February snippet How the Famine affected my family’ Case 4

Carol Hurley Law, responding to ‘How the Famine affected my family’ tells us the story of her Kerry/Cork families settled on Irish Mountain in West Virginia. This was so extensive I felt it should be given the length of a journal article and with full picture content.

August/September snippet: Irish Ghettos, where did the Irish settle in large numbers in your hometown? Response One: Irish Ghettos in Chicago

Contributed by Mike Donahue My g-grandfather, Patrick O'Donoghue immigrated to Chicago with his wife, Mary Kelly in the 1850s. He joined his brother, Michael and his wife, Catherine Harty.  They settled in a heavily Irish neighborhood 3 miles south of downtown. Over the years, this neighborhood was called "Hard Scrabble," then "Cabbagetown" and finally, Bridgeport. […]

July snippet – Funny stories from my family history – Response Two

Contributed by Sarah Smith Funny family story – passed down from my Aunt. I have not researched my family at all – no time! – so can't provide the detail you may require. However, I have no reason to disbelieve my Aunt!   My great grandfather O'Donoghue was the son of a local squire in […]

First white child born in Jefferson Township

From Winona Republican-Herald, Dec 10, 1942;   Jefferson Township is in Houston County, MN  The History of Houston County MN says thus: “The first births in the township of which there are any record were those of Michael and Patrick Donahue, twin sons of Patrick Donahue. They were born in July, 1856. Their father Patrick Donahue was […]

July snippet – Funny stories from my family history – Response One

Contributed by Thomas Witte Colleen Donahue Witte and the Cemetery Lots Recently I was engaged in a conversation with my wife (Colleen Donahue Witte} that started me thinking of things that had happened when we lived Duluth, MN and of dying and of graveyards. We had bought a home on London Road in a lovely […]

Why my name is spelled Donahue

Contributed by Mike Donahue My g-grandfather, Patrick O'Donoghue immigrated to Chicago to join his brother, Michael in the late 1850s. The brothers settled in a neighborhood called Bridgeport on Chicago's south side; they raised their families living next door to each other. All official records of the two brothers and their families, census, city directories, […]

February snippet – How the Famine affected my family – Case Four

Reference Case Two.  I do not know by whom this was submitted I, too, have an Irish maternal grandmother's maternal grandmother, pop up in Canada, amid all the French Canadians. The priest recorded the marriage record in English, but did give the bride's parents' full names & county of origin in Ireland. I am not sure if […]

June Snippet: Response Two posted..The Curse

Contributed by Anita Donohoe The Curse: “In every generation, only one son will have a son who will carry on the family name.” There is a legend/curse in our Donohoe line where, in every generation, there will be only one male who will carry on the family name. Cursed by a widow, whose only son […]

June Snippet – Response One posted

Contributed by Kielan Donahue My second cousin’s wife, upon meeting his mother, says her[the mother in law’s] first words to her[the wife] were something along the lines of “Oh, I heard you’ve met my son, I’m sorry”. If that doesn’t qualify as black sheep I don’t know what does