Thursday, August 31, 2017

My Submissions to More Brickwall Solutions to Genealogy Problems

Get All The Birth Certificates You Can

Always obtain all certificates for family members that you can. This can fill in details regarding relationships, geography and place names. 

Several of my Irish ancestors lived in places that are not shown on maps. Newtown Saville is a group of three townlands in Clogher parish, County Tyrone. The townlands are Dunbiggan, Lisnarable and Tamlaght. The McGinn family lived there and it was impossible to decipher which of the three townlands my McGinn family called home. The land records would list names by townland but on their civil registration records the McGinns always listed their home as Newtown Saville. I had several death certificates, baptismal records and birth records but all listed Newtown Saville as residence. The land records showed that there were McGinns at Dunbiggan and Tamlaght in the appropriate time frame.

It was not until I received Ally McGinn’s birth certificate from 1870 that her place of birth was listed as Tamlaght, and not Newtown Saville, that I had a better idea of my family’s location. More Brickwall Solutions page 77

Don’t Be Afraid To Ask

How can you contact living relatives in the old country? I looked on the Internet and found businesses near the old farm. I sent an e-mail and asked them to check their phone book for McGinn and McGuigan families living in Clogher. The owner sent me a list of three McGinns in the phone book. I wrote each of them and did not hear back.

One day I got a letter from the town pharmacist. He mentioned that one of the McGinns had given him my letter since he was from Newtown Saville and his mother was from Tullanafoile Townland. He mentioned that he spoke with old Bridget McMaugh there who knew everything and she remembered my grandmother’s brother and their cousin. He said he would get back to me with more details. After a year I was nervous that if Miss McMaugh died I would never get the information. I decided to write her myself and within a month she wrote back with the name and addresses of both my second-cousins. I wrote them and they both wrote back and shared stories and photos. They were unaware that they had “friends” in the USA.

Apparently, in Ireland, first-cousins and closer relations are family, second-cousins and more distant relations are “friends”. More Brickwall Solutions page 128

Irish Marriage Indexes

Don’t let spelling slow you down in your search for a marriage certificate.

I knew Patrick Cassidy had married Ann Murphy in Ireland in about 1877 according to the 1900 US census. My local FHC has indexes for Irish marriages from 1845 to 1921. I thought it would be a simple search to find corresponding citations in the same year for both names. I also knew the Cassidy family hailed from Newry, which is in both Counties Armagh and Down.

I could find an Ann Murphy in Newry but not the corresponding Pat Cassidy. I decided to search a few years earlier since the census information is often a bit off. I did find a match between the two names in 1873 for County Armagh. I thought maybe they lived near Newry or this was Ann's home parish. I wrote Dublin for the certificate and was shocked when I received two marriage certificates!

A Patrick Cassidy and Ann Murphy had indeed married in 1873, just not to each other, so I had the wrong people. They had identical marriage index citations because they married in the same place at the same time but not to each other. 

I decided to go back and see what might be up with the other Ann Murphy and try to find Patrick Cassidy. I looked along all the names on the page near Cassidy until something jumped out at me. Patrick Cassiday had a matching citation to Ann Murphy  and I got their marriage certificate from Dublin proving they married in Newry in 1877.

Likewise, be careful with unique spellings. The prefix O’ in Irish surnames caused me a few problems finding marriages in the index. I could not find the Denis Buckley-Margaret O’Callaghan marriage from 1885 nor could I find the John O’Riordan-Honora Buckley marriage in the mid-1890s. I left the FHC flustered. Months later when I learned that the O’ prefix was often dropped, I searched the indexes again and quickly found the marriages under Buckley-Callaghan in 1885 and Riordan-Buckley in 1894. More Brickwall Solutions pages 135-36 

Using The IGI For Ireland

One way to find the place of origin for Irish ancestors is to use the IGI(International Genealogical Index) and hope for good luck. The IGI has Irish births listed from the beginning of civil registration in 1864 and ending a few years later.

As all eight of my great-grandparents were born in Ireland from 1849 to 1870, I hoped a parent search would flush out my ancestors in the IGI or at least their siblings who were born after 1863. 

Couple by couple, I entered my second great-grandparents’ names. Michael Cassidy and Mary Reavey lived in Newry, County Down and their son was born around 1850. If he was an older child, his youngest sibling might show up in the IGI. Unfortunately, no names came up.

Next, I tried Dominick Benson and Mary Fahey. Their daughter, Bridget, was born around 1854 and again, I was hoping that some younger siblings might appear. Only one name did, Dominick Benson. Up until this moment, all I knew was that the Bensons were from County Sligo but this birth record would give me a parish name to search further.

Then, I entered Patrick McGuigan and Catherine Mallon. Nothing came up. I moved onto Patrick McGinn and Alice McWilliams. Three children came up: Patrick, Biddy and James. This too, was exciting because it corrected my family tradition that they were from Omagh and properly identified the parish as Clogher, County Tyrone.

Encouraged, I moved onto my mother’s side of the family which I hoped would bring better results since both my maternal grandparents were Irish-born. Denis Buckley and Catherine Cahill returned no hits. Likewise with Maurice O’Callaghan and Mary Mahoney.

My last two couples were successful though. Daniel Riordan and Mary Anne Desmond had daughters Julia and Catherine. It identified their birthplaces as Macroom, County Cork, which was a great help. Lastly, the search for John Buckley and Honora Curtin brought up my great-grandmother Honora and her brother Denis in Mallow, County Cork. 

These results also reinforced a genealogy rule that you always search by family and not just your ancestor. Of the four couples that had IGI matches, only one of the entries was for my direct ancestor’s birth. The others were all just siblings but the geographical information gained from these collaterals was key. More Brickwall Solutions pages 138-39   

Check Those Genealogy Periodicals

Always check genealogy periodicals for others searching your names in the same localities. 

I am researching the Benson family of Ballysadare, County Sligo, Ireland. I found the address of a New York man also researching the Benson name in Ballysadare during the 19th century. He wrote back telling me that we were not connected but gave me the address of a researcher from Australia. She, too, was not a match but she gave me the name of a Benson family currently living in Ballysadare.

When I wrote them, they informed me that there were no members of my Benson family still there but they were so kind to send me photographs of the farmhouse, the church and the gravestones of my ancestors. More Brickwall Solutions page 148

Study That Church Register!

A good way to learn about your family is to study the church register even if you do not expect your ancestors to show up in the records because of a late starting date or gaps in the records.

When I borrowed the Ballysadare Catholic baptismal register for County Sligo, Ireland from my FHC, there was a gap from 1853-1858. My aunt assured me that her grandmother was 39 in August of 1893 when my grandfather was born. That would make her birth in June of 1854 and inside the baptismal gap beginning in August of 1853 through to February 1858. I was expecting that my great-grandmother, Bridget Benson, would fall between the cracks and not be listed. I started with the earliest records for the register and recorded every Benson entry I could find. 

I was stunned when I got to the baptisms of 3 July 1853 and found Brigida Benson, daughter of Dominick Benson and Maria Fahy of Corhawnagh Townland. This was totally unexpected and very exciting. I also found two unknown siblings in 1859 and 1862 and the youngest brother whose 1864 birth registration had led me to this parish register. Apparently, Bridget was 40 when she became a first-time mother in 1893. More Brickwall Solutions pages 150-51

Getting Genealogy Goose Bumps

Always check the published family histories located at most historical libraries. Once, while we were passing through Des Moines, my wife and I stopped at the Iowa State Historical Society to check some census returns. After I finished my assignments, I started browsing. With just 15 minutes to go before closing, I hit a goldmine. I saw a book called the Munson Record 1637-1887 A Genealogical and Biographical Account of Captain Thomas Munson (A Pioneer of Hartford and New Haven) and His Descendants by Myron A. Munson. 

My wife’s second great-grandmother’s 1883 wedding invitation said "Mr. and Mrs. O.D. Munson invite you to the wedding of their daughter Nelle”. We were able to find Nelle’s marriage license at the courthouse and it said she was the daughter of Orson Deriel Munson and Sarahh Elizabeth Powell. Our quest had begun.

The Munson family book was indexed and I got goose bumps as I looked in the People Who Married a Munson index and found an S.E. Powell. Could it be our S.E. Powell? Quickly turning the pages as closing time approached, I found that it was indeed the Orson and Sarah Munson family of Omaha, NE and it listed their children including Nelle.

I quickly made notes of Orson’s ancestors and got back to Capt. Thomas Munson, an early settler in Connecticut. We made a Xerox of the title page and planned to return when we could make copies.

This was by far the most exciting time in a research library for us. More Brickwall Solutions pages 156-57

My Submissions to 500 Brickwall Solutions To Genealogy Problems

The Many Wives Of Cassidy 

Calvary Cemetery in Queens, NY was a big help learning about Joseph Cassidy’s first two families. Speaking on the phone with the sexton I was informed that Joseph Cassidy was buried at Calvary on 16 Jun 1928. Bridget Cassidy was buried in the same grave on 17 Jun 1933. Joseph Cassidy purchased the grave on 1 Jan 1883 for $15. There were six burials in the following years: 1883 (two), 1889 (two), 1928 and 1933. The dates seemed to support the family tradition that there were two previous wives that died in childbirth . Clearly the 1928 burial was Joseph and the 1933 burial was Bridget. I did not have the names of the earlier wives or the children. Assuming the children were stillborn, I did not know if they would have names. 

The sexton told me that I would have to have a name and a date to learn more about the burials in the plot. Figuring that Joseph would probably not have purchased a grave without needing one, I gave the following information. “I would like the burial details for Mrs. Joseph Cassidy and the infant Cassidy buried on 1 Jan 1883”. He checked and found that Margaret Cassidy was buried in the grave on 1 Jan 1883. He could not find anything on the baby. He could not check the other two without names and dates of death. This puzzled me but led me to check other sources with the limited information I had. Clearly, Margaret Cassidy died at the end of 1882. Getting her death certificate might answer the puzzle. 

The first two wives of Joseph Cassidy and their children have been the most interesting people to search in the death records. Knowing from the cemetery that Margaret Cassidy died in late 1882 I checked for her death certificate. Margaret Cassidy died 29 Dec 1882 from peritonitis after parturition. My wife, a doctor, suggested that she might have had a Caesarean section, especially in light of the family tradition that she died in childbirth. The doctor cared for her from 22 December to 29 December 1882. Parturition indicated that she had given birth, my wife said.  

I wondered then where was the baby? If she had delivered on 22 December then the grave would have been purchased in 1882 to bury the stillborn baby. If she had delivered on the 29th then the baby should have been buried on the same day as Margaret if it had died. 

I decided to check the 1883 death index for Cassidy children who would have been born in December 1882. Luckily, there was only one that was a possibility. Mary Cassidy was six months old when she died in late June 1883. Her parents were Joseph and Margaret Cassidy. The address was different than where Margaret died but within a few blocks. I assume she was nursed by a wet nurse and died at her home.(Blogger note-The address was confirmed after publication to be that of her aunt and uncle. They had their own Mary Cassidy born in Sep 1882. Apparently, Ann Murphy Cassidy nursed both her own daughter and her husband's niece.) Knowing that a doctor had assisted in the delivery I checked the 1882 birth index and found Mary Cassidy born on 22 Dec 1882 to Joseph Cassidy and Margaret (McKeon) Cassidy. This certificate gave quite a bit of information.

The death records helped clear away the mystery as to why both burials took place in 1883 but the cemetery could not find baby Cassidy’s burial. They were buried six months apart. 

The second Mrs. Joseph Cassidy and baby were more of a challenge. I did not know the wife’s first name or when she and her baby died. I decided to use the FHL and order the New York City Death Index for 1889. I was that if this woman had died in late December like Margaret Cassidy, then I would have to check the 1888 deaths as well. I was looking for all the female Cassidys who died in 1889 of child-bearing age. Fortunately, only one woman fit this parameter; Ellen Cassidy, age 34. I wrote to the Municipal Archives and received her death certificate. It said that she was the wife of Joseph Cassidy. She had been under the doctor’s care for nine months. The 1889 Death Index also had an entry for Ann Cassidy, age 11 months, which proved to be Joseph and Ellen’s daughter.

Ultimately I would learn that neither wife nor their daughters had died in childbirth.  Margaret Cassidy did die a week later but her daughter Mary lived to be six months old. Ellen Cassidy died nine months after her delivery and her daughter Ann died at 11 months. Both girls were baptized and the names of their godparents proved helpful in my research. Brickwall Solutions pages 52-53

Family Legends 

In the family papers I found a birth certificate for Anne Buckley born on 23 Jun 1930 at Morrisania Hospital in the Bronx. Family legends say that this girl only lived a few hours. A check of the death index was called for. Knowing Anne’s birth date and that she only lived a few hours should have made finding her death certificate easy. It did not.

In the index there was no Anne Buckley listed dying on 23 Jun 1930 or 24 Jun 1930. There were no Anne Buckleys that died as infants in 1930. Discouraged I moved onto other research.

After checking with my uncle, we did eventually find her at Calvary Cemetery in Queens. She was 20 days old when she died on 13 Jul 1930. Further research showed that she was christened on 26 Jun 1930. The only thing missing was the cause of death. We would need the death certificate to find the answer.

Three years later when I returned to the New York City Municipal Archives, I discovered the problem. Upon checking the index for 1930 again I saw the death date 13 Jul 1930 next to the entry Female Buckley, not Anne. Of course when I checked it was my grandparents’ daughter. She died from pyloric stenosis; a blockage between her stomach and her intestine caused her to vomit and ultimately killed her. She never left Morrisania Hospital.

She was given a name at her birth. Three days later she was given that name again when she was baptized. Despite living almost three weeks her death certificate listed her only as Female Buckley. A combination of a clerical error and my strong dependence on a family legend caused me to miss the entry.

Be thorough in your research. If you don’t find something think of reasons why and check your new thoughts. Brickwall Solutions page 71

The Case of Henry McTee

Henry McTee has been a difficult ancestor to trace. The 1910 census said that he was born to Irish-born parents. His 1920 obituary said he was born on 1 Nov 1859 in Chicago. Therefore he should show up in the 1860 Illinois census in Cook county. This census is indexed but the only McTee listed did not have a son named Henry, Hank or Harry.

Finding Henry’s marriage certificate became a challenge. He had married Daisy Hubbard in the early 1890s in western Kansas. Or so it was believed. Calling each county in western Kansas led to nothing. Ultimately his widow’s obituary said they were married in Trenton, Hitchcock, NE. This was incorrect but after checking adjacent Dundy county, NE, we finally found it. Since Dundy county is very rural, the clerk checked the record over the phone and we got the certificate later for $1. This piece of information was crucial for later research in the Chicago city directories and the US census. 

Henry McTee’s death certificate lists him as Charles Henry McTee. It states that his parents were Charles and Anne McTee, which disagrees with the 1891 marriage certificate which listed them as Samuel McTee and Mary Taylor. An 1860 census was found that agreed with the 1891 information and the 1920 information.

Knowing that Henry McTee was born in 1859 in Chicago made a search of the 1860 Illinois census a necessity. However, the one McTee in the index was not a match. The index listed Robert McTee, Cook Co., Illinois, 844 PALOS. When checking the family it listed: Robert McTee, 33, born Canada, Ellen McTee, 36, born Ireland, Jeremiah McTee, eight, born Illinois and Ronald McTee, one, born Illinois. When Henry McTee’s father was listed as Samuel we decided to check every Samuel Mc____ in Cook county in 1860. There were eight. Of course, upon checking the first seven there was no match but the eighth was a hit. 

Samuel and Ann McIntire were living with their eight-month-old son Henry in the eighth ward. Unfortunately there was no Samuel McIntire or Ann McIntire in the 1870 census index. We got a huge lead as to what the unadulterated form of McTee was but it is still proceeding at a snail’s pace. 

Ann was found in the 1880 census with her third husband Andrew Dier and her younger children; 11-year-old John McTee (listed as Dier), eight-year-old Sadie McCauley (listed as Dier), Amelia Dier, William Dier, and Maude Dier. It appears that Samuel was around until at least July 1868. Second husband Richard McCauley fathered Sadie in June 1871. He died in October 1871 and his daughter was born in March of the following year. Ann appears to have married Dier circa 1873. Henry McTee has not been found in the 1870 and 1880 US census.

We had checked the 1860 Chicago city directory looking for McTees but there were none. After finding them in in the 1860 census as McIntire we rechecked but still no luck. Finally, we checked the neighbors listed in the census for their address. Abraham Schick could be found on North Dearborn Avenue in 1859 and 1865. In 1865 there was a Samuel McAndee on North Dearborn. In 1868 there was a Simon McTee on North Dearborn.

This has been such a pain-staking process because we get so little success. We believe that the McTees lived in Holy Name parish in the 1860s. 

Unfortunately this parish lost its records in the Chicago Fire of 1871. Brickwall Solutions pages 208-09

Chance Meeting 

When my aunt started secretarial school in 1942 she met another girl with the same surname of Cassidy and both fathers were Joseph Cassidy. They went home and discovered that they were second cousins. The families got together for a visit and then fell out of touch until 1997. 

I gleaned what I could from my aunt that the non-related Joseph Cassidy had a wife Lillian and siblings Michael, Mary (who married a McRory) and Frank. They lived in Bayside, Queens. After trying to find Cassidys in Bayside section of Queens from the phone book I decided to use the 1920 federal census. I found Joseph and Lillian Cassidy living with her parents named McGorry. When I checked the phone book I found a McGorry in Bayside and called. Sure enough they were related to the Cassidys and gave me a contact name. Surprisingly they were also related to me because Mary Cassidy married a McGorry not McRory. Siblings Joe and Mary Cassidy married first cousins Lillian and Bill McGorry. Joe and Mary Cassidy’s parents  married in Ireland and had two sons there so it was possible to identify the place of origin in Ireland down to Ruddle’s Row, Newry, County Armagh. 

A chance meeting and a story passed down from my aunt helped me fill out some of my family history. Brickwall Solutions pages 276-77

Oh Brother! 

St. Raphael’s Catholic Church is one of the few Manhattan parishes available from the FHL. The records are in English and I was able to gather a great deal of information I needed. I checked here for Sarah Goodwin’s baptism in 1896. I also found her half-brother’s baptism in 1905. The most interesting things I discovered in St. Raphael’s records were the baptisms in 1903, 1907 and 1912 for the children of Owen McGinn and Mary Mahoney. From the 1900 census I knew that Sarah Goodwin had a maternal uncle called Owen McGinn. Family legend held that this uncle moved out from their apartment and married a much younger woman. 

Here was an Owen McGinn in the same parish having a family. If the wife was truly younger one would expect that they would have children. I decided to write down the information and check it later against other sources. My aunts remembered an uncle named James McGinn but not an Owen McGinn. The census clearly established an uncle named Owen, but was this him and his wife?

A check of the 1920 census found this family and it showed that Owen was 20 years older than Mary. This too agreed with the family stories. A check of the SSDI led nowhere. There were no marriage notations, so I could not try and track their marriages and spouses.

A few years later I tried the SSDI again and hit it big. I found a John McGinn with the same birth date as the one in the St. Raphael’s register. He had died in New Jersey and I got his obituary by calling the local library there. A fellow historian was there researching and since I had a date she obliged me and searched the obituary.

I called the funeral home and asked them if they would confirm John’s parents’ names. I gave them the names Owen and Mary McGinn and they confirmed that those were the names of the John McGinn they buried.

Following up on newly found names in a church register helped me find another branch to my family tree and contact them for their oral tradition. Brickwall Solutions page 302

Keeping The Faith With Parish Records 

In my census research I had discovered another group of Goodwins, who were part of my family history. John Goodwin had a brother Peter who married Mary Cunningham and had several children- including Peter, Thomas and Kathleen- between 1894-98. These children and their godparents were listed in St. Raphael’s records. The notation records were inconsistent as Thomas had a marriage notation, while my grandmother did not. Both were born in February 1896. Both married in 1919. 

I wrote to the Church of the Holy Cross because I could not find my grandmother’s three older brothers in the St. Raphael’s records between 1890-94. Holy Cross was the most likely parish in the neighborhood to have these records. I received a return letter saying that they had searched but found nothing.

I wrote to Holy Cross again because of another branch of the family was married there in 1881. This time the return letter informed me that there was a $5 charge per certificate. So after searching every other parish in the area I wrote back and asked Holy Cross to search the records for Goodwins between 1890-94 and sent the money. They found five baptisms for Patrick, Owen and Hugh Goodwin and their cousins Owen and Francis Goodwin.

Be persistent in your research especially in parish records. Brickwall Solutions page 353 

Pizza With Aunt Alice

My wife’s great-grandmother’s sister is still living. We sent a letter to Aunt Alice and she replied with some information about her mother’s family. She mentioned that she did not know her grandparents. We set up a time to visit Aunt Alice. She took us to the pizza parlor and we listened. She talked about her father’s brother and sister, Uncle Jim and Aunt Lucy, and how they would visit them in Oakland, IA.

Not being a native of Omaha, I did not realize that Oakland was just across the Missouri River in Pottawattamie county, IA. Our local library had cemetery inscriptions in a book and I found a James Thompson that turned out to be Uncle Jim. Paying a dollar for his uncertified death certificate, it told me that his father was Jasper Thompson and that James was born in Valparaiso, Porter, IN. Going back to the library I quickly found the Jasper and Elizabeth Thompson family in the 1860 US census at Porter Co., IN. The ages and birthplaces of the children indicated that this family would be enumerated in Virginia in 1850.

I checked the 1850 census for Virginia and found Jasper and Elizabeth with a one-year-old child. I called the Lewis County, West Virginia Courthouse and they found a marriage in 1849 between Jasper Thompson and Elizabeth Houghton. The letter had not asked about aunts and uncles so Aunt Alice skipped it. The friendly conversation with her at lunch got her talking about many things. Mentioning Uncle Jim and Aunt Lucy in passing led us across the country in a matter of days. Brickwall Solutions page 390

Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Finding Ellen

Always accept help when offered. I recently emailed the reference desk at Cork County Library and asked about street numbering practices. The reference librarian provided answers about Dublin Street in Cork City in the early 1900s. She also offered help if I could provide the links for the two censuses and the civil registers I had found previously.

Much to my surprise she had computerized access to some Cork City parish registers and found the church copy of an 1894 marriage record. She later found the baptismal entry for a first cousin and her 4 younger full siblings; siblings that I was unaware of. Patrick McSweeney married Ellen O’Riordan in 1887. They had 5 children: Evelyn in 1890, Michael in 1891, Thomas in 1892, Mary Anne in 1893 and Daniel Joseph in 1895.

With new names and dates I was able to find civil birth registrations for the four younger children. Since they do not appear in the 1901 Irish Census I assumed that they most likely died before that date. Michael died at 5 days old in 1891. Thomas died at 9 months old in 1893. Mary Anne died at 2 years old in 1895. I have yet to find a death record for Daniel Joseph. His father married a second time in 1904 and his first son in that marriage was named Daniel. I assume Daniel Joseph died young and before his half-brother.

Checking the St. Joseph Cemetery online, 

http://www.corkarchives.ie/genealogy/burialcemeteryrecords/

I discovered that Michael McSweeney was buried in Section 1 with a headstone. His half-sister Maggie was buried there too in 1904. I have a death record for Thomas but can not find him buried there. 

I have never been able to find a death registration for Ellen O’Riordan McSweeney. I knew she delivered a daughter on 2 Jun 1890. I knew that her husband married a second time in Nov 1904. I could not find her in the 1901 Irish Census. With the new names and dates of her younger children, I knew that she delivered a son on 20 Feb 1895. I started in the burial register for St. Joseph and checked its chronological list of burials starting on that date.

I was not disappointed. On 23 Apr 1895, Ellen McSweeney, 32, of 70 York Street was buried in Section 1. Now that I had a date, I tried anew to find her in the civil registry; and failed.  A few months later on 11 Sep 1895 her daughter Mary Anne was buried with her. Mary Anne’s death registration took place in Macroom where the cemetery stated she last resided. Her aunt Nora Riordan was the informant. 

Now that I had proof that she was buried in Apr 1895, she had to have died before May 1895. I tried to find the pages she would most likely be listed on by searching the index at FamilySearch.org.  I found no death entry for this wife and mother. I looked again at the death indexes and determined that she would appear in Cork District #2 in the second quarter of 1895 around volume 5 pages 72-77. She does not appear there.

Since the couple married in 1887 and it was three years until their first child was born. Could there have been a child or two born in 1888 or 1889? After conducting a search for McSweeney and alternate spellings between 1887-1890 for births and deaths, I did not find any likely candidates.

Perhaps the newly married couple delayed starting a family or suffered a period of infertility. They may also have conceived without difficulty but suffered a miscarriage or stillbirth or two. A search of St. Joseph Cemetery from 1887-July 1890 did not find any such burials.

Tracing Michael Gillen: A Case Study with updates

Below is an article I wrote several years ago with a couple of updates and a correction. The publication information is listed here.


Kevin Cassidy, “Tracing Michael Gillen: A Case Study,” Family Chronicle,
Nov/Dec 2009, 37-41; republished in Tracing Your Irish Roots: A Collection of Previously Published Articles from Discovering Family History, Internet Genealogy and Family Chronicle, 2010, 47-51. 


Searching a family tree is often painstaking and time consuming. If one is patient, persistent and methodical, it can become a success story. 

Michael Gillen was an Irish immigrant that arrived in America as a child. Family tradition stated that he was the youngest child of his parents with two older sisters; Mary and Delia. His mother was widowed in Ireland after his birth and remarried a Mr. Gray at some point. It was unknown whether her remarriage occurred in Ireland, England or the USA. The family maintained that the Gillens hailed from Connemara, County Galway. Michael Gillen was widowed in 1932 and some time after that an Aunt Delia came to visit him. It was presumed that she was his sister.

His descendants wanted to determine which parish in Ireland he came from. They wanted to know the full details of his parents’ marriage, his father’s death and mother’s remarriage. They wanted to know how many children were born to this family and were there surviving descendants on any collateral lines either in Ireland or the USA.


Sacramental Records

One good place to start researching is church sacramental records. The Catholic Church has recorded numerous sacramental events. Due to the hierarchical and geographical structure of Catholicism records can be tracked relatively easily. Registers most often record a baptism and a marriage. Determining exactly where a person lived at a specific time facilitates determining the correct parish to contact. 

The research moved from known facts to unknowns. Michael had married Annie Ferrick(Fear-ik) and had many children through 1900. As Catholics, these children were baptized at two midtown Manhattan parishes. Certificates for the five children born in 1890, 1891, 1893, 1894 and 1895 were found at St. Agnes Church on East 43rd Street and certificates for the final two children in 1897 and 1900 were found at St. John the Evangelist Church on East 55thStreet.

Catholics usually baptized their children within a week of birth in this time period. Parents were required to select baptismal sponsors for the sacramental ceremony. Typically blood relatives from both sides were selected. This fact necessitates obtaining an entire set of baptismal certificates for Catholic families. Only one of their combined fourteen baptismal sponsors was named Gillen. Michael’s sister, Mary, was apparently alive and still single in 1891 according to the church records. The other thirteen may have been cousins or good friends but not definite Gillen relations. 

Family tradition maintained that 2 other children were born to this couple but had died young. It was not known exactly when they were born, when they died and where they were buried. One family member stated that their names were Agnes and Robert at a family wake in 1953. 

Vital Records

Vital records are another great source to utilize. Civil authorities collected dates, ages, addresses, parents’ names and other helpful data. Death records are more common compared to marriage and birth records. Civil authorities could oversee a limited number of funeral homes and cemeteries more easily than the vast number of priests and midwives. Church records are often a substitute for missing vital records before 1910 in New York City. 

Michael Gillen died in 1944. His death certificate listed his parents as John Gillen and Bridget Conry and birthplace as Ireland. He was buried in the Bronx at St. Raymond’s Catholic Cemetery with his wife. A woman who was later determined to be his wife’s sister was buried in the grave in 1935. His sisters and mother were not interred at St. Raymond’s.

Searching the International Genealogical Index (IGI) and the NYC birth indexes revealed a birth certificate for one of the missing children. Mary Agnes Gillen was born at Charity Hospital on Blackwell’s Island. This public institution, located in the East River, properly recorded both her birth on 23 July 1885 and her death there on 16 Aug 1885. 

The birth certificate indicated that her parents were married and that she was the first-born child of Annie Ferrick Gillen. The death certificate merely listed Annie Gillen as the decedent’s mother and did not provide her maiden name. Having both a birth and death certificate provided more complete information.

Curiously, the death certificate did not list where Mary Agnes Gillen was buried. Calvary Cemetery in Queens answered that she was not buried there. This was a popular Catholic cemetery for families living in Manhattan in the 1800s. If she were not buried here it would be difficult to determine where she was buried. It was likely she was baptized since she died at age 24-days but she was not baptized at St. Agnes or St. John.

With the easy availability of the NYC Department of Health vital records online I was able to find that of the ten children born to Mrs. Michael Gillen only three were registered with the civil authorities in a timely manner. A fourth born in 1893 had a delayed birth certificate issued years later.  

Mary Agnes was the first born and delivered at Maternity Hospital on Blackwell’s island. Her parents were both Irish born and her father was a waiter. Michael Gillen was 27 and his wife was 20 on 23 Jul 1885. 

On 29 Apr 1897 at 351 East 56th Street their daughter Ellen joined the family. Michael, 35, was unemployed. Annie was 32 and had delivered 8 previous children. A total of 6 were now living. Three children had died.

Their tenth and last child, Annie, was born at 323 East 54th Street on 5 Jul 1900. Michael was a milk man. The seasoned parents were 39 and 36. Nine previous children had been born to them with 7 living at the time, including the new baby.

There was a remarkable consistency in answering the questions of child born and children living. The parents ages were less so. Michael was actually, 23, 35 and 38. Annie was actually 21, 32 and 36 when these three daughters were each born. 
Census Records

The United States Census counted the people of the US every ten years. A thorough search of all federal census records is a good place to pursue one’s research. Michael Gillen was enumerated in the 1900-1930 censuses. He was in Manhattan in the East 50s in 1900 and 1910. In 1920 and 1930 the family was found in the Bronx.

The 1900 federal census indicated that Annie Gillen had delivered 9 children with 6 surviving. Michael and Annie were married for 16 years. Both these facts supported the family tradition. It did suggest that a third child died during childhood. This was a new clue.

The 1910 census recorded that Annie had now delivered ten children and seven were living. Ann Gillen had been born on 5 Jul 1900 after the previous census. The numbers were accurately updated reflecting the new family member. This census also solidified the possibility that three Gillen children had died before 1900; Agnes, Robert and an unidentified child.

The Gillens were married 25 years in 1910. Possibly, they married in 1884 between 15 April and 1 June. Census records are not perfect. Sometimes the information is exactly right and other times simply more right than not. Unfortunately, some census entries are very flawed. Always compare old information and later findings to determine the most accurate story.

The four federal censuses for Michael Gillen taken together shed light on his immigration story. Three of the four censuses listed an immigration year of 1870 and one listed 1869. Michael was born in about 1861 so an immigration year of 1870 fit well with family tradition that he immigrated as a child. The 1925 NY state census gave further support recording that Michael had lived in the USA for 55 years, immigrating in 1869 or 1870. 

City Directories

Urban localities often have a wonderful precursor to the telephone book. The city directory was an annual head of household listing. It must be remembered that not everyone is listed. Bachelors were less often listed than married men. Single women rarely appeared but many widows did, listing the name of their late husbands. This is helpful determining the right household.

Michael Gillen lived in the East 40s and 50s of Manhattan from 1885-1910. A search was made of the city directory for widows named Bridget Gray. Bridget Gray, widow of Patrick, was found nearby. It is a good idea to make a chronological listing of city directory addresses found for an ancestor. This allows the researcher to follow movements over time and compare them to other subjects. It also helps identify likely parishes for marriages and baptisms based on geography. 

Revisiting Sources with Updated Information

As new information is discovered, previous resources need to be examined again. Oftentimes one must revisit records a second and third time to find a family member. Michael Gillen was found in the 1880 Census listed as Gray along with his mother, sisters, stepfather and half-brother, Thomas. They lived in the lower east side of Manhattan at 300 Cherry Street. Initial searches for Michael Gillen in the 1880 census had failed because of the common mistake of enumerating a stepchild with his stepfather’s surname.

Bridget Gray was enumerated in the 1900 census on East 46th Street with her daughter, Mary Gillen. She was listed as being born in Feb 1833. According to the census, Bridget emigrated in 1868 while her children Michael and Mary both recorded 1870. Bridget might have arrived first to earn money to bring her children over at a later time. 

She had delivered a total of 11 children and three were living in 1900. Since Michael and Mary were enumerated in 1900 it indicated that either Delia Gillen or Thomas Gray were dead.  It is unclear how many children were born to John Gillen in Ireland and how many were born to Patrick Gray in Ireland and/or America. It also stated that despite being a widow she had been married 31 years. The Grays might have married in 1869.

Checking the NYC death indexes again found that Bridget Gray died in 1903 and was buried at Calvary Cemetery in Woodside, Queens Co. Her death certificate listed that she was the daughter of Thomas Graney and Mary Comber. She had purchased the grave in 1889 to bury her husband, Patrick Gray. Their son Thomas was buried there also in 1899. His death certificate listed his mother by her married name, Bridget Gray. These were the only burials in this grave. It is unknown if any of Bridget’s other children were buried in New York.

The 1899 death certificate did not help clarify Bridget’s maiden name. Luckily, Michael’s American-born-half-brother had a birth certificate. Thomas Gray’s 1874 birth record listed his mother as Bridget Condrie and reported that he was her tenth child. She was 39-years-old. They lived at Denman Place near Courtland Avenue in Melrose. Melrose is located in the present day Bronx.

His baptismal certificate was found at St. Jerome parish in the present day Bronx. There were two parish churches geographically closer to their home but St. Jerome’s served Irish and German immigrants. Bridget’s maiden name was listed as Conway. The Catholic Church’s policy of issuing a certified transcription makes it difficult to definitively determine surnames since the researcher is unable to view the original handwriting and determine was the name Condry, Conry or Conway. Neither sponsor had a name that pointed to an obvious familial relationship. It also raised the question of why are there two maiden names? Conry, Condrie, Conway might be similar but are very different from Graney.

Naturalization Papers and Ship Lists

Trying to learn more about this family’s origins led to a check of the naturalization records of Patrick Gray and Michael Gillen. Naturalization papers from this period rarely reveal where in Ireland a person came from but it is prudent to search everything available to get as complete a picture as possible. Patrick declared his intent in 1872 in Westchester Co. and naturalized in 1874 in New York Co. Both times he resided in the Melrose section of the current day Bronx. The county boundaries changed but not the streets and buildings. 

Michael Gillen naturalized in 1885 in New York Co. He did not declare his intention apparently due to his arrival in the USA before age ten. He listed his date of birth as 10 Aug 1861 and arrival date as June 1870. These two specific dates proved to be illuminating. While they did not state where in Ireland he was born, they helped identify a research trail that would.

Previous checks of the passenger lists found nothing. No Bridget Gillen or Bridget Gray arriving in 1868. No Gillen children arriving in 1870 or June 1870. 

A renewed check of the passenger lists found a set of Gibian children; Mary, 10, Bridget, 9 and Michael, 7 arriving on 6 Jun 1870 with a 23-year-old, Thomas Graney from Queenstown, Ireland. The handwriting could be read as Gillian but the indexer did the best he could. The childrens’ ages are a bit off. Their 1880 census ages would make them 11, 10 and 9 in 1870 but in family history research one must never rely too heavily on the ages listed in census records and passenger lists. They are reliable as a whole but not infallible. This 6 Jun 1870 arrival date matched perfectly with Michael Gillen’s naturalization papers. If Bridget Gray’s 1903 death certificate correctly listed her maiden name as Graney, might this adult escort have been the childrens’ maternal uncle or a cousin?

Searching All Census Records

Manhattan questioned the federal census count in 1890. In the fall of 1890 NYC policeman conducted a second count. (In 1898 the 5 boroughs of New York City were united. Before then Manhattan and parts of the current Bronx comprised New York County and that alone was the City of New York.) These records provide only name, sex and age but are a wonderful tool with the loss of the 1890 federal census. 

It is highly unlikely that any urban police force would be allowed to conduct such a count in 2010 but fortunately for genealogists the NYPD was sent out in 1890. These films are available through the Family History Library in Salt Lake City as well as the Municipal Archives in New York City. They are not indexed but finding aids are available and easily utilized. A complete census for all blocks did not survive.

Bridget Gray was found on Second Ave. between East 41st and East 42ndStreets with her daughter, Mary Gillen and son, Thomas Gray. Blocks away at 315 East 54th Street, her son Michael Gillen, was enumerated with his wife, Annie, and their children; Maggie, 2 and Thomas 8-months. Thomas was the oldest of the seven surviving children. Maggie’s presence was a long awaited find. Family tradition preserved the names Agnes and Robert but not Maggie. 

Thoroughly Searching Shortened Lives

Maggie Gillen did not appear in the 1900 federal census and therefore had to be the 3rd lost child of Michael and Annie. Her death would have to appear in the death index. Maggie Gillen, age 4, died on 11 Nov 1892. She was buried at Calvary Cemetery. The cemetery disclosed that her mother purchased the grave shortly before Maggie’s birth to bury a 15-month-old, John Gillen. These were the only two burials in the grave. 

Therefore, Mary Agnes Gillen was not buried with them at Calvary. Upon further research it was discovered that the Jesuits ministered to Blackwell’s Island in the 19th century. The Jesuit parish, St. Ignatius Loyola, recorded her baptism at the chapel on Blackwell’s Island without a sponsor’s name on 24 Jul 1885. The parish secretary indicated that Mary Agnes might be buried at the Potter’s Field on Hart’s Island. Hart’s Island is also located in the East River to the north of Blackwell’s Island.

The New York City Municipal Archives has records of burials for the Potter’s Field.  Mary Agnes Gillen was buried on 18 Aug 1885. She was buried in Trench 111 Grave 823 and burial permit number 164. This island is not open to the public. It is open to family members who want to visit the graves and these records make finding a location feasible.

John’s death certificate mentioned he died at 237 East 45th Street. The building was occupied by 20 families and had 4 floors. The physician noted that the house was in a “very bad sanitary condition.” Notes such as these remind current researchers how far people have come from very meager beginnings.

St. Agnes was contacted again and revealed that Maggie Gillen was baptized there 21 Jun 1888. Her sponsors were named Philbin and Manning. No baptismal certificate has yet been found for John Gillen. (I recently learned that Michael Gillen was living at 868 Second Avenue; 20 AD; 12 ED between East 46th and East 47th Streets, 10017 in 1886 based on electoral voting lists. That is exactly where St. Boniface parish was in 1886. I sent a request for the missing baptism of John Gillen to Holy Family. Holy Family was not open in 1886 but currently covers the old territory of St. Boniface and keeps their registers. I received a PDF file today for the baptism of John Gillel(sic) son of Michael Gillel(sic) and Ann Feerick. Jerry O’Neil and Mary Reynolds were the sponsors. This is a great find that while not opening any new doors necessarily it provides full life details for a little boy that died very young. Perhaps, his godparents were cousins or neighbors in the old country. There is no mention of the name Robert so it remains unknown why that name was mentioned at the wake in 1953.) 

He did not have a birth certificate so it is uncertain whether Robert might be his middle name or a recollection error. Agnes was a middle name so it could be that Robert was too. John was the son of Michael and Annie Gillen.


Winning the Game of Solitaire Through Side Doors

St. Agnes verified that Michael and Annie had married there on 12 May 1884. The wedding date matched exactly with the 1900, 1910 and 1930 census questions regarding marriage. They had been married 16 years in June 1900 and 25 years in Apr 1910. The 1930 census correctly stated they had married at ages 22 and 19. 

The male witness was Mark Corrigan. This name sounded familiar. In 1900, the tenth Gillen child, Anna, had a baptismal sponsor named Mark Corrigan. This seemed to be too big of a coincidence. 

Checking the IGI records online, found the likely connection. Several children were born in Brooklyn to Mark Corrigan and Delia Gillen between 1885-1901. The census records from 1900-1930 showed that Delia was the right age to be Michael’s sister and had emigrated in 1870. This Delia Gillen Corrigan could be the missing sister. 

Delia Corrigan died in 1938 allowing the possibility that she was Aunt Delia that had visited after Annie died. Delia’s death certificate listed that her father was John Gillen and mother was Bridget Conry. Her obituary specifically mentioned Michael Gillen, brother, as a survivor. Aunt Delia had been found and definitively identified. No mention was made of her sister Mary Gillen so it was probable that she had died by 1938.

Unfortunately, making a connection for Delia back to Ireland proved fruitless. Delia had married Mark Corrigan c. 1885. No civil marriage record was recorded. NYC Catholic marriage records are often very difficult to find in this time period and often reveal the barest of details. 

Delia became a US citizen by marriage when Mark Corrigan naturalized in 1888. She never filed a petition for citizenship that in 1906 began to collect significant information on the petitioner’s birthplace and immigration.

Delia bore 9 children between 1885-1901 and few lived to adulthood. None of their baptismal or burial information was discovered. Costs to discover the names of baptismal sponsors and burial details were prohibitive. They were buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Brooklyn and likely baptized at St. Michael’s Church there based on their death certificates. Attempts to contact living descendants also were unproductive.

Mary Gillen became the last hope. In 1910, she lived in the same home, 317 East 46th St., where her mother died seven years earlier. The 1910 census showed that Mary was single and had three male boarders. A check of the marriage records did not find her. She was not at this address in the 1915 state census and could not be found in the 1920 federal census. 

It was hoped that Mary might have married after 1909 and filed a City Clerk marriage license. This document is similar to a marriage certificate but recorded by a different civil authority in NYC from 1908-the present. Neither the Department of Health nor the Office of the City Clerk had a marriage on file for this Mary Gillen. Since compliance with civil recording of marriages was complete at this time, it was determined not to search Catholic marriage records. Before 1910 though it is always prudent to consider that a Catholic marriage may have taken place but was not recorded with the city. 

This was the case in 1884 when Michael Gillen married. The Department of Health was not notified that his marriage had occurred. From 1853-1866 the Health Department kept civil marriage registers. From 1866-1888, the Health Department sent marriage certificates to Albany but maintained a dual recording in their own registers. From 1888-1937 the Department of Health received only certificates.  After 1937 they no longer handled any marriage records.

It is interesting to remember that from 1866-1888 a certificate and a ledger entry were recorded. These were created by the same office but in different penmanship. One set of records may have been better preserved and easier to read. The information kept was similar. 

In 1908, the City Clerk’s Office began to issue marriage licenses BEFORE the wedding took place. This placed the burden on the couple and not so much on the clergy. The clergy did have to return a copy of this record signed and certified after the ceremony. The information asked for the license was more in depth than the Department of Health certificates. One should search for both types of civil marriage record in the wedding took place in NYC between 1908-1937. 

IF Mary Gillen had married in the Catholic Church after 1909 she most likely would have had to provide her baptismal details to the priest at the wedding, which he would have recorded in the marriage register. These details would have revealed her place of origin in Ireland. 

Several Mary Gillen death citations were checked. Finally, her Dec 1910 death was discovered. The death certificate stated that her parents were John Gillen and Bridget Graney. 

It was confusing to have so many variants of Bridget Gillen Gray’s maiden name. In 1874 Thomas Gray’s birth and baptismal certificates listed Condrie and Conway. Death certificates in 1903 and 1910 for Bridget Gray and Mary Gillen listed Graney. In 1938 and 1944, Delia Corrigan’s and Michael Gillen’s death certificates stated Conry.

More confusing was the discovery that a man named Patrick Charles buried Mary Gillen in a plot that he had purchased just a few years earlier. No known connection could be made between these two. A scanning of the 1910 federal census entry answered all the questions. 

Patrick Charles was one of Mary Gillen’s boarders. It would be quite strange that a tenant would bury his landlady. Checking the IGI found that Patrick Charles might be more than a boarder to Mary Gillen.

Patrick Charles was born 16 Sep 1875 in Co. Galway to Aeneas Charles and Mary Greaney. Could they be first cousins? (In the 1905 New York State Census, the following was found after this article was originally published; 1905 NY State Census at 317 East 46th Street, AD 22 ED 16 Block A page 27
Gillon, Mary;  Head, white, female, 45, Ireland, 35 years in US, citizen, housework
Charles, Patrick; COUSIN, white, male, 25, Ireland, 3 years in US, alien, bartender. The answers are usually there if we continue to be patient and keep looking.)

Further checking found that there were 5 children born to this union between 1869-1877. Mary Charles’ maiden name went back and forth between Greaney and Conry in the birth records just like Bridget Gillen Gray’s name did in the US records. The civil marriage record for the Charles-Conry wedding listed Thomas Conry as the father of the bride. Bridget Gray’s father was named Thomas also. Were these women sisters? Since both were Thomas’ daughters, it made more sense that they were siblings than first cousins.

Heritage centers in Ireland have computerized many of the records across the country. Several of the counties now allow researchers to view their indexes at no cost on the Internet. Checking the Irish heritage records online found that the Charles’ were married at and baptized their children in Milltown Roman Catholic parish. These records began in the late 1850s. Milltown is not part of the western region of Connemara, but it is in County Galway. Mark Corrigan was from Milltown too. Annie Ferrick Gillen hailed from just over the county border in Ballinrobe, Co. Mayo.

Years earlier both Irish heritage centers for Galway had been contacted and the family informed that no record of Michael Gillen born 10 Aug 1861 to John Gillen and Bridget Conry/Greaney was found. A determined researcher checked it again online and was intrigued by the hit for Michael Gilleen, son of John, baptized at Milltown in 1861. 

Paying the fee opened the complete record and definitively answered the Gillen question. Michael Gilleen, of John Gilleen and Bridget Conry, was baptized at Milltown on 11 Aug 1861. The exact date of birth on his naturalization papers was 10 Aug 1861. This entry appeared perfect on every count. The spelling of Irish surnames in this period was not standardized so the extra “e” was of no consequence. Michael Gilleen’s godparents were Thomas Conry and Mary Conry. Could he be the gentleman that sailed to NYC in June 1870? Was she the woman that married Aeneas Charles in 1869?

This parish register was later borrowed from the Family History Library. It showed that Patrick Charles was baptized(born) 9 Sep 1875 (a week before his birth!) at Milltown. His birth certificate listed his mother as Mary Greaney while his baptismal entry listed her as Mary Conry. No indication has been found detailing that Conry and Greaney are the same name in Gaelic but clearly they are synonymous in the Milltown region or for this specific family.(I want to correct an error in the original article. Patrick Charles was baptized on 15 Sep 1875. The baptismal register recorded his date of birth as 9 Sep 1875. The civil birth register recorded 16 Sep 1875, which is erroneous if he was baptized on the 15th. Perhaps his mother changed the date to avoid a fine when she registered the birth on 13 Oct 1875.)

Another child of John Gillen and Bridget Conry was identified. James Gilleen was baptized 26 Sep 1859 at Milltown. His godparents were James Conry and Bridget Gilleen. 

From 1859 through 1944 Bridget and Mary had their maiden names listed on baptismal, birth, marriage and death certificates seventeen times. Bridget had 6 Conry or variants and 2 Graney listings. Mary had 4 Conry and 5 Greaney listings. 

Mary Conry/Greaney was the daughter of a servant Thomas at Ballymary townland near Milltown. Her possible sister Bridget’s death certificate listed her father as Thomas Graney and mother as Mary Comber. The exact relationship between Bridget and Mary and Thomas may never be known but Milltown is definitely where Michael Gillen hailed from in Ireland. That was the ultimate goal in all this research and is very satisfying. The hope is that visiting Milltown will answer the remaining questions regarding John Gillen’s death and surviving Gillen relations.