tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.comments2023-06-27T03:43:35.956-04:00LowellIrishLowellIrishhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17581828365206969935noreply@blogger.comBlogger288125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-32007044708420333492023-06-23T18:21:55.960-04:002023-06-23T18:21:55.960-04:00Léigh go cúramach le do thoil
Tá sé tábhachtach...Léigh go cúramach le do thoil<br /> Tá sé tábhachtach oideachas a chur ort féin faoi tinnis choitianta, mná sláintiúla agus fir. is gnó é<br /> Smeara cnámh idirmheánach (orgáin duáin) sna duáin, testes agus dáileog teagmhála trom 100%. Seol ríomhphost chuig Marialadrimaholyclinic@gmail.com<br /> Tá go leor againn<br /> Tá sé tábhachtach taithí mhaith a bheith agat.<br /> Ar mhaith leat deiseanna, deiseanna, deiseanna chun gnóthachan airgeadais a bhaint amach?<br /> Cheannaigh mé do cheannsa<br /> le haghaidh 880,000 euro<br /> Praghas: 570,000 euro<br /> Ubhagán: 300,000 go<br /> An tUasal Larsen: SEK 450,000<br /> VIB / Sida Ultra Vibros 11 An méid a cheadaítear dúinn, an méid a cheadaítear dúinn VIB / SIDA Ultra Vibros 11<br /> Seol ríomhphost chugainn<br /> R-phost;<br /> seoladh ríomhphoist; Marialadrimaholyclinic@gmail.com<br /> cad: toirchis<br /> Mise le measAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-78745065070860871712023-06-23T18:17:44.557-04:002023-06-23T18:17:44.557-04:00Léigh go cúramach le do thoil
Tá sé tábhachtach...Léigh go cúramach le do thoil<br /> Tá sé tábhachtach oideachas a chur ort féin faoi tinnis choitianta, mná sláintiúla agus fir. is gnó é<br /> Smeara cnámh idirmheánach (orgáin duáin) sna duáin, testes agus dáileog teagmhála trom 100%. Seol ríomhphost chuig Marialadrimaholyclinic@gmail.com<br /> Tá go leor againn<br /> Tá sé tábhachtach taithí mhaith a bheith agat.<br /> Ar mhaith leat deiseanna, deiseanna, deiseanna chun gnóthachan airgeadais a bhaint amach?<br /> Cheannaigh mé do cheannsa<br /> le haghaidh 880,000 euro<br /> Praghas: 570,000 euro<br /> Ubhagán: 300,000 go<br /> An tUasal Larsen: SEK 450,000<br /> VIB / Sida Ultra Vibros 11 An méid a cheadaítear dúinn, an méid a cheadaítear dúinn VIB / SIDA Ultra Vibros 11<br /> Seol ríomhphost chugainn<br /> R-phost;<br /> seoladh ríomhphoist; Marialadrimaholyclinic@gmail.com<br /> cad: toirchis<br /> Mise le measDr hermisianoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-85863541529854890332023-06-23T18:16:59.040-04:002023-06-23T18:16:59.040-04:00Léigh go cúramach le do thoil
Tá sé tábhachtach...Léigh go cúramach le do thoil<br /> Tá sé tábhachtach oideachas a chur ort féin faoi tinnis choitianta, mná sláintiúla agus fir. is gnó é<br /> Smeara cnámh idirmheánach (orgáin duáin) sna duáin, testes agus dáileog teagmhála trom 100%. Seol ríomhphost chuig Marialadrimaholyclinic@gmail.com<br /> Tá go leor againn<br /> Tá sé tábhachtach taithí mhaith a bheith agat.<br /> Ar mhaith leat deiseanna, deiseanna, deiseanna chun gnóthachan airgeadais a bhaint amach?<br /> Cheannaigh mé do cheannsa<br /> le haghaidh 880,000 euro<br /> Praghas: 570,000 euro<br /> Ubhagán: 300,000 go<br /> An tUasal Larsen: SEK 450,000<br /> VIB / Sida Ultra Vibros 11 An méid a cheadaítear dúinn, an méid a cheadaítear dúinn VIB / SIDA Ultra Vibros 11<br /> Seol ríomhphost chugainn<br /> R-phost;<br /> seoladh ríomhphoist; Marialadrimaholyclinic@gmail.com<br /> cad: toirchis<br /> Mise le measAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-49869217697819991712022-11-21T01:21:22.438-05:002022-11-21T01:21:22.438-05:00I will definitely read that book. I just love Iris...I will definitely read that book. I just love Irish culture and tradition. If you want to learn more about traditions of Ireland then you must read In The Ould Ago book which is available <a href="https://folklorebook.com/" rel="nofollow">Folklorebook.com</a>.Lewis Edwardshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07440918246321760763noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-16966692224313921802022-10-29T12:42:17.559-04:002022-10-29T12:42:17.559-04:00John M Burke (Dublin Dan) and Annie Irish are my g...John M Burke (Dublin Dan) and Annie Irish are my great great grandparents. Contact me at: cyndyfujikawa@gmail.com for more information.Caitlin Parkshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18167666473309845038noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-5091622241789203592022-06-27T17:15:57.371-04:002022-06-27T17:15:57.371-04:00I was on campus avenue in the 60's. Great plac...I was on campus avenue in the 60's. Great place. Ken Languirand.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-85181658154758243042022-05-04T01:42:42.041-04:002022-05-04T01:42:42.041-04:00Thaank youThaank youIsahttps://www.isaacweber.com/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-31553601503160574452021-07-10T11:22:56.354-04:002021-07-10T11:22:56.354-04:00Thank you for your research. I just purchased a tr...Thank you for your research. I just purchased a trunk like this at a yard sale. I cleaned the wood with mild soap and water and treated it with Howard's Restore-A-Finish. I replaced the handles as one was missing entirely and the other was badly damaged. Am in the process of cleaning the inside with just a soft cloth and warm water and will glue down the loose paper. I, too, purchased the trunk because of the label ! And, I, too, collect stuff ! Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18306055605701710865noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-19237364589440025262021-05-31T18:13:09.583-04:002021-05-31T18:13:09.583-04:00It was Gus Bernier at Channel 9.It was Gus Bernier at Channel 9.Gary Francis, WCAPhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14556383348281483697noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-91366813963515394012021-01-31T10:08:43.927-05:002021-01-31T10:08:43.927-05:00I am related to Michael J. Coleman (1830-1868) and...I am related to Michael J. Coleman (1830-1868) and his wife Martha (1832-1895). Michael was from Cork County, Ireland and lived in Lowell, MA. I don't know if this will help you but all the Coleman/Roark/Fox members are buried at the Saint Patrick's Cemetery in Lowell, MA. All the gravesite information is now online. I have a photo of this gravesite if you are interested. Thank you for sharing your information. I am getting close to retirement and plan to research as well.<br /><br />Best regards,<br /><br />Jane<br /><br />Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14290634176559059780noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-2365991246452330052021-01-03T15:58:21.449-05:002021-01-03T15:58:21.449-05:00Hi, Please see my recent entry on the blog concern...Hi, Please see my recent entry on the blog concerning Burke. I am not on any social media All the best steve Steve Griffinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02325040224284874503noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-78423383111898770512021-01-03T15:48:08.142-05:002021-01-03T15:48:08.142-05:00This completes the original message
(Irish in Lowe...This completes the original message<br />(Irish in Lowell, Mass.). Mitchell, Brian C. The paddy camps: the Irish of Lowell, 1821-61. University of Illinois Press, 1988, xiii, 247p, bib, index, photos. Fine in dust jacket. Review slip laid in. <br />During the mid-nineteenth century, Lowell’s Irish population was among the largest in New England. Lowell was the largest of the antebellum mill towns. The Irish had lived in the vicinity since the 1790’s and by the 1830’s had formed a permanent settlement, a rough collection of “paddy camps” that kept them separated from the planned Yankee mill village. The cordial relationship abruptly ended when the mills replaced their female Yankee workers with the Irish. <br /><br />(Irish in Lowell, Mass.). O’Dwyer, George F. The Irish Catholic genesis of Lowell. Revised edition. Lowell: Lowell Museum, 1981, 80p, paperbound. This is a reprint of the very scarce 1920 edition. Fine condition.<br />Very useful history of this important, and now forgotten, Irish community.<br />(Irish in Lowell, Mass.) St. Patrick’s Church. 150th Anniversary, Saint Patrick’s Catholic Church, Lowell, Massachusetts, 1831-1981. Lowell: St. Patrick’s, 1981, 68p, photos, paperbound. Fine copy. <br />St. Patrick’s was the first Catholic church in Lowell, built to serve the needs of the Irish. Many of the early settlers were Irish speakers; Mass was said by an Irish-speaking priest. This celebratory commemoration of the founding consists mainly of ads from the sponsors. I would assume that the Irish-speaker, Fr. Jeremiah O’Callaghan, 1780-186, probably celebrated Mass there.<br /><br />Robinson, William Erigena, 1814-1892. “W. E. Robinson, to the Citizens of Lowell”. Dated November 22, 1851, measures 9” x 13”. In fine shape, especially considering the ephemeral nature of the item.<br /><br />Robinson, a very important but largely forgotten leader in the Irish-American community, addresses the citizens of Lowell, Mass., criticizing the Loco Foco party for rejecting a qualified candidate simple because he was an Irish-Catholic. <br />Steve Griffinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02325040224284874503noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-14170417551930249122021-01-03T15:46:25.116-05:002021-01-03T15:46:25.116-05:00Flaherty, Doug. Digging into ourselves: poems. Mad...Flaherty, Doug. Digging into ourselves: poems. Madison, Wisconsin: Quixote Press, 1970, 27 poems on 28 unnumbered pages. Paperback, yellow paper cover with illustrated cover, little dusty. Measures 6 ½” x 8 ½”. Originally sold for $1.00<br />Flaherty, Doug. Digging into ourselves: poems. Oshkosh, Wisconsin: Road Runner Press, 1970, 14 poems on 20 unnumbered pages. Paperback, blue paper cover, cover as poorly illustrated by Alex Salimbeni as the other edition. Measures 4 ½” x 6 ¾”. Originally sold for 35 cents. <br />These books would be a bibliographer’s nightmare. Even though they share the same author, the same title, and the same year of publication they are not the same book. They only share seven poems and then not necessarily the same text. For example, Toby Tobias Dog is much longer in the Road Runner Press chapbook edition. Flaherty founded the Road Runner Press, which is the copy of the Digging into ourselves that Flaherty’s school, the University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh, has. <br />Doug Flaherty, born in Lowell, Massachusetts in 1939, founded Road Apple Review, a literary quarterly which published from 1968-1978. He also founded Wolf Angel Press and was a twenty-year faculty advisor to the Wisconsin Review at the University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh. He retired as Professor Emeritus, in 2001 from the University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh. <br />Flaherty, Doug. Good thief come home: selected poems, 1970-1990. Austin, Texas: Prickly Pear Press, 1990, 54 unnumbered pages. Paperback. Spine slightly sunned with a reading crease and faint corner crease to the front wrap. Inscribed by Flaherty on the half title page: “For Beverly, the black hat will point you home. The north wind cannot disturb. Best, Doug Flaherty, 4.17.90”. <br />Flaherty, Doug. Love-tangle of roots. Ithaca, New York: Ithaca House, 1977, 65p. Paperback. Good condition.<br />Flaherty, Doug. Weaving a slow dream of hands. Dublin: Seafront Press, 1972, 23p, paperback. Repaired with scotch tape at bottom of spine, good copy overall. Inscribed on front free endpaper: “For Paul, who reads images from the face of words. Best to you, on the coast. Doug Flaherty”.<br />"This book was set by hand in ten point Times Roman and printed on Glastonbury antique laid paper in a limited edition of 600 copies: 550 bound in paper, of which, 200 have been hand-sewn, numbered and signed; 50 bound in boards, numbered, signed, and inscribed by the author."<br />(Prize fighting). (Ward, Micky). Halloran, Bob. Irish thunder: the hard life & times of Micky Ward. Guilford, Conn.: Lyons Press, 2008, 289p, index. New in dust jacket. <br />Halloran, a sportswriter and technical consultant for the 2010 motion picture, The Fighter, portrays the boxer from Lowell, Mass., who became the 2002 world light welterweight champion -- "Irish" Micky Ward. "Recounts Ward's rise to hero status, his rivalry with his imprisoned brother, and the negotiations, betrayals, and drugs that shaped the wild youth who ultimately became a nationally respected boxer. Ward's dramatic victories inside the ring are depicted in gripping detail, but it is his victory outside the ring that inspires."<br />(Irish in Lowell, Mass.). McKean, David Duncan. Lowell Irish. Charleston, South Carolina: The History Press, 2016, 126p, bib, index, illustrations. New paperbound.<br />Lowell played a prominent role in the lives of Irish Americans, especially in the nineteenth century.<br />Meagher, Timothy J. (ed). From paddy to studs. Irish-American communities in the turn of the century era, 1880 to 1920. New York: Greenwood Press, 1986, xiv, 202p, bib, index. Fine. <br />Good essays on such communities as St. Louis, Worcester, Lowell, Philadelphia, Chicago, and San Francisco.<br />Steve Griffinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02325040224284874503noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-82485577491235048492021-01-03T15:46:07.072-05:002021-01-03T15:46:07.072-05:00Flaherty, Doug. Digging into ourselves: poems. Mad...Flaherty, Doug. Digging into ourselves: poems. Madison, Wisconsin: Quixote Press, 1970, 27 poems on 28 unnumbered pages. Paperback, yellow paper cover with illustrated cover, little dusty. Measures 6 ½” x 8 ½”. Originally sold for $1.00<br />Flaherty, Doug. Digging into ourselves: poems. Oshkosh, Wisconsin: Road Runner Press, 1970, 14 poems on 20 unnumbered pages. Paperback, blue paper cover, cover as poorly illustrated by Alex Salimbeni as the other edition. Measures 4 ½” x 6 ¾”. Originally sold for 35 cents. <br />These books would be a bibliographer’s nightmare. Even though they share the same author, the same title, and the same year of publication they are not the same book. They only share seven poems and then not necessarily the same text. For example, Toby Tobias Dog is much longer in the Road Runner Press chapbook edition. Flaherty founded the Road Runner Press, which is the copy of the Digging into ourselves that Flaherty’s school, the University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh, has. <br />Doug Flaherty, born in Lowell, Massachusetts in 1939, founded Road Apple Review, a literary quarterly which published from 1968-1978. He also founded Wolf Angel Press and was a twenty-year faculty advisor to the Wisconsin Review at the University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh. He retired as Professor Emeritus, in 2001 from the University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh. <br />Flaherty, Doug. Good thief come home: selected poems, 1970-1990. Austin, Texas: Prickly Pear Press, 1990, 54 unnumbered pages. Paperback. Spine slightly sunned with a reading crease and faint corner crease to the front wrap. Inscribed by Flaherty on the half title page: “For Beverly, the black hat will point you home. The north wind cannot disturb. Best, Doug Flaherty, 4.17.90”. <br />Flaherty, Doug. Love-tangle of roots. Ithaca, New York: Ithaca House, 1977, 65p. Paperback. Good condition.<br />Flaherty, Doug. Weaving a slow dream of hands. Dublin: Seafront Press, 1972, 23p, paperback. Repaired with scotch tape at bottom of spine, good copy overall. Inscribed on front free endpaper: “For Paul, who reads images from the face of words. Best to you, on the coast. Doug Flaherty”.<br />"This book was set by hand in ten point Times Roman and printed on Glastonbury antique laid paper in a limited edition of 600 copies: 550 bound in paper, of which, 200 have been hand-sewn, numbered and signed; 50 bound in boards, numbered, signed, and inscribed by the author."<br />(Prize fighting). (Ward, Micky). Halloran, Bob. Irish thunder: the hard life & times of Micky Ward. Guilford, Conn.: Lyons Press, 2008, 289p, index. New in dust jacket. <br />Halloran, a sportswriter and technical consultant for the 2010 motion picture, The Fighter, portrays the boxer from Lowell, Mass., who became the 2002 world light welterweight champion -- "Irish" Micky Ward. "Recounts Ward's rise to hero status, his rivalry with his imprisoned brother, and the negotiations, betrayals, and drugs that shaped the wild youth who ultimately became a nationally respected boxer. Ward's dramatic victories inside the ring are depicted in gripping detail, but it is his victory outside the ring that inspires."<br />(Irish in Lowell, Mass.). McKean, David Duncan. Lowell Irish. Charleston, South Carolina: The History Press, 2016, 126p, bib, index, illustrations. New paperbound.<br />Lowell played a prominent role in the lives of Irish Americans, especially in the nineteenth century.<br />Meagher, Timothy J. (ed). From paddy to studs. Irish-American communities in the turn of the century era, 1880 to 1920. New York: Greenwood Press, 1986, xiv, 202p, bib, index. Fine. <br />Good essays on such communities as St. Louis, Worcester, Lowell, Philadelphia, Chicago, and San Francisco.<br />Steve Griffinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02325040224284874503noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-15770122397064490092021-01-03T15:31:55.796-05:002021-01-03T15:31:55.796-05:00Another message to followAnother message to followSteve Griffinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02325040224284874503noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-46856239393863956072021-01-03T15:31:21.165-05:002021-01-03T15:31:21.165-05:00Hello,
I was happy to come across this site when ...Hello,<br /><br />I was happy to come across this site when I was doing some research on John Burke. I have an unrecorded sheet music score referring to him. FYI, there are other Irish-Lowell connections. From my collection on the Irish in America, which I have given to the National Library of Ireland are the following:<br /><br />(Sheet music). O’Connell, C. C., arranger, fl. 1870’s. I am an Irish Boy or Dan Donohoe is my name. Arranged by C. C. O’Connell. Boston: White & Goullaud, 86 Tremont Street, 1871, 5 pages. Charles H. Crosby & Company of 4-6 Water Street, Boston did the lithograph. Other distributors listed are W. A. Pond & Company in New York; Lyon and Healy in Chicago; and J. E. Winner in Philadelphia. Large format score with edge repaired. Lithograph of Irish man in traditional dress carrying a whip for a jaunting car with the Blarney Castle? in the background. Could be from a theatrical backdrop. The image occupies most of the cover, well done. May be from a photograph. Typical wear and tear considering the age and nature of the production.<br />Caption on cover: “Favorite Songs Sung by the Celebrated Irish Comedian, John M. Burke. With McGill and Strong’s Mirror of Ireland”. With list of four songs.<br />Note: There is a reference to the Mirror of Ireland, “Mirror of Ireland ... Donnybrook fair 1850 McGill & Strong's mirror of Ireland 85 beautiful scenes and a talented troupe of Irish comedians” published by the Readex Corporation in 2005 in its American broadsides and ephemera,1706-1900. First series, no. 24024. Appears to have been issued in Worcester, Massachusetts in 1872 and performed at the Mechanics Hall. The performers include: Bryan O'Lynn; G.B. Harcourt; Sadie McGill; Julia Butler; O.T. Arnold. The performance includes: Mirror of Ireland; Troupe of Irish comedians; Killarney. No mention of Burke.<br />A very scarce item with no copy located on OCLC.<br />I will have a copy made of the score and send it to this site.<br /><br />(Sheet music). O’Connell, C. C., arranger, fl. 1870’s. I am an Irish Boy or Dan Donohoe is my name. Arranged by C. C. O’Connell. Boston: White & Goullaud, 86 Tremont Street, 1871, 5 pages. Charles H. Crosby & Company of 4-6 Water Street, Boston did the lithograph. Other distributors listed are W. A. Pond & Company in New York; Lyon and Healy in Chicago; and J. E. Winner in Philadelphia. Large format score with edge repaired. Lithograph of Irish man in traditional dress carrying a whip for a jaunting car with the Blarney Castle? in the background. Could be from a theatrical backdrop. The image occupies most of the cover, well done. May be from a photograph. Typical wear and tear considering the age and nature of the production.<br />Caption on cover: “Favorite Songs Sung by the Celebrated Irish Comedian, John M. Burke. With McGill and Strong’s Mirror of Ireland”. With list of four songs.<br />Note: There is a reference to the Mirror of Ireland, “Mirror of Ireland ... Donnybrook fair 1850 McGill & Strong's mirror of Ireland 85 beautiful scenes and a talented troupe of Irish comedians” published by the Readex Corporation in 2005 in its American broadsides and ephemera,1706-1900. First series, no. 24024. Appears to have been issued in Worcester, Massachusetts in 1872 and performed at the Mechanics Hall. The performers include: Bryan O'Lynn; G.B. Harcourt; Sadie McGill; Julia Butler; O.T. Arnold. The performance includes: Mirror of Ireland; Troupe of Irish comedians; Killarney. No mention of Burke.<br />A very scarce item with no copy located on OCLC. I will have a copy made of this and send it to this site. Best wishes, Steve Griffin PS message was too long so will send two<br /><br /><br /><br />Steve Griffinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02325040224284874503noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-37887981045579066942020-12-31T14:47:48.342-05:002020-12-31T14:47:48.342-05:00I remember when we lived on Fletcher st,,I would s...I remember when we lived on Fletcher st,,I would stop by the bakery, watck the process through the open doors,,,,the bakers would slip me a few crackers!! I f you lived in that area in the 60s you would know how great this was !!!Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11443794144171063605noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-46199011692704481002020-09-26T09:25:40.133-04:002020-09-26T09:25:40.133-04:00My "Lowell Ancestors" arrived in the cit...My "Lowell Ancestors" arrived in the city (by way of Portsmouth, Lawrence, Manchester) mid 1870s to - obviously - find employment in the Mills. After hiring two genealogists, my cousins and I feel that the needle hasn't moved much. Repeatedly, however, the leads suggest a connection with St. Patrick's Church and Cemetery. My growing obsession germinated decades ago when my mother presented me with a family album from the late 1800's. Beyond the most basic declaration, received as a suggestion, really, - that "these are your McKenna relations", I am only able to say that the majority of the cabinet cards and CDV's advertise Lowell photographers. My mother was pretty certain about one of the faces that seemed to be gazing (contemplatively?) wide of the photographer 's left shoulder. Your great-grandmother, Margaret T. McKenna, she assured me. <br />So, I've been chasing Margaret T. McKenna, her four siblings, and her parents ever since. With each tiny piece that we can add to the narrative, our sorrow expands over their profound struggles. Tewksbury Almshouse. . . pauper graves. . . dissolution of family. <br />As any family researcher knows, you never really abandon your pilgrimage. It's an imagined restiveness, I'm sure, but until we can arrange in our mind's eye their final resting place, we'll not be at peace.Scosche of Classhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13770348814482742608noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-3307768731004016512020-09-26T09:22:18.433-04:002020-09-26T09:22:18.433-04:00This comment has been removed by the author.Scosche of Classhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13770348814482742608noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-8626447703615745842020-09-14T14:48:36.302-04:002020-09-14T14:48:36.302-04:00Hi Dave,
My name is Ryan Green. I’m conducting re...Hi Dave,<br /><br />My name is Ryan Green. I’m conducting research and working on a genealogy of the Green family in Lowell. <br /><br />Through both traditional genealogy and DNA testing I’ve learned that many of the Greens of Lowell, including John, originally had the surname of Greenan back in County Leitrim. They can be found in the Irish Tithe Applotment records living in “Aughavadden” in the Fenagh Parish. <br /><br />I believe this John is my GGG-grandfather Hugh Green’s uncle. Hugh was born 1820 in Ireland, and died in 1893 in Lowell. Hugh bought a large portion of property from this Gentleman John Green just prior to John’s death in 1866. I have the sale record that I got from another cousin who got it from the city archives. I believe Hugh was John’s nephew, and that Hugh’s father was another Hugh Green(an). My Green family lived on this property at Lakeview and owned a large portion of land in the area in the late 1800s. <br /><br />I came across your article and can’t tell you how much this is appreciated to see a relative’s memory kept alive through storytelling such at this. If you know of any living descendants of John, could you please email me at rgreen50 @ aol .com . Looking to connect and share some of my findings and further research.<br /><br />Thank you,<br /><br />RyanRyanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05298812989925393065noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-60210877471711157692020-08-08T15:24:12.378-04:002020-08-08T15:24:12.378-04:00Hi, my 2X great grandfather is Hugh Cummiskey from...Hi, my 2X great grandfather is Hugh Cummiskey from PEI. Born in 1820 in County Monaghan Ireland. I often wonder if the Lowell Hugh Cummiskey and the PEI one are cousins.Paul Forsythhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05792824728493666594noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-2075954054461329432020-03-18T01:11:07.236-04:002020-03-18T01:11:07.236-04:00Hi Lowell,
You've stumbled upon my family. ...Hi Lowell, <br /><br />You've stumbled upon my family. The cane is an interesting detail I was not aware of! <br /><br />I was unaware that Annie Irish remarried. I wonder if it may have been confused with her stage name and alter ego, "Mrs. Harry Hall." Making her Annie Hall....food for though. Please keep in touch: https://www.facebook.com/cyndy.fujikawaCynthia G Fujikawanoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-72495686914673670882019-11-29T20:40:03.354-05:002019-11-29T20:40:03.354-05:00I really appreciate this information that you have...I really appreciate this information that you have provided here on this platform.<br /><a href="http://intelligater.com" rel="nofollow"><b>START YOUR BACKGROUND CHECK HERE WITH INTELLIGATER.COM</b></a>Justmehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12866007572810006441noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-2963717308659248422018-08-26T21:37:20.133-04:002018-08-26T21:37:20.133-04:00I have found during Genealogy search that I have 2...I have found during Genealogy search that I have 2 Grand Uncles buried in St. Peter's Cemetery, only 1 of which is listed on the spreadsheet. One is Morris Bell (he is listed) the other is Bartholomew Bell 3/27/1907-7/26/1908. I assume at this point in time, there is no way to know where they are buried. Thank you for the research you are doing. My family wasn't even aware these children ever existed, it would be nice one day to know where their remains are. Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14951465930992792723noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4934082776237806721.post-85258695512365726062018-03-10T20:50:53.245-05:002018-03-10T20:50:53.245-05:00Rosemary, could you contact me through my email? ...Rosemary, could you contact me through my email? Thanks.<br />LowellIrishhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17581828365206969935noreply@blogger.com