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21st June 05, 02:18 AM
#1
Irish surname v county
Recently I was searching for the Jones surname in respect to Irish County. (My grandmother knows virtually nothing about her Irish grandfather!) I came across this rootsweb page:
http://www.rootsweb.com/~irlkik/ihm/cntynam2.htm
[Remove the (cntynam2.htm) for even cooler stuff...]
Just curious as to the veracity of this information. Does anyone know otherwise? Any Joneses out there? Says we're from Wicklow county (originally, exclusively); hmmm... sounds rather convenient to me. Just because it is on the Internet does not make it true.
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21st June 05, 03:16 AM
#2
reliability of sources...
Originally Posted by kilt_nave
Recently I was searching for the Jones surname in respect to Irish County. (My grandmother knows virtually nothing about her Irish grandfather!) I came across this rootsweb page:
http://www.rootsweb.com/~irlkik/ihm/cntynam2.htm
[Remove the (cntynam2.htm) for even cooler stuff...]
Just curious as to the veracity of this information. Does anyone know otherwise? Any Joneses out there? Says we're from Wicklow county (originally, exclusively); hmmm... sounds rather convenient to me. Just because it is on the Internet does not make it true.
You hit the nail on the head with your last sentence, especially when it comes to genealogy: just because it is on the Internet does not make it true. Since you are dealing with a very common surname in the British Isles (Jones), really the only way to truly determine where your group of Joneses comes from is through individual research on your family tree.
Your local genealogical/historical society is a great place to start -- they may have their own research facility, or the local public library -- and don't forget the local LDS church for their family research centers -- the Mormons research mormons & non-mormons alike.
Good luck!
Todd
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21st June 05, 07:48 AM
#3
Those sites are actually pretty "generic" with the locations, but they're a GREAT place to start. I was researching the Delaney (O Dubhshlaine) name, and started in Kilkenny (as the internet proposed). Without that starting point, I never would have been able to track the Catholic Church records and grave markers to find the actual base in Laois. It saved me how many locations of searching???!!!!;)
Arise. Kill. Eat.
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21st June 05, 08:07 AM
#4
Originally Posted by Jimmy Carbomb
Those sites are actually pretty "generic" with the locations, but they're a GREAT place to start. I was researching the Delaney (O Dubhshlaine) name, and started in Kilkenny (as the internet proposed).
That's funny Jimmy, 'cause everytime I get interested in looking up family history, I start with a Kilkenny
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21st June 05, 08:39 AM
#5
Originally Posted by Colin
That's funny Jimmy, 'cause everytime I get interested in looking up family history, I start with a Kilkenny
Usually discovering my family history drives me TO a Kilkenny, or Guinness, or Bunnahabhain, or whatever. ;)
Last edited by jfellrath; 21st June 05 at 08:57 AM.
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21st June 05, 08:53 AM
#6
Originally Posted by Colin
That's funny Jimmy, 'cause everytime I get interested in looking up family history, I start with a Kilkenny
If someone didn't know the topography of Ireland, they would think that Kilkenny was some dried-up lake bed that was hard for migrants to escape... so everyone just settled there!
My wife's maiden name is Delaney, so I was doing "the search" for the family. Good night nurse, there are a LOAD of Delaneys in Ireland!!! It was fun tracking the "right ones".
Fortunately for me, my family history is very well spelled out in some old books and journals, so I have known all along that Armagh is "home base". That goes back a LONG time. In fact, family still resides there in droves. When I plugged-in the family name with "Ireland", it went straight to the correct church. I guess we made just enough trouble over there to be tracked.;)
Arise. Kill. Eat.
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21st June 05, 03:12 PM
#7
Originally Posted by cajunscot
a very common surname in the British Isles (Jones)
Luckily for me I can narrow it down to just Ireland. She remembers him speaking with an Irish accent and telling her stories about Ireland. Not a bad memory for an 87-year-old.
Thanks for the tip, I found new genealogy stuff I can talk to my granny about...
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21st June 05, 08:54 AM
#8
Interesting site! I read through all the counties and couldn't find my surname (Gingles) listed. I know that my grandfather immigrated to Canada in 1913 from Larne, Co. Antrim. Unfortunately I have no idea if the family originally came from there. Using the net to try to search has been disappointing.
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21st June 05, 10:08 AM
#9
I admit that I was caught up in the web of information. This is just one great source of knowledge amongst many. I really appreciated the other stuff (maps and history)
Glen McGuire
A Life Lived in Fear, Is a Life Half Lived.
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21st June 05, 11:45 AM
#10
You may try http://genforum.genealogy.com/
You may find long lost relatives that you didn't even know you had... I did!
[B]Paul Murray[/B]
Kilted in Detroit! Now that's tough.... LOL
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