Search found 1859 matches

by Sduddy
Thu Mar 20, 2025 10:59 am
Forum: Clare Past
Topic: Mildly curious about the word “Clachán”
Replies: 1
Views: 123

Re: Mildly curious about the word “Clachán”

The Glens of Antrim Historical Society gives the nearest thing I can find to a history of the use of the word “Clachán”; see this piece entitled “Books and Articles on Clachans and Rundale”: https://antrimhistory.net/clachan-project/summary-of-findings-of-project/books-articles-on-clachans-and ...
by Sduddy
Thu Mar 06, 2025 4:21 pm
Forum: Clare Past
Topic: Mildly curious about the word “Clachán”
Replies: 1
Views: 123

Mildly curious about the word “Clachán”

The word “clachan” is used to denote a group of farmhouses in 18th and 19th century Ireland, but the word originated in Scotland and in Ulster (a province in Ireland), and I often wonder to what extent, if any, it was used in the rest of Ireland, and, in particular, in County Clare.
I first came ...
by Sduddy
Fri Feb 21, 2025 1:17 pm
Forum: Clare Past
Topic: The heavens opened and the choir sang, Kilrush, 1878
Replies: 1
Views: 276

Re: The heavens opened and the choir sang, Kilrush, 1878

I was wondering who the organist from St. John’s Cathedral, Limerick, might be, and found a thesis by Mary Regina Deacy: "Continental Organists and Catholic Church Music in Ireland, 1860-1960": https://mural.maynoothuniversity.ie/id/eprint/5088/, which gives an account of the many continental ...
by Sduddy
Fri Feb 21, 2025 9:56 am
Forum: Clare Past
Topic: The heavens opened and the choir sang, Kilrush, 1878
Replies: 1
Views: 276

The heavens opened and the choir sang, Kilrush, 1878

Ignatius Murphy, in his article “Building a Church in 19th Century Ireland,” ( The Other Clare , Vol. 2 (1978)), gives, firstly, an account of the building of a chapel in Kilkee, and, secondly, the building of a small chapel in Kilrush, plus a larger replacement.
In 1799, the chapel in Kilrush was a ...
by Sduddy
Thu Feb 20, 2025 11:41 am
Forum: Clare Past
Topic: The hospitality of Fr. Comyn, Kilkee, 1831.
Replies: 0
Views: 168

The hospitality of Fr. Comyn, Kilkee, 1831.

Ignatius Murphy, in his article “Building a Church in 19th Century Ireland” ( The Other Clare , Vol. 2 (1978)), tells us that Fr. Comyn began collecting money in 1829 for a chapel* in Kilkee. Kilkee had lately become a popular seaside resort with many visitors during the Summer months, but the ...
by Sduddy
Sat Feb 15, 2025 9:55 am
Forum: Clare Past
Topic: Daniel Considine, Scribe
Replies: 6
Views: 15243

Re: Daniel Considine, Scribe

Well, I am back quickly to say I am wrong about the Caherbanna Keanes having a shop in Ennis. I’ve looked at my own old notes and see that there was a Keane family living in Ballyashea, Kilnamona, who also used the name “Myles” or “Miles”. A Myles Keane died in 1879, in Market Street, Ennis, aged 70 ...
by Sduddy
Fri Feb 14, 2025 1:24 pm
Forum: Clare Past
Topic: Daniel Considine, Scribe
Replies: 6
Views: 15243

Re: Daniel Considine, Scribe

Although that newspaper report gives James Brady, seed merchant, as the employer of Daniel Considine, I still think it possible that Daniel lived with the Keanes in Gaol Street. I think that James “Brady” was James Brody; the record of death of a James Brody, in 1888, gives his occupation as Farmer ...
by Sduddy
Thu Feb 13, 2025 9:09 am
Forum: Clare Past
Topic: “Book sale includes an Irish dictionary older than Samuel Johnson’s famed tome”
Replies: 1
Views: 424

Re: “Book sale includes an Irish dictionary older than Samuel Johnson’s famed tome”

For a biography of Aodh Buí, see "Aodh Buí Mac Crúitín (c.1680-1755)", by Michael Mac Mahon: https://www.clarelibrary.ie/eolas/coclare/literature/bardic/aodh_mac_cruitin.htm

Mac Mahon says that the dictionary includes an introductory poem by Mac Crúitín, in which he exhorts his country men and ...
by Sduddy
Sat Jan 18, 2025 10:18 am
Forum: Clare Past
Topic: “Book sale includes an Irish dictionary older than Samuel Johnson’s famed tome”
Replies: 1
Views: 424

“Book sale includes an Irish dictionary older than Samuel Johnson’s famed tome”

says a headline in the Irish Times today, January 18, 2025. In an article by Sylvia Thomson, on page 18, she gives a short description of some of the items being sold online by Co. Offaly bookseller, Conor Purcell, including a dictionary part-written by Aodh Buí Mac Crúitín:
A first edition of one ...
by Sduddy
Sat Dec 14, 2024 9:54 am
Forum: Clare Past
Topic: 1879 Pennsylvania obituary, Mrs. Catherine Brew Schnell b. 1816 Clare
Replies: 5
Views: 819

Re: 1879 Pennsylvania obituary, Mrs. Catherine Brew Schnell b. 1816 Clare

I found another well, also in the parish of Dysert (or Dysert O'Dea), which is a much better match for "Springmouth". It is Tobar RabhartaÍ: https://heritage.clareheritage.org/places/holy-wells/tobar-rabhartai-toberarraghta-sometimes-called-tobar-oireachta-dysert-odea-kileenan. "Rabharta" means ...
by Sduddy
Fri Dec 13, 2024 6:03 pm
Forum: Clare Past
Topic: 1879 Pennsylvania obituary, Mrs. Catherine Brew Schnell b. 1816 Clare
Replies: 5
Views: 819

Re: 1879 Pennsylvania obituary, Mrs. Catherine Brew Schnell b. 1816 Clare

Hi Sharon,

I'm sorry for confusing the matter by introducing Thaddeus Brew, who married Mary Curtin. It was the appearance of Catherine Schnell on that page of the Brew One Name Study that made me think I was on the right track. And I see now that I was mistaken in giving Thaddeus's year of death ...
by Sduddy
Thu Dec 12, 2024 5:28 pm
Forum: Clare Past
Topic: 1879 Pennsylvania obituary, Mrs. Catherine Brew Schnell b. 1816 Clare
Replies: 5
Views: 819

Re: 1879 Pennsylvania obituary, Mrs. Catherine Brew Schnell b. 1816 Clare

Hi Sharon,

Thank you for posting about Catherine Brew Shnell. Her mother, Mary, was Mary Curtin, a relative of Roland Curtin, who is the subject of a post made by me in July 2016, entitled “Roland Curtin born in Dysert, in 1764”: http://www.ourlibrary.ca/phpbb2/viewtopic.php?t=6798
Looking at the ...
by Sduddy
Thu Nov 21, 2024 4:56 pm
Forum: Clare Past
Topic: John Purcell Born 1856
Replies: 56
Views: 127145

Re: John Purcell Born 1856

Hi Barry,

Wikipedia has a piece on one Nicholas Purcell, born in 1651, commissioned Captain on 12 Feb 1686 in the army enrolled by Lord Tyrconnell to uphold the cause of King Jame II: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_ ... f_Loughmoe

Sheila
by Sduddy
Sat Sep 28, 2024 9:16 am
Forum: Clare Past
Topic: Patrick Guilfoyle, b. 1880 in Driminure, Aughrim, Tomgraney.
Replies: 2
Views: 57169

Re: Patrick Guilfoyle, b. 1880 in Driminure, Aughrim, Tomgraney.

Hi Darren

I think you are right in guessing that it was Patrick’s wife, Kate Rodgers, who was related to Alfie Rodgers, rather than Patrick himself.
Nevertheless I looked the Scarriff baptisms (1852-1872) for a Guilfoyle-Rodgers connection and found this one: the baptisms of two children of a ...
by Sduddy
Thu Sep 05, 2024 6:04 pm
Forum: Clare Past
Topic: Information is wanted of Thomas McNamara, of Glandree,
Replies: 865
Views: 4009687

Re: Information is wanted of Thomas McNamara, of Glandree,

Hi Jimbo

Good work. Your purchase of Fr. Ignatius Murphy’s The Diocese of Killaloe: 1850-1904 is paying dividends. I too failed to find a civil record of the death of Fr. John Clune, You found that the report of his death in the Freeman’s Journal of Mon 14 Jul 1890 gave “yesterday” as the date, but ...