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    1. [S-I] McCoy, McKay, Armstrong, Milligan, Field
    2. Marilyn Otterson
    3. Hi, I just dropped into the list today as I have been involved in a couple of other projects and have let genealogy slide. Now I see McKoy and McKay and now I am interested. I never pass up a chance to ask this group questions and now I am wondering a bit what is going on. Anyway....Armstrong, McCoy (or sometimes McKay), Milligan and Field from Co. Tyrone. If anybody sees those names, I'd love to know about it. Thanks, Marilyn

    11/07/2011 01:47:45
    1. Re: [S-I] McCoy, McKay, Armstrong, Milligan, Field
    2. Carla DeVille
    3. McCoy and McKay surname are found in Louisiana along with my Chapmans who were Scot-Irish.  I need more information on them and I love to share what I have. Carla DeVille Diggin up bones in my sleep! ________________________________ From: Marilyn Otterson <rosiedoggie@myfairpoint.net> To: scotch-irish@rootsweb.com Sent: Monday, November 7, 2011 7:47 PM Subject: [S-I] McCoy, McKay, Armstrong, Milligan, Field Hi, I just dropped into the list today as I have been involved in a couple of other projects and have let genealogy slide. Now I see McKoy and McKay and now I am interested.  I never pass up a chance to ask this group questions and now I am wondering a bit what is going on. Anyway....Armstrong, McCoy (or sometimes McKay), Milligan and Field from Co. Tyrone.  If anybody sees those names, I'd love to know about it. Thanks, Marilyn ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to SCOTCH-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    11/07/2011 10:52:38
    1. Re: [S-I] McCoy, McKay, Armstrong, Milligan, Field
    2. Marilyn Otterson
    3. Hi, Carla, I don't think we have the same tribe....mine didn't come over until mid-1800s, and they came to Massachusetts. But they are common names...and that makes all this more difficult, right? Marilyn ----- Original Message ----- From: "Carla DeVille" <carla_deville@yahoo.com> To: <scotch-irish@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, November 08, 2011 8:52 AM Subject: Re: [S-I] McCoy, McKay, Armstrong, Milligan, Field > McCoy and McKay surname are found in Louisiana along with my Chapmans who > were Scot-Irish. I need more information on them and I love to share what > I have. > > > Carla DeVille > Diggin up bones in my sleep! > > > ________________________________ > From: Marilyn Otterson <rosiedoggie@myfairpoint.net> > To: scotch-irish@rootsweb.com > Sent: Monday, November 7, 2011 7:47 PM > Subject: [S-I] McCoy, McKay, Armstrong, Milligan, Field > > Hi, > I just dropped into the list today as I have been involved in a couple of > other projects and have let genealogy slide. > > Now I see McKoy and McKay and now I am interested. I never pass up a > chance > to ask this group questions and now I am wondering a bit what is going on. > Anyway....Armstrong, McCoy (or sometimes McKay), Milligan and Field from > Co. > Tyrone. If anybody sees those names, I'd love to know about it. > > Thanks, > Marilyn > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > SCOTCH-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > SCOTCH-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    11/08/2011 03:24:06
    1. Re: [S-I] McCoy, McKay, Armstrong, Milligan, Field
    2. Hi Marilyn, McKay and Armstrong are done. Check archives.....amazed! You aren't reading every single one of these <grin>!!! Nada for the other two. Mulligan of course is Irish, a Donegal sept, though now found in Mayo and Monaghan. Because as MacLysaght says "much reduced at the time of the Plantation". I think by that he means "mostly killed. " Field? Was his first name "Green"???? Sorry, bad joke. The Irish didn't tend to take locative surnames but it is possible his Irish name sounded like something...Or he was English. McLysaght says... bingo! (Oops that was me).... could be Fehilly or Maghery. Fehilly is a Connacht sept. An Mhachaire 'of the field' is one of the few 'cognomina' taken from a place of residence. It is found in Co Limerick in the 1300s, but ... it takes the form Field in Armagh. Maybe you need a DNA test <grin>. Linda Merle ----- Original Message ----- From: "Marilyn Otterson" <rosiedoggie@myfairpoint.net> To: scotch-irish@rootsweb.com Sent: Monday, November 7, 2011 8:47:45 PM Subject: [S-I] McCoy, McKay, Armstrong, Milligan, Field Hi, I just dropped into the list today as I have been involved in a couple of other projects and have let genealogy slide. Now I see McKoy and McKay and now I am interested. I never pass up a chance to ask this group questions and now I am wondering a bit what is going on. Anyway....Armstrong, McCoy (or sometimes McKay), Milligan and Field from Co. Tyrone. If anybody sees those names, I'd love to know about it. Thanks, Marilyn ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to SCOTCH-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    11/10/2011 08:52:39
    1. Re: [S-I] McCoy, McKay, Armstrong, Milligan, Field
    2. Marilyn Otterson
    3. Hi, Linda.....hey, I got a DNA test, even found an Armstrong cousin in Co. Tyrone although he wasn't interested in swapping ancestor stories. His ancestors are from the same tiny townland...it's only a 25 match, but with the location and all, it seems pretty positive. His cousin sent me photos of the old (wrecked now) farmstead. Milligan is also a Scottish name...they say that she always swore she was Scottish, but then everybody did that. We don't know where Milligan and Field came from for sure, but assume Milligan was Fermanagh as that is pretty close to where my Armstrongs lived in Tyrone. We finally found the Milligan graves in a Boston area cemetery. Of course they were hard to find...one stone was only "Mother" and the other was "Father." It took a Milligan researcher to find the stones among some of the offspring, but we still can't find where they came from. You might remember that I asked about those folks before....they went back to Ireland and then back to the USA through Liverpool to Quebec to Boston. We could never find ships' records in Boston because they didn't come in that way. Sorry I missed the McCoy and Armstrong stuff...Termonmagurk area of Co. Tyrone. You mean the list archives? I am surprised I missed that although this has been a beastly year and I had to let the genealogy stuff mostly slide. Hoping to get back to it. Cheers, Marilyn ----- Original Message ----- From: <lmerle@comcast.net> To: <scotch-irish@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, November 10, 2011 10:52 AM Subject: Re: [S-I] McCoy, McKay, Armstrong, Milligan, Field > Hi Marilyn, McKay and Armstrong are done. Check archives.....amazed! You > aren't reading every single one of these <grin>!!! > > Nada for the other two. Mulligan of course is Irish, a Donegal sept, > though now found in Mayo and Monaghan. Because as MacLysaght says "much > reduced at the time of the Plantation". I think by that he means "mostly > killed. " Field? Was his first name "Green"???? Sorry, bad joke. The Irish > didn't tend to take locative surnames but it is possible his Irish name > sounded like something...Or he was English. McLysaght says... bingo! (Oops > that was me).... could be Fehilly or Maghery. Fehilly is a Connacht sept. > An Mhachaire 'of the field' is one of the few 'cognomina' taken from a > place of residence. It is found in Co Limerick in the 1300s, but ... it > takes the form Field in Armagh. > > Maybe you need a DNA test <grin>. > > Linda Merle > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Marilyn Otterson" <rosiedoggie@myfairpoint.net> > To: scotch-irish@rootsweb.com > Sent: Monday, November 7, 2011 8:47:45 PM > Subject: [S-I] McCoy, McKay, Armstrong, Milligan, Field > > Hi, > I just dropped into the list today as I have been involved in a couple of > other projects and have let genealogy slide. > > Now I see McKoy and McKay and now I am interested. I never pass up a > chance > to ask this group questions and now I am wondering a bit what is going on. > Anyway....Armstrong, McCoy (or sometimes McKay), Milligan and Field from > Co. > Tyrone. If anybody sees those names, I'd love to know about it. > > Thanks, > Marilyn > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > SCOTCH-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > SCOTCH-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    11/10/2011 05:47:37
    1. Re: [S-I] McCoy, McKay, Armstrong, Milligan, Field
    2. Hi Marilyn, I do find Milligan in Black "Surnames of Scotland". This is one I'll have to blame on the Irish! (Joke). Ie MacLysaght doesn't mention it. Usually Black is considered 'definitive' for Scottish surnames. MacLysaght is rarely accorded that same high esteem among the Irish, as I have learned on various lists. He has to compete with several earlier documenters of Irish surnames, some quite early. The same lists discuss who is the truest but of course it varies with the poster and I also think who you are trying to research. No doubt McL and his associates are great for those researching the Irish, but unfortunately, especially for those of us researching in Ulster, that may not be the case. Besides these two books I have an "English" surname that also has a lot of Scots, Welsh, and Irish names, which is why I said "English" and not English <grin>. However I don't have the time to look up all this. Often Bell "Book of Ulster Surnames" will give you a summary of what McL, Black, and Reaney and Wilson (my English surname book) say. Bell does say Milligan could be either Scots or Irish. This illustrates one of my main points: always look up the surname. I should add, in the right book <grin>! And I should take my own advice and follow it compulsively to avoid screwing up. Did you find the McCoy, etc? or where to check? Browse from http://lists.rootsweb.ancestry.com/index/intl/NIR/Scotch-Irish.html down to Nov. 2011. If I am hallucinating and didn't do them, let us know. Linda Merle ----- Original Message ----- From: "Marilyn Otterson" <rosiedoggie@myfairpoint.net> To: scotch-irish@rootsweb.com Sent: Thursday, November 10, 2011 12:47:37 PM Subject: Re: [S-I] McCoy, McKay, Armstrong, Milligan, Field Hi, Linda.....hey, I got a DNA test, even found an Armstrong cousin in Co. Tyrone although he wasn't interested in swapping ancestor stories. His ancestors are from the same tiny townland...it's only a 25 match, but with the location and all, it seems pretty positive. His cousin sent me photos of the old (wrecked now) farmstead. Milligan is also a Scottish name...they say that she always swore she was Scottish, but then everybody did that. We don't know where Milligan and Field came from for sure, but assume Milligan was Fermanagh as that is pretty close to where my Armstrongs lived in Tyrone. We finally found the Milligan graves in a Boston area cemetery. Of course they were hard to find...one stone was only "Mother" and the other was "Father." It took a Milligan researcher to find the stones among some of the offspring, but we still can't find where they came from. You might remember that I asked about those folks before....they went back to Ireland and then back to the USA through Liverpool to Quebec to Boston. We could never find ships' records in Boston because they didn't come in that way. Sorry I missed the McCoy and Armstrong stuff...Termonmagurk area of Co. Tyrone. You mean the list archives? I am surprised I missed that although this has been a beastly year and I had to let the genealogy stuff mostly slide. Hoping to get back to it. Cheers, Marilyn ----- Original Message ----- From: <lmerle@comcast.net> To: <scotch-irish@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, November 10, 2011 10:52 AM Subject: Re: [S-I] McCoy, McKay, Armstrong, Milligan, Field > Hi Marilyn, McKay and Armstrong are done. Check archives.....amazed! You > aren't reading every single one of these <grin>!!! > > Nada for the other two. Mulligan of course is Irish, a Donegal sept, > though now found in Mayo and Monaghan. Because as MacLysaght says "much > reduced at the time of the Plantation". I think by that he means "mostly > killed. " Field? Was his first name "Green"???? Sorry, bad joke. The Irish > didn't tend to take locative surnames but it is possible his Irish name > sounded like something...Or he was English. McLysaght says... bingo! (Oops > that was me).... could be Fehilly or Maghery. Fehilly is a Connacht sept. > An Mhachaire 'of the field' is one of the few 'cognomina' taken from a > place of residence. It is found in Co Limerick in the 1300s, but ... it > takes the form Field in Armagh. > > Maybe you need a DNA test <grin>. > > Linda Merle > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Marilyn Otterson" <rosiedoggie@myfairpoint.net> > To: scotch-irish@rootsweb.com > Sent: Monday, November 7, 2011 8:47:45 PM > Subject: [S-I] McCoy, McKay, Armstrong, Milligan, Field > > Hi, > I just dropped into the list today as I have been involved in a couple of > other projects and have let genealogy slide. > > Now I see McKoy and McKay and now I am interested. I never pass up a > chance > to ask this group questions and now I am wondering a bit what is going on. > Anyway....Armstrong, McCoy (or sometimes McKay), Milligan and Field from > Co. > Tyrone. If anybody sees those names, I'd love to know about it. > > Thanks, > Marilyn > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > SCOTCH-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > SCOTCH-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to SCOTCH-IRISH-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    11/14/2011 08:18:34