Название | Collins Tracing Your Irish Family History |
---|---|
Автор произведения | Ryan Tubridy |
Жанр | Справочная литература: прочее |
Серия | |
Издательство | Справочная литература: прочее |
Год выпуска | 0 |
isbn | 9780007360956 |
President Kennedy
Several recent presidents, including Ronald Regan and Richard Nixon, were of Irish origin, but none was more famously Irish than John F. Kennedy (1917–63). His great-grandfather Patrick Kennedy (1823–58), of Dunganstown, Co. Wexford, married Bridget Murphy, probably of Owenduff, Co. Wexford. In fact, all the president’s great-grandparents were Irish. His middle name, Fitzgerald, is from his mother Rose Elizabeth Fitzgerald (1890–1995), whose paternal grandfather and maternal grandmother were Fitzgeralds from Bruff, Co. Limerick. Their surname suggests descent from the Cambro-Norman Geraldines (see p. 195).
Civil Registration
Civil registration for births and deaths started in the late 18th century in certain cities, such as New Orleans (1790), and on a state level in the 19th century, beginning with Massachusetts (1840), the latest to start being Georgia (1919). Marriages were performed by clergymen or justices of the peace, with licences issued by county clerks, with civil registration only starting in the late 19th or early 20th century. Each state differs in its start dates, accessibility of its records and the amount of information recorded. The best sources are www.cyndislist.com under the individual state, and A. Eakle and J. Cerny, The Source; a Guidebook of American Genealogy (Ancestry, new edn 1996 by L. Szucs and S. Luebking). At best civil registration records can tell you how long an immigrant had lived in America, whether they were naturalised, and whence they came, though this will usually just be the country, not exact place, of origin.
Some civil registration is becoming available at www.ancestry.com. The US Social Security Death Index (1962–96), available at www.familysearch.org, includes dates of birth. It’s an excellent way of tracing where the descendants of immigrants ended up.
Censuses
There have been censuses every ten years since 1790. All are searchable to 1930 at www.ancestry.com (with 1880 free at www.familysearch.org too). Up to 1840 they recorded heads of households with numbers but not names of other people present, divided into sexes and age groups – frustrating for lack of detail, but not entirely uninformative. From 1850, all names and ages are recorded along with place of birth, and the relationship to the head of the household is stated from 1880. Much of the 1890 census was accidentally burned. From 1880–1920 the countries of birth of everyone’s parents is stated as well. Those for 1900 state how long people had been in America. Those for 1910 indicate on which side veterans of the Civil War had fought. Censuses will tell you who was from Ireland, but don’t state precise places of origin.
Directories
Flourishing from the 19th century, these are especially strong for cities, where many Irish migrants went, and list much of the working population. They are a great source for tracking ancestors year by year, thus working out roughly when they arrived, and identifying possible relatives living nearby.
Religious registers
In fortunate cases these go back to the foundation dates of communities. Most are with their churches or church archives, and most are on MMF. Some records, especially marriages,
may identify migrants’ places of origin. Church archives, more so Protestant ones, may also contain letters of recommendation written by the migrant’s clergyman back home.
Newspapers
Much is available in local and state repositories and increasingly online. Especially in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, obituaries for migrants or their descendants often state the place of origin. Also worth seeking are reports of ships’ arrivals and adverts for people in America or Ireland seeking relatives. Such adverts from the Boston Pilot (1831–1916), for example, are published by the New England Historic Genealogical Society as The Search for Missing Friends. Catholic newspapers flourished locally in the 19th century, including Philadelphia’s Erin (1822) and the Catholic Advocate and Irishman’s Journal (1823). By 1911 there were 321 of them: see www. newadvent.org/cathen/11692a.htm.
Biographical dictionaries
There are many of these for cities and states, and overall the Dictionary of American Biography (Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1996).
Wills
Most wills were proved in local county courthouses (which also house local legal records): many are on MMF.
Naturalisations
These often state residence and occupation, the ship of arrival, and date and rough place of birth, though seldom in any detail – usually you’ll just find ‘Ireland’. They are normally at the court where the naturalisation took place. From 1868, however, they were issued at Federal Naturalisation Centres, though detailed records only date from 1906. L.D. Szucs, They Became Americans (Ancestry, 1997), goes into detail. The NARA have pre-1906 federal naturalisation indexes for Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Rhode Island up to 1906, and for all states from 1906 until 75 years ago (i.e. 1932 for people searching in 2007). Citizenship applications up to 1941 and passport applications 1795–1919 are on MMF.
Shipping lists
The best overall guide to passenger lists for ships between Ireland and America is www. genealogybranches.com/irishpassengerlists.
Some lists of Irish people leaving for America have been published, especially B. Mitchell, Irish Passenger Lists, 1803–06, Lists of Passengers Sailing from Ireland to America Extracted from the Hardwick Papers (GPC, 1995) (about 4,500 people) and B. Mitchell, Irish Passenger Lists 1847–71, Lists of Passengers Sailing from Londonderry to America on Ships of the J. & J. Cooke Line & the McCorkell Line (GPC, 1988) (about 27, 500 people).
Generally, the best records are at the port of arrival. Some have been published and are indexed in P.W. Filby and M.K. Meyer, Passenger and Immigration Index (Gale Research Co., 3 vols, 1981) with annual supplements to 2000, now also on CD (to 1999) from Family Tree Maker’s Family Archives (#354).
Records of immigration and passenger lists at the American end are mostly at the NARA. Customs passenger lists date from 1820 and will only state the country of origin, but the Immigration Passenger Lists that started in 1883 will state the last place of residence – in many cases the actual place of birth.
For the Great Famine, see I.A. Glazier and M. Tepper, The Famine Immigrants, Lists of Irish Immigrants arriving at the Port of New York 1846–51 (GPC, 7 vols, 1893–6). Over 600,000 Famine immigrants, named in passenger lists and New York port arrivals, are indexed at www.ancestry.com. The database www.irishgenealogy.ie/famine_ship is a record of ships arriving 1846–51. Many Irish came through New York’s Castle Garden 1830–92 (see www.castlegarden.org) and Ellis Island 1892 and 1924 (www.ellisisland.org: these can also be searched without knowing the migrant’s initials at www.jewishgen.org/databases/EIDB/ellis.html).
Army records
Most pre-20th-century army records concern the Revolutionary War (1773–84) and Civil War (1861–5). Army service and pension records are in state archives (especially for Confederate states) and at the NARA (as described in Meredith S. Colket jr and Frank E. Bridges, Guide to Genealogical Records in the National Archives (National Archives and Records Administration, 2001). A useful guide to Civil War records is www.illinoiscivilwar.org/cwgeneal.html. There are also social societies, such as the Daughters of the American Revolution, whose membership is for those who can prove descent from revolutionary soldiers, including many Irishmen, and