so killoe is drumlish and then this crosses the boarders of longsford and leitrim i havecassidy's in chelsea ,ma where alot of these people came to in usa In a message dated Fri, 10 Nov 2000 1:14:43 AM Eastern Standard Time, "Beryl O'Gorman" <wordweav@bigpond.net.au> writes: << Hi Jim You wrote > so killoe is drumlish and this crosses the voarders of longsford and leitrim > jim Is this a question or a statement? This is really important for me to know as my Dimond/Cassidy family disappeared from Gortermone on the Leitrim side of that same border and I am interested in finding them in Longford. Would appreciate any further information you can give. I found a heap of Cassidys in Drumlish parish. Martin is my man, born circa 1810. No parents known. Married Mattie Dimond or Dymond and my g grandmother Mary Ann was born in Gortermone in 1836. TIA Beryl O'Gorman Greensborough Victoria Australia What's your story? Wordweavers Weaving your memories Weaving your stories http://www.wordweavers.net ----- Original Message ----- From: <CARADOC28@aol.com> To: <IRL-LONGFORD-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, November 09, 2000 3:34 PM Subject: Re: [LONGFORD~] Drumlish change > The village of Drumlish is near the northwest corner of County Longford, > near the boundary of county Leitrim. > > I think this was formerly part of Killoe Parish, and that there is now a > Drumlish Ph. > > > so killoe is drumlish and this crosses the voarders of longsford and leitrim > jim > > ______________________________ >>
There seems to alot of confusion here. Is there anyone who can put this straight? BTW, I found records of my Gormans listed under "Clonbroney parish" (I don't know if that means Civil-, or Church-parish?). In the register, the name "Drumlish" appeared as the final word in the records register for my gf's birth. So if it came under "Clonbroney parish", and "Drumlish" is some sort of subsection of Clonbroney, then what is Drumlish?? A townland, or something else? (records were around 1860--when did the boundaries change?) At 02:06 AM 11/10/2000 EST, CARADOC28@aol.com wrote: > >so killoe is drumlish > and then this crosses the boarders of longsford and >leitrim >i havecassidy's in chelsea ,ma where alot of these people came to in usa > > > > > >In a message dated Fri, 10 Nov 2000 1:14:43 AM Eastern Standard Time, "Beryl >O'Gorman" <wordweav@bigpond.net.au> writes: > ><< Hi Jim >You wrote >> so killoe is drumlish and this crosses the voarders of longsford and >leitrim >> jim > >Is this a question or a statement? This is really important for me to know >as my Dimond/Cassidy family disappeared from Gortermone on the Leitrim side >of that same border and I am interested in finding them in Longford. Would >appreciate any further information you can give. I found a heap of Cassidys >in Drumlish parish. Martin is my man, born circa 1810. No parents known. >Married Mattie Dimond or Dymond and my g grandmother Mary Ann was born in >Gortermone in 1836. >TIA > >Beryl O'Gorman >Greensborough Victoria Australia > >What's your story? >Wordweavers >Weaving your memories >Weaving your stories >http://www.wordweavers.net >----- Original Message ----- >From: <CARADOC28@aol.com> >To: <IRL-LONGFORD-L@rootsweb.com> >Sent: Thursday, November 09, 2000 3:34 PM >Subject: Re: [LONGFORD~] Drumlish change > > >> The village of Drumlish is near the northwest corner of County Longford, >> near the boundary of county Leitrim. >> >> I think this was formerly part of Killoe Parish, and that there is now a >> Drumlish Ph. >> >> >> so killoe is drumlish and this crosses the voarders of longsford and >leitrim >> jim >> >> ______________________________ > > >> > > > >==== IRL-LONGFORD Mailing List ==== > Try your luck if you're looking for ancestors in Pennsylvania, USA: >Subscribe to the Pennsylvania Census Lookup list: >mailto:PA-CENSUS-LOOKUP-L-request@rootsweb.com?subject=subscribe > > >