Thursday, August 16, 2012

HICUZ 90


Copyright 1990 et seq, Donald Rowe

Reminder, your acceptance of this newsletter signifies that you will not use its contents to alter, in any form or way, the historical religious beliefs, no matter what they were – or were not – of family members mentioned herein.
 
 





This newsletter summarizes the recently unearthed data, and old data rediscovered in trying to answer questions from several cousins.  I wish to acknowledge the inputs of several of my cousins – first cousins Eleanore (Rowe) Tomusko, Dennis Joseph O’Connor, (second or third) cousin Keith Corcoran, and second cousin once removed Linda (Sullivan) Vilcheck.

Eleanore (Rowe) Tomusko – I found an earlier letter in which my first cousin Eleanore (Rowe) Tomusko, researched Boston, MA records (8 parishes) but couldn’t find anything confirming Grampa William Joseph was baptized there. She did find in a 1853 Boston City Directory a Thomas (and thus Mary and Wm Joseph) Rowe, laborer, living at 28 Nashua Street.

Eleanore and her husband Bill found and verified the records showing arrival of Thomas Rowe (nee Wroe) and Mary Ellen (Meagher) Rowe to Boston, MA on 6 June 1853.

Cousin Eleanore Tomusko sent a letter years ago with data from the marriage of Wm Joseph and Catherine Ellen (Shanaghan) Rowe. The date was 19 June 1977. Their parents were identified as: Thomas and Mary Rowe, John and Elizabeth (I know separately- Larkin) Shannon (was Shanaghan in Canada. The witnesses were: Daniel Mannix and Helen Shannon. Helen was Catherine’s sister and Daniel Mannix was a family friend (separately noted by Eleanore. My Dad was named after this Daniel Mannix, whose son became a doctor. Cousin Eleanore said the two doctors didn’t appreciate each other for some reason.  The marriage was performed by Rev. Dennis Bradley.

Eleanore also shared in a Oct 1997 letter details of the siblings of my grandmother, Catherine Ellen (Shanaghan).  Her sister Linia “Lena” married George Keeble. Lena and George Keeble had two children, Elizabeth and a son. The son ran away from home and was never heard of again; Elizabeth “Lizzie” Keeble never married and eventually lived with her sister, my grandmother in Portland, ME.  

Dennis Joseph O’Connor -  Has joined the Gaelic-

Keith Corcoran -  sent along a family photo, circa XXXX, showing several of his particular ancestors (names, relationships), with one individual identified as Joseph Rowe.  At the time my Uncle/Aunt Joseph and Teresa (Tamborrel) Rowe were living in Mexico. Thus this particular Joseph Rowe was not in our line. 

Scott Rowe - has been researching numerous records (census, death certificates, burial) for my great grandparents, Thomas and Mary Ellen (Meagher) Rowe, and Catherine (Meagher) Murray, Catherine’s sister. The 1900 census report noted that Mrs. Murray had one child, which was not alive, and she came to the USA in the same year as Great Gramma Mary. I doubt that a census taker would make that type of entry up. I suspect Catherine came over that same year, but at another time. Scott unearthed (pardon the play on words) Calvary cemetery records. Scott and I shared various records which summarize the conflicting info on Mary Ellen and her sister Catherine.  

Scott downloaded the 1900 census of Portland, ME which has Catherine Murray living with her sister Mary Rowe. The Calvary cemetery online records for grave site #3 lot 69  has Mary Rowe at 69 yrs (d. 1902), and in the next grave, #6 Lot 69, has Catherine Murray at 68 Yrs (d. 1909) with a note that “the stone states 1839 DOB.”

Catherine’s Death certificate states she died 1/19/1909 while living with her sister’s family at Adams St. Portland Maine. Her death certificate lists Jeremiah Maher and Johanna Casey as her parents, and her age at death 68yrs. I suspect that the census taker screwed up the age of Catherine. Mary should be the eldest by about 5-6 yrs. If they came together in 1853 I doubt Catherine would have been married as she would have been 14-15 years old.

Various records I had (Death certificates, 1880 US census, 1900 census, and Calvary Cemetery records) show varying years of birth for Mary Ellen vs. Catherine, as follows:

Mary Ellen – 1835,       1832,               Apr 1832,        and 1834
Catherine -     1841,     not recorded,    May 1821        and 1841 I’m uncertain any are precise.

As to Catherine and Mary’s parents – the records all identify their father as Jeremiah Meagher, and their mother as either Catherine (or Johanna) Casey. Perhaps one or the other was a middle name.

Scott’s research discovered that Catherine and Michael Murray divorced, probably after the death of their son Michael at 5 months, and he remarried. We believe Michael married Ellen, who is buried with him in the same cemetery in South Portland, ME.

Ellen died 3 March 1888 at age 52, Michael Murray d 27 Dec 1908 at 88 years. Michael Murray the son of Catherine and Michael Murray died 21 September 1866 at age 5 months.

Scott successfully downloaded copies of the Passenger Arrival records for the ship Josephus to Boston in 1853, as well as death certificates for Mary Ellen (Meagher) Rowe and her sister Catherine (Meagher) Murray. Michael Murray (the father’s) grave states he was husband of both Catherine and Ellen. 

Linda (Sullivan) Vilcheck – introduced herself, found us all via the HICUZ blog.

An unnamed cousin shared information – good as of 1999, for how to obtain copies of Ordnance Survey (OS) maps from the Library of Congress (LOC). These maps provide valuable information relating which families lived in particular parts of the British Isles in the period 18940 and thereafter. They are extremely valuable with Irish research in that the census records for the Republic of Ireland prior to 1920 were almost all burned in the 1916 uprising. These maps even depict individual structures. The original maps date to 1840, and several were updated in 1890s and 1920s.

To use the OS maps effectively, you must be certain of the county and the map number (means you know the town or town land, barony, and parish.) where you hope to find ancestral homes. The LOC has microfiche copies of many old OS maps. None of the maps have the alphanumeric identifiers which the surveyors of the Griffith’s Valuation added in pen and ink. The only source of the annotated maps for the Republic of Ireland is the Valuation Office in Dublin. To get the copies from the LOC –

1)      US residents can order copies of the full size maps by sending the map number and county name to:  Library Of Congress, Photo Duplication Services, Washington, DC 20540-5230.
2)      Visit the LOC Mapping Department in the basement oif the Madison Bldg, First and Independence Ave., SE, Washington, DC. Bring a photo ID and buy a LOC copy card.
The microfiche are arranged in cabinets by county, then by map number. There is a fiche at the start of each county which shows the arrangement of that county’s OS maps. There are separate drawers for the 1840, 1890s, and 1920s variants.

MLFHS: Catholic Records

The three RC dioceses in Lancashire have agreed that the place of safety of 
registers and other records of Catholic parishes should be the Lancashire 
Archives in Preston. You can view its holdings of all religious registers 
on-line at 
http://www.lancashire.gov.uk/corporate/web/?siteid=4528&pageid=30843&e=e 
This list is kept up-to-date as registers are deposited.

The Manchester Archives and Local Studies Unit (MALS) has microfilm copies 
of some of these RC registers.  Its index is on-line at 
http://www.manchester.gov.uk/site/scripts/documents_info.php?categoryID=448&documentID=464

> Can you please tell me where the records for St Malachey's RC church in 
> Erasmus Street, Collyhurst, are kept

The parish of St Malachy is a fairly new parish (founded 1922) but has 
suffered a marked loss of population in the last 30- - 40 years and is now 
part of the parish of St Patrick, Livesey St.  The LA catalogue has -

MANCHESTER, Collyhurst, St Malachy; Diocese of Salford
For original registers enquire at:- Hollywood House, Sudell Street, 
Collyhurst, Manchester. M4 4JF
C 1947-1962; M 1947-1954, 1961-1962  Reg rets  RCSF 2
[endquote]

This means that all the original parish registers are still with the Parish 
Priest, to whom enquiries should be directed at the address quoted.  The 
'Reg rets' are similar to the Anglican Bishop's Transcripts but there is a 
closure period of about seventy years i.e. they cannot be consulted until 
seventy years have elapsed from the last entry.

> Also can you tell me where to find records for St Chads on Cheetham Hill 
> Road

The current "Salford Diocesan Almanac" (2012) has this note about St Chad 
under "Closed Churches and Chapels of the Salford Diocese" -

Manchester, St Chad - This mission was founded in the mid-eighteenth century in a former industrial building off The parsonage.  It was re-located to a property at 
Roman Entry in 1773 and then top a purpose built chapel on Rook Street in 
1776.  It was finally moved to its current location on Cheetham Hill in 
1847.  Early registers at LCRO [= LA], later registers at St Anne, Crumpsall [endquote]

From a potential cousin –

My 3rd great aunt Catherine Slattery was married to Michael McCarthy in Ste Catherine De Portneuf, Quebec, Canada in 1833. Catherine was born in Tralee in 1815 according to the 1851 Canadian Census. Her parents were Patrick Slattery and Catherine Pollard. 

I believe that Patrick Slattery's brother was Stephen Slattery. You have both of their names posted in the
Graves’ settlement, Seignory of Neuville, Concessions of St John, St Mary. 

I did find a birth record for Michael Slattery who was Stephen Slattery and Hanorah Fitzmaurice's son and I did also find Stephen and Hanorah's marriage record in DUNMUNTANE, Kerry. 

I have never been able to find any documents for Patrick and his wife Catherine Pollard as to where they came from in
Ireland. I do believe that they also came from County Kerry. 

What is the Graves Settlement? This is the first I have ever heard of it. Thank you for establishing this Blog Spot.

Liz 
My reply to Cuz Liz,

I apologize for being so tardy in responding. I only check my G-Mail account occasionally since I set it up for coordinating a trilogy of novels I’m working on I saw that you had checked Ancestry.com about the Graves Settlement.

Here is an extract which addresses the Graves Settlement in Portneuf County, Quebec – it may be the citation you refer to.

Back in HI CUZ 27 I provided some incorrect Shanaghan family information. By way of introduction, it will be helpful to show which “Irlandais” emigrated to Portneuf County in Quebec together, and when they came, as of that 1842 census. That census information shows that I was wrong in saying the older William Shanaghan was the son of Denis and Catherine McCarthy Shanaghan; here’s how it looked across several closely spaced districts. Listed by number of years present in Canada, as of 1842:

                        Graves’ settlement, Seignory of Neuville, Concessions of St John, St Mary
            21 years – Robert Cameron, from Scotland, family of 9, 1 from Ireland, rest born Canada.
                           Roderick Mullins, gardener from Ireland
            16 yearsDenis Shanaghan, 10 in fam, 6 Irish, 5 born Canada, 1 not enum w/ family
                            Stephen Slattery, 8 in fam, 3 born Ireland, 5 born Canada
            15 years – John Lawless, 6 in fam, all born Ireland
                           John McCarthy, 6 in fam, 3 born Ireland, 3 born Canada
                           Michael McCarthy, 5 in fam, 2 born Ireland, 3 born Canada
 Michael Gaffney, 8 in fam, 2 born Ireland, 1 born Canada, 1 not enum w/ family
            12 years – Patrick Burns, 6 in fam, all born Ireland
                           John Rotchford, Ireland, mason
                           Mary Graves, Ireland 
            10 years – Owen Love, 2 in fam, both from Ireland
                           Roger McGahan, 2 in fam, both from Ireland
                           Patrick Slattery, 4 in fam, all from Ireland
                           Charles Cleary, 6 in fam, 3 from Ireland, 3 born Canada
                           Martin Lawlor, 5 in fam, all born Ireland
                           John Cleary, 5 in fam, 3 born Ireland, 2 born Canada
                           David Graham, 3 in fam, 2 born Ireland, 1 born Canada
            9 yearsWilliam Shanaghan, 5 in fam, 2 born Ireland, 3 born Canada.

                        Bourg Louis, First Range
            13 yearsCornelius Shanaghan, 9 in family, 3 Irish, 6 born Canada.

                        Graves’ Settlement, Seignory of Neuville, Concession of St Charles
            20 years – William Raisin, 3 in fam, 2 Irish, 1 born Canada
17 years – Denis Duggin, culler of timber, fam of 5, 5 from Ireland
                Thomas Corcoran, 8 in fam, 3 Irish, 5 born Canada
            16 years - Arthur McClintock, 8 in fam, 2 from Ireland, 6 born Canada
            15 years – Richard Driscoll, 7 in family, 3 from Ireland, 4 born Canada
                           James Corcoran, 3 in fam, 2 born Ireland, 2 born Canada, I not enum w/ fam
                           Patrick Love, 10 in fam, 4 born Ireland, 6 born Canada



Also here is another Slattery, probably a relative.

Received in the mail from Ste Catherine paroisse (parish) de Portneuf, 2 Rue Jolicoeur, Quebec, Canada G0A 3M0, a copy of the parish record of the 6 February 1844 (M4) marriage of my great grandparents, John Shanaghan, "son of age to Denis Shanaghan and Catherine McCarthy of St Bazil, of one part, and Eleanor Mylar, daughter of age to Thomas Mylar and Elizabeth Larkin also of St Bazil." Noted as present were "Denis Shanaghan, father, and Thomas Slattery, a friend of the bridegroom, of James Mylar brother and Catherine Shanaghan sister in law of the bride."  Signing the record were Dennis Shanahan, James Mylar, Thomas Slattery.  I'm curious about this Catherine, sister in law of the bride, which makes her the bride of a brother of Eleanor (Ellen), perhaps James Mylar's wife???, and maybe John's sister????. The record was entirely in English, a rarity among ones I've seen in French speaking Canada in that period, perhaps suggesting the priest (named Paisley) at this parish was a rare one. The record also said that "bride and bridegroom cannot write." Little tips help!

I’m not up to speed on land areas, or controls of the settlements. Here is another clue. Settlements were grants of the Crown, sort of like early American colonies. Good luck.

See – http://provincequebec.com/municipalites-of-quebec/portneuf/ for entries below on towns of interest.
Portneuf
Portneuf is a town located near Quebec City. It has a population of about 3,000.
The first settler in the Portneuf area was Pierre Robineau who came here in 1636. Ten years later the seigneury of Portneuf was created. In 1681, it became a barony.  Flour mill, a sawmill, a Catholic church and a manor house were built.
During the French regime, the seigniors gave precedence to settlement and agriculture in the area. The English placed more emphasis on commercial exploitation of the forest and of hydraulic power.
In 1801, when Canada was an English colony, Mr. McNider takes a fifty-year lease on the property which later was taken over by Edward Hale, a member of the Council of Lower Canada. Mr. Hale brought in many Irish Protestants to Portneuf. In 1806, industry begins in the town, when W.B. Coltman builds a water-powered sawmill. Lumber mills, shipbuilding and, much later, paper mills were developed here.
(Trois Rivieres (Three Rivers), noted below, is in the vicinity of various parishes where our ancestors lived.)
Trois-Rivieres
Trois-Rivieres City (population of about 130,000) is located in the Mauricie administrative Region at the confluence of the St-Maurice and the St Lawrence, halfway between Montreal and Quebec City. In fact, the name of the city meaning “Three Rivers” reminds us that the St-Maurice River, which is divided by two islands at the river’s opening, has three mouths at the place of its confluence with the St. Lawrence River.
The city was founded in July, 1634, by Sieur Laviolette, and it was the second permanent settlement in Canada, founded 26 years after the founding of the future Quebec City. TheForges du Saint-Maurice, the very first Canadian foundry dating back to the 1730s, was founded here.
Due to its important strategic position, Trois-Rivieres was scene of battles during the Seven-Years-War and during the American invasion in 1775.
In 1608, the greater part of Trois-Rivieres was destroyed by a fire. Unfortunately, almost all original buildings were destroyed. Only a few were spared by the fire, including the Ursuline Monastery and the De Tonnancour Manor.
Actually, Trois-Rivieres City is a large agglomeration created in 2002, when six smaller historical towns merged, namely Cap-de-la-Madeleine, Pointe-du-Lac, Sainte-Marthe-du-Cap, Saint-Louis-de-France, Trois-Rivieres and Trois-Rivieres-Ouest.
Shannon
Shannon is situated approximately 15 miles north, twenty minutes by car, of Quebec City, along the banks of the Jacques-Cartier River.
The first inhabitants that settled here were of Irish descent who came here in the pre-famine era, seeking a better life. These people became farmers and lumbermen, driving logs along the Jacques-Cartier River. Till now, many inhabitants have Irish roots, and Shannon is one of the strongest Irish communities in Quebec.
The municipality of Shannon was created in 1846, when citizens of the community decided to leave St. Catherine-de-Portneuf in protest against the municipal taxes.
(St Catherine was a parish near St Basile (where my Shanaghan/McCarthy ancestors passed through); both in Portneuf County they had many Irish residents.)
I’m of the opinion that due to these connections years ago we’re cousins, so - WELCOME CUZ!


MLFHS: New Data in the Catholic Records Index

By kind permission of Lawrence Gregory at Salford Diocesan RC Archives I have added several thousand new names to the Catholic Records Index on the society web site (accessed via the button on the home page or direct at http://www.mlfhs.org.uk/data/catholic_search.php

The data covers:

Manchester, St. Ann, Stretford
Baptisms, Marriages & Confirmations 1859-1925

Manchester, St. Alphonsus, Brooks Bar, Old Trafford
Baptisms, Marriages & Confirmations 1904-1925

Manchester, St. Anthony of Padua, Trafford Park
Confirmations 1904-1926

Barton on Irwell RC Cemetery,  Burial Registers 1823-1948

MLFHS member
-----------------------------------------------
MLFHS: Catholic Records Index - New Data

Many thanks for these additions.

Particularly as I’m certain that I have finally found some vital 
information about my 3 x great grandmother which has been eluding me for 
about 12 years.

Please can you tell me if the printed copy of transcribed burial 
registers for the period 1816-1825 is available for purchase or can it 
only be accessed in the Society's Resource Centre? And are there any 
plans to transcribe the remaining years ie bet 1825 and 1832?

A massive thanks is also deservedly due to Julie.  She has clearly done 
a great job with a very difficult transcription.

Another MLFHS member comment

I have just added a small batch of burials to the Catholic Records Index. These relate to burials at St. Mary, Mulberry Street, Manchester for the period 1832-37.

Great thanks are due to Julie Davey for a magnificent effort in transcribing these near impossible images - the scanned pages are frayed and discoloured and the ink sometimes pale, and that is even before the sometimes appalling writing and widespread use of highly abbreviated forenames.

These will eventually appear together with baptisms and the earlier burials on a CD to be published by the Catholic FHS. The direct link to the index is http://www.mlfhs.org.uk/data/catholic_search.php

MLFHS: Parish records available online at LDS site


There's no straightforward (either reasonable or unreasonable)  way I know of getting a list of the parishes  with images. 

What I do is: 

Go to familysearch.org

Scroll down the page and below 'Browse by Location' click on 'British Isles'; you'll get a list of all collections and some of these collections have link 
to 'Browse Images'

The Lancashire Parish Records entry does not have a 'Browse Images Link' but if you click on the link for the collection and scroll down the page you then get a link to 'Browse through Images'

MLFHS: Parish records available online at LDS site

The basic index page for the
Cheshire, Lancashire and Yorkshire images is:

https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-266-12454-46877-84?cc=1788853&wc=10932209#uri=https%3A%2F%2Fapi.familysearch.org%2Frecords%2Fcollection%2F1788853%2Fwaypoints

Memorable huh!

MLFHS: Parish records available online at LDS site

I just click on BMD on the tool bar, go to
Lancashire online images and there is the list!

I just want to thank you for interest in family research and for sharing so many bits of the puzzle. Keep up the good work. I apologize if I have overlooked anyone.

Wroe/Rowe ancestry
Wendy Wroe   Marta Innocenti    Doreen Travis
T David Wroe   Lin Rowe    Betty DiBiase
Steve Rowe   Eleanore Rowe Tomusko   Judith Wroe
Janis Pahnke  John L. Rowe   Erik Bengtsson
Scott Rowe  Margie (French) Thompson

O’Connor/Sullivan ancestry
Mary Frances (O'Connor) LaMar (deceased)
Catherine “Cat” Shrum (deceased)
Tom Buckley  Clare (O’Connor) Coulter
William D. Brew (deceased)   Marge Dillon (deceased)
Sile O’Mahoney of Tipperary  Vincent O’Connor
Patricia (Tish) O’Connor (deceased)
Jill (O’Connor) Kelly  Tim and Kerstin O’Connor
Nora Curtin (deceased)

Shanaghan/McCarthy ancestry
John and Sandra Byrne   Janice Copeman  Keith Corcoran"
Olav and Kathy den Ouden   Patricia Hall
Linda Maitland   Yves and Gisele Marcotte
Michael L. Marcotte   Percy Lawless   Theresa Ganest (deceased)
Kevin Kindellan   Lucy Bryne (deceased)
Patrick Michael McCarthy

Gerhard ancestry
Jim Dixon     Joan (Gerhard) Stelicha

McDonald ancestry
Heather MacKenzie    David MacLeod
Dick MacLeod   Jill (MacKenzie) Olson
Rev. Jonathan MacKenzie
Heather (MacKenzie) Davern

Diaz/Robinson/Pena ancestry
Roberta “Bobbie” Robinson Carmichael

MLFHS: Catholic Records Index

An MLFHS member has added another 6,281 names to the Catholic Records Index on the society web site. These relate to:

St Mary, Swinton & The Swinton Industrial Schools 
Baptisms 1856-1910
Marriages 1867-1920
Confirmations 1863-1904
WW1 War Dead

These come courtesy of Lawrence Gregory of Salford Diocesan Archives.
  
TREASURE – From second cousin once removed Linda (Sullivan) Vilcheck. She found the record of my Mothers’ passage to America as a baby.

I don't really know where to start with family things, so here goes... it appears that you had trouble finding the ship your mother came over on. It was the SS Lucania. It sailed from Liverpool and Queenstown, and arrived in New York on the 28 July 1906 - and here's something interesting. They sailed 2nd class, not steerage.

They were listed as follows:

     361 Sullivan, Sylvester.  19 y; male; single; laborer; can read/write; Nationality - British; Race - Irish; last residence - Caherdaniel; final destination Ansonia, Ct; ticket? - no; paid by sister; has $50; in U.S. before? - no; ever been in prison?-no; polygamist? - no; anarchist? - no; promise of labor? - no; health - good; crippled/deformed? – no

     360 Sullivan, Ellen. 60 y; female; married; housekeeper; contract 27482; can read/write; Nationality - British; Race - Irish; last residence - Caherdaniel; final destination Ansonia, Ct.; ticket? - no; paid by daughter; has $50; In US before? - no; joining daughter, Mrs. Denis O'Connor, 28 Rockwood Ave., Ansonia, Ct.; In prison? - no; Polygamist? no-; Anarchist? - no; Promise of labor? -no; Health memo - senility; crippled/deformed? - no. (Held for Special Inquiry. see page 34, #9. See pass. 379, her daughter) (Don’s maternal great grandmother)

      Sullivan, Ellen & son. 60 y. female; grp 2, #7/8, 2 persons (passenger 360/361); cause of detention - LPC; Inspector - Fitzgerald; adm 7/28, pg 161; Secy - M, Time: 9:25, 2 dinners
      (LPC recorded after cause of detention is the abbreviation for "likely to become public charge)

     379 O'Connor, Bridget. 28 y; female; married; housekeeper; contract 27482; can read/write; Nationality - American; Race - Irish; last residence - Caherdaniel; final destination - Ansonia, Ct.; ticket? - no: paid by husband: $ - no; In US before? - yes, 1904 Ansonia; joining husband, Denis O'Connor, 28 Rockwood Ave., Ansonia, Ct.; In prison? - no; polygamist? - no; anarchist? - no; promise of labor? -  no; health - good; crippled/deformed?-no; (see passengers 360, 361, 380 - 382) (Don’s maternal grandmother)

     380 O'Connor, Ellen. 11 y.; female; single; can't read or write; Nationality - American; Race - Irish; last residence - Caherdaniel; Final destination - Ansonia, Ct.; Ticket? - no; paid by father; In US before? - yes, 1904, Ansonia; joining father ( see passenger 379)

     381 O'Connor, Daniel. 2 y; male; single; child; can't read/write; Nationality - American; Race - Irish; last residence - Caherdaniel; final destination - Ansonia; Ticket? no:; paid by father; $? - no; joining father (see passenger 379)

     382 O'Connor, Bridget. 1 y.; female; single; can't read/write; Nationality - American; Race - Irish; last residence - Caherdaniel; Final destination - Ansonia; Ticket? - no; paid by father; $ - no; In US before? - no; joining father (see passenger380) (Don’s mother)

     Just as a hmmmm - passenger 869 was a Sinclair Lewis. He was in steerage.

Thanks Cuz Linda!!!

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