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John Horkin appears on the 1861 census for Halifax Yorkshire married but wife not listed. Family are Maria, Henry, William, Bridget and John. Henry was my great grandfather born in 1845 and on the 1891 census says he is from Killasser. All my searches in Ireland have come up blank.
Help anyone please !!!

Mike Hawkins

 

 

 

Mike

Thursday 8th Aug 2019, 11:52AM

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  • Mike:

    Welcome to Ireland Reaching Out!

    The RC baptismal records for Killasser parish start in 1846. Not sure when the five children were born. I searched the subscription site Roots Ireland and there were no Horkin/Horkan baptismal records in Killasser prior to 1861. I also did not see a Henry baptismal record with a father named John in any parish.

    You may want to add the family emigration story to our XO Chronicles site and possibly someone will see a connection. https://irelandxo.com/ireland-xo/history-and-genealogy/ancestor-database

    Roger McDonnell

    Castlemore Roscommon, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘

    Thursday 8th Aug 2019, 03:27PM
  • According to MacLysaght's Surnames of Ireland, Horkin is a Mayo variant of the name Harkin.  MacLysaght says that the Harkin surname originated in Inishowen (northeast Donegal), with the original Irish form of the name being Ó hEarcáin, from an archaic word for the color red, earc (a word which also has other meanings), with the name thus meaning something like "descendant of the red one".  One might think that it refers to red hair, but the word rua is usually used in that case, so maybe it refers to an ancestor whose sking was "ruddy".

    One of my grandmothers (a McNulty) grew up in Killasser parish.  The McNulty's in Mayo migrated there from Donegal in the 1600's, and perhaps your Horkin's did as well.  I've searched most of the parish registers in the area in researching my family history.  I didn't note down any Horkin's in Killasser, but then I wasn't specifically looking for them, so they may be there.  If there were some still there when the parish register started, and they were not too numerous, you might be able to determine the townland where they lived.  If you want to try looking in the Killasser parish records, here's a link to them:   https://registers.nli.ie/parishes/0134

    If you do locate a likely townland in Killasser, here's a link where you could learn more info about the townland, with links to some other records such as census records and Griffith's Valuation:  https://www.townlands.ie/mayo/killasser/

    My grandmother's husband (a Gallagher) grew up a few miles away in another Mayo parish.  In between the two is the parish of Swinford/Swineford.  Records for some of my ancestors are located in the Swinford parish register, either because they lived there or because it had a church building prior to some of the otther parishes, and so people from nearby parishes were sometimes baptized or married there.  The records for Swinford go back much further than some of the neighboring parishes.  You didn't mention John Horkin's age, but you might try searching there as well.  In doing my research, I did note down that a Thomas Harkin was a witness at a Gallagher marriage in Swinford in 1826.

    I just did a quick search for Horkin's in the Family Search database, and there were several Horkan families shown as living in the area between the town of Swinford and the town of Foxford in the 1860's (an area overlapping the parishes of Swinford and Killasser, and also the parish of Toomore).  Don't be put off by the spelling of the name, by the way.  Different anglicized forms were written down by the authorities and parish priests at various times, and the spelling can vary from generation to generation (sometimes even in the same generation) within the same family.

    If you want to try looking in the Swinford parish records, here's a link to them:  https://registers.nli.ie/parishes/0133

    If you've had your DNA tested, we could compare results.  Given the Killasser connection, we may be at least distant relatives.  My results are posted at GEDMATCH, as kit number T780556.  It still might be hard to find a paper connection, of course, although I and some relatives are trying to track down the estate records for the area (the landlord's records), which somtimes go further back and can contain useful genealogical info.

     

    kevin45sfl

    Thursday 8th Aug 2019, 06:01PM

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