I got nosey and searched WYBRANT in Irish church records and got a bunch, all in Dublin starting in the 17th Century <G> maybe they got to Ireland with the Vikings! Mary is the first in the line so just for fun I send it <G> MARY WYBRANT Date of BirthN/R N/R N/R AddressN/R FatherBARTH WYBRANT MotherJOANE WYBRANT Further details in the record Father OccupationGENT About the record Book NumberPageEntry NumberRecord_IdentifierImage Filename N/R299N/RDU-CI-BA-154104prs3-7-michan-303 Eliz Not Today and Not without a Fight (Anon) For all that has been, thanks. For all that will be, yes. (Dag Hammarskjold) On Sat, Jul 19, 2014 at 11:01 AM, Dddarwin via <[email protected]> wrote: > Is anyone out there searching (or have in their family) a WYBRANT family > from Ireland? > > My part of the family came from County Wicklow in Ireland. I realize that > the surname was probably originally Norwegian but my ancestors all came from > Ireland between 1800 and 1849. > > My Great Grandmother, Jane Frances Wybrant Flynn was b. 1814 in > Sheeanamore, County Wicklow, Ireland. She was married sometime before 1844 in Ireland > to James Flynn where they had four children. > > On Nov. 6, 1849 they arrived on the ship "Hartley" which landed at New > Orleans. I must assume they and the children went by river because in the 1850 > Census they were in McDonough County, Illinois. In Feb. 1851 in Illinois > they had my Grandfather James Flynn. > > Jane's family (Andrew and Ann) arrived earlier than she did. > > If this sounds familiar to anyone please contact me. > Thanks for reading this. > Gretchen > EMAIL: [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) > > > ===== > If you would prefer digest mode to mail mode, drop a note to [email protected] and ask for the digest... > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message