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Category Archives: Tombstone Transcriptions

Art & Science in Ireland!

12 Sunday May 2019

Posted by Janet Maher in Art in Ireland, Connecticut Irish, County Clare, Ireland Images, Ireland Pilgrimage, Mahers, Tombstone Transcriptions

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Art & Science Collaboration, Burren College of Art, Ireland Study Abroad

It is with excited anticipation that my friend and I are now preparing our Loyola University Maryland courses for a paired Art and Science experience in County Clare, Ireland. Our students and we will be at the Burren College of Art from the end of May through the end of June! We will use Instagram primarily to post aspects we wish to share. I intend to also post here, hoping that those who follow this blog will find the images and text to be interesting, even if not directly Maher-related. Looking through digital photographs from my artist residency three years ago at the College, I found two of Maher graves at Corcomroe Abbey (above). Maher references never fail to find me in my extensive journeys within Ireland and Connecticut. Sometimes a hovering spot appears in an image, as on the Patrick Maher grave here. Perhaps I’m superstitious, but I interpret this phenomenon as a spirit visitation, making its support of my continued search for illusive answers known!

That the rabbit hole of my Irish research and in-depth genealogy work since 2006 has brought me to this point in time feels astonishing. The many years of following my instincts as an artist, continually evolving my teaching, and allowing myself to veer onto a path of research that seemed (to some) to have led my decades of artwork trajectory astray has beautifully come full circle to the present! This new Study Abroad opportunity for Loyola creates a collaboration between Fine Arts and Biology — and will also be the culmination of my teaching career. I am thrilled that it also brings me to Ireland for a fifth time! Until our adventure begins, please enjoy my various Ireland boards on Pinterest and enjoy Mother’s Day!

©2019 Janet Maher / Sinéad Ni Mheachair

NEHGS Announcement and Upcoming Presentation in Naugatuck!

18 Wednesday Sep 2013

Posted by Janet Maher in Connecticut Irish, Early Irish Catholics in Connecticut, Naugatuck, New Haven, New Haven Irish Catholic Immigrants, Ordering From the Old Sod to the Naugatuck Valley, Saint Francis Church, Tombstone Transcriptions

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Early Irish History, From the Old Sod to the Naugatuck Valley, Irish Catholic History, Irish in Connecticut, New Haven County Connecticut, Saint Francis Cemetery

Civil War Monument and Headstones, Saint Bernard Cemetery, New Haven, CT ©2007 Janet Maher

Civil War Monument and Headstones, Saint Bernard Cemetery, New Haven, CT ©2007 Janet Maher

Thank you to the New England Historic Genealogical Society for announcing the publication of my book, From the Old Sod to the Naugatuck Valley: Early Irish Catholics in New Haven County, Connecticut, in their current issue of American Ancestors. They are among several locations that own a copy for their library. I have begun to receive emails with questions about the cost and content of my book, so I’d like to take this opportunity to provide that information again here, as well as to announce my upcoming talk for the Naugatuck Valley Genealogy Club on Saturday, October 12 at the Naugatuck Historical Society, in Connecticut. This will follow a brief business meeting at 1 p.m., and it is open to the public.

My talk and Power Point presentation will include selections from the 363 images of people, places, details and maps included in my 400-page book, and I will discuss methods of finding illusive information when doing this kind of research.

From the Old Sod to the Naugatuck Valley explores the history of Ireland through the perspective of religion and centuries of discord that led millions of Irish Catholics to leave their native land. It traces the origins of the Catholic Church in Connecticut, then to several Irish families whose personal stories extend to the present. It includes complete transcriptions and section maps of the first Irish Catholic cemetery in Naugatuck, Saint Francis. My research of particular families in the Naugatuck Valley has led me to the location in Ireland from which many of the early settlers and priests originated. More general information may be found throughout this blog (where the info is more specifically Maher-related) and on my Irish-oriented Pinterest site.

My book, which lists for $65.95, will be discounted for those interested in purchasing a signed copy on that day. Whether or not you can attend the talk, mention this blog posting to purchase it for $60 with free shipping in the U.S. throughout the rest of this year. (Makes a great Christmas present!) Send your check to me at P.O. Box 40211, Baltimore, MD, 21212, and let me know if you would like it inscribed.

Table of Contents 

Acknowledgments

I: Background Ireland; Arrival of the Normans; Conquest of Ireland; Rebellion; Thomas Francis Meagher; Some Potential Connections Between New Haven County and Ireland

II: Catholicism in New England; Catholic Churches; Christ’s Church, Saint Mary’s Church, New Haven; Immaculate Conception/Saint Mary’s Church, Derby; Catholic Schools in Early New Haven; Early New Haven County Cemeteries; Early Catholic Waterbury; Catholic Schools in Waterbury; Old Saint Joseph Cemetery

III: Catholicism in Naugatuck; The First Catholics; Saint Anne and Saint Francis Churches

IV: Vignettes of Selected Families: The Butlers; The Brennans; The Martins; The Conrans; The Learys; Some New Haven Mahers; Adelaide Maher Quigley, Thomas Maher, Matthew Maher, Michael O’Maher; Anthony Meagher, John Maher, Jeremiah Maher; Ireland and America Letters; Josephine Maher and Family

V:  Saint Francis Cemetery Transcriptions: Sections A & B; Sections C, G & Portion of H; Sections F & Portion of H; Sections E & Portions of D, H; Section H; Modern Section; Tombstones That Cite A Location in Ireland

Conclusion

Appendix: Selected Additional Photographs

Notes

Image Identification

Bibliography

I welcome anyone who has read and (I hope!) feels positive about my book to comment here, or add to the lovely review that one reader wrote on Amazon.com. Thank you all for continuing to follow and read this blog, and I look forward to sharing my labor of love with any who can show up on October 12!

©2013 Janet Maher / Sinéad Ni Mheachair

All Rights Reserved

New CIAHS Book – Early New Haven Irish and Their Final Resting Places

13 Saturday Jul 2013

Posted by Janet Maher in CT, Early Irish Catholics in Connecticut, New Haven Irish Catholic Immigrants, Saint Bernard Cemetery, Tombstone Transcriptions

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Early Irish History, Irish Catholic History, Irish in Connecticut

©2011 Janet Maher, Bishops' Stone, Tyler and O'Reilly, Saint Bernard Cemetery, New Haven, CT

©2011 Janet Maher, Bishops’ Stone, Saint Bernard Cemetery, New Haven, CT

Congratulations to the authors of a new book about the early New Haven Irish! Written, compiled and edited by Ellen Bohan, Patricia Heslin, Paul Keroack, and Bernard and Rosanne Singer, with contributions by Neil Hogan, Robert O. Larkin, and Jamie Longley, Early New Haven Irish and Their Final Resting Places: The Old Catholic and Saint Bernard Cemeteries was recently published by the Connecticut Irish American Historical Society.

It is eighty-seven pages, with valuable detailed transcriptions of five hundred and sixy-nine burials, with a focus upon those that cite a location in Ireland. Included are lists from the first Catholic Cemetery 1834 – 1850, gleaned from New Haven Vital Records 1649- 1850; ones transcribed from Vital Records, August 1849 – August 1851; deaths and interments March 1, 1850 – September 30, 1851; headstones removed to Saint Bernard Cemetery; Saint Bernard Cemetery headstones with Irish birthplaces; Civil War headstones in Saint Bernard Cemetery; and an index of names. It begins with an excellent essay about early New Haven Irish Catholic beginnings.

For those interested in this topic and seeking to make connections between their ancestors in Ireland and those who emigrated to New Haven, Connecticut, this publication is an imperative addition to your library. Transcriptions are included from among these Irish counties:

Antrim; Armagh; Carlow; Cavan; Clare; Cork; Derry/Londonderry; Donegal; Down; Dublin; Fermanagh; Galway; Kerry; Kildare; Kilkenny; Leitrim (the majority); Leix/Queens; Limerick; Longford; Louth; Mayo; Meath; Monaghan; Offaly/Kings; Roscommon; Waterford; Westmeath; Sligo; Tipperary; Tyrone; Wexford; Wicklow.

A limited quantity of this book has been published at $17.  Contact the group by email at ctiahs@gmail.com, by phone at 203-392-6435, or by mail P.O. Box 185833, Hamden, CT, 06518, to order a copy. Also see their library page for other available publications.

[It should be noted that recently deceased Howard Eckels also did much work and made important discoveries in relation to the first Catholic cemetery on the grounds of Christ Church that been hidden through subsequent decades of expansion by Yale New Haven Hospital. Forensic science study may still be underway in relation to this.]

©2011 Janet Maher, Bishop Bernard O'Reilly, from O'Donnell's 1890 publication, History of the Diocese of Hartford

©2011 Janet Maher, Bishop Bernard O’Reilly, from O’Donnell’s 1890 publication, History of the Diocese of Hartford

Reverend James H. O’Donnell, in his History of the Diocese of Hartford (1900) explained that Mr. Bernard O’Reilly purchased the land that was to become Saint Bernard’s Cemetery, blessed on September 1, 1851. The second Bishop of Hartford (which at the time included Rhode Island), was Right Reverend Bernard O’Reilly, succeeding Bishop William Tyler, who died in 1849. Bishop O’Reilly was a very active and engaged bishop in the history of the diocese. In September 1851, he “established a theological seminary,” teaching there in its first week. He sailed to visit the Irish missions in 1852 to encourage priests to work with him in America, thus becoming largely responsible for the majority of Irish priests that figured into the early history of Catholic Connecticut. It was he who ordained Thomas Hendricken, the revered future pastor of Waterbury’s Immaculate Conception Church and eventual first bishop of Rhode Island. Bishop O’Reilly also “introduced into the diocese the Sisters of Mercy in May, 1851. The mother-house was at Providence, and the first Superioress was Mother Xavier.” (See my previous post about Fanny Warde, aka Mother Mary Francis Xavier.)

Returning from another work-related European trip in 1856 the steamer ship on which Bishop O’Reilly sailed, Pacific, was lost at sea. O’Donnell noted that the Catholic population in the diocese of Hartford at the beginning of his term was 20,000 and included twelve churches. At the time of the bishop’s death the Catholic population had grown to 60,000, with forty-six churches, nine schools and three orphan asylums.

In my text I made the assumption that it was the bishop himself who made the deal for the purchase of the land which became Saint Bernard Cemetery, using “Mr.” instead of his official title. The seller, ardently anti-Catholic, had no inkling that the land which was intended to be sold in small lots would actually be “lots” of Catholic cemetery plots! I liked imagining the wiley nature of this undertaking by a high-ranking clergyman acting without his garb, albeit in service of a perceived greater good. The CIAHS authors, however, discovered that there was another person in New Haven similarly named, Mr. Bernard Reilly, “a local businessman, civic leader, and active layman,” who made the transaction. Good to note the clarification on their part, which still makes for an amusing story!

Wishing CIAHS well on continuing to add to documentation about an important, long forgotten, group of people.

©2013 Janet Maher / Sinéad Ní Mheachair

All Rights Reserved

References:

Bohan, Ellen, Patricia Heslin, Paul Keroack, Bernard Singer, Rosanne Singer, with Neil Hogan, Robert O. Larkin, and Jamie Longley, Early New Haven Irish and Their Final Resting Places: The Old Catholic and Saint Bernard Cemeteries, Hamden, CT: Connecticut Irish American Historical Society, 2013

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

Studying Stones

09 Sunday Dec 2012

Posted by Janet Maher in Connecticut Irish, Early Irish Catholics in Connecticut, History, New Haven Irish Catholic Immigrants, Ordering From the Old Sod to the Naugatuck Valley, Tombstone Transcriptions

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Connecticut, Early Irish History, Irish in Connecticut, Irish in the Civil War, Naugatuck Connecticut, New Haven County Connecticut, Saint Francis Cemetery

©1997 Janet Maher, Naugatuck, Connecticut

©1997 Janet Maher, Naugatuck, Connecticut

For those doing family history research it is particularly helpful (and gratifying) to find the grave of someone whose life you have been studying. Research may, thankfully, lead one to the correct cemetery where an official government soldier or sailor’s stone may be found. Someone killed in a war may have been buried in the state where he died. Those who survived a war were usually buried where they later settled and managed to continue on with their lives. Some with notable distinction in American wars were buried in the United States’ Arlington Cemetery. In Ireland, noted individuals are buried in Dublin’s Glasnevin Cemetery.

In some instances veterans who could have been included in either of these cemeteries might, instead, have been buried with family. One of The Forgotten Ten, Irishman Patrick Maher, of Limerick, who was convicted of helping to rescue  Sean Hogan in 1921, was one of these. He was among the ten executed IRA Volunteers who had been buried in the grounds of Mountjoy Prison since Ireland’s final war for independence from Great Britain. In 2001 these men were exhumed and honored with a public motorcade-led funeral and the reburial of nine of them in Glasnevin Cemetery. Maher was brought home to his family’s plot in Limerick. The nine men buried at Glasnevin were Kevin Barry, Thomas Whelan, Patrick Moran, Frank Flood, Patrick Doyle, Bernard Ryan, Thomas Bryan, Thomas Traynor and Edmond Foley.

Since data is readily available about veterans, it becomes an important means of learning about some individuals. Those who may not wish to study war or issues about religion may nonetheless need to delve into these aspects of someone’s life.  Nineteenth century or earlier “brick walls” in Irish family history research might well have had something to do with religious conflict that led to death or emigration, and emigration often went hand in hand with serving in the military in some regard.

There is a great deal of interest in the phenomenon of the overly large number Irish who served in the American Civil War. Irishman Damian Shiels has been researching this topic for many years and maintaining an excellent blog (see posting below). He has announced that he will soon be publishing a book on the subject, titled after his blog, Irish In the American Civil War. In Connecticut, Bob Larkin has a special Facebook site about the notable Ninth Regiment Connecticut Volunteers in the Civil War, also worth the visit for those interested.

When I studied the graves of Saint Francis Cemetery in Naugatuck, Connecticut, I wondered if the soldiers or the native Irish buried there might have been individuals sought currently by families out of town. Might a relative not be aware of their person’s final resting place in this small borough? Complete transcriptions and many photographs from this cemetery are included in my book, From the Old Sod to the Naugatuck Valley: Early Irish Catholics of New Haven County, Connecticut. For this posting I have excerpted the names of those veterans and native Irish whose graves are in this cemetery:

Naugatuck Veterans in Saint Francis Cemetery

       Flags are replaced each year on known veteran graves in Saint Francis Cemetery, although no list exists for the original set of names. Those whose tombstones cited their war involvement included:

  • James Adamson, Civil War, Co. B, 20th Regt., Connecticut Volunteers
  • George T. Anderson, WW I, EM3C, U.S. Navy
  • Edmund P. Belletti, WW II, Cpl., U.S. Army Air Corps
  • Frank B. Buckmiller, WW II, M Sgt., U.S. Army
  • James J. Claffey, WW I, Co. B, 113th Inf.
  • John P. Coen, Civil War, Co. F, 9th Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers
  • Michael Coen, Civil War, Co. K, 20th Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers
  • Lionell H. Cote, WW II, S2, U.S. Navy
  • Daniel Cullinane, Grand Army of the Republic insignia
  • James R. Dalton, WWII, Sgt., Field Artillery Rep. Dep.
  • John R. Deegan, WW II,  PFC, U.S. Army
  • William M. Dolan, WW I,1st Cook, U. S. Army
  • James Duffin, Civil War, Co. D, 158 Inf., New York Volunteers
  • Thomas Ford, Civil War, Co. H, 15th Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers
  • Michael Fruin, Civil War, Co. H,15th Regiment, Connecticut Volunteers
  • Thomas P. Harper, WW I, 152D Dep. Brig.
  • Horace E. Jones, Civil War, Co. H, Second Connecticut Volunteers, Heavy Artillery
  • Arthur Keefe, Civil War, Co. E 2 Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteers
  • Bernard J. Leahy, WW II, RDSN, U.S. Navy
  • Thomas Maher, Civil War, Co. E, U.S. Artillery
  • John A. Martin, WW I, U.S. Navy
  • John William McCarthy, WW I, MM1, U.S. Navy
  • Terrence McLaughlin, WW I., Co K, 53rd Inf.
  • William J. Neary, Jr., WW I
  • John O’Donnell, Civil War, Co. E [7th], Connecticut Volunteers
  • James Thomas Patterson,  WW II, Maj., U.S. Marine Corps.
  • Peter A. Reilly, WW I, 301st M.T. Co.
  • Patrick Ruth, Civil War, Capt., Co. B8, Connecticut Volunteers I

Irish Citations in Saint Francis Cemetery

       While there are many more native Irish buried in Saint Francis Cemetery than those whose tombstones cite their original home, these are the stones that do:

  • From County Cork: James Walsh
  • From County Kerry: James Carroll, Cornelius Shea
  • From County Kilkenny: Nicholas Brennan, John Cuddy, Roland Dalton, John Doolan, Martin Gibbons [likely], Julia Lannen, Patrick McCarthy, William Purcell, Charles Talbot
  • From County Laois: Michael Coen (elder), Eliza Grant, Matthew Maher
  • From County Leitrim: Elizabeth Mulvey, Cornelius Splann
  • From County Limerick: Margaret Burke, Mary Hanley, Julia Quirk, Robert Reardon
  • From County Meath: Ann Murray
  • From County Monaghan: Michael Martin
  • From County Tipperary: William Fruin, Mary Kiely, James Kirwin, William Powers, Maurice Quinlan
  • From County Waterford: Johannah Foley

christmas-swirlsSM

Looking for a Christmas present for someone interested in Irish history, Connecticut Irish, New Haven County, Waterbury and/or Naugatuck? My book may be obtained locally at: Mattatuck Museum, Waterbury, CT; Naugatuck Historical Society, Naugatuck, CT; and Quinnipiac University Bookstore, Mount Carmel Branch, Hamden, CT. Online it may be purchased from Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble, and from me via Paypal or by check (P.O. Box 40211, Baltimore, MD, 21212).

I wish everyone much happiness throughout the holiday season and offer prayers for peace throughout the world in the new year!

©2012 Janet Maher/Sinéad Ní Mheachair

All Rights Reserved

Catholic Transcript Review!

07 Sunday Oct 2012

Posted by Janet Maher in Connecticut Irish, Early Irish Catholics in Connecticut, History, Mahers, Meaghers, New Haven Irish Catholic Immigrants, Tombstone Transcriptions

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Book Signing, Irish Catholic History, Naugatuck Connecticut

A review/interview by Jack Sheedy, News Editor of Hartford’s Catholic Transcript, came out this week! Mr. Sheedy said, “Ms. Maher has succeeded in making complex migration patterns easy to understand.” “From the Old Sod to the Naugatuck Valley gives a brief history of Ireland, a history of Catholicism in New England, a discussion of Catholicism in Naugatuck, a close-up of several Irish families in the Naugatuck Valley and a detailed photographic tour of St. Francis Cemetery. If you are related to or know someone named Maher, Butler, Brennan, Martin, Conran or Leary, you will find in the book a detailed “vignette” of that family name, including Irish origins, census information and more.” Thank you very much to Mr. Sheedy!

Hope to see you at the Mattatuck Museum talk and book signing on October 25, Waterbury, Connecticut, 5:30pm!

Review in October 2012 Catholic Transcript

©2012 Janet Maher/Sinéad Ní Mheachair

All Rights Reserved

New Haven’s First Catholic Cemetery, November, & Book Signing, October

28 Friday Sep 2012

Posted by Janet Maher in Christ Church Cemetery found beneath Yale New Haven Hospital, Connecticut Irish, Early Irish Catholics in Connecticut, History, New Haven Irish Catholic Immigrants, Ordering From the Old Sod to the Naugatuck Valley, Tombstone Transcriptions

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Ancient Ireland, Early Irish History, Irish Catholic Immigrants, Irish in Connecticut, Naugatuck Connecticut, New Haven County Mahers

On November 4 Connecticut’s State Archaeologist, Dr. Nick Bellantoni, will lead a panel discussion with Gary Aronson (Yale University), Sarah Brownlee (Peabody Museum), Dan DeLuca and Anthony Griego, about the discovery last year of the first Catholic Cemetery that surrounded Christ Church in the early nineteenth century. Their discussion will take place at New Haven Museum, 114 Whitney Ave., from 2 to 4 p.m. and is free and open to the public.

Also, a reminder to come if you can to my talk, No Irish Need Apply: Early Irish Settlement in the Naugatuck Valley, at the Mattatuck Museum (144 West Main Street, Waterbury) on October 25, at 5:30, also free and open to the public. My book, From the Old Sod to the Naugatuck Valley: Early Irish Catholics in New Haven County, Connecticut, will be available for purchase. See Table of Contents here. Hope to see you there!

©2012 Janet Maher/Sinéad Ní Mheachair

All Rights Reserved

Using Griffiths Valuations, Irish Census and Tombstone Information to Locate Families (Transcriptions.3)

30 Monday Jul 2012

Posted by Janet Maher in Early Irish Catholics in Connecticut, Kilkenny Mahers, Origins, Tombstone Transcriptions

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Gowran, Griffiths Valuations, Ireland 1901 and 1911 Censuses, Irish Tombstone Transcriptions, Kilkenny, Thomastown

Gowran Roman Catholic Church ©2011 Janet Maher

I continue to examine documents for possible links between my study in Connecticut and the areas of Ireland that I have pinpointed as places of origin for a select group of people. Certain families within a relatively close range from towns near the borders of Tipperary, Kilkenny and Laois, Ireland, settled in Naugatuck, New Haven County, Connecticut. In forms of wave migration, Thomastown, Kilkenny, was one place that became clear.

After the Great Famine (1845-1849) it can be assumed that many Mahers who had once lived in the Barony of Gowran, and other areas of Ireland, emigrated or did not survive. If they were not leaseholders, some may not have appeared in Griffiths Evaluations even if they might have lived and worked on the land. Thus, some continued to remain invisible. There is a strong likelihood, however, that Mahers in Ireland after the Famine had been related in some way to emigrated Mahers whose ancestries led back to the same areas. The following is an example of a way to gather indirect information that might help to locate families and form a bridge between emigrated individuals and those who continued the family lines in their homeland.

Roadsigns to Gowran or Carlow ©2011 Janet Maher

Through baptism records I have determined that one of the Maher families in my study originated in Kilfane, which was in the Union of Thomastown, Barony of Gowran. Ask About Ireland’s Griffiths Valuation index turned up 105 hits for the surname Maher in the Barony of Gowran, Kilkenny, almost thirty years after the first members of the family appeared in America. Mahers were living in the Gowran areas of Columbkille, Dungarvan, Gowran, Graiguenamanagh, Grangesilvia, Kilfane, Kilderry, Kilmacahill, Powerstown, Saint John, Shankill, Thomastown, Tullaherin, and Woolengrange.

In 1850 one Philip Maher remained as a leaseholder in the townland of Ballykeoghan. An Anne Maher leased a house in the townland of Newtown, Parish and Union of Thomastown. In Kilbline, Parish of Tullaherin, Union of Thomastown, was listed one Patrick Maher who leased fifty acres of land, with house, offices and garden, and one Martin Campbell, who leased, in turn, a small parcel of land from Patrick Maher. In Knockbrack, Woolengrange, Union of Thomastown, Margaret Maher lived on seventeen acres of land. By pulling each name up in this way, one at a time, it is possible to learn details about each person who appears in the online Griffiths Valuation index and attempt to match them to other information one might have. There is a large jump between Griffiths Valuations and the 1901 census, available (with the 1911 one) from the National Archives of Ireland, but information from Griffiths may help to link the earliest immigrant settlers that left Ireland around the time of the Famine. (In Ireland is the collection of the actual Griffiths returns.)

Mahers living in Gowran in 1901 included those in the townlands or streets of: Bodal (Patrick Maher, a tailor); Brickana (Margaret Maher, working as a servant); Commons (John and Catherine Maher and family); Gallowshill (John and Bridget Maher and family); Main Street Upper (Mary Maher and her sisters) and Lower (Mary Maher and her son); and Talbotshill (Margaret Maher, a farmer). In 1911 with some changes, the groups and most of the individuals were still there.

In house #1 in Gallowshill [Gallows Hill] in 1901 were John and Bridget Maher, John’s father, Michael (a retired farmer), and John and Bridget’s children: Mary, [Jeramiah], Joseph, Bridget, Teresa, along with a farm servant named Michael Cunningham. This house had likely been Michael’s, as his name was first entered, then crossed out, by the census-taker in Form B1, the House and Building Return. John might have been Michael’s oldest son, heir to the family house and land.

By 1911 Michael had died and Joseph was gone from the house, which was now considered as house #2 by the census taker. Some time around 1904 John and Bridget’s daughter, Agnes had been born. The House and Building Return for 1901 listed Mary Hogan as the owner of house #2. (In 1911 the numbers for both families were reversed, although given the data, they did not exchange houses.) Mary’s structure had two more front windows than John and Bridget’s three, and in 1911 a few more changes could also be seen. Both houses were built from “stone, brick or concrete.” Mary’s roof was made of “slate, iron or tiles.” John’s was thatched or made of “wood or other perishable materials.” John had eight out-offices or farm-steadings; Mary had ten. For both, these included a barn, stable, cow house, calf house, fowl house, piggery, turf house and potato house. Mary also had a dairy. Nine people lived in four rooms in John’s house; two people lived in three in Mary’s. In 1911 they each seemed to have expanded the spaces inside the houses, such that there were now two rooms in the individual dwellings, and John had added another window. Both families were Catholic.

I photographed several of the tombstones on the grounds of Gowran Church, Kilkenny City, Kilkenny, last summer, with a focus upon surnames that also appeared in early Catholic Naugatuck, Connecticut. Here, among my images, was the stone for what appears to have been the same Jeremiah, above, and three of his sisters! This stone, which at one time may have had an image or carving attached to its face, was inscribed:

In Loving Memory Of  / JERMIAH MAHER / Gallows Hill Gowran / Died 1st Nov 1937 Aged 54 Yrs / His Sisters BRIGID MAHER / Died 23rd Jan 1970 Aged 85 Yrs / TERESA MAHER / Died 1st June 1982 Aged 83 Yrs / And AGNES MAHER / Died 16th  Feb 1987 Aged 83 Yrs. [The grave site extends forward about ten feet in an enclosed area covered with small white stones.]

From this information it might be surmised that neither Jeremiah nor his younger sisters had married. We do know that their parents’ names had been John and Bridget (or, the original spelling, Brigid) Maher and that their grandfather, a widower, had been Michael Maher, born about 1821, according to the 1901 census. We can also picture them in place as, perhaps, a typical Catholic farming family in rural Kilkenny. Did Jeremiah’s older sister, Mary, and younger brother, Joseph, marry and/or settle in another part of Ireland? What was Bridget’s maiden name? With further research, such as a study of baptism and marriage records, much more might be revealed about this family.

[Jermiah] Maher and sisters, Gowran ©2011 Janet Maher

Another Maher grave in Gowran Cemetery included this inscription:

Erected By His Widow / In Memory Of / JOHN MAHER, Gowran / Who Died 21st January 1881. / Aged 66 Years. / And Of Their Children / ALICE and CATHERINE / Also in Memory of  / ELIZA MAHER / Widow of the Above / Who Died 5th February 1885 / Aged 66 Years / And Their Daughter / MARY / Who Died 15th March 1907 / Aged 65 Years. / R. I. P.   [At the lower edge of the stone was also: ELIZABETH Died 28th Sep 1913 / BRIGID 7th Aug. 1919 / JANE 19th…(more)]

Some other surnames that I found in Gowran Cemetery which also exist in early Irish cemeteries of New Haven County included:

[One large Celtic stone in an enclosed plot; just outside the plot another large stone, family name Hanlon with inscriptions.] Cross / Jesus Mercy, Mary Help / This Cross Was Erected By DANIEL BLANCHFIELD BLANCHFIELD’S PARK / In Memory of His Mother / BRiDGET BLANCHFIELD / His Brothers RICHARD and PETER / And His Nephew JAMES BYRNE / Who Died 13th Jany 1885 In The 25th Year Of His Age / His Grandnephew, OWEN BLANCHFIELD KEHOE / Who Died 2nd Feb. 1993, In His 69th Year. / And His Nephew, JAMES RICHARD (JIM) KEHOE, / Who Died 17th Nov. 2000, In His 46th Year. / R. I. P.  [At base] His Mother, MAURA KEHOE [dates covered by plant, 2009] Aged 83 Yrs.

Pray For the Soul of / MICHAEL BOWE, Ballyquirk / Who Died Sept 15th 1879, Aged 81 Yrs. / Also His Wife ELLEN BOWE Nee WALSH / Died May 23rd 1891 Aged 69 Yrs. Also Their / Son THOMAS Died Sep. 9th 1910 Aged 70 Yrs. / Also Their Son JOHN Died Feb. 2nd 1912 / Aged 66 Yrs. and Their Son MARTIN / Died May 2nd, 1923, Aged 78 Yrs. / Also Their Daughter ELLEN / Died July 22nd 1930, Aged 75 Yrs.

Sacred Heart of Jesus / Have Mercy on the Souls of / JOSEPH BUTLER / CASTLE VIEW / died 19th June 1965 / His Wife MARY / Died 31st Jan. 1967 / Their Son, JAMES, / Died 6th July 1993 / R. I. P. / Erected By Their Loving Family

Cross / Erected By JAMES CAHILL / Of Gowran / In Memory Of His Children / ELLEN CAHILL / Who Died March 19th 1879 / Aged 7 Years / MARY CAHILL / Who Died August 20th 1882 / Aged 20 Years / MARGARET CAHILL / Who Died November 5th 1885 / Aged 19 Years / Also ELLEN and MARTIN CAHILL / Who Died Young / R. I. P.   [Side] Cross / Also / In Memory Of / ROBERT CAHILL / Who Died 14th August 1893 / Aged 28 Years / And / PATRICK CAHILL / Who Died 16th September 1894 / Aged 20 Years. / Also / In Memory Of The Above-Named JAMES CAHILL / Who Died 13th December 1896 / Aged 67 Years. / Also His Wife / BRIDGET CAHILL / Who Died 29th April 1920 / Aged 81 Years.

Sacred / To the Memory of / JOHN KELLY / of Dungarvan. / Who Died 15 December 1878 / Aged 62 Years / Also Three Of His / Children Who Died Young / And of His Wife / MARGARET KELLY / Who Died 16 March 1907 Aged 72 Years /  And of His Son JAMES J. KELLY / Who Died In Melbourne 19 Oct. 1913. / Aged 40 Years / And His Daughter / MARY FRANCES HAYDEN / Who Died Jan. 30th 1831 Aged 65 Years / Also His Son WILLIAM F. KELLY / Who Died Nov. 14th 1943. Aged 80 Years. / Requiescant In Pace.

[Two stones sharing the same enclosed plot filled with small white stones] Erected / In Loving Memory / Of / JAMES J. O’DONNELL [CLASHWILLIAM] / Died 18th May, 1962 Aged 80 Years. / His Wife ANGELA Nee DOWLING / Died 22nd Apr. 1983 Aged 87 Yrs. / Their Son ANDREW / Died 17th May 1995 Aged 78 Yrs. / Their Son MAURICE / Died 8th Nov. 1995 Aged 62 Yrs.   [Stone #2]  Most Sacred Heart of Jesus / Have Mercy / On the Souls of / NORA M/ O’DONNELL / Who Died 24th May 1963. / Infants of LOUISE and JOHN. / JAMES BRENDAN O’DONNELL / Died 25th Apr. 1997 / Aged 73 Yrs. / R. I. P.  [The stonecarver was Mullan, from Kilkenny.]

Cahill stone, Gowran; Blanchfiled to the right, behind ©2011 Janet Maher

©2012 Janet Maher/Sinéad Ní Mheachair

All Rights Reserved

Book Signing in Naugatuck!

24 Thursday May 2012

Posted by Janet Maher in Connecticut Irish, History, New Haven Irish Catholic Immigrants, Tombstone Transcriptions

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

Catholic Church, Connecticut, From the Old Sod to the Naugatuck Valley, Naugatuck Connecticut, Naugatuck River Valley

Monasterevin Monument © 2011 Janet Maher

Monasterevin Monument © 2011 Janet Maher

I apologize that technical difficulties have delayed the book, as I know that many of you are almost as anxious for it to arrive as I am, but a proof should be here within days and, given no problems, copies should be available within a week or so after that. Please save the date and plan to come, if you can, to the Naugatuck Historical Society on Thursday, June 21 at 6 pm. I will give a short talk about From the Old Sod to the Naugatuck Valley: Early Irish Catholics in New Haven County, Connecticut and will sign copies! Hoping to see you there!

Table of Contents 

I: Background Ireland; Arrival of the Normans; Conquest of Ireland; Rebellion; Thomas Francis Meagher; Some Potential Connections Between New Haven County and Ireland

II: Catholicism in New England; Catholic Churches; Christ’s Church, Saint Mary’s Church, New Haven; Immaculate Conception/Saint Mary’s Church, Derby; Catholic Schools in Early New Haven; Early New Haven County Cemeteries; Early Catholic Waterbury; Catholic Schools in Waterbury; Old Saint Joseph Cemetery

III: Catholicism in Naugatuck; The First Catholics; Saint Anne and Saint Francis Churches

IV: Vignettes of Selected Families: The Butlers; The Brennans; The Martins; The Conrans; The Learys; Some New Haven Mahers; Adelaide Quigley, Thomas Maher, Matthew Maher, Michael Maher; Anthony Meagher, John Maher, Jeremiah Maher; Ireland and America Letters; Josephine Maher and Family

V:  Saint Francis Cemetery Transcriptions: Sections A & B; Sections C, G & Portion of H; Sections F & Portion of H; Sections E & Portions of D, H; Section H; Modern Section; Tombstones That Cite A Location in Ireland

Conclusion

Appendix: Selected Additional Photographs

Notes

Image Identification

Bibliography

(399 pages; 336 images)

©2012 Janet Maher/Sinéad Ní Mheachair

All Rights Reserved

New Haven County Irish in the Civil War

08 Saturday Oct 2011

Posted by Janet Maher in Connecticut Irish, History, Kilkenny Mahers, New Haven Irish Catholic Immigrants, Tombstone Transcriptions

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

9th Connecticut Infantry, AmericanCivilWar, John Maher, Patrick Maher, Reverend Thomas Duggan


John and Catherine Maher Tombstone

John and Catherine Maher Tombstone, Parents of Major Patrick Maher, Saint Bernard Cemetery, West Haven, Connecticut

Robert Larkin tells me that there will be a commemoration of the Soldier’s Monument at Saint Bernard Cemetery in West Haven on October 23 at 1 p.m. He explained that this will mark the 125th anniversary of the dedication by the State of Connecticut of the 32 foot high monument (note photo in my previous post, Miscellaneous Thoughts, 8/22/11). It will include a wreath laying, bagpiper, taps, a short ceremony, a handout with soldier information and assistance in locating individual Civil War grave sites. Over the summer Ellen Bohan, Pat Heslin and Paul Keroac were able to find the location of 190 Civil War markers or tombstones, including some veterans who had been buried with their families. Their list includes more than 300 soldiers in total. Congratulations to them for this invaluable work!

Soldiers in the cemetery represent about 20 Connecticut regiments or artillery units, nine regiments from other states, 20 from the United States Infantry and Navy, a Medal of Honor recipient and one soldier who died in 1942. Each of the identified markers or stones will have a flag placed at its site. Among the many veterans from the Ninth Regiment Connecticut Volunteers are: Colonel Thomas Cahill, Captain Lawrence O’Brien, Captain John G. Healy, 2nd Lieutenant William O’Keefe, Captain James Hennessey. Neil Hogan, author of Strong in Their Patriotic Devotion, has written a two-page flier and two pages of soldier information will also be available for those who attend the ceremony.

At the Naugatuck Historical Society will also be events in commemoration of the Civil War. Beginning at noon on October 23 will be concert, fellowship and cocktails, the annual meeting of the society, and at 2 pm a buffet dinner with a Civil War Music program.

Unfortunately, I will not be able to attend either of these events, but I will be there in spirit. I offer this “almost” chapter that I had considered including in my book, but am finding that it ranges too far outside my already complicated topic. This venue seems to be the right place for it.

I wish my friends in Connecticut and everyone who attends the commemoration events a glorious time honoring the heroes!

Colonel Cahill Tombstone

Colonel Thomas Cahill Family Stone, Saint Bernard Cemetery, West Haven, Connecticut

Company E, of the 2nd Regiment, the Washington-Erina Guards of New Haven was begun in July 1849 and officially recognized in March 1852. It was comprised of American citizens, either naturalized or American born. Among the 1850 petitioners to form the militia were: John Maher, Patrick Maher and Thomas W. Cahill (of Massachusetts). The group “purchased their own uniforms and received flint-lock muskets from the State.”[i] The Irish companies in New Haven, Hartford, Bridgeport, Derby, and Norwich included:

• Infantry Company E, 2nd Regiment, Washington-Erina Guards – Capt. Thomas W. Cahill, First Lieut. Patrick Maher

• Infantry Company D, 2nd Regiment, Jackson Guards – an offshoot of New Haven’s Company E (Murray noted that when the company was disbanded there was no captain and John Maher, Jr. commanded as First Lieutenant. John was likely the brother of Patrick Maher, whose parents’ tombstone is above. They require their own article.)

• Infantry Company F, Emmet Guards – Hartford

• Infantry Company C, Jackson Guards – Norwich

• Rifle Company B, 2nd Regiment, Derby Rifles – Derby

• Infantry Company B, 8th Regiment, Montgomery Guards – New Haven

Despite prejudice against them throughout the decades, when the American Civil War began in April 1861 many Irish in Connecticut were willing to enlist. Mahers fought in both sides of the Civil War, most on the side of the Union. The National Park Service Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System includes information about 26 Mahers in the Union Army between 1861 and 1865. (Five Meaghers, five Mahars and twenty-six Maher listings occur for Connecticut regiments. Eighty-six men by the name of Butler were listed, as were 121 by the name of Martin.) Reverend Thomas Duggan noted 7,900 Irish soldiers, and that Irish priests, such as Reverend Thomas Francis Hendricken of Waterbury’s Immaculate Conception, raised flags above their churches. Captain Cahill was notified that his Emmet Guards would be quickly commissioned, to which he tersely replied:

“Six years ago I was captain of a company of volunteer militia and a native of New England. I was, with my comrades, thought to be unfit to shoulder a musket in time of peace, and the company was disbanded…under circumstances peculiarly aggravating to military pride. The law by which we were disbanded still stands on the Statute Book, and as long as it is there my fellow-soldiers and myself feel it to be an insult to us and to all our fellow-citizens of Irish birth and Catholic faith. If we were not fit to bear arms in time of peace, we might be dangerous in time of war.”[iii]

The 1855 law was repealed and the Irish Regiment, the Ninth Connecticut Volunteers, was begun at Camp English in New Haven. Neil Hogan and Right Reverend Thomas S. Duggan, D.D., wrote extensively about the Connecticut 9th, in particular about their mistreatment through lack of Hartford’s support during the war.[iv]

Their first tour of duty began in Massachusetts under General Benjamin Butler, who had requested Connecticut soldiers. When the Connecticut 9th, along with the 26th Massachusetts Regiment, arrived in the Gulf of Mexico on the desolate Ship Island, near Mississippi, Hogan noted “Nearly half of them were without shoes and as many more without shirts; several had no coats or blankets. Some drilled in primitive attire of blouse and cotton drawers…The tents were hardly capacious enough to cover them.” [v] By contrast, the Massachusetts company had been given “warm blankets, ample tents, and two uniform suits of clothing per man.” In 1862 a letter from one of the Connecticut 9th soldiers was printed in the New Haven Register, setting in perspective the loyalty of the Irish to their adopted American homeland despite the conditions in which they served. It stated “the Ninth will do their part, when they are led forth in defense of the country which gives more freedom to the stranger than any other on the face of the Earth. Irishmen have fought for France under Sarsfield, for Russia under Delacy and for Spain, in their shirt sleeves, under O’Donnell, at Bull Run under Corcoran; and the adopted sons of Connecticut will prove themselves as good as their ancestors either in France, Spain, Russia or America.”[vi]

According to Duggan the military pay that the Connecticut 9th sent back to their families amounted to almost $20,000 during their difficult time in the south. He noted the finding of a cache of canvas shoes that Cahill gave to his men against regulations to which he replied, “My men are bare-foot and necessity knows no law.”[vii] Cahill had been serving as Brigadier-General for the Connecticut 9th, and a New York Tribune article regarded the company as “one of the oldest and best disciplined regiments.” When Cahill retired after his notable service, however, he was only awarded his initial title, Colonel.[viii]

From rosters listed in Thomas Hamilton Murray’s study of this regiment I have compiled the following information:[ix]

• On September 27, 1861 the following men mustered into Connecticut Ninth, Company E from Derby: Thomas Healy (1st Sgt.), Michael Dolan (Cpl.), James McNally (Cpl.), John Crowley (Pvt.), Edward Heffernan (Pvt.), Cornelius Ryan (Pvt.), James Ryan (Pvt.); also on that day, John Maher, of East Windsor, mustered into Co. G.  From New Haven on that day the following mustered into Company E: Thomas Kennedy (1st Sgt.), Michael Mullins (2nd Lieut.), Daniel Heffernan (Sgt.), Thomas Ryan (Sgt.).

• Between October 4 and October 30, 1861 the following men from Derby mustered into Company E: James Dolan (Cpl.), James Shea (Pvt.), John Healey (Pvt.), John Lawler (Cpl.), Bernard Whelan (Pvt.), and from New Haven, James P. Hennessey (Capt.), Francis McKeon (1st Lieut.), and Terence Sheridan (Capt.).

• On November 25, 1861, from Derby, Michael Naylor (Cpl.), Timothy Crowley (Pvt.), John Maher (Pvt.) mustered into Company E.

• From New Orleans, on Nov. 30, musician John Burns also mustered into this Company. He was followed on May 27 and 29, 1862 by Hugh Lynch (Pvt.), Garrett O’Toole (Pvt.), John McTague (Pvt.), and William Grace (Pvt.), who mustered into Company E from New Orleans and Cape Parap’t.  (Might those who ended up in the south when they emigrated have intentionally decided to join friends in the Connecticut 9th when the opportunity arose?)

• In 1862 and 1863 the following of the aforementioned men died: William Grace, John McTague, John Maher (both), John Burns, John Crowley, Cornelius Ryan, James Ryan. Edward Heffernan was discharged. John Lawlor, Michael Dolan, Thomas Healy, and Michael Mullins transferred into Company K. On October 12, 1864 the following men transferred into Company B: Garrett O’Toole, Hugh Lynch, Timothy Crowley, John Healey, Terence Sheridan, Thomas Kennedy, Daniel Heffernan, Thomas Ryan. In addition, Hogan noted, “Timothy Maher was promoted to corporal in Company B, and served to the end of the war.”[x]

Joseph Casimir O’Meagher noted another Patrick Meagher, First Lieutenant 13th Infantry, Brevet Captain for gallant and meritorious services in 1863 during the siege of Vicksburg.[xi] Captain Daniel Maher, Lieutenant Patrick Maher, Sergeant Jeremiah Maher, and Private Patrick Maher served in the 63rd Regiment, New York Infantry, which was attached to Brigadier General Thomas Francis Meagher’s Irish Brigade. John Meagher, who enlisted at 19 in his home state of New York, according to O’Meagher, was promoted to corporal, sergeant, and second lieutenant. He fought in “Fredericksburg…Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Bristow Station, Rapidan, Mine run, The Wilderness, Spottsylvania, Laurel Hill, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, Deep Bottom [twice], Ream’s Station, Skinner’s Farm, Hatcher’s Run and Sutherland’s Station. [xii]

In the early 1900s many tributes were paid to the valiant Ninth Connecticut Volunteers, thoroughly documented by Thomas Hamilton Murray. On August 5, 1903 he included a notice from the Naugatuck Daily News that recounted the trip taken to New Haven by “the Hibernian Rifle Company, the Saint Francis T.A.B. (Total Abstinence and Benevolent Society) Drum Corps, members of Isbell Post, G.A.R. (Grand Army of the Republic), the Young Men’s Catholic Institute and the Naugatuck Drum Corps” to participate in ceremonies for the unveiling of a New Haven monument in honor of the Ninth Regiment.[xiii] Included among the invited were members of the New Haven Society, Knights of Saint Patrick. Attending the formal dinner that evening were members and dignitaries from Connecticut cities as well as from New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Delaware and Rhode Island, including:

• Hon. William Kennedy, Naugatuck

• Col. John G. Healy, New Haven (9th)

• Thomas Hamilton Murray, Boston

• Michael P. Coen, Naugatuck (9th)

• Joseph R. Hall, Naugatuck

• John F. Hayes, M.D., Waterbury

• Thomas M. Cahill, M.D., New Haven

• Stephen J. Maher, M.D., New Haven

• Major Patrick Maher, New Haven (24th)[xiv]

The graves of war veterans in Naugatuck are still decorated by the Veterans’ Association every year with flags, although there does not seem to be specific records about them. Among all the veterans buried in Saint Francis Cemetery, Naugatuck are:

• Adamson, James, Co. B., 20th Regt. Conn. Vols., G. A.R., Post 13

• Brennan, John, Co. I., 5th Inf. Conn. Vols., G.A.R.

• Burke, John P.,  G.A.R., Post 16

• Carolen, Thomas, G.A.R.

• Campion, Wm., Sgt. Co. C., 1st Conn. Cav., G.A.R.

• Coen, John P., Corp. Co. F., 9th Reg. C.V., G.A.R.

• Coen, Michael, Co. K., 20th Reg. C.V., G.A.R.

• Conran, James, G.A.R., Post 7 (Co. F., 1st Conn. H.A.)

• Davy, John, G.A.R., Post 170

• Duffin, James, Co.D., 158 Inf., N.Y. Vols., G.A.R.

• Ford, Thomas, Co. H., 15 Regt. Conn. Vols., G.A.R., Post 10

• Fruin, Michael, Co. H., 15 Inf. Conn. Vols., G.A. R., Post 15

• Harper, Thomas P., 152D. Dep. Brig.

• Jones, Horace E., Co. H., 2 C.V.R.A., G.A.R.

• Keefe, Arthur, Co.E., 2 Reg. Mass. Vol. , G.A.R.

• Keogh, Michael, G.A.R., Post 165

• Maher, Thomas, Co. E, 3 U.S. Arty. G.A.R.

• Martin, John A., U.S.N., World War I

• Murphy, Patrick, Spanish American War

• O’Donnell, James

• O’Donnell, John, Co. E., 5th Conn. Vols. G.A.R., Post 6

• Ruth, Patrick K., Capt., Co. B., 8 C.V.I., G.A.R.

• Shields, David, Co. K., 23rd U.S. Inf., G.A.R., Post 4

• Young, Peter, G.A.R., Post 1

May they all rest in peace.

James Maher, Civil War, Saint Bernard Cemetery, West Haven, Connecticut

Note: In the course of posting this article I stumbled upon a chapter of the book Lives of the Deceased Bishops of the Catholic Church in the United States, which includes a chapter about Bishop Hendricken. Although I did research him and include some information in my book, I had not seen this until now and did not know that his mother’s name was Ann Maher! His connection to Kilkenny has already been interesting to me, as so much of my own research leads directly back there, but that his mother was a Maher may be significant.

©2011 Janet Maher/Sinéad Ní Mheachair

All Rights Reserved

 


[i] Murray, Thomas Hamilton, History of the Ninth Regiment, Connecticut Volunteer Infantry, The Irish Regiment, In the War of the Rebellion, 1861-65; New Haven, CT: The Price, Lee and Adkins Co., 1903; pp. 12-14.

[iii] Duggan, Right Reverend Thomas S., D.D., The Catholic Church in Connecticut, New York City: The States History Company, 1930, pg.90.

[iv] Hogan, Neil, Strong In Their Patriotic Devotion: Connecticut’s Irish in the Civil War, Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society, 2003.

[v] Ibid., pp. 14-15.

[vi] Opcit., pg. 15.

[vii] Duggan, Right Reverend Thomas S., D.D., Vicar-General of the Diocese of Hartford, The Catholic Church in Connecticut, New York: The States History Company, 1930; pp. 91-92.

[viii] Ibid., pg. 92-93.

[ix] Opcit.

[x] Civil War Soldiers and Sailors web site notes this Timothy as 16th Regiment, Co. D. A second Timothy Maher (2nd Reg., Co. C) had an alternate spelling, Mayher.  He also appears as Corp. Timothy Meagher. (M535, Roll 11)

[xi] O’Meagher, Joseph Casimir, Some Historical Notices of the O’Meaghers of Ikerrin, American Edition, New York, 1890, pg. 182.

[xii] Ibid.

[xiii] Murray, Thomas Hamilton, History of the Ninth Regiment, Connecticut Volunteer Infantry, The Irish Regiment, In the War of the Rebellion, 1861-65; New Haven, CT: Price Lee and Adkins Co., 1903, pp.391, 392.

[xiv] Ibid., pp 394-396.

Transcriptions.2 – Old Kilcullen Graveyard, Kildare

24 Wednesday Aug 2011

Posted by Janet Maher in History, Tombstone Transcriptions

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

Brennan, Dún Ailinne, Irish in Connecticut, Kilcullen, Naugatuck Connecticut

Old Kilcullen Graveyard

Old Kilcullen Graveyard, July 2011

Old Kilcullen Graveyard

Ruins, Old Kilcullen Graveyard, July 2011

A death record that I discovered for one James Maher in Connecticut near the town of my family, and age contemporary with my great great grandfather, listed his parents’ names and a place of birth, Kildare. This was quite unusual, as most of the earliest death records that I have looked for are missing, and those that can be found typically only say “Ireland” as a birth location. There were, of course, many James Mahers in Ireland as there are in America, but in honor of this one we intentionally visited Kildare.

We spent our first night in Ireland in Kildare City and had the first of extended conversations with people we met in the most authentic-looking local pubs. Two men in particular, part of a group of regulars who stop in for a pint after work (one whose family is Dunne) were extremely friendly and helpful. John thought I looked surprisingly like one of the Maher women whom he knew, which warmed my heart no end, though I had to wonder if there might not have been a touch of blarney in that.

Another advised me above all else during our stay, listen to people. And it is true that every conversation revealed ever more, often in small, tossed off comments that would anchor a thought or definitively answer a question of mine. At breakfast, when we asked the waitress for our first set of directions, she pointed to someone sitting at the counter, a retired schoolteacher, and said that he could tell us anything about the history of Ireland. While we were finishing our coffee he came over, sat down with us and we conversed (with me mostly enraptured and taking notes) for more than an hour. It was from him that I learned, among a great deal of other things, that I had the right to use the “Ní Mheachair” surname. (Typing it here for the first time was as emotionally significant as the first time I acknowledged aloud that I was an artist.)

We had not intended to try to find any “living Mahers” in Kildare, but an uncanny thing happened when we were slightly lost outside of town looking for Old Kilcullen Graveyard. I got out of the car to ask for directions in a neighborhood store and the proprietor said, “Here’s the person you need to talk to,” pointing to the customer standing next to me. As we turned to look at each other I was stunned to see my father’s eyes and face and became riveted by the stranger’s quiet voice and gentle demeanor, so like his (and my brother’s, who seems increasingly like our father). Maybe this was the person John thought I should meet!  So, in my memory we did meet – here was “a Maher,” I do believe – though it was early in our journey and I didn’t dare intrude on this man’s privacy nor ask anything beyond how to get where we meant to go.

Brennan Tombstone

Brennan Tombstone, Old Kilcullen Graveyard, July 2011

At the time of Saint Patrick the walled town of Kilcullen was ruled by the Kings of Leinster, whose primary location was one of the ancient hill forts, Dún Ailinne (Knockaulin) (2.,3.). Saint Patrick is credited with having begun a monastery in Cill Chuillinn where a round tower was built in the 11th century. At Kilcullen’s High Cross and Round Tower (Ardchros agus Cloigtheach Sheanchill Chuillinn), are remains of two high crosses, ruins of an old church and several graves (no Mahers). The base of one cross, carved on all sides in high relief designs, includes an image of Mac Táil, who was ordained by Saint Patrick. Mac Táil (of the adze) defended the monastery against the Vikings in the early 10th century.  A Bord Fáilte Éireann sign at the Round Tower explained that round towers “were used as refuges and as store houses for church valuables during the Norse raids in the 9th-10th century A.D. and served as watch towers and belfries. During the insurrection of 1798 during a successful Irish stand, the upper portion of the tower suffered some damage.”

One of the oldest graves in Saint Francis Cemetery, Naugatuck, Connecticut, is that of Nicholas Brennan, from Kilkenny.  At present it hasn’t been determined whether his family was related to the group that arrived from Kildare in 1860, whose intermarried branches through the decades seem to connect with just about every other Irish Catholic family in town–including mine. I believe it is possible that the tombstones I have transcribed from Kildare could tie into the Naugatuck Brennans. In a different part of Saint Francis Cemetery, a Talbot grave also cites Kildare as the origin of that family.

Selected Transcriptions: Old Kilcullen Graveyard

1. Erected by His Children In Memory of Their Beloved Father CHRISTOPHER TALBOT, Kildare, who died 5th June 1887 aged 66 years. His son JOHN who died 23rd January 1903 aged 34 years  Also Their Beloved Mother ANNE TALBOT who died 2nd September 1906 aged 64 years. MARY HARTE Daughter of CHRISTOPHER TALBOT who died 13th August 1914 aged 48 years Also His Son PATRICK who died  4th October 1916 aged 50 years. Also their cousin KATIE TALBOT who died 2nd February 1919 aged 36 years. And Also His Daughter LIZZIE CONNOLLY who died October 2nd 1924 aged 50 Years.   R   I   P

2. Erected by JAMES DUNNE Osborne Lodge Kildare To the Memory of His Son PATRICK JOSEPH who died 2 April 1917, Aged 25 Years. The Above JAMES DUNNE Died At Whitestand House Kildare [13th?] Feb 1927 Aged 86. KATHERINE DUNNE, Wife of JAMES DUNNE died 15th July 1956 Aged [88?]  R. I. P.

3. Pray For The Soul Of JAMES BRENNAN Old Kilcullen Who Died On The 1st Feb. 1884, Aged 64. Also CATHERINE BRENNAN Relict Of Above, Who Died 15th December 1911 Aged 95 Years.  R  I  P

4. (Lichen, very difficult to read)  This stone was erected by Daniel Brennan in memory of his Father, Patrick Brennan, who departed this life August [?] [1861?] aged [?] and his Mother [Mary] Brennan (too much lichen to read the rest).

5. (Lichen, very difficult to read)  Erected by Michael Brennan of [….pool?] in memory of his [?] Mother Mary Brennan who died Old Kilcullen April the 19th [1870?] aged [and his] Father [short name] Brennan who [unreadable] Rest [unreadable] Old Kilcullen [?] the [?]

6. DENIS BRENNAN Who Died [?] Feb. [1938] Aged [?8] Years.  Also His Wife MARGARET BRENNAN who died 30th March 1946 Aged 87 Years and Their Granddaughter MARGARET who died 10th March 1948 Aged 5 Years.

7. (Celtic Cross Monument) Pray For The Soul Of FRANCES BRENNAN Died 16th May 1948 Ages 38 Years And Her Husband JAMES BRENNAN Died 24th Jan. 19[6]4 Aged 62 Years.

Old Kilcullen Graveyard

Old Kilcullen Graveyard, July 2011

High Cross Carving

Mac Táil on High Cross Remains, Old Kilcullen Graveyard, July 2011

©2011 Sinéad Ní Mheachair (Janet Maher)

All Rights Reserved

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