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    1. Re: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Carnes (Carns) Family of South Boston - Bevins of South Boston.
    2. I couldn't find a death record for Thomas Carnes. >From the Massachusetts Vital Records Boston, Vol. 339, Pg. 240d. 17 September 1882, Margaret (Campbell) Carnes, widow, 70, died of Soft (sic) of the Brain, residence & died at 242 Bolton St., b. Ireland of John & Elizabeth. Boston, Vol. 225, Pg. 78 b. 10 September 1870, Mary Louisa Brown, 22 East St., of George & Elizabeth, Confectioner, Both b. Ireland. Boston, Vol. 315, Pg. 149 b. 29 January 1880, Annie Frances Brown, 242 Bolton St., of George & Elizabeth, Laborer, Both b. Ireland. The page for Frederick Brown was illegible. Geri -----Original Message----- From: wfodab163@verizon.net To: NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH@rootsweb.com Sent: Mon, 23 Apr 2007 10:50 AM Subject: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Carnes (Carns) Family of South Boston - Bevins of South Boston. Seeking information about the Carnes (Carns) family. Thomas Carnes & his wife Margaret (?) were born in Ireland. In the 1880 US Census Margaret Carnes was living at 238 Bolton Street in South Boston, MA and stated he was a widow. With her was her 3 daughters and a granddaughter. I have found a record of an Annie F. Carns married to a Thomas R. Bevins - with a daughter named Edith W. Bevins, living in South Boston, living with them was her sister Margaret and Margaret's daughter, Margaret J. Carnes. Any help in finding information about this family is appreciated. Here is an outline of the Carnes family: Descendants of Thomas Carnes Generation No. 1 1. THOMAS1 CARNES was born in Ireland, and died Bef. 1880 in Boston, MA (?). He married MARGARET (?). She was born 1814 in Ireland. Children of THOMAS CARNES and MARGARET are: 2. i. ELIZABETH2 CARNES, b. 1846, Ireland. 3. ii. MARGARET CARNES, b. 1850, Ireland. iii. ANNE CARNES, b. 1858, Ireland. - did she marry Thomas R. Bevins and did they have a daughter named Edith W. Bevins ? Generation No. 2 2. ELIZABETH2 CARNES (THOMAS1) was born 1846 in Ireland. She married GEORGE BROWN January 23, 1869 in Boston, MA, son of GEORGE BROWN and MARY. He was born 1846 in Ireland. Children of ELIZABETH CARNES and GEORGE BROWN are: i. MARY L.3 BROWN, b. Abt. 1870, Boston, Massachusetts. ii. FREDRICK E. BROWN, b. Abt. 1877, Boston, Massachusetts; d. Boston, Massachusetts; m. ALICE JUDGE, July 15, 1905, Boston, Massachusetts; b. 1883, Boston, Massachusetts; d. December 5, 1911, Boston, Massachusetts. iii. ANNIE F. BROWN, b. January 1880, Boston, Massachusetts. 3. MARGARET2 CARNES (THOMAS1) was born 1850 in Ireland. Child of MARGARET CARNES is: i. MARGARET J.3 CARNES, b. Abt. 1871, Massachusetts. ====New England Irish Mailing List==== Check out the NE-Irish website: http://www.connorsgenealogy.com/NEIrish/ ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ________________________________________________________________________ AOL now offers free email to everyone. Find out more about what's free from AOL at AOL.com.

    04/23/2007 06:27:10
    1. Re: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] pre-1835 Irish migration
    2. Kay Stanton
    3. FROM THINGS THAT I'VE READ, IT SEEMS THAT WHEN THE ENGLISH LANDLORD "HELPED" THE TENANT WITH PASSAGE (AT LEAST DURING THE FAMINE), - IT WAS PROBABLY BECAUSE HE WAS RESPONSIBLE FOR THAT TENANT AND IT WAS CHEAPER TO SEND HIM TO AMERICA! CAN ANYONE CONFIRM THAT? AL? CAN YOU CONFIRM? INCIDENTALLY, HAVEN'T TALKED TO YOU IN A LONG TIME. HOPE YOU'RE DOING WELL. KAY STANTON DAYTONA BEACH, FL ----- Original Message ----- From: <Myrtle1893@att.net> To: <new-england-irish@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, April 23, 2007 10:28 AM Subject: Re: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] pre-1835 Irish migration > Thank you for sharing the reasons your family left Ireland and the other > information like a landowner "helping" a tenant with passage. It adds > more depth to the story for me. > > Sandy > > -------------- Original message from AlRose509@aol.com: -------------- > > >> In a message dated 23-Apr-2007 12:57:41 AM Eastern Standard Time, >> Cothulio@cs.com writes: >> >> My questions: what wuld prompt an Irish family come to the US prior to >> 1835? >> ============== >> My Irish Catholic MARTIN family (a grandfather along with his adult >> married >> children and their families) came from southern County Monaghan to Boston >> MA in >> 1823. The explanation is that they had put up with oppressive ethnic >> extermination long enough. Some with the means to do so left for better >> opprtunities. >> Also, there were incentives for some landlords to pay partial passage for >> tenants to leave. >> >> Anyone with MARTIN, McMAHON, McCLEY, FERRIN, LYONS, McDERRMOTT, LONG, or >> McCULPHER/McCULLOUGH from southern County Monaghan or parish of Killanny >> in >> County >> Monaghan or Louth should take a look at my worldconnect file. >> >> _http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/~butchrose_ >> (http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/~butchrose) >> >> Al Rose >> Fayettville, NC >> >> >> >> >> ************************************** See what's free at >> http://www.aol.com. >> ====New England Irish Mailing List==== >> Check out the NE-Irish website: >> http://www.connorsgenealogy.com/NEIrish/ >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' >> without the >> quotes in the subject and the body of the message > ====New England Irish Mailing List==== > Check out the NE-Irish website: > http://www.connorsgenealogy.com/NEIrish/ > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without > the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    04/23/2007 05:45:30
    1. Re: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Funeral homes: an excellent resource
    2. Kay Stanton
    3. AND DON'T FORGET TO FOLLOW UP AND GET AN OBIT IF YOU CAN. THAT, TOO, CAN OFFER INFORMATION. OFTEN IT WILL LIST PALLBEARERS OR WHO GAVE FLORAL PIECES - WHO, IN MANY CASES, ARE RELATIVES. I FOUND AN ENTIRE FAMILY AND WHERE THEY LIVED (OUT OF STATE) BECAUSE THEY GAVE FLOWERS. THAT PARTICULAR OBIT WAS DATED 1908 AND TOOK PLACE IN MAINE. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Richard Danca" <rdanca@gmail.com> To: <new-england-irish@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, April 23, 2007 11:02 AM Subject: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Funeral homes: an excellent resource

    04/23/2007 05:41:20
    1. [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Ellen HAGGERTY - When did she arrive in the USA?
    2. Joan Boetger
    3. Hello, One of my brick walls is Ellen HAGGERTY, b. bet. 1834-1837 in Ireland to William and N. N. mother, per the Massachusetts Archive's marriage registry. I have no idea as to whether her father stayed in Ireland or made the voyage with his daughter. At 20, she married Carmelo RINADO (AKA David RINALDO) on Dec. 06, 1857 in Boston, MA. They had 3 children, Laura P. RINADO, Joanna RINADO and my gr-grandfather Paul Victor Manuel RINARDO. Spelling per birth registries. The Mass. Archives sent to me as Ellen's death registry a document stating she died Jan. 16, 1863 at 25 on Deer Island as a pauper after "14 hours delerium tremors," apparently she was a drunk. Carmelo worked in a "bowling saloon", first living on Hanover Street, Boston, then 2 and 5 Arch Place, South Boston. That's my knowledge of her in a nutshell. I would be most appreciative of any information on my Ellen. Joan (Rinaldo) Boetger --------------------------------- Ahhh...imagining that irresistible "new car" smell? Check outnew cars at Yahoo! Autos.

    04/23/2007 05:25:26
    1. [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Funeral homes: an excellent resource
    2. Richard Danca
    3. It's fairly likely that your Irish (or Italian or Polish...) family has been using the same funeral home for years, possibly for generations. If so, you may have an excellent information source just a postage stamp away. When I wrote a letter to "our" funeral home, asking for information on several names -- ya gotta be specific here! -- I got back a dozen or more photocopies of index cards the funeral home had kept. And they didn't even take me up on my offer to pay! Thanks to these cards, I *finally* got a lead on my g-grandfather Michael Hartigan's parents, along with cause-of-death and burial information that I would not have found elsewhere. I even know who paid for the funerals and who drove the funeral cars! This is not exactly primary research, so it's stuff I still need to verify elsewhere, including getting death certificates and such. Still, I only have to look in a smaller universe of records. Bonus: I plan to scan these copies and include them in my research files. Best part: even though this is the so-called Irish funeral home, my Sicilian grandmother was so impressed by one of the family funerals she attended there, she arranged to have her husband buried from here, and we later buried her from that home as well. That means I got information on the other side of the family as well. -- --- Richard Danca Newton, MA rdanca@gmail.com ------

    04/23/2007 05:02:51
    1. [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Carnes (Carns) Family of South Boston - Bevins of South Boston.
    2. Bill Olsen
    3. Seeking information about the Carnes (Carns) family. Thomas Carnes & his wife Margaret (?) were born in Ireland. In the 1880 US Census Margaret Carnes was living at 238 Bolton Street in South Boston, MA and stated he was a widow. With her was her 3 daughters and a granddaughter. I have found a record of an Annie F. Carns married to a Thomas R. Bevins - with a daughter named Edith W. Bevins, living in South Boston, living with them was her sister Margaret and Margaret's daughter, Margaret J. Carnes. Any help in finding information about this family is appreciated. Here is an outline of the Carnes family: Descendants of Thomas Carnes Generation No. 1 1. THOMAS1 CARNES was born in Ireland, and died Bef. 1880 in Boston, MA (?). He married MARGARET (?). She was born 1814 in Ireland. Children of THOMAS CARNES and MARGARET are: 2. i. ELIZABETH2 CARNES, b. 1846, Ireland. 3. ii. MARGARET CARNES, b. 1850, Ireland. iii. ANNE CARNES, b. 1858, Ireland. - did she marry Thomas R. Bevins and did they have a daughter named Edith W. Bevins ? Generation No. 2 2. ELIZABETH2 CARNES (THOMAS1) was born 1846 in Ireland. She married GEORGE BROWN January 23, 1869 in Boston, MA, son of GEORGE BROWN and MARY. He was born 1846 in Ireland. Children of ELIZABETH CARNES and GEORGE BROWN are: i. MARY L.3 BROWN, b. Abt. 1870, Boston, Massachusetts. ii. FREDRICK E. BROWN, b. Abt. 1877, Boston, Massachusetts; d. Boston, Massachusetts; m. ALICE JUDGE, July 15, 1905, Boston, Massachusetts; b. 1883, Boston, Massachusetts; d. December 5, 1911, Boston, Massachusetts. iii. ANNIE F. BROWN, b. January 1880, Boston, Massachusetts. 3. MARGARET2 CARNES (THOMAS1) was born 1850 in Ireland. Child of MARGARET CARNES is: i. MARGARET J.3 CARNES, b. Abt. 1871, Massachusetts.

    04/23/2007 04:50:45
    1. [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Just a reminder about the NEHGS MVR 1841-1910 database
    2. Sue Richart
    3. Hi Listers, Just a reminder on the NEHGS Massachusetts Vital Records 1841-1910 database, please include the volume and page number for entries that either are listed as "image not available" or as an earlier post commented on an illegible image. That is a real help for me. I'm one of the folks fixing the database and am looking specifically looking for posts about image problems. About ten percent of the database has problems, which is a lot when you consider there are 8.5 million entries. I'm reporting problem areas to the webmaster for correction and connecting images that are on the server, but not linked to entries. I won't be able to get to anything this week, due to other events, but will try to connect images next week if any show up. Sue Richart NEHGS Volunteer

    04/23/2007 04:40:05
    1. Re: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Margaret Connell
    2. Arlene Haddock
    3. Update to first email. Thanks for the response and comments. I went back and searched all the records that I have. I have all the census records so do not need them. >From a marriage record 22 March 1858 at the age of 18: She was born in Cork, Ireland. Her parents were Patrick and Catherine Connell. Calculated from her death record of 30 Aug 1885, she was born 30 Aug 1839. If she left Ireland at age 16 or 17, she would have left in 1855 or 1856. Margaret came into the state of R.I. and worked as a domestic. I don't think she did this for long before she married. Her cousin stayed in Boston, MA. It is possible that her father Patrick came to R.I., as a man named Patrick CONNOR by state census record of 1865 is living with them at one point but is not listed on any other census record for them. He was 48. I hope this helps. Thanks Arlene Clarke Haddock --- Arlene Haddock <mahaddock@yahoo.com> wrote: > My great grandmother left Ireland with a cousin, > probably from the port of Cork. It is said she was > born and lived in Dublin. They probably came to the > Port of Boston. I have not been able to find a ship > that she could have come on. > > Margaret married Nathaniel Sherman Northup(1831 - > 1894). > > Margaret O'Connell was born in 1838 and died 1880. > Any information or suggestions would be welcome. > > Thank you. > > Arlene Clarke Haddock > > > __________________________________________________ > Do You Yahoo!? > Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam > protection around > http://mail.yahoo.com > __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com

    04/23/2007 04:30:54
    1. Re: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Carnes (Carns) Family of South Boston - Bevins of South Boston.
    2. Sue Richart
    3. Bill, I have absolutely no time this week to look, but will check the Boston City Directories and the MVR death index for Thomas Carnes next week or the week after. Sue Richart On 4/23/07, gclarke688@aol.com <> wrote: > > I couldn't find a death record for Thomas Carnes. > > >From the Massachusetts Vital Records > > Boston, Vol. 339, Pg. 240d. 17 September 1882, Margaret (Campbell) Carnes, > widow, 70, died of Soft (sic) of the Brain, residence & died at 242 Bolton > St., b. Ireland of John & Elizabeth. > > Boston, Vol. 225, Pg. 78 > b. 10 September 1870, Mary Louisa Brown, 22 East St., of George & > Elizabeth, Confectioner, Both b. Ireland. > > Boston, Vol. 315, Pg. 149 > b. 29 January 1880, Annie Frances Brown, 242 Bolton St., of George & > Elizabeth, Laborer, Both b. Ireland. > > The page for Frederick Brown was illegible. > > Geri > > > > -----Original Message----- > From: wfodab163@verizon.net > To: NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH@rootsweb.com > Sent: Mon, 23 Apr 2007 10:50 AM > Subject: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Carnes (Carns) Family of South Boston - > Bevins of South Boston. > > > Seeking information about the Carnes (Carns) family. Thomas Carnes & his > wife > Margaret (?) were born in Ireland. In the 1880 US Census Margaret Carnes > was > living at 238 Bolton Street in South Boston, MA and stated he was a > widow. With > her was her 3 daughters and a granddaughter. I have found a record of an > Annie > F. Carns married to a Thomas R. Bevins - with a daughter named Edith W. > Bevins, > living in South Boston, living with them was her sister Margaret and > Margaret's > daughter, Margaret J. Carnes. Any help in finding information about this > family > is appreciated. > > Here is an outline of the Carnes family: > > Descendants of Thomas Carnes > > > Generation No. 1 > > > 1. THOMAS1 CARNES was born in Ireland, and died Bef. 1880 in Boston, MA > (?). He > married MARGARET (?). She was born 1814 in Ireland. > > > Children of THOMAS CARNES and MARGARET are: > > 2. i. ELIZABETH2 CARNES, b. 1846, Ireland. > > 3. ii. MARGARET CARNES, b. 1850, Ireland. > > iii. ANNE CARNES, b. 1858, Ireland. - did she marry Thomas R. Bevins and > did > they have a daughter named Edith W. Bevins ? > > > > Generation No. 2 > > > 2. ELIZABETH2 CARNES (THOMAS1) was born 1846 in Ireland. She married > GEORGE > BROWN January 23, 1869 in Boston, MA, son of GEORGE BROWN and MARY. He was > born > 1846 in Ireland. > > > Children of ELIZABETH CARNES and GEORGE BROWN are: > > i. MARY L.3 BROWN, b. Abt. 1870, Boston, Massachusetts. > > ii. FREDRICK E. BROWN, b. Abt. 1877, Boston, Massachusetts; d. Boston, > Massachusetts; m. ALICE JUDGE, July 15, 1905, Boston, Massachusetts; b. > 1883, > Boston, Massachusetts; d. December 5, 1911, Boston, Massachusetts. > > iii. ANNIE F. BROWN, b. January 1880, Boston, Massachusetts. > > > > 3. MARGARET2 CARNES (THOMAS1) was born 1850 in Ireland. > > > Child of MARGARET CARNES is: > > i. MARGARET J.3 CARNES, b. Abt. 1871, Massachusetts. > ====New England Irish Mailing List==== > Check out the NE-Irish website: > http://www.connorsgenealogy.com/NEIrish/ > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com > with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body > of > the message > ________________________________________________________________________ > AOL now offers free email to everyone. Find out more about what's free > from AOL at AOL.com. > ====New England Irish Mailing List==== > Check out the NE-Irish website: > http://www.connorsgenealogy.com/NEIrish/ > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without > the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    04/23/2007 04:28:24
    1. [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Lemon/Lamont ancestors
    2. PAUL NICHOLS
    3. Hello all. My immigrant ancestor was James (Lamont) Lemon who came to Boston in 1718 on the 5 Ships with Scotch/Irish on board...as far as I know. The Lamont/Lemon line, from what my research has told me, were the Lamont Clan in Scotland but had to leave because the Campbell Clan was terrorising them back in the 1600's .. So my line went to Ireland. Anybody have any info on his ancestors? IAW the IGI he married Margaret (Polly) Brackenrig (Could be Breckenridge) on 25 Jan, 1715. Thanks. Paul of San Diego

    04/23/2007 03:50:47
    1. Re: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] REILLY/REILEY/RILEY
    2. Pat Connors
    3. Have you tried tracking them through city directories? Many time they gave date of death in the year after they died. looking for deaths of William J and Mary Ann (Devlin) Reilly, > residing in Medford, MA in 1880 according to census. They were married in > Arlington, MA in 1873. He born in Pennsylvania, she in MA; parents of both > born in Ireland. > > -- Pat Connors, Sacramento CA http://www.connorsgenealogy.com

    04/23/2007 03:46:57
    1. Re: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] pre-1835 Irish migration
    2. In a message dated 23-Apr-2007 12:57:41 AM Eastern Standard Time, Cothulio@cs.com writes: My questions: what wuld prompt an Irish family come to the US prior to 1835? ============== My Irish Catholic MARTIN family (a grandfather along with his adult married children and their families) came from southern County Monaghan to Boston MA in 1823. The explanation is that they had put up with oppressive ethnic extermination long enough. Some with the means to do so left for better opprtunities. Also, there were incentives for some landlords to pay partial passage for tenants to leave. Anyone with MARTIN, McMAHON, McCLEY, FERRIN, LYONS, McDERRMOTT, LONG, or McCULPHER/McCULLOUGH from southern County Monaghan or parish of Killanny in County Monaghan or Louth should take a look at my worldconnect file. _http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/~butchrose_ (http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/~butchrose) Al Rose Fayettville, NC ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.

    04/23/2007 12:18:52
    1. Re: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH Digest, Vol 1, Issue 20
    2. In a message dated 4/22/2007 8:55:51 PM Pacific Daylight Time, new-england-irish-request@rootsweb.com writes: My questions: what wuld prompt an Irish family come to the US prior to 1835? Possibly as indentured servants like my Irish 8th great grandfather did in 1656 to Massachusetts.

    04/22/2007 07:57:07
    1. [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Arringtons
    2. Thank you Pat. Gail ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.

    04/22/2007 05:56:24
    1. Re: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] CARYLE, CARLE. CARL
    2. Thank you for the reminder about google, it was a "DUH" momemt for sure. I spent a good bit of time on those links -------------- Original message from Dasmi1170@aol.com: -------------- > > In a message dated 4/22/2007 10:24:07 AM Eastern Standard Time, > Myrtle1893@att.net writes: > > > My questions: what wuld prompt an Irish family come to the US prior to > 1835?< > > Sandy, > > If you haven't gone to _www.google.com_ (http://www.google.com) go to it. I > typed in Conditions in Ireland in 1830. > > Then 1820s One of the website: > _http://memory.loc.gov/learn/features/immig/irish2.html_ > (http://memory.loc.gov/learn/features/immig/irish2.html) > > Joan > > > > > > > ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com. > ====New England Irish Mailing List==== > Check out the NE-Irish website: > http://www.connorsgenealogy.com/NEIrish/ > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    04/22/2007 05:29:17
    1. [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] REILLY/REILEY/RILEY
    2. CAROL RILEY
    3. looking for deaths of William J and Mary Ann (Devlin) Reilly, residing in Medford, MA in 1880 according to census. They were married in Arlington, MA in 1873. He born in Pennsylvania, she in MA; parents of both born in Ireland. William's parents Michael & Bridget Reilly Mary Ann's parents John & Hannah Devlin any additional info appreciated, thanks Carol Riley

    04/22/2007 03:57:46
    1. Re: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH Digest, Vol 1, Issue 19
    2. gary e. lee
    3. Does anyone have info on Mary Murphy, probably born Conneticut around 1823, married Charles Scott Teel? Thank you, Linda from Cosi ----- Original Message ----- From: <new-england-irish-request@rootsweb.com> To: <new-england-irish@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, April 22, 2007 4:14 PM Subject: NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH Digest, Vol 1, Issue 19 > > > ====New England Irish Mailing List==== > Check out the NE-Irish website: > http://www.connorsgenealogy.com/NEIrish/ > > Today's Topics: > > 1. Craig - Irish from Ahoghill, County Antrim (herb_316) > 2. Patrick KELLEY of Boston, Mass (ShariKelley@aol.com) > 3. Hurley/RI (Pat and Jeff Carpenter) > 4. CARYLE, CARLE. CARL (Myrtle1893@att.net) > 5. OATES (helenware) > 6. Re: CARYLE, CARLE. CARL (Dasmi1170@aol.com) > 7. Irish potato famine (Kathy Montgomery) > 8. Margaret O'Connell or Connell (Arlene Haddock) > 9. Re: Margaret O'Connell or Connell (Donna Rhyne) > 10. Old Arrington (GailSass@aol.com) > 11. Re: Margaret O'Connell or Connell (Mary Ellen Chambers) > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Message: 1 > Date: Sun, 22 Apr 2007 06:34:17 -0400 > From: "herb_316" <herb_316@bellsouth.net> > Subject: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Craig - Irish from Ahoghill, County > Antrim > To: <NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH@rootsweb.com> > Message-ID: <001201c784c9$c913a7f0$6101a8c0@herbhendricks> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" > > Looking to connect to any Craig Irish families from Ahoghill, County > Antrim, Northern Ireland; Especially those Craig families listed in 1766 > Irish Religious Census for that area: William Craig (2x), James Craig, > John Craig, and Adam Craig. > > We have DNA Profile for well documented Craig Family from the above to the > USA in 1773-1774. > > If possible Craig Family connection contact below. > > God Bless. > > Herb Hendricks > Retired NASA Physicist > 2418 Lebanon Road > Pendleton, SC 29670 > Herb_316@Bellsouth.net > 864 2616636 > Group Administrator Hendricks DNA Project > Secretary Hendricks Family Association > Current Research Families; Major, Smith, Craig, Hendricks, Eskew, > Rochester > Web site = http://www.familytreedna.com/public/hendricks > > > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 2 > Date: Sun, 22 Apr 2007 07:25:01 EDT > From: ShariKelley@aol.com > Subject: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Patrick KELLEY of Boston, Mass > To: NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH@rootsweb.com > Message-ID: <c30.10a67699.335ca00d@aol.com> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" > > Does anyone have any info on Patrick Kelley, of Boston, Mass. > > This is what I know: > > Patrick Kelley was a laborer, married a Mary (have seen her surname as > Gill, > Conley and Cluney). > > They had a son, Bartlett, born 29 Jul 1847, Boston, MA; died 26 Jun 1900, > Rowley, MA; married Celinda GRANT Haskell (first husband was Asaph > Haskell) 20 > Jan 1868, Rowley, MA. > > Celinda was born 12 Jul 1843, Franfort, ME; died 25 Aug 1903, Rowley, MA. > She was the daughter of Jefferson and Emeline (Plumer) Grant. > > Bartlett Kelley was a railroad man. > > He was also a Civil War veteran; invalid pension. He enlisted as a Private > in Company D, 48th Infantry Regiment in the state of Massachusetts on 24 > September 1862. He said he was 18 years when he enlisted. He served under > Capt. > Noyes. Enlisted 15 Aug 1862-mustered out 24 Sep 1862.Was severly wounded > 27 May > 1863 in an assault on Port Hudson, LA. Mustered out on 3 Sep 1863 in Camp > Lander, Wenham, MA. > > Bartlett was 5' tall, with fair complexion, light hair and blue eyes > (according to his pension records). > > According to the 1900 census, Bartlett and Celinda had 1 child (Charles > Maurice Kelley) and he was not living in 1900. > > According to the 1860 census, Bartlett was 13 years of age. He was living > in > Rowley with Thomas and Mary (Saunders) Cressey-both 66 years of age. > > Thank you, > > > Shari Kelley Worrell > Researching Essex County, Mass > Brick Walls Conley/Cluney, Kelley, Ramsdell, Wilson, Bailey > > > > > ************************************** See what's free at > http://www.aol.com. > > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 3 > Date: Sun, 22 Apr 2007 09:12:22 -0400 > From: "Pat and Jeff Carpenter" <carstano@comcast.net> > Subject: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Hurley/RI > To: <NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH@rootsweb.com> > Message-ID: <000901c784df$ddc1fd80$cc3e2218@jeff> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" > > By way of introduction I'm researching the families of John Hurley & Mary > Donohue, Mary's mother, Mary Spillane and Helen Josephine Hurley and her > husband Philip Sheridan Knauer. > > John Hurley, b. 15 July 1830, Bantry, County Cork, Ireland; d. Aug 1915, > Providence, RI, m. 30 Jul, 1856, St. Patrick's Church, Providence, RI > Mary Donohue, b.16 Sept 1838, Glegariff, County Cork, Ireland, d.14 Dec > 1916, Manning St., Providence, RI, > > John and Mary had 15 children, 13 of which survived. > > One of the thirteen surviving children was Helen Josephine Hurley, b.3 > Sept, 1879, Gano St., Providence RI, d. 1971, Lloyd Ave., Providence RI, > m. 8 Jan 1908, St. Joseph's, Providence, RI, Philip Sheridan Knauer, b.3 > Aug 1870, Warwick, Chester County, PA, d. 7 May, 1952. > > Mary Donohue (Donahue) Spillane b. 1805, County Cork, Ireland, d. 1877, > Providence, RI. > > I am looking for information for the following: > > John Hurley's stone reads U.S.N. 1853-4, 1864-5/Bucklin Post No. 20 G.A.R. > And, #93 is stamped into the base of the stone. Does anyone know what the > # stamped into the base of the stone may represent and, secondly, does > anyone have information about the Bucklin Post No. 20 G.A.R. or a > suggestion where I might find information about the post? > > Thanks, > Pat Stano-Carpenter > > > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 4 > Date: Sun, 22 Apr 2007 15:23:14 +0000 > From: Myrtle1893@att.net > Subject: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] CARYLE, CARLE. CARL > To: NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH@rootsweb.com > Message-ID: > <042220071523.5302.462B7DE20003D294000014B62160376021CCC7C8CE0A049B9D97B3@att.net> > > Content-Type: text/plain > > Recently found information on my gr gr gr grandmother and am trying to > piece together any "between the lines" information that may be in the > concrete information that I do have. I'd appreciate any help other Irish > researchers may have to offer. > > Name: Julia CARL > b. abt. 11 June 1834, Northampton, Hampshire Mass [birth calculated from > age at death] [location from birth record of child] > m. 1849/1850 location unknown [1850 census has box checked for "married > within the year"] Benjamin Knight Bennett. > > Other clues: > 1850 census Northampton, Ma. > Michael Carle 40 Laborer b. Ireland {abt 1810} > Alice Carle 40 b. Ireland {abt 1810} > Patrick Carle 12 b. Mass {abt 1838} > Julia Carle 15 b. Mass {abt 1835} > Mary Carle 7 b. Mass {abt 1843} > Catherine Carle 4 b. Mass {abt 1846} > Richard Carle 4 b. Mass {abt 1846} > Richard Carlyle 80 b. Ireland {abt 1770} > > I checked NEHGS for any births in Northampton that may be for this family > but had no luck with that. > I am hoping that this is her family group. Unfortunatly when she died of > consumption in Woonsocket RI on 20 may 1876, the information on the > certificate was sparse and the only information I have on parentage is the > identification as "IRISH". > > My questions: what wuld prompt an Irish family come to the US prior to > 1835? > Where did they go? I cannot find the family in later census records > is the progression of the name from Caryle, to Carle, to Carl a logical > one or am I reading more into this that exists? > > I'd surely appreciate any help one may have to offer on ideas for further > research and places to look. > Kind regards, > Sandy from Colorado > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 5 > Date: Sun, 22 Apr 2007 11:43:16 -0400 > From: "helenware" <helenware@comcast.net> > Subject: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] OATES > To: <NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH@rootsweb.com> > Message-ID: <008e01c784f4$f20be160$6401a8c0@hsd1.ma.comcast.net> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" > > My g.g.grandfather Peter Oates was from County Longford Ireland. He > married a Bridget Rowley in the mid 1840's in Templemichael, Longford. > They had children in Ireland James and Hugh, Hugh died in the famine. > Peter moved his family to Liverpool, England and lived with a family named > Ward(not known if related or not) > His daughter Ellen was born while in Liverpool---soon after they came to > the Boston area and a son Peter was born. > Records show Bridget and her Rowley family and the 2 Oates children came > over on a different ship than Peter. > They settled in Hopkinton, Middlesex, Mass. > Bridget and baby Peter soon died of small-pox. > Peter then married Mary Nugent Burke(widow) they had 2 sons Peter and > Patrick. Peter being my g.grandfather. > Mary Nugent came over from Ballinasloe, Galway, Ireland in about 1849 and > lived in Hopkinton Middlesex, Mass. > Helen Ware > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 6 > Date: Sun, 22 Apr 2007 14:34:10 EDT > From: Dasmi1170@aol.com > Subject: Re: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] CARYLE, CARLE. CARL > To: new-england-irish@rootsweb.com > Message-ID: <ca2.d3d87bf.335d04a2@aol.com> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" > > > In a message dated 4/22/2007 10:24:07 AM Eastern Standard Time, > Myrtle1893@att.net writes: > >> My questions: what wuld prompt an Irish family come to the US prior to > 1835?< > > Sandy, > > If you haven't gone to _www.google.com_ (http://www.google.com) go to it. > I > typed in Conditions in Ireland in 1830. > > Then 1820s One of the website: > _http://memory.loc.gov/learn/features/immig/irish2.html_ > (http://memory.loc.gov/learn/features/immig/irish2.html) > > Joan > > > > > > > ************************************** See what's free at > http://www.aol.com. > > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 7 > Date: Sun, 22 Apr 2007 11:47:57 -0700 > From: "Kathy Montgomery" <kathym@uvic.ca> > Subject: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Irish potato famine > To: <NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH@rootsweb.com> > Message-ID: <NHBBIBMMMLANFBNNJNADGEAFCCAA.kathym@uvic.ca> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" > > Hi - if you want a really detailed history of the potato famine, try: > > Woodham-Smith, Cecil. THe Great Hunger. 1962. Old Town Books, NY > 941.58 Woo > > It is not focused on New England, but it sure tells you how NE history was > affected by the arrival of thousands of dying, starving and ill Irish. > > > > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 8 > Date: Sun, 22 Apr 2007 12:39:59 -0700 (PDT) > From: Arlene Haddock <mahaddock@yahoo.com> > Subject: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Margaret O'Connell or Connell > To: NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH@rootsweb.com > Message-ID: <993994.36426.qm@web52710.mail.re2.yahoo.com> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 > > My great grandmother left Ireland with a cousin, > probably from the port of Cork. It is said she was > born and lived in Dublin. They probably came to the > Port of Boston. I have not been able to find a ship > that she could have come on. > > Margaret married Nathaniel Sherman Northup(1831 - > 1894). > > Margaret O'Connell was born in 1838 and died 1880. > Any information or suggestions would be welcome. > > Thank you. > > Arlene Clarke Haddock > > > __________________________________________________ > Do You Yahoo!? > Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around > http://mail.yahoo.com > > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 9 > Date: Sun, 22 Apr 2007 18:13:53 -0400 > From: "Donna Rhyne" <djfrnc@nc.rr.com> > Subject: Re: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Margaret O'Connell or Connell > To: <new-england-irish@rootsweb.com> > Message-ID: <001101c7852b$83a40180$0b00a8c0@nc.rr.com> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" > > You would need to have an idea about when she arrived and who she might > have > been with on arrival to narrow down the many choice for the name Margaret > O"Connell. > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Arlene Haddock" <mahaddock@yahoo.com> > To: <NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Sunday, April 22, 2007 3:39 PM > Subject: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Margaret O'Connell or Connell > > >> My great grandmother left Ireland with a cousin, >> probably from the port of Cork. It is said she was >> born and lived in Dublin. They probably came to the >> Port of Boston. I have not been able to find a ship >> that she could have come on. >> >> Margaret married Nathaniel Sherman Northup(1831 - >> 1894). >> >> Margaret O'Connell was born in 1838 and died 1880. >> Any information or suggestions would be welcome. >> >> Thank you. >> >> Arlene Clarke Haddock >> >> >> __________________________________________________ >> Do You Yahoo!? >> Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around >> http://mail.yahoo.com >> ====New England Irish Mailing List==== >> Check out the NE-Irish website: >> http://www.connorsgenealogy.com/NEIrish/ >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without > the quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 10 > Date: Sun, 22 Apr 2007 18:46:17 EDT > From: GailSass@aol.com > Subject: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Old Arrington > To: NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH@rootsweb.com > Message-ID: <cd7.e2cfbeb.335d3fb9@aol.com> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" > > Hi > I am not sure where the Arringtons landed when they came over from > Ireland, > but here is the little information I have > Old ARRINGTON, b. abt 1645 County Antrim, North Ireland > William ARRINGTON, b. 1671, Antrim, North Ireland > Haleran ARRINGTON, b. 1710, Cambridgshire, England, M. Hannah BRYANT, b. > 1716, Antrim, North Ireland > Thanks for any help. Eventually they lived in South Carolina but maybe > they > landed in the New England area first. > Gail > > > > ************************************** See what's free at > http://www.aol.com. > > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 11 > Date: Sun, 22 Apr 2007 16:13:57 -0700 (PDT) > From: Mary Ellen Chambers <maryln61@sbcglobal.net> > Subject: Re: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Margaret O'Connell or Connell > To: new-england-irish@rootsweb.com > Message-ID: <302932.51351.qm@web81806.mail.mud.yahoo.com> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 > > Arlene~ > If your great grandmother was born & lived in Dublin City, why do > you think she sailed from Cork City or a port in County Cork? That is > traveling from one side of the country to the other at a time when land > travel was not all that comfortable or easy. In what year or approx. year > did she emigrate? > > Mary Ellen Chambers > > Arlene Haddock <mahaddock@yahoo.com> wrote: > My great grandmother left Ireland with a cousin, > probably from the port of Cork. It is said she was > born and lived in Dublin. They probably came to the > Port of Boston. I have not been able to find a ship > that she could have come on. > > Margaret married Nathaniel Sherman Northup(1831 - > 1894). > > Margaret O'Connell was born in 1838 and died 1880. > Any information or suggestions would be welcome. > > Thank you. > > Arlene Clarke Haddock > > > __________________________________________________ > Do You Yahoo!? > Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around > http://mail.yahoo.com > ====New England Irish Mailing List==== > Check out the NE-Irish website: > http://www.connorsgenealogy.com/NEIrish/ > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without > the quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > > ------------------------------ > > > > End of NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH Digest, Vol 1, Issue 19 > ************************************************ > >

    04/22/2007 02:54:54
    1. [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] ARRINGTONS
    2. Cancel that last email question. I found that they landed in South Carolina. Anyone else with Arrington information can contact me offline since this has nothing to do with New England area. Thanks ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.

    04/22/2007 01:20:29
    1. Re: [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Old Arrington
    2. Pat Connors
    3. In the 1790 US census the only Arringtons found were in North and South Carolina and in Maryland. Ancestry's Immigration records show some landing in Boston in the 1700s. The Immigration section for Ancestry is free until March 30. I am not sure where the Arringtons landed when they came over from Ireland, > but here is the little information I have > -- Pat Connors, Sacramento CA http://www.connorsgenealogy.com

    04/22/2007 12:56:29
    1. [NEW-ENGLAND-IRISH] Old Arrington
    2. Hi I am not sure where the Arringtons landed when they came over from Ireland, but here is the little information I have Old ARRINGTON, b. abt 1645 County Antrim, North Ireland William ARRINGTON, b. 1671, Antrim, North Ireland Haleran ARRINGTON, b. 1710, Cambridgshire, England, M. Hannah BRYANT, b. 1716, Antrim, North Ireland Thanks for any help. Eventually they lived in South Carolina but maybe they landed in the New England area first. Gail ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.

    04/22/2007 12:46:17