[posted 9 Oct '12; added to web site 23 Jan '15] [This is a redacted form of a letter I sent to some Cushing genealogy cousins about a year and a half ago. I haven't been able to do any more research on the Caseys since.]
For those of you who have looked through census
records, you know that there was a Casey family "next door" (can you say
that with farmland?) to Dennis and Katherine Casey Cussen/Cushing in
Fort Winnebago. There's an awful lot of information online right now,
especially through the familysearch.org website, and through census,
marriage, and birth records there, supplemented with Find-a-Grave
records and usgenweb files, I fleshed out what I could about these
Caseys. I added them to my online tree, so if you want to take a look,
go to my Cushing Genealogy website at http://www.cushings.com/roots/ ,
select "family trees" from the menu, then "my family", then type in
either "casey, james" (select the one born in 1800), or "casey, patrick"
(select the first one, born between 1800 and 1803). Click on
"descendancy" to see their family trees, as far as I traced them.
Here's what I know, in brief. Dennis and Catherine Casey Cushing left
Stoughton in about 1847, may have stopped in Madison, Wisconsin, but
arrived in Fort Winnebago in about 1849. James Casey immigrated from
Ireland in 1849 and arrived in Fort Winnebago on the farm "next door" to
the Cushings. Patrick Casey immigrated with his family in 1848, was in
Lawrence, Massachussetts in 1850, but moved shortly thereafter to Fort
Winnebago, to a farm very near the Cushing and James Casey families. In
1850, Patrick Casey is listed both with the James Casey family in Fort
Winnebago and with his family in Lawrence, Mass. My speculation is that Patrick and James Casey and Katherine Casey Cushing were brothers and sister, born in
about 1800, 1803, and 1806, respectively.
Of the few Caseys found in Cushing birth
records, John Cussen/Cushing's godfather, in Galbally, was a Patrick
Casey. (John was one of Dennis and Katherine's older sons, who also had a farm in Fort Winnegabo.) Patrick Cussen's godfather, in Galbally, was Margaret Casey. (Patrick was another of Dennis and Katherine's sons. The James Casey who emigrated to Fort Winnebago was married to Margaret Brady Casey.) There are a few other
possible connections, but these are such common names that they are not
proof of a connection to the Fort Winnebago neighbors. My
great-grandfather, Francis Cushing, was a witness (best man?) at the marriage of William
Casey in Fort Winnebago. William was the son of nearby Patrick Casey; Francis was the son of Katherine Casey Cushing.
This could be an indication of family, but could also be simply because
they had been neighbors and friends for many years. (I think this is
more likely an indication of family relationship because William was
seven years older than Francis and in the pre-teen and teenage years
they were neighbors, with such large families, I don't think they would
have been neighbor buddies.) That's pretty much all I know about Caseys
in Fort Winnebago.
I know of 6 children to Patrick Casey. I don't know
what became of the 5 daughters. Son William moved with his parents to
Rudd, Iowa, then after the parents died moved on to Lake Co., South
Dakota. After James' death, much of his family moved to the Rudd, Iowa
area, too. Daughter Ellen married James Durick and their descendants
remained in the Portage area. Son Patrick F. stayed on the family farm
in Fort Winnebago (you may have seen his name on the 1873 plat map next
to Dennis Cushing) for a few years, but then moved on to Iowa. Son
James moved on to Watertown, Wis. More details are in my family tree.
I don't spend a great deal of time on genealogy these days. I was
hoping to find some descendant to contact that might know something
about the Caseys, but the free online records only get me to about 1930,
so I haven't found families to contact yet. I'm thinking of looking for
Caseys in Galbally church registers, Caseys in St. Mary's church
(Portage) registers, land/deed records for the Cushings and Caseys in
Fort Winnebago, naturalization records for Dennis Cushing and James and
Patrick Casey (Columbia Co. records available through LDS). There were
also some rather prominent Casey descendants - an Archbishop of Denver
in the early 70s, and a state representative, I think in Mitchell Co.,
Iowa, whose families might have some genealogy information, if I can
locate them.
Tuesday, October 9, 2012
My Opinion: Nearly All Cushings from Cork, Limerick, Tipperary Area are Related
The whole point of that table was to show that Cushing (or it's Irish variants: Cushen and Cussen) was not a very common name in Ireland. The estimated number of Cussens in about 1840 was 800. To play around with some numbers (I'll try to use more accurate numbers after I do a little research), if a typical family is two parents and six children, 800 Cussens is about 100 families. Almost all of these, nearly 80%, were in southwest Ireland. Roughly using the population chart at http://www.mapspictures.com/ireland/history/ireland_population.htm , there were about 50 Cussen families in 1790 and only about 25 in 1700. We'll never trace individual Irish Cussen families back to 1700, but I think it's certain that the Cussen/Cushen/Cushing families from southwest Ireland are somehow related.
Thursday, August 23, 2012
Surnames in Ireland
A helpful resource in locating families in Ireland is Robert Matheson's Surnames in Ireland. Published in 1909, the report makes use of the 1890 Births Index to count and locate surnames throughout the country. Two tables published in this report are particularly interesting: One Hundred of the Principal Surnames in Ireland and Surnames in Ireland having Five Entries and upwards in the Birth Indexes of 1890. Below, I combine these tables and modify them to show the most common Irish surnames in our family tree. My modification changes the population estimates to reflect the population in about 1840, since our Irish ancestors emigrated between about 1825 and 1841. [Note 1: Between 1841 and 1891, the population of Ireland dropped by about 50%. 50%! The potato famine and emigration depleted the Irish population enormously. Even today, the population of Ireland is less than it was in 1841. The loss of population was not the same in all counties (Tipperary dropped 60% and Cork dropped 49%, for example), so my correction of simply doubling the population is not entirely accurate, but it should be quite a bit more accurate than using population numbers from 1890.] [Note 2: You may notice that some of the population estimates don't follow the top 100 ranking. I lumped some name variations together that slightly changed some relative rankings. It's not important.]
Connaught is western Ireland (counties Mayo, Sligo, Roscommon, Leitrim and Galway); Munster is southwestern Ireland (counties Kerry, Limerick, Clare, Tipperary, Cork and Waterford); Leinster is eastern Ireland (counties Longford, Westmeath, Meath, Louth, Dublin, Kildare, Kings/Offaly, Queens/Leix, Wicklow, Carlow, Kilkenny, and Wexford); and Ulster is northern Ireland (counties Donegal, Londonderry, Antrim, Tyrone, Fermanagh, Monaghan, Cavan, Armagh and Down).
In the table below, I have included the 10 most common names and added the most common Irish names from our family tree.
Connaught is western Ireland (counties Mayo, Sligo, Roscommon, Leitrim and Galway); Munster is southwestern Ireland (counties Kerry, Limerick, Clare, Tipperary, Cork and Waterford); Leinster is eastern Ireland (counties Longford, Westmeath, Meath, Louth, Dublin, Kildare, Kings/Offaly, Queens/Leix, Wicklow, Carlow, Kilkenny, and Wexford); and Ulster is northern Ireland (counties Donegal, Londonderry, Antrim, Tyrone, Fermanagh, Monaghan, Cavan, Armagh and Down).
In the table below, I have included the 10 most common names and added the most common Irish names from our family tree.
Surname | My estimated population in ca .1840 | Top 100 | 1890 births | Principal counties | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ireland | Leinster | Munster | Ulster | Connaught | ||||
Murphy | 126,000 | 1 | 1386 | 476 | 611 | 189 | 110 | Throughout Ireland, but greatest numbers in Cork, Dublin, and Wexford. |
Kelly | 114,000 | 2 | 1251 | 438 | 215 | 267 | 331 | Throughout Ireland, but greatest numbers in Dublin, Galway, Mayo, Roscommon, and Cork. |
Sullivan | 89,000 | 3 | 975 | 61 | 875 | 15 | 24 | Throughout Munster, but greatest numbers in Cork and Kerry. |
Walsh | 85,000 | 4 | 932 | 476 | 611 | 189 | 110 | Throughout Ireland, but greatest numbers in Cork, Mayo, Waterford, Galway, Dublin, and Wexford. |
Smith | 68,000 | 5 | 753 | 232 | 62 | 412 | 47 | Antrim, Cavan, and Dublin. |
O'Brien | 69,000 | 6 | 764 | 216 | 414 | 73 | 61 | Throughout Munster, and Dublin, Cavan, and Galway. |
Byrne | 67,000 | 7 | 734 | 583 | 52 | 53 | 46 | Dublin, Wicklow, Wexford, Louth, Carlow, Kildare, Kilkenny, Cork, Waterford, Donegal, Galway, Mayo & Roscommon. |
Ryan | 65,000 | 8 | 715 | 180 | 473 | 13 | 49 | Tipperary by far, but also Limerick, Dublin, Cork, Waterford, Kilkenny, Wexford, Clare & Galway. |
Connor | 63,500 | 9 | 698 | 160 | 336 | 81 | 121 | Connor (432): Kerry, Dublin, Mayo, Cork, also Roscommon, Galway, Antrim, Londonderry. O'Connor (266): Kerry, Cork, Limerick, Dublin, Clare, Galway. |
O'Neill | 64,500 | 10 | 709 | 226 | 190 | 254 | 39 | O'Neill (407): Throughout Ireland, but 50% in Dublin, Antrim, Cork, and Tyrone. Neill (244): Antrim, Cork, Kerry, Carlow, Dublin, Wexford. McNeill (58): Antrim & Londonderry. |
Campbell | 32,000 | 31 | 349 | 39 | 8 | 279 | 23 | Antrim, Down, Armagh, Tyrone, Londonderry, Donegal. |
Casey | 23,000 | 59 | 254 | 61 | 134 | 17 | 42 | Cork, Kerry, Dublin, Limerick. |
Donnelly | 22,000 | 65 | 240 | 64 | 19 | 135 | 22 | Antrim, Tyrone, Armagh, Dublin. |
Hogan | 17,500 | 91 | 193 | 59 | 115 | 5 | 14 | Tipperary, Dublin, Limerick, Clare, & Cork. |
Gorman | 15,000 | 164 | 60 | 61 | 33 | 10 | Gorman: Antrim, Dublin, & Tipperary. O'Gorman: Clare. | |
Dooley | 5,500 | 60 | 33 | 12 | 5 | 10 | Dublin & King's | |
Enright | 4,500 | 49 | 4 | 43 | - | 2 | 21 in Limerick, 11 in Kerry, 8 in Cork, 3 in Clare. | |
McClintock | 2,300 | 25 | 2 | - | 23 | - | Antrim & Londonderry. | |
Cummings | 1,800 | 20 | 4 | 2 | 12 | 2 | Antrim. Many more Cummins, in Dublin, Cork, & Tipperary. | |
Pyne | 1000 | 11 | - | 10 | 1 | - | 7 in Cork, 3 in Clare. | |
Cussen | 800 | 9 | 1 | 7 | - | 1 | 3 in Cork, 2 in Limerick |
Saturday, August 18, 2012
Mannings & Enrights
Several years ago, I looked up some information for my
cousins. I just came across it and decided to post it here in case I
can help them connect with more of their family history. This was
mostly from census records, and not a comprehensive search of other
records. This research is six years old, so more information is
undoubtedly available now.
John and Bridget Manning, born about 1811 and 1813, respectively, emigrated from Ireland to the US in the 1840s, with their son, John, born in about 1839, and probably some other children. I found them in Clyman, Dodge County, Wisconsin in 1860. (Since earlier censuses are not available through my service, I don't know if they were there earlier.) There were several Manning families in Clyman, but I don't know how they're related. John was a blacksmith and a farmer. I think that John married a Catherine (born about 1850 in Ireland), and that they had a daughter, Katherine, in about 1884. In 1900, John was a widow living with his daughter, Katherine, still in Clyman, Wisconsin. Katherine married Joseph L. Enright in about 1907, and their son, Paul Manning Enright, was born in Texas in 1908. In 1910, this family was living in Waco, Texas, including Katherine's father, John. They had a daughter in about 1913, but I couldn't make out her name. Something like Alline or Alsine. Joseph was a Bridge Builder for the railroad. By 1920, the family had moved to Texarkana, Texas and were still there in 1930. John Manning probably passed away between 1920 and 1930. So on the Manning side, your grandmother, Katherine Manning Enright, was born in Wisconsin, but her parents were born in Ireland. Your great grandfather, John Manning, emigrated from Ireland in the mid 1840s with his family while a child. Your great grandmother, Catherine Manning, was also born in Ireland, but I don't know her maiden name or when she emigrated.
I believe that your Enright emigres are John and Sarah Enright, born in Ireland about 1802 and 1820, respectively. I don't know where they married - Ireland or the US. Their son, James, was born about 1842. Most of the census records say James was born in New York, though one says Ireland. Other children were born in New York and Massachusetts in the mid to late 1840s, so the family lived in that area for a while. I found the family in 1860 in Milford, Jefferson County, Wisconsin. James married a Johanna (born 1851 in Ohio). Johanna's parents were both born in Ireland. James and Johanna had at least 8 children in Wisconsin, including your grandfather, Joseph L. Enright, born about 1880. I may have found another brother who was born in Arkansas in 1890, so the family may have moved to Arkansas in the 1880s. Two of Joseph's brothers, James and William, were also bridge builders for the railroad in Texas, so there was some kind of Civil Engineering strength in the family. I found Joseph in Pine Bluff, Jefferson County, Arkansas (again building bridges for the railroad) in 1900, before he married. It was interesting that of the 100 persons on his census page, he was the only white. So on the Enright side, your grandfather, Joseph L. Enright, was born in Wisconsin, and his parents were probably born in New York and Ohio. But all 4 of their parents, your Enright great great grandparents, were born in Ireland. I'm not sure when they emigrated, nor even what all of their names were.
I learned a few years ago about your father visiting with a cousin, Ray, on the East Coast when returning from some business trips. Joseph L. Enright's brother, William, a RR Bridge Builder in Texas, had a son Raymond born in about 1909, one year younger than your dad. I think the 1930 census said he was an insurance agent.
John and Bridget Manning, born about 1811 and 1813, respectively, emigrated from Ireland to the US in the 1840s, with their son, John, born in about 1839, and probably some other children. I found them in Clyman, Dodge County, Wisconsin in 1860. (Since earlier censuses are not available through my service, I don't know if they were there earlier.) There were several Manning families in Clyman, but I don't know how they're related. John was a blacksmith and a farmer. I think that John married a Catherine (born about 1850 in Ireland), and that they had a daughter, Katherine, in about 1884. In 1900, John was a widow living with his daughter, Katherine, still in Clyman, Wisconsin. Katherine married Joseph L. Enright in about 1907, and their son, Paul Manning Enright, was born in Texas in 1908. In 1910, this family was living in Waco, Texas, including Katherine's father, John. They had a daughter in about 1913, but I couldn't make out her name. Something like Alline or Alsine. Joseph was a Bridge Builder for the railroad. By 1920, the family had moved to Texarkana, Texas and were still there in 1930. John Manning probably passed away between 1920 and 1930. So on the Manning side, your grandmother, Katherine Manning Enright, was born in Wisconsin, but her parents were born in Ireland. Your great grandfather, John Manning, emigrated from Ireland in the mid 1840s with his family while a child. Your great grandmother, Catherine Manning, was also born in Ireland, but I don't know her maiden name or when she emigrated.
I believe that your Enright emigres are John and Sarah Enright, born in Ireland about 1802 and 1820, respectively. I don't know where they married - Ireland or the US. Their son, James, was born about 1842. Most of the census records say James was born in New York, though one says Ireland. Other children were born in New York and Massachusetts in the mid to late 1840s, so the family lived in that area for a while. I found the family in 1860 in Milford, Jefferson County, Wisconsin. James married a Johanna (born 1851 in Ohio). Johanna's parents were both born in Ireland. James and Johanna had at least 8 children in Wisconsin, including your grandfather, Joseph L. Enright, born about 1880. I may have found another brother who was born in Arkansas in 1890, so the family may have moved to Arkansas in the 1880s. Two of Joseph's brothers, James and William, were also bridge builders for the railroad in Texas, so there was some kind of Civil Engineering strength in the family. I found Joseph in Pine Bluff, Jefferson County, Arkansas (again building bridges for the railroad) in 1900, before he married. It was interesting that of the 100 persons on his census page, he was the only white. So on the Enright side, your grandfather, Joseph L. Enright, was born in Wisconsin, and his parents were probably born in New York and Ohio. But all 4 of their parents, your Enright great great grandparents, were born in Ireland. I'm not sure when they emigrated, nor even what all of their names were.
I learned a few years ago about your father visiting with a cousin, Ray, on the East Coast when returning from some business trips. Joseph L. Enright's brother, William, a RR Bridge Builder in Texas, had a son Raymond born in about 1909, one year younger than your dad. I think the 1930 census said he was an insurance agent.
Thursday, August 16, 2012
Outdated: Can't Follow the Names in my Posts?
Most of you are probably lost when I start mentioning names, like Patrick Donley. To see how someone fits into your tree, use the Rootsweb family tree in the list of links on the right of this blog page. One way to see how someone is related to you (if they are) is to go to the family tree and find your nearest deceased relative. (For privacy reasons, no living persons are included in the family tree that I've publicly posted at Rootsweb.) This could be a parent or a grandparent. Then at the top of that person's page (but below the banner ad), click on "pedigree". You should see Patrick Donley in the last column. To see his family, or his descendants, click on his name. If you have trouble, leave me a comment and I'll try to help.
Margaret Donnelly no. 2
Our second Margaret Donnelly, aka Maggie, was the niece of Margaret no. 1. Maggie was the daughter of James Donley (the oldest of Patrick and Nancy's sons, the only one born in Ireland) and Mary Buchannan. I don't know alot about this family. James and Mary were married in the early 1850s. Maggie was born in 1856 in Fort Covington, about 40 miles east of Waddington (where our Donnelly family first settled) along the St. Lawrence river. It could be that James and Mary lived in Fort Covington, or that Mary was from there and she had the baby in her parents' home. In 1860 they were living in the village of Waddington. In 1868, when Maggie was 12 years old, they sold their home and moved to Burlington, Vermont, where they remained. What little I know about Maggie is that in 1880 she was selling or making hats, that in 1899 she died of heart disease, and that as far as I can tell, she never married. She is probably buried in Burlington in a family plot.
Location:
Burlington, VT, USA
Thursday, August 2, 2012
J. Lufkin Douglas Genealogy
Just a note about a valuable resource for our Douglas genealogy. Our Douglas family is descended from a John Douglas who, at the age of 12, ran away from home. In 1707 he was kidnapped on the docks of London and forced to work on the crew of a ship that sailed for the New World, where he was sold to pay for his passage. (Apparently, this was not uncommon at the time.) In 1890, Joshua Lufkin Douglas published a genealogy of this family, as best he could, from available records and from correspondence with as many of the descendants as he could contact. I first found this book several years ago on Heritage Quest, through the New England Genealogical and Historical Association. At the time, I painstakingly entered the over 2000 individuals into a family tree, and added it to my own. Now I find it in several places. Google has scanned this book, which is available in Google Books in several different formats. Amazon offers printed copies for about $20. When I transcribed the individual vital records (birth, marriage, death), I decided to leave out the descriptive information about all these families, which is really the more interesting information. There was just too much for me to copy. The other day I came across someone who has transcribed all this information, and made it available on his genealogy website. The Wilde Genealogy site is at http://www.computersrwilde.com/Genealogy/ and our Douglas family starts here.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)