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Messages - Armagh_Matchetts_Barnetts

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Armagh / Re: Tartaraghan, Armagh, Ireland
« on: Sunday 31 March 24 15:52 BST (UK)  »
Is it possible to share a more extended view of that family tree image? I have strong linkage to the Matchett bloodline and would like to learn more. My Matchett relatives hailed from Ballynarry and Cloncore but also had strong connections to Angus, Scotland.

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The Common Room / Re: Matchett Heritage - Armagh County
« on: Tuesday 30 January 24 13:54 GMT (UK)  »
Thank you. I am new to RootsChat. Your insight into my question is appreciated. I am planning on a trip to Armagh County [from the USA] later this year, perhaps I can find burial sites of long-lost Matchett's or Barnett's. My stay will be about two weeks, I hope two weeks will be ample time to gain traction with research or even meeting a living Matchett or Barnett.

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Armagh / Re: Matchett - Seagoe and TARTARAGHAN Parishes, Portadown
« on: Tuesday 30 January 24 13:44 GMT (UK)  »
Thank you for sharing this information.

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Armagh / Re: Matchett - Seagoe and TARTARAGHAN Parishes, Portadown
« on: Saturday 27 January 24 13:47 GMT (UK)  »
Richard Matchett and Alice Baxter are my great great great grandparents. Richard Matchett's name is listed on the attached copy of his daughter Sarah Ann Matchett's marriage certificate. I have a certified copy as well. Here is an excerpt from my short story entitled, "The Allen's and Barnett's of the Merrimack River Valley of Massachusetts":

"Richard Matchett (b. 1805, d. 1873) and Alice Baxter (b. 1804, d. 1874) also had strong connections to Scotland.  Mr. and Mrs. Richard and Alice Matchett moved to Dundee, Angus, Scotland on the east coast of Scotland at left in the 1860s. Evidence in the genealogical record show the Matchett’s move to Dundee, Scotland was one of employment and economic interest.  At that time, Dundee was the world’s center for textile processing for hundreds of years, including the second half of the 1800s and was known as the world capital for jute processing and manufacturing.   Jute is a long, soft, shiny bast fiber that can be spun into coarse, strong threads. It is produced from flowering plants in the genus Corchorus, which is in the mallow family Malvaceae and used to produce textile products such as jute rugs. Matchett relatives during the era of the late 1800s have been traced to specific addresses in Dundee, all located on either 7, 13 or 15 Seafield Lane - in very close proximity to the waterfront where work in the jute industry took place."

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The Common Room / Matchett Heritage - Armagh County
« on: Sunday 21 January 24 21:18 GMT (UK)  »
I am a Matchett descendant. My great-great grandmother/grandfather, Sarah Ann Matchett and Robert Barnett, were married in Armagh County in 1854. Attached is a copy of the marriage certificate; I do have a certified copy as well. My long-lost Matchett relatives lived in the vicinity of Cloncore and Ballynary in 1854 and were textile weavers and farmers by trade.

I am looking for help to expand my knowledge of the Matchetts into the early 1800s, 1700s and beyond if possible.

 

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