As
a part of our Irish cousins gathering I recently spent a day in Derby, New
Haven County, CT. I wanted to uncover documentation to prove that Ann Brady
Kilday, born in Ireland, was a daughter of Thomas Brady & Catherine Gibney. I wanted to
gather information on descendants of Thomas & Catherine Brady who lived in
the Derby/ Ansonia area. The trip was a success.
Before
going I first made a list of the things I wanted to uncover.
·
Marriage
Certificate for Ann Brady & James Kilday, probably between 1800 – 1884. Hopefully
the certificate would show Ann’s parents and prove her link to Thomas & Catherine
Brady.
·
Birth
certificates for the children of Ann & James Kilday: Catherine, 1884;
Annie, 1887; Margaret, 1889, James L, 1892; Frances, 1895.
·
Death
Certificate for James Kilday, probably between 1894 – 1900.
·
Any
evidence of William and Owen Brady, brothers of Ann Brady Kilday.
I searched
the internet for possible places I could find this information. It looked like
my choices were:
·
Ansonia
City Hall, 253 Main Street, Ansonia. The records there begin in 1889 which
would not help with some of my wish list.
·
AnsoniaLibrary, 53 Cliff Street, Ansonia.
·
Derby
City Hall, 1 Elizabeth Street, Derby. It was difficult to get an idea of their
holdings from the internet.
·
DerbyHistorical Society, 37 Elm Street, Ansonia. I contacted them by email &
they told me they have no birth records or directories.
·
NewHaven Public Library, 133 Elm, New Haven. I contacted them by email. Response: We only have New Haven records, and
only prior to 1850. You'd want to contact the town clerks in the towns where
the events occurred.
·
Milford Public Library, 57 New Haven
Avenue, Milford.
Next I
decided to check one of my favorite blogs, Explorations in CT Genealogy written
by Bryna O Sullivan. I read her blog regularly and know she has expertise in
researching CT. I emailed her concerning my goals and asked for places to look.
She kindly sent me this response:
Unfortunately, not every town website contains the history you need. The 1800s are in a gap period – it’s too late for the Barbour Collection, but too early for statewide recording. The Connecticut State Library offers a great cheat sheet that’s probably a better place to start: http://www.cslib.org/cttowns.htm. That page indicates that Ansonia was taken from Derby in 1889…which means your record is probably in Derby. (Here’s Derby’s website: http://electronicvalley.org/derby/govern/Misc/City-TownClerk.htm.) Of course, that would only work if you’d like a full, certified copy. It might be cheaper to start with the Derby Historical Society (http://derbyhistorical.org/).
Bryna
was a great help!
I
decided to begin my search at the Derby City Hall, clerk’s office. I checked
out their hours and phone number. I contacted my cousin, Pat, and we decided to
meet in Derby. I packed my genealogy bag with my CT info, my binder of the Brady family, my
iPad with my Ancestry APP, my camera, paper & pens and I was ready.
Results
of the trip next Tuesday.
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You are the champ at planning ahead and gathering information BEFORE you go. It's helpful to me reading how you do that.
ReplyDeleteWendy, I usually have limited time when I travel for genealogy. Careful preparation helps maximize that time. Of course, I usually want more time anyway. ha!
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