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Strokestown Famine Diaspora welcomed back 'home' for The Gathering 2013

Project information and contact with ancestors of Ireland’s famine from Strokestown Park House, Roscommon


Strokestown Park House
Strokestown Park House
Photo by oldrectoryireland.com

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During the course of the Great Irish Famine, 1845-1851, more than a million people emigrated from Ireland never to return.

On the Strokestown estate of the Mahon family, more than 5,000 people left. Some, like the 1,432 who went to Canada, in the summer of 1847 were assisted in emigration by the landlord, Major Denis Mahon. Most, however, received small sums of money to go and sailed for England, Canada, America and Australia.

As preparations continue for the 2013 Gathering, when Ireland will take center stage in the minds of millions of people claiming Irish descent around the world, at Strokestown Park House an exciting project is underway as part of those celebrations. In 2013, Strokestown Park, in collaboration with the Department of History, NUI Maynooth and the OPW/NUI Maynooth Archive & Research Centre at Castletown, will welcome the Strokestown Famine Diaspora back to county Roscommon for a week-long celebration which will include an international famine conference, music, drama and other community based activities.

As part of The Gathering, Strokestown Park House, in collaboration with the Department of History, NUI Maynooth is looking to trace and invite ‘home’ to Roscommon the ancestors of these Famine emigrants for a week of celebration and remembrance.

Owing to current economic circumstances it might not be possible for many of the global Irish who wish to take part in some of the events in Ireland from doing so. We want to gather the Roscommon Famine emigrants stories. We want to hear your story- whether detailed or not, or if you are only in the process of finding out about your Famine ancestors. While the project is primarily aimed at Strokestown emigrants, we would love to hear from those with roots in Roscommon and further afield.

The stories will be added to our website and will be available to be read by visitors to the National Famine Museum. Send us your stories, pictures, memories and any other information that will help put all these pieces of the jigsaw together (see email below).

Family names
In total the Strokestown Park Archive (a fascinating collection of over 40,000 documents) contains details on over 10,000 people during the Great Famine, through emigration, eviction, relief and workhouse records. A sampling of the family names of those who emigrated during the Great Famine include:

Brennan, Feeney, Murray, McGuire, Hogan, Fitzsimons, Gannon, Freeman, Conry, Casserly, Doherty, Burke, Murtagh, Moran, Duffy, Fahey, Kelly, Goodman, Bowens, Doyle , Kenny, Moore, Beirne, Gibbons, Healy, Finnegan, Quinn, Egan, Fallon, Hanly, Tighe, Donnelly, Hunt, Cox, Dempsey, Donegan, Dwyer, McCormick, Glancy, Madden, Lannon, Rush, Duffy, McLaughlin, Conneally, Higgins, and Flannigan.

Taking a sample of those that left it may be possible the trace the lives of those that reached Canada, America, Australia, and other locations.

For example Catherine Blair of Lissonuffy, near Strokestown arrived in Baltimore, MD in 1850. She is recorded in the Federal Census in 1850 as living there with her husband James, aged 57 and three children William aged 11, Thomas aged 9 and Jane aged 2. Others settled in the ‘Kerry Patch’ in St Louis, Missouri and in Cincinnati Ohio.


Nster.com


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Nearly all of the Famine/Great Hunger emigrants left an Ireland that would remain a single political entity for another 170 years, and a great many of these emigrants were fluent i dteanga na nGael. The government of tody's Irish state that is arranging the 2013 Gatherings apply the term "Ireland" only to the part of the homeland over which they have jurdiction, not to Ireland's NE region, and few members of that Partitionist admisintration are seldom, if ever, heard ag labhairt Gaeilge. I'd greatly appreciate it if someone would be so kind as to inform me if there is a place in the Gatherings for me, a London-born U.S. citizen whose cultural heritage applies to the 'whole Irish nation and all its parts', Éireannach atá an-bródúil as an nGaeilge mheasartha maith atá aige freisin.
 




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