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Messages - corinne

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This is an update of information from the Sennett (Synnott, Sinnett, Sinnott) surname study files of what is known about the family of Michael Synnott, a stonecutter, and his two wives, Ellen Loughnan and Ellen Coleman.  Note that while his father is known to be Nicholas, a stone cutter (as noted on his marriage to Ellen Loughnan), no record of his birth has yet been able to be confirmed.

Michael Synnott, stonecutter first married Ellen LOUGHNAN on 7 june 1896, and they had one child, a male, unnamed, born and died on 4 feb 1897 at Clonafin (Parsonstown reg district).  Mother Ellen died shortly after on 11 mar 1897 (aged 24, stonecutters wife) with the cause of death noted as "delicacy from birth".  The informant for both deaths was Mary Loughnane (grandmother of the child, mother of Ellen) who was present at death.

In 1901 Michael is found on the census at house 4, Moyvannan (Kiltoom, Roscommon), aged 40, b Co Galway, a stonecutter, married.  He is not with his family.  Ellen SYNOTT is still in Cloniffeen (Shannonbridge, Kings Co) with her step-father Kieran HENRY, his wife Teresa HENRY, Ellen's children Mary and Eliza SYNOTT (aged 2 and 1) and Kieran HENRY's other stepchildren Stephen COLEMAN (17), and Eliza COLEMAN (15).
From this 1901 census record assumptions made are:   Ellen SYNOTT, wife of Michael was born COLEMAN, her mother is Teresa HENRY, formerly COLEMAN, and she is staying with her stepfather and mother because she has young children and her husband Michael has gone to Moyvannan for work.

There is a marriage of Teresa HALL to Thomas COLEMAN 19 feb 1868 at Ballinasloe, Creagh Co Galway.  Thomas COLEMAN dies 28 Dec 1886 at the Workhouse, with his usual place of residence given as Shannon Bridge.  He has had 9 children, including the three named in Census 1901 with the HENRY family (Ellen, Stephen and Eliza).  In the 1911 census, Kieran HENRY is stated to have been married 18 years with no children.  Teresa (who has had 8 children born, all of whom are still living) is named as his wife, though no marriage record has been found yet (and they may not have actually married).    Teresa's children are all found in civil birth records with surname COLEMAN, father Thomas COLEMAN, a shoemaker, and mother Teresa HALL.  Ellen COLEMAN was born 28 oct 1879 at Shannonbridge.

There is no record found yet of the second marriage of Michael SYNNOTT to Ellen COLEMAN (nee HALL), but there are civil registration records of 5 children born to Michael SYNNOTT (a stone cutter) and Ellen COLEMAN.  A sixth (John) is also named as a child of Ellen on Census1911 but no civil registration record of his birth has been found.

The death of Michael SYNNOTT was registered by Pat NULTY, the RIC officer who found the body.  He had been "accidentally drowned" on 5th September at Shannon Bridge, aged 55, a stonecutter, married.  The death certificate does not indicate how he came to be in the water.

Michael's widow Ellen SYNNOTT (aged 29, a widow) is at house 28, Shannonbridge Town at Census 1911, with children Lizzie (11), John (4) and Michael (3) and a lodger.  Ellen is stated as having been married 12 years, with 6 children born and 3 still living.  Note that she probably had 5 children still living at this point, though may have interpreted the census question as the number of children still living with her (which was 3).

Ellen SYNOTT died 23 jun 1929 at Shannon Bridge (cause of death, exhaustion, from Carcinoma of the uterus).  She was a widow, servant, aged 50, and her son Michael SYNOTT of the same  address was the informant.   

The birth marriage and death records are all found on the free irishgenealogy civil records website.   If anyone has further information about the descendants of Michael Synnott, please feel free to either message me here, or contact me through the surname study (registered with the Guild of One Name Studies) - use the surname search on the home page one-name.org to get to the contact page for the study.  Any male descendants of this line will be eligible to join the YDNA project, so please also contact me about this.   

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Family History Beginners Board / Re: Sinnott Family - Nicholas Sinnott m Ellen Hickey
« on: Wednesday 01 November 23 11:57 GMT (UK)  »
Hallmark:  This is your family record in the surname study database:  https://sennett.one-name.net/getperson.php?personID=I36193&tree=Sennett  If that link doesn't work (links can change after updates) the easiest way to find the family is to use the search box for Andrew Carr then you can click on his wife (Margaret Sinnott) and see the rest of her family from there.  If you need any more information or want to add anything, just use the contact form on the website to message me.

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Update on DNA testing for the Sennett, Sinnott, Synnott, Sinnett DNA project:   we are now largely using BigY testing as this is enabling us to predict date of common ancestor much more closely and to also build the genetic tree for people of this surname with 12th century Irish origin and especially those who have an E haplogroup (downstream of E-M35).  BigY is expensive, so the project is able to provide subsidies for testing if required.  We prefer that people join the project with a minimum of a Y37 test, and then depending on results, we can offer funding for upgrading some tests to BigY.   If even the cost of the Y37 is a deal breaker, there are a few initial Y37 test kits that can be made available, particularly if your family is not already represented in the project.   You can contact the surname project through the surname search link from the Guild of One Name Studies website.

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Wexford / Re: Sinnott family in Wexford
« on: Wednesday 01 November 23 11:43 GMT (UK)  »

Does anyone know anything about
Richard Sinnott B:Abt. 1680 married Joan Lasÿ B:Abt. 1682

Or anything about the family from around that time?

The Sennett/Sinnott surname study has three children:  Patrick b 1701, Catherine b 1705, and Thomas b 1708

It is quite difficult to prove connections between people in that kind of time frame, so while there are two possible marriages for son Thomas (one to Catherine Sinnott in 1730 in Ferns, which is probably wrong, and one to Catherine Devereux in Wexford in 1736, which may be right but needs more proof) until further evidence surfaces they can't be considered correct right now. 

What is your connection, and do you have any other evidence of connections to this couple or any of  the three children?

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Offaly (Kings) / Re: synnott family from shannon bridge
« on: Thursday 12 October 23 09:30 BST (UK)  »
Thank you for the information.  I’m looking for more info Michael who died in 1905.  I’m looking for his parents names

There is a Michael Sinnott who died on 6 dec 1904 at Ardcavan, Co Wexford at the age of 84, but he was a bachelor.  Is this who you mean?  He won't be related at all though to the Michael Synnott of Shannonbridge who this message thread was originally about.   If this isn't the right person, then please feel free to contact me through the Sennett (Synnott, Sinnott, etc) surname study (search online for Guild of One Name Studies, and then type in Sinnott or Synnott into the search box to get my contact link).  I hold the surname study database of more than 100,000 people.

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Any Welsh origin Sinnetts here?  Or anyone in contact with Sinnett families who have family origins in Pembrokeshire?   The Sennett (Sinnott, Synnott, Sennett, Sinnett, etc) DNA project at familytreeDNA has recently had an incredibly interesting Y-DNA (BigY) result that confirmed the genetic relationship of a Pembrokeshire Sinnett family to Irish Sinnotts/Synnotts, in about the timeframe where this group of surnames first became established (12th century).    The surname project (at familytreedna dot com) is now really keen to have people from two or three more SINNETT families with Pembrokeshire ancestry join, in order to try and triangulate results and pin down the date of common ancestry a bit closer.  There are some sponsored tests available for either an initial Y-DNA37 test, or for BigY upgrades of lower level Y-DNA tests from Sinnett men who show an E-M35 haplogroup.    Best way to contact me is through the surname study contact link (use the search box on the Guild of One Name Studies website, or the contact form on the Sennett surname study website).   

The surname study is also very interested in getting a whole lot more families of any spelling variant of S-NN-TT (one or two N's or T's and any vowels) and any origin joining the YDNA project.   With more than 30 DNA tests having been upgraded to BigY so far (many of these upgrades being sponsored by the project) we are building an incredibly interesting genetic tree that so far links many different surname variants, and Irish, Welsh and Cornish origin families to the same 12th century common ancestor.   

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Waterford / Re: help with marraige please -completed
« on: Sunday 10 October 21 10:10 BST (UK)  »
Manus, do you know if any male SYNANs have done YDNA testing yet?   Or if there are any who would be interested?   I run the Sennett/Sinnott/Synnott YDNA study at familytreedna.  Because the Sinnott genealogy claims exactly the same earliest origins as the SYNAN families do (Adam Fitz Synan or Adam Fits Synad, with an arrival in Ireland in the late 12th century) I'd be extremely keen to find genetic evidence of the link.   If you are on facebook, there is a "Synan genealogy" group where the admin has posted a lot of information, or feel free to PM me or contact me through the Sennett surname study (contact link by searching for Sennett or Sinnott on the Guild of One Name Studies website).

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Hertfordshire / High Elms in Hitchen, 1939?
« on: Friday 06 August 21 14:27 BST (UK)  »
Does anyone know of a High Elms in Hitchen (not High Elms Manor near Garston), in the same vicinity as the Boys Grammar School, Elmside Cottage, New Grammar School Walk, and Bedford Road.   I have found an entry for a 10 year old child at this address in 1939, listed as a "patient".   I think part of the address has been blacked out but the first line definitely says "High Elms emergency.."   so I'm thinking it was some kind of childrens home, hospital, or convalescent facility.

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Limerick / Magdalen Asylum - delayed death reg (HEWSON, GODFREY, ROBINSON, SYNNOT)
« on: Monday 22 February 21 15:00 GMT (UK)  »
I've just been searching Irish Civil Registration records, and discovered on an 1871 page, four deaths from this asylum from 1864 and 1865  that were not officially registered until 7 feb 1871

Honora HEWSON, widow, died 18 dec 1864 at Magdalen Asylum, Limerick, aged 56
Mary Anne GODFREY, spinster, died 7 dec 1864 at Magdalen Asylum, Limerick, aged 44
Mary ROBINSON, spinster, died 10 apr 1865 at Magdalen Asylum, Limerick, aged 26
Anne SYNNOT, spinster, died 28 jun 1865 at Magdalen Asylum, Limerick, aged 28

As these were the last four records on a page, there may be other late recorded deaths from the same asylum on the following page or pages.   That means that it may be worth looking for names of interest well beyond the date you know the person to have died.

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