My parents were NOT married. The homes ( that's with a "s")I was in were from 1940-1953, they are closed or torn down , and there are no records. I couldn't get a copy of school records for myself when I went to work at age 16 to support myself. Since I had to have parents ask and they weren't available. My Father's Father was born in England of Irish parents. Thanks for the thought.been there , done that.....I said it was a unique situation, I wasn't kidding. On Sep 15, 2010, at 2:09 PM, Janet Crawford wrote: > Pat, I had one other thought. The RC home you were in must have some > records as to the names of your parents and the circumstances as to > why you were entered there. Can you get them to give you a notarized > copy of that? You don't have to prove they were married, just that > they were your parents, and then you prove your father's birth and his > father's in Ireland. > > Janet > > On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 7:08 PM, Pat Lewis <carmodyp@bellsouth.net> > wrote: >> thank you all for your reply, however, I find I have a unique set of >> circumstances. I am in Florida, The lived in NYC, in more than 10 >> years >> of searching records, genealogy sites etc, hireing researchers and >> checking with the NYC diocese as to where the certificate might be >> of >> a church closed where grandmother ( then a widow w/ 3 children) lived >> in 1900 according to census. I have NO relatives to ask and Father >> left no documents or info about his parents. >> I was just curious as to how I would apply. Apparently, without >> grandparent USA info I cannot. >> >> I have been to Ireland in 2002 and did get to see the town/city that >> my >> Grandmother lived and surrounding area. And managed to get her >> baptismal cert record. She left Ireland approx. 1880 with her >> brother, >> her Mother came later. She married in the 1880's, had 8 children, only >> 3 alive when she became a widow, and later married my grandfather, >> about 1900-1901. Other than the 1900 census of NYC and 1910 census >> she >> is not in any documentation! >> No licenses were required back in those times there-fore no city >> record. Church in area where the census was taken in 1900 closed, St. >> Patricks' Diocese barely any help as to finding where a record might >> be. Calls to various churches in NYC area, where she supposedly lived >> and where they lived later after they married have found nothing. >> GRandparents died long before I was born, and no documents found >> since. >> >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the >> quotes in the subject and the body of the message >> > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
St Patricks' Diocese isn't very friendly and sent me on wild goose chase- Called many churches and still no certificate or names found or church. On Sep 15, 2010, at 3:50 PM, Jean Copeland wrote: > Pat, > > Have you asked the Diocesean Office where the family lived in New York > if > they have an Archives for Diocesan Records? Here in Ohio our Diocese > has an > archives office that holds the records from closed parishes or at > least can > tell us where records are now kept if they are held at another parish. > Good luck in your search. > > Jean > > On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 2:08 PM, Pat Lewis <carmodyp@bellsouth.net> > wrote: > >> thank you all for your reply, however, I find I have a unique set of >> circumstances. I am in Florida, The lived in NYC, in more than 10 >> years >> of searching records, genealogy sites etc, hireing researchers and >> checking with the NYC diocese as to where the certificate might be >> of >> a church closed where grandmother ( then a widow w/ 3 children) lived >> in 1900 according to census. I have NO relatives to ask and Father >> left no documents or info about his parents. >> I was just curious as to how I would apply. Apparently, without >> grandparent USA info I cannot. >> >> I have been to Ireland in 2002 and did get to see the town/city that >> my >> Grandmother lived and surrounding area. And managed to get her >> baptismal cert record. She left Ireland approx. 1880 with her >> brother, >> her Mother came later. She married in the 1880's, had 8 children, only >> 3 alive when she became a widow, and later married my grandfather, >> about 1900-1901. Other than the 1900 census of NYC and 1910 census >> she >> is not in any documentation! >> No licenses were required back in those times there-fore no city >> record. Church in area where the census was taken in 1900 closed, St. >> Patricks' Diocese barely any help as to finding where a record might >> be. Calls to various churches in NYC area, where she supposedly lived >> and where they lived later after they married have found nothing. >> GRandparents died long before I was born, and no documents found >> since. >> >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the >> quotes in the subject and the body of the message >> > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
Hi Noeline, Howard Gillman Daunt's son, John Daunt b 1845 emigrated to Aus with his wife Jane nee Fox on 30 August 1870: Maryborough, Queensland, Immigrants from the British Isles and Germany 1861 - 1891 to Moreton Bay Brisbane DAUNT, Howard age 1 Ship/ Year: Flying Cloud 1870 DAUNT, Jane age 23 " " DAUNT, John age 25 " " 30 August 1870 Howard was baptized Herbert but his birth certificate says Howard. I found a record however that could be him indicating he may have moved to USA / Canada later. 1911 Ontario, Warwick County, has a Howard Daunt age 43, Irish, there since 1886. Also in 1891 a possible record in Ontario, he is down as single. But what happened to his mother and father I don't know so anything you can find would be terrific.... Thanks Noeline Carrie -----Original Message----- From: Noeline Mullins [mailto:blossy09@tpg.com.au] Sent: 15 September 2010 03:12 To: irl-cork@rootsweb.com Subject: RE: Daunts of Cork city, Church of Ireland records Hi Caroline, could you please send me any info of that name in Australia please if you have any?? Noeline Kiwi in Brisbane. -----Original Message----- From: irl-cork-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:irl-cork-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Caroline Smith Sent: Wednesday, 15 September 2010 5:30 AM To: knowltonew@earthlink.net; irl-cork@rootsweb.com Subject: RE: Daunts of Cork city, Church of Ireland records Thank you for this Elizabeth, I will give it a whirl! Best wishes, Caroline -----Original Message----- From: knowltonew@earthlink.net [mailto:knowltonew@earthlink.net] Sent: 11 September 2010 23:06 To: irl-cork@rootsweb.com Subject: Daunts of Cork city, Church of Ireland records Caroline, I have been researching since 1986 and have found the most productive method for researching C of I ancestors in Cork city is to avail yourself of the Cobh Genealogical Project Address; The Director, Cobh Genealogical Project, Merville, Cobh, Co. Cork. Telephone (021) 4811363 E-mail: mervillecobh@eircom.net There is a fee for this, but over a few years of ordering searches I took my McCarty line and others back from 1850s to the 18th century. Elizabeth >1. It seems my ancestor Howard Gillman Daunt, C most likely born in Cork City in around 1810, and, if not Dublin, and C of I. From the web links I've heard of so far, mostly from this brilliant list, it seems that all Cork City parish records for that time have been destroyed. Or is that wrong? Can anyone point me to a way of finding out what parish records are available in Ireland? At some point I will come over, but I want to find the best place to go, and avoid searching through records that have already been transcribed and are on the online sites, and make effective use of the short time available. ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3133 - Release Date: 09/14/10 04:35:00
Geocities was shut down by Yahoo in October 2009. Any site not moved by the owner was destroyed. Now, someone tried to copy all the information from Geocities pages to http://www.reocities.com/~agiroux/nychurch.htm but it appears to have not worked completely. It also appears that the neighborhood and "address" may be missing from the link. Some geocities sites used the owners "~alias". With that information may actually be on the reocities site. Finally, I though you would be able to get a static copy from web.archive.org. But I just checked and it is not listed on that site as well. This could be due to the possibly missing neighborhood and address. Maybe a google search will find its new hiding spot. PS: I only just learned of reocities today. Someone found one of my old pages and was asking a question. Mike in Ohio On 09/15/2010 07:01 PM, Jackie Sullivan wrote: > I got a list of churches for NY at www.geocties.com/~agiroux/nychurch.htm > This list churches for Manahattan,Brooklyn,Queens. It's not the list that says > where record were moved to. I will get that name. If you don't have the name > maybe you figure which one by address. > Jackie ----- Original Message ---- From: Pat Lewis <carmodyp@bellsouth.net> To: county cork <irl-cork@rootsweb.com>; CLARE IRL IRL <IRL-CLARE@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wed, September 15, 2010 2:08:35 PM Subject: Citizenship and grandparents marriage research question thank you all for your reply, however, I find I have a unique set of circumstances. I am in Florida, The lived in NYC, in more than 10 years of searching records, genealogy sites etc, hireing researchers and checking with the NYC diocese as to where the certificate might be of a church closed where grandmother ( then a widow w/ 3 children) lived in 1900 according to census. I have NO relatives to ask and Father left no documents or info about his parents. I was just curious as to how I would apply. Apparently, without grandparent USA info I cannot. I have been to Ireland in 2002 and did get to see the town/city that my Grandmother lived and surrounding area. And managed to get her baptismal cert record. She left Ireland approx. 1880 with her brother, her Mother came later. She married in the 1880's, had 8 children, only 3 alive when she became a widow, and later married my grandfather, about 1900-1901. Other than the 1900 census of NYC and 1910 census she is not in any documentation! No licenses were required back in those times there-fore no city record. Church in area where the census was taken in 1900 closed, St. Patricks' Diocese barely any help as to finding where a record might be. Calls to various churches in NYC area, where she supposedly lived and where they lived later after they married have found nothing. GRandparents died long before I was born, and no documents found since. ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Pat, I had one other thought. The RC home you were in must have some records as to the names of your parents and the circumstances as to why you were entered there. Can you get them to give you a notarized copy of that? You don't have to prove they were married, just that they were your parents, and then you prove your father's birth and his father's in Ireland. Janet On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 7:08 PM, Pat Lewis <carmodyp@bellsouth.net> wrote: > thank you all for your reply, however, I find I have a unique set of > circumstances. I am in Florida, The lived in NYC, in more than 10 years > of searching records, genealogy sites etc, hireing researchers and > checking with the NYC diocese as to where the certificate might be of > a church closed where grandmother ( then a widow w/ 3 children) lived > in 1900 according to census. I have NO relatives to ask and Father > left no documents or info about his parents. > I was just curious as to how I would apply. Apparently, without > grandparent USA info I cannot. > > I have been to Ireland in 2002 and did get to see the town/city that my > Grandmother lived and surrounding area. And managed to get her > baptismal cert record. She left Ireland approx. 1880 with her brother, > her Mother came later. She married in the 1880's, had 8 children, only > 3 alive when she became a widow, and later married my grandfather, > about 1900-1901. Other than the 1900 census of NYC and 1910 census she > is not in any documentation! > No licenses were required back in those times there-fore no city > record. Church in area where the census was taken in 1900 closed, St. > Patricks' Diocese barely any help as to finding where a record might > be. Calls to various churches in NYC area, where she supposedly lived > and where they lived later after they married have found nothing. > GRandparents died long before I was born, and no documents found > since. > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
Hi Pat: You might also try http://italgen.org/ Don't be misled by the name; they offer compiled listings of births, marriages, deaths, etc., for New York City and some for Long Island, all nationalities included. Also, many of the marriage listings show the name of the corresponding bride/grooom - helps you know you've got the right person! Hope this helps. Elizabeth
I got a list of churches for NY at www.geocties.com/~agiroux/nychurch.htm This list churches for Manahattan,Brooklyn,Queens. It's not the list that says where record were moved to. I will get that name. If you don't have the name maybe you figure which one by address. Jackie ----- Original Message ---- From: Pat Lewis <carmodyp@bellsouth.net> To: county cork <irl-cork@rootsweb.com>; CLARE IRL IRL <IRL-CLARE@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wed, September 15, 2010 2:08:35 PM Subject: Citizenship and grandparents marriage research question thank you all for your reply, however, I find I have a unique set of circumstances. I am in Florida, The lived in NYC, in more than 10 years of searching records, genealogy sites etc, hireing researchers and checking with the NYC diocese as to where the certificate might be of a church closed where grandmother ( then a widow w/ 3 children) lived in 1900 according to census. I have NO relatives to ask and Father left no documents or info about his parents. I was just curious as to how I would apply. Apparently, without grandparent USA info I cannot. I have been to Ireland in 2002 and did get to see the town/city that my Grandmother lived and surrounding area. And managed to get her baptismal cert record. She left Ireland approx. 1880 with her brother, her Mother came later. She married in the 1880's, had 8 children, only 3 alive when she became a widow, and later married my grandfather, about 1900-1901. Other than the 1900 census of NYC and 1910 census she is not in any documentation! No licenses were required back in those times there-fore no city record. Church in area where the census was taken in 1900 closed, St. Patricks' Diocese barely any help as to finding where a record might be. Calls to various churches in NYC area, where she supposedly lived and where they lived later after they married have found nothing. GRandparents died long before I was born, and no documents found since. ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Pat, Have you asked the Diocesean Office where the family lived in New York if they have an Archives for Diocesan Records? Here in Ohio our Diocese has an archives office that holds the records from closed parishes or at least can tell us where records are now kept if they are held at another parish. Good luck in your search. Jean On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 2:08 PM, Pat Lewis <carmodyp@bellsouth.net> wrote: > thank you all for your reply, however, I find I have a unique set of > circumstances. I am in Florida, The lived in NYC, in more than 10 years > of searching records, genealogy sites etc, hireing researchers and > checking with the NYC diocese as to where the certificate might be of > a church closed where grandmother ( then a widow w/ 3 children) lived > in 1900 according to census. I have NO relatives to ask and Father > left no documents or info about his parents. > I was just curious as to how I would apply. Apparently, without > grandparent USA info I cannot. > > I have been to Ireland in 2002 and did get to see the town/city that my > Grandmother lived and surrounding area. And managed to get her > baptismal cert record. She left Ireland approx. 1880 with her brother, > her Mother came later. She married in the 1880's, had 8 children, only > 3 alive when she became a widow, and later married my grandfather, > about 1900-1901. Other than the 1900 census of NYC and 1910 census she > is not in any documentation! > No licenses were required back in those times there-fore no city > record. Church in area where the census was taken in 1900 closed, St. > Patricks' Diocese barely any help as to finding where a record might > be. Calls to various churches in NYC area, where she supposedly lived > and where they lived later after they married have found nothing. > GRandparents died long before I was born, and no documents found > since. > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
thank you all for your reply, however, I find I have a unique set of circumstances. I am in Florida, The lived in NYC, in more than 10 years of searching records, genealogy sites etc, hireing researchers and checking with the NYC diocese as to where the certificate might be of a church closed where grandmother ( then a widow w/ 3 children) lived in 1900 according to census. I have NO relatives to ask and Father left no documents or info about his parents. I was just curious as to how I would apply. Apparently, without grandparent USA info I cannot. I have been to Ireland in 2002 and did get to see the town/city that my Grandmother lived and surrounding area. And managed to get her baptismal cert record. She left Ireland approx. 1880 with her brother, her Mother came later. She married in the 1880's, had 8 children, only 3 alive when she became a widow, and later married my grandfather, about 1900-1901. Other than the 1900 census of NYC and 1910 census she is not in any documentation! No licenses were required back in those times there-fore no city record. Church in area where the census was taken in 1900 closed, St. Patricks' Diocese barely any help as to finding where a record might be. Calls to various churches in NYC area, where she supposedly lived and where they lived later after they married have found nothing. GRandparents died long before I was born, and no documents found since.
Hi Caroline, could you please send me any info of that name in Australia please if you have any?? Noeline Kiwi in Brisbane. -----Original Message----- From: irl-cork-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:irl-cork-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Caroline Smith Sent: Wednesday, 15 September 2010 5:30 AM To: knowltonew@earthlink.net; irl-cork@rootsweb.com Subject: RE: Daunts of Cork city, Church of Ireland records Thank you for this Elizabeth, I will give it a whirl! Best wishes, Caroline -----Original Message----- From: knowltonew@earthlink.net [mailto:knowltonew@earthlink.net] Sent: 11 September 2010 23:06 To: irl-cork@rootsweb.com Subject: Daunts of Cork city, Church of Ireland records Caroline, I have been researching since 1986 and have found the most productive method for researching C of I ancestors in Cork city is to avail yourself of the Cobh Genealogical Project Address; The Director, Cobh Genealogical Project, Merville, Cobh, Co. Cork. Telephone (021) 4811363 E-mail: mervillecobh@eircom.net There is a fee for this, but over a few years of ordering searches I took my McCarty line and others back from 1850s to the 18th century. Elizabeth >1. It seems my ancestor Howard Gillman Daunt, C most likely born in Cork City in around 1810, and, if not Dublin, and C of I. From the web links I've heard of so far, mostly from this brilliant list, it seems that all Cork City parish records for that time have been destroyed. Or is that wrong? Can anyone point me to a way of finding out what parish records are available in Ireland? At some point I will come over, but I want to find the best place to go, and avoid searching through records that have already been transcribed and are on the online sites, and make effective use of the short time available. ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 9.0.851 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/3133 - Release Date: 09/14/10 04:35:00
Yep plenting of farming around that area too. I figured you had tried but threw it out there. I used to live in the Saratoga area and seem to remember some pretty active historical groups over there. Maybe one of them can help you push the right button. On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 11:43 AM, Ann W <annw659@cableone.net> wrote: > Thanks, John, > My people were farmers, until they moved to Cohoes around 1872/1873 to work > in the mills. > I have tried the diocese, but they are very slow to answer. > > Ann > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
Pat Lewis <carmodyp@bellsouth.net> said: >I have been able to find the marriage and baptism certs of my great >grandparents in Kanturk, Cork. And baptismal of grandmother there. >However, my Grandmother came to the USA in 1880's married my Grandfather >aprox. 1900-1901 but unable to find her marriage certificate, since the >area she lived in NYC, has moved church records to another church as yet >unfound, despite years (10) of searching. When applying for Irish citizenship, civil records are preferred over church records. See the following for NYC Civil Records of marriage. http://www.ci.nyc.ny.us/html/records/html/vitalrecords/home.shtml New York City, Department of Health, Bureau of Vital Records -dja
Thanks, John, My people were farmers, until they moved to Cohoes around 1872/1873 to work in the mills. I have tried the diocese, but they are very slow to answer. Ann
OOPS! Didn't realize that was the book you had -oh, well-on with the hunt, Thanks for the reply, Ann
Ann All those villages are Washington County. I would assume your folk worked in the quarries of that area. I would start with the Diocese and work downward. http://www.rcda.org/ Good luck. John On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 7:38 AM, Jackie Sullivan <jackieneal1@yahoo.com>wrote: > Sorrry I thought you meant New York City. > Jackie > > > > ----- Original Message ---- > From: Ann W <annw659@cableone.net> > To: irl-cork@rootsweb.com > Sent: Tue, September 14, 2010 10:44:11 PM > Subject: LOOKUP REQUEST > > Hi, Jackie, > May I ask you to look up a couple of records for me? > > I'm looking for the marriage of: > Thomas Reed, b. Ireland- (parents, Thomas Reed and Catherine??) to > Catherine Pendergast, b. Ireland-(parents, William Pendergast and Catherine > O'Rourke). > The marriage year would be 1854-1856, probably in Cambridge, Jackson, or > White Creek, NY. I know St. Pat's was in Cambridge, but was served by the > circuit rider priests for several years -not sure about Jackson and White > Creek. > > The other record would be the marriage of Thomas Behan to Catherine Reed > (sister of young Thomas Reed, above), supposedly at St. Pat's. > Marriage year would be between 1855 and 1858. > > St. Pat's in Cambridge does not have these records -would love to know > where > they are kept!! > > Thanks, > Ann > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in > the subject and the body of the message > > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
Sorrry I thought you meant New York City. Jackie ----- Original Message ---- From: Ann W <annw659@cableone.net> To: irl-cork@rootsweb.com Sent: Tue, September 14, 2010 10:44:11 PM Subject: LOOKUP REQUEST Hi, Jackie, May I ask you to look up a couple of records for me? I'm looking for the marriage of: Thomas Reed, b. Ireland- (parents, Thomas Reed and Catherine??) to Catherine Pendergast, b. Ireland-(parents, William Pendergast and Catherine O'Rourke). The marriage year would be 1854-1856, probably in Cambridge, Jackson, or White Creek, NY. I know St. Pat's was in Cambridge, but was served by the circuit rider priests for several years -not sure about Jackson and White Creek. The other record would be the marriage of Thomas Behan to Catherine Reed (sister of young Thomas Reed, above), supposedly at St. Pat's. Marriage year would be between 1855 and 1858. St. Pat's in Cambridge does not have these records -would love to know where they are kept!! Thanks, Ann ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Huge thank you to all for your ideas and will follow up on the Cobh heritage Centre and the websites for the RCBL. Will also get the book: I think the Grenham one is the most easily available even though it's 2006. Also thanks for the terrific website of Cork records. Re the Gillman Daunt name: it seemed when I started that there had to be a connection to the Gillman Daunt marriages, but it doesn't seem to be straightforward and I've been down several blind alleys with this. Howard Gillman Daunt named his first son Benjamin Achilles too.... He used the middle name Holmes for his next sons who were twins. Sometimes I wonder if maybe he had delusions of grandeur, or maybe he was a dispossessed / younger / rebellious son. Howard Gillman Daunt lived in Dublin as a clockmaker / engineer / inspector of gas works / employee finally of the Dublin gas meter company, which isn't particularly grand, but was a living. His father was John and a shoemaker, according to HG's second marriage certificate when he was quite elderly in 1874. There is a John Daunt shoemaker listed in one of the Cork directories in 1810, which is near the year of HG Daunt's birth, and that is my best possibility so far. I am assuming at the moment that he probably moved from Cork, but of course, he could have been born in Dublin, won't know until I find some kind of record of birth / baptism. So, all thoughts welcome! What a great list this is Caroline -----Original Message----- From: Kae Lewis [mailto:kae@chartertn.net] Sent: 12 September 2010 04:58 To: irl-cork@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: Daunt I feel sure someone with the name of Howard Gillman Daunt is a descendant of the 3 Jun 1795 marriage at St Peters Cork City between Achilles Daunt and Miss Mary Gillman (See Marriage License Bonds). It wouldn't surprise me if your Howard was their son in fact. And they were landed Gentry (C of I) from Tracton Abbey, near Carrigaline, Co Cork. I doubt any of them ended up as a shoemaker unless they were a black sheep or something. The Daunts always had plenty of money. Achilles Daunt was most likely the son or grandson of William Daunt, of Tracton Abbey. You will see a photo of his plaque on the Tracton Abbey church as it stands today. (His fellow builder was my ancestor George Hodder.) http://www.corkrecords.com/RingabellaTourists/RingabellaTourists.htm William Daunt of Tracton married Jane Austin in 1753 at Killagran church. Another Daunt Gillman marriage: On the Casey index there is a Gillman will of Frances Gillman 1845 who leaves money to, among others, John Daunt son of my nephew Achilles Daunt, Thomas Daunt late Major in 2nd West India Regiment. Thomas Daunt appears in the Holy Trinity Cork Parish register. The LDS IGI index records Frances who will is above, as the daughter of John Gillman and Mary Daunt. My great great grandmother's sister Helen Maguire Fowler married one Achilles deCourcy Daunt who was from this Tracton Daunt family. The name of one of their grandsons George Gillman Daunt b 1865 near Garrigaline . So I am pretty sure this whole family too are descended from this Daunt/Gillman marriage. Since this family is only related to me by marriage I havent really concerned myself too much with the details. There are people who know a lot more about these Daunts of Cork than I do and many of them have been at it for years. The St Peters parish registers and Holy Trinity, Christchurch, Cork are available at the RCB Library in Dublin and both include Daunts. But Tracton registers were lost in the Four Courts fire. Many of the St Peters registers are indexed on my website: www.corkrecords.com Kae Lewis On Sep 11, 2010, at 4:55 PM, irl-cork-request@rootsweb.com wrote: 1. It seems my ancestor Howard Gillman Daunt, C most likely born in Cork City in around 1810, and, if not Dublin, and C of I.
Hi, Jackie, May I ask you to look up a couple of records for me? I'm looking for the marriage of: Thomas Reed, b. Ireland- (parents, Thomas Reed and Catherine??) to Catherine Pendergast, b. Ireland-(parents, William Pendergast and Catherine O'Rourke). The marriage year would be 1854-1856, probably in Cambridge, Jackson, or White Creek, NY. I know St. Pat's was in Cambridge, but was served by the circuit rider priests for several years -not sure about Jackson and White Creek. The other record would be the marriage of Thomas Behan to Catherine Reed (sister of young Thomas Reed, above), supposedly at St. Pat's. Marriage year would be between 1855 and 1858. St. Pat's in Cambridge does not have these records -would love to know where they are kept!! Thanks, Ann
Thank you for this Elizabeth, I will give it a whirl! Best wishes, Caroline -----Original Message----- From: knowltonew@earthlink.net [mailto:knowltonew@earthlink.net] Sent: 11 September 2010 23:06 To: irl-cork@rootsweb.com Subject: Daunts of Cork city, Church of Ireland records Caroline, I have been researching since 1986 and have found the most productive method for researching C of I ancestors in Cork city is to avail yourself of the Cobh Genealogical Project Address; The Director, Cobh Genealogical Project, Merville, Cobh, Co. Cork. Telephone (021) 4811363 E-mail: mervillecobh@eircom.net There is a fee for this, but over a few years of ordering searches I took my McCarty line and others back from 1850s to the 18th century. Elizabeth >1. It seems my ancestor Howard Gillman Daunt, C most likely born in Cork City in around 1810, and, if not Dublin, and C of I. From the web links I've heard of so far, mostly from this brilliant list, it seems that all Cork City parish records for that time have been destroyed. Or is that wrong? Can anyone point me to a way of finding out what parish records are available in Ireland? At some point I will come over, but I want to find the best place to go, and avoid searching through records that have already been transcribed and are on the online sites, and make effective use of the short time available.
Pat, Dublin is somewhat forgiving re missing records. See if you can find a newspaper announcement of the marriage and an application for a marriage license with NY State. Janet On Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 7:08 PM, Pat Lewis <carmodyp@bellsouth.net> wrote: > I have been able to find the marriage and baptism certs of my great > grandparents in Kanturk, Cork. And baptismal of grandmother there. > > However, my Grandmother came to the USA in 1880's married my > Grandfather aprox. 1900-1901 but unable to find her marriage > certificate, since the area she lived in NYC, has moved church records > to another church as yet unfound, despite years (10) of searching. > My Grandfather was born in england of Irish parents from Cork. > > Since I had no actual knowledge of the grandparents until 1965, just > before my Father died ( born USA). I had been in a RC childrens home > from age 6-17. > > How could I apply for Irish dual citizenship? > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to IRL-CORK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >