Showing posts with label Children of Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney Summerhill County Meath. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Children of Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney Summerhill County Meath. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Children of Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney of County Meath- Thomas Allen 1841 Summerhill- 1920 Jerseyville

 

Thomas Allen was the seventh son born to Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney. The seventh son was thought by some to hold special powers; the seventh son of a seventh son was though to be a healer. (We don't know Thomas' father Richard Allen's birth order!)

Hugh was seven years old when his brother Thomas was born. We can only imagine the tiny cottage full of little boys; the eldest child, Mary, now 15 years old, was the only girl to help Margaret when this new baby was born.The family was predominantly boys; Frank 12, John 8, Hugh 7, Patrick 6, Peter 4, and Richard 2. 

The baby was baptized at the church at Dangan on November 22, 1841. His baptismal sponsors were Thomas McCan (likely his uncle- the husband of Mary Sweeney, his mother's sister) and Christine Fitzsimons (also likely Sweeney relations- Catherine Sweeney, another of his mother's sisters, had married Andrew Fitzsimmons.)

On the 1900 census, Thomas reports immigrating in 1864. But we see no records for him for the civil war draft.

 However, we do know that on New Years Day in 1872, Thomas married Bridget Burnes/Byrnes at St. Francis Xavier Church in Jerseyville. Richard? and Anna Burns were the witnesses.


In 1880 they were living at 251 Tea Street in Jerseyville.

There were no children born to the union, and we can only assume that Bridget died young. Her burial record shows she  died Sept 28, 1887. She was buried in St. Francis Cemetery.


In 1900, Thomas was 59 years old, living and working on the farm of newlywed John J. and Catherine "Kate" Maloney Quinn and their family, including John's parents- 76 year old Thomas Quinn and 64 year old Ellen Kinsella Quinn (my great grandparents), who note their immigration date as 1855, and Richard Quinn, John J. Quinn's brother who was born in 1869 and would die that year.


In 1910 he is listed as 65 (again, ages seem to be vague to this generation of Allens- according to his baptismal record he was 69) and living with his nephew, 39 year old Thomas Allen (my grandfather) and his 38 year old wife Nellie Quinn (the daughter of Thomas and Ellen Quinn above) and their family.


         My grandparents- Nellie Quinn and Thomas Allen as newlyweds

He was still with them in 1920, when my mother, Pauline Allen, was 4 years old. His age is now listed as 80, which would be close to correct.

My mother never knew her grandparents; they all passed away before she was born. So her great-uncle, Thomas Allen, was the closest thing she had to a grandfather. She remembered him very fondly; he would often sing and play games with her. As the youngest child in a large family, she was the "baby" of the family, and he was the eldest member, so they enjoyed their special time together. Her oldest sister, Mary, would write letters for him back to John Allen, his brother who still lived on the old family farm in Summerhill Ireland, and read the letters to him that came back, written by John's niece.

                  Pauline Allen and her great-uncle Tom Allen

One day Tom was helping in the garden, burning grass, when his trousers caught fire and he was badly burned. He must have suffered terribly; the burns were so severe that he died several days later. My mother lost one of her dearest friends.


He died on the last day of March in 1920 and his funeral was held at St. Francis Xavier Church in Jerseyville. This would have been the first time my mother experienced the funeral of someone she loved, although another Allen death would come just a month later- the sudden death of her 47 year old uncle, Hugh Allen, who lived on the farm just across the road from her home. Both services were held by Father Clancy, a priest who would serve Jerseyville and the Allen family for many, many years to come.

He was buried at the cemetery at St. Francis, next to his wife, Bridget. 


He was the last of the children of Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney to pass from this world.



Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Children of Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney of County Meath - Peter Allen 1837 Summerhill -1905 Nebraska

 We don't know much about Peter Allen.

He was baptized on June 28, 1837 at the church in Dangan. His father was listed as "Dick" Allen and his mother as Margaret Sweeney. His baptismal sponsors were Pat Sweeney (his uncle) and Cath McCan. 

                      Ireland, Selections of Catholic Parish Baptisms, 1742-1881

The only census we have for him is the 1900 census. On that document, he reports that he arrived in the U.S. in 1881. So, Peter was one of the last Allen siblings to immigrate from Ireland.

We notice in the Allen documents and especially in the census records that there is a lot of discrepancy about birth dates and ages. Peter clarifies this for us by simply stating his birth date on the census as "Don't know." This is despite the fact that he states that he can read and write. Birth dates were apparently not all that important to the Allen's in Ireland, and since many could not read and write, they were not readily recorded. It is a good thing that we have the church baptismal records!

In 1900, Peter was a naturalized citizen, and owned his own farm, adjacent to that of Mary Allen, his brother Edward's widow. With 6 children under the age of 15, Mary was probably very glad for Peter's help on the farm. Edward had only died 3 years earlier.

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

Peter died 5 years later, on January 5, 1905. He was 67 years old. He was buried at Sacred Heart Cemetery in Burchard, near his brother Edward. His grave gives us a great clue as to where the Allen family lived in County Meath. It is inscribed "Aged 61 y. born in Umberstown, Ireland."

Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 12 August 2020), memorial page for Peter Allen (20 Jun 1837–5 Jan 1905), Find a Grave Memorial no. 33061916, citing Sacred Heart Cemetery, Burchard, Pawnee County, Nebraska, USA ; Maintained by LoNe Searcher (contributor 46845051) .

We know now that Umberstown is the tiny townland where the Allen family farm was located- near Dangan, where they attended church in Summerhill Catholic Parish in County Meath.

 The inscription on Edward's grave says " born in Summerhill Parish, Meath Co., Ireland." His birthdate on findagrave is given as March 14, 1844 and his death date as May 27, 1897- aged 53. 

Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 12 August 2020), memorial page for Edward Allen (14 Mar 1844–27 May 1897), Find a Grave Memorial no. 33302035, citing Sacred Heart Cemetery, Burchard, Pawnee County, Nebraska, USA ; Maintained by LoNe Searcher (contributor 46845051) .

Mary (Bryan) Allen would also be buried there in 1932,  as would her son, John J. Allen, buried in 1966.

There is a puzzle in the Burchard Cemetery as well-

James Allen, b 1888, died May 25, 1897 (two days before Edward)- age 9.  Edward's son James was still listed on the 1900 census as 12 years old. He did not die until 1930. So- who is this child?

Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 12 August 2020), memorial page for James Allen (1 Jan 1888–25 May 1897), Find a Grave Memorial no. 33302068, citing Sacred Heart Cemetery, Burchard, Pawnee County, Nebraska, USA ; Maintained by LoNe Searcher (contributor 46845051) .






Children of Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney County Meath- Patrick Allen 1835 Summerhill- 1910 Nebraska

 

Hugh and his younger brother Patrick were close in age- just one year apart. Patrick was baptized at the church in Dangan on June 5, 1835. 

He had joined his brothers in Jerseyville by 1874, when, on April 8, he married Catherine "Kate" Burns at St. Francis Xavier Church. His brother Hugh was a witness for his wedding.



Their first son, Richard, was born on January 27, 1875 and baptized at St. Francis Xavier church in Jerseyville.


Shortly after his birth, the couple moved to Beatrice, Gage Nebraska, where their first daughter, Mary Ann was born.

By 1880 Patrick was living in Mud Creek, Gage Nebraska. Patrick was farming, and they had four children.

In the 1900 census, Patrick noted that he immigrated in 1870, so had been in the U.S. for 30 years, and was a naturalized citizen. He owned the farm they are living on.

The couple lost their eldest son, Richard, in 1890. He was only 14 years old. He was buried at St. Joseph Cemetery in Beatrice, Gage Nebraska.


In the winter of 1909, Patrick became ill. He was diagnosed with pneumonia. Just after Christmas, on December 29, his 27 year old son, Frank, died suddenly. Patrick died just days later on January 2, 1910. 


Catherine stayed on the farm for a time, but by 1920 she was living at 429 6th Street in Beatrice. The census showed her as 72 years old. She later moved to Vermillion, South Dakota. She died on November 20, 1926, and was buried with Patrick at St. Joseph Cemetery in Beatrice.

Patrick and Catherine Allen's children were:

Richard b January 27, 1875 Jerseyville, died 1890 Nebraska age 14

Mary Ann b Sept 7, 1877, Beatrice married Lawrence J. Houlton in 1897. Lawrence was a farmer in Vermillion, South Dakota. He and Mary Ann had nine children. Mary Ann lived until age 92, dying in November, 1969.

Thomas was born January 1879. Thomas remained single throughout his life, and at age 41, was living with his sister, Cecilia Allen Reddon and her family on Gage St. in Potsdam, Nebraska, working as a stock buyer. By 1930 he owned a farm in Green Valley, Nebraska. He later moved to Stuart, Nebraska, where he died in August, 1941. He was buried at the cemetery in Beatrice.

John A. b Oct 6, 1880 married Dora Mae Olds in 1905. John was a farmer, worked at Dempster Mill, and helped build the first Catholic church in Crab Orchard, Neb. He was living at 918 S. 6th street in Beatrice, when he died at age 89. He was buried at St. Joseph's cemetery in Beatrice.

Frank Allen born 1882 died 1909 age 27.

Cecilia Allen b Aug 15, 1884, married Charles J. Reddon August 5, 1903 in Beatrice. They had 7 children and lived in Blue Hill, Nebraska. Charles died in 1937. In 1940, Cecilia was living with two of her daughters and providing nursing care in a private home. She died in 1965 at age 80 and is buried at Blue Hill cemetery.

Bernard Charles Allen b September 22, 1886 married Ellen Shaughnessey in 1912 in Axtell, Kansas. They had 8 children. Bernard was a farmer. He died in 1945 at age 58.

Edward Robert Allen b March 11, 1889, married Rose Murray in 1910. They had 7 children. In 1940 they were living at 428 North 6th St. in Beatrice. Ed was driving a truck for a refinery. He died in 1964 at age 75.


 



Friday, August 7, 2020

Frank Allen Part 3- The interesting 1912 will of Mary Durney Allen Fahey (3rd and last wife of Frank Allen)

In 1912, Mary Durney Allen Fahey wrote her will. She named her nephew, Hugh Allen, (my great grandfather) as her executor.

Probate Records; Author: Illinois. County Court (Jersey County); Probate Place: Jersey, Illinois
 Probate Records, Vol D-G, 1901-1922

This will is significant for our Durney genealogy. We very limited Parish baptismal records for this family from Ireland to prove relationships. But here Mary notes her relationship with nieces and nephews in the community. They are listed as:

John Powers- nephew, East St. Louis (son of Bridget Durney Powers who died in 1905)
Laurence Powers
Katie Powers
Priscilla Powers
Anthony Powers
Josephine Powers
Cora Powers
grandnephews and nieces, Jerseyville, Illinois (children of James "Shug" Powers who died in 1907/grandchildren of Bridget Durney)

John Durney
William Durney
Richard Durney
Annie Durney
Michael Durney
Nephews and nieces, address unknown (children of Thomas Durney)

Bird Powers
Mary Powers
grandnieces address unknown

Thomas Durney
John Durney
James Durney
Mary A. Herget
Anna Schlagel
grandnephews and nieces address unknown (children of Michael Durney)
and Bridget Fitzgerald - Jerseyville Illinois (daughter Michael Durney)

Richard Allen
Margaret Allen
Rose Allen
Thomas Allen
Hugh Allen
nephews and nieces- Jerseyville Illinois (children of Margaret Durney Allen who died in 1884)

So- despite the lack of baptismal records, here we have a document connecting Mary Durney, Bridget Durney, Thomas Durney, Michael Durney, and Margaret Durney as siblings.

Here is another interesting thing about the will. Despite naming 24 heirs to her estate, including those she had no idea of where they might live, Mary left out one very important person.

She left out her stepdaughter, Delia Allen Aylward, who she raised from the age of seven. Family histories note that Delia's children visited Mary, and referred to her as grandma. Delia received nothing from her father's estate. But she sat with her step-mother as she lay dying. Here is a note she wrote to her eldest son, Frank.

From the book of Jody Allen



Next Post- The remarkable story of Delia Allen Aylward.
















Thursday, August 6, 2020

Children of Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney of County Meath- Frank 1829 Summerhill - 1872 Jerseyville Ill. Part 1


                              Francis "Frank" Allen- Hugh's eldest brother 
                                               (Source: picture from book of Jody Allen)

Hugh was no doubt very close to his eldest brother, Frank. They may have emigrated together; if not, Hugh soon followed Frank to America and was living with him in Macoupin County, Illinois in 1860. (see previous blog) In 1860, Frank was a young man of 31 years (the census says 27 but we have his baptismal record!) and had married Rachel Reece on January 15, 1859. They had an 8 month old baby, David, named for Rachel's father. 
(Source Year: 1860; Census Place: Township 12 Range 7, Macoupin, Illinois; Page: 188; Family History Library Film: 803206)

In 1861, their first daughter was born; Bridget Ellen "Adelia" Allen. By July 1863, the family had moved to Jersey County, where both Frank and Hugh registered for the draft for the civil war. (Neither went to war)

                                   Frank Allen's farm in Jerseyville 
                                            (Source: colored map from book of Jody Allen)

 Frank lived about a mile north of Jerseyville. According to a family story, he raised race horses on his farm. On March 19, 1864, Rachel gave birth to a third child, named Richard after his grandfather in Ireland. It was thought that Rachel died soon after his birth. Family histories say that her daughter, Delia, was still very young ("still in a crib") when her mother died. She was believed to be buried in Oak Grove Cemetery in Jerseyville. No burial records for St. Francis were found.

The baby survived and was baptized on April 6, 1865- a year after his birth- at St. Francis Xavier Church in Jerseyville. His baptism took place just 4 days after the baptism of Hugh Allen and Margaret Durney's son, who was also named Richard after his grandfather. 

                   (Source: Diocese of Springfield Illinois Sacramental Records, St. Francis Xavier)

As was typical for widowers with small children, Frank remarried a respectable year later. On April 9, 1866, he and Margaret Black/Blake were wed in Jerseyville.

                Source: Document from the Family history notebook of Helen and Margie Allen

Once again, Frank was struck by tragedy. Less than a year later, his second wife Margaret died at age 40, childless. She was buried at St. Francis.

                                             photo source: P. Meado  find-a-grave

Undaunted, Frank married for the third time, again one year later, on February 25, 1868. This time he married Mary Durney, the sister of his brother Hugh's wife, Margaret Durney. At 44, Mary was not a young bride and was, in fact, six years older than Frank, although on the 1870 census, she notes her age as 37. (This differs from her baptismal certificate.) However, Mary gave birth to a daughter on January 27, 1870 whom they named Margaret and called "Maggie." Maggie was just one month younger than Hugh Allen and Mary Durney's son, Thomas (my grandfather.)

Catholic Diocese of Springfield; Springfield, IL; Illinois, Church Records, 1853-1975

The 1870 census clues us in to more tragedy in Frank's life. The two sons born to Frank and Rachel apparently did not survive. In 1870, Adelia Allen was 9 years old and Margaret 8 months old. Frank's farm was prospering, the land valued at $7,000 and his personal property at $2220.

Source: Year: 1870; Census Place: Township 8 Range 11, Jersey, Illinois; Roll: M593_233; Page: 706A; Image: 629; Family History Library Film: 545732

But as we have seen, health in those times could be precarious, and according to a family history, Frank's health was failing. Numerous doctors came to visit the family, resulting in mounting bills but little improvement to his health. Despite their tonics and remedies, by June 1872 Frank was reportedly too ill to even sign his name on a bank note. He died five months later on the 13th of November, 1872, at only 42 years of age.
 (Source: genealogy records of Jody Allen)

                                         (Source: 
Diocese of Springfield Sacramental Records)

His burial record notes that he was born in the Parish of Dangan, County Meath. He was buried in the cemetery at St. Francis Xavier in Jerseyville.

                                                                Photo source: findagrave


Next post: What happened to Frank's family after his death? 




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.