My Families

[Home]
[Wall]
[O'Connell]
[Hanley]
[Tansey]
[Cronin]
[Lundstrum]
[Crane]
[Feeney]
[Matty's Page]
[About Us]
[Contact Us]

This site has been created to share my family histories with those having similar interests and objectives.  It focuses primarily on my Irish immigrant ancestors and their first generation American descendants.

Almost all of my families emigrated from Cobh (pronounced "Cove"), County Cork, Ireland, boarding two or three-masted steamships and sailing for roughly two weeks to either New York City or Boston, depending upon weather and speed.  For most of the Irish emigration period, Cobh was known as Queenstown, named in 1849 to honor Queen Victoria's visit to Ireland; however, Queenstown reverted to Cobh following Irish Independence in 1920.  Not only was Queenstown the last Irish soil beneath my ancestors' feet, but it was the last port of call for the RMS Titanic in 1912.  The RMS Lusitania, sunk in 1915 during World War I, lies in the deep only a few miles from Queenstown.  Between 1840 and 1910, there was a significant evolution in the size, power, and speed of passenger ships.  The earlier ships were referred to as "coffin ships" because many passengers died during the arduous voyage, especially during the time of the Great Famine when landowners found it cheaper to pay the fares of their starving tenants than it was to feed them.  Names of ships transporting my ancestors included Catalonia, City of Richmond, Commonwealth, Saxonia, Scythia.  Below are some few photos of Queenstown, circa 1900.

Principal street in Queenstown

 

Chief thoroughfare in Queenstown fronting harbor

 

Three-masted steamship at anchor in harbour

(Passengers were ferried to ships)

An immgrant's last view of Queenstown

(St. Colman's Cathedral in background; spire not yet completed)

Most of the events involving my families occurred in or near Lynn, Massachusetts, a harbor town just north of Boston.  Lynn was first settled in 1629 by colonists from the New England Company in Salem.  The settlers relied mostly on shell fishing and family farms for their existence.  An iron works was built in 1643, and later, tanning became a major industry.  Lynn continued to grow and became internationally known for its shoe industry which had advanced from tradesmen toiling in one-room workshops known as “ten footers” to large multi-storied shoe factories.  The General Electric Company was founded in Lynn in 1892 through the merger of Thomson-Houston Electric Company and the Edison General Electric Company.  The first jet airplane engine built in the U. S. came from Lynn’s General Electric plant in 1942.

Lynn, Massachusetts circa 1870

From History of Lynn, Massachusetts by James Newhall, 1883

Almost all of my families were Irish immigrants who came to America during the period 1865 to 1900 from faraway Irish counties, such as Tipperary, Waterford, Cork, Galway, Sligo, Roscommon, and Limerick.  Although most arrived in Boston, many of the early immigrants arrived in New York and passed through Castle Garden, Ellis Island's predecessor.

The life patterns of my immigrant families were similar.  The immigrant men were low-skilled laborers, and the immigrant women married low-skilled laborers.  If not already married before coming to America, they typically married only a few years after arriving in Lynn and had large families, often experiencing an unimaginable toll in infant mortality.  They lived in Lynn communities referred to as the "Brickyard" and the "Highlands" and became well-known and respected citizens.  The immigrant families tended to be deeply religious and highly involved in church activities at St. Mary's Church, St. Joseph's Church, and Sacred Heart Church.  For the most part, they enjoyed long and married lives in Lynn and, no doubt, took some measure of satisfaction in the gamble they had made so many years before.

My first generation American ancestors grew up in large but poor families and understood loss at an early age.  It was common to lose two or more siblings to a wide variety of diseases and accidents.  They attended Lynn public and parochial schools and participated in scholastic, athletic, and church activities.  Being more educated than their immigrant parents, they found higher-skilled employment in Lynn, typically with the Lynn city government, shoe factories, and General Electric Company.  They enjoyed greater economic success and some achieved notable distinction, such as the Mayor of Lynn, Swampscott Chief of Police, lot superintendent of Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey circus, Red Sox team doctor, and founder of St. Mary's Hospital in Brooklyn, New York.  They mostly married, had smaller families, and moved to other areas of Lynn or neighboring towns, like Salem, Marblehead, Swampscott, Melrose, Chelsea, and Boston.

My second generation American ancestors attended the same Lynn schools; some going on to college or other advanced education schools.  They continued the pattern of diversity of trade and skill and increased economic success.  Many would begin the migration to other states due to military service, other opportunities, or retirement.  This trend would continue through succeeding generations.  Today, only remnants of the original Irish immigrant families can be found in Lynn and neighboring towns.

A large number of the men and some women in all of these generations served in the U. S. military, participating in the Spanish American War, World War I, World War II, Korea, and Vietnam.  Many were members of the American Legion or Veterans of Foreign Wars.  One family sent four brothers to World War I at the same time.  Others served with distinction with some of America's most famous World War II units, such as the 82nd Airborne Division, 17th Airborne Division, 379th Bomb Group, and USS Franklin and were engaged in fiercely fought campaigns.

This website is dedicated to my ancestors - from the poor immigrants who ventured into the unknown to create new but hard lives for themselves and their families to their first generation Americans and beyond, some gaining prominence as civic leaders, religious officials, athletes, businessmen, and war heroes.  These are their stories.

Principal Names in Family

Ahearn

Dobbins Kilhouley

Mullowney

Aylward Donovan Landry Murphy

Barry

Drislane Lane Nolan
Bishop

Duggan

Lawless

O'Brien

Brady Dwyer

Lundstrum

O'Connell

Burns

Feeney

Macadam O'Neil
Carson Finnegan Marinick Quinn
Chadwick Gaddy Martin Symmes
Condon Gleason McCarthy

Tansey

Cox Gothard McKeever Twomey

Crane

Hanley

McNulty Vassallo

Cronin

Hedderman

Miller

Wall

Devine Kane Moloney Walsh