As we await
processing of our travel documents, there is
much to be done before we get to commence research in the Old Country. Ireland may be,
relatively, a small country, but it is full of Kellys and Tullys and even
Falveys. Which John or Mary would be ours? Lest we squander our precious three
weeks research time in the Emerald Isle, the goal is to ascertain the right
John Kellys before we leave home, here in the States.
Right now, I’m taking time to sort through each major
surname group, to see where I left off in research. Call this a needs
assessment for my research’s current status. While I felt pretty good about the
condition in which I left each surname project, last time I reviewed it, I had
worked each project back in time as far as I could push it, and then froze it
in its corner and left it standing there.
Some good things have happened in the meantime. For one,
both
FamilySearch.org and
Ancestry.com have been in what appears to be an arms
race to see who can amass the greatest heap of digital records in the shortest
time. Don’t expect to see any non-proliferation treaties in this race. Instead
of mutual destruction, this race insures a mutual benefit for all researchers.
Then, these two genealogy giants are being joined by many
upstarts—both for-profit and non-profit organizations—adding their
contributions to the universe of historic documents available online. There is
such a patchwork of genealogical websites out there that the phrase “Google™ is
your friend” has indeed become the genealogist’s mantra.
The bottom line for me—having put my Irish brick walls to
bed long before the winter holiday season was upon us—is that there may well be
multiple additional resources now available to help me pick up the trail and
blaze a path further back in time. The key is: to push that path back far
enough to land me on the western shores of Ireland.
To make sure no hint is left unnoticed, I’ve got to have a
research plan. Here are the trails, as I left off work on each surname, and
what I still need to do with them to land me in the right parish in that family’s
homeland.
Tully and Flannery
From their home in Chicago,
where we met Frank Stevens through his World War II letters home to his mother,
Agnes Tully Stevens, the Tully family followed a path northward to Canada West,
as it was called in the 1860s. There, I’ve last seen their records in a small
town called
Paris in
Brant County.
The challenge here is to find documentation at that early date, and also to
trace what became of the women of the Tully family—many of whom I can’t locate
after the 1852 census. Additionally, my hope is to uncover any relationships
between
the Tully families listed in that census, and to see how the Tully
matriarch, whose maiden name was Flannery, connects with the Flannery neighbors
in the vicinity of the Tully home.
We’ve already obtained written notice of the Tully family’s
origin in Ireland, which
makes this the ancestral line most likely to allow me to make connections with
a specific parish, once we get to Ireland. Who knows? Perhaps we’ll
even find distant cousins still in the town of
Ballina in County Tipperary.
Flanagan and Malloy
While I’m unlikely to find any further trace of the
unfortunate Stephen Malloy after his unexpected flight to Boston
from Liverpool in 1848, hopefully I’ll be able to figure out what drew his wife—after
her pursuit of her missing husband—to the
recently established transportation hub of the Midwest city of Chicago. While I’ve
located—thanks to a copy of a letter passed down through the family—the name of
the ship Stephen traveled on (and, incidentally, his home address in Ireland,
thanks to the foresight someone had to save the letter
in its envelope), I’ve yet to find any passenger records showing me
how his wife and, later, his young daughter, got to the New World from the Old.
Before the Mrs. Malloy’s determined pursuit of her fleeing
husband, there are undoubtedly records of the Malloys’ marriage, and their
daughter’s birth. Thankfully, I do know that Mrs. Malloy’s maiden name was
Flanagan, and that she had a brother. What I have yet to find is confirmation
that her brother was indeed the William Flanagan that was sentenced to
transportation for seven years—and, if so, how he decided to return not to his homeland, and not to Boston, where his sister had
traveled, but to Chicago. And who got there first? William? Or his sister?
Most of all, I’d like to find out: why Chicago? And were they the only ones? Or did
other Flanagan siblings also find their way westward?
Kelly and Falvey
This is the line that has its marching orders laid out in
the best-defined manner of all our Irish ancestral lines. My first duty will be
to send for immigration records from the courts for the Kelly family which settled
in Fort Wayne.
Here’s hoping the records will be for the
right
John Kelly! And, finding that, that they will contain the kind of information I’m
seeking. I’ve already been informed by family tradition that this Kelly family
was from the
Lakes of Killarney. That,
however, is the type of remembrance rife with possibilities for romanticism.
As I’ve already mentioned, I had once been excited to
discover that John Kelly’s wife had the unusual name of Johanna Falvey.
Unusual, that is, to
me. To the folks
back home in
County Kerry, apparently Falvey
was not all that uncommon. Though an obituary helped me discover the origin in County Kerry,
there is still much work to determine
which Johanna Falvey it might have been
who married which John Kelly.
The Other Kelly
There is yet another Kelly puzzle I’ve got to decipher: that
of the Catherine Kelly who married the original immigrant John Stevens. This
young Catherine Kelly apparently came to the United States with her own parents,
and married here—somewhere. Because
this detail transpired sometime close to 1850, and may have occurred in either
the Midwest or possibly even in New
Orleans, sources for solid documentation may not be
available. There are only the slightest hints of possible names for this
Catherine Kelly’s parents. Even these may be false leads. All that’s been
passed down orally from family tradition is that this Kelly family came from
the Dublin area—not
a reassuring lead. I may be researching more Kellys than I counted on, just to
find the right one. And that’s even before I leave the shores of this country.
Stevens: the family’s namesake
The primary prize in all this searching would be to locate
the origin of the Stevens immigrant from whom our whole family descended. In
one serendipitous moment in Lafayette, Indiana, I was able to find a Declaration of Intent,
isolating
County Mayo
as John Stevens’ origin in Ireland.
In addition, the form included details on John Stevens’ route of travel to Indiana: up the Mississippi
from New Orleans.
To find any passenger record of this man’s travels, though,
has been near impossible to this point. Trying to jump to the source by
scouring the records already available online for a John Stevens in County Mayo
is fruitless—or, rather, too plentiful in its yield. Which John Stevens would
be ours? The goal is to find any other indicators which would allow me to
isolate this John Stevens with certainty, either by parents’ names, siblings’
names, or other records of his origin.
A Tall Order
Between the marching orders for these eight Irish surnames,
I’ve got a lot of work to cover within the next six months. From this vantage
point, it seems like a race to the finish. While some lines may gain ground
quickly, others may seem to stall out, but overall, here’s hoping to make
steady progress on average, as the months fly by on the way to an autumn finish
line.