Author Topic: Patrick Neasey Roscommon  (Read 4061 times)

Offline hallmark

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Re: Patrick Neasey Roscommon
« Reply #45 on: Tuesday 17 September 19 20:13 BST (UK) »


If James and his daughter Kate can't be found on Irish Census maybe he was in England?


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Offline heywood

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Re: Patrick Neasey Roscommon
« Reply #46 on: Tuesday 17 September 19 20:23 BST (UK) »
I’ll have another look. I keep forgetting the surname I am searching - the variations ...
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Offline Diane53

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Re: Patrick Neasey Roscommon
« Reply #47 on: Tuesday 17 September 19 20:28 BST (UK) »
Hmmmm, I do know that Rosemary Lane was mostly inhabited by catholic families from Ireland. It wasn't a very big street but the whole of that area around Rosemary Lane, was full of catholic Irish families.
Please indulge yourself with my research if you like.
The witnesses at Patrick and Agnes wedding was Annie King and John Lally or Sally but the L looks more likely having looked at the other writing.

Offline heywood

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Re: Patrick Neasey Roscommon
« Reply #48 on: Tuesday 17 September 19 20:44 BST (UK) »
Yes I noticed all the Irish families in Rosemary Lane. That’s what happens and often people from the same area settle together hence my interest in the Nestors.
Unfortunately, it doesn’t help.
I can see a John Lalley in 1891 but that is it.
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Offline hallmark

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Re: Patrick Neasey Roscommon
« Reply #49 on: Tuesday 17 September 19 22:36 BST (UK) »
Hmmmm, I do know that Rosemary Lane was mostly inhabited by catholic families from Ireland. It wasn't a very big street but the whole of that area around Rosemary Lane, was full of catholic Irish families.
Please indulge yourself with my research if you like.
The witnesses at Patrick and Agnes wedding was Annie King and John Lally or Sally but the L looks more likely having looked at the other writing.


Why not spend time browsing through the Registers having a look at Whom married Whom?

Are the Nestors, Neaseys, Tierneys intermarried within the Parish?

At least that way when you are talking to people you have some knowledge of other the Surnames intermingled but you don't know how!

Mrs Nestor in 1901 Benmore   Kiltullagh census might have been his sister for all we know and where he was when he died!

There are filters and you can browse then at your leisure......Year by Year, bit by bit....


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Offline heywood

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Re: Patrick Neasey Roscommon
« Reply #50 on: Tuesday 17 September 19 22:48 BST (UK) »
Just to say, that I only quoted those families to illustrate that sometimes/often families are intertwined - as you are saying, hallmark.
It might all be a red herring.
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Offline hallmark

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Re: Patrick Neasey Roscommon
« Reply #51 on: Tuesday 17 September 19 23:08 BST (UK) »
Just to say, that I only quoted those families to illustrate that sometimes/often families are intertwined - as you are saying, hallmark.
It might all be a red herring.



I agree 100% but "something" brought him to there..... 


Give a man a record and you feed him for a day.
Teach a man to research, and you feed him for a lifetime.