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" |
That made me laugh Ellie, Garcia in Ireland in the 18th century! I checked the census and they had all seemingly gone back to Spain by 1901 :-)
ReplyDeleteLOL, must have been a mass migration
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