It’s been wonderful, knowing I can research details of my
family history from the comfort of my own home, moving not much more than my
fingertips across a keyboard. There are resources available, everything from FamilySearch.org,
the long-established repository for all things genealogical, to fresh ideas,
like Ireland’s
brainchild for reaching out to curious descendants of the famine’s diaspora,
Ireland Reaching Out.
My only problem: I seem to arrive at these promising
websites either too early or too late.
Take FamilySearch.org. With the roll out of their latest
iteration of their website, the Church
of Latter Day Saints
incorporated the device of the “wiki” to create their own version of Wikipedia:
a finding aid for genealogical research, honed down to the smallest
geographical designations. Since I had recently discovered that FamilySearch
included some Irish records for County
Kerry—the very location of
the next family on my get-ready-for-Ireland quest—I decided to do a search there for
the family of our ancestors, John and Johanna Falvey Kelly.
Using only FamilySearch's database labeled “Irish Births and Baptisms
1620-1881,” I narrowed down my parameters until I reached a likely cohort of sixteen hits. Among that manageable number of results, there were four possibilities of
specific interest:
·
Mary Kelly, born 18 September, 1864, in “Molahiffe”
·
Mary Kelly, born 20 March, 1867, in “County Kerry”
·
Mary Kelly, born 20 March, 1867, in “Molahiffe”
·
Mary Kelly, born 24 March, 1867, in “Currow”
Each of these results named as parents a variation on the
spellings for John Kelly as father and Johanna Falvey as mother.
Googling “Molahiffe, County Kerry”
brought several results, which I was eager to follow. The first one turned out
to be the wiki page for FamilySearch’s entry by that name. “Wonderful,” I
thought, “I’m finally getting to check out a FamilySearch wiki. I’ve always
meant to do that.”
But when I got to the page, it was evidently the boilerplate
format provided so a well-meaning volunteer could take the template and run
with it.
Another Google result for my eager search on my new-found
location was the County
Kerry page on Ireland
Reaching Out. This was a government-sanctioned program launched with much
fanfare a few years back—and oh, how I wish I were part of the flagship enterprise
that was feted with accolades upon their early successes—but it apparently has
fallen out of the limelight. The latest entry for the County Kerry page for Molahiffe parish was dated January 30 of 2013.
Not to be discouraged, I try to remember how much I have yet
to learn about these Irish ancestors, and how many resources are still out
there, inviting me to mount this steep learning curve. After all, I only have
four more months to learn so much.
Though all I could find online for Molahiffe baptismal
records was a site that did not include any Kelly or Falvey records, I can take a look at other pockets of
stuff online as I find them—like the old Rootsweb site for Kerry Online Records. I
can even play around with the Surname Search page at The Irish Times.
I can refocus my sites on learning about the Lordship of Molahiffe—if, indeed, this is the region from which our Falvey ancestors hailed.
Hey, this lordship comes complete with a castle. Wouldn’t it be cool to go visit it? After all, someday this keyboard traveler will convert from virtual to real traveler.
Interesting, the Falvey name goes back into the distant, smokey reaches of time.
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falvey
Yes, it is one with a heritage. Thanks for sharing that link, Iggy!
DeleteA castle...yes you should visit:)
ReplyDeleteWell...what's left of it. But it still would be fun to be there and know...
Delete