• About

Maher Matters

~ Ancestry Maher/Meagher/Meachair

Maher Matters

Category Archives: In Memoriam

Jane, Beyond the Veil

05 Sunday Mar 2023

Posted by Janet Maher in Dr. Jane Lyons, Famous Irish Individual, In Memoriam

≈ 15 Comments

Tags

Dr. Jane Lyons, Irish Genealogy

For almost seven months I have tried to write fully about the passing of the extremely special person, Dr. Jane Lyons. Perhaps my difficulty has been in part due to the fact that posting such on this blog would effectively close the parenthesis of our approximately 20-year-long energetic journey together. One morning at the beginning of February I woke from a fairy-tale like dream in which my soul-friend was cheerfully introducing me to her magical world in a beautiful place full of heart, creativity, love, and even, costume. Jane and I were sharing yet another adventure together, but unlike any we had in the past, and she wanted me to know she was deeply happy and fulfilled. That I know Jane died in her sleep on August 6, 2022, and has more recently assured me that she is at peace, I continue to try to write.

Owner of the formerly enormous website, FromIreland.net, Jane Lyons introduced herself at a conference eight years ago in this way: “…I am not an archeologist, I’m not an historian, I am a scientist and engineer who drifted into genealogy and gravestones back in 1996. In 1996 I began transcribing gravestones in County Laois and between 1996 and 1998 I transcribed, we’ll say, maybe two-thirds of every gravestone that was pre-1901…At the time I was a lecturer at UCD. By 2001 I opened up a website, and the website gets 1,000 visitors a day, minimum. I own a very large genealogy mail list, one of the largest in the world, and in the last few years I’ve discovered FaceBook, and I’m very noisy on that.” (Listen to her here.) In addition to the wealth of other forms of useful documentation about early places and snippets of Irish history from various historic documents, Jane had webpages of transcriptions for 122 graveyards at that point, and had taken about 200,000 photographs. Her website led me to her when I began my own research in 2001. Why was it that anything I keyword searched online kept dropping me into her site? After writing her a fan email, I joined her listserv and the rest is our own history. 

I am grateful to have been able to be an online observer of the beautiful Humanist Celebration of Life that Jane’s beloved children and friends created for her in Dublin on August 13. All details were heartfelt, embracing aspects of Jane’s life and passions. The altar made of her woven casket was surrounded with love and thoughtfulness, as her camera, her well-worn and constant boots, her dog’s leash, her garden flowers and other touches were reverently added to it in stages by the younger members of her family. Traditional flute, contemporary Leonard Cohen music and a tribute to her incredible work in saving and sharing Irish history that cannot be found in books honored her well. Through my tears I felt her smiling and approving, her love flowing over all present. Somehow this vicarious witnessing helped ease my sense of loss, though I could only own a fraction of that being felt by those who grew up with, through and around her.

Back in the days before the Internet as we now know it, before social media and all that has become, Jane and I were fairly constant companions in cyberspace through her online group, Y-IRL. There, she befriended and opened up her world to me while others in this virtual international community also began to help me “learn to learn” about Irish ancestral history, times and places. She and other members patiently shared insights that taught me by example how to conduct genealogical research. (Eventually I also took online courses, imagining I might even one day hang a shingle and change my profession, having fallen completely “down the rabbit hole”!)

We communicated “across the pond”, around the world, through the ether, while Jane generously orchestrated the gathering between strangers in a way and on a scale that I believe had never happened before and could not happen again. Pre-FaceBook or any of its offshoots, Jane’s listserv invented itself as its regular participants engaged in deep and thoughtful ways, sharing knowledge and opinions in an atmosphere of kindness and civility, in ways that made one feel that all could potentially become friends. In fact, those living in proximity to each other did arrange to gather occasionally at mutually agreed-upon places, dates and times, to enjoy conversing and eating together. I participated in some of these and arranged my own different kind in Connecticut, to gather together those with whom I was in regular contact regarding our common place-based research, so that we all could meet each other. (Thanks to the Naugatuck Historical Society for allowing large gatherings to happen twice, with great results!)

Jane Lyons drove endless miles throughout Ireland as she scoured long-ignored cemeteries, photographed and transcribed tombstones and shared the results publicly long before anyone had thought to do what would become an official effort, en masse, by the late 2000s. Jane had become a full and almost daily presence in my life into the mid 2000s. She so inspired me that by 2006 I had also begun a website of my Irish-focused efforts, posting transcriptions for important cemeteries in New Haven County where the earliest Irish-American settlers were buried. I hoped to create a bridge back to her research while seeking the correct locations for my own people. For a time, Jane and I acted as sympathetic parallels of each other.

Then, one day, Jane had a terrible accident that required she be kept in a coma for three weeks, a portion of her skull being kept alive within her body while the swelling in her head diminished. Her world-wide community was silenced in shock and fear, her heightened importance to everyone becoming realized starkly, acutely. When the day arrived that she posted online again—and all of us could finally let out our breaths—I announced to my husband, “We need to go to Ireland!” This, my/our second trip, was specifically in order to meet Jane. Upon return I began this blog. With each of my three subsequent pilgrimages to Ireland, seeing and spending extended time with Jane was an important part of the experience. That Jane also came to see me in America for the book release of my From the Old Sod to the Naugatuck Valley, became an expanded occasion for her to also visit some of the individuals and groups who were participants on her listserv. It was a thrilling full-circle time for everyone. Having picked her up at the airport at the beginning of her trip, she stayed with us where we were staying, we spent time with her in New England, then passed her on to make the circuit of gatherings in other places, then met up with her again at a gathering in Washington D.C. and brought her back to spend another week with my husband and me in Baltimore before we reluctantly brought her to the airport as she headed back to Ireland.

Though I can count the number of times we have physically been in the same place over the same extended times, each of those real-life connections were outsized in their importance and fullness, nurturing the mutual feeling that we had known each other since childhood and gone through decades of life together. Jane became one of the people in my life to whom I am permanently tethered by memory through places and chapters of time, and for whom the relationship required more engagement than emails. Perhaps our spirits were meant to meet and play roles in each other’s lives from the beginning. It may take a lifetime to get to find all such individuals, but Hallelujah for those of us fortunate to have found many of them! 

COVID’s arrival in 2019/2020 meant that my blog stopped being about research and scholarship about Ireland, which suddenly seemed inappropriate and irrelevant given the severity of Humanity’s frightening health crisis. Yet I never fully shut it down. As memories of Jane reel through my thoughts like still photographs in progression, I will close by offering a few images here, and sending love out to those who still feel her connection. Thank you, Jane, for giving so fully of yourself and for all the wonderful moments we shared. You will always live on in my heart!

©2023 Janet Maher / Sinéad Ni Mheachair

All Rights Reserved

Matty Maher: A Legend

14 Tuesday Jan 2020

Posted by Janet Maher in Famous Irish Individual, In Memoriam, Kilkenny Mahers, Matty Maher, McSorley's

≈ 2 Comments

“It’s not what you become in life but what you overcome.” (Matty Maher)

Bold in Danger, Cherished gift from a genealogy friend, ©2013 C.O’Donnell

The past year has been one of immense transition on levels beyond what any of us might have imagined. We continue to reel from the daily news in this ecological and political whirlwind. Many souls have left the planet before the fan regulating the health of humankind has been splattered beyond repair.

As my husband and I prepare to head north for the celebration of life for the passing of yet another dear longtime friend, I am grateful that my brother alerted me to the passing of one of the most legendary Mahers — Matty Maher (Matthew Dennis), owner of the 166 year old McSorley’s Old Ale House in New York City. New to Maher’s legend myself, articles immediately available from a quick search intrigued me, and Matty was easy to spot in photos via his undeniable Maher eyes! Learning about him has been a welcome distraction, and I cheer him from afar while his friends and family celebrate the great man at his funeral events today.

The story of Matty Maher brought back memories of the seventies and my first venture into New York City as a tentative adult with art peers on a field trip from college. In recommending places to visit, our teachers told us that by the end of the afternoon they could be found at a very cool Irish pub – McSorley’s – and we were welcome to stop by. Whether or not they knew that women were not yet (or only barely recently) welcome, at that point in time the mere thought was beyond possible for me. Shy as I was to even speak to my seemingly all powerful and quite intimidating male teachers in class, the odds of my showing up there were nil, bars not yet being part of my universe. The trip was wonderful, nonetheless, and through the years New York, and the world itself, became ever smaller and less terrifying to wander through as I have claimed various parts as homes along the way. The next time I’m in NYC I’ll be sure to have a pint in honor of this very important Maher at New York’s oldest bar (established in 1854). Maybe I’ll even get to meet and toast a Sláinte to one of his five daughters.

Several articles (linked here) round out the story of a man who was deeply loved over many decades and whose life was directed as if by the angels to immigrate from his Threecastles, Kilkenny, homeland and build a charmed life in America. (Of particular note is an essay from Kilkenny that includes a great photo of Matty Maher and a timeline history of McSorley’s.) Maher’s work from 1964 onward ultimately transformed a simple beer bar into a destination. His former employees shared loving memories of him, recalling his generosity of spirit. Michael Brannigan explained, “People’d always ask him, ‘You own the bar?’ ”…“He’d say, ‘No, you own the bar.’ The customers own it.”

My brother described McSorley’s as “a museum really…Every inch of the place is covered in pictures…and there’s only beer and only two choices—black or tan—and crackers and cheese and onions…that’s it…and shoes alleged of Joe Kennedy.” New York Times and New Yorker Magazine articles described a sawdusted floor and particulars among the treasure trove of memorabilia, including a collection of “holy relics” in the form of turkey wishbones left behind on an ancient chandelier by soldiers in World War I to safeguard their return before heading off to battle. According to Maher, the bones came to represent those who were lost in the war and thus treated reverentially. More were added in honor of individuals in relatively recent conflicts. For artists and writers in the fifties and sixties John McSorley’s “The Old House at Home” must have been akin to the Cedar Street Tavern, which was originally in Greenwich Village. John Sloan depicted a scene inside McSorley’s in a painting that had been exhibited in the Armory Show of 1913.

As the energy of this Matthew Maher, son of one other Patrick Maher, joins all that is good in the universe and those who knew him are filled with the joy of having shared his life, may the energy of our own friend, Noah Totten, find and join his like-energy, and may our world be strengthened by this powerful addition of spirit. “May it be its own force field / And dwell uniquely / Between the heart and the light.” (John O’Donohue)

[Update: 16 January 2020 — See @IrishTimesNews on Instagram for a great photograph by Lauren Crothers that captured the honor canopy of raised hurling sticks as pallbearers carried the great man’s coffin. The funeral of Matty Maher took place at Holy Trinity Church, Whitestone, New York.]

CITATIONS:

Dan Barry, The New York Times, “Dust Is Gone Above the Bar, But A Legend Still Dangles,” April 6, 2011

Chang, Sophia, Gothamist, “Longtime McSorley’s Owner Has Died, Bar Will Stay In the Family, ” January 13, 2020

Sean Keen, Kilkenny People, “Matty Maher Passed Away This Morning With His Family By His Side, Wonderful Kilkenny man who owned McSorleys in New York has passed away, Kilkenny and Irish People in New York Lose A Great Friend,” January 11, 2020

Joseph Mitchell, The New Yorker, ‘The Old House at Home,” April 14, 1940

McSorley’s Old Ale House, https://mcsorleysoldalehouse.nyc/

New York Historical Society Museum & Library, “The Armory Show at 100,” McSorley’s Bar, 1912

Elizabeth Nix, History Stories, “Why Were American Soldiers in WWI Called Doughboys?,” September 28, 2018

John O’Donohue, To Bless the Space Between Us, A Book of Blessings, Doubleday, 2008, pg. 18

Rikki Reyna and Clayton Guse, New York Daily News, “‘He was an absolute legend’: Owner of 166-year-old McSorley’s Old Ale House dies at 80,” January 12, 2020

Sam Roberts, The New York Times, “Matty Maher, an Institution at an Institution, McSorley’s, Dies at 80,” January 13, 2020

Lori Zimmer, Art Nerd New York | Los Angeles, “Cedar Tavern,” July 31, 2013

©2020 Janet Maher / Sinéad Ni Mheachair

Ruth Conlon McGarty, In Memoriam

16 Saturday Nov 2019

Posted by Janet Maher in Connecticut Irish, In Memoriam, Irish in Waterbury, Waterbury Irish: From the Emerald Isle to the Brass City

≈ 6 Comments

Ruth Conlon McGarty, 1928-2019

In the first week of August, my sweet friend, Ruth Conlon McGarty, crossed the veil at age ninety. Her home was that in which my brother and I spent our early years, part of my own memories, as was the Conlon family. My mother re-introduced me to Ruth before her own death when Ruth had invited us to lunch during one of my visits home. Ruth became close to me after her husband Lenny’s death, increasingly so as she began to turn the corner toward her last chapter. Ruth enthusiastically embraced her Irish lineage and shared many stories with me as I researched my two books. She invited and expected me to stay with her on several research trips, and later simply to visit as often as possible. We shared many lovely times chatting, catching up with news, eating together, talking about her life and mine, our memories, the Irish of Waterbury, and she cheered my ongoing efforts. She contributed four of her historic photographs to my second book, later donating several photographs to the archive collection of the Mattatuck Museum. I was privileged to be asked to give the eulogy at her funeral, some of which I excerpt and recompose here.

Ruth Conlan McGarty was like a version of Mary Tyler Moore in my mind. She was good, wholesome, smart, strong, elegant, classy, gracious, funny, cheerful. She was a professional, the executive-secretary to the vice-president of Connecticut Light & Power for forty years. A “people-person” with a fully open heart and open mind, Ruth embodied a brightness that made her seem much younger than she was.

Her beloved Lenny devotedly cared for his mother, as did Ruth her own parents. After Mrs. McGarty’s passing, she and Lenny were free to marry, and Ruth explained that he made sure they could do so in the way they wished. Frustrated with the restrictions at her now local parish, they spoke with the pastor of the Immaculate Conception who openly listened to their plan to simply show up in the side chapel with a couple of friends when they could get away from work.  Although he would have allowed this, he suggested they reconsider. Having waited so long to marry, with Ruth’s parents still alive, mightn’t Ray and Pauline appreciate the thrill of watching their daughter walk down the aisle? Agreeing to a version of that, Ruth and Lenny picked a convenient as-soon-as-possible date and invited friends to show up. Despite the relatively short notice the Immaculate was packed. Ruth explained that the party following at the Elks Club went on practically all night, though they slipped away, leaving their many friends who were thrilled to the core to continue celebrating Ruth and Lenny’s having finally tied the knot.

Corporal Lenny McGarty being pinned with the Bronze Star in World War II, 1945; image on page 126, Waterbury Irish: From the Emerald Isle to the Brass City, contributed by Ruth Conlon McGarty.

Ruth and Lenny were mad about each other and did everything together for thirty-five years, including taking many vacations, especially throughout Ireland. They were a solid team, always looking out for each other, happiest in each other’s company. Ruth recalled Lenny’s having set a habit in retirement that they would wake by seven o’clock every morning and be sure to do something out every day. They began the day by walking to Bunker Hill Pharmacy to buy the daily newspaper, then came home to read it and talk about whatever was going on over breakfast. Later they would engage with the outside world amid family or friends or in their favorite places. They loved to dine out, and fully enjoyed their well-earned quality time and experiences after less affluent years as children and young adults.

Having gone from a being a child in her parent’s home, to living with her parents in Bunker Hill, then becoming Lenny McGarty’s wife, Ruth had never experienced living alone until 2008. The loss of Lenny created an incredibly deep loneliness that accompanied her own declining health. She placed on the wall of her hallway the photograph I took of them not long before Lenny died and he remained in that way an image at the soul of their home. Thankfully, her wonderful neighbors, friends at church, and members of her extended family stepped in as Lenny would have hoped, each playing significant roles in their own ways. Ruth appreciated every inclusion, every invitation to a gathering, every meal, every performance at the Palace or Seven Angels Theatre and every attendance at a child’s event. She loved her nieces and nephews and spoke often about missing her two brothers and sister. She was devoted to her great grand-nephew whom she came to completely rely upon.

Reminiscent of like times with my own mother, visits to Ruth became part of any opportunity that led me to Connecticut. I, or my husband and I, would take her places she and Lenny used to go, or that I remembered and hadn’t seen in a while, or that none of us had ever visited before. We’d drive through Litchfield to enjoy the country roads and stop in at a potter’s studio, or watch the ducks near a restaurant we’d heard about, wander through peonies in bloom at a farm in Torrington, or walk throughout the downtown Green and Bunker Hill Park, both having been so much a part of my own young life. Ruth enjoyed re-visiting the church where she was married and finding the names of her and Lenny’s families inscribed on a plaque at the entrance. Sitting in her den at night in our respective two reclining chairs watching television with white wine and snacks before going to bed at ten or eleven, I would imagine her and Lenny having done this very thing, as the “two old crows” who lived there, like their lawn ornament proudly announced outside the front door.

I’ll never forget our watching various stages on cable of the lead-in to the 2016 presidential election and how refreshing it felt to me that we were politically aligned. When I would call she’d always ask how soon I could come back, and it saddened both of us that my living so far away (and my full time job) didn’t allow me to visit as often as either of us would have liked. I would make hopeful promises for several months ahead, when school was out or in-between semesters as possible.

Although I remain deeply connected to friends from elementary and high school, Ruth was the last familial-type of tie to my hometown. Her parents and my grandparents had been great friends, and my parents grew up and attended school near her and her siblings. My father was friends with her brothers. I recall the Conlons as part of my family’s sphere of connections and annual holiday visits when I was just a child, before my grandparents moved away. As her guest in my former home decades later I could be easily in the present with her. As I learned about her early life and common events through her perspective, she provided me the gift of being able to re-frame my own memories and release them. Through Ruth I was given an intimate insight into what it is like to grow old alone in a house after most everyone one loves has gone, along with one’s abilities and independence. With Ruth I could be a younger friend somewhat like a non-existent daughter for a period of time. As she began to decline her great grand-nephew and I got to know each other and his attention started to become ever more necessary.

I still like to think of Ruth rushing around, wanting to do or get something for me like a perfect hostess, and as one of her friends noted, with an ever-present bounce in her step. Ruth’s pure enjoyment of being with people is captured in my mind like a series of snapshots in which she is smiling, waving, laughing and quietly at peace in beautiful settings – all the many aspects of a person fully alive, fully herself. She made so many people happy through her presence that we who have loved her can now be happy for her. She is at rest, at peace, her spirit joined with that of her husband’s, her ancestors’ and everyone whose life she has touched.

It is fitting that the enormous number of people who came to the funeral home, representatives of organizations to which she belonged, friends of a lifetime, family from far and near, and those who drove to the church and the cemetery seemed more akin to what might be expected in honor of a much younger person or a local celebrity. That so many individuals showed up made me happy for her amid my sorrow imagining her last months. I thought of her smiling over every aspect of the day in which the fullness of her life was revealed.

Ruth remains within all who continue to remember her and hold her in our hearts along with all others who have come into ourselves. May we feel Ruth’s energy guiding and helping us spiritually as we continue to move forward in our own journeys, and may we face our own deaths as gracefully and nobly as she did.

©2019 Janet Maher / Sinéad Ni Mheachair

Alfred Edward Sullivan, In Memoriam

14 Thursday Nov 2019

Posted by Janet Maher in Connecticut Irish, In Memoriam, Irish in Waterbury, Waterbury Irish: From the Emerald Isle to the Brass City

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

In Memoram, Irish Ancestry

Alfred E. Sullivan, 1928-2019

This has been another tumultuous year globally, and I am surely not alone in having said farewell to important people within my personal sphere. One such loss was my cousin, Alfred Edward Sullivan, whom some knew as “Sully”. Al was a strong, enthusiastic and loving spirit who lived an emotionally rich and fully engaged life. His quick, irreverent wit and sharp memory accompanied a deep knowledge about a wide array of topics. At ninety years old, Al was my last family elder. Having served as the Connecticut clan’s official genealogist, Al shared information with me about our Sullivan family line which linked my Maher side of things from Tipperary, Laois and Kilkenny into County Kerry. My husband and I made a point to visit some of his favorite places on our first trip to “the Ol’ Sod”, though even into my fifth visit I was reticent to try to meet all the people Al had urged me to “look up”. Al’s parents and one set of my great grandparents are among the members of the Sullivan family depicted on page sixteen of Waterbury Irish: From the Emerald Isle to the Brass City.

A lifelong Democrat, Al Sullivan was proud to have been named after the first Catholic presidential candidate, Alfred E. Smith, upon his birth on Election Day in 1928. Trained as a medic, Al served post-World War II in the United States Army, primarily in Japan and the Philippines. A proud “Fighting Irish” alumnus of the University of Notre Dame, his degree in Commerce led to a productive career, extensive travel and a fully-enjoyed retirement. His devoted wife, children, grand and great-grandchildren, nieces, nephews, extended family and friends around the world are better for having been graced with his presence in our lives. We will always remember that conversations in person and on the phone with “Cuzzin” Al invariably included laughter and often invoked a forgiving roll of the eye. May Al Sullivan’s spirit continually remind us to take ourselves lightly and never forget the importance of caring about those we love.

©2019 Janet Maher / Sinéad Ni Mheachair

A. Michael Maher, Jr. (1929-2014)

30 Tuesday Dec 2014

Posted by Janet Maher in In Memoriam

≈ 5 Comments

Cemetery Angel #6 ©2013 Janet Maher

Cemetery Angel #6 ©2013 Janet Maher

It is with sadness for his passing and in gratitude for having been privileged to get to know him over a few years that I share a tribute to the life of Michael Maher. A largely attended and beautiful thanksgiving of his life was celebrated today in Annapolis, Maryland.

“Mike Maher, 85, was born in Houston, Texas to Alvin M. and Lucille Guillaume Maher. A graduate of Saint Thomas High School, he received a B.S. degree from Tulane University in physics and did graduate work at the University of Maryland. During the Korean War, he flew F-86s and F-94Cs in the 84th Fighter Squadron, Air Defense Command, United States Air Force.

He had an accomplished career applying science to real world problems. As a government contractor, he developed the phased radar system found in naval warships today. He played a major role in the design and manufacture of the Pegasus satellites which gathered crucial data for NASA’s moon missions. He later established a major environmental testing laboratory and in 1970 became its President and CEO. at the U.S. Department of Commerce he led the design of the Industrial Energy Conservation Program which assisted the manufacturing sector in improving its energy efficiency, reducing the nation’s dependency on foreign oil. At Potomac Electric Power Company, he designed and implemented a load control program for residential and commercial customers which contributed to the cancellation of a major new generating plant. In retirement, he consulted with the Electric Power Research Institute on the introduction of electric cars.

He lived life fully, enjoying good wine, Navy and Redskins football, ice cream, sailing, Dixieland jazz and the Big Band music of the 1940s, cherry pie, the newspaper comics, and lively political discussions. He was a skilled photographer. He read widely and was particularly interested in American and military history.

He was a past president of the Lindamoor Improvement Association, a member of the International Club of Annapolis, and an associate member of the Class of 1953, U.S.N.A.

He was a loving husband and his children, grandchildren and great grandchildren were his greatest pride and joy…”

May God hold him in the hollow of His hand.

 

©2014 Janet Maher / Sinéad Ni Mheachair

All Rights Reserved

Howard Eckels, Rest In Peace

21 Saturday Jul 2012

Posted by Janet Maher in Christ Church Cemetery found beneath Yale New Haven Hospital, Connecticut Irish, Early Irish Catholics in Connecticut, Howard Eckels, In Memoriam

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Christ Church, Forensic History Examination, New Haven, Yale University

Cleevaun, Dingle Peninsula ©2002 Janet Maher

(Revised July 27, 2012)

Last night I received some sad news. Howard Eckels, a man I had yet to meet, has passed on. An active email acquaintance with me, I had wondered why I had not heard back from him when I told him of my upcoming book signing in Naugatuck. Little did I know that he died one week after it, on June 28.

In August, 2011, Howie, as he called himself, contacted me out of the blue asking for my references regarding early burials in Saint Bernard Cemetery. I had written about this in a 2008 article published in the Connecticut Society of Genealogists journal and had many posted transcriptions on my 2006 web site, which has only recently come down. Eckels had been conducting what he termed a “forensic history examination” of Christ’s Church Cemetery. This first Catholic Church in New Haven was destroyed in a fire in June, 1848 in an episode that Reverend J.H. O’Donnell termed “a conflagration.” A second Catholic Church was created from the purchase and alteration of a former Congregationalist one, and it was consecrated as Saint Mary’s Church in December of that year. In 1851 the cornerstone was laid for the construction of the third Catholic church in New Haven, Saint Patrick’s, which was completed in 1867. On September 28, 1858 Saint John the Evangelist Parish was dedicated, having been built on the same spot as Christ’s Church. It was the first in America to have been designed after 11th and 12th century Irish churches.

In 1969 the site of the former Saint John’s Church was purchased by Yale New Haven Hospital, and since tombstones had been removed previously, by the late twentieth century no one knew that beneath the ground were bodies of early Catholic parishoners, buried between 1834 and 1853. (A few had still been buried there after Saint Bernard Cemetery was established in 1851, replacing Christ’s Church as New Haven’s Catholic cemetery.) In the long-standing tradition where cemeteries were on the grounds of churches, Eckels had discovered that there had been at least “602 burials, of which 40% were aged 5 or younger” around Christ Church. (In an interview he had also said 550 bodies.) When ground was broken in 2011 at Yale New Haven Hospital to expand its emergency room, skeletons were discovered and an important historic collaboration began.

Howie sent me his spread sheet of 608 burials, which cited the date of each death, the name of each person, their age at death and recorded cause of death, if possible, and he had planned to publish his findings in the New Haven Historical Society and Museum and the Godfrey Genealogical Library. Working with archeologists Nicholas Bellantoni, of the University of Connecticut and Gary Aronsen, of Yale University, who exhumed four skeletons, Eckels attempted to determine their identities. It was possible to take three dimensional scans using equipment at the new Quinnipiac University Medical School. “Two,” Eckels said, “were good enough for construction of [facial reconstruction] duplicates,” and genetic and DNA testing on the remains were also being done. Catholic Television and Radio did a taping for a documentary. I am including here two of three photos that he emailed me, which I have watermarked with his copyright.

Scanning a skull from Christ Church Cemetery ©2011 Howard Eckels

(Quoting from my own book) “Land was purchased on May 14, 1833, at the corner of York and Davenport streets upon which to build the wooden Gothic designed structure, Christ’s Church, for $3,000. It was considered ‘without exception the most beautiful little Gothic church in New England,’ but it was not without its difficulties. The first mass was held on May 8, 1834 in honor of the Catholic holy day, the Feast of the Ascension, with a large gathering of both Catholics and Protestants. Faulty craftsmanship in the construction of the gallery behind the altar resulted in its giving way, killing two people.” They were a Protestant man named Mr. Abraham Hardyear, of Orange, and his fourteen year old son, Abraham Lloyd Bryan. Mr. Eckels found that the two were included on his list of burials, where he placed the grandson’s age as between ten and fourteen.

Working to determine the identity of a skeleton from Christ Church Cemetery ©2011 Howard Eckels

According to Eckels, this was his seventh history, “and by far the biggest and most rewarding. The investigative technique is from over 40 years law enforcement experience.” I had looked forward to getting to know him in the future, as I have been able to do with so many individuals with whom I have built an email relationship over the years around our mutual interests in the early Irish settlers, their history, and evidence of their existence in New Haven county, Connecticut. It is to my sorrow that I post this information about Mr. Howard Eckels here, where I first saw his kind face and smiling eyes in his Middletown Press obituary.

Only sixty-eight years old, Mr. Eckels had lived in New Haven and Hamden, Connecticut, served in the U.S. Army National Guard Military Police between 1963 and 1969, worked for Southern New England Telephone Company and was a Connecticut State Police Trooper for twenty-seven years. For ten years he was a U.S. Marshal and he also owned the Howard Pool Service and Enterweb Internet Services. His obituary also noted him as having contributed photographs to several local papers and that he was a member of the North Haven Historical Society. Some of his Irish family history that he shared with me included Dwyers and McGraths who were in Connecticut in 1800 working on the Farmington Canal project. He had traced his (Presbyterian) Eckels to Belfast before 1750 and thought that his family likely had a Norman background in Scotland and had been involved in the Battle of Hastings. He said, “My family may have been one of those visitors that came and never went home.”

I offer my sincere condolences to his family, and thank him, across the veil, for having reached out to me. I will look forward to seeing the results of his work that others, no doubt, will see through to fruition.

References:

“Howard Eckels,” The Middletown Press, June 30, 2012, http://www.legacy.com.

Howard Eckels emails, August 12, 2011 – March 17, 2012.

Maher, Janet, From the Old Sod to the Naugatuck Valley: Early Irish Catholics in New Haven County, Connecticut, Baltimore, MD: Apprentice House, 2012.

Maher, Janet, The Irish Catholic Community of the Naugatuck Valley, Connecticut, With Selected Tombstone Transcriptions, Parts I and II, The Connecticut Nutmegger, December, 2008, Glastonbury, CT: Connecticut Society of Genealogists, pp. 211-223.

Molloy, Leo Thomas, compiler, Tercentenary Pictorial History of the Lower Naugatuck Valley, on the occasion of the 300th anniversary of the settlement of Connecticut, Containing a history of Derby, Ansonia, Shelton, Seymour, A Chronical of Progress and Achievement of the Several Cities and Towns, Ansonia, Connecticut: Press of the Emerson Bros., Inc., 1935.

O’Donnell, Rev. James H., History of the Diocese of Hartford, Boston: MA, The D.H. Hurd Co., 1900.

Weisberg, Julie, “Long-Forgotten Cemetery Lies Beneath Yale New Haven Hospital,” East Haven Patch, July 30, 2011, http://branford.patch.com/articles/long-forgotten-cemetery-lies-beneath-yale-new-haven-hosptial. (Note, re “hospital,” spelling is as it is on URL.)

©2012 Janet Maher/Sinéad Ní Mheachair

All Rights Reserved

Pages

  • About

Blog Stats

  • 89,519 hits

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 226 other subscribers

Archives

Recent Posts

  • Jane, Beyond the Veil
  • Addendum and Transition
  • Earth Day in a Pandemic
  • Shine A Light
  • It’s Mask-Making Time

Top Posts & Pages

  • O'Meagher Castles
  • About
  • Ikerrin Origins
  • Ancient Ireland
  • Pilgrimage to Ireland, Part 4: Roscrea & Ikerrin, Tipperary

From the Old Sod to the Naugatuck Valley

From the Old Sod to the Naugatuck Valley

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Follow Following
    • Maher Matters
    • Join 226 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Maher Matters
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar