Showing posts with label Catharine Allen Byrnes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catharine Allen Byrnes. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 29, 2020

Children of Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney County Meath- marriage traditions Before and After the Famine


            
               Hugh Allen and Margaret Durney's Marriage- April 25, 1864

When Hugh Allen got married at age 30, his marriage was influenced by Irish cultural patterns that had existed for hundreds of years, some of which changed abruptly after the Great Famine of 1845-1852.

He knew, like all Irish farmers, that acquiring land for farming was the basis on which a marriage was built. He bought his land and established a farm a year before he actually married and started a family. But he had to leave Ireland to achieve this goal.

Before the Famine (Before 1845)

Before the famine, most Irish fathers traditionally divided their farms to provide farms for their married sons. With the willingness to divide land into smaller plots, every son could expect the possibility of marriage by their early 20's. Even if a father could not/would not oblige, a young man could turn to a neighbor to get land. The last resort was to sublet a "conacre" where he would pay a portion of his crop or his own labor to the main tenant in exchange for a short-term lease- but this arrangement offered little security to a young couple. Even holdings of a few acres would likely be enough of a start for a young couple. It was not unusual to see holdings of only 3 acres supporting a family.

Hugh's father, Richard Allen, was much better off than this; he leased a house and 17 acres in the tiny townland of Great Umberstown directly from the wealthy landowner, Charles P. Leslie, and subleased a house and garden to John Allen, who, no longer needing land to farm, was likely Hugh's aging grandfather.

A nearby neighbor in the same townland was Patrick Sweeney, who had 16 acres of land. Since Richard's wife Margaret was a Sweeney, and there are no other Sweeney's in the Parish, we can assume that Patrick is Margaret's kinsman.  Richard and Margaret's parents likely followed a traditional pattern of marrying their children to nearby neighbors - often in order to protect their land interests.
Like most couples, Richard and Margaret had probably known each other from childhood. Even those that did not marry a next door neighbor likely knew their intended from childhood. Couples were likely to marry from within the same Parish- in the case of Richard and Margaret, both attended the nearby Dangan Church in Summerhill Parish. Travel was by foot in those times so courtships were almost always within the close community.

Marriages in those days (and those that followed) were rarely a romantic concern. If fathers did not arrange marriages themselves, matchmakers and marriage brokers stepped in to bring couples together. They worked with the fathers of the bride and groom to come to an agreement based on the dowry or "fortune" the bride could offer in order to balance out the value of the groom's farm. Land was the key to marriage; men without land who were just hired laborers were not considered for marriage to a farmer's daughter.

As fathers subdivided their land leases to provide for married sons, many farms became smaller and smaller- some as tiny as those of 3 acres that make us wonder how the families survived.

After the famine (1850's)

After the famine, things changed. So many people had died, been evicted, or emigrated, that the larger landlords began consolidating holdings in order to allow for more profitable pasture land. Small tenant farmers were inspired by the letters from family abroad, many of whom, like our ancestor Hugh, were now very successful farmers. Fathers were less likely to subdivide their farms, and held on to the property until their death or old age.

As a result of this, sons often delayed their marriages, having little of their own to offer a wife. If single, they could more easily save their money for the dream of emigration and hope of a better future. Many sons who did not emigrate abroad moved elsewhere to find employment. Others entered religious orders, which grew dramatically after the practice of subdivision had faded away. Others stayed single, helping as laborers and often contributing greatly to the success of the farm. Some perhaps hoped that they might one day inherit and then left to seek their fortunes elsewhere if they did not. Inheritance was not limited to the eldest son, in fact it was often the youngest son, who stayed on the farm with his aging parents, who ended up the heir.

Marriage was not easy for young girls in these circumstances. Fewer young men were marrying and finding a husband became more difficult. A woman with a good temperament would be an attractive addition to the family; caring for aging parents and providing grandchildren. But a woman who also had a good dowry might allow for others in the family to emigrate abroad, or help provide a dowry for the girls within the family so that they could marry. After the rigors of the famine, parental controls over the practicalities of marriage increased more than ever, and children understood the need to help support and maintain the family as a whole.

We see these patterns in the Allen family. The eldest daughter, Mary, married Patrick Burns at the Dangan Church in 1851 when she was 25. They quickly emigrated to start a family in America. The eldest son, Frank, also emigrated, and by 1861 they were both in Jersey County, Illinois.

The next eldest son, John Allen, stayed on the farm in Ireland with his parents, along with the youngest son, Edward, and youngest daughter, Catharine.

The middle five sons had little hope of inheriting land; Hugh, Patrick, Peter,Tom, and Richard emigrated as single young men, hoping to make their way in the world and find their brides in America. They helped each other out until they could each save enough money to buy a farm and marry, except for Richard Allen, who emigrated but never married, dying in 1872.

Little Catherine, born at the height of the famine in 1847, married in April 1872, when she was 24 years old. But she married a man twice her age; 49 year old Owen Byrne.

The youngest son, Edward Allen, still single at age 36, finally left home in 1880. We might guess that he waited to leave until after his parents death, as they married in 1825 and would have been elderly by that time. Edward married Mary Bryne in 1885 in Jerseyville, later moving to a farm in Nebraska.

The farm was eventually left to John Allen, who never did marry. Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney had died by the time of the 1901 census, but John was still living on the farm, with a 19 year old cousin named Jane Moran. This goes along with Aunt Helen's stories of writing letters back from her Uncle Tom Allen to John Allen in Ireland. John could not write either (as is noted on the census) but had a young female relative who would write letters for him. But when John reached his later years, he had no children of his own to care for the farm. In 1911, when he was 76 years old, his sister Catherine's son, Thomas Byrne, age 37, was doing the farming. We don't know when John died, or who inherited the family farm in Ireland, as he had no sons of his own.

The pattern of marriages after the famine worked out well for our family in America. Despite (or because of) delaying marriage, most of those who emigrated managed to save money, buy a farm, and marry. Most became successful farmers with large, healthy families. But for those who remained in Ireland, marriage after the famine was so difficult that many never married at all.
The population decrease because of death, emigration, and single adults who never married or delayed marriage, having fewer children had a significant impact in the years to come.















Saturday, July 18, 2020

Children of Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney County Meath- Catherine Allen Byrne Part 1


Catharine Allen was baptized in the Dangan Church in Summerhill Parish on May 21, 1847- at the height of the famine. Her sponsors were Thomas Murren and Ellen Sweeney- likely her mother's sister.



She was the youngest in a family of ten surviving children of Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney. Times were hard and there were many mouths to feed. She must have watched her parents struggle through those lean years following the famine. As a very young child, she watched Mary, her eldest sibling and only sister marry and emigrate to America. Then, one by one, she watched her brothers go. First Frank and Hugh, then Patrick, Thomas and Richard. There were no prospects for them on one tiny rented plot of land in Umberstown. It could not sustain them or permit them to marry and raise additional families. But the cherished letters that came back from them in America were full of hope and promise. They owned their own farms now, and several of them were married and had growing families. They had great plans for the future. Even her parents, who mourned knowing that they would never again see their beloved children, must have been joyful that their lives in America were so different from the bleak future that would have faced them in Ireland.

Catherine stayed on the farm to care for her aging parents- probably until their deaths. We don't know for sure, but believe that they had both died by 1866. After that only John, Edward, and Peter remained on the farm, and Edward and Peter were anxious to follow their brothers to America. Catherine would have cared for the three brothers; cleaning the house, doing the laundry, and cooking the meals. It was a dreary life for a young girl. After the famine, there were few enough young men of her own age who had the means to go courting. Many of the survivors who had the courage and the means for travel had left Ireland for good. Others stayed single, realizing they could never afford to marry and raise a family.

The man who asked for her hand was settled with a farm but was much older than she. Owen Byrne was 49 years old to her 24. He was a widower with 5 children, the eldest few barely younger than herself. Two of the boys were grown; Richard 21 and Edward 18. James was 15, Elizabeth 12. The baby, Eugene, was only 4; his mother had died after his birth. 
For a time the Byrne family had lived in Dangan, so Catherine knew them from church. She surely understood what her life would be after the marriage. She would take on housekeeping as both a step-mother and a wife. And yet it must have been a good match, for Catherine agreed.
She married Owen Byrne at the church in Dangan on April 10, 1872.



By that time, Owen and his family were living in Clonmahon, on the edge of the town of Summerhill. Catherine's first son, Thomas Byrne, was born on May 4, 1873.


Her next child was a daughter, Margaret "Maggie" Byrne,  born April 25, 1875. Catharine's brother Edward "Ned" Allen was one of the baptismal sponsors.


A third child followed in June 1877. This daughter was named after her mother, and Catharine's brother Peter Allen was one of the baptismal sponsors.


I cannot find another baptismal record for ten years, but in 1877, Edward Byrne was born.

The 1901 census shows Owen Byrne 78, Catherine 50, Thomas 26 and Edward 13, living in Summerhill Parish in the townland of Clonmahon- about a mile from the Dangan church. Owen and his son are farming, and Edward is still in school. Everyone in this family can read and write, and they live in a nice house with 5 rooms- unusual for this time.

Ancestry.com. Web: Ireland, Census, 1901 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2013.


In 1907, daughter Catharine, now 30 years old, married Joseph Proffitt at the church in Dangan. Her witnesses were her brother Thomas Byrne, and Anne Sweeney (likely a cousin.)

In 1911, the census shows Owen age 90, and Catherine age 69 with Edward Byrne, age 23, who would now be doing the farming. His brother Thomas, as noted before, is now living with his uncle Edward Allen in Great Umberstown, and helping him with his farm.



Friday, July 17, 2020

Children of Richard Allen and Margaret Durney of County Meath- Catherine Part 3- Catherine's daughter- Maggie Byrne and her trip to America Part 2


When Maggie and Eugene arrived at Ellis Island in New York on April 3, 1897, Maggie was 16 years old.

By this time, trains were the main form of transportation across the United States. Did Maggie and Eugene stop at St. Louis to see the family in Jerseyville? Or did they head straight to meet her uncles in Nebraska? We don't know, but we do know what happened after they arrived in Nebraska.


Edward "Ned" Allen
Maggie had surely hoped to stay with her beloved uncle "Ned," her baptismal sponsor, who lived with his family in Burchard, Pawnee County Nebraska. But in May, Ned suffered a ruptured appendix. There was no relief from the pain, and the country doctor did not know how to treat him. Finally, realizing the appendix had to come out, the doctor attempted surgery- with no available anesthesia. The family story says that it took five men to hold Ned down as they cut into him. But the effort came too late; the infection had spread. 

He died on May 27, 1897. He was buried at Sacred Heart Cemetery in Burchard, Pawnee County. The inscription on his grave noted that he was "Born in Summerhill Parish, Meath Co., Ireland."

His wife, Mary Bryan Allen, was left with six children. The eldest, Richard, was ten. The youngest, named Edward after his father, was only three weeks old at his death. Maggie's help was surely needed by the young widow. Peter Allen was likely living next door by then; he is shown there on the 1900 census three years later. Patrick Allen and his family were not far away.

Maggie's half brother, Eugene Byrne, found a job working on the railroads. In 1900 he was living in Fillmore, Nebraska.

Maggie, meanwhile, met a handsome young man. John Patrick Carmichael had been born in Illinois, but his family had also moved to Nebraska. In 1900, he was 28 years old, living with his family on a farm in Sherman, Gage County, Nebraska.

John Patrick Carmichael

The two were married and in 1910 were living in Lincoln, Gage County, Nebraska. Their first child, "Jane" was born in 1910.




By 1920 they moved to Omaha, where they raised their family.

Maggie Byrne Carmichael seated on right



The 1940 census shows the family at 1725 S. 28th St. Omaha. John was 68, Maggie 61. Two children were still living at home; Robert 21 and Virginia 13.
This census shows us that Maggie completed the 7th grade in school
Year: 1940; Census Place: Omaha, Douglas, Nebraska; Roll: m-t0627-02272; Page: 4A; Enumeration District: 94-114


John Carmichael died in 1945. He was buried at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Omaha, Nebraska.

Maggie Byrne Carmichael died in 1951 and was buried next to her husband.



Their children were:

Genieve "Jane" b July 16, 1910 Nebraska died July 1975 Omaha Nebraska.

Eugene J. b 1912 Beatrice Nebraska died July 19, 1916 Marshall Co., Kansas buried St. Bridget Cemetery, Axtell, Marshall Co., Kansas. (about 3-4 yrs old)

Catherine b Aug 13, 1915 Kansas,  married Clifford Kizzier in 1938 in  Omaha,  died Feb 23, 1998, Rapid City, South Dakota

Robert b Oct 28, 1917 Axtel, Kansas. Served in the 515th Parachute Infantry Regiment in WWII, serving in France.  Robert married Julia Mae DeVaughn in 1948 in Omaha. He died Aug 31, 2000, Omaha, Nebraska and was buried at Calvary Cemetery in Omaha.

Virginia b Aug 26, 1926 Omaha, Neb. married Lumir Pinker. Died Feb 21, 2020.






Monday, January 28, 2019

Children of Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney- Catharine Part 2- Catherine's daughter- "Maggie" Byrne and her trip to America- Part I


There are many Margaret's- some nicknamed "Maggie" among Allen descendants. This story is about one of them, and dedicated to all the others!

Maggie was Catherine Allen Byrne's only daughter. She was baptized in the church at Dangan, Summerhill Parish, on April 25, 1875. The sponsors at her baptism were Catherine's brother, Edward "Ned" Allen, and Anne Byrne.

Maggie's uncle and godfather, Edward Allen, emigrated to America before 1880 and married Mary Byrne in Jerseyville in 1885. (See blog post on Edward Allen.) Shortly after his marriage, he and his bride traveled across the midwest to Pawnee County Nebraska. Peter Allen, Edward's older brother, who immigrated to America in 1881, also moved to Pawnee, Nebraska. The 1900 census shows Peter living on his own farm next to Edward's family farm. Edward, Peter, and the other Allen brothers surely sent letters home to the family in Ireland about their experiences in America.

According to a family story by one of Maggie's daughters, Owen Byrne told his oldest son and 28 year old Eugene, Maggie's half brothers, that they should emigrate to America because of the conditions and lack of employment in Ireland at the time. Two tickets were purchased, but at the last moment, the oldest son decided that he should stay. 18 year old Maggie decided to take his place. 

We can imagine Catherine's heartbreak at the thought of losing her daughter forever. The family held an "American Wake" knowing that they would likely never see Maggie or Eugene again.



After the grief of leaving their parents, siblings, and home in Ireland, the two young people must have begun their adventure with both excitement and trepidation. They had read the letters from family in America, and knew they would be meeting their Uncles "Ned" and Peter Allen, who owned farms next to each other in Plum Creek, Pawnee County, Nebraska. Eugene's information on the ship's log clearly states their destination as "Pawnee." Their plans for employment were simple; Eugene states he will do "labor" and Maggie lists she will be a "servant."

Maggie and Eugene set sail from Queenstown (Cobh) in County Cork aboard the Cunard Line's ship Lucania, heading for the port of New York. (Two other famous ships would set sail from Queenstown/Cobh- the Titanic and the Lusitania.)

The Lucania was a new ship; built only four years earlier in 1893. It was magnificent; the largest and fastest passenger liner on the ocean. The first class compartments were amazingly opulent. If you have seen the "Titanic" you can picture the level of comfort those passengers enjoyed; as well as the contrast between first class accommodations and those in steerage, where Maggie and Eugene stayed. A steerage ticket cost about $12.

The Lucania arrived in New York on April 3, 1897.



We can only imagine their feelings as they sailed through New York harbor and proceeded through immigration. We don't know how they managed to travel across the country to Nebraska. Did they stop in Illinois to see Maggie's aunt and uncles there? In any case, both Eugene and Maggie were soon on their way westward.

What awaited them there was unexpected.


Sources:

Year: 1880; Census Place: English, Jersey, Illinois; Roll: 216; Page: 12A; Enumeration District: 093

Ancestry.com. Illinois, County Marriage Records, 1800-1940 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2016.


Year: 1900; Census Place: Plum Creek, Pawnee, Nebraska; Page: 4; Enumeration District: 0131; FHL microfilm: 1240935

Year: 1897; Arrival: New York, New York; Microfilm Serial: M237, 1820-1897; Microfilm Roll: Roll 672; Line: 41; Page Number: 14

Sunday, July 22, 2018

Children of Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney County Meath- Catharine Allen Byrnes 1847 Summerhill- 1916 Clonmahon



The name "Catherine" has stayed with Allen descendants through the generations. This post is dedicated to you!

It appears that the family of Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney had only two daughters- the eldest child, Mary, born in 1826, and the youngest child, Catharine, born twenty years later. Eight brothers were born between the two girls! Hugh would have been about 12 years old when Catherine was born on May 21, 1847- at the height of the famine. Catharine's closest sibling would have been her brother Edward, who was just 3 years old when she was born.

Catherine Allen's baptismal record at Dangan Church in Summerhill Parish

As a child, Catharine would have watched her elder siblings emigrate to America in the 1850's. She grew up in the little cottage on the farm and then remained home with her brothers John and Edward to care for her aging parents. We don't know when her mother died, but her father, Richard Allen, died in 1866. 


Courting was difficult for a young girl after the famine; many of those young men who survived had no land to offer a family, or had emigrated abroad to seek their fortune. But when Catharine was 23 she married- albeit to a man twice her age. Her husband was Owen Byrne, a 45 year old grocer. Owen's first wife, Julia McNamee, had died in 1868, two days after giving birth to her son, Eugene. Owen was left a widower with five young children.

 In the spring of 1872, Owen and Catharine were married. (Note that even at age 24, she is listed on her marriage record as a spinster!) Their witnesses were Patrick Young and Mary Reilly.

Catharine Allen's marriage to Owen Byrne

After her marriage to Owen, Catharine lived in Clonmahon townland, just north of the village of Summerhill, and only a few miles from her Allen family in Great Umberstown. Her first son, Thomas Byrne, was born on May 4, 1873. A daughter, Margaret, followed on April 18, 1875. Catharine and Owen would have 5 children together.

The 1901 census shows Owen, age 78, Catherine, age 50, Thomas Byrne 26, and Edward Byrne 13, living in Clonmahon. They lived in a nice stone house with 5 rooms inside. Owen also had a farm, and Thomas was working the farm. Edward was still in school. This was an educated family- everyone could read and write.


The 1911 census, Catherine was 69 years old, and her husband, Owen was 90!
Their son, Edward, was a young man now, 23 years old. Patrick Byrne, age 50, and his wife and family live nearby.

 Catherine's son,Thomas Byrne, was no longer living with them. In the 1911 census he is shown living with his uncle, John Allen (now 76 years old) helping with the farming on the Allen family farm in Umberstown. 

Catherine died on January 11, 1912. She was 60 years old, and suffering from heart disease and "dropsy"- what we would call congestive heart failure. She died at her home in Clonmahon, with her son Thomas Byrne, of Umberstown, signing that he was present at her death. Owen lived to be 94 years old, dying in Clonmahon in 1916. Thomas was also present at his death.

Civil Death Registration for Catherine Allen Byrne age 60

What happened to Catherine's other four children? (next post)

Sources:

Ancestry.com. Ireland, Selections of Catholic Parish Baptisms, 1742-1881 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.

Ancestry.com. Ireland, Select Catholic Marriage Registers, 1775-1942 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014.

Ancestry.com. Ireland, Select Births and Baptisms, 1620-1911 [database on-line]. Provo, UT: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2011.

Original data: Census of Ireland 1901/1911. The National Archives of Ireland. http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/search/: accessed 31 May 2013.

Catharine Allen Byrne's civil death record- you will have to sign in but it will then take you to the record. If you click on "image at the bottom, you can see the original entry and download this if you wish.