Showing posts with label genealogy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label genealogy. Show all posts

Saturday, February 14, 2015

From Ireland to America - JFK Ancestor on The Dunbrody Famine Ship


It was a big year for New Ross, County Wexford. In June the new visitor center opened at the Kennedy Homestead in Dungannon kicking off the 50 year JFK homecoming celebrations. At the Dunbrody Famine Ship Irish Emigration Experience, a new boardwalk on the quayside was completed linking the Dunbrody, the ship that Patrick Kennedy took during the famine for a new life in Boston, to where JFK spoke in June 1963.

For the first time, permission was granted for a flame from the Eternal Flame at President Kennedy's graveside in Arlington National Cemetery to be used in the lighting of the Emigrant Flame from the Gathering torch. 30 members of the Kennedy family were there.

As soon as Wild Geese member Oisin O'Connell and I walked in the door of the Dunbrody Visitor's center, we were met by Sean Reidy, CEO of the JFK trust. Mr. Reidy shared what an amazing emotional experience the town had during the celebrations and welcomed

TheWildGeese.comwith open arms. We received our tickets as original passengers and proceeded to go through the audio-visual presentation of the very sad but hopeful immigrant experience prior to boarding, the journey on the replica of the Dunbrody, and finally the arrival in North America. I was surprised to see that the Dunbrody's most frequent destination was the tragic Grosse Ile in Quebec, Canada, but I now know why this is one of Ireland's most popular attractions.


We went up to the cafe to see the Irish America Hall of Fame and found the induction of the San Patricio Battalion of Mexico. Oisin first came to our attention when we helped to promote ZorroFest 2013 in Wexford town which was a celebration of the life of 17th-century Wexfordian William Lamport (Guillèn de Lombardo), the "Irish Zorro".

We had one more stop on my New Ross tour which was the 'Ros Tapestry' across the street... but that is a whole other story for another day.

I cannot thank Oisin enough for taking me on this memorable journey and as we left the 'Quayside Experience' Oisin insisted I do the JFK handshake and I am so happy I did!



Read more on the 2013 50th JFK Homecoming Celebrations in New Ross, Wexford: http://www.jfk50ireland.com/

Friday, February 13, 2015

From Ireland to America - Irish Famine Graveyards

Memorial garden of peace dedicated to Father Mychal Judge of the New York Fire Department, the first official casualty of 9/11 and son of Leitrim emigrants.


Our Wild Geese teammate Anna Porter took me to visit two 'famine' graveyards in the county of Leitrim.  At first sight there are just stone walls enclosing areas of beautiful Irish green grass, but once inside I could feel the intensity under my feet.


I entered through the old gate of the Drumshanbo Famine Graveyard and saw the uneven ground and the barely visible small stone enclosures from approximately 500 unmarked graves. A rosary hung from a tree in the center, and as I walked a wave of nausea and depression came over me as the reality of the events here suddenly took hold.


I did what I always do when visiting cemeteries I suggested that if anyone was still hanging around that they go swiftly and directly to the light, this experience was complete, and it was time to move on.

The ground under my feet puddled as I walked even though this was one of the sunniest summers on record in Ireland. The population in Leitrim was reduced by 40,000 during the famine and was one of the hardest-hit counties -- the saturated land contributed greatly to the failure of the crops.




At the front gate is a plaque from the Leitrim Society of New York and there are five other famine graveyards in the area. Most, if not all, have dedication plaques sponsored by this group.



The second graveyard was in Carrick-On-Shannon "in the shadow of the old workhouse" for the proper internment of about 900 victims of the famine, mostly children,




In 1998, the Carrick District Historical Society commemorated the 150th anniversary of the Famine by creating a memorial garden from the then-overgrown site.  This time there was also a plaque from the people of Carrick acknowledging contributions of the Leitrim Society of New York.

Anna and I sat in front of the fountain for quite a while listening to the water and discussing the plight and current suicide rate in Ireland, due in large part to the mortgage crisis just hitting its peak there. To me it felt lighter in this peaceful garden, as if the recognition of those long-forgotten within elevated the atmosphere.

The editor of the Leitrim Observer wanted to meet with me before I left as he had heard of my activities in the area and my involvement with The Wild Geese -- apparently they have a large New York subscriber base. We couldn't make that meeting happen, but this was just the beginning of my observations of the love affair between the U.S. and Ireland in counties Leitrim and Wexford. 

My Wexford Gathering in Druidic Carne

For 13 years I had been looking for "The Cross of Ballysheen" County Wexford in historical records and on my journeys with Google streetview.  Finally I was here at 'The Lobster Pot' at Carnsore Point which sits right on the crossroads dividing the old townlands of Ballysheen and Ballyfane.  I had quickly set up a The Wild Geese Gathering event and invited our Wexford members, but the logistics didn't work out so Jack and I had a coffee and a mini gathering.
Wexford Native and Wild Geese Heritage Partner Larry Kirwan of  'Black 47 ''volunteered' local maritime historian Jack O'Leary to help me with my family history research in the Carne area. Jack was wonderful and offered to drive me around.  The first place he took me was to the famous restaurant 'The Lobster Pot' so I could look for the 'Cross of Ballysheen' where Joseph Scallian and Margaret Doyle were married in 1783 during the last penal years in Ireland.  
Everyone around here knew Jack and Larry so this solo Wild Goose received a very warm welcome.  Jack introduced me to his friends, and they are many, but James Maloney, formerly of the Irish Tourist Board / Failte Ireland, was a local Carne resident, historian and also an OPW (Office of Public Works) at Tinturn Abbey!
James showed us a 19th century map of the Nunn's family St. Margaret's estate farm just before he submitted it to the Wexford Historical Society and Our Lady's Island Parish in case one of my ancestors were on the tenant list.  Then he took us on an amazing road trip around the area starting with the estate and when he showed us where the tenant's thatched homes had been. I got that 'I'm home' feeling again.
The estate took us right down to the beach and even though it was cold out I had to get my feet into the Irish Sea, even if James and Jack were yelling out to me that technically it wasn't the Irish Sea!  
I wanted to buy both of them a pint at the Lobster Pot.  While walking the area I shared with James how long I have wanted to see the area that was known to have old cottages on it, but is now private property. He disappeared for a bit while I walked down the road then he came running back calling to me  'let's go!"  
James got permission for us to go into the farm to look around and a member of the family directed us to a field and an old path, once known as the 'church path' that led down to the ruins of the old cottages!
It was like living inside the dream I'd been dreaming for 13 years. We clambered through the field and there it was the 'church path' which we figured went straight to Our Lady's Island Church. There were many baptism and marriage records stating they took place at Ballysheen but also in the many crossroads, priest's houses and homes.
It was the late 1700's and the penal laws were waning and I would imagine Our Lady's Island went underground at that time? I am happy I found the marriage record specifically stating the 'Cross at Ballysheen' that led me to this crossroad, a spot many drive by but was a very special place for the families that lived here. 
I walked the hedges peering through to the other side till i saw that the path had turned into a field with a row of stones, the last remnants of the cottages!  If this Margaret Doyle Scallian was my Margaret Doyle Scallian, then this whole area of hamlets and crossroads was her home.  
We went back to my waiting Guinness and then I realized that I was having my Wexford Gathering after all!  So here we are Jack, James, me and the owners Ciaran and Anne Hearne at The Lobster Pot in beautiful Carne, Wexford. 
The sun was setting and James wanted to get me into the Lady's Island cemetery. In the Wexford Library's Cantwell's Memorial book of the dead, I discovered not only a lot of Scallians buried there but one family of Johnsons who had all the same first names as the first few generations of my Bear Cove, Nova Scotia Johnsons.
My goal for this trip was to follow a hunch that Andrew Scallian, who seems to have arrived in Halifax, Nova Scotia, alone, son of a Joseph Scallian and Margaret Doyle  Co. Wexford was related somehow to William Johnson who also 'arrived' from Co. Wexford. William deeded half a 100-acre lot of his prime oceanfront property in Herring Cove to Andrew the year Andrew married. A Johnson/Scallion marriage resulted in one of my branches, so here I am.  
While I was in 'my office' or the front desk on the research floor of the Wexford library, I met historian Brian Cluer (who is now a WG member) who introduced me to Rex Sinnott (also a new WG member) in New Zealand. I soon discovered that Brian was the author/editor of The Carnsore Chronicles, a site I have spent many hours on for the wealth of research on the history, people and places of Wexford it contains.  Rex has added the Scallian research I discovered to the Scallian data base on his Sinnott Genealogy site, so with all these amazing guys I am finally getting closer to making a real connection across the pond.  
Just south of Ballysheen we often drove by a standing stone in an area called Logansherd.  James said the name meant Long Stone and there were many before the farmers removed them. Another of my goals was to visit druidic sites, especially in the areas my ancestors lived in, an adventure that had a whopping start when I was in Wiltshire prior to coming to Ireland.
This is from Our Lady's Island:
"One famous pagan shrine, possibly a temple to the sun, stood at Carnsore Point where a natural stone structure is believed to have been a Druid's altar. In Penal times this was used as a Mass Rock.
In a list of Irish place-names published in Iris-Leabhar na Gaeilge in 1903, the Irish name for Our Lady's Island is given as Cluain-na-mBan - 'the meadow of the women'. Considering that this locality was the centre of druidical worship, it would not be far-fetched to suggest that Our Lady's Island was in pre-Christian times inhabited by female druids."
This is from The Carnsore Chronicles:
"A 23 ft. long “giant’s grave”, a dolmen (a Breton word), is marked on the six inchOrdnance Survey map 53 that datesfrom 1841.  The map places it near the location of the present windmill number six on Carnsore Point."
In 1979, the first in a series of anti-nuclear protests and free festivals were held on Carnsore Beach.  It was where two of the organizers met for the first time, my new BFFs, James Moloney and Jack O'Leary.  
I was hoping to record Jack's recollections when we were here at the Windmill Farm, the site of the original protest festival, but it was cold and raining and we were pressed for time.  He had told me some wonderful stories though driving along in his old RV of how they pulled it together with no money and Christy Moore.  
Another person there at that first protest was The Wild Geese Admin Anna Porter'spartner, Barne, who was our driver for most of our trek around Leitrim, Sligo and Fermanagh.  Apparently it was the place to be in 1979 ... old hippies make the best people -- the druids would be very pleased indeed!

Saturday, February 13, 2010

The Quantum Mechanics of DNA Time Travel & Genealogy

I allowed myself to travel back in time through my own DNA while researching my own family tree on Ancestry.com for part two of my genealogy documentary series By Her Roots.  Stopping only to stretch and grab a protein shake,  I stepped out of time for 17 hours.   This is a common occurrence for those who have become "addicted" to tracing their own family history.


I have chosen to approach my next series from this unique aspect. We know now that we carry the experiences of our ancestors in our DNA and I believe we took on the responsibility of going through the process of clearing the dramas they could not.  As we realize who and what we are we start to see that our life's journey carries the life's journeys of our ancestors.  So how does this affect our current lives?
When we are fully engaged in the Now and present "time",  we are actually able to move out of time through other dimensions of the "imaginal realm".  When the observer kicks in and I catch myself observing myself, there is a wonderful feeling of joy and contentment that comes over me.   Forcing myself to "engage the observer" still takes work for me as I confess I do not meditate as often or as deeply as I should to develop clear mind but I am working on it.


The Dalai Lama says he meditates 7 times a day to practice his own death so he is better prepared to enjoy the experience when he does pass.  I understand this.  




I believe that the more we can shut off the media and control everyone's programming in our brains by staying in present time, we develop a relationship with our own spiritual self or the "I".  The more we practice this the more we operate from "clear mind" and the closer we get to full consciousness.  All creative artists know this principle.  Going without sleep or food is easy when you are fully engaged in the creation of something that resonates so strongly with you that the creative energy alone feeds your entire being and it is more exciting than any other form of escape. 
According to Fred Alan Wolf 's blog on his book the Yoga of Time Travel,  focusing and defocusing  is a process the mind goes through when creating our future.  You have to focus to "see" therefore materialize the outcome you want in the future from the cloud of molecules and possibilities, this is called the Observer Effect.  You also have to defocus and relax to complete the process. Avatars, Medicine Elders and Bodhisattvas time travel because through years of intense meditation and training of the mind they are able to travel the corridor, going through the door and coming back using this focus/unfocus process.  "By breaking free of the chains of linear time and slipping the timestream you take profound spiritual steps toward achieving liberation from the ego, connecting to the universal consciousness, and overcoming the fear of death."


Writers, as well as Genealogists and family historians know very well the principle of synchronicity..they can all share amazing stories of "coincidental" occurrences during their research.  If you truly are in "the zone" you are "out of linear time" and tapping into the elements of  the subject of your focus no matter what time period.  As we take back full consciousness by using more of our brain power the easier it will be to slip into the time stream of our own DNA.   Sooooo exciting!!







Thursday, October 15, 2009

Nominations for MASHABLE'S OPEN WEB AWARDS

I just spent the last 2 hours shamelessly promoting my Genealogy Internet Series BY HER ROOTS  by asking all my friends, followers, connections and subscribers to vote for my series in the Best Online Video Web Series in the OPEN WEB AWARDS .....Every Day!  Every time I ask them to do something to assist me with my promotional campaigns I hint at never asking them again...and here I am getting caught up.  But they are my "friends" aren't they?

MASHABLE actually promotes this concept: "We encourage self-promotion and all promotion. After all, this is the social media edition of the Open Web Awards. Below is the tool to preset your link so you can share, tweet, email the link to whomever. We've also created some buttons that you can grab the embed code with your link to post on your site, blog or even a fan page".  


So in edition to promoting my series I am also promoting my broadcaster ROOTSTELEVISION.COM who are achieving phenomenal success thanks to their Production Team and the leadership of MEGAN SMOLENYAK SMOLENYAK,  no that is not a typo...its her name and she is phenomenal.  She is getting a lot of press right now for uncovering Michelle OBama's slave roots back several generations.  Here she is on the Today Show


So I have also nominated them for Best TV Network OnlineI so love the way social media works especially for independent producers and anyone who is inspired to share their creativity and their source of information and inspiration!

I am finishing the last webisode for By Her Roots and will upload shortly in time to submit it to the WEBBYS.  I am not under any illusions that I could win in any contests I enter but I do have to market my work every way I can so I can get the financing to hire a camera operator and an editor for my next two series "By Her Roots - Part Two" in Ireland and "Secrets of the Royal Grandmothers" in France and England so the technical quality will be dramatically improved!

Thanking everyone again for your support!
 

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Hayes of Dublin

A couple of years ago, while I was researching my Irish Roots and preparing to go to Halifax Nova Scotia to shoot my internet documentary By Her Roots, I received a death notice for my great grandfather from a family researcher in Dublin, Ireland. Turns out he was buried in the Park Lawn Cemetery in Toronto. Not only had I never heard of this grandfather, neither had my mother. And even more surprising to me was that my family lived and worked all our lives around this cemetery and never knew we had an ancestor there.

He died on same day as my mother's birthday so i took her to the cemetery for her birthday....

Here is the latest short webisode from my series By Her Roots:

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

By Her Roots on Rootstelevision.com

Here is an excerpt from today's Rootstelevision.Com Blog where my Family History Webisode Series is one of the Videos featured:

Roots Television | Og Blog
Keep up with the latest additions and happenings by following along with Og, our RootsTelevision guide.

« New Genealogy Videos and Unclaimed Persons Turns One! | Main
June 16, 2009
New Genealogy Videos: By Her Roots and Priceless Legacy

This week Og is featuring the seventh By Her Roots episode by Alannah Ryane. In this edition, she visits the Fortress of Louisbourg to investigate the Private Peter Martin record she found there. She also uncovers the movements of the 45th regiment during the years 1744-1760 and the French Indian Wars. Be sure to watch the first six webisodes, too, if you haven't see them already!



Thanks for watching!
Og
RootsTelevision.com