Records of South West Cork families such as Dalys, Haggertys, Swanton, Jagoe. Lannin, Levis, Dukelow, Beamish, Harrington, Mahony, McCarthy, Stout, Kingston, Raycroft, Jennings. Skuce, in Registers of Rochester New York, Register Mount Hope Cemetery, Rochester, Rochester Genealogy Relevant Canadian Records.


https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Durrus,+Co.+Cork/@51.6217107,-9.521993,11z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x48459fe7ccd270df:0x231e3744ac95441a

Records of South West Cork families such as Atteridge, Brooks, Coghlan, Daly, Haggertys, Gallagher, Gosnell, Lannin, Hithcock, Justice, King, Levis, Love, Dukelow, Beamish, Stout, Jermyn, Kingston, Raycroft, Jennings, Pick, Riordan, Sullivan, Skuce, Shannon, Swanton, Woulfe, Young, in Registers of Rochester New York, Register Mount Hope Cemetery, Rochester, Rochester Genealogy Relevant.

 

DNA evidence suggest the Hegarty/Haggerts originated in Derry/Donegal possibly came down to west Cork for Battle of Kinsale , 1600, like O’Neills, O’Donnell, Gallaghers, Wards.

Canadian Records.

Often through going through these records and the Canadian and USA Census and death and marriage it is possible to establish the dates of birth and marriage of Irish born, North Americans.   This is of particular value in view of the loss, destruction or non availability Irish Records.
Many thanks to Sharon Haggerty for this.

Population Density and Emigration of West Cork Protestant families, from Mizen and Muintervera Peninsulas, to Rochester New York, Wisconsin and Percy Township, Northumberland County, Ontario from early 19th Century.

Emigration from West Cork, 19th century, Dukelow family

Nexus: Picton, Ontario and Muinterbhaire and Mizen Peninsulas, Williamson, Baker, Attridge, Dukelow, King, O’Sullivan and Hurley families

https://durrushistory.com/2014/09/02/prized-aim-of-irish-emigrants-us-certificate-of-citizenship-issued-new-york-1859/

Some of the work done by Sharon Haggerty in extracting records:  She extracted what are probably thousands of records from parish registers. In the case of Cork they include many of the parishes extending from Skull to roughly Innishannon and south to the coast.
Those she personally extracted can be found at:http://homepages.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~sharonmh/Cork.Registers
The website for The Rochester Genealogical Society: http://crpc.nyrgs.org/
Website for Mt Hope Cemetery in Rochester, and that was a real find, but this site is even better. They have scanned numerous church registers—mostly not indexed. She has  been through three of them so far, starting with the 266 pages of one Episcopal register:
This one that has the families I am interested in. There are lots of SW Cork names, many of them found in Skibbereen and/or Ross parish: a few Haggertys plus Swanton, Lannin, Levis, Dukelow, Bemish [sic], Stout, Kingston, Raycroft, Jennings. Skuce, others, some of which indicate where the person came from. e.g., image 160 shows Dukelows came from “Scull”, Cork, Ireland; image 135 shows Hosfords from Bandon.
Some other examples that Sharon  picked up on [square brackets are a comment from me]:
List of Communicants 1887:
image 135 of 266 – 3 Lannins said to have been born in S Johns, Peterboro Ont”
Martha (McCullagh) Lannin
Fannie Willis Lannin
Eva Lannin
[1871 census for Peterborough shows following Ch of England family: Thomas 33, Martha 29, Fanny 10, William 8, Frank 5, Eva 3 and Fredrick 1. Thomas was a merchant, Martha born Ireland but all others born Ontario. In 1881 Martha is a widow and there is one more child, Thomas. Also of interest, William is then said to be Willie—I’ll bet the record showing a child Fannie Willis is actually 2 children, Fannie and Willis/Wm/Willie—I also found an ancestry tree for this family-
Communicants 1846:
image 158 of 266
Eliza (Haggerty) McCue born Scull, Cork. Ire. 1836 (birth year? more likely immigration year?)
[does the name McCue ring any bells for you?]
1847 image 159
Cath. (Williamson) Tanner
[this one is interesting as I had found a marriage record in the marriage license bonds listing and had suggested the Catherine Tanner in Rochester might have been Catherine Williamson
So if you find you have time on your hands and want to do some browsing, go to http://crpc.nyrgs.org/  and pick a register to browse!

Sir Wiliam Foster Stawell, Co. Cork, to Solicitor General Victoria and Chief Justice 30 years, Sir Francis Murphy, Cork to Military Surgeon and Speaker Victoria Parliament, Australia.

Tags

,


Sir Wiliam Foster Stawell, Co. Cork, to Solicitor General Victoria and Chief Justice 30 years, Sir Francis Murphy, Cork to Military Surgeon and Speaker Victoria Parliament, Australia.  Stawell footnote on bottom of page 1.

Sir Redmond Barry, Supreme Court Judge, Melbourne, Australia, Judge in Ned Kelly case, Involved in founding University of Melbourne, Art Gallery, Mechanics Institute, Schools of Mines, cultural Societies, Born Ballycough Co. Cork, 1813 died Melbourne 1889. The Redmond Barry Building is a significant building at the University of Melbourne.

Cork barristers, Sir William Foster Stawell (1815-89), Oldcourt Co. Cork to Attorney General and Chief Justice, Melbourne, Redmond Barry (1815-89), Ballyclough, Co. Cork Chief Justice, Victoria, 40 hats on the Munster Circuit 1842 and not enough work for 20, and the development of Australian Legal Infrastructure

Graveyard Inscription in old Irish, Gaelic Script, Port Fairy, Victoria, Australia for native of Co. Clare, Ireland, Aindriás Landrach (Andrew Landers), Fíor Gael, 1828-1912, with Photograph of Grave

Room to let in Hell, might suit Lawyer, Dublin Four Courts pre 1796, Sir William Foster Stawell, Old Court, Mallow, Co Cork, Chief Justice Victoria, and Supreme Court Building, Melbourne modelled on Dublin Four Courts

Irish Female Emigration to New South Wales 1832, ‘The Committee for Promoting the Emigration of Single Women ‘, Cork to Sydney, Free Passage and some Australian Themes.

William Carleton (1794-1869) and Sir Charles Gavan Duffy (1816-1903) from Hedge Schools in Monaghan and Tyrone and the Reverend John Blackley’s Classical Academy, the Beat of the Orange Drum, to Literary Renown and Prime Minister of Victoria.

7-IMG_8530 6-IMG_8529 5-IMG_8528 4-IMG_8527 3-IMG_8526 2-IMG_8525 1-IMG_8524

1636 Inquisition on death of Donald McCarthy Reagh, Families mentioned Dalys, Crowleys, O’Driscolls, McCarthys, O’Mahonys, Areas include, Aughadown, Caheragh, Castlehaven, Drimoleague, Kilgariff, Kilcoe, Muintervara/Kilcrohane, Myross, Schull


1636 Inquisition on death of Donald McCarthy Reagh, Families mentioned Dalys, Crowleys, O’Driscolls, McCarthys, O’Mahonys, Areas include, Aughadown, Caheragh, Castlehaven, Drimoleague, Kilgariff, Kilcoe, Muintervara/Kilcrohane, Myross, Schull

From Samuel Trant McCarthy, Sheriff of Co. Kerry, History of McCarthys 1913.

1-IMG_8421

1-IMG_8463

Earliest Irish script in Latin Antiphony of Bangor, 680 AD, Irish Scribes First to use initials for articulating texts, Late Printing in Irish with Kearney’s Catechism 1571, examples of Gaelic Script, Elizabethan 1571 AD, Vatican, 1675 AD, Jacques Guerin 1732 AD, Petrie 1841 SD.


Earliest Irish script in Latin Antiphony of Bangor, 680 AD, Irish Scribes First to use initials for articulating texts, Late Printing in Irish with Kearney’s Catechism 1571, examples of Gaelic Script, Elizabethan 1571 AD, Vatican, 1675 AD, Jacques Guerin 1732 AD, Petrie 1841 SD.

1-Scan 1426

1-Scan 1429

1-Scan 1430

2-Scan 1431

Cork Constitution 13th October 1833, By their marriage the ancient honourable and distinguished house of O’Donovan Carbery and O’Sullivan Bere are linked together, the Mailed Hand is now bound to protect and succour the Gentle Robin’


Cork Constitution 13th  October 1833, By their marriage the ancient honourable and distinguished house of O’Donovan Carbery and O’Sullivan Bere are linked together, the Mailed Hand is now bound to protect and succour the Gentle Robin’

 

Walls and gate remnant of Estate of Timothy O’Donovan Esquire, O’Donovan’s Cove (Kealties/Tullig) Durrus, West Cork.

Richard O’Donovan – Mary (Maria) O’Sullivan, ‘at Keamatringane House, Berehaven, on the 13th October 1833 by the Rev. Ml. Devine P.P. Richard O’Donovan of Fort Lodge, Co. Cork, second son of Late Richard O’Donovan of O’Donovan’s Cove, Esq. to Maria lovely daughter of the late Morty O’Sullivan of Coolach and Reane (Reen?) and sister of the present head of the Clan Sullivan. By their marriage the ancient honourable and distinguished house of O’Donovan Carbery and O’Sullivan Bere are linked together, the mailed hand is now bound to protect and succour the gentle robin’ (Cork Constitution). Morty O’Sullivan’s father was John of Coulagh (his father also John of the same address) and his mother was Maria daughter of John Segerson.   From Durrus parish Register Children:
Maria 10 May 1835 Tullig Richard O’Donovan Hanora Sullivan
Richard 4 June 1836 Fort Lodge John Sullivan Mary Baldwin
Timothy 20 June 1843 Tullig William Donovan Anne O’Donovan
Catherine (Miss Katty) 31 May 1846, Tullig, Daniel and Mary Sullivan, died 1928 buried in Durrus Chapel yard with her cousin Jane Blair.
Finn’s journal 2nd May 1782, ‘Died Thomas Donovan of North Lowerton near Skibereen left the bulk of his large fortune to Rev Mr Walsh co-adjutor to parish of Schull and his well chosen library of thousands of volumes, gold watch and gold repeater to Rev. Jas. Crowley, P.P. of above parish’ (POK). Is this father Walsh the one who baptised the Ardahill O’Donovans?

Castlehaven Harbour, West Cork, c1900, with Ketch and Fishing Barrels.


https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Castlehaven,+Co.+Cork/@51.5108647,-9.1919606,12z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x4845af85f3f3c235:0x1800c7a937dfd780

Castlehaven Harbour, West Cork, c1900, with Ketch and Fishing Barrels.

Courtesy JCHAS, 1905

French fleet fishing Castlehaven Harbour, West Cork, 1875.

https://durrushistory.com/2014/11/22/genealogy-of-odriscoll-family-from-ederscel-942-ad-with-sketch-of-vanished-castlehaven-castle-by-edith-somerville/

https://durrushistory.com/2015/01/29/9029/

1-IMG_7820

Seating Plan of the Dining Hall of Tara , Seat of the High King of Ireland c 1,000 AD, from a Book Published by Figgis, 1968, Dedicated to DONOGH O’MALLEY, Late Minster for Education, in Ireland, whose Single-mindedness and Extraordinary Energy fired Public Opinion and brought to fulfilment much dedicated work and imaginative planning of the Permanent Officers in that Department

Tags

, ,


Seating Plan of the Dining Hall of Tara. seat of the High King of Ireland c 1,000 AD, from a Book Published by Figgis, 1968, Dedicated to DONOGH O’MALLEY, Late Minster for Education, in Ireland, whose Single-mindedness and Extraordinary Energy fired Public Opinion and brought to fulfilment much dedicated work and imaginative planning of the Permanent Officers in that Department

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hill_of_Tara

1-Scan 1425

1-Scan 1426

1-Scan 1429