>From: "H. S. Patton" <[email protected]> >Reply-To: [email protected] >To: [email protected] >Subject: Re: [McCARTY-L] Re: McCarty, John and Ann Harman >Date: Wed, 5 Apr 2000 19:10:57 -0400 > >Bingo That is the info I found earlier and can not relocate,. This fellow >supposedly disappeared but the writer suspected that he was tied to the >Bucks county group but found no proof. Somehow all of these tie togeather. >Although the early names are all Catholic Saint names the appearance of Old >Testamnt names reveal that they are converted at some recent point to >Protestant, therefore are closely related to the landed families of the >McCarty clan. Because of the English penal code and the English law which >forbade breaking up of estates and required all the estate to pass to the >oldest son the ones who emigrated were of two types, those younger sons who >were disposessed of land and those who did military service to the Crown >for >which they would have recieved good conduct papers and land grants in the >colonies. >----- Original Message ----- >From: <[email protected]> >To: <[email protected]> >Sent: Wednesday, April 05, 2000 12:30 AM >Subject: Re: [McCARTY-L] Re: McCarty, John and Ann Harman > > > > Following is non documented info on this couple: > > > > John McCarty, b 1643/44 in County Cork or Kerry, So Munster, Ireland. >He > > married Ann Harman, 1684 in New York. Marriage records state: Ann >Harman >of > > Woodbridge, NJ. John McCarty's state: John McCarty of Piscataway, NJ. > > > > Ann was born in Middlesex, England arriving in America in 1682. > > > > Evelyn Bryan Evelyn Clould this be the father of Nicholas McCarty b 1670 in Cork Ireland. Bob ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com