Friday, October 7, 2011

Oct 11 Update, including Powers to Higgins to Hagarty

Having restored and updated a number of the families on my genealogy pages, a priority has been to restore and update the BrooksHumbertson and the BrooksPowers pages. Those two families, when complete, will fill in key links on the Trees page. There is much information, and yet many missing pieces.
While looking back through my notes and rechecking the facts on Brooks, expecially in the Frostburg area, I ran into some new information. For example, my great-grandfather Thomas Meagher appears in the 1895-96 directory for Frostburg which is available online at the Western Maryland Historical Library site. We already knew that my grandmother had lived in Frostburg as a young girl. But since we know so little about her father, it is nice to see his name in print in the directory. The directory also lists several members of the Powers family living near the corner of Maple and College. That is the vicinity where I remember my grandmother pointing out she had lived [see footnote no. 8 on the MeagherBrooks page]. The 1895-96 directory lists the residence for Thomas Meagher as New. I don't know if that was a street name, or if it indicated a new entry.
The 1895-96 directory also helped with sorting out the Powers-Higgins-Hagarty connection. You can see that connection in the descendants for PowersKilleen at the bottom of the Trees page, as well as on the new HigginsPowers page. When I mentioned to my Mom that I had figured out where the Hagarty name fit, and that the Hagartys had lived in Duquesne, my Mom immediately exclaimed, Oh, Margaret Mary! As memory has it, it seems that neither Nell (Meagher) Thompson, who lived not far from Duquesne, nor her sister Irene (Meagher) Murtha were close to their second cousin, Margaret Mary Hagarty. But their brother Tom Meagher, the funeral director, stayed in touch with Margaret Mary. My Mom recalls a day ca. the early 1930's when her Uncle Tom took her mother to visit Margaret Mary in Duquesne. The Murtha children stayed behind in Mt. Pleasant with Grandmother Annie babysitting. Besides living in the town of Duquesne, it appears also that at the time Margaret Mary would have been attending or would have recently graduated from Duquesne University. While visiting Margaret Mary, Tom took his sister to Kennywood [Amusement Park]. Kennywood would have been an easy half-mile walk from Margaret Mary's house on Oakmont Avenue. Margaret Mary's mother, Ellen (Nellie), would have still been alive then. Ellen's brothers (Margaret Mary's uncles) Dennis Higgins and possibly Patrick Higgins may also have been there. (This rootsweb post has Dennis and Patrick living with the Hagartys in 1910). I suspect that Dennis Higgins (b. 1873) may have been the namesake for Dennis Meagher (b. 1902).

Monday, August 8, 2011

Thomas and Annie Meagher Web Page

I finally updated and restored the web page for the Thomas and Annie Meagher family. Twelve years ago I started researching Thomas and Annie. One thing led to another, and the branches on the family tree increased. Over the years, as new details emerged about Thomas and Annie, I updated family members with mailings. Yet the information about Thomas and Annie on the old (att) web pages had never been updated, except for a few feeble improvements to the citations. Now all of the information is available and organized on the new web page. There are also some new links and attachments that may be of interest.

Looking at their history side-by-side on the web page, the most interesting question for me is still what brought each of them to Mt. Pleasant. Did the teenaged Annie travel there with her childhood family, or did her mother Ellen and/or her twin sister Mollie remain behind in Maryland. It seems that Thomas left his childhood family behind in Ohio and never looked back. Obviously when you look at stories of immigrants from Europe, there were hundreds of teenagers who left their childhood families behind and traveled on their own (maybe tagging along with friends or relatives) to the coalfields of western Pennsylvania. My Hungarian grandparents did that. It was something that many of their friends and relatives in the old country were doing. The streets of America were paved with gold, etc. But I doubt that teenagers growing up in the coalfields of Maryland or Ohio would have any illusions about the streets of Mt. Pleasant. What did they hear about Mt. Pleasant in the mid-1880's that attracted them there? Did organizations in the Irish community provide support for traveling and getting settled in the new town?

I have not been satisfied with any of the genealogy software that I've tried. Initially it's fun to enter all of the links and create expansive charts. But the static links don't tell the whole story. Families grow and shrink as individuals join and leave. Traditional families become extended families. Individuals migrate from one family to another. I've taken to entering information directly into web pages, with each page attempting to tell the story of a family.

Friday, May 20, 2011

Dignitaries Visiting the Irish Midlands

Queen Elizabeth today completed her four-day stay in Ireland. President Obama will be in Ireland on Monday. Their visits to sites in the the Irish Midlands have connections to some of my ancestors.

“O'bama” will visit Moneygall, from where F. Kearney, the President's great-great-great-grandfather on his mother's side, emigrated in 1850. Moneygall lies along the N7 highway, in County Offaly, but very close to the boundary with County Tipperary. (The Offaly-Tipperary boundary crosses the N7 highway five times within about ten miles of Moneygall.) Traveling east from Moneygall towards Dublin, the N7 crosses into that part of Tipperary that is Ikerrin, the ancestral homeland of the O'Meagher clan.

Two of my ancestors on my mother's side emigrated from locations that are within 20 miles of Moneygall. My great-great-grandfather, James Meagher, emigrated from near Cappawhite, about 20 miles southwest of Moneygall. My great-great-grandmother, Ellen Powers, left from Kilcormac, about 20 miles northeast of Moneygall.

Today Queen Elizabeth visited the Rock of Cashel, which is about thirty miles south of Moneygall. Although it is a bit of a stretch, there is a connection with another of my ancestors, my great-grandfather John Murtha. John, along with most of his Murtha siblings, emigrated from County Cavan, which is a long way northeast of Tipperary. About the time when John Murtha was a very young man, there was a land survey known as the Griffiths Valuation. Griffiths recorded that the Murtha homestead and farm was owned by “Dean Adams” (the Reverend Samuel Adams, a Cavan squire holding the office in the Church of Ireland, “Dean of Cashel”).

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

James Meagher, of Cappawhite Parish

This post, and and later ones, will refer to information in my online genealogy pages. Those pages are back, but only a few of them so far.

The MeagherCavanaugh(1862) page summarizes information about the James Meagher family. Included on that page is a link to the Meagher YDNA surname project. That project has taken on a fascinating life of it's own. Unfortunately, it's yet to prove anything in my line. My mother's cousin took the test, establishing that our Meaghers are in the I haplogroup. (Most of Irish ancestry are R's, with the I's a distant second.) Because the I haplogroup is relatively rare, the test should prove convincing for a connection (or lack of it), if I ever manage to convince a presumed distant cousin to take the test.

In the meantime, there is the vexing problem of a missing baptismal record for my great-great-grandfather James Meagher (see footnote #11 on his parents' family page). Sometime in 2009 I happened to find an email address for the parish priest at Cappawhite. Later that year I sent an email explaining the situation. For awhile I did not hear anything. Then last April a letter arrived from Cappawhite. The parish priest enclosed a copy of the original record for 1837, carefully trimmed to a thin strip, thus excluding records immediately before and after.

The original record, at the top of the image, can be compared with the extracted information (bottom of image) provided by the Tipperary Heritage Unit, Family History Research Centre in June of 2000. The original record clears up one minor discrepancy. The townland is in fact spelled Clonganiff, with two n's, not Clongariff. The double n spelling agrees with the ca. 1850's standardization of the spelling as Clonganhue. (Another of the earlier variant spellings: Clonganhve.) It's still unknown whether Conor (Cornelius) became James, or whether the record for James is just missing.

Exactly 150 years ago, the following advertisement appeared in the Boston Pilot, a Catholic newspaper with national circulation.

Actually the image above is a copy of the advertisement as reprinted in The Search for Missing Friends. It would be interesting to check a microfilm copy of the original issue. (Online searches indicate that microfilm of the originals may be available at Notre Dame and at Catholic University of America.) The timeline in the ad makes sense if Mary left home before visiting her brothers. So she probably left home 8 years before the ad (She would have been 23 years old in 1853; James would have been about 16-18 that year.) As explained in footnote 4 on the MeagherCavanaugh(1862) page, James could have left Ireland as late as 1856. There are many interesting James Meagher scenarios yet to explore both in Ireland and in America.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Connections to Meagher and Murtha on the NBC Show

A week ago Friday my Aunt called in the evening from LaFayette Manor to tell my Mom that she was watching a show about Rosie O'Donnell, and that the name of Rosie's mother or grandmother (my Mom wasn't clear on this) was Murtha. My Aunt did not know which show or station she was watching, so my Mom began flipping through the cable channels. I googled, and eventually discovered that my Aunt was watching an episode from the second season of the NBC show Who Do You Think You Are. In Tucson the show would begin a half hour after the call. I never watched any episodes from the first season, imagining them to be one long commercial for ancestrydotcom. On the contrary, I enjoyed the Rosie O'Donnell episode. It emphasized travel to the original locations, even to the point of literally fingering the original records. Although my Aunt was interested in the Murtha connection, I was more excited about the last 15 minutes or so of the program, specifically that latter segment's connection to my ancestor Ellen Powers (mother-in-law of Thomas Meagher--see the previous post, Ellen Powers).

First, the Murtha connection: My cousin Jim Naureckas has information on his Jim's Genealogy Pages about our Murtha ancestors. They were from County Cavan, close to the northern border of Co. Meath. Our great-grandfather was not a Famine Immigrant; he left Ireland about 35 years after the Famine. My understanding from the show is that Rosie's ancestors were from the northern part of Co. Kildare, close to the southern border of Co. Meath. The Murtha/Murtagh surname is centered on Co. Meath. (You can explore the frequency of the Murtha/Murtagh surname in Ireland by doing a search at the Irish Family History Foundation site. Registration is not required to obtain merely a summary of the total number of relevant records of various types for each county.) So we are interested in the connection between Murtha families on the northern and on the southern fringes of Co. Meath. My guess is that the common ancestor would go back considerably more than 200 years, although we may never know for sure.

Rosie O'Donnell was fortunate to find a Famine-era record from her ancestors' Poor Law Union (PLU) showing that her ancestors had been approved for emigration. The expert on the show explained that this meant that her ancestors would have needed to stay in the local workhouse for a certain period. Thre were well over 100 Poor Law Unions established in Ireland, each containing a workhouse. Intially the PLU aid system was shunned by the poor. But when the Famine hit, the system was overwhelmed.1 Continuing with the show: Rosie went on to visit what is considered to be the best surviving workhouse complex in Ireland, similar to the one where her ancestors would have stayed. She visited the Birr Workhouse (aka Parsonstown, an earlier name for Birr), which happens to be the workhouse where the Powers family (see the previous Ellen Powers post) would have gone. Their parish, Kilcormac, is only about 8 miles northeast of Birr. Four-year-old Ellen Powers could easily have spent the winter of 1846-1847 in that very workhouse. More likely, the Powers family would have fended for themselves that winter, before being evicted by their landlord in the summer of 1847, then making their way south to Cobh. Still, even with that scenario, Ellen may have known less fortunate orphaned friends who spent their winters in that attic. Viewing the reaction of Rosie O'Donnell to the workhouse setting is especially moving, realizing that the Powers family must have at least passed by that very complex, also imagining the conditions inside.

1. Peter Gray, The Irish Famine, Thames and Hudson Ltd., London, 1995, 191 pp., ISBN 0-500-30057-7

Ellen Powers

While visiting St. Pius cemetery in Mt. Pleasant I had always heard of Ellen, one of my great-great-grandmothers. Ellen's daughter was Annie, my great-grandmother. In the spring of 1903, Annie lost her first husband after an accident in the coal mine. Thomas Meagher was buried at the head of town (the city cemetery), with the specific location now forgotten. The Irish have a way of avoiding tragic memories. Two years after losing Thomas, the widow Annie Meagher lost her mother. By then (1905) a new Catholic cemetery had been established in Mt. Pleasant. Ellen was an early arrival at the new cemetery, the first to be buried in a block of eight gravesites. Annie, on the other hand, was later buried with her second husband in an opposite corner of the cemetery. As a result, the eight gravesites purchased by the widow Meagher are all now devoted to surnames other than Meagher. The eight gravesites skip Annie's generation; they represent the generation before and the three generations after.

Just beyond the entrance to St. Pius cemetery, the drive splits into a one-way loop. Ellen's gravesite is close to a curve in the driveway. Visitors often found her site a convenient spot to pull completely off the road, allowing other cars to pass effortlessly. Over the years my Dad concocted a variety of flags to draw attention to the corner of Ellen's gravesite, all of which proved no match for a metal bumper. We concluded that he would not rest in peace until Ellen had her own stone marker. That meant finding out more about Ellen.

A little research quickly revealed that Ellen's maiden name was Powers, that she belonged to a large family that had moved from New York to Frostburg MD in the 1850's, and that she and her entire family were Famine Immigrants, arriving in New York on 13 Sep 1847 aboard the Issac-Walton. By chance, a death record in Frostburg indicated that one of Ellen's brothers was a native of Kings County. That led to a request for information from Irish Midlands Ancestry. (The current, presumably much faster way to do this starts with an online search at the Irish Family History Foundation.) The report from Irish Midlands Ancestry revealed that Ellen and all of her siblings were baptized in the parish of Kilcormac, in the western part of County Offaly (formerly Kings County). Ellen was only 5 years old when her family left Ireland. Her oldest sister, Catherine, was 16 and her youngest sister, Anne, was only 1 year old. So, thanks to the baptismal records, we know that the Powers family was in or around Kilcormac from 1831 into 1846. Then we have the ship manifest placing them in New York in 1847. That leaves only a little over one year of uncertainty, extending from July 1846 (when Anne was baptized) to September 1847. It would have been a hectic and difficult year. The family would have made the decision to leave Ireland (or else have had it made for them by their landlord or some agency). They would have needed to gather the resources to pay for their trip (or the landlord or some other agency did that for them). They would have had to make their way over land to a port city (probably Cork). Records for the Famine years, even when they have managed to survive, can be especially cryptic. So we may never know the details of Ellen's last year in Ireland. But for one possible scenario, see the next post in this blog.