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  #1  
Old 05-03-11, 18:44
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Nell Nell is offline
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Default Callaghan McCarthy abt 1800 Cork, Ireland - 1877 London

None of the information below would have been available until the marvellous Merry helped me

I don't know when Callaghan or his wife came to England.
poss marriage? Calahan Mc Carthy & Mary Murphy 14 Nov 1825 Saint Martin In The Fields,Westminster

1841 ~ not yet found

1851
Saffron Hill, London
Cal. McCarthy head 46 potato dealer Ireland
Mary McCarthy wife 45 Ireland
Bridget McCarthy daur 18 Middx St. Andrews
Eliza McCarthy daur 16 Middx St. Andrews
John McCarthy son 14 Middx St. Andrews
Mary Ann daur 11 Middx St. Andrews
Julia McCarthy daur 8 Middx St. Andrews
Catherine McCarthy daur 4 Middx St. Andrews

1861 ~ not yet found


1871 [fits with death below]
38 Great Saffron Hill
Callaching [sic] McCarthy 65 head greengrocer Ireland Fermoy
M A Mc Carthy 67 wife greengrocer Ireland Killkenny
M A Stastto [Stratton] daur mar 30 b. London St. Andrews


Death:
Callaghan McCarthy, age 76,greengrocer, died 18 Mar 1877 at 26 Saffron Hill, of pneumonia. His married daughter Mary Ann Stratton was the informant.

[COLOR="DarkOrchid"]Edit 29 Apr 2018. Have just found Callaghan's burial on Findmypast. His funeral was at the Roman Catholic church St. Etheldreda's in Holborn, his address was 38 Saffron Hill. Burial at SS Maria, Kensal Green 26 Mar 1877./COLOR]

Link to ex's gt gt grandfather: http://www.genealogistsforum.co.uk/f...ead.php?t=9825
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Last edited by Nell; 29-04-18 at 11:57. Reason: to add info from death cert
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Old 05-03-11, 19:11
maggie_4_7
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"I don't know when Callaghan or his wife came to England.
poss marriage? Calahan Mc Carthy & Mary Murphy 14 Nov 1825 Saint Martin In The Fields,Westminster"


So can we assume they were protestant then?
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Old 05-03-11, 19:58
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I don't know that this is the marriage, Maggie. It might be. I don't know when Callaghan or his wife came to England.

I will get a birth cert for one of their children to get Mary's maiden name when I am in funds.

As for their being Protestant, all I can say is that all their children married in C of E churches. But I haven't found any baptisms. So it might be that the baptisms were in churches not on Ancestry, or that they were Catholics but married in C of E churches because it was more socially acceptable or because their spouses were C of E.
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researching
Chowns in Buckinghamshire & Oxfordshire
Brewer, Broad, Eplett & Pope in Cornwall
Smoothy & Willsher/Wiltshire in Essex & Surrey
Emms, Mealing + variants, Purvey & Williams in Gloucestershire
Barnes, Dunt, Gray, Massingham, Saul/Seals/Sales in Norfolk
Matthews & Nash in Warwickshire
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Old 05-03-11, 20:41
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Quote:
I will get a birth cert for one of their children to get Mary's maiden name when I am in funds.
And when you can find one! (I couldn't)
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Old 05-03-11, 20:57
maggie_4_7
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Merry View Post
And when you can find one! (I couldn't)
Yeah I was just thinking that too!
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Old 05-03-11, 23:01
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Well, there's that too. Pesky McCarthys and Marsdens and Robins. All in ex's tree and all a nightmare!
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Love from Nell
researching
Chowns in Buckinghamshire & Oxfordshire
Brewer, Broad, Eplett & Pope in Cornwall
Smoothy & Willsher/Wiltshire in Essex & Surrey
Emms, Mealing + variants, Purvey & Williams in Gloucestershire
Barnes, Dunt, Gray, Massingham, Saul/Seals/Sales in Norfolk
Matthews & Nash in Warwickshire
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  #7  
Old 06-03-11, 03:04
tenterfieldjulie
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Nell when I was in Ireland in 2009 I visited the Immigration Museum and Heritage Centre at Cobh (pronounced Cove) outside Cork. Cobh used to be called Queenstown. Cobh was the largest immigration port from Ireland. It is where the mass migration of people left from after the potato famine to the USA and the world. It was the last port of call of the Titanic. When I find the literature about it I will let you know, as enquiries could be made about all the people who left from there and it is where most people left from. I'm not sure if it was a paid site or not.
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Old 06-03-11, 08:39
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Erm, we are looking for them in Saffron Hll London, not America!! They came from Ireland to England probably in he 1820s.
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Old 06-03-11, 09:05
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I once read an article - which I can't find - written in the first half of the C19th which claimed that although the majority of the Irish immigrants in the Saffron Hill area were RC, they tended to bend to the will of whichever priest braved the slum. I have Cork and Kerry ancestors there in the 1840s-60s and although I have some evidence that they were RC (even up to the end of the century), they did often marry (when they do) in C of E churches. I suppose like many immigrants they lived within their own rules to some extent and I've never come across a baptism with my lot so I assume that if they were baptised they were baptised RC.

Birth registration is no better - my great grandfather was born 1875/6, the sixth of eight that I know of and I've never found a birth cert for any of them.
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Old 06-03-11, 09:22
tenterfieldjulie
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Merry I believe Queenstown (Cobh) in Ireland was the major immigration port to everywhere. I read somewhere that it has passenger lists of all who sailed from Cobh and that included UK. The famine migration to the States (Ellis Island), Convicts (Australia) and the last port of call of the Titanic, are just major exhibits in the museum. Hopefully when I find the literature it may be of help to Nell Sorry my post was confused.
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