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Researching the Irish and Anglo-Americans in Spanish America (Part 2)

5 Oct By Dwight Leave a Comment

The Spanish and later Mexican governments kept records of settlers. A good treatment can be found in George R. Ryskamp’s chapter “Colonial Spanish Borderland Research” in The Source: A Guidebook to American Genealogy, 3rd ed, edited by Loretto Szucs and Sandra Luebking  (2006): 699-733.

Concerning records in general, much has been published or made available online. For example, Lawrence H. Feldman’s Anglo-Americans in Spanish Archives: Lists of Anglo-American Settlers in the Spanish Colonies of America (1991) documents settlers in what is now Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi and Missouri.

Spanish and Mexican land grants are among some of the most important sources. As Spanish America became part of the USA piece by piece, land owners had to prove their ownership, which created a whole new set of records from the American perspective. A good discussion of land can be found in E. Wade Hone’s chapters on “Spanish Possession” and “Mexican Possession” in his encyclopedic Land & Property Research in the United States(1997). To access online material on grants, Google the key word “Spanish Land Grants,” “Mexican Land Grants” and of course “Private Land Claims.”

Texas provided its own complexity as Spain opened Texas for Anglo-American settlement in 1820, one year before Mexico declared its independence. The ensuring Mexican land grants continued until 1835. These settlers created the Republic of Texas in 1836; which was annexed into the USA in 1846. In California, the land system was known as the Ranchos under both Spain (1784-1821) and Mexico (1833-1846). The Rancho boundaries became the basis for California’s land survey system. 

This fascinating piece of American history will take you through land, tax, military and court records. Fortunately, much is readily available. Always check online first, then published books, and then manuscript material. You might be surprised what you find.

Filed Under: Irish Ancestry Tagged With: American Frontier, Colonial America, Ethnic Connections, Immigration and Emigration, Research

In Search of Missing Friends Database

29 Aug By Dwight Leave a Comment

A fascinating source are newspaper advertisements for missing friends and relatives from Ireland. In order to reconnect with someone, ads would be placed with what little information that is known. Cast the net wide in a well known newspaper and see what comes back to you. The Boston Pilot was one of these newspapers.

Boston Pilot ads (1831-1920) have been published and are online. One excellent database is hosted by the New England Historic Genealogical Society: www.americanancestors.org Another  database can be found on the Boston College website: infowanted.bc.edu  The collection consists of 40,399 records ranging from simple to detailed.

An ad may be placed a decade or later after the immigration occurred. Also, just because the Boston Pilot was a Jesuit publication, don’t assume every ad is placed by a Catholic looking for Catholics. Not all Irish remained with the church. I have found many Protestant converts placing ads or the subject of ads. Don’t assume the Boston Pilot only went to Boston residents. It had a worldwide audience. You will find ads looking for people in almost every place imaginable.

Each database has its strengths and weaknesses. A place search may be what you need, and this can be done by county, parish, town or townland. Perhaps you need only one surname from one county. Make sure the online databases can provide you with your search parameters. If you have doubts, then certainly consult the incredible printed copies which are meticulously indexed in just about every direction possible.

I consult these ads on a regular bases, and often I do find who I am looking for. In these cases typically listed will be the origins in Ireland, when immigrated, where settled, and who is looking for them. By Irish research standards this is incredible.

Filed Under: Irish Ancestry Tagged With: Databases, Immigration and Emigration, Newspapers

The Irish Connection to Bermuda

19 Aug By Dwight Leave a Comment

The Caribbean Island of Bermuda was first settled in 1609 by a group of shipwrecked colonists who were sailing for the Jamestown settlement in Virginia. Many Irish prisoners were transported to the island during the mid-seventeenth century. However, six months after a thwarted revolt in 1658, a resolution was passed making it illegal “to buy or purchase any more of the Irish nation upon any pretense whatsoever.” In 1684 Bermuda became an English colony, with close connections to the colonies of Virginia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Georgia.

In 1767 it became a base for the British Caribbean fleet and home for traveling British militia. The military and the accompanying infrastructure continued to bring Irish to the island.  During the American Revolution, Bermuda became home to many Loyalists fleeing the mainland.

The majority of Bermuda’s records are at the Bermuda Archives in Hamilton: www.gov.bm (click on archives), which houses 400 years of records. Many of their primary collections are on microfilm at the Family History Library: www.familysearch.org

There are also many websites which can provide help and have databases of extracted records, such as “Bermudian Genealogy & History”: www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~bmuwgw/bermuda.htm There are also reference works such as Helen Rowe’s A Guide to the Records of Bermuda (1980) and two works by Clara Hollis-Hallett Early Bermuda Records 1619-1826 (1991) and Bermuda Index 1784-1914 (1989). A recent guide is John Titford’s My Ancestors Settled in the British West Indies: Bermuda, British Guiana and British Honduras(2011).

When considering Bermuda research, for colonials, consider migration to the southern mainland a possibility. Also, the strong British military presence makes this a natural place for your ancestor to have spent some time.

Filed Under: Irish Ancestry Tagged With: Caribbean Islands, Colonial America, Immigration and Emigration

Why was Greenock, Scotland so Popular?

5 Aug By Dwight Leave a Comment

Map of Greenock, Scotland

The Irish immigrated and formed a community in Greenock. Knowing why the Irish were drawn to this city, may help you in finding your ancestors.

The fares from Ireland to Greenock were relatively inexpensive, making it a destination place even prior to the Potato Famine. The Famine years in 1846-7 saw immigrants flood to Scotland in general. Immigration consisted of both Irish Catholics and Protestants. The “Mother Parish” for Roman Catholics was St. Mary’s which can be traced to 1808, and the Famine swelled its numbers. Protestants had any number of Presbyterian and non-conformist churches to choose from. 

Greenock is in the historic county of Renfrewshire. It is a seaport, and major industrial area. Under the Act of Union (1707), Greenock became the main port on the West Coast, where it prospered through trade with the American Colonies, especially through importing and processing sugar from the Caribbean.

Historically, Greenock was a center for shipbuilding, sugar refining and wool manufacturing. The Irish worked in all these industries. It’s the sugar industry that most researchers do not associate with the Irish. Sugar refining began in 1765. Fourteen refineries operated in the city, and by the end of the nineteenth century, about 400 ships a year were transporting sugar from the Caribbean to Greenock for processing. The 1851 Census showed that 44.3% of the female textile workers were Irish women. The Irish took jobs such as this because many were less skilled, lacked education, and often only spoke Gaelic. This with local prejudice kept them under represented in more skilled trades.

Cardwell Bay and The Holy Loch, Lyle Hill

As a major historical port, Greenock provided the jumping off point for many Irish elsewhere around the world. Don’t be surprised if you find that your Irish immigrant family spent time in Greenock for a short time or for several generations.

 

 

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Professional Links

Dwight Radford, visit me at: www.thejourneyhomegenealogy.com

Leland Meitzler Publisher of genealogy products and books: www.FamilyRootsPublishing.com

Irish Genealogical Society International: www.irishgenealogical.org  I write articles for their journal The Septs

Kelowna & District Genealogical Society located in beautiful British Columbia: www.kdgs.ca I will be speaking at their conference in September

Mike O’Laughlin author of Irish family history books: www.irishroots.com

Sharon DeBartolo Carmack, MFA, CG professional book editing: www.nonfictionHelp.com  

Come enjoy the December research tour: www.SaltLakeChristmasTour.com I am one of the consultant’s at this wonderful event

 

Filed Under: Irish Ancestry Tagged With: Immigration and Emigration, Irish, Scotland

The Important Irish Connection to Barbados

18 Jul By Dwight Leave a Comment

Barbados was settled by the English in 1627, and became a center for the sugar industry. The island had a combination of slaves and indentured servants; both African and European. The Irish were an important piece of this trade in human bondage. Much has been written about the “Barbadosed” Irish, who were sent to the island as slaves under Oliver Cromwell: www.yale.edu/glc/tangledroots/Barbadosed.htm The number sent will never be known, but estimates range from 60,000 to 12,000.

For colonial Catholics, remember, this was a Protestant colony, so your ancestors will be found in the Anglican records. There were also Irish Moravians and Quakers on Barbados. Quakers can be traced to counties Leix (Queens) and Wicklow.

A useful reference work is Geraldine Lane, Tracing Ancestors in Barbados: A Practical Guide (2007) as well as numerous published and online articles. One handy article is Dwight A. Radford and Arden C. White’s article, “The Irish in Barbados,” in The Irish At Home and Abroad 2 (3) )1994/5): 92-97.  

Major resources include James C. Brandow’s Genealogies of Barbados Families (1983) and JoAnne McRee’s six volume series Barbados Records(1979-1984). Much has also been preserved in Vere Langford Oliver’s Caribbeana and The Journal of the Barbados Museum and Historical Society. The core records can be found at the Barbados National Archives; the National Archives, Kew: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk  with much on microfilm at the Family History Library: www.familysearch.org

For those of us with Irish colonial ancestry in the English colonies, whether white or black, Barbados is such as important link that we dare not ignore it.

Filed Under: Irish Ancestry Tagged With: Caribbean Islands, Colonial America, Immigration and Emigration, Indentured Servants, Slavery and Bondage

The Irish Migration to South Africa

17 Jul By Dwight Leave a Comment

What is today South Africa evolved from settlements established by the Dutch and English. The Dutch arrived in 1652 under the Dutch East India Company. In 1795, the British took over the Cape. This would later become the provinces of Cape Province, Natal, Orange Free State and Transvaal.

With the establishment of the British, the Irish would arrive in great numbers as merchants, mariners, soldiers, miners and settlers. The first distinct Irish group migration was in 1818 with a small party of Irish artisans. The famous 1820 group of settlers were transported to the Cape by the British Government and included five groups from counties Cork and Wicklow. Another County Cork group came in 1823. After these organized groups, most migration was of individual colonists.

One Irish immigration scheme was the planned transportation of women. Being so far from Europe, there was an abundance of men and few women. Beginning in 1849 the

Emigration Philanthropic Society of England began assisting poor Irish girls to leave the Irish workhouses. The resulting drama is the stuff of legends. In an 1851 scandal broke

aboard the immigration ship Gentoo which had become a floating brothel! The resulting embarrassment would enact policies where the Irish girls would be chaperoned on board by responsible English families. Then once in South Africa, small groups of girls were under the protection of married women, who guided them away from hasty marriages and unacceptable employment.

The Irish in South Africa played an important part of the European history and development of the country. Regardless of where your family immigrated; if you had a branch in South Africa, it’s history and records are worth exploring.

Filed Under: Irish Ancestry Tagged With: Immigration and Emigration, South Africa

The Censuses of England and Wales (1841-1911)

16 Jul By Dwight Leave a Comment

The censuses for England and Wales were taken every ten years. The years released to the public include: 1841, 1851, 1861, 1871, 1881, 1891, 1901 and 1911. These are scanned and online on two major subscription databases; www.ancestry.com and www.findmypast.co.uk They are also indexed on www.familysearch.org with links to the Findmypast website. They make a wonderful tool for hunting down Irish immigrants.

While usually, the censuses will simply say “Ireland” as the place of birth, sometimes, they actually provide county and parish of birth. Two of my favorites are the 1841 and 1851 enumerations. These are important as they are pre and post Potato Famine. My rule of thumb is that if a family had immigrated by 1841 they left for reasons other than hunger, and they had enough money to leave. In short, they were not always among the poor of the poor. The story in 1851 was different. It was towards the end of the Potato Famine, and massive migration was still underway. Both tell the story of very different migrations out of Ireland.

Now continuing with my examples, there’s some quirks you need to be aware of in 1841 schedule. In that census, only “I” is listed for Ireland and nothing else for birthplace. Always double check that with a later census to make sure the census taker was accurate. Other quirks include relationships not being provided, and the age of individuals older than 15 years being rounded down to the nearest five years. When you compare this with 1851, a clearer picture emerges. Both Ancestry and Findmypast have helpful guides to the censuses, including a listing of census areas known to be missing from the 1841 collection.

With the censuses so readily available at the fingertips, it’s an exciting time to be a family historian!

Filed Under: Irish Ancestry Tagged With: Census, Databases, England, Immigration and Emigration, Wales

India and the Colonial America Connection

15 Jul By Dwight Leave a Comment

Don’t be surprised if your Colonial American ancestors were actually from India. The colonial vocabulary used the term “East Indies” to describe the Indian subcontinent.

So how did these people get to the New World in the 1600s? The records themselves provide answers, and are extracted by Paul Heinegg as “Free African Americans of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland and Delaware”: www.freeafricanamericans.com/East_Indians.htm

Mr. Heinegg, notes that East Indians came in bondage as indentured servants and slaves

from England. He documents East Indians from the court records in Maryland, Virginia and North Carolina. He notes that although they tended to marry into the Free Black community, they also intermixed with the indentured white community, many of whom clearly had Irish surnames. The court records used often use the term “East India Indians.”

One very interesting case from the Spotsylvania County Order Books (1735-38) showed the distinction between the East Indians and African slaves (page 440):

“Zachary Lewis, Churchwarden of St. George Parish, presents Ann Jones, a servant belonging to John West, who declared that Pompey an East Indian (slave) belonging to William Woodford, Gent., was the father of sd child which was adjudged of by the Court that she was not under the law having a Mullato child, that only relates to Negroes and Mullatoes and being Silent as to Indians, carry sd. Ann Jones to the whipping post.”

In this case, Ann Jones, a presumed white indentured servant, had a child by Pompey, an East Indian slave. The laws were already in place restricting white indentured servants having children with African slaves. Yet, it had not caught up with the East Indian issue. In the end, Ann’s sentence was the whipping post!

What a fascinating piece of history with records to back it up.

Filed Under: Irish Ancestry Tagged With: African Americans, Asia, British India, Colonial America, Ethnic Connections, Immigration and Emigration, Indentured Servants, Slavery and Bondage

The Irish in the Ottoman Empire

30 Jun By Dwight Leave a Comment

The Irish went everywhere including the Ottoman Empire. The modern nation of Turkey is much smaller than its predecessor empire, which was dismantled after World War I.

From 1583-1825, the Levent Company Merchants from England held by charter a monopoly of British trade with the Ottoman Empire. They had major trading posts at “Scanderoon” (Aleexandretta), Smyrna and Aleppo (now in Syria). The Irish would follow in their footsteps.                  

The Sultans in the nineteenth century began to modernize the empire. As a result, Europeans were invited to help, with Symrna (Izmir) and Constantinople (Istanbul) becoming gathering places. The collapse of the Ottoman Empire, and the Turkish Revolution brought an end to this era.

When foreigners intermarried with the local Christians, their children were legally considered Turks, and not foreigners. The French coined the term Mezza Razza to describe these mixed families. The Irish were certainly among the Mezza Razza.

The Ottoman Empire was a mixture of cultures and peoples. Christian communities included Orthodox (Greek, Armenian, Russian), Catholics (Roman, Armenian, Greek/Eastern Rite), and most Protestants attended the Anglican Church. Large collections from all these denominations are on microfilm at the Family History Library

(FHL): www.familysearch.org Make no mistake, the Irish are recorded in them. Also don’t neglect the British Consulate records for vital records; also at the FHL.

Noteworthy collections are deposited in London. These include the “Levant Company’s Archive (1634-1825)” at the Guildhall Library: www.cityoflondon.gov.uk and the “International Memoranda (1821-1890)” which are Church of England records housed at the National Archives, Kew: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Just be aware there are reasons why an Irish family would be in the Ottoman Empire. Also be aware that your Middle Eastern Christian family may indeed have an Irish connection. There are historical currents to explain all this with records to back it up.

Filed Under: Irish Ancestry Tagged With: Asia, Ethnic Connections, Immigration and Emigration

The Irish in Antigua

28 Jun By Dwight Leave a Comment

The English colonized the Caribbean Island of Antigua in 1632. By 1674 the first large sugar plantation was established. The island became important because of its natural harbors. The 1678 Census showed there were 610 Irish out of the population of 4480. This means 13.6% of the population was born in Ireland.

The Irish came to Antigua as indentured servants or as merchants. As more African slaves were imported, there were fewer reasons for the Irish to stay. They would leave for the larger islands or for the mainland American colonies.

There was a direct connection between the merchant families of County Galway and Antigua, and they were often Roman Catholic. When dealing with colonial Catholics, it’s important to keep in mind, Antigua was an English Protestant colony. For this reason, all family baptisms, marriages and burials were recorded in the Anglican Church registers.

Irish Catholics on Antigua also had connections with the Irish Catholic colony on Montserrat.

For the genealogist, Vere Lanford Oliver’s three volume work The History of the Island of Antigua (1894) provides extracts of church records, tombstones, censuses, genealogies and civil records. It is on microfilm at the Family History Library (FHL #1149539): www.familysearch.org Oliver traces many in the planter class of Irish back to Ireland. Primary records at the Antigua & Barbuda National Archives have also been microfilmed at the FHL. The periodical Caribbeana (FHL #38848) is another resource for extracted records. Other records can be found at the National Archives, Kew, England: www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Antigua is especially important for researching both Catholic and Protestant Irish families in the colonial period. This island may be the link between Ireland and Colonial America.

Filed Under: Irish Ancestry Tagged With: Caribbean Islands, Colonial America, Immigration and Emigration, Indentured Servants, Slavery and Bondage

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Dwight A. Radford

Dwight A. Radford is a professional family history researcher. Along with his staff they specialize in Ireland, England, Canada, African American, Native American, and United States. Connecting families together through historical documents and then creating a cherished family heirloom published book for generations to enjoy. Full bio…

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