Wednesday, December 20, 2023

Photograph of Jeremiah Garner. I Think. I'm Pretty Sure.

 









     This photograph, taken in Canada, was posted to Ancestry a few years ago.  It purports to be of Angeline Peck (seated) and three of her sons by John Dent Collins, an Irishman from County Cork.  The females pictured are said to be Angeline's stepdaughters, the children of John's first marriage to Mary Anne Wright.  The girls were born in County Cork, the boys in Canada.  I have serious doubts about the lady in the back row, however.  She seems too long in the tooth to be Angeline's stepdaughter.  I wonder if she might in fact be Angeline's younger sister Eliza Jane who was living with Angeline and John as late as 1865.  Looking through censuses, it seemed to me the small boy must be Herbert Collins who was born in 1867 and passed away in 1871.  In the photo he looks to be three or four so it was probably taken about 1870.

     That brings us to the adult male seated next to Angeline.  John Dent Collins died the same year his son Herbert was born, so it isn't John.  Marriage records show that in 1870, Angeline became the third wife of my great-great-great-grandfather Jeremiah Garner, who apparently had a mid-life crisis, left his wife back in New York, and ran away to become an inn keeper in Canada.  And marry twice more.  And then leave Angeline in Canada to return to New York after his first wife's death, in time to be buried next to her.  Passing strange.

      Assuming I'm right about the young child being Herbert, and this photo being taken in 1870, Jeremiah would have been fifty-four years of age.  The man in the photo could be that age, but when I first viewed the image, I was somewhat skeptical about this being Jeremiah.  Mostly because there was no real proof or provenance, and I'm just a natural born skeptic.  I contacted the individual who originally posted the photo, who conceded she wasn't positive about her identification of Jeremiah, but seemed to believe the lady was indeed Angeline.

     After spending the last few days studying this family, I have to say I'm beginning to come around.  Who else could this man logically have been?  The gardener?  In 1870, photos were still being taken exclusively by professional photographers.  It wasn't until eighteen years later Kodak would introduce the first camera for home use; a box camera that came preloaded with enough film for one hundred photos.  After one had used all the film, the camera, along with $10, was returned to Kodak for the photos to be developed and printed.  The photos and the reloaded camera were then returned to the customer.  But that was in the future, the picture above would no doubt have been taken by a photographer.

     The question remains, is that Grandpa Jeremiah?  Is it?  I wish I could say I was positive it's him... but I'm not.  I really do think it is, it makes sense that it would be.  I know he married Angline in March of 1870, and looking at the leaves on the small tree in the background it's obviously well past March in Canada. I would think if a photographer was hired to come out and snap a family photo Jeremiah would certainly have been in it.  Judging from the background, that may even be his hotel the family is posed in front of.

     

     

     

Saturday, November 11, 2023

Derafada You Say?



     While researching, I tend to get bogged down in details.  I'm aware of this, and it does slow me down, but I enjoy it and when I find what I'm seeking it reassures me I'm on the right track.  Today I was looking at Daniel Welch, (or Walsh), who coincidentally married two cousins of mine who don't appear to be related to each other.   Daniel first married my cousin Catherine Lawler, from Rathdowney in Queen's County, around 1846 in Ireland.  About ten years later they and their two young daughters immigrated, settling in Palmyra, New York where Catherine died in August of 1865 at about the age of fifty.    

     Long ago I visited the parish office of Saint Anne's in Palmyra, and copied all the birth, marriage, and death register entries that seemed relevant to my family. It was in those records I had found Daniel married Ellen Hogan, another cousin of mine, in 1866. Like her husband, Ellen was born in Tipperary, to Darby and Dora Hogan.  There is no indication Ellen and Daniel were acquainted in Ireland.  Indeed, it was unlikely, Ellen was twenty-one years younger than Daniel.

     Today I noticed their marriage record contained the names of Daniel's parents, John Walsh and Mary Quinn.  Having those names enabled me to locate Daniel's baptism along with those of four of his siblings, all in the Parish of Moyne and Templetuohy in Tipperary.  The address his parents gave in each case was Derafada.  That's when my penchant for detail and second-guessing myself kicked in, did I have this right?  How did Daniel and Catherine, living in different counties, get together?  I needed to know.

     I ran a search at Google Maps for Derafada with no results.  A general Google search produced nothing with the exception of a few sites containing histories of unrelated families.  After some thought, I tried the site called SWilson which has tons of Irish genealogy info, the Seanruad townland site, now called "The Core", Tithe Applotments, and Griffith's Valuations.  None of them had anything on Derafada. Lists of Tipperary townlands were of no help, nor was Google Books.  Running out of ideas, I was about to give up when I tried an image search.  No Derafada came up, but something almost as good did.


       This is exactly what I was hoping to find, right above the Walsh's parish, Moyne and Templetuohy, was the Lawler's parish of  Rathdowney.  Being familiar with Rathdowney records, I knew there was a huge gap during the decades surrounding the famine.  Fortunately, the Lawler's lived right on the border of Queen's County and Tipperary.  I'd had some luck finding Rathdowney relatives in Templemore records, (just above Moyne and Templetuohy), and I'd be willing to bet the Walsh family in Tipperary lived near the border as well.

     The above map indicates they were practically neighbors so the mystery of how they met was solved.  It also explains why I was unable to find a marriage record for Daniel and Catherine, they were likely married in the bride's home parish, the one with the missing records. I'm now confident in saying I have Daniel's parents and birthplace correct as well as his marriage to Catherine Lawler.
 
      

Saturday, October 7, 2023

Of Naming Patterns and Expectations

 


     At various times I've applauded and cursed the Irish Naming Pattern.  A name like John Ryan in Tipperary renders it practically useless if not a hindrance due to the lack of originality in names, while more uncommon given names can make it a gift.  The thing is, there are times when the pattern falters.  A sickly infant not expected to survive may not be given the typical name, one born soon after the loss of a family member may be given the deceased's name out of respect, a child born on the feast day of a locally favored saint might bear that person's name; there are a number of reasons the pattern may not have been followed to the letter, but most often it was.

     For instance, my great-great-grandmother Anna Ryan, born in Goldengarden, Tipperary in 1831, was the daughter of Cornelius Ryan and Alice O'Dwyer.  Anna immigrated to America as a young woman, followed later by her parents.  In New York she married James White, from Queens County, the son of James White and Margaret Keyes.  Their first child, a son, was born a year after their marriage and predictably was named James, after his paternal grandfather.

     Two years later Alice, named for her maternal grandmother arrived, followed by the births of Margaret named for her paternal grandmother, Mary named for her maternal aunt, and Julia named for her paternal aunt.  Then at last another boy was born and finally, Anna's father, now in New York, would get his namesake. Only he didn't.  That child was not christened Cornelius, but Thomas.  What the what?

     Had I somehow missed a child?  Julia was born in November of 1864 and Thomas on the first of December in 1866.  It's possible a child was born in 1865 and didn't live long I suppose.  The New York census of 1865 for Wayne County is not online, nor is the mortality schedule for that year, and the newspapers were silent on the matter. This puzzled me for quite a while.  It wasn't until 1876 that a son to be named Cornelius White entered the world, after the birth of two brothers before him.  He was born when Anna was forty-five years old, and probably thinking her child-bearing days were behind her.  

    A good deal of time was spent looking for any trace of an earlier Cornelius White, there had to have been one, didn't there?  But none was found.  Then I had the opportunity to visit the Family History Library in Rochester and was able to view the registers of Saint Anne's Catholic Church in Palmyra, New York where the family were parishioners.  There among the baptisms was this--

     Please excuse the orange highlighter, I was pretty excited about this find at the time.  The first baptism was for Cornelius White on December 9, 1866, son of Jacobo White and Anna Ryan.  The second was that of his twin brother Thomas.  Thomas' sponsors were Cornelius Ryan Jr., (Anna's brother), and his wife Anna Hennessey.  So, there had been a baby named Cornelius after all, the pattern had not been broken!  In fact, this family was almost a textbook case.  Their only deviation was in not naming their third daughter Anna after her mother, but that wasn't really uncommon.

     Of course, now I wanted to know what had happened to Cornelius so I began collecting clues.  He would have been three in 1870, but only his twin brother Thomas appeared in the census that year.  Ditto the 1875 NY census.  I scoured the 1870 mortality schedule, but he wasn't listed there.  The burial register from Saint Anne's doesn't commence until 1868, but he's not there either.  We know Cornelius was alive to be baptized in early December of 1866, the last mention I've ever found of him.  All of which leads me to believe Cornelius likely passed in 1867.  The causes of death for young children in the 1870 mortality schedule for the family's location were scarlet fever, lung congestion, and diphtheria, in that order.  Of course, I can't say what illnesses might have been circulating in 1867.

     There is very little I can say.  But I have questions. Were you called Connor like the grandfather whose name you bore?  Were you a happy baby, or were you fretful and not thriving?  What caused you to leave so soon?  With no obituary I'll most likely never know what befell wee Cornelius, but at least I know he was here and lived for a short time in an age when it was ridiculously easy for small ones to slip away...

Saturday, August 12, 2023

No, Natives Did Not Steal Your Father

 

     This coming June will find me on the Massachusetts Island of Nantucket, which my research on Martha's Vineyard two summers ago indictes may be the place my 5th great-grandfather Thomas Garner was born.  I'd love to confirm that hypothosis, so I have the entire winter to pore over my Garner notes and make a research plan for the Nantucket library.  I want it ready to go since my library time will be limited, (there is a beach after all).  I've already started digging in by constructing a timeline.  

     Thomas' son, Thomas Jr., my 4th g.g., was born at Tisbury on Martha's Vineyard in 1773.  Thomas Jr.'s daughter Clarissa was born at Hartland, Vermont in 1795, indicating the family left Tisbury at some point.  Probably around the time of Thomas Sr.'s death in the Revolutionary War in 1777.  By the early 1820's Clarissa and her parents were living in New York, in the Town of Locke, the eastern part of which, (the Garner's part), became the Town of Summerhill in April of 1831.  

     Looking through the trees on Ancestry was perplexing. They all have Clarissa married to Samuel Lamphier and maintain she gave birth to Spaulding Lamphier in 1802.  Only that's not possible.  Aside from the fact she was only seven or eight years of age in 1802, she was with her parents until at least 1820.  It's in the census!  I'm confounded how anyone can think an eight year old having a baby makes sense, never mind that Ancestry flashes a red warning if you  attempt to type something that ludicrous into your tree.  Clarissa did marry Samuel Lamphere, that much is correct, but not until about 1823, she could not have been his first wife nor Spaulding's mother.

     Another odd one was the death date of her stepson Spaulding and the circumstances surrounding it.  Every Ancestry tree had clearly copied the other one, for none of them had real sources and they all claimed he died in 1859.  "Believed by the family to have been taken by 'Indians' while on his way to vist a neighbor."  His corpse was never found.  In the year 1859!  I am quite certain there were no native uprisings taking place in New York State in 1859.  To be fair there was a reservation for the Cayuga Tribe about thirteen miles from Locke although they were pacified by then and caused no trouble; it's also true Spaulding appears to vanish about that time, three years after his wife Prudence Marble's death, which left him with seven children ranging in age from twenty to seven.  It appears Spaulding did not handle her death well, which eerily mirrors his half-brother Samuel Jr.'s, (who was Clarissa's son), decline after his wife's death.  Within three years Samuel was in the county poor house whose blunt description of him was, "this old man has lost his mind".

     See, this is how I get sidetracked.  I'm not even related to Spaulding since I do not credit the assertion that Clarissa Garner was his mother, but now I was curious what the deal was with him.  He wasn't in the 1860, 1865, or 1870 censuses and his children were scattered about the neighborhood.  He was gone alright, but I still wasn't buying the captured by Indians theory.  It seemed to me there was good reason no body surfaced, though that didn't stop someone from putting him on the Find A Grave site with a death year of 1859.

     As I continued examining Spaulding, I came to the 1875 New York State census and who should I see there... a resurrected Spaulding Lamphier!  Living in Locke with his widowed daughter Emily Whipple and her children. So how does the story of his abduction and murder still live on?  Granted it's a good tale, it made me take notice, but it's clearly untrue.  I posted a copy of the census to the Find A Grave page for Spaulding and the owner did change his death date so that's progress I guess. 

     The question remains, where was Spaulding all those years?  Gone west perhaps?  It was after all, the era of the Pike's Peak Goldrush.  The territories may have looked like the perfect opportunity to shed his responsibilites and make his fortune. The fact Spaulding can't be located in three censuses makes it seem he may not have wanted to be found.  In the end, he returned to Locke where his daughter Emily found a place for him in her home.  I don't know if the other children were as welcoming when their father reappeared, in fact one or two had died during his absence, though I can't locate any obituaries that may have shed some light on these questions.  But now I need to get back to someone I really am related to-- like Thomas Garner Sr., possible birthplace Nantucket.

Thursday, June 22, 2023

I Finally Found Ellen or, Transcibers Don't Get the Last Word

 


     This week I've been taking another look at the family of Darby Hogan.  From the information I've assembled, it seems Darby had a connection to my White/Ryan family, though as of yet I've been unable to find the link.  Over the years I was, however, able to prove Darby Hogan had two marriages, both of which took place in Tipperary's North Riding.  His first wife was Dora whose maiden name appears to have been Hogan as well; the second was Maria Callanan or Cooney depending on which record one is looking at.  Three children were born of the first marriage, Darby Jr., Ellen, and Hann, but only Ellen left a trail I've been able to follow.  She immigrated to Palmyra, New York in the 1860's, the same place her father Darby was first seen in an American census- the 1855 New York State Census, living with his second wife Maria and their fourth child Michael.  Oddly enough, Darby's three children with Dora, and his first three with Maria did not immigrate with him but remained in Ireland.  His three eldest children with Maria as well as Dora's daughter Ellen, as mentioned above, came over at later dates.

     I've pretty much exhausted all the sources I've located for Darby and his wives Dora and Maria, so it was time to take a closer look at Ellen whose baptism I had yet to find.  Hopefully it would contain something new, especially about Dora Hogan who must have passed before Darby married Maria around 1842 give or take.  Dora's last child, Hann, was baptized in 1840 making me wonder if perhaps she died giving birth to another child in 1842?  Darby and Maria's first child, Anna, was born in July of 1844 so I think 1842 is a fair guess at his second marriage date. 

     I first tried finding Ellen at Find My Past in their Irish Roman Catholic Baptisms.  I found Darby Jr. and Hann, but no Ellen.  There was nothing for it, but to do a line-by-line search.  This was going to take a while since I had no clear birth year for Ellen.  The transcription of the 1870 census at Ancestry gave her birth year as 1820 but that was a transcription error.  The 1860 census said born in 1840, and Find A Grave had 1837.

     I went to the NLI site and began searching at 1830.  Since I didn't have a firm date for Darby's birth either it was possible he had been born a few years earlier than I believed.  Thankfully, the parish registers were in fairly good shape, and I was making progress until I realized I was looking in the parish Darby had moved to after his second marriage, Birr and Loughkeen, rather than Lorrha and Dorrha parish where Ellen's two sibling were baptized, so back to square one.  After about thirty minutes I came to the entry below:

     That was her alright, why didn't that come up in my search at FMP?  I checked there again using just the parish of Lorrha and Dorrha, the year, and the name Ellen.  There it was, Ellen born to "Daily" and "Dolly" "Hoyer".  Good grief.  Ellen was baptized 19 July in 1836, her sponsors were Thomas and Mary Hogan.  While all the other mother's last names on the page differ from their husband's, in this case it gives Dora's maiden name as Hogan just like her other two children's baptisms did.  Unlike the baptisms of Darby Jr. and Hann, however, Ellen's did not give an address.  Since Ellen was the middle child and her siblings were both born at Killeen in County Tipperary, I would think she likely was as well.

     Other than the two sponsor's names, who could be relatives of either parent, and Ellen's real birth year, nothing new was found in the baptism record.  I still had nothing about Dora's passing or Darby's second marriage.  Unless. What if the anonymous transcribers had messed that record up as they had Ellen's age in 1870 and her parent's names in her baptism?  Hold on a sec while I check... Wow!  I just found it, "Dorny Hogan" and "Mary Collonan" were married on 1 November in 1842 at the parish of Lorrha and Dorrha!  That meant Maria likely lived near Darby before their marriage.


     This has been a great reminder to not take indexes at face value and try to look at the original document.  Transcribers make mistakes as we all do, though in the case of the Irish records here, it would appear the real fault lies with the parish priest, he did mangle those names pretty badly and his handwriting would not win any awards.  These are official church records, a little care would be in order! I'm looking at you Father...

Saturday, May 27, 2023

Of Soppers and Whiteboys

 


     This week I learned something new thanks to Uncle George Gunn, born in 1854 at Ballygologue in County Kerry; another brother of my great-great-grandmother Mary Gunn.  I’ve written several blogs about George, mainly because there’s just so much to say about this man.  He survived only two years after his arrival in New York, which is a real shame, I’m positive he’d have given me a lot more to write about had he lived longer.  George would have set Palmyra New York on its ear.  Unfortunately, to quote the old song, “With a love of the liquor poor Tim George was born”.  After imbibing one evening, he somehow missed his footing while strolling along the Erie Canal, plunging to his watery death--

 Palmyra August 1892--The body of George Gunn, a laborer about 30 years old, was found floating in the canal just west of this village on Sunday morning last, and was taken in charge by Drake & Johnson undertakers.  Gunn was in Palmyra late Saturday evening and the supposition is that he had been drinking and while on his way to Macedon by tow-path he fell into the canal and met his death by drowning.

     George’s rap-sheet in Ireland was impressive with numerous arrests for drunkenness, assaulting a caretaker, bad language, a few for assaulting police officers as they attempted to apprehend him, and a charge of Whiteboyism.  From a stint he did in Tralee Prison in 1888 for drunk and disorderly, we learn George was 5’9 ½”, with brown hair and grey eyes.  The number of times he was arrested previously was eight, but I’m betting there were plenty more cases he got away with.  George was definitely a character, one of those “wild Kerry peasants” I’ve heard tell of.  The arrest that really caught my attention, however, was the one in 1882 accusing him of being a whiteboy.   https://www.askaboutireland.ie/narrative-notes/whiteboys/ I do love a good rebel.

     The newspaper report of the incident read--

Early on Sunday morning a patrol of police discovered a body of men engaged at drill. They captured ten of the party who were brought into Tralee.  The men, who are of the lowest order in Listowel, were brought before the magistrates on Monday.  When arrested they had their faces blackened and wore false whiskers.  The prisoners are George Gunn, Richard Barry, James Kissane, Thomas Hayes, John Browne, Jeremiah O’Connor Denice Bunce…

     A few days later another article appeared in the local newspaper detailing their court appearance--

     The men's defense intrigued me. Their solicitor argued the accused had gone to a neighborhood wedding as, “soppers” which explained their appearance. That certainly required further explanation.  A google search brought up next to nothing, but then I remembered the Schools Collection, which as far as I’m concerned is a national treasure.  In the 1930’s schoolchildren from all over Ireland collected stories from grandparents and older neighbors, which they then recorded in composition form.  It’s amazing what can be found there.  There is no better site to get a feel for life in old Ireland.  I typed “soppers” into their search box and was not disappointed.  Up popped two full pages of results, many of them from County Kerry.  Most descriptions of soppers noted, “To entertain the party, they came with their faces colored or covered so they would not be known. They played and danced and sang”.  In other words, they were expected to be in disguise just as George and the others maintained.

     Resident Magistrate Captain Massey, (in the above article), who comes across as a real prig clearly wasn’t having any of that.  His smug speech stating it was fortunate the prisoners had no firearms about them, has a disingenuous ring to it.  In spite of no real evidence, he still required a £10 surety, (several hundred dollars in today’s money), or two months in prison.  It appears he would have loved to throw the book at Uncle George and his pals and was peeved he hadn't the grounds to do so.  I'm not crazy about his, "men who are of the lowest order", crack as reported in the newspaper either.

     Uncle George had no way of knowing that within thirty-nine years the likes of Captain Massey and his ilk would be gone from Ireland.  Gone from the Free State anyway, and good riddance.  It’s too bad George didn’t live long enough to see that marvelous day.  

 

Friday, May 19, 2023

Richard Gunn's Abject End

 

Killarney District Lunatic Asylum

     Since I've been having such good luck wrapping up loose ends in my Gunn family line, I thought I may as well give my great-great-grandmother's brother Richard Gunn another shot.  I only learned of Richard's existence when I found his 1857 baptism record.  It mangled his name, but the address of Ballygologue in County Kerry was correct, and his parent's names were right for the most part.

     I couldn't find Richard in the 1901 or 1911 censuses, nor in civil registration records.  His was not a common name, so I went for broke and did an all Ireland search of registrations, all events, all locations, and all years.  Amazingly, there were only five registrations under the name of Richard Gunn!  I don't know how that could be possible, but I tried the search several times and there are only five.*  Factoring in his age, there was only one death registration, but it occurred in Killarney, County Kerry in 1885.  I thought it unlikely to be him, he must have died in infancy in Ballygologue before registration was mandated, but I clicked on it anyway and was in for an unpleasant surprise.

Richard Gunn Ballygologue, death at Killarney District Lunatic Asylum, pulmonary phthsis one year





     Richard died of tuberculosis in an insane asylum? I was not expecting that one. This suggested all sorts of questions and called for more research.  It appeared possible he had been a patient for at least a year since the onset of his illness was known to the institution, but that's conjecture.  I wondered of course, how he ended up in that place and what his diagnosis was, but I understand those records, archived in the Kerry Library in Tralee, are sealed.

      I also wondered how hard it was to be admitted to an asylum in Ireland in the late 1800's, the answer seemed to be--not very. The list of causes below is from the Killarney asylum.



     During the period of Richard's stay, there were two forms in use for admissions, one for dangerous and criminal lunatics which required the signatures of two magistrates sitting together, and another called Form E. That form, shown below, required a declaration by friends or relatives, a certificate from a magistrate and clergyman or poor law guardian, along with a medical certificate.

     Another question was, what was the asylum like? Being locked away with mentally ill persons, some of them violent, so far from home would be unpleasant under any circumstances.  Ballydribbeen, where the asylum was located, was almost 40 miles from Richard's home.  In 1885 that would have meant visits from his friends and family were probably infrequent at best.  It surprised me there wasn't a closer option for treatment.  After doing a little reading about the Killarney asylum however, I learned that as a district asylum, it was responsible for the mental healthcare of the entire county.  Like most of the population, Richard had no resources for private care so the district asylum was his only option. But what of Richard's day-to-day living conditions?  One report referred to a chronic problem with wet walls, while another spoke of overcrowding, gloomy rooms, and inadequate ventilation. With those surroundings, it's hardly surprising respiratory illnesses and phthisis (TB), were frequent causes of death, or that they spread rapidly.  What a dreadful place for a suffering, twenty-five year old to spend his last days.


*  One of the five Listowel registrations was of the birth of a formerly unknown Richard Gunn in 1865; his father Francis Gunn could well be a brother of my Richard's father John Gunn, who named a son Francis.   

Friday, May 12, 2023

More About That Lost Son of Johanna Gunn




            My last blog ended with the amazing discovery of Johanna Gunn's firstborn, living in the same townland as his mother, after many years of my believing he likely hadn't survived childhood.  Naturally, after all that searching, I wanted to know more about this man's life.

     Edward Gunn was born December first in 1867 and baptized the fourth day of December in the parish of Listowel, County Kerry.  The church register of baptisms shows the parish priest wrote, mother Johanna Gunn of Ballygologue, godparents George and Mary Gunn.  No father's name was recorded there or on the registration of his birth as seen above.  And there it ended, Edward Gunn couldn't be found in the 1901 or 1911 censuses, nor did he appear in any other civil registrations after his birth.  I had nearly given him up, but while researching that blog about his mother Johanna, it suddenly became clear he had simply changed his surname to that of his father, Edward Burke Sr., and had never left Ballygologue.  Like his half brothers William and John Connor, Edward was a shoemaker; in 1898 he married Mary Denihan, setting up housekeeping in Ballygologue.  Their daughter Ellie was born there in 1899, followed by Daniel Joseph Burke in1902, then four more sons, and daughter Mary Ellen in 1910.

Edward, Mary and Ellie Burke 1901 with Mary's father, all spoke English and Irish


     In studying my Kerry ancestors, I was struck by how bleak and precarious their lives seemed.  Johanna's mother, Margaret Browne Gunn, gave birth to seven children with only three surviving her, Johanna and two others who immigrated.  Johanna had seven children but again, only three survived her, two of them in the states.  Edward Gunn Burke was also father to seven children, three of whom survived him, two in Ireland and one in the states.  Do you see a pattern here?  I know it was not unusual to lose a child, but my ancestors from southeast Ireland seemed to have much better luck with children.  The losses in this family seem staggering by today's standards.  I'm convinced the social and economic conditions in Kerry, one of the poorest counties in Ireland at the time, were a big factor in the death rates and why so many of my realtives left.  In the period after the famine, County Kerry had the highest immigration rate, followed by counties Cork and Clare.

    The only child of Edward's to try his luck in America was his oldest son Daniel.  While putting the pieces of Edward's life together I found an obituary for a Daniel Burke of Palmyra, New York, fifteen minutes from my current home.  That could have been any old Daniel Burke, it's hardly an uncommon name, and yet, this one was from Ireland, was of the right age, and had two brothers with the correct names still living there.  And he was in Palmyra.  Looking at the 1930 census of Palmyra, I found a Dannie Burke from Ireland living with Mary Mahoney from Ireland, (maiden name O'Connor I knew from previous research), and her husband. That had to be him! 

     The census had an immigration date which led me to the passenger list of Daniel's ship arriving 22 September1924 in New York.  Passenger lists from that time period contain a trove of information.  From that single document I learned Daniel was an agricultural laborer, stood 5 feet 3 inches tall, had black hair and gray eyes, and $30 in his pocket.  It showed his father's half-brother William O'Connor, already in America, had put up the money for his nephew's passage.  It further showed Daniel was on his way to the home of his great-aunt, Mary Gunn Power, my great-great-grandmother, in upstate New York, and he had left a father, Mr. Ned Burke, in Ballygologue.  

     It gives me such a rush to make the connection between Ireland and the place where I still live.  A feeling of closeness.  Daniel's destination, the Power home, was a mile from where I would grow up decades later, Palmyra was the next village over.  Daniel eventually landed a good job, married in 1935, and raised two children, Daniel Jr. and Rosemary.  He passed away in Rochester, New York in 1971.  

     Back in Ireland, Edward Gunn Burke lived out his days in Ballygologue, his wife passing in 1928, his mother Johanna in 1930, and himself in 1939 at age 71.  His death registration says he died from toxemia of burns in Listowel Hospital, but even after extensive newspaper searches, the scant information in the registration was all I could find.  By then he had lost his firstborn daughter Ellie to bronchitis in 1902 at the age of two, two young sons to whooping cough at ages two and four in 1907, his only remaining daughter, Mary Ellen at 18 from typhoid fever, along with his wife. His oldest son Daniel was far away, but Edward at least had his sons Mike and Edward Jr. with him until the end.



     



Friday, May 5, 2023

A Singular Sunday, in Which the Mystery of Johanna Gunn is Finally Solved and a Lost Child Found

      


    The damp, cold weather continues here in New York.  Add to that a newly spayed puppy and I find myself housebound.  Since little Suzie is pretty high on pain meds and sleeping, I saw an opportunity to spend the day doing genealogy.

     I've long been curious about Johanna Gunn, the sister of my great-great-grandmother Mary Gunn Power, both of Ballygologue in County Kerry, so I chose her as my subject.  It appears Johanna was the oldest in her family, born around 1850 to John and Margaret Browne Gunn.  Johanna's first child, Edward, was born out of wedlock in the spring of 1867 there in Ballygologue.  I never found another scintilla of information about him and assumed he had probably died young.  

     In 1871, Johanna married Thomas O'Connor and gave birth to five more sons and a daughter. Thomas died in the Listowel Work House in1889, but what of Johanna?  No death registration ever came to light for her in spite of many hours of searching.  She appeared in the 1901 census as a poverty stricken widow living in a two room, 3rd class abode with her mother, three of her children, and a nephew. After that she seemed to vanish.

     Today at the Civil Registration site I pored over every death entry that could conceivably be hers, using all manner of search terms with no luck.  Over and over I tried, growing very discouraged, but a feeling of dejavu was slowly creeping in.  I had run into this situation before with another great-great-grandmother.  I only found her when I chanced upon an obituary naming all her children, the lady had remarried well into her sixth decade and assumed a new surname.  Could Johanna have married again?  Back to the registrations, and indeed, there was a marriage!  In 1910, when she was about 60, Johanna had married John Granville of Ballygologue.  No wonder I never found her death registration.

Marriage of Johanna O'Connor, widow, Ballygologue, father John Gunn-- it all fits!

     Now that I had Johanna's new surname, not to mention her newly found entry in the 1911 census, finding her death date should be a breeze right? Nope. There were three possibilities, one of which I quickly discounted since that lady's husband was a shopkeeper, which from the 1911 census I knew John Granville was not.  That left two Johanna Granville's in Ballygologue, one born in 1849 who died in 1924, and one born in 1858 who died in 1930.  Unfortunately, neither seemed to fit. The registration with the birth year of 1849 seemed promising at first, but the informant was Michael Granville, son of the decedent.  Johanna didn't have a son named Michael. The birthdate on the remaining registration was way off, if Johanna was born in 1858, she would have been nine years old when Edward was born.  Also, the informant was Michael Burke, grandson.  Johanna didn't have a grandson named Michael Burke. Now what?

     I did a little research on the Granville's that's what.  Maybe Johanna's new husband John Granville had a son named Michael who would have been Johanna's stepson? That did not pan out, the marriage record seen above refers John as a bachelor, not a widower, and in the 1901 census he was single. No children for John.  I did find his father Thomas Granville's second marriage to Johanna Nolan.  They too lived in Ballygologue and they did have a son named Michael, probably the 1924 death registration was hers. She was younger than her husband Thomas and was in worse circumstances in 1901than my Johanna was, sharing a one room cabin with five other people.  

     It seemed 1930 must be the right year for my Johanna's death, but who was Michael Burke, grandson? To answer that question, I looked for the birth of a lad by that name in the civil registrations and found this--

Michael Burke, son of Edward Burke and Mary Deenihan, born Ballygologue, 1906


     That was possibly him, but who was Edward Burke?  Or Mary Deenihan?  I needed to see their marriage registration--

Marriage of Edward Burke in 1898




     

     Wait, what!  Could it be?  After all my years of searching?  Edward Burke born in 1872?  Living in Ballygologue?  Marriage witnessed by Johanna O'Connor?  Oh, my Lord!  It was Johanna's firstborn son Edward!  I was sure of it.  Now the "Michael Burke, grandson", on the 1930 death registration made sense.  Edward hadn't died young; he had grown up in Ballygologue with his mother.  Although his parents never married, and he was baptized Edward Gunn, at some point he had adopted his father's surname.  Right there in his marriage registration was his father, Edward Burke.

     I've always seen Johanna as a tragic figure who gave birth to seven children, only two of whom outlived her.  Those two, along with her surviving brothers and sister, were gone to America by 1902, never to return to Ireland.  She had eleven grandchildren living in the states she would never meet.  I used to believe Johanna was left without any close family nearby in her last decades.  Now however, I know she had a husband, her son Edward, and even grandchildren on her side of the Atlantic. Knowing all this makes me feel a small sense of relief for her.  In spite of  Johanna's many losses, she wasn't alone.

     


Saturday, April 29, 2023

Today's Forecast - Cloudy with Genealogy

      


     After days of record-breaking high temperatures here in New York, we are back to our usual early spring weather.  Cold and damp ... I refuse to go outside.  Instead, I decided to dive into the O'Hora rabbit hole.  Many years ago, I met a distant cousin from that line on the internet.  Luckily for me, though she resided in Georgia she regularly visited her hometown of Auburn, New York, which was the first stop for the O'Hora clan after they got off the boat way back when.  Today, there are still O'Horas living in that place.

     I live fairly close to Auburn, and while planning to meet one another, we agreed to bring along our genealogy notes and copies to share.  Among the documents Rita gave me was a copy of the report she commissioned from the now defunct Carlow Genealogy Project.  There were pages of Hore/O'Hore baptism records, marriages, tithe applotments, it was absolutely amazing!  At that time none of those things were online.  It kept me busy for weeks, but after copying the data into my software, studying it, attempting to figure out connections, it eventually found its way into my filing cabinet.  Because really, there wasn't much more I could do with it. With nothing online, I had no way to double check the information it contained, look for proof of the hypotheses I had formed while reading it, or build on that research.  Things have changed now, so I grabbed the report, turned up the heat, and sat down to start hunting.

     I soon found that though the document was valuable, there was quite a bit the authors had missed.  Rita knew her great-great-grandmother was Mary Hore, but she could never find proof that Mary was the daughter of Michael Hore and Mary Travers, and the sister of my great-great-grandfather James Hore.  Going through baptisms at Find My Past, I found the baptism of Mary "O'Hara", daughter of Michael and Mary "Travis", born in the townland of Ricketstown, the same place my James and his siblings were born.  (The Carlow researchers really should have found that one, given the address and such similar names.)  This was clearly the proof Rita had been seeking but sadly, when I tried to contact her with the news, I found she was deceased.

The long sought baptism of Mary Hore/O'Hora

     Another omission was the address of the subjects.  Using information contained in the report, I looked up baptisms and marriages now available online and discovered many of them gave an address. That's really important.  It's very helpful to know which Hore families were living in the same townland.  There were also cases where there were actually three witnesses to a marriage, but only two appeared in the report.  Witnesses are also of importance.  I was glad to have the report though. Since many members of the family stayed in Ireland, I'd be flying blind without clues about what to look for.  The online records themselves are far from perfect, whoever indexed the parish of Hacketstown for the Find My Past site had particular trouble with the surname; in one case changing it to "Thara", and in another to "Garcia", Garcia???  I finally found those two baptisms by using just the parish, approximate date, and parent's first names for search terms, though that didn't always work.  In one case the mother's name Rose had been indexed as "Ton".

     It may sound as though I'm criticizing, but I don't mean it that way.  I'm over the moon about all the Irish records that have come online.  Using them and the report Rita gave me I've been able to put families together and even see how they relate to the O'Horas who came to the USA.  And I've had a ball doing it. DaVinci was right when he said, "The noblist pleasure is the joy of understanding". True, I was sad that it was too late to tell Rita I'd finally found the baptism she'd spent years looking for.  And that mis-transcribed "Garcia" surname?  That was exasperating, but at the same time it made me laugh, I doubt there were many Garcia families living in Knockananna in the 1800's.  I point it out because it's something researchers need to consider when that record we know is there just can't be found.

Baptism of Bridget "Garcia"





Sunday, April 23, 2023

A New Family Photo!

      I've noticed something about Ancestry, they don't always find obvious hints.  This time it was the photograph of a family member on Find A Grave that the site failed to alert me to.  The name and dates match my tree exactly, and I already had an earlier version of that Find A Grave page in my tree from before the picture was added.  It's not the first time this has happened either.  A few months ago, while viewing the tree of a DNA match, I found a photo of one of my Travers relatives had been posted there with nary a peep from Ancestry.  I enjoy doing my own research, but pictures are the holy grail of genealogy, Ancestry needs to do better.

     Nevertheless, I'm excited to find the image of Arthur Worden, his wife Edna Warner, and their daughter Inez.  They aren't direct ancestors, but I'm related to both of them by blood.  Arthur was my 2nd great-granduncle, and Edna my 1st cousin 3 times removed.  I have a photo of Inez, found on eBay of all places, so I compared that one to Ancestry's.


Inez and her baby sister Gladys

Inez and parents from Find A Grave photo

     The strong resemblance between the older child in the first photo and the one beneath it is indisputable.  I'm always a little leery of online pictures with no provenance, but I'm confident this is a true image of the Worden family. Edna's hair looks a bit odd here, so I copied the picture into my paint program then used the little eyedropper tool to match her hair color from the unfaded, left side of her head and went over it.  The results are below, I think it's a big improvement.


     It's such a thrill to stumble upon images of long-gone relatives.  I wish Arthur's face was in better shape, but it imparts a good idea of what he looked like.  I wonder did he look like his father Paul or his mother Eva Benedict?  Eva was Paul's second wife and much younger than him.  After three children their marriage fell apart; 1892 found Arthur living in the "orphan asylum" while a neighbor adopted his younger sister, changing her surname to McClouth.  His younger brother lived with Paul.  I would love to know the details of how this all came to pass, but so far, I've been unable to even find a record of a divorce.  

     Eva remarried and gave birth to another daughter, but her three eldest children never lived with her again.  The 1910 census shows Eva, aged 54, living with her new husband William Brown, their daughter Ruby Brown aged 19, and a one-year-old child named Arthur Brown, listed as Eva's son.  I've always believed this baby was in fact Ruby's, not Eva's, but had no proof.  However, in addition to the photo, there on the F.A.G. site was Ruby's obituary; among her survivors was her "son" Arthur of Detroit.


     I don't know who posted the photograph to Find A Grave, but I plan to message that person through the site, and also recheck the Find A Grave pages in my trees.  Hopefully, more photos await discovery...

    

     

Tuesday, March 14, 2023

I Attend Lectures At the National Archives of Ireland, And So Can You

      


     It's true, you can!  I'm a faithful reader of Clare Santry's Irish Genealogy News blog which covers all things pertaining to Irish genealogical research, from databases to site updates, to bargains. Pickings have been slim since covid reared its ugly head, but one helpful thing that did come out of the lock downs was an increase in Zoom accessible lectures.  A while ago on Clare's site I noticed one such talk sponsored by the Archives titled, From Tithes to Griffith's: Property and Valuation Records, given by professional genealogist Michael Walsh and now available at You Tube.  As I happened to currently be working in just that area of my research, I decided to give it a go.

      I've been fruitlessly searching for my third-great-grandfather Michael Hoar/O'Hora, of  Ricketstown, County Carlow, in the Tithe Applotment Books ever since they came online in 2012.  I've found a John "Hoar", another variation, in Ricketstown but no Michael, whose children's baptism records give his address as that place. The tithe book of the Civil Parish of Rahill in County Carlow contains part of Ricketstown; the other part of the townland lies in the Civil Parish of Kineagh, County Carlow.  I cannot find it, and Lord knows I've looked!  

John Hoar in the Rahill Parish book, mistakenly indexed as Hoan at the Archives

     Once again, I pulled up the Kineagh book.  It had 131 images online at Family Search, not bad, may as well look at them all.  The first pages seemed to be a protracted argument about who should get the cash from the tithes, but then the image below came up. Take a look at the heading, it reads, "Particulars of Rent-Charge payable to Thomas G. Maple in lieu of Composition...".  What did that mean? Typically, it would have read just, "Annual Composition", though all the tithe books are a little different.  There was no standard form used, each locality designed thier own format.

Ricketstown is the last entry in the Kineagh Parish book, person liable for rent-charge is J. Hutchinson




     

            This page was followed by more discussion of who was entitled to benefit from the tithes, then suddenly, I found myself in County Cork.  Seems it also has a parish by the name of Kineagh.  Returning to the page, it appears J. Hutchinson, in the third column, was responsible for Ricketstown's tithes so possibly no list of occupiers was done?  Maybe that professional genealogist could help.

     I've hesitated in the past to try these lectures. Attempting to calculate the time differences and navigate the intricacies of Zoom, along with my aversion to attempting anything that might cause me frustration, (like computers) intimidated me a bit.  However, this proved literally painless.  I reserved my "ticket", followed the instructions emailed to me, and I was in like Flynn.  I really didn't even read the instructions closely, which for me is always a last resort, and it still worked.  Kudos to the Archives.

     The program was enjoyable, and it felt quite glamorous to be attending an academic lecture.  I even learned a few things.  There was a Q & A session afterwards, but unfortunately my question about the phrase, "in lieu of composition", wasn't chosen.  

     I remain completely confused by all this, the description at Family Search says the year of the Kineagh book is unknown, but it appears to be post 1837.  For years the british had been floating bills to change how tithes were collected, hoping Catholic tenants could be mollified by lowering their tithes and rolling them into their rent payments. That became law in 1838 and would explain the use of the term, "Rent-Charge", on the document.  Still, I came across a book done in 1850 which still listed occupiers at that late date.  All I know is that the names of Ricketstown residents in Kineagh are missing.  I'm not quite ready to give up though, maybe I should be looking in the Cork film?

     

     

     






Monday, February 13, 2023

That Missing 1890 Census! In Which I Discover Mary Ann O'Hora's Story, Find Two New Cousins, And Share Some Free Rochester, NY Databases

 

Aftermath of the fire that destroyed the 1890 census

     Irish immigrants Margaret Welch and Michael O'Hora, (the brother of my great-great-grandfather James O'Hora), were a prolific couple.  They produced twelve children between 1855 and 1877 in Cayuga County, New York, and even more amazingly for the mid-19th century, they kept every one of them alive to adulthood.  I had accounted for all twelve children with the exception of one, Mary Ann, born in about 1863.  I knew from several of her brother's obituaries that Mary had at times lived in New York City and Jersey City, along with her sister Margaret O'Hora Murphy, and had picked up a husband with the surname Seeley at some point.  That was all I had.

     I began with the New York State Marriage Index, brought to us through the perseverance of the good folks at Reclaim the Records who sued for their release.  Nothing turned up there, so I next searched New York City marriages, nothing there either, or in the New Jersey index.  That was odd.  Next, I checked census records, the closest I came was a Mary and Charles Seeley that could have been the right couple, but that really didn't pan out.  Then in the 1910 census I found a Mary A. Seeley, wife of Frederick W. Seeley.  Now that looked promising, this Mary was born in New York, both of her parents were from Ireland, and she was of the right age, but there were two young men listed as stepsons to Frederick in the household, Alexander and Joseph Farquhar.  That couldn't be right, I'd never heard that name before, and none of the obituaries I'd read had ever mentioned another husband for Mary.  Still, the youngest son, Joseph, wasn't born until 1888 and none of those obituaries were that early, so it was a possibility, however unlikely it seemed.

    Rechecking the obituaries, I saw that any reference to Mary Seeley had stopped by 1921, she wasn't included in her brother Michael's obituary that year, nor her brother John's in 1922, though all the other living siblings were listed in both.  The 1909 obituary of Henry O'Hora, "Mrs. Mary Seeley, of Jersey City NJ", and the 1910 obituaries of James and Thomas O'Hora, "Mrs. Seeley of NYC", were the last mentions of Mary Ann. She must have passed away between 1910 and 1921.  A search of Find A Grave turned up a burial for a Mary Seeley who died in 1917 and was interred in Holy Name Cemetery in Jersey City.  I visited the cemetery's website and did a search for Mary Seeley; when the result page came up, there was a wee button titled, "Additional Deceased in Plot (1)".  Clicking the button I found, Frederick W.!  That 1910 census was looking better by the minute. The death date of Mary Seeley in Holy Name fit my timeline nicely, in addition to her age, current residence, birthplace and parent's birthplace.  But who were those Farquhar's?

     New York City vital records aren't included in the New York State indexes, so I did a separate search in the NYC vital records database. This is what came up--  

O'Hara!  That is awfully close to O'Hora.    

     The Old Fulton newspaper website was my next stop; if only I could find something that definitively tied the Farquhar's to the O'Hora's I could be certain Mary Farquhar was my girl.  And after several tries, I did find it, in an estate settlement in 1923--

To Jennie O'Hora, Margaret Murphy, Frank O'Hora, Patrick O'Hora, Anna O'Hora, Alice O'Hora, ... numerous other O'Hora's... (but no Mary Seeley) ... and finally, the very last names, Alexander, and Joseph Farquhar. They were all requested to appear in court in Auburn if they wished to contest probate of the will of Mary's brother John O'Hora.  I recognized all these names as children and grandchildren of Michael and Margaret O'Hora, Mary's parents.

   Now I was convinced this was my Mary Ann, but I wanted more, I wanted that O'Hora/Farquhar marriage record.  Just to see what happened, I added the two boys to Mary's tree on Ancestry.  Alexander's WWII draft card came up, his birthplace-- Rochester, New York.  Rochester!  That changed everything.  I know Rochester genealogy, I live in the neighborhood, I know where to look and what's available.  First I checked the city's, "Rochester Historic Marriage Records", database, figuring Mary Ann may have tied the knot in Rochester since her first child was born there.  Nothing came up.  But I wasn't done, next I searched the, "Rochester Churches Indexing Project", and found this--

     There it is, Mary's first husband was Joseph Farquhar just like on her son's birth certificate.  Look at the bride's parents' names, perfect.  Everything had conspired against me finding this marriage, starting with no available census in 1890 to find the couple in.  They should have been in the Rochester marriage database but weren't, and they weren't in the New York State Marriage Index either.  I checked that index manually since I now had a year, and pages 361 to 421 were missing.  Right where Mary O'Hora would have been.  I can't explain why Joseph Farquhar wasn't listed other than it had only been a few years since New York State began requiring that marriages be reported, and compliance wasn't quite up to snuff yet.  

     That left but two loose ends, what became of Joseph Farkuhar, and when and where did Mary Ann wed Mr. Seeley?  Back to the New York City Vital Records site where I struck out.  However, Ancestry has a death index for NYC, there I located Joseph's death and the number of the death certificate.  Using that number I found the actual certificate on the NYC site--

     As for Mary's second marriage, I suspected it took place in New Jersey, which doesn't have a nice site with certificate images like New York City, but those folks at Reclaim the Records I mentioned earlier had also asked New Jersey for their old vital records.  They didn't even have to file a lawsuit in this case.  In those records I found Mary O'Hara marrying Frederick Seeley in 1904, no further dates or address given.  I think that's a wrap.