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My ancestor Thomas Broady was born in Longford around 1839. By 1859 he was in Manchester as that is when he was married. His father's name was John and he also had a brother Denis b around 1842. Unfortunately I have no further details of his family before 1859. Any help or advice would be most appreciated. 

Sunday 9th Mar 2014, 10:45AM

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  • Dear Karen I checked the Ireland Genealogy Projects records of Longfors RC churches and I found no Broady but many Brady. May be the name is misspelled or your ancestor belong to another church.

    You can check by yourself at: http://www.igp-web.com/longford/churchrecs.htm.

    Best regards from Spain.

    Sunday 9th Mar 2014, 11:09AM
  • Same with Griffith Valuation recors from Longford. Many Brady but no Broady

    Sunday 9th Mar 2014, 11:24AM
  • Thank you. The spelling of the name does seem to vary. I wonder if the Irish accent  affected the spelling once the family arrived in Lancashire. 

    Thanks. 

     

    Sunday 9th Mar 2014, 08:34PM
  • Mike Collins in his today "Letter from Ireland" wrote:

    Have you noticed the following?

    • It can be very difficult to “pin down” an Irish name. There seem to be so many spellings and variations.
    • It is so hard to know if a surname is Irish or Scottish or English – a lot of them seem interchangeable.
    • Getting the answers to family history questions can be very difficult – knowing where, who and what to ask!

    Tracing your family history – and uncovering your Irish Heritage – can be particularly challenging in Ireland. It would be nice to have friendly and knowledgable guides on hand.

    .......

    If you have been forwarded this email by a friend - you can subscribe to the Your Irish Heritage newsletter for free at http://eepurl.com/xPw4P

    Best Regards

    Eduardo

    Sunday 9th Mar 2014, 08:57PM
  • An this is from SURNAME DATABASE (http://www.surnamedb.com/Surname/brady)

     

    Recorded in many spellings including Brady, Brody, Brodie, Broady, and no doubt others, this is a surname of Anglo-Irish origins, of which it has no less than four, each with its own history and derivation. Firstly, it may derive from the Gaelic surname Mac Bradaigh meaning the male descendant of the thieving and dishonest chief!! Be that as it may the Brady's were a powerful clan in Ireland, their chief holding control over a large territory lying to the east of Cavan, and probably deserving of his reputation. Surprisingly the earliest recorded namebearer as Gilbert MacBrady, the bishop of Ardagh from 1396 to 1400. The second origin is English and a nickname given to a person with excellent eyesight. This is from the pre 7th century "brad-eage", meaning broad eye. The earliest recording as shown below is from this source. The third origin is habitational from a lost place known as "Broad island" and somewhere in England, whilst lastly the name may be topographical for a dweller by a wide piece of land through a forest cleared for agriculture or "brad gehaeg". The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Roger Bradeie. This was dated 1170, in the cartulary of Oseney Abbey, Oxfordshire, whilst more recently (relatively) in 1615, Edwardus Broadey married Elizabetha Yarwoode at Sandbach in Cheshire, on November 10th of that year. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was sometimes known as Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spell

    Read more: http://www.surnamedb.com/Surname/brady#ixzz2vVHjKMXy

    Sunday 9th Mar 2014, 09:36PM
  • Again, thank you for this helpful information. I will check the Brady references in Longford. Perhaps there aren't too many with John being the father of a Thomas and a Denis of appropriate ages. 

    :)

     

    Sunday 9th Mar 2014, 09:50PM

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