LANARK COUNTY ORIGINS My ancestors, their friends, neighbours and associates.
Matches 701 to 750 of 48,188
# | Notes | Linked to |
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701 | (Research):Green: Foundry Moulder | Easton, George (I3782)
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702 | (Research):Green: Hardware Manager Cochrane Dunlop Hardware, ON and SK 1938-1979 Canadian Armed Forces (Infantry) 1943-1945 Retired to Sidney, BC 1979 | Green, Fredrick Walter (I2637)
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703 | (Research):Green: has birth in Dalhousie Twp; Easton Papers note has her buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Perth. | Easton, Blanche Elliott (I2642)
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704 | (Research):Green: Mining Engineer | Airth, Murray Wright (I2668)
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705 | (Research):Green: P Eng Bachelor of Applied Science/Professional Engineer, University of Toronto 1938 PE MacLeod Cockshutt mine - Geraldton, ON Publisher Emeritus, the Northern Miner, Toronto, ON 1992: Living in Toronto | Brown, Maurice Russell (I3804)
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706 | (Research):Green: Pharmacist | Kells, Harry Lee (I2664)
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707 | (Research):Green: PhD 1914 BA Queen's University, Kingston ON 1941 Doctor of Pedagogy, University of Toronto 1930-1943 Principal of Fort William Vocational School, Fort William, ON 1906 Wingham, ON, Junior Clerk on opening of CIBC | Green, Walter Henry Roy (I2636)
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708 | (Research):Green: Railway Engineer Easton papers suggest burial in Elmwood Cemetery Perth, ON | Grant, Lindsay Duncan (I2643)
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709 | (Research):Green: Ruby raised two children after the divorce in 1953 | Bass, Ruby (I3823)
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710 | (Research):Green: Secretary | McLeod, Jean Ruth (I2651)
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711 | (Research):Green: Secretary, Insurance Agency to 1939; Cochrane Dunlop Hardware 1958-1967 | Finlay, Ruby Alberta (I3787)
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712 | (Research):Green: Teacher | Spence, Philip Harron (I2620)
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713 | (Research):GREINHORN JAMES WILLIAM GREINHORN/NANS ROBISON FR584 (FR584) M 28/02/1663 479/ 20 406 Falkirk | Miller, Nanes (I34096)
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714 | (Research):Grudy? born 1649 | Grundy, Elizabeth (I24277)
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715 | (Research):Had 5 children, 2 living in 1900 | Miller, Elizabeth J. "Lizzie" (I330)
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716 | (Research):Had 5 sons and at least one daughter. First son was Mungo (aka Kentigern or Quentin). Second son was Adam. Also had a son named James, who was killed in 1592, the same year as his death. His second wife, Elizabeth (sometimes Isabella) Galbraith, feuded with her husband's heirs. Her clan joined in her feud and came and attacked the Lindsays, killing Robert Galbraith (her stepson). This got the Galbraith clan outlawed. Last Changed: March 25, 2021 D Diane Calhoun | Lindsay, John 9th Lord of Bonhill (I70198)
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717 | (Research):Had a family of 11. On the 1881 census she is 61 years old. The following information comes from Edith Beaulieu: " They lived in North Sherbrooke, Con 2, Lot 14 in the 1861 census. | Crawford, Janet "Jessie" (I6538)
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718 | (Research):Had large family with two daughters | McKay, George (I6718)
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719 | (Research):Had various enterprixes and investments prior to his retirement. | Crooks, Thomas George (I12133)
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720 | (Research):Harper, ON | Gilmour, James (I9165)
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721 | (Research):Harry Mather Gender Male Death Date 23 Dec 2012 Obituary Date 27 Dec 2012 Newspaper Place Ottawa, Ontario, Canada Spouse Marion Dodds Parents Isabella (Ashby) and John C. Mather and Children Douglas (Nancy), Dennis (Mary Jo) and Brenda (Gary) Kirkham Siblings Gordon (Jean) of Toronto and the late John (Ivey) and Evelyn (Ernie) Miller; Norman and Charles Dodds; Viola (George) Allan and Myrtle (Percy) Lake | Mather, Harry Clark (I1842)
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722 | (Research):Hazel Barber and Eli Rekedal had no children. Eli worked at crop spraying and at the frozen locker in Vesta. When Bob's wife Gwen passed away, Hazel and her sister Frances, together with their parents, assisted with the care of Bob's children. | Barber, Hazel Gertrude (I9415)
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723 | (Research):Hazel Dean? | Milner, Hazel Deane (I14433)
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724 | (Research):He travelled with the Glasgow Trongate Emigration Society in 1821 on the David of London. Carol Bennett could not find any further trace of him. May not belong to this family. | Baird, John (I27964)
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725 | (Research):He was born at Bathgate Castle, West Lothian, Scotland, the eldest son and heir of James Stewart, 5th High Steward of Scotland (c. 1260-1309) by his third wife Giles (Latinised to Egidia) de Burgh, a daughter of the Irish nobleman Walter de Burgh, 1st Earl of Ulster. At the age of 21 Walter fought against the English at the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314 where according to some sources, together with Douglas he commanded the left wing of the Scots' army, but according to other sources was (due to his youth and inexperience) merely the nominal leader of one of the four (or three) Scottish schiltrons, the effective leader being his cousin James Douglas, Lord of Douglas. For his services at Bannockburn, Walter was appointed Warden of the Western Marches and was rewarded with a grant of the lands of Largs, which had been forfeited by King John Balliol. In 1316 Stewart donated those lands to Paisley Abbey. Following the liberation of King Robert the Bruce's wife, Elizabeth de Burgh, and daughter, Marjorie, from their long captivity in England in October 1314, Walter the High Steward was sent to receive them at the Anglo-Scottish Border and conduct them back to the Scottish royal court. Soon after, in 1315, he married Marjorie, receiving the Barony of Bathgate in Linlithgowshire as part of his wife's dowry. During the absence of King Robert the Bruce in Ireland, Walter the High Steward and Sir James Douglas managed government affairs and spent much time defending the Scottish Borders. Upon the capture of Berwick-upon-Tweed from the English in 1318 he took command of the town which subsequently on 24 July 1319 was besieged by King Edward II of England. Several of the siege engines were destroyed by the Scots' garrison whereupon Walter the Steward suddenly rushed in force from the walled town to drive off the enemy. In 1322, with Douglas and Thomas Randolph, he made an attempt to surprise the English king at Byland Abbey, near Malton in Yorkshire, but Edward escaped, pursued towards York by Walter the Steward and 500 horsemen. Around 1320/26, Walter, Steward of Scotland, granted by charter to John St. Clair, his valet, the lands of Maxton, Roxburghshire, one of the witnesses being Roberto de Lauwedir tunc justiciario Laudonie ("Robert de Lauder, then Justiciar of Lothian"). He married twice: Firstly in 1315 to Princess Marjorie, the only daughter of King Robert I of Scotland by his first wife Isabella of Mar. Marjorie died in March 1316 giving birth to their only child: King Robert II of Scotland (born 1316-died 1390), the first monarch of the House of Stewart who reigned as King of Scotland from 1371 to his death in 1390. Secondly he married Isabel de Graham, believed to have been a daughter of Sir John Graham of Abercorn, by whom he had three further children: John Stewart of Ralston. Sir Andrew Stewart, knight. Egidia Stewart, who married three times: firstly to Sir James Lindsay of Crawford Castle; secondly to Sir Hugh Eglinton; and thirdly to Sir James Douglas of Dalkeith. He died on 9 April 1327 at Bathgate Castle and was buried in the Abbey Church of Paisley, alongside his first wife, Marjorie Bruce, and his five High Steward ancestors. A memorial on the wall of the Abbey is inscribed as follows: In everlasting memory of the High Stewards of Scotland. Here rest their bodies where stood the high altar of this Abbey Church of Paisley. | Stewart, Walter 6th High Steward of Scotland (I70241)
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726 | (Research):Headstone Highland Cemetery, Dalhousie Twp indicates that Margaret Crampton was married to John Poole, and that John was also married to a Cunningham. Hwever dates fit with William H. not John. | Crampton, Margaret Minerva (I3493)
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727 | (Research):Headstone is out a year 1866 | Graham, John James (I4750)
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728 | (Research):Headstone seems to be out a year.1874 | McIntosh, Henrietta Minerva (I4751)
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729 | (Research):Helen Gourley Miller may have been a twin but no batismal record could be found to verify this. She was baptised in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Lanark Ontario and this the source indicated for the following information. Notes were found to link Blair Gourlay Miller #4081 in my Legacy database indicating his name was found in a microfilm circa 1970s, listing him as a child present at the time of Helen's death in 1950. He does not appear in the 1852 census so if he was not a stillborn or childhood death, he may have been adopted by another family member as were other children in the family e.g. John Mason Miller #335 by Janet Miller #20 and Robert Hendry Boyle and Jane Eliza Miller and Andrew Burns Miller #825 by George Miller #27 and Helen Mason. For the moment I have unlinked him from the family of Thomas Miller #22 until further proof can be found. 8 Apr 2018 Search added to to do list | Miller, Helen Gourley "Ella" (I294)
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730 | (Research):Helen Maxwell is recorded as the wife of Thomas who settled in Lanark Township | Dods, Thomas (I22351)
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731 | (Research):Hello there - hope you don't mind my getting in touch - my name is Wendy Skirrow and I am researching my mother's family line. My 4 x Great Grandfather was Aaron Tuck born in Congham Norfolk in 1797. He was "base born" (ie no father recorded) in the parish register but was the son of Elizabeth Tuck. Elizabeth married Edward Andrews of Hingham in February 1798 (2 months later) leading me to speculate that Edward may have been Aaron's father. I see that you too have been researching the Andrews family and that I am DNA related to DD who's DNA test you administer. Would it be possible to check if DD is related to Edward Andrews? Any help you can give would be much appreciated! Many thanks. Wendy. | Andrews, Edward D. (I28098)
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732 | (Research):Henry and Lucy lost a set of twins in 1776 and I believe adopted the twins John and William, born out of wedlock to Elizabeth 1776,(#30143) daughter of , who later married William Stred. | Ashby, Henry (I30133)
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733 | (Research):Her death record states that she was born at "Whitelea" in Scotland. William, her brother writes that he will name his new property "Whitelea" in the letter to his father. | Miller, Margaret Ann (I31)
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734 | (Research):Her father Robert Lawson was President of the Middleville and the Lanark Township Agricultural Societies from 1885 '96 1889 giving up the post when he went to Pilot Mound Marion's 2 brothers were fruit farmers. Marion goes with her parents Robert Lawson and Lilly Campbell and her siblings to Pilot Mound. They go in a group with others from Middleville. Actually, Marion returns to Middleville to get her grandfather my 3 great blood Uncle when he is upwards of 80 years of age and widowed. They take him to Pilot Mound and he dies there. The transcription in Lanark is all TRUE BULL. My one Lawson cousin in the United States belongs directly to this family and another one of my Mitchell cousins who lives in Edmonton is also connected to this family as well. | Lawson, Marion Gemmill (I9937)
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735 | (Research):Her marriage to Oldaker of Craig Alaska while she was in Rake Alaska | Lambert, Muriette (I7853)
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736 | (Research):Hi my Great Great Great paternal Grandmother was Catharine Boyle born about 1800 probably in County Antrim. She was married to a Thomas McBride. She emigrated to Ontario Canada about 1871 from Campbeltown Scotland. I would love to find out more about her earlier life, when where she was born and her immediate family. Any help would be very much appreciated from a novice in Irish family history. | Boyle, Cathrine (I5986)
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737 | (Research):Historical and genealogical record of the first settlers of Colchester County, down to the present time DetailRelatedSource Description Section: Chapter V Source Information Ancestry.com. Historical and genealogical record of the first settlers of Colchester County, down to the present time [database on-line]. Provo, UT: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005. Original data:Miller, Thomas,. Historical and genealogical record of the first settlers of Colchester County, down to the present time. Halifax, N.S.: A. & W. MacKinlay, 1873. David Archibald, Esq., was the eldest of four brothers who settled in Truro. They arrived in Nova Scotia with a number of others on the 13th day of December 1762. He was a leading man in society; was the first Justice of the Peace who was settled in Truro; was first who represented Truro Township in Parliament. He first took his seat June 5th, 1766. His name stands first in the Grant of said Township, also to the call given the Rev. Daniel Cook, which was dated September 13th, 1770. His name is also at the head of the list of elders of the Presbyterian congregation. These were chosen in the summer of 1770. He had his front lands on the north side of Salmon River. His house stood near George McLeod's, on what is called Bible Hill. At one time a thief was brought before him for trial, and the sentence was, "That the thief should be tied to a cart and driven from the Hill across the River, down round the Parade, and back to the Hill again; and that the driver should use the whip more freely on the thief than on the horse. Mr. Archibald was born in Londonderry, Ireland, September 20th, 1717. Elizabeth Elliott, his wife, was born June 10th, 1720. They were married May 19th, 1741. He died about 1795. His wife died October 19th, 1791, aged seventy-one years. | Elliott, Elizabeth (I53286)
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738 | (Research):Home at time of baptism was Lanark C6 L4. | Miller, John James (I6473)
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739 | (Research):Houston McMann Forgan Hood Jan 2017 ancestry tree by RonnieHouston74 'goes away back' | White, Margaret (I6004)
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740 | (Research):Howard and Marilyn live in old family farm house with walls 18" thick. Perth (on the Scotch line). 4 children | Dodds, Howard Edwin (I8260)
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741 | (Research):http://www.canadianheadstones.com/qc/view.php?id=136973 | Douglas, Walter (I32917)
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742 | (Research):http://www.faysgenealogy.com/pedigree.php?personID=I44476&tree=BenJohn Jane Boyd 1813-1889 m John Wright 1809-1898 (Renfrew County) son Samuel Wright 11 Mar 1832, Ramsay Twp married Mary Boyd c Mar 1833 Lanark Co. d. Westmeath Twp, Renfrew, b. Beachburg | Boyd, Jane (I21913)
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743 | (Research):http://www.faysgenealogy.com/pedigree.php?personID=I44476&tree=BenJohn | Boyd, Jane (I21933)
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744 | (Research):http://www.marmorahistory.ca/aunger | Aunger, Mary Jane (I9745)
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745 | (Research):http://www.yclc.ca/indexz.html the Halpennys, the Chamneys, the James, the Hopkins, the Codds, the Twamleys, the Jacksons, the Dowdalls had all been members of a single (Church of Ireland i.e. Anglican) church in Ireland - St. Michael's Church in Aghold Parish in Wicklow County near the villages of Shillelagh and Coolkenno, and the town of Tullow just across the County Carlow border. To this day, St. Michael's church ministers to members of these same families - who at the turn of the nineteenth century were served by Rector - James McGhee. Yet, the family members who came between 1820 and 1823 had largely become Wesleyan Methodists. Records of St. Michael's are, unfortunately, partial, and in some cases - missing - but they often mention some of the above-named emigrants specifically - and while there are no apparent Boyds, McCreerys or McGees - who were said to have come from Armagh - clearly the Lanark County community had been laergely built around these former members of St. Michael's - in Wicklow. To the right is a painting I did of St. Michael's Church as it might have looked when my ancestors attended here in the early 19th Century. Below is one of several pages which list, among others, the families who emigrated. On this fascinating (to me) page we see the marriage of Edward Chamney to Jane Twamley in 1762, the baptism of their son, John a year later and the baptism of Lancelot and Abigail Jackson's daughter Margaret. We also see a plethora of Codds , Chamneys, Twamleys and Halpennys, whose families had been caught up in the Irish Rebellion of 1798. Rector James McGhee had, in 1798, led a valiant defense of the embattled Protestant community, a Captain Chamney had lost his life alongside Halpennys, Codds and Twamleys - who had also died in the fighting. A one-page extract naming Codds and Twamleys appears below. Further records from this rather large collection can be perused at: http://www.halpenny.net/general/aghold.html | Halpenny, John B. (I9889)
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746 | (Research):http://www.yclc.ca/indexz.html Thomas Codd (Coad) (1773-1852)** came to Canada in 1820 with his wife LADY Elizabeth (nee Twamley (1774 or 1778 -1839) from Corwick Lowhelem*. Their offspring - the 2nd generation Codes who came to Boyd's Settlement were George, Richard, Thomas, Abraham, Rachel and James. Abraham later moved to North Dakota and James to Saginaw, Michigan. The others remained in the Boyd's Settlement community and latterly at Kitley Twp. until the late 1840's to early 1850's when George and Richard moved their families to Trowbidge in Huron County and East Wawanosh in Western Ontario respectively. The elder Thomas Codd and his son Richard, changed their name to Coad in the late 1840s, and moved to Kitley Twp. to be with their Coad kin. The reason for the name change has remained a well-kept secret. George Code (b. 1800 at Croneleagh Hill, Wicklow - granted Lanark Con. XII- Lot 4E) married Pearl Boyd (daughter of Samuel Boyd - the original settler who was granted Con. XII Lot 2W.) Thomas Sr. received Con. XII Lot 4W. Daughter Rachel Code married Thomas Jackson*** (Lanark Township Con XII Lot 2E) who came with Lancelot Jackson (Con. XII Lot 1E) in 1820. Thomas Code b. 1807 stayed on the homestead Con. XII Lot. 4W (of which I painted a picture when I was 16) and married Mary Jane James and had 7 children by his first marriage - William, James, Rachel, Ann, Eliza Mary and Letitia. After Mary Jane died, Thomas Code remarried Mary (Price or Pryce) with whom he had 10 more children - Harriet (m. an Agnew) Thomas (m. Mary Willows - the Willows owned the property to the south of Thomas' farm - Lanark XII Lot 3) Alicia (who married William James McCreery) John, Margaret ( who married John McCreery), Sarah, Albert and Abraham - 17 children in all. Margaret Code McCreary was my great grandmother. ** Thomas Code, b. 1773, Munahullen, Aghowle Parish, Shillelagh Barony, Co. Wicklow, Ireland, d. July 23, 1852, Lanark Twp, Lanark Co., Ontario, Canada, m. Elizabeth Twamley in Ireland before 1800. *** Thomas Jackson, b. 1798, Tullow, Co. Carlow., Ireland, d. August 13, 1881 Lanark Twp., Lanark Co., Ontario, Canada, m. Rachel Code January 1, 1821 in St. James Church, Perth, Lanark Co., Ontario, Canada.? Children are: Elizabeth, Ellen (Eleanor), John, Abraham, Thomas, Leticia and Mary. The Codd/Code Connection My ancestral Codd family had come out in 1820 at the same time as Samuel Boyd - and later became Codes and Coads. While detailed suggestions of a community's origins are often lost to "official" records, my great aunt, Laura (McCreary) Ferrill (who 's buried at Boyd's) as an amateur historian put together much of the ancient Codd family tree data before such practices were common. She records the histories of the Codds who also arrived in 1820 and who later married into the McCreery family. The Codd (or Code) family came to Wicklow County from the "Barony of Forth" County Wexford (17th century). Their origin was English - and ultimately Anglo-Norman - coming over from Normandy with William the Conqueror, and arriving in Ireland at Castletown in Wexford with Strongbow in 1190 as landed gentry. There is reference to Lake of Lady's Island as "once in four or five years opened evacuating itself into the sea - a passage cut by Squire Codde of Castletown (on the east coast of Ireland in Wexford) ."Squire John Codde is mentioned in the parish register of Wexford. Anne Codde of Castletown married a Reverend Thomas Bunbury of Balesker in 1668. Jane Codde married Thos. Richards Esq. of "The Park" and later Rathaspec. Loftus Codde of Castletown deposited a will in 1696 at Emiscarthy (Enniscorthy). These Norman Coddes were Roman Catholic - and only later families became Protestant. They could not have come alone. Emigrant settlers travelled in groups. Henry Hammond, whose wife was a Boyd was there in August 1820, and I suspect at least two other August '20 settlers - John Conn, and William Brown and perhaps even John Totton - may have come from Armagh. Andrew Stephenson (or Stevenson) also married to a Boyd, would join them in 1824. From Aghold Parish in 1820 there were Thomas Codd, Edward Hopkins, Thomas and Lancelot Jackson, Henry Martin, Robert and Samuel Wellwood, and John Poole - joined by 1822 by John Warren, George Codd, William Dowdall and Charles and Fosse Sterne. We know little about the early settlers except that the Boyds were Wesleyan Methodists (Samuel was a Sunday School teacher in Ireland) - and that John Wesley had paid several visits to Portadown in Armagh between 1767 and 1785, attracting a large following there. Many, but not all of the Aghold, Wicklow group were Methodists as well. We remain uncertain of the exact location of the origins of the Armagh emigrations - except that the earliest - the Boyds the Hammonds, the Stephansons were from the Keady area. County Armagh occupies a small area - 30 miles from north to south and 15 miles from east to west. While one is tempted to group the Parishes of Tynan, Derrynoose and Keady (surrounding the town of Keady) - and perhaps Newtownhamilton - as separate from the parishes of Mullaghbrack and Loughgilly (surrounding the town of Markethill), such a grouping is arbitrary. The Parish of Drumcree, to the north contains the town of Portadown -with a large Methodist population around the time of emigration (1820s). The earliest (1820-22) settlers were definitely from the Keady area. For a detailed analysis of the possible origins of the Armagh emigrants to Lanark County | Code, Thomas Sr. (I21516)
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747 | (Research):https://catalogue.nli.ie/Search/Results?lookfor=Poole%2C+wexford&type=AllFields&limit=20 Journal of Jacob Poole, a member of the Society of Friends in Co. Wexford, including discussions of antiquarian and religious topics, 1788-1827. Manuscript Main Creator: Poole, Jacob, 1774-1827 Language: English Published / Created 1788-1827. Notes Physical description: 1 item (1 journal vol). Subjects: "...Society of Friends -- Ireland -- Wexford (County)..." Portion of a commonplace book (pages 239-284 only), relating to the Society of Friends, kept by Jacob Poole of Co. Wexford, [ca. 1815-1820]. Manuscript Main Creator: Poole, Jacob, 1774-1827 Language: English Published / Created [ca. 1815-1820]. Notes Physical description: 1 item (1 commonplace book). Subjects: "...Society of Friends -- Ireland -- Wexford (County)..." Extracts made by Jacob Poole from the minutes of the County Wexford monthly meetings of the Society of Friends, 1777-1779 with associated later material, 1777-1785. Manuscript Main Creator: Poole, Jacob, 1774-1827 Language: English Published / Created 1777-1785. Subjects: "...Society of Friends -- Ireland -- Wexford (County)..." | Poole, Jacob (I24317)
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748 | (Research):https://robertnreynolds.weebly.com/park-family-pioneers.html https://www.scribd.com/doc/64038298/james-john-louisa-mary-ann-for-newel-sept-2011?secret_password=2i0bsgrqp146ki815dzp#download | Park, James II (I29891)
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749 | (Research):https://search.ancestry.ca/search/db.aspx?dbid=3709 Daniel Whyte Canada, Immigration and Settlement Correspondence and Lists, 1817-1896 Description: (Volume 015) North America English and Scottish Applicants; Offices and Individuals, 1827 Source Information Ancestry.com. Canada, Immigration and Settlement Correspondence and Lists, 1817-1896 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2013. Resident year 1827 Springbank Daniel Whyte, labourer, 12 souls, 9 between 0-10, 3 between 10-16 | Whyte, Daniel (I12408)
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750 | (Research):https://titheapplotmentbooks.nationalarchives.ie/ PooleJohnOldrossOldrossWexford1826 BOOKS AuthorTitlePublisherPlaceDateCommentSample refSample location ffolliott RosemaryPollet virtus : being, in particular an account of the Pooles of Mayfield, Co. Cork, and including accounts of the many families with whom they were connectedRosemary Poole FfolliottLimerick1956349 p.Ir 9292 p 5National Library of Ireland Many of these families sent members to Canada, starting in the 1817-1820 time period. They were able to do so because the British government assisted families by paying their passage to Canada, and by setting them up with the essentials of homesteading when they reached Canada. To be considered for such assistance, aspiring emigrants were placed on a list about 1817. Persons on this list were volunteering to be transported to Canada. Ernest Miller shared with Herb Norry: John, b. 1760 had 10 children found to be erroneous - actual date 1749 William Rev Jacob Thomas John, Ann Frizelle Rev George Margaret Sarah Ann An Earlier Generation: Was John Sr. a brother of Elizabeth b. c1750 who married Peter Hornick in 1777 in Old Ross? If so, he moved to Old Ross from Gorey, Wexford with his parents around 1750. He had a farm and store across the road from the church in Old Ross. Ann Poole Tully's obituary suggests that her parents came to Canada with them. | Poole, John (I3436)
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