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I am trying to locate information on a Thomas McCullough married to Nancy Agnes Glasgow. I have just received possible new info on this couple from someone on Ancestry.ca and would like to verify if they may be my GG grandparents. The info I received states that they were born sometime around 1790's in Scotland but went to Ireland in possibly 1813. They may have lived on the Kintyre Peninsula in Argyllshire. It is noted that she may have been pregnant with my great grandfather Thomas at that time and gave birth in Armagh in1813. They emigrated to Canada in 1840. Supposedly there are records that they had three children. Thomas, John and Nancy. There is a local paper here in Canada stating that they may have come from county of Monaghan although many other records state Armagh. They may have been in Keady parish according to another source. Where this gets confusing is that one source I heard from stated that Thomas Sr. and Nancy Agnes never left Ireland and that she knows someone in Keady who found their graves there as well as land that they had owned. I know this can't be true as I have Canadian census records showing an elderly Nancy McCullough living with her son and wife Ellen Crittenden (born in Canada). Any help solving this mystery would be very much appreciated. Sincerely Carol McCullough

CM

Monday 21st Jan 2019, 02:04AM

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  • The account of someone from the Kintyre peninsula born in the 1790s ending up farming in Armagh by 1813, sounds a bit unlikely to me. McCullough and its variant spellings is a fairly common name and I suspect different families may have got mixed up here.

    The main Scottish migration to Ireland was in the 1600s, when some 200,000 Scots settled there. By the 1700s they were starting to move out of Ireland again and by the early 1800s the number was steadily increasing. That’s not to say that a couple from Scotland couldn’t have moved to Ireland in the early 1800s but it would be bucking the trend.  There was certainly plenty of movement between Co Antrim & Kintyre (It’s only 11 miles and boats were back and forth all the time) but in general, apart from obvious commercial trade, it was Irish born people going to Campbeltown to look for work. Not many came the other way because there wasn’t any work in Ireland. That was why folk were leaving. And where would someone from Kintyre get the capital to rent and stock a farm in Armagh? (Most farms were inherited at that time).

    I looked at the tithe applotment records for Keady parish for 1825. There was just one McCullagh farm there then. The tenant was John  and he lived in Drumdirge townland.

    http://www.irishgenealogyhub.com/armagh/tithe-applotments/keady-parish.php#.XF5nchSqCnt

    Drumdirge is now known or spelled Drumderg. By the time of Griffiths Valuation in 1864 that farm appears to have passed to William McCullagh. It was plot 3, a 10 acre farm. http://www.askaboutireland.ie/griffith-valuation/index.xml?action=nameSearch

    This looks to be that farm in 1901:

    http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1901/Armagh/Crossmore/Drumderg/1013512/

    The family were Presbyterian (indicating Scottish ancestry) but, as I mentioned previously, most of the Scots settlers in Armagh and the rest of Ulster, arrived in the 1600s.

    Neither of the 2 Presbyterian churches in Keady has any baptism or marriage records before 1838, so if that is where the family lived you may struggle to find documentary evidence of their marriage or children’s baptisms.

    Possibly DNA testing may be a way of matching with others who have additional information about where the family originate. Family Tree DNA reportedly has more people with Ulster roots than any other company. That obviously increases the chances of finding a match. You might want to try them or, if you have already tested, you can transfer your results to them for no fee.

    The North of Ireland Family History Society is running an Ulster DNA project in conjunction with Family Tree DNA and can offer testing kits at a reduced price.  http://www.nifhs.org (Go to DNA project on the website). You don’t need to be a member of the NIFHS to participate in the DNA project.

    Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘

    Saturday 9th Feb 2019, 06:05AM
  • Thanks again Elwyn, I guess I have a lot more questions to ask in order to try to clarify facts I have been receiving from a variety of different sources.

     

    Carol

    CM

    Sunday 10th Feb 2019, 07:42PM
  • Hello, I am researching the same family of Thomas McCullough and wife Nancy Agnes Glasgow.  I just received correspondance from a person in Ireland who bough the property from our McCullough Family in the town of Derryhennett, County Armagh, Ireland.  I have email her back and am trying to find out more records.  I have found record of a Thomas McCullough in this town so far (see attached). I tried to share the link but this website says I'm not approved to share external links... weird.

    I hope this helps and I hope to hear back from the lady who reached out to me regarding the Thomas McCullough family.  I've attached a copy of the transcript and actual document found on the askaboutireland.com website. 

    If you come across any other information please send it my way, and I'll do the same.  

    Saturday 28th Jan 2023, 01:53AM
  • Thank you for the attachments.  May I ask what your connection is to Thomas McCullough ?

    CM

    Sunday 29th Jan 2023, 03:52AM

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