Great find. I thought she must have been there somewhere. :) Chris Patricia Hanenburg wrote: > Bridget McNamara Considney (Considine) and Patt Considine were on the same ship! > Different manifest line numbers though; Bridget was 0005, Patrick 0022. They both arrived on April 2, 1905 on the Celtic from Queenstown. > > Strange they didn't sign in 'together' like Patrick and his cousin did. > > Found Bridget McNamara Considine's arrival at Ellis Island through familysearch.org and cross referenced with Ellis Island records. This was also her second trip to Bayonne, her first being in 1904 as per Ellis Island (haven't found either one's first passage info yet) and she listed Kilrush as last residence. She also claimed to be an American citizen then it was crossed out and Ireland written in it's place and arrived with what looks like $105. in her pocket. If true, a lot of money at that time. Probably more like $10.50. Name written down as McNamara and crossed it out and w rote Considine which was misread as below. Maybe they met in New Jersey or Chicago and went back to Kilrush to get married then returned to the US. She has more names on records.... at least I know for sure she was married to Patrick Considine in Ireland and her last residence was in Kilrush! Will keep you posted. > > First Name: Bridget > Last Name: McNamara Considney > Ethnicity: US Citizen > Last Place of Residence: Kilrush > Date of Arrival: Apr 02, 1905 > Age at Arrival: 24y Gender: F Marital Status: S > Ship of Travel: Celtic > Port of Departure: Queenstown > Manifest Line Number: 0005 > > > Given Name: > Bridget > Surname: McNamara Considney > Last Place of Residence: Kilrush > Event Date: 02 Apr 1905 > Age: 24y > Nationality: America, Irish > Departure Port: Queenstown > Arrival Port: New York > Gender: Female > Marital Status: S > Citizenship Status: > Ship Name: Celtic > > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to IRL-CLARE-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message