Showing posts with label Myra Sheehan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Myra Sheehan. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 17, 2021

On This Day: Loving Irish Hands

During the month of March, I am shining the light on my Irish roots.

St Patrick’s Day is always significant for the Irish. My great-grandmother Mary Theresa Sheehan Killeen Walsh saved many greeting cards, one of which led me to her family left behind in Croom, County Limerick, Ireland.

Real shamrocks from Ireland


These 2 cards were from her niece Myra Sheehan, daughter of Mary Theresa's brother Denis Sheehan and his wife Alice. I cannot tell the dates they were sent, but it would have to have been before 1939.


Wendy

© 2021, Wendy Mathias. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, March 11, 2020

52 Ancestors - LUCK: St Paddy Cards


In March the expression “Luck of the Irish” has special meaning for my family. My great-grandmother Mary Theresa Sheehan Killeen Walsh was an Irish matriarch, the much loved maternal grandmother of my father. She came from Limerick, Ireland in 1886.
Mary Theresa Sheehan Killeen Walsh https://jollettetc.blogspot.com
Mary Theresa Sheehan Killeen Walsh
1869 Ireland -1939 Portsmouth, VA
Judging by the St. Patrick’s Day cards glued carefully into her scrapbook, Mary Theresa was proud of her Irish heritage.


from her daughter Catherine

from her sister Delia Sheehan Christian

My favorite cards came from my great-grandmother’s niece Myra Sheehan, daughter of Mary Theresa’s brother Denis. This family remained in Limerick unlike the rest of Daniel and Bridget Sheehan’s children who all immigrated to New York in the 1880s and early 1890s.

The cards still have real Irish shamrocks encased in plastic.


Read about the GOOD LUCK Myra’s cards brought me HERE.


Amy Johnson Crow continues to challenge genealogy bloggers and non-bloggers alike to think about our ancestors and share a story or photo about them. The challenge is “52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks.

Wendy
© 2020, Wendy Mathias. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Wordless Wednesday: Picked By Loving Irish Hands #2

Wordless Wednesday is a daily prompt at Geneabloggers that asks family historians to create a post in which the main focus is a photograph or image.

These shamrocks from home must have been such a comfort for my great-grandmother. I wonder if she ever again saw her brother Denis and her niece Myra Sheehan or any other family that did not make the move to the United States.

© 2016, Wendy Mathias.  All rights reserved.

Monday, March 7, 2016

Mystery Monday: Myra's Family

Mystery Monday is a daily prompt at Geneabloggers that encourages bloggers to write about mystery ancestors or mystery records – anything in their genealogy and family history research which is currently unsolved.

During the month of March, I am remembering my Irish ancestors by writing about my recent discoveries. The stories still qualify for “Mystery Monday” as there are so many questions yet unanswered.

St. Patrick's Day card from Myra Sheehan to Mary Theresa Sheehan Walsh http://jollettetc.blogspot.comMy favorite “new to me relative” is Myra Sheehan. The minute I saw the St. Patrick’s Day card signed “Your loving niece Myra,” I knew for sure that my great-grandmother Mary Theresa Sheehan Killeen Walsh had family still living in Ireland. Myra’s last name was Sheehan, signaling that Mary Theresa had a brother. I wanted to know more about this branch of the family, but I was almost convinced finding them would be nearly impossible. I asked Dara of Black Raven Genealogy whether it was even worth trying to research this family with so little to go on. She asked me a few questions, and surprisingly came back with two census records plus a baptism record for Myra’s father. Voila – the Sheehan family.

Myra’s father was Denis Sheehan. He was apparently the third child born to Daniel Sheehan and Bridget Gorman of Castletown District, County Limerick, Ireland. His birthdate was May 13, 1866, and he was baptized in the Ballingarry Diocese of the Catholic Church on May 20 of that year. The record was written in Latin, so his name appears as Dionysus. The sponsors were Thomas Gorman (maybe a brother to Bridget) and Honoria Grady. These two were sponsors at the baptism of several of Denis’s siblings as well.

Baptism record Denis Sheehan 1866 Limerick, Ireland  http://jollettetc.blogspot.com

About 1891, Denis married a woman from County Tipperary named Alice. In the 1901 census for Croom in County Limerick, Denis and Alice had 4 children: Mary age 7, Daniel age 4, Margaret age 3, and Honoria age 9 months. Denis was a stone and brick mason. He and Alice both spoke Irish as well as English, while the children spoke only English. If Denis spoke Irish, then I can safely assume that my great-grandmother Mary Theresa did as well.

1901 Census Croom, Limerick, Ireland Denis Sheehan  http://jollettetc.blogspot.com
1901 Census Croom, Limerick, Ireland
from National Archives Ireland

In 1911, Denis and Alice reported they had been married 20 years and that 6 of 8 children were living:  Myra (Mary) age 17, Daniel age 14, Gretta (Margaret) age 13, Rose (Honoria) age 10, Denis age 9, and John age 6. The four older children spoke both Irish and English. Denis was still a brick and stone mason.
1911 Census Croom, Limerick, Ireland Denis Sheehan  http://jollettetc.blogspot.com
1911 Census Croom, Limerick, Ireland
from National Archives Ireland

The 1901 and 1911 census records in Ireland are so interesting for the added details about the houses and out-buildings. Myra’s family home was described as having either stone, brick, or concrete walls instead of mud, wood, or other perishable material. Likewise the roof was either slate, tile, or iron, not anything perishable like thatch or wood. Their house had 5 or 6 rooms with 3 windows facing the street. As such, the house was considered a 2nd class house, with houses rated between 1st class and 4th. They also had a piggery and fowl house. The landowner for the Sheehans’ home and for most of their neighbors was Earl Dunnivan.
Myra's House on Main St, Croom, Limerick, Ireland http://jollettetc.blogspot.com
Myra's house on Main St, Croom, Limerick, Ireland
The dark yellow house fits the description of having
3 front windows (counting the dormer).
from Google Maps

The census records make me think this family did fairly well. At least they were not living in a house made of perishable materials, and everyone had at least some basic education since all of them could read and write.

Somehow Myra kept up with her aunt Mary Theresa who left Ireland about the time Myra was born. While I am so glad to have this little outline of a family, I would like to know more. I wonder how well they knew one another. Was Myra the spokesperson for her father? Or was he already deceased when she sent the St. Patrick’s Day cards? What became of Myra and her brothers and sisters?

I’m casting out that cousin bait – come, come, my Irish cousins.

© 2016, Wendy Mathias.  All rights reserved.

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Wordless Wednesday: Picked By Loving Irish Hands

Wordless Wednesday is a daily prompt at Geneabloggers that asks family historians to create a post in which the main focus is a photograph or image.

This St. Patrick’s Day card complete with real shamrocks was my first clue that my great grandmother Mary Theresa Sheehan Killeen Walsh had family left behind in Ireland. A niece with the name “Sheehan” meant Mary Theresa had a brother. They were in County Limerick, not Cork as I had always heard.

I cannot read the date, but it cannot be later than 1939.

© 2016, Wendy Mathias.  All rights reserved.