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Topic: Dunleavy village location? (Read 477 times)
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benny2
RootsChat Extra
 
Posts: 3
Census information Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk
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Hello,
Does anyone have any idea where Dunleavy is located?
Alternate names may be Dunlevy, Donlevy, Dunlavey or Dunlevey. This is a last name in many Irish records, but it is also supposed to be a village somewhere in Monaghan county. I have searched many online sites but no luck. Perhaps someone has access to an old gazetteer? Appreciate your assistance. Benny2
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shanew147
RootsChat Aristocrat
     
Posts: 2623

- - Dublin, Ireland - -
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I dont see anything promising on the townland database : www.seanruad.com
a search of Directories and Gazetteers has not located anything .. the closest are
Surnames - Pigots 1824
Dunleavey Dunlevie
Placename - Ambrose Leet - 1814
Dunlaven, Wicklow
what timeframe is the reference that you have ? and do know anything about anything nearby - prominent residents, estates, geographic features...
Shane
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Wilson : Cambridgeshire [Chatteris], Yorkshire [Leeds], Dublin & Australia [Sydney/NSW] | Fitzsimon : Bray, Co. Wicklow & South Co. Dublin Hayes, Shepherd, Bickerdike, Render, Harper : Yorkshire | Doyle, Dillon, Cantwell, Roach, Clarke : Co. Wicklow Cathcart, Wilson : Kings Co./Offaly, Dublin City & N. Ireland | Hodges : Bristol, Glos./Bray Co. Wicklow/Dublin City | Nevin : Cork Sheridan : Dublin City | Kavanagh, Rooney, Clarke, Hughes, May, Monks : North Co. Dublin [Rush/Thomastown]
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Mr J T Arthur
RootsChat Senior
   
Posts: 258
Census information Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk
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Dún is a fortified residence and Leamh (Lav) is the Elm which is the best clue I can offer.
Good luck
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benny2
RootsChat Extra
 
Posts: 3
Census information Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk
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Thank you for your assistance on the Dunleavy question. I must assume that whoever made this entry in "Pioneer & Patriot Families of Bradford County PA," by Clement Heverly, 1913, p. 415 was mistaken.
I have found various spellings such as Dunlevy, Donlevy, Dunlavey and Dunlevey. There is also "A genealogical history of the Dunlevy family By Gwendolyn Kelley Hack, full-text at http://books.google.com/books?id=mTZKAAAAMAAJ&pg
Possibly they meant Dunlewy, County Donegal, or Dunlavan, County Wicklow, or Dunleary, county Dublin, but that doesn't fit the known facts below. Dunlevy means "Lughach's fort" per Placenames in Ireland at http://www.n-ireland.co.uk/genealogy/placenames/placenamesd.htm
Below is what the citation says. He was born about 1770.
"John Morrow was a native of Dunleavy, County Monaghan, Ireland, where he tended a grist mill. He married Nancy, daughter of John Gamble and some years after his sons and father-in-law had
immigrated to Bradford county, he and his wife came also. Mr. Morrow was an expert builder of
stone-wall fences and was thus employed by the more thrifty farmers after settling in Wilmot [Bradford County, PA]. His death occurred Oct. 24, 1837, aged 67 years and that of his wife, April 1860, in her 85th year. Both (are) inhumed in (the) Lacey street cemetery [Laceyville, PA]."
It is known that he lived and worked in Slieveroe and Drumalt, both in Kilmore Parish, county Monaghan. I guess the Dunleavy notation will ever remain a mystery.
Thanks again for all your help.
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shanew147
RootsChat Aristocrat
     
Posts: 2623

- - Dublin, Ireland - -
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from Pigot’s Commercial Directory of Ireland, 1824
Saml. Morrow, Monaghan-st, Clones, Co. Monaghan - Publican
theres a few other Morrow entries at that time - in Dublin, Sligo (McMorrow) , Saintfield, Portadown, Coleraine & Dungannon (Morrows)
Shane
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Wilson : Cambridgeshire [Chatteris], Yorkshire [Leeds], Dublin & Australia [Sydney/NSW] | Fitzsimon : Bray, Co. Wicklow & South Co. Dublin Hayes, Shepherd, Bickerdike, Render, Harper : Yorkshire | Doyle, Dillon, Cantwell, Roach, Clarke : Co. Wicklow Cathcart, Wilson : Kings Co./Offaly, Dublin City & N. Ireland | Hodges : Bristol, Glos./Bray Co. Wicklow/Dublin City | Nevin : Cork Sheridan : Dublin City | Kavanagh, Rooney, Clarke, Hughes, May, Monks : North Co. Dublin [Rush/Thomastown]
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benny2
RootsChat Extra
 
Posts: 3
Census information Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk
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Dunleavy Mystery Solved
Well Jack Storey, Irish village expert, has provided the answer. He wrote me that "In Kilmore there was only one Fort (Dun) and it was Dunraymond (Raymond's Fort), previously Dunleavy (Leavy's Fort). Slieveroe and Drumalt are quite near to Dunleavy (Fort of the Leavy family). It was Leavy's prior to Cromwell when it became Raymond's."
So Dunraymond is what used to be Dunleavy. It is 4.7 miles north-northwest of Ballybay, and only 2 miles from Drumalt, and 3.4 miles from Slieveroe, where John Morrow and his family lived.
Thanks for all your help.
Benny
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