangelical Church Records (63,714 images) > - Poland, Roman Catholic Church Books 1600-1950 (1,002,155 records, 2,249,867 images) > - South Africa, Methodist Parish Registers 1822-1996 (18,726 images) > - Sweden, Södermanland Church Records, 1640-1860 (90,102 records) > - Wales, Probate Abstracts 1773-1780 (69,525 images) > > Please note I am not meaning to offend any of my American friends by not including the details of the new collections from the Canada, the US and South American regions. There have been some enormous collections added online for the US and Mexico in particular in this past month. These have been well covered by fellow geneabloggers. But you can always find the full list of collections for these areas here. > > Findmypast.co.uk > - Business Index Collection 1892-1987 > The Business Index Collection, published by www.findmypast.co.uk and in association with the Society of Genealogists, is available online for the first time, over 100 years after the indexes were first published in print. The Business Indexes are directories of how Britain’s business landscape shaped up between the early 1890s and 1927. They contain images and details of Britain’s shopkeepers, businessmen and women, as well as captains of industry. The records also feature a short biography, detailing the entrant’s prominence in local society, their memberships of corporations and/or clubs, the hobbies or leisure activities they enjoyed, as well as charities and other institutions that they may have been involved in. This information provides a unique insight into the individual’s character, which is extremely difficult to find elsewhere in such a comprehensive form. > http://www.findmypast.co.uk/search/business-index/ > > - 19th and 20th Century Military Records > FMP UK have just release four new military sets of records. These contains over half a million records covering 100 years of the militia – the forerunner of The British Territorial Army – have just been published online. Records provide unique descriptions of what your ancestors actually looked like. These are everyday workers including butchers and bakers fighting for their country. The records provide useful detail including attestation and leaving dates, achievements made in service and soldiers’ physical appearance. And, certainly in the case of the 1861 records, the records can fill in gaps left by the census. The releases are the: > 1861 Worldwide Army Index > Royal Fusiliers Collection 1863-1905 > Paddington Rifles 1860-1912 > Surrey Recruitment Registers 1908-1933 > > - More Parish Records > FMP UK added another 290,000 new parish records going back to the 1700s. These records comprise: > Suffolk 1753-1837 (50,608 marriages) > Suffolk 1812-1905 (75,258 baptisms) > Warwickshire, Rugby 1564-1837 (1,436 marriages) > Warwickshire, Handsworth Cemetery 1909–1991 (62,252 burials) > Yorkshire, Sheffield 1558-1934 (99,611 baptisms) > http://www.findmypast.co.uk/parish-records-collection-search-start.action?redef=0&event=B > > Findmypast.com.au > All is quiet from FMP Australia at this stage, with no new collections added since June. > > Findmypast.ie > FMP Ireland continues to grow bit-by-bit with a few more additions to their collection over the last past month. > > - Burke’s Landed Gentry of Ireland 1899 > This was the first specifically Irish edition of Burke’s Landed Gentry, and is considerably more detailed on Irish families than what had appeared in previous years in the general British series. It contains about 80,000 records, which contain detailed genealogies of all the ‘landed gentry’ in Ireland. > > http://www.findmypast.ie/content/burkes_landed_gentry_launch > > - Ulster Parish Registers: Derry Cathedral 1642-1703 > 10,000 new BMD records have been released online to help you piece together your Irish family history. The Register of Derry Cathedral includes records of the baptisms, marriages and burials for the parish of Templemore, which included Derry City, from 1642 to 1703. > http://www.findmypast.ie/content/register_of_derry_cathedral > > - Dublin Post Office Directories > Two more excellent sources of information for those researching their Irish family history have just gone live, The Post Office Annual Directory and Calendar for 1843 and 1858. The directories are extremely rare and valuable sources of information for anyone researching their Dublin ancestors. Containing 650 and 700 pages respectively, the directories list all the government, military, religious, educational, medical, legal and police establishments in the city and county. > http://www.findmypast.ie/content/post_office_annual_directory_and_calendar > > HAPPY SEARCHING! > > Read more… > Chris [email protected] http://www.flickr.com/photos/crissouli/
I've sent John Dooley a notice re a Marrinan clan gathering which is to happen at the end of August in Ennystymon. This may be of interest to others. Larry Brennan is to give a talk re Marrinans as well... From what I understand, there are a number of references to Marrinan on both the Rootswen and Ancestry boards, which you should be able to find by Googling. Hope this helps a bit. On 02/08/2011, at 6:25 AM, [email protected] wrote: > MARRINANS - A very unusual surname. I'm not sure it's Irish BUT here goes > -: Chris [email protected] http://www.flickr.com/photos/crissouli/
Christina Yes that does and I think you did tell me before. I like to share because sometimes it does help someone else with their research. I just wanted to make sure that me or my family down the line would not lose the right to share the photos with others. Thanks Teri
Some info on the Marrinan clan gathering on the Clare Roots Society website at http://www.clareroots.org/index.php/clare-gene-news Paddy
i am not sure how to ask or reply sorry i am new at this....my grandmothers surname was marrinan and i am trying to find her family she came over with her two brothers in 1926 they lived in miltownmalbay on ennistymon road..i have the census from 1911.. this is the first time i have seen mention of marrinan anywhere..if anyone can be of help i have very little infomation on my family and someday hope to be able to afford a trip to eire and find them. if anyone can help or tell me what i am suppose to do i would be indebted thank you jeannie ________________________________ From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> To: [email protected] Sent: Monday, August 1, 2011 9:15 PM Subject: IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 142 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ DELETE all extra text in the Digest Today's Topics: 1. Re: Photos of Ancestors Wanted! (Jackie Hoare) 2. Re: IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 141 ([email protected]) 3. Re: IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 141 (Christina Hunt) 4. Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee (John M Dooley) 5. Re: Photos of Ancestors Wanted! (Alanna L Scanlon) 6. Photos for Ireland today (Christina Hunt) 7. Re: Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee ([email protected]) 8. Re: Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee (Chris Goopy) 9. New Genealogy Records Online ? July 2011 (Chris Goopy) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Mon, 01 Aug 2011 19:13:20 +1000 From: Jackie Hoare <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] Photos of Ancestors Wanted! To: <[email protected]> Message-ID: <CA5CAB50.36662%[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="ISO-8859-1" I have an equally sad story on family photos.... When my mum was young she remembered seeing photos of who would have been my great great grandmother hanging on a wall at a great aunt's. When this aunt died the photos were sent up to another Great Aunt in Cairns. My mum was talking to her aunt and mentioned these photos she remembered and asked if she knew what happened to them. Mum's aunt told her that she had no interest in the photos and didn't think anyone else would so she dug a big hole on her cane farm and buried them! ARGH! On 1/08/11 3:52 AM, "Alanna L Scanlon" <[email protected]> wrote: > I may be speaking for others other than myself when I describe my situation. > ? > First is that there are great gaps between each of my generations, huge is > another description. > ? > Second is that my people were very poor.? Third is that they lived way out in > the county as it was when they were alive.? Fourth is that they did not > believe in such nonsense or expense. > ? > I found a letter from Ireland telling that my father had written to his > brother asking about the picture on the wall of a "John."? I think that my > father had said that this "John" was a handsome man.? From what this letter > said was that he did not know about this picture.? So what happened to it and > why was a picture taken of him with the cost, etc. > ? > This may be the John where the words?"beloved brother"?written on his > tombstone by his brother and sister in 1899.? Was the picture given away or > was it thrown away as not important, as has happened in my family.? Valuable > information or items. > ? > Just had to respond to what to me is a sad subject -- lack of information in > my family. > > Alanna > > --- On Sun, 7/31/11, Christina Hunt <[email protected]> wrote: > ? > I put out a call on a few Irish lists for Ancestor photos to put in the > IGP Archives this month. We got a few. If you have one or more to share > (assuming you know the county) you can use our Photo uploader to add > them. We are about preserving our ancestors faces as well as their names. > http://www.genrecords.org/irfiles/photos.html > > Example: > http://www.igp-web.com/IGPArchives/ire/longford/photos.htm > > All the best...Christina > ? > ====================================== > Remember to stay on Topic. > If you have a problem with anything please contact the list admin > [email protected] > ------------------------------- > 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 > ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2011 08:28:05 -0500 (GMT-05:00) From: [email protected] Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 141 To: [email protected], [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]link.net> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 I have a number of photos from ancestors from County Clare and Conty Sligo. What is the best way for me to upload them? JIM ________________________________ > >Message: 2 >Date: Sun, 31 Jul 2011 13:32:21 -0400 >From: Christina Hunt <[email protected]> >Subject: [IRL-CLARE] Photos of Ancestors Wanted! >To: [email protected], irl-clare <[email protected]>, > LIMERICK <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" > <[email protected]> >Message-ID: <[email protected]> >Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed > >I put out a call on a few Irish lists for Ancestor photos to put in the >IGP Archives this month. We got a few. If you have one or more to share >(assuming you know the county) you can use our Photo uploader to add >them. We are about preserving our ancestors faces as well as their names. >http://www.genrecords.org/irfiles/photos.html > >Example: >http://www.igp-web.com/IGPArchives/ire/longford/photos.htm > >All the best...Christina > > Mizzi in sunny and pleasant wintery weather in North >Queensland Australia. > ------------------------------ Message: 3 Date: Mon, 01 Aug 2011 09:32:39 -0400 From: Christina Hunt <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 141 To: [email protected], [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed The easiest thing for us is if you use our uploader. We can get the html text from that and it goes quickly from there. http://www.genrecords.org/irfiles/photos.html Thanks! Christina [email protected] wrote: > I have a number of photos from ancestors from County Clare and Conty Sligo. What is the best way for me to upload them? > > JIM > ------------------------------ Message: 4 Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2011 10:08:09 -0500 From: "John M Dooley" <[email protected]> Subject: [IRL-CLARE] Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee To: <[email protected]> Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee???? ------------------------------ Message: 5 Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2011 10:45:51 -0700 (PDT) From: Alanna L Scanlon <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] Photos of Ancestors Wanted! To: [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 I even have more.? A nasty aunt said that whatever I did not know would not hurt me. ? She is the one who wrote to her sister and whose letter was shown to my mother.? This sister really liked my mother.? She wrote that my name was "rather heathensh."? My mother was born in Missouri and came from highly educated and highly intelligent people.? This creep said?my mother was Hawaiian meaning she was trash and black. ? >From what I understand, she thought she had some kind of claim on my father, as he Should have made sure she came to the States.? My father had no money!!!! ? My own father would not talk about his family except to his brother as per reply letters from his brother he did not destroy.? He would not keep family papers or letters. ? All so very sad!!!!!!? Yes, these are sad things to say about one's own family, but they are the ones who caused it.? My father sent them moeny that should have been used by his legal family.? My mother who was Always cold sent her good heavy coat to them.? She sent them other things.? So, I guess we were resented for doing so.? The nice sister told my mother and wrote in a letter I still have not to send them anything as they have more than we do.? More sadness. ? Alanna --- On Mon, 8/1/11, Jackie Hoare <[email protected]> wrote: ? I have an equally sad story on family photos.... When my mum was young she remembered seeing photos of who would have been my great great grandmother hanging on a wall at a great aunt's.? When this aunt died the photos were sent up to another Great Aunt in Cairns.? My mum was talking to her aunt and mentioned these photos she remembered and asked if she knew what happened to them.? Mum's aunt told her that she had no interest in the photos and didn't think anyone else would so she dug a big hole on her cane farm and buried them!? ARGH! ------------------------------ Message: 6 Date: Mon, 01 Aug 2011 13:58:43 -0400 From: Christina Hunt <[email protected]> Subject: [IRL-CLARE] Photos for Ireland today To: irl-clare <[email protected]> Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed I have received these photos in the last 24 hours. They are from all over Ireland but I thought it was cool to see them. http://goo.gl/PzC6R Some of these are still in process of being linked to the index. Also, let's stay on topic please. Thanks, Christina List admin aka Webmaster IGP Archives ------------------------------ Message: 7 Date: Mon, 1 Aug 2011 16:25:23 -0400 (EDT) From: [email protected] Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee To: [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" MARRINANS - A very unusual surname. I'm not sure it's Irish BUT here goes -: "Houses of Clare", by Hugh W.L. Weir, (C) 1986, Ballinakella Press, Whitegate, Co. Clare , page 232: ROCKVIEW HOUSE, CARREN - View of Burren Rocks (Eng.) -?; Associated families, etc. - Macnamara, Roche, Marrinan. Townland - Cahergrillaun (Carran) Location - N of the Kilcorney Road, 3 km W of Carran Present Condition - House - Standing, uninhabited; - Demesne - A quantity of mature trees, including beech. A few walls standing. Features - Originally taller and thatched, Rockview is now a small, one story, four bay, gable-ended nineteenth century lodge, with chimney stacks in each gable, facing south with magnificent views down a fertile valley. There are three large four-pane sash windows in front, and a lower unlit front door. There is a small garden, and the house is approached from the road by a short straight drive. History - Standing in 1841, Rockview House and its ninety acre farm was leased to Captain Francis Macnamara in 1855. The estate comprised the whole of Cahergrillaun townland. The house was reconstructed by the Marrinan family in around 1950. \\ It seems your family name is rare and was in possession of this house in 1950. Thus there must be people in the area, possibly relatives, who would either know or remember your relatives. From the entry in "Houses of Clare" it's not certain that there was a relationship to the earlier occupants, but quite possibly there was. Burren Rocks (unknown to me - can't find on map) but probably in Burren area) is not near Kilkee, but in Co. Clare nothing is VERY far away ! Check both areas-: Tithe Applotment Books, Griffith's Evaliuation, etc, for MARRINAN; also Letter to Editor of local newspapers, briefly giving all known details, might well bring replies - 'Clare Champion'. Do Internet search. Hope this helps. Len Keane (O'Cathain) In a message dated 8/1/2011 11:08:51 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, [email protected] writes: Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee???? ====================================== Remember to stay on Topic. If you have a problem with anything please contact the list admin [email protected] ------------------------------- 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 ------------------------------ Message: 8 Date: Tue, 2 Aug 2011 09:00:12 +1000 From: Chris Goopy <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [IRL-CLARE] Garveys and Marrinans from Kilkee To: [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii I've sent John Dooley a notice re a Marrinan clan gathering which is to happen at the end of August in Ennystymon. This may be of interest to others. Larry Brennan is to give a talk re Marrinans as well... From what I understand, there are a number of references to Marrinan on both the Rootswen and Ancestry boards, which you should be able to find by Googling. Hope this helps a bit. On 02/08/2011, at 6:25 AM, [email protected] wrote: > MARRINANS - A very unusual surname. I'm not sure it's Irish BUT here goes > -: Chris [email protected] http://www.flickr.com/photos/crissouli/ ------------------------------ Message: 9 Date: Tue, 2 Aug 2011 11:14:47 +1000 From: Chris Goopy <[email protected]> Subject: [IRL-CLARE] New Genealogy Records Online ? July 2011 To: Irish <[email protected]>, Clare <[email protected]>, Clare Projects <[email protected]>, [email protected], [email protected] Message-ID: <[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252 With recent posts re new records coming online, I thought this would be of interest to many ... this comes from Gould Genealogy, Australia... I have no further information. > Date: 26 July 2011 1:40:57 PM AEST > Subject: New Genealogy Records Online ? July 2011 > Source: Genealogy & History News > Author: Alona Tester > > We?re not quite at the end of the month, yet July has been a has been a BIG, BIG month for new genealogy records online, particularly with the big players in the field. Military records, Wills, Business records, Convicts, Civil Registrations, Parish Registers, Directories, and Cemetery records ? it?s all here. > > So here?s a rundown of the new records that have just been added ? > > Ancestry.co.uk > - London Wills and Probate 1525-1858 > The beginning of July saw the release of Ancestry UKs London Wills and Probate collection. As we all know wills are truly personal documents, often written by your ancestor?s own hand, and they can provide a real insight into how they lived, telling you how much money they had, what sort of possessions they owned and even which of their relatives they preferred. > > Before 1858, the place where a will was proved depended not on where someone lived, but on where they owned property. As you can imagine, plenty of people lived outside London but had second houses, business premises or simply land in the city. You may well find these people?s probate records in this new collection. [PHOTO] > http://search.ancestry.co.uk/search/db.aspx?dbid=1704 > > - British Postal Service Appointment Books, 1737-1969 > An unusual source of information, but still very important, are the British Post Office appointment books, which contains about 1.5 million names on 39,864 images, in the indexes to the Postmaster General?s minute books. They show Name, Date of appointment, and Location, which includes when they started a new position within the Post Office. Some records contain the job the worker was appointed to. The books were kept from 1831 until 1969, when they stopped being kept because of legislation and human resource procedures. > http://search.ancestry.com/search/db.aspx?dbid=1933 > > Ancestry.com.au > - Australian Immigration Collection 1788-1923 > Earlier this month Ancestry.com.au announced the launch their new Australian Immigration Collection 1788-1923, which claims to be the largest online collection of historic Australian immigration records in existence. This collection documents the names and journeys of more than 14.5 million people who travelled to Australia between 1788 and 1923 in search of a new life. > http://www.ancestry.com.au/immigration > > - New South Wales, Australia, Wives and Children of Irish Convicts, 1825-1840 > This index contains lists of wives and children of convicts transported to New South Wales who, at their husband?s or father?s request, were brought to New South Wales at the government?s expense to join their spouse or parent. The index also includes female convicts whose children were transported with them. This index was compiled from musters and other New South Wales records. This index gives you the name of convict, spouse or child; the ship name; the departure year of the ship; and any remarks (which can these can include place information or even birth dates). The index includes names of some individuals who refused the request to be transported to New South Wales. > http://search.ancestry.co.uk/search/db.aspx?dbid=2377 > > Deceased Online > The burial and cremation records for Edinburgh, Scotland that are now online at Deceased Online comprises over 1 million records, and this on top of nearly a million burial records from the UK?s largest cemetery added in February this year. Deceased Online is constantly growing, and now has records for nearly 450 cemeteries and crematoria around the UK, and by early August they expect to add another 1.25 million burial and cremation records from the north of Scotland to South Devon. > www.deceasedonline.com > > FamilySearch > The world?s largest FREE genealogy website, FamilySearch grows at an incredible rate. Here?s details of the new records that have been added online in July: > - Australia, Miscellaneous Genealogical Records 1776-1980 (4275 images) > - Austria, Upper Austria Seignorial Records 1537-1888 (116,182 images) > - Belgium Civil Registration 1795-1920 (328,045 records, 6,408,769 images) > - Czech Republic Church Books 1552-1935 (39,869 records, 302,046 images) > - England and Wales Census 1901 (34,138,362 records) > - England, Cheshire Bishop?s Transcripts 1538-1900 (2,180,763 records > - England, Cheshire Parish Registers 1538-2000 (4,140,534 records) > - England, Lancashire, Cheshire, Yorkshire Parish Registers 1603-1910 (947,377 records, 332,814 images) > - France, Coutances Catholic Diocese 1802-1907 (269,828 records, 553,957 images) > - Germany, Pomerania Church Records 1544-1945 (140,256 images) > - Germany, Westfalen, Minden Citizen Lists 1574-1902 (14,707 records, 902 images) > - Italy, Civil Registration 1806-1940 (102,724 records, 3,844,256 images) > - Italy, Waldensian Evangelical Church Records (63,714 images) > - Poland, Roman Catholic Church Books 1600-1950 (1,002,155 records, 2,249,867 images) > - South Africa, Methodist Parish Registers 1822-1996 (18,726 images) > - Sweden, S?dermanland Church Records, 1640-1860 (90,102 records) > - Wales, Probate Abstracts 1773-1780 (69,525 images) > > Please note I am not meaning to offend any of my American friends by not including the details of the new collections from the Canada, the US and South American regions. There have been some enormous collections added online for the US and Mexico in particular in this past month. These have been well covered by fellow geneabloggers. But you can always find the full list of collections for these areas here. > > Findmypast.co.uk > - Business Index Collection 1892-1987 > The Business Index Collection, published by www.findmypast.co.uk and in association with the Society of Genealogists, is available online for the first time, over 100 years after the indexes were first published in print. The Business Indexes are directories of how Britain?s business landscape shaped up between the early 1890s and 1927. They contain images and details of Britain?s shopkeepers, businessmen and women, as well as captains of industry. The records also feature a short biography, detailing the entrant?s prominence in local society, their memberships of corporations and/or clubs, the hobbies or leisure activities they enjoyed, as well as charities and other institutions that they may have been involved in. This information provides a unique insight into the individual?s character, which is extremely difficult to find elsewhere in such a comprehensive form. > http://www.findmypast.co.uk/search/business-index/ > > - 19th and 20th Century Military Records > FMP UK have just release four new military sets of records. These contains over half a million records covering 100 years of the militia ? the forerunner of The British Territorial Army ? have just been published online. Records provide unique descriptions of what your ancestors actually looked like. These are everyday workers including butchers and bakers fighting for their country. The records provide useful detail including attestation and leaving dates, achievements made in service and soldiers? physical appearance. And, certainly in the case of the 1861 records, the records can fill in gaps left by the census. The releases are the: > 1861 Worldwide Army Index > Royal Fusiliers Collection 1863-1905 > Paddington Rifles 1860-1912 > Surrey Recruitment Registers 1908-1933 > > - More Parish Records > FMP UK added another 290,000 new parish records going back to the 1700s. These records comprise: > Suffolk 1753-1837 (50,608 marriages) > Suffolk 1812-1905 (75,258 baptisms) > Warwickshire, Rugby 1564-1837 (1,436 marriages) > Warwickshire, Handsworth Cemetery 1909?1991 (62,252 burials) > Yorkshire, Sheffield 1558-1934 (99,611 baptisms) > http://www.findmypast.co.uk/parish-records-collection-search-start.action?redef=0&event=B > > Findmypast.com.au > All is quiet from FMP Australia at this stage, with no new collections added since June. > > Findmypast.ie > FMP Ireland continues to grow bit-by-bit with a few more additions to their collection over the last past month. > > - Burke?s Landed Gentry of Ireland 1899 > This was the first specifically Irish edition of Burke?s Landed Gentry, and is considerably more detailed on Irish families than what had appeared in previous years in the general British series. It contains about 80,000 records, which contain detailed genealogies of all the ?landed gentry? in Ireland. > > http://www.findmypast.ie/content/burkes_landed_gentry_launch > > - Ulster Parish Registers: Derry Cathedral 1642-1703 > 10,000 new BMD records have been released online to help you piece together your Irish family history. The Register of Derry Cathedral includes records of the baptisms, marriages and burials for the parish of Templemore, which included Derry City, from 1642 to 1703. > http://www.findmypast.ie/content/register_of_derry_cathedral > > - Dublin Post Office Directories > Two more excellent sources of information for those researching their Irish family history have just gone live, The Post Office Annual Directory and Calendar for 1843 and 1858. The directories are extremely rare and valuable sources of information for anyone researching their Dublin ancestors. Containing 650 and 700 pages respectively, the directories list all the government, military, religious, educational, medical, legal and police establishments in the city and county. > http://www.findmypast.ie/content/post_office_annual_directory_and_calendar > > HAPPY SEARCHING! > > Read more? > Chris [email protected] http://www.flickr.com/photos/crissouli/ ------------------------------ To contact the IRL-CLARE list administrator, send an email to [email protected] To post a message to the IRL-CLARE mailing list, send an email to [email protected] __________________________________________________________ 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 email with no additional text. End of IRL-CLARE Digest, Vol 6, Issue 142 *****************************************