T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
790.1 | | TALLIS::DARCY | | Wed Aug 08 1990 16:33 | 7 |
| Hmmm Jim, there's a Ballindine in Co. Mayo. Do you know what
county he was from? I'll check my Shell Guide to Ireland
this evening for more town names.
The town name could easily have been corrupted when recorded.
-george
|
790.2 | | SALEM::CULBERT | Free Michael Culbert | Wed Aug 08 1990 16:49 | 14 |
|
Jim,
The only thing I could find that seems even close is Doonaha in
Clare Co. It is about 5 k west of Carrigaholt and 5 k east of Kilrush.
It is 1 k north of the mouth of River Shannon. Probably isn't the
place though because the spelling is so far off. I'll bet that
SNAKE will know though...
paddy
|
790.3 | surname? | TALLIS::DARCY | | Wed Aug 08 1990 16:57 | 4 |
| It would help in locating if you told us your great grandparent's
surname. Is it Donnelly?
-george
|
790.4 | | ROSETA::DONNELLY | Jim Donnelly | Wed Aug 08 1990 17:57 | 6 |
| Yes, his surname is Donnelly and I have no idea what county he is from. Hope
you can help me determine that.
thanks
jim
|
790.5 | Ballymena? | ULYSSE::COADY | | Thu Aug 09 1990 13:13 | 6 |
|
Charles Donnelly - hmmmmm, could be Norn Iron
like Ballymena
|
790.6 | | SALEM::CULBERT | Free Michael Culbert | Thu Aug 09 1990 14:14 | 28 |
| Jim,
I'll be calling over to Belfast this week-end and I'll ask about
the town....
If you are real serious you may want to try contacting the;
Ulster Family Register
An archive of genealogical material containing over 500,000
names including Ulster marriages c 1719-1845 extracted from selected
church registers. Contact John McCabe, Ulster Family Research
Services, Lansdowne, 3 Stonebridge End, Stoneyford, Lisburn, Co.
Antrim. Tel (084664)772
or
Public Records Office
66Balmoral Avenue, Belfast BT9 6NY. Tel (0232)661621
The main source of manuscript information for genealogical research
in Ulster.
Good Luck
paddy
ps Since your great great grandfather married a woman from Scotland
there is a pretty good chance you'll find your roots in the North
of Ireland.
|
790.7 | | FORTY2::DONOVAN | | Fri Aug 10 1990 08:19 | 9 |
|
Hello, I would guess your grandfather was from Donegal since Donnelly
is a common name there.
If this is correct then with a dash of imagination and a pinch of
salt, 'Bydona' could be a corruption of Bundoran (phonetically
Byndurn) on the west coast.
John
|
790.8 | Corruption has been around a long time. | MACNAS::MHUGHES | | Tue Aug 14 1990 13:11 | 19 |
| Leaprechauns are unclear.
I have never heard of a place called Byelona. It could be that
BY would be a shortening of Bally leaving you with Ballydona
or even Ballydonagh, or Ballymoney if the recorder didn't have the
accent or the patience to listen carefully.
In many cases Irish people pre 1900 (especially emigrants) were
illiterate and would not be able to correct a lazy recorder.
Ballymoney is a large town in Co. Antrim.
If you have any dates relevant to a record in Ireland e.g. marriage
of Charles' father and mother, or birth or death certs. etc. you
could probably go a long way by following Paddy's advice.
Snake explores the possibilities.
|
790.9 | West Of Ireland | DBOSW2::MBRENNAN | Todays best labour saver - Tomorrow | Thu Aug 16 1990 07:48 | 7 |
|
Knowing the way that you people change the accents if Irish words is
is usually a help.
My guess is Ballina in Co Mayo.
MBr
|
790.10 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Mon Aug 20 1990 09:58 | 3 |
| Oral tradition in my family tells me that my Grandmother, a Lane, was
born in Innishannon. I think it's near Cork. Anybody know of it?
|
790.11 | Innishannon | TRIBES::CREAN | What!!! Ozone-friendly CURRY!!!! | Mon Aug 20 1990 12:55 | 8 |
| Innishannon is a small town near Bandon in county Cork. It has
basically a single main street, which constitutes a section of
the Cork-Bandon road, and a few side streets. About six bars and
a few shops. A lot of ruins: a old abbey and so on. (I passed through
it a few weeks ago travelling from Cork to Bandon.)
The surname Lane appears to be fairly common in Cork county. From
the phone book I found a John Lane at Dromkeen, Innishannon.
|
790.12 | Hurling Artist, more famous than the Artist Artist | MACNAS::MHUGHES | | Wed Aug 22 1990 04:44 | 8 |
| Leaprechauns are in the maroon.
The single most famous Lane in Ireland right now is of course Noel
Lane who plays at full-forward on the Galway hurling team who will
trounce Cork in the all-Ireland final in 12 days time.
Snake says Galway are magic.
|
790.13 | WHO'S MARRYING WHOM?? | USEM::REDDEN | | Fri Aug 24 1990 17:08 | 12 |
| Say Paddy -
I am curious - why did you mention that the fact marrying someone
from Scotland means the Irish person is most likely from the North?
Why is that?
P.S. Jim -
My mother was from Donegal and I have heard the name Donnelly is
quite common there also.
Linda -
|
790.14 | | SALEM::CULBERT | Free Michael Culbert | Mon Aug 27 1990 13:33 | 14 |
|
Well I guess the Northern part of Ireland is more accessible for
holiday trips. I know alot of Scots that holiday in the North. And
when one holidays one meets the natives so to speak. And BANG they fall
deeply in love with the Irish and marry (now how can anyone resist such
a charming people). This is just one reason there are many.
Now remember this all happened when the mode of transportation was not
as advanced as it is today.
But then I didn't meet very many Scots in the Southern part of the
Republic last year but I did encounter alot of Germans and Yanks.
paddy
|
790.15 | I vas in Dublins, I vas in Galway, and I ... | HILL16::BURNS | Is the whole world aGuinness | Mon Aug 27 1990 14:30 | 9 |
|
Paddy: Do you mean "Vasindoolins" !!!! :-)
keVin
|
790.16 | Paddies in Scotland | RTOEU::RDELANEY | Adam 'ad 'em....... | Wed Aug 29 1990 06:32 | 7 |
| When I lived in Glasgow a few years back there was a documentary on the
Glaswegian Irish and they estimated that in Glasgow alone there was
20,000 first and second generation Irish just from Donegal !! Almost
all the Irish you're likely to meet are from Ulster. But then there's
always a few bad apples like us Corkies to upset the statisticians.
- Robin who's better-half is Glaswegian......
|
790.17 | Glasgow, capital city of Donegal ! | FORTY2::DONOVAN | | Thu Aug 30 1990 09:01 | 17 |
|
You're not kidding ! the school I went to was divided into classes in
alphabetical order, and we had an entire class of C's and D's for all
the Connellys, Connaghans, Donnellys, and Delaneys. It was unusual to
find someone who didn't have family in somewhere like Letterkenny or
Ballybofey. There was a contingent came over regularly for Celtic's
home games, and I believe there was also a Rangers supporters club
from Donegal who came over (pretty rare in the Republic I imagine).
Why the fascination with Glasgow ? obviously the great weather and
outstanding job prospects . . . there must have been some sort of
post world war two boom in the area to attract so many people; I know
there were a lot of jobs to be had on the railways; there would also
have been a lot more iron, steel and heavy engineering at the time
(but sadly not any longer).
John
|
790.18 | A Pointer | SIOG::OSULLIVAN_D | Best Before 07/68 | Tue Sep 04 1990 13:10 | 10 |
| re:.0
You might try a publication called 'Lewis's Topographical Dictionary of
Ireland'. Since it is likely that the name mentioned is a townsland,
and there are 10s of thousands of these in Ireland, this book (it:'s
old ) may help. Try the National Library in Ireland if you make no
progress in the U.S. (looking for the book)
-Dermot
|
790.19 | Tradition.... | MPO::GILBERT | A Kinder Gentler MAXCIM - D4.3.0 | Thu Sep 06 1990 17:31 | 14 |
|
RE: the Irish in Glasgow
According to one Ol' Feller in my family tradition might have something
to do with it. In the early 1800's the Irish who had money went
to America. Those that didn't went to Scotland to work in the mines
and the factories. My own seem to have done exactly that. We know
that between 1840-1858 they moved from County Down to Kilmarnock.
They saved their pence and came to the U.S. in between 1900-1905.
Amazingly they knew what they wanted and did exactly the same thing
to get it. They went to Colorado and worked in the mines until they
had enough money to buy a farm in Connecticutt. Despite the fact
that my grand parents were born in Scotland they were always fiercely
Irish.
|
790.20 | Success!!! (I think) | ROSETA::DONNELLY | Jim Donnelly | Wed Oct 03 1990 16:41 | 9 |
| While looking through "Irish Records, Sources for family and Local History,"
by James Ryan, I came across the civil and RC parishes of Upper and Lower
Bodoney in Co. Tyrone. Seems like a pretty good match for the phonetic spelling
of the location "Bydona" that I was trying to match. Further, since my
GGrandfather is Charles Donnelly and the name O'Donnelly figures prominately
in Co. Tyrone history, it appears that I may have hit pay dirt.
Jim
|
790.21 | | DELNI::CULBERT | Free Michael Culbert | Thu Oct 04 1990 15:47 | 6 |
|
Congrats.....
Keep digging!!!!!!!
paddy
|
790.22 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Fri Mar 19 1993 22:24 | 28 |
| RE: .11 by TRIBES::CREAN
>Innishannon is a small town near Bandon in county Cork. ...
Well, they're probably going to have to enlarge it now. I was flipping
the channel during a commercial on Star Trek:TNG, when I saw local TV
person, Peter Mehegan, walking the streets of my grandmother's village
of Innishannon. It seems Boston's channel 5 has been doing a series of
programs this week, travelling around Ireland and the commentator came
to Innishannon in search of his roots. Lo and behold, he was chatting
with Fr. O'Donovan and looking at the parish records, just as I had
done, Summer before last. And there was Alice Taylor, who writes books
and has a little office at the top of the stairs in the village
supermarket. Her latest book has a picture on the cover of Billy
O'Connell at his forge, where I talked with him about Lanes who lived
there before. Down at the Innishannon House hotel he talked with Conal
O'Sullivan, the very same who was so hospitable to me when I was there.
This was such a treat. If only I coul have taped it to show to some of
the Lane cousins who live outside of the Boston area. Oh well.
While we're on the subject of location, what can anyone tell me about
Doneraile, just outside of Mallow? I found that a nephew of my great
grandfather, Dennis Ahern, was born there in 1867. This, coupled with
a tombstone inscription that his wife's people, the Fitzpatricks, were
from the Parish of Mallow, has narrowed my search for the Ahern's home
town.
|
790.23 | The Irish sporting pastime | MACNAS::MHUGHES | | Sun Mar 21 1993 06:02 | 20 |
| Leaprechauns saw the Irish Spring at Cheltenham
One of the most auspicious events to occur involving Doneraile was the
first ever steeplechase (fence jumping horse racing to you
un-initiated).
The name steeplechasing comes from the event which was a race over
open countryside and over ditches and anything else that got in the way
was held over a course from the Steeple of the church in Buttevant to
the church steeple in Doneraile. Original horse-borne orienteering.
THe event took place in the early 1800's. Steeple chasing reaches its
pinnacle at Cheltenham in mid-March every year and the Irish take the
place over to clean out the bookies.
THe Aintree Grand national is the most internationally known version
of the event.
Snake is happy after six Irish winners.
|
790.24 | Chalk and Cheese | SIOG::BRENNAN_M | festina lente | Mon Mar 22 1993 13:24 | 7 |
| Mike,
There is one heck of a difference between fence jumping horse racing
and steeple chasing.
You would know if you ever sat on the back of a hunter
Mbr
|
790.25 | | CUPMK::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Sun Jul 11 1993 22:46 | 3 |
| In 1871 there was a place in County Cork called Dromroe. Can anybody
tell me where that is or was?
|
790.26 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Mon Aug 16 1993 01:38 | 12 |
|
In a Civil War pension record I was looking at the persons place of
birth was given as follows:
"on July 6 - 1837 in the county of Gallaway, in the parish of
Ballinkill in the town of Glinnk Ireland".
Glinnk is as best I can make out from the handwriting. My map shows
two place names of Glinsk in Galway, at Ballymoe and at Carna. This
could be it, but does anybody know of a Ballinkill? The only one I
find is Ballinakill in Laois.
|
790.27 | Ballinakill ! | MACNAS::BDUNNE | | Tue Nov 16 1993 08:53 | 13 |
|
I've only found this note, hope this helps.
Ballinakill rang a bell, re Connemara. As I was
tidying my office prior to leaving Digital, (`DEC' is not
PC anymore, apparently !), I found an AVIS map of Ireland.
Lo and behold, there is a Ballinakill Harbour marked - it
is an inlet more or less between Cleggan and Renvyle, north
Connemara, 15 miles north-west of Glinsk (Carna).
Sl�inte,
Brendan.
|