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    1. Re: [MONAGHAN] Song
    2. MICHAEL BURNS
    3. People might be interested in my song about the Irish ' from Armagh & Louth & Cavan... from Tyrone & County Monaghan' coming to Co Durham in England in the 1847s, fleeing the famine to work in the iron industry. It's called 'Back in 1847' and you can find it at the link below. _____________ Michael Burns To listen to my songs and tunes, go to http://michaelburns1.com/ >________________________________ > From: "irl-monaghan-request@rootsweb.com" <irl-monaghan-request@rootsweb.com> >To: irl-monaghan@rootsweb.com >Sent: Tuesday, 25 December 2012, 8:00 >Subject: IRL-MONAGHAN Digest, Vol 7, Issue 200 > > > > >+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ >Put SURNAMES in CAPS > >Today's Topics: > >  1. Clogher Record on JSTOR.ORG (Nick Cimino) >  2. Monaghan to Durham (teresa callan) > > >---------------------------------------------------------------------- > >Message: 1 >Date: Mon, 24 Dec 2012 11:35:06 +0000 >From: Nick Cimino <ncimino@hotmail.com> >Subject: [IRL-MONAGHAN] Clogher Record on JSTOR.ORG >To: "irl-monaghan@rootsweb.com" <irl-monaghan@rootsweb.com> >Message-ID: <BLU002-W1889780602AFD48EA046E01AE3B0@phx.gbl> >Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" > >Many college and university libraries have a program called jstor.org that gives online access to journal articles including the Clogher Record.  You can preview the first page of the Clogher Record articles by going to jstor.org. > >All the best, > >Nick Cimino >Member, APG >www.apgen.org >My Blog >http://ancestorpuzzles.blogspot.com/ > > >                        > >------------------------------ > >Message: 2 >Date: Mon, 24 Dec 2012 12:26:12 -0000 >From: "teresa callan" <teresacallan@btinternet.com> >Subject: [IRL-MONAGHAN] Monaghan to Durham >To: <IRL-MONAGHAN@rootsweb.com> >Message-ID: <6BC17058C6A54B45AABAD3B2D996E16C@your5mjafe1hd3> >Content-Type: text/plain;    charset="us-ascii" > >I have been interested in migration between Ulster and north east England >for some time because that was the route some of my ancestors took.  I did >wonder whether anyone had undertaken a deeper study on the subject.  I also >wondered whether the link between the north east and Ulster went back before >the steel and coal industries and that Ulstermen came across to take in the >harvest (and as the museum at Stalling Busk shows to shear the sheep).  > > > >My great grandfather Patrick Callan from Drumgoose in County Monaghan >appears in Middlesbrough in 1870 when he marries.  The census and >certificates for him indicate he is a labourer in the steel works.  However, >my father understood that this job had been combined with the job of >recruiting agent going into pubs, railway stations and other places Irish >might congregate and persuading people not to go home after the harvest but >to go into the steelworks. Whether this job was specific to him or whether >in fact the steelworks paid a bounty for recruits I do not know.  However it >is possible that Ulstermen doing the recruiting might bring in more >Ulstermen. My limited reading of the census for South Bank shows a number of >Monaghan and Armagh men.  > > > >Whilst Patrick Callan may have been coming to an area he knew - I understand >that, at least immediately after the famine the family came to England to >work - I have no suggestion that my Connelly ancestors from Tyrone ever did. >Joseph Patrick Connelly reputedly ran away from Pomeroy on his way to school >and turned up at his sister's in Newcastle.  Looking at the facts his >brother marries a County Tyrone girl in Leadgate in 1866.  At least one >sister arrives in Newcastle in 1866 or 7.  By 1871 Joseph Patrick is in >Gateshead, three of his sisters are in Newcastle and his brother is still in >Leadgate.  Again in looking through the records there are a lot of Tyrone >names.  > > > >Incidentally for anyone whose ancestors passed through the north east Brooms >is not the only church recording place of origin on marriage entries. >Stockton (which covers most of Teesside at that date) does so around 1850. >It names the parents and if they are living says where.  I think the entries >are townlands rather than parishes but I have not checked this.  > > > >Teresa > > > >------------------------------ > >To contact the IRL-MONAGHAN list administrator, send an email to >IRL-MONAGHAN-admin@rootsweb.com. > >To post a message to the IRL-MONAGHAN mailing list, send an email to IRL-MONAGHAN@rootsweb.com. > >__________________________________________________________ >To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to IRL-MONAGHAN-request@rootsweb.com >with the word "unsubscribe" without the quotes in the subject and the body of the >email with no additional text. > > >End of IRL-MONAGHAN Digest, Vol 7, Issue 200 >******************************************** > > >  

    06/30/2013 04:27:27