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We are looking for information about my great great grandfather. 

Edward Coyne

Born Dec. 25, 1839 (we know this date was used by many as an estimate)

Died May 31, 1915

Came to America 1846

Obituary says he was born in Killarney, Ireland

Death Certificate says he was born in Ireland.

His father's name is not indicated, but had a birthplace of Ireland

His mother's maiden name was O'Neal and had a birthplace of Ireland

We are unsure of how or who he came to America with

We are coming soon for another trip (July 2023) and would love to do a bit more research. 

We are not sure what next step to take or how to check the parish registers. 

Thank you kindly for any assistance. 

Jason B

Friday 30th Jun 2023, 05:14PM

Message Board Replies

  • Hello,

    Are you sure he was born in KILLARNEY and not KILKENNY?  I'm finding the name Coyne abundant in Kilkenny but not in Killarney.

    Patricia

    Friday 30th Jun 2023, 07:51PM
  • In his Surnames of Ireland, MacLysaght says that Coyne is originally a County Mayo surname, although some may well have migrated to Kilkenny, as Patricia found.  The O'Neal/O'Neil surname originated in several places in Ireland, and can be found all over the country, but perhaps the largest clan was/is in Ulster.  A number of the Ulster O'Neil's migrated to Mayo at the time of the Plantation of Ulster (17th century).  There is an O’Neill heritage project headed by Sean O’Neill (to whom I am distantly related), who is from the O’Neill branch in County Mayo, and whose email address is sean@oneill.ie .  His family comes from near Swineford in East Mayo, but his research also covers Ulster and other parts of Ireland, so he might be able to help you locate more information about your ancestors.

    O'Coyne is an anglicization of the Irish name Ó Cadhain, which means "descendant of the wild geese".  Kyne was another anglicized form, based on the sound of the name, but the name was sometimes "translated" as Barnacle (referring to the wild barnacle geese), so if you come across any of them in your research, they could be related.  There is a separate Irish name, Mac Giolla Chaoine ("son of the devotee of the gentle one" -- presumably referring to some ancient monk or saint) which was usually anglicized as MacKilcoyne or just Kilcoyne.  Since these were all Mayo names, Kilcoyne and Coyne were sometimes confused with one another.

    kevin45sfl

    Friday 30th Jun 2023, 09:33PM
  • Thank you

    Jason B

    Thursday 6th Jul 2023, 11:31PM

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