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Hi,

My gggrandfather Martin White was born 9 Nov 1823 (8 Nov 1822) in Dereney, Galway (now Clare) Ireland, possibly the son of James Whyte and Anastasia Nevils (from baptismal record Loughrea parish).  He came to the US in Oct 1848 (port of New York) married a girl he knew from home (Margaret Madden) in Cincinnati, Ohio 1853.  They lived in Cincinnati, Ohio, Rock Island, Illinois, Memphis, Tennessee, Davenport, Iowa and finally settled in Chicago, Illinois.  Other family members who immigrated  Peter White (Ida, Iowa) Matthew White (Ky), Andrew White, (Iowa) Ann White (Chicago, Ill) and another Peter White (Iowa).  I am interested in any family connections or history.

Mary Lee

maryleef

Thursday 24th Jul 2014, 10:06PM

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  • Dear Mary

    Welcome to Ireland Reaching Out!

    I have passed your query to a volunteer, I hope they will be in touch soon

    Best wishes

    Clare Doyle

    Genealogy Support 

    Tuesday 29th Jul 2014, 12:12PM
  • Hello Mary.

    I was asked to review your inquiry, since it had a Loughrea reference. I first found your online tree on Ancestry.com, and see you've got a GREAT story attached to Martin!  My very first question for you is "Have you tried to get a copy of his death certificate?"  It may have the names of his parents listed, since it showed they were both born in Co. Galway.  I see that his original marriage certificate does not show the parents of the couple.

    But, I was very curious why the family would be taking their child to Loughrea for baptism, so far away from the Dereney area, so I started researching that location in Co. Clare.  I believe you should look into the following items, since there are Catholic Churches very near the townland that your ancestor was raised.  I first started looking into the Griffith's Valuation, found that "Derrainy" was listed as part of the civil parish of "Clonrush".  I found that Clonrush is part of the Catholic Parish of Mountshannon, as well as, in the Diocese of Killaloe.  Then I found references that the current St. Flannan Catholic Church, in Whitegate, is the nearest to Derrainy.  I would suggest that you contact them to see where the old records might be kept, hoping that they go back into the early 1800's.  Once that is done, you can check the Clare Library website, which has a listing of burials in the Clonrush graveyard (which has many "Whyte" names.)  There is also a link to the National Archives, showing many Whyte/White and Madden names in the 1830 Tithe Applotment books in "Dereney".

     

    If any of the links do not work, or if you need any further tips on them, please reply, or send me an email directly at Mary@FindingGrandpa.com and I will try to help.

     

    White/Whyte in Abbey Cemetery in Loughrea

    http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=cr&GSln=wh&GSiman=1&GScid…;

     

     

    Griffith's Valuation "Derrainy"; Civil Parish of Clonrush

    (If the link below does not work, type the following)

    Placename: Derrainy

    County: Galway

    Barony: Leitrim

    Parish: Clonrush

    http://www.askaboutireland.ie/griffith-valuation/index.xml?action=doPla…

     

     

    Griffith's Valuation map shows RC Chapel very near Whitegate; other Catholic churches might be found

    You could search the Clonrush Parish listing (beginning on page 71) of Griffith's Valuation, looking for any reference for "RC Chapel" in the column that I marked on one of the attached images; hoping to find old churches, and then researching where the old records of those old churches might be found today.

    (View images attached)

    (If the link below does not work, type the following)

    Placename: Clonrush

    County: Galway

    http://www.askaboutireland.ie/griffith-valuation/index.xml?action=place…

     

     

    IRO: Clonrush Parish is part of Inishcaltra

    I would suggest for you to post your message on this parish page also, since it is the place that might have your answers, if a volunteer is in the area!

    http://www.irelandxo.com/group/clonrush-clare

     

     

    Wikipedia: Civil Parish of Clonrush is part of the Catholic Parish of Mountshannon; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clonrush

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountshannon

     

     

    Whitegate RC Church "St. Flannan"

    http://www.killaloediocese.ie/parish/mountshannon-clonrush/church.html

     

     

    National Archives Tithe Applotment Books: "Dereney And Ballinahinch"

    http://titheapplotmentbooks.nationalarchives.ie/search/tab/results.jsp?…

     

     

    Clare County Library: Clonrush area graveyards

    http://www.clarelibrary.ie/eolas/coclare/genealogy/don_tran/graves/clon…

     

    I hope this helps somehow!

    Mary Van Dyke

    MNAJPA

    Tuesday 29th Jul 2014, 04:26PM
  • Mary,

     

    Thank you so much for your help.  I can find Martin White in an index of Cook County deaths, but not in the Cook County Clerk's index (Chicago).  The Clonrush parish group is listed as closed, so I don't know how to post there.  I will check the Griffith's etc and try contacting St Flannen's Church.

    I appreciate your efforts,

    Mary Lee

    maryleef

    Tuesday 29th Jul 2014, 07:06PM
  • Mary, try ordering the following film, from the LDS website www.Familysearch.org

    You may have a lead on how his name was written on the actual certificate, OR this film might have the actual certificate of death (and not just an index.)

     

    Death certificates, Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, nos. 18270-20342 1907

    Family History Library

    United States & Canada 

    Film1239759 

     

    Alternatively, you can request a manual look-up from the Cook County Clerk site at: 

    http://www.cookcountygenealogy.com/Search.aspx#

    They can do look-ups for $15

     

    Also, the link to the Inishcealtra (and Clonrush) Parish on IRO is here:

    http://www.irelandxo.com/group/inishcealtra-clare

    MNAJPA

    Tuesday 29th Jul 2014, 07:55PM
  • Thank-you again!!!!!

     

    I have ordered the film and posted on the Inishcealtra Parish page.  I have my fingers crossed that the parents names are on the death certificate.   There is a family story that 2 of Martin's daughters traveled to Ireland and met family there.  Is there any way to track something like that down in Ireland?  This would have occurred before 1911.

     

    Mary Lee

    maryleef

    Tuesday 29th Jul 2014, 10:11PM
  • I tried to post this earlier, but I can't see that it worked.

    I wanted to keep this post going, since you're asking good questions, and someone else might be able to use these tips for their research.

     

    I will use the information from your Ancestry.com tree and try to see if I can't find anything.

    We can track the daughters, using immigration records, ship manifests, as well as, passport applications.  I'm hoping that SOMETING has information on when/where they traveled to and from.

     

    Which daughters traveled?  and did Dora and/or Mary ever marry?  (I'm focussing on their last names at time of travel.)

    Thank you,

    Mary

    MNAJPA

    Tuesday 29th Jul 2014, 11:03PM
  • Mary,

     

    I believe it was Mary & Dora who traveled.  They were both school teachers and never married.  Mary died in 1911 and Dora died in 1915.  I have checked Ancestry and could not find a passenger entry for them.

    Thank-you for all your efforts,

    Mary Lee

    maryleef

    Tuesday 29th Jul 2014, 11:48PM

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