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Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Book Report: Tracing Your Irish Family History



Tracing Your Irish Family History
By Anthony Adolph
Firefly Books, Ltd., Ontario, 2009


 


This book sits on my genealogy bookshelves beside several others on the same topic. They have all taught me more about the home of my mother’s mother’s family but this one is especially appealing. When you first flip through the pages you will be pulled in by the photographs, charts, text boxes, sketches and easy to read text. You can browse on any page or read cover to cover. I’ve done both.

When you get past the appealing layout you’ll find the content full of research tips and Irish facts and history. Within the section on the United States Mr. Adolph gives these suggestions for research: NARA, societies, civil registration, censuses, directories, religious registers, newspapers, biographical dictionaries, wills, naturalizations, shipping lists, army records and land records. Each has a brief description of their value to genealogy. In the same section there are text boxes about: the colonization of America, President Kennedy, criminals sentenced to transportation to the colonies and further reading.  

When looking in Ireland for more information Mr. Adolph writes,

“Whether or not you’ve found your ancestor’s place of origin yet, don’t leap on the next plane to Dublin. Much Irish research can be done online and using the Mormon’s microfilmed records…”

He then writes about hiring professional genealogists, materials available through societies, useful magazines and books, websites and biographical dictionaries. He describes repositories in Dublin and Belfast and the county heritage centres.

The ‘Divisions of Ireland’ section is especially important to understand in order to locate the records you need. The difference between a townland, a parish and a barony is important. I was confused before reading about the difference.

I suggest you find this book in your library or buy a copy. You won’t regret spending an afternoon with this book.



Contents

Part 1. Tracing back to Ireland: first steps
          First, find your immigrant
          Using and storing records
Part 2. Tracing back to Ireland, country by country
          England and Wales
          Scotland
          United States
          Canada
          Argentina
          Australia
          New Zealand
Part 3. Tracing your roots in Ireland
          Introducing Ireland
          The divisions of Ireland
          Griffith’s Valuation and Tithe Applotments
          Civil Registration
          Censuses
          Religious Registers
          Occupational records
          Dictionary of Irish sources
Part4. Tracing ancient Irish roots
          Irish names
          Recorded pedigrees
          Heraldry
          Milesius was your ancestor
          Ancient Irish roots
          The invasions of Ireland
          Modern chieftains
          Genetics
Useful addresses
Index

MY LIBRARY

At the top of this blog, click on My Library for many more books that I have found useful for genealogical & historical research.




Monday, January 19, 2015

Book Report: The New Civil War Handbook

The New Civil War Handbook.
Hughes, M. (2013)
El Dorado Hills, California: 
Savas Beatie






















If you are researching an ancestor who served in or lived during the time of the Civil War it would be good to brush up on the facts. This 158 page handbook might be just the place to begin. You can learn there are almost two dozen names for the conflict including ‘The Brothers’ War’. You can learn that the average age of Union soldiers at the time of enlistment was 25.8 years and that one in every four Union soldiers was born outside of the United States.

I learned that although the Union won the war more Union soldiers (43,012) were mortally wounded than Confederate soldiers (37,000) and more Union soldiers (224,586) died of disease than Confederate soldiers (120,000). I learned that my state, New York, lost more soldiers in the war (46, 534) than any other state.

I knew that my 2nd great grand uncle, John Mark, had been killed in action at Chickasaw Bayou, Miss. Dec. 28th 1862. Mark Hughes’ Handbook records 1,929 Union soldiers and 207 Confederate soldiers were killed, wounded, captured or missing as a result of that battle. This gave me a clearer picture of the scope of the battle that claimed John Mark. 

If you are interested in details of battles, war strategies and biographies of those involved you will want a more detailed book. This one is just an introduction but it will get you started on the right path. 

Contents

Section I: The Facts

  • Naming the War
  • Civil War Voices
  • Did You Know? Interesting Facts about eh Civil War
  • Civil War Veterans Better Known for Other Achievements
  • Organization of the Armies

Section II: Images

  • Civil War Begins
  • Generals
  • Soldiers
  • A Soldier’s Life
  • Battles and Battlefields
  • Technology and the War
  • Weapons of War
  • War on the Water
  • Caring for the Sick, Wounded and Dead
  • Prisoners of War
  • Civilians Caught up in the War
  • Women and War
  • African Americans and the War
  • The Civil War and Native Americans
  • The War ends
  • Reconstruction

Section III: Figures

  • Numbers and Loses (Overall)
  • Strength of the Union Army
  • Losses in Major Battles
  • Number of Engagements by State
  • Alternate Names of Battles
  • Troops Furnished by Various States
  • Causes of Battle Wounds (Union)
  • Major Causes of Death (Union)
  • Principal Union Prisons (Peak Occupancies and Deaths)
  • Principal Confederate Prisons (Deaths)

Section IV: Miscellany

  • African Americans in the Civil War
  • Native Americans in the Civil War
  • Glossary of Civil War Terms
  • Civil War Points of Interest
  • Civil War Bookshelf
  • Civil War on the Web


MY LIBRARY


At the top of this blog, click on My Library for many more books that I have found useful for genealogical & historical research.


Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Fresh Start vs. Writing Contest = Same Results

The new year is here and it is time for a fresh start. People have made resolutions to learn a new language, clean out their closets and get fit. Genealogists have made their resolutions as well. I have been reading posts about bloggers who are scanning photographs, organizing documents and taking classes to learn new skills. It all sounds ambitious and exciting.

I have been reading other blogs about a Genealogy Do Over. These bloggers are taking a fresh look at documents and other sources that they have already collected. I can see the value of this and it sounds very appealing.

Thus far I have resisted the urge to clean off my desk top and join my fellow bloggers. Why? I didn’t want to get side tracked from a goal I set for myself.

Each year The Connecticut Society of Genealogists has literary contests. I have wanted to
enter for some time. This is the year to do it. I am entering the “Tell Your Family Story” Essay Contest. This contest focuses on families in New England. My goal was to write about my great-great-grandparents, Patrick and MargaretBrady Coyle who left Co. Cavan, Ireland and settled in New Haven County, Connecticut. I have lots of documents related to them and their children and want to share their story with a larger audience to possibly meet ‘new’ cousins and learn even more.


Along with my ten page essay I had to send along copies of my documentation. Ironically, in doing this I had to do many of the same things my fellow genealogists are doing. I had to get out my original documents, look them over with a fresh eye to insure they contain the data I wanted; scan them and organize the scans. Even though I have not joined group to get a fresh start on my research I have the same result. 


Sunday, January 11, 2015

Forget Me Not: Anna Brady Kilday, 1899 Ireland - 1952 CT

Ann Brady Kilday
11 Nov 1899 Ireland - 27 Jul 1952 CT
Daughter of Thomas Brady & Catherine Gibney



Mrs. Annie Kilday, Former Resident, Died in Milford

Mrs. Annie Kilday, aged 93, widow of James Kilday and a former well known resident of this city, died Sunday afternoon at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Catherine Thompson of 50 Park Avenue, Wildemere Beach, Milford. She had been in failing health for the past several years.

Born in Ireland, Mrs. Kilday was the daughter of the late Patrick and Mary Madden Brady [These names are incorrect.]. She resided in Derby for many years until 34 years ago when she removed to Milford to make her home.

Her survivors include two daughters, Mrs. Thompson, with whom she made her home, and Miss Frances Kilday of New Haven; a brother, John Brady of East Orange, N. J., six grandchildren and nine great grandchildren.

The funeral will be held Wednesday morning from the Colwell Funeral Home, 116 Elizabeth Street and at St. Gabriel’s Church, Wildmere Beach, Milford for a high Mass of requiem, time to be announced. Internment will be in the family plot in Mt St Peter’s Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home tonight from 7 to 10 o’clock and Tuesday from 2 to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m.

"Mrs. Annie Kilday, Former Resident, Died in Milford." The Ansonia Sentinel 28 July 1952: 6.



1 James Kilday b: c 1850 Ireland, d: 11 Nov 1899 CT
... + Ann Brady b c 1865 Ireland, m: 18 Aug 1881 CT d 27 Jul 1952 Milford, New Haven, CT

......2 Mary Kilday b: 12 Jun 1882 New Haven, CT
......2 Catherine Kilday b: Feb 1884 CT
...... + Jack B Thompson b: Ac 1883 OH, m: 26 Apr 1909 New Haven, CT
.........3 Gladys Thompson b: c 1910 CT
......2 Annie M. Kilday b: 3 Mar 1887 New Haven, CT
......2 Margaret E. Kilday b: 8 Sep 1889 New Haven, CT
...... + John Coleman
.........3 Anna Mariah Coleman b: 12 Jun 1918
......... + William Frederick Miller
............4 Mary Jayne Miller 
............4 Michael Terrence Miller 
............4 Beverly Ann Miller 
............ + Ronald William Kelly
......2 James Leo Kilday b: 28 May 1892 CT
...... + Theresa Guilfoyle b: Abt. 1897 CT
.........3 James Kilday b: Abt. 1923 CT
.........3 Warren Kilday b: Abt. 1925 CT
.........3 Patricia Kilday b: Abt. 1932 CT
......2 Frances Kilday b: 14 Mar 1895 New Haven, CT



Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Book Report: Families of County Cork




Volume IV of the Irish Families, great & small:
Families of County Cork by Michael C. O’Laughlin
Kansas City, Missouri: The Irish Genealogical Foundation.
1999




“Co. Cork is the largest county in the province of Munster, and in all of Ireland. To the east are counties Tipperary and Waterford. To the north is Limerick, and to the west is Co. Kerry. Co. Cork is given as holding some 700,000 inhabitants in the year 1831.”


This small hardcover book begins with maps and a brief history of County Cork including mentions of the Normans, Vikings, ancient bloodlines, tribes and invasions. There are several maps of the county, drawn at different times in the history of the county.

The bulk of the book is an alphabetical list of surnames with related spellings and a history of the family name. Some histories fill a column and others a single line. Of course, the families I am interested in have brief histories.



I am interested in the English & Mullane families. I found this for those surnames:


ENGLISH

“Several of the name are given in an 1851 census of the Union of Kilworth in Co. Cork.”

MULLANE

“Mullan. A name found centered in Cork for several centuries, and linked with Macroom there.”


There is also a listing of Cork Placenames. “A selection of placenames found in 17th – 20th Century Records including Modern Parishes, Unions & Registrars Districts.” 

For further research the Addendum has a list of works that are “good examples of published sources available to those researching their Cork roots.” They can be found in the Irish Genealogical Foundation library. There is also a list of Irish repositories for Cork research.

I had hoped to discover more about the English & Mullane surnames in this book. However, there are some names with more extensive information. The value of this work for your research depends on which surname you are researching.


MY LIBRARY

At the top of this blog, click on My Library for many more books that I have found useful for genealogical & historical research.



Friday, January 2, 2015

New Year’s Resolution: Hiring a Professional

Last Year’s Resolution:

Each year I make Genealogical Resolutions. I haven’t met them all but I have tried. Last year I resolved to go through our house and photograph our family treasures so our children will know the stories behind my great aunt’s World’s Fair spoon, my mother’s cut glass bowl, pieces of Waterford Crystal from Ireland and other treasures. I have made a good start on this project. I posted about many of the items on ‘Treasure Chest Thursdays’ in my blog. This year I will continue to photograph family treasures and to write the stories behind them.

This Year’s Resolution:

I also resolve to learn more about my maternal grandfather’s family. Nathaniel Gardner, 1882 NY – 1944 NY, was the son of Leopold Gartner/Gardner, 1860 Austria – 1948 NY. I have gathered some limited information on this family while they lived in New York State but have no information about their lives before they crossed the Atlantic.       

I don’t know how to search Jewish records. I don’t know how to search records in Austria/Hungry/Germany. Those borders have moved many times over the years. I decided to look for a professional genealogist. I went to the website for 


I looked for someone knowledgeable about Jewish research in the New York City area. This all led me to 


I read about his experience and contacted him and we exchanged emails. All of this led me to sign a contract with Steps to the Past.

My resolution to learn more about my Jewish roots has begun. The research will begin in January. Watch my blog where I will share the findings.

Good luck with all your resolutions!