Saturday, July 12, 2025

The Family "Homestead"

Ok, the title is a bit misleading. My family does not really have a homestead. But during all my growing up years the house my mother grew up in was somewhat of that for me. Not that I ever got to go into it. No, by the time I was of age to remember, the house my mom grew up in was not in the family. 

However, my mom's widowed maternal uncle lived a block away. Two of his daughters lived with him, also his brother-in-law. We visited them regularly. We could step outside and see my mom's house from the front of their house.

I last saw it in 2023 when I was visiting two of the cousins who still lived there. But today, I found out mom's house is gone. Actually, the whole row of houses is gone, from one corner to the other. Here's what the block looks like!



The house was built in 1899. My mom's maternal grandfather most likely bought the house new! He was an immigrant from Ireland. In the 1900 Census my mom's mother, her three siblings (two girls,
two boys), and parents lived there on two floors. People rented out the other two floors. 

(1900 U.S. Census, Ancestry.com)

When my mom was born, she and her mom and dad lived on one floor, and my grandmother's sister with her husband and five kids lived in the two-story unit. My great grandparents lived on one of the other single-unit floors. My grandmother's two brothers, now married, lived nearby. My mom was an only child, but she had lots of cousins in the neighborhood. Here are the relatives in the house in the 1930 census.

(1930 Census, Ancestry.com)

This photo of the house is from the 1940 NYC tax records:
(New York City Tax Records, nyc.gov/records, 1940 for 91 Fourth Avenue, Brooklyn, NY)

As I said, above, one block away is a three-story brownstone which my grandma's youngest brother bought in the early 1920s and where his last child still lives! She is in her early 90s. Her sister who had lived in the house with her since being born, passed away last year. They lived in that house all their lives. My mom was an only child and they filled kind of a sibling slot for her. I have always had a love of history, especially family history, thus this blog. When I was in this neighborhood, knowing I was where my family had such roots was always a wonderful thing for me...and now the next time I visit Brooklyn, part of that is gone...

Wednesday, July 9, 2025

Family Business [52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks Challenge]

My mother's paternal grandfather was Patrick Kilgariff (c.1846-1904).  He had his own business having something to do with selling cloth. In various records he is listed as a dealer, draper, cloth dealer, or pedlar (the British spelling). A draper was a retailer or wholesaler of cloth, mainly for clothing. Perhaps he also sold items associated with that such as thread, buttons, ribbons, cording, scissors. I think he may have perhaps been an itinerant dealer?

I think he may have been itinerant for this reason. Traditionally, young people in Ireland in this time would have married other young people from nearby farms or villages, places within walking distance or cart-ride distance. Patrick was from County Mayo, but Mary Mannion was from County Sligo. In the 1850s her family lived in Strandhill, a coastal area west of Sligo town. Patrick and Mary's locations were at least a full day's walk from each other, about a twelve hour walk. So, it's not likely they would have come across each other from their home areas. They certainly could have met if Patrick were an itinerant peddler.

Strandhill, County Sligo to Ballaghadreen, which was in County Mayo in my great grandfather's day, but is now in Country Roscommon.

At any rate, when Mary and Patrick married, their addresses were in the town of Sligo itself.  Of their eleven children, two were born in Sligo (the first and seventh child). The rest of their eleven children were born in County Tyrone, though two different areas of County Tyrone, from 1874 to 1890.

Sligo town, County Sligo, Ireland, Google Maps


From the civil records it seems my great grandfather Patrick could not read or write. He left his "mark" if he was the one reporting the births of his children. It boggles my mind that he could run a business without knowing how to read and write. He must have been able to do some math, at least? However, things did not go well, as you will see further on. Here is his wedding register with his "mark" highlighted. The registrar is a witness to Patrick's mark...but he forgot to write the word "mark," he only wrote the word "his." (Also, interesting--notice his father's last name is spelled Gilgariff)




He is listed as a draper in the Dromore section of the "Belfast and Province of Ulster Directory" for 1892, found on Ancestry.com. This is the town where he and his family lived. Most of his children were born in Dromore, including my grandfather, John, the youngest, in 1890.




Here is a notice of my great-grandfather Patrick going into bankruptcy in 1895. However, here he promises to pay what he owes in three installments rather than actually go through with the bankruptcy.

(The Commercial Gazette, London, pg. 211, 2 Jun 1895. From Newspapers.com)


Here are the people to whom he (apparently?) owed money because this notice was in the same newspaper (or dealer magazine?) on the same day as the above notice.

(The Commercial Gazette, London, pg. 283, 12 Jun 1895. From Newspapers.com)

Coates & Co., is an existing company which makes yarn. Aitken, Campbell, & Co. may have had something to do with textiles as I found an exhibit in a museum from a few years ago which had two pieces of cotton cloth by a company with the same name. I also found online a company by the name of Hamilton & Co., but it seemed to be American-based, not UK-based company, selling women's clothing. I could not find any information about any of the other companies/names. 

On Family Search I found more information which, to be honest, I can't decipher even though it's in English. It's in 'Legalese'. It's a conveyance record, but I'm not sure if my great grandfather is taking out a 99-year lease, or giving one up? This record is in County Tyrone, in 1885, where the family lived at this time, which was five years after my grandfather's birth. If you can figure it out, leave me a comment!



From 1882 to 1896 Patrick was listed (bottom of the page) in the Northern Ireland Valuation Revision Books in Dromore, Tyrone. There's always taxes to be paid.
(Northern Ireland, Valuation Revision Books, 1864-1933, Ancestry.com)

In 1899 and 1900 he is listed as a "dealer" and living at 2 Holmes Street, in the Belfast and Province of Ulster Directory. So the family had left Dromore by then, and were living in Belfast.

In the 1901 Census, below, the family was living on Silvergrove Street in Belfast. Three of the oldest children had emigrated away from Ireland to NYC where they were staying near a maternal aunt. The next three sons had already left for Glasgow, Scotland, even though the family counted two of them as being with them in Belfast! I don't know if the family had any contacts in Glasgow that the brothers may have been with.

(The National Archives of Ireland)

Notice Patrick says he is clothes dealer. I don't know, though, if he was actually still working in the trade. However, in the Lennon-Wylie.co.uk 1901 Belfast/Ulster Street Directory, snip below, Patrick is listed as being a clothing dealer, so maybe he was still working from the home.




At any rate, in 1904 Patrick passed away. I have not found any obituary which might reveal any further information. He was only 58. His civil death registration is below. Cause of death: "Cardiac disease, 1 month." I am thinking it meant he'd had a heart attack and managed to hang on for a month.  
(Irishgenealogy.ie #4584038, entry #493)







Saturday, October 19, 2024

 MOST

Of all my grandparents, my maternal grandfather, John Kilgariff, had the most siblings. He was the youngest of twelve! His parents were Patrick Kilgariff (the records have variations on the name), originally of County Mayo, Ireland, and Mary Mannion (Manion, Manning, Manen, Mann, and other variations) of County Sligo. They were married in Sligo town in the Catholic church there, on 28 December 1870. Their marriage record below is from https://www.irishgenealogy.ie/en/



Photo of Mary Mannion Kilgariff in possession of author

His siblings were:

Mary "Minnie" (1871, County Sligo--1959, NY) [married, 1 child, no offspring]

Patrick James (1874, County Tyrone--1906, NYC) [never married]

Francis (1875, County Tyrone--1908, NYC) [married, 2 children]

Joseph Daniel (1877, County Tyrone--1945, Scotland) [married, 2 children]

Henry (1879, County Tyrone--1916, Flanders) [never married, no heirs, died in WW1]

Winifred (1880, County Tyrone--1965, NYC) [married, 2 children]

Dominick (1882, County Sligo--1961) [married, 5 children]

Margaret Jane (1884, County Tyrone--1904, Belfast, Ireland) [never married, no offspring]

Bridget (1886, County Tyrone--?) [married, 4 children]

Elizabeth (1888, County Tyrone--1957, Belfast, Northern Ireland) [never married, no offspring]

Peter (1889, County Tyrone--1886 County Tyrone) [died in infancy]

AND, finally, my grandfather, born 14 August 1890 in County Tyrone, Ireland [married, 1 child]. The family moved to Belfast at some point in time, and by the 1901 Irish Census, these siblings were still living at home: 

Joseph, Winifred, Dominick, Margaret, Bridget, Elizabeth, and John

Mary, Patrick, and Francis, had already emigrated to New York City, and were living with who they named as an aunt and uncle (James and Margaret Foley), though I have not made a connection as to how that couple is actually related. Henry apparently had already emigrated to Scotland.

In the 1911, their father Patrick was already deceased, and these siblings were still living at home:

Bridget, Elizabeth ("Lizzie"), John      

Bridget married in 1911, and my grandfather emigrated to NYC in 1920, and Elizabeth would have been the only one left at home with her mother. Elizabeth never married, so she would have been with her mother until the end.

By the time my grandfather was an adult, his brothers Joseph, Henry, and Dominick had already emigrated to Scotland and Patrick and Joseph had already emigrated to the USA and died. Once my grandfather emigrated to the USA, he interacted with his sister Winifred, but not with his sister, Mary, who had emigrated to the US when he was a child. Makes a bit of sense being as she was the oldest child, and he was the youngest. She had left home when he was about 6 & 1/2. He didn't really know her. 

The only photos of the siblings that I have are of my grandfather, and his sister Winifred.

                                      John, probably in the 1920s           Winifred in 1953

Both photos held by the author


Lastly, of all these siblings, the only two have descendants who still have the last name Kilgariff: Joseph and Dominick. 




Friday, May 19, 2023

Grandpa John Kilgariff in WWI

 

John Francis Kilgariff

14 August 1890 – 25 July 1955

My maternal grandfather enlisted and served in WW1 with the Royal Irish Rifles and Royal Irish Fusiliers as part of the UK military, 7 August 1914 to 1 August 1919. He was an Irish citizen at the time, living in Belfast with his parents and siblings.


John Francis Kilgariff, Royal Irish Fusiliers (the emblem on his cap).

The chevrons on his right sleeve indicate this photo was probably taken in Egypt towards the end of his service since one chevron = one year of service overseas.

Photo from the private collection of granddaughter Carol McLaughlin Neilson

He served in the War in the Balkans, including service in Gallipoli, and later in Palestine.


My grandfather’s military papers say he volunteered early in the war, with the Irish Rifles. According to my cousin Chris King, they would have been part of the 6th (Service) Battalion which was formed in Dublin in August 1914, and went through these evolutions and battles:

-Unit attached to 29th Brigade in the 10th (Irish) Division

-February 1914: moved to the Curragh (a flat, open plain in County Kildare used by the military as a training camp)

-May 1915: moved to Hackwood Park (Basingstoke) in Hampshire, UK, to continue military training

-7 July 1915: embarked at Liverpool and sailed to Gallipoli via Mudros. Mudros was on the island of Lemnos in the Aegean Sea (see above).

-29 September 1915: moved to Salonika, arriving 4-5 October.

[-31 October 1916: My grandfather was wounded; recuperated through at least December 1916; perhaps longer.]

-September 1917: moved to Egypt for service in Palestine

-15 May 1918: unit disbanded at Deir-el-Nidham, Palestine

-1 August 1919: Demobilized, transferred to Reserve 

Info from:  

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/10th_(Irish)_Division#:~:text=It%20included%20battalions%20from%20the,travelled%20of%20the%20Irish%20formations


According to his Casualty Card extract [Fig 1] he was wounded 31 October 1916. No full casualty record is available due to WWII bombings of London. But the casualty card extract does tell the places he went when wounded. I put the events in chronological order and added additional information here to make it more understandable.

31 Oct 1916 - Wounded 31 October Reported by ob Battalion

2 Nov 1916 - Sto abdomen admitted 1st Canadian Stationary Hospital [on Lemnos, Greece]

(I don’t know why the 2 Nov incident appears before the 31 Oct incident on the card?)

6 Nov 1916 - Transferred to Hospital Ship Braemar Castle 6 November 1916 [Fig 2]                                                        a week later the ship struck a mine in the Aegean Sea  

11 Nov 1916 - Sto R Thigh Admitted Admiral Baviere Military Hospital, Malta [Fig 3]

18 Dec 1916 - G Sto R Thigh transferred to Convalescent Camp Ghain Tuffieha, Malta [Fig 4]

Fig 1 - John Kilgariff's Casualty Card. From Ancestry.com

This First Aid wagon is the type of vehicle my grandfather would have been placed in to be transported               from the battlefield to the field hospital, then to the ship that took him to Malta.


This photo of my grandfather (x) and his fellow soldiers would have been taken 
when he was convalescing on Malta. 
Photo in the private collection of Carol McLaughlin Neilson, granddaughter. 


Fig 2 – the Braemar Castle as a hospital ship - https://bandcstaffregister.com/page197.html - accessed 16Mar2023

This is the ship that transported my wounded grandfather to the island of Malta, to recuperate. A week later this ship struck a mine and exploded.


Fig 3 - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auberge_de_Bavi%C3%A8re accessed 16Mar2023

The hospital where he recuperated, on the east side of Malta (blue pinpoint).



                                 FIG 5­­­4- http://www.maltaramc.com/imgmaps/mltahosp1915.jpg accessed 17Mar2023

Convalescent Camp Ghain Tuffieha on Malta, location circled in yellow, where he went to convalesce.


In 1917 his unit moved to Palestine for service in that region. At one point during his time in Palestine, he participated in celebrating the Feast Assumption of Our Lady on 15 August 1918. He saved a pamphlet of it, below.



     ~~~   ~~~   ~~~   ~~~   ~~~   ~~~   ~~~   ~~~


Release from the military 1 August 1919. Certificate from ancestry.com

As a result of his service in the military he was awarded three medals, shown on the next page.


 British War Medal -for all who served overseas

Front: shows the King George V, bareheaded coinage effigy, facing left, with the legend: 

GEORGIVS V BRITT : OMN : REX ET IND : IMP :

Reverse: there is a horseman, St. George, armed with a short sword (an allegory of the physical and mental strength which achieves victory over Prussianism). The horse tramples on the Prussian shield and the skull and cross-bones. Off-center, near the right upper rim, is the sun of Victory. The dates 1914 and 1918 appear in the left and right fields respectively. 

        


    

        British Victory Medal                                                                             British 1915 Star                                                                                                                              For all who served in a theater of war                                                                                                                            before 1914


For further information on the Irish in WW1 in the Balkans: 

https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/an-irishman-s-diary-on-the-10th-irish-division-and-salonika-1.2457673

For further information on the 6th (Service) Battalion:

https://www.nickmetcalfe.co.uk/the-evolution-of-the-regular-and-service-battalions-of-princess-victorias-royal-irish-fusiliers-1914-1918-part-4-the-5th-6th-5th6th-11th-service-battalions/ 


For further information on the 10th (Irish) Division in WWI: 

https://archive.org/details/tenthirishdivisi00cooprich


for further information on experiences of British soldiers in Egypt and Palestine:
http://ndl.ethernet.edu.et/bitstream/123456789/68411/1/23.pdf.pdf



Monday, January 17, 2022

Great Great Aunt Mary McGuinn

The life of my great great Aunt Mary McGuinn seems a bit tragic. Not everyone who came to America did well. But who can say how they would have fared back home?

Mary is the sister of my dad's mother's mother. Her parents were John McGuinn and Mary Kelly of County Mayo, Ireland. She was their third child, and the second girl. She is the sister of another entry I did on my great great Uncle Thomas McGuinn. She was born in June 1866. She was baptized on 24 June 1866 in the Catholic Diocese of Curina. Here's a snip from the baptismal registry of the local Catholic church.

https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/61039/images/04223_05_0087?pId=607264 

Her sponsors, James & Bridget Kelly were most likely relatives on her mother's side.
She doesn't appear in any of the Irish censuses because she left Ireland before 1901, so other than being a farm child, I don't know anything of her life. 

She emigrated to the USA in 1892. She left from Queenstown, Ireland on the Germanic and arrived in NYC on 29 April 1892. The ship manifest says she was 18 at the time, but by her baptismal date she would've been 26. Her occupation was servant, on the manifest. Not knowing her story, I don't know if she came to stay with relations? Friends? Did she have the promise of a job somewhere? Here's the clip of her name on the ship's log. 

https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/7488/images/NYM237_586-0697?pId=4002144954 

Next in Mary's life, I found her marriage record; 2 February 1898. She married Frederick Miller, of Glen Cove, NY. He was a painter (house? art?). She was living at 128 Gates Avenue, Brooklyn. It says her age is 21 but she actually would've been about 32? His age says 21 as well, but he was born in 1873, so he actually would have been 25. I think the ages "21" on the marriage certificate signify that they were "of age," meaning legally allowed to wed. 

The church where she married might possibly have been St. John's Chapel on Greene St., in Ft. Greene, Brooklyn. Here is an image of it I found online:


This church no longer exists. It was on Vanderbilt between Greene and Lafayette in Brooklyn. The marriage certificate was signed by Rev. John A. Ferry and I found that name connected with a Catholic church out on Long Island the following year. So since she was most likely married in a Catholic church, I researched and found online that this was the closest church to both her address and the reverend's address at the time of her marriage. 
Here is her marriage certificate which I got from New York City. 



I can't find a 1900 US Census for Mary. I did find one for her husband with his family in Glen Cove, Nassau County. It does say he is married, and a painter. It's odd that they're not together.

In 1901 or 1902 their son Frederick K. Miller was born and 1902 or 1903 their son John Miller was born. I'm assuming both were born in Brooklyn, but there's a chance they were born in Glen Cove where they father was from. I can't find birth certificates for either of them. Of course, if they were born at home without a doctor's care there's a chance no birth certificate was filed.

The next time I find the family is in the 1905 NY State Census. Mary is living with her two sons and her brother Thomas McGuinn, who had immigrated from Ireland earlier in 1905, at 41 Atlantic Avenue in Brooklyn. Her sons are are 3 and 2. She is doing housework. But her husband is not with the family. I can only assume she is relying on her brother for support?
Lucky for her she has him to rely on.

https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/7364/images/004296307_00216?pId=54672

I did find a man with the name Fred Miller, age 33, married, who is a painter, in the Kings County Penitentiary at Crown Street & Nostrand Avenue. It seems like it could be him. If he's in jail, that would explain why he's not with the family. The jail had two sections. One for felons, and a workhouse for those convicted of petty crimes and misdemeanors who worked in a shoe factory. This Fred Miller entered the jail on May 31, 1905. But I don't know which part of the jail he was in. 

https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/7364/images/004296336_00406?pId=1345304

An image of the penitentiary:


I find the name Frederick Miller in various logs in the NY prison system off and on from 1882 through 1915. Some are overlapping, so obviously there's more than one Fred Miller in the system at this time. I have no way of verifying that any is Mary's husband. 

I don't find any family member in the 1910 U.S. Census. 

In the 1915 NY State Census the family is in Manhattan at 441 W. 28th St.,
 including her brother Thomas McGuinn. Son Fred is 14, John is 12, and she now has two other children, Thomas and Marion, twins, aged 9. All the children are attending school. Mary's occupation is dressmaker, so she is earning some income that way.
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/2703/images/32848_B094061-00143?pId=4742758

In 1918 her husband's draft registration card says he is in Glen Cove and the nearest relative name he gives is his mother, not his wife. So he is still not with the family.

In the 1920 census the family (minus husband/father Frederick) is living at 456 W. 18th Street, Manhattan. Mary says she works for a wage in the perfume business but I don't know if she's in a factory or sales. Son Fred, now 18, is a horse and wagon driver. Son John, 16, is a helper in a machine shop. The twins Tom & Marion are 14 and have attended school since September 1919. Her brother Thomas McGuinn is no longer with them. 

https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/6061/images/4313912-00643?pId=87473047 

The next moment in Mary's timeline I have information on is the June 1925 NY State census. Mary is a 54 year old housewife. Son Fred, 23, is a chauffer. Son Tom, 19, is a candy-maker. Daughter Marion, 19, is doing 'fancy work.'  Son John is not with the family on this census. Since she is not out in the workforce, she depends on her children's income to run the household. Her grown children are supporting her.

https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/2704/images/32849_b094274-00212?pId=17410043

On 19 October 1925, Mary's niece Mary Ellen McDonagh (20), and nephew John Harrington (24), both arrived together in America from County Mayo, Ireland, to stay with the family. Mary Ellen was the daughter of her sister Bridget McGuinn McDonagh. John was the son of her sister Hanoria McGuinn Harrington. John had intended to stay with his older sister Mary Ann Harrington, who was a recent immigrant to America herself, having come a few years before, but apparently, the authorities did not allow that. I don't know which relative he really did stay with, but his sister's name was crossed out and Mary Miller's name was written on the entry manifest. And her address on the manifest was 640 10th Avenue, NYC. It would've been quite the full house with the two cousins staying with them.

In 1930 the family is recorded in the U.S. Census as living at 68 W. 102nd St., Manhattan. Mary is 58 and says she is a housewife and that she is a widow. The family had a radio; that was one of the questions on the 1930 census. Sons Fred and John were both chauffeurs. Daughter Marion was not working, but her twin Thomas was an elevator operator. Again Mary was relying on her children's income.

https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/6224/images/4638843_01057?pId=42503906

In 1935 the family was living in Queens, NY, according to the answer to the question on the 1940 census asking where they were living in 1935.

In 1940 the US Census said the family was living at 3239 48th St., Queens, which is the Long Island City~Woodside area. Mary was now 64. Only her children Marion and Thomas were living with her. They were 34. Marion was a library book mender, working for the government. Neither Mary nor Thomas were working, so the whole family was relying on Marion's income. In 1939 Marion only worked 26 weeks, according to the census. Marion and Thomas's highest education was 8th grade. Marion was listed as single, but that is crossed out and the number 7 is penciled in the same box. I don't know what that means. She also now had the last name Sweeney, plus a daughter, Eileen, aged 5. 

https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/2442/images/m-t0627-02721-00989?pId=9555557

In early 1944, and perhaps in 1943(?), Mary was hospitalized in the Goldwater Hospital on Welfare Island. The name Welfare Island paints a bleak picture but Goldwater Hospital was actually a modern hospital for its time with forward-looking ideas. Here are some descriptions of the hospital from the website "New York Almanack, Remembering Goldwater Hospital in NYC" 
"The Goldwater Hospital was a monument to the golden years of public health in New York City, designed in distinctive chevrons to offer light and air to all its patients. The rooms had terraces to allow patients direct access to fresh air, and each ward featured a solarium. The hospital had 2,700 windows."  

From the website, "Urban Omnibus" 

"Before penicillin, sunlight was part of the cure as much as any medication, so an almost obsessive attention was paid by Rosenfield to the path of light through his buildings. The buildings were placed so that they wouldn’t cast shadows on one another. The chevron shape yielded more hours of exposure and views of the river. Wards were designed to encourage the use of the outdoor space with every bedroom opening onto a wide balcony or terrace. Even the roofs of the main gallery were meant to be used as circulation and terraces by the patients during the sunny months. In fact, almost every single space in the facility receives natural daylight. Corridors set deep in the building are lined by glass partitions or doors with transoms. The dumbwaiter lobby in the laboratory building gets its light from a window set high above the sink of a bathroom that has its own six-foot-high window to the outside." 

It was at this hospital that Mary died on 16 February 1944. She had been living at 3228 48th St., Astoria, Queens. Her death certificate is number 4244. According to her death certificate she is buried at St. John's Cemetery, in Queens, NY.

I created a Find a Grave memorial for her on that website. 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

What happened to Mary's family in America?

I wasn't able to find much. I am pretty sure son John married, and possibly Frederick, too, but I can't determine which records with their names are them, as there are a few Frederick and John Millers in NYC at this time. All I found on son Thomas was a cancelled WWII draft registration card showing he was unemployed, then his name in a death index for February 1974. Daughter Marion passed away in November 1978. The obituary I found for her said her husband was Arthur, and her daughter's name was Ellen, not Eileen. 

NYC addresses associated with Mary:
1898 - 128 Gates Avenue, Brooklyn
1905 - 41 Atlantic Avenue, Brooklyn
1915 - 441 W. 28th Street, Manhattan
1920 - 456 W. 18th Street, Manhattan
1925 - 640 10th Avenue, Manhattan
1930 - 68 W. 102nd Street, Manhattan
1940 - 3239 48th Street, Astoria, Queens
1944 - 3228 48th Street, Astoria, Queens







Thursday, January 13, 2022

FAVORITE PHOTO

 

 The 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks challenge by Amy Johnson Crowe for January 18 is
"Favorite Photo"

This is my favorite. Isn't it neat? Don't you love the clothing? On the right a bit of the Gibson Girl look with the large hat; a leg o' mutton sleeve on the left, and in the center the gentleman's straw boater? The photo is from 1910. It was taken in Brooklyn, at Coney Island. 

On the right is my mother's mother. Her name at the time was Margaret Charles McCann, but her nickname was Pearl. She was 24 in this photo. It's her handwriting on the right side of the photo.

The woman on the left is her Aunt Mary "Minnie" Sherlock McCann, who was her mom's sister. She was about 34 years old.

In the center is Minnie's husband, Michael James "Jim" McCann, who I believe, was Pearl's dad's nephew. If he wasn't a nephew, he was related to her dad. He would've been 41 here.

Minnie and Jim were on an extended visit from Belfast, Ireland. Pearl's parents had emigrated from there a few years before Pearl was born.

Here's the back of the post card. The card was addressed to Minnie's mother:


The description printed on the card says it's from Somach's Studios, Loop the Loop, Surf Avenue, Balmer's Walk, Coney Island, N.Y.  I have a feeling they weren't really at the Loop the Loop ride at Coney Island, maybe just at a photo studio with a backdrop or mock up of a car from the Loop the Loop? The Loop the Loop itself was taken down in 1910 so it may already have been gone when this photo was taken? 

The address on the postcard is the one my grandmother's grandfather's (Minnie's dad) was living at when he passed away in 1941. How my grandmother got the postcard, I don't know. I do know she visited her grandfather with her parents and my mom in 1935. Perhaps he gave it to her then?

Here is a photo of Surf Avenue with the Loop the Loop.  
Link to the site online where the photo is from:  
https://d1lfxha3ugu3d4.cloudfront.net/images/opencollection/objects/size4/1996.164.8-B10221_glass_SL1.jpg

Here is a closer photo and of the ride. 
Link: https://www.coneyislandhistory.org/blog/today-history-national-roller-coaster-day


Religious Tradition (52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks Challenge)

I'm American, but of 100% Irish ancestry. Three of my grandparents were born in Ireland (Mayo, Cavan, Tyrone) and emigrated to the US (N...