What draws me back to Ireland over and over again? There’s the stunning physical beauty. But what makes a beautiful place so special? For me, it’s the people: their intellect, passion, warmth and wit. There’s no better place to find this than in an Irish pub and in the…
ContinueAdded by Valerie Lapin Ganley on May 21, 2014 at 1:30pm — 1 Comment
I have a net friend, Janet Maher and we've known one another a long time and a couple of years ago (2012) I said to one friend I am NEVER going back to the US again and the very next day I get an email from Janet saying 'book published, launch on such a date" and I said to myself 'That's it Lyons, you're going back to America"
Off I went for about 2.5 weeks.
I'd been in the U.S. a number of times but this time, it was so different. This time I did not have to pay to stay in…
ContinueAdded by Dr. Jane Lyons on May 21, 2014 at 12:30pm — 25 Comments
The terms “first cousin once removed” and “second cousin” are often confused. When the term “removed” is used, it indicates that the two people are from different generations. Second cousins have the same great grandparents but not the same grandparents.…
ContinueAdded by Dee Notaro on May 21, 2014 at 6:30am — 4 Comments
Names have been extracted from a paper published in the “Proceedings and Transactions of the Kilkenny and the South-East of Ireland Archaeological Society” Vol 3. 1855. pp. 231-274
The article was written by John G. A. Prim.
http://www.from-ireland.net/history-muster-kilkenny-1685-ireland/
and yes, you can…
ContinueAdded by Dr. Jane Lyons on May 20, 2014 at 1:48pm — No Comments
This was actually one of the most interesting Churches I have been to because most of the side walls and the back wall had been knocked down and yu could still see the tiles from the inside of the Church and the wall remnants as you stood beside it.
I went off here because one day, a man on my FB page told me I had been close to a Church his family used to go to one day when I said I has walked the dogs around a bog beside the train line out the Templemore Road. So, next day i was…
ContinueAdded by Dr. Jane Lyons on May 20, 2014 at 5:12am — No Comments
This is actually a very pretty little church and the thing about it is that it is on my way from Laois to Tipperary as I was a few weeks ago on my way to Nenagh. You literally drive through this little patch of Offaly and then you are into Tipperary. I have done the graveyard a good while ago but I haven't checked my site to get a link. Been at the computer for about 2 hours now and all I seem to be doing is talking!!!…
ContinueAdded by Dr. Jane Lyons on May 20, 2014 at 4:23am — No Comments
This is some of what I do :)
Posted to my Facebook page a few mins ago and I've just decided that yep, this is what I will do with this blog. Post whatever new links I have created on from-ireland and yatter away about whatever I am going to do or where-ever I am going to go any time I go off out looking for something :)
"Roman Catholic Church, Knock, Tipperary.
I've posted that I had put photos of this Church up before, but they were photos taken from the graveyard at…
ContinueAdded by Dr. Jane Lyons on May 20, 2014 at 3:36am — No Comments
I didn't name my website last night so now I'll tell you a little about it.
It is called from-ireland and I created it about 2001. A net friend taught me a little about web page creation and I don't mean the kind of web pages that we find free on the internet now, I mean he taught me code and what the 'source code' of a web page looks like. I had to work from the back forward meaning I created pages in code and then looked at what the end result would look like. After a while, I…
ContinueAdded by Dr. Jane Lyons on May 20, 2014 at 2:30am — No Comments
I transcribe gravestones in Ireland as well as transcribing information from parish records. I began transcribing the words of pre 1901 gravestones in 1996.
I have a website which was created in 2001 and two years ago we put 170,000 gravestone and church photographs online. I indexed the names off every stone I could read and we have that index online as well. The numbers of gravestone photographs have increased since that time and the places I have been to stretch from…
ContinueAdded by Dr. Jane Lyons on May 19, 2014 at 3:30pm — 9 Comments
The aggregate narrative on America’s Independence,
containing both the Colonial and British sides.
Volume 2 of the Irish-American Story has finally been published. Even as I wrote it, I was in awe as to the deeds of Barry,…
Added by James Francis Smith on May 18, 2014 at 2:58pm — No Comments
Your ancestors who immigrated to the United States filled out form SS-5 for their social security card. They were required to put full place of birth – not just country. They were also required to put the mother’s maiden name. Look for a social security number on…
ContinueAdded by Dee Notaro on May 17, 2014 at 1:30pm — 1 Comment
An Irishman You Probably Never Heard About But Should Have
The banner said in Spanish: Kidnapped – March 25, 1977– Walsh,…
ContinueAdded by Jim Goulding on May 17, 2014 at 9:00am — 6 Comments
Come with Cupid's Crusade -- an upscale singles adventure -- to the town of love on September 14th (2014) for 7 days. Meet the matchmaker himself, see the awe-inspiring beauty of Clare during your days, dance and find love at night. Sleep in a 4-star hotel, feast on wonderful food, see Galway City, the Aran Islands and much more. Love is in the air…
ContinueAdded by annette counihan on May 16, 2014 at 1:30pm — No Comments
This is part one in a series of articles on "Searching for Your Irish Ancestors" written by Ireland-based professional genealogist Nicola Morris of Timeline Genealogy. You can…
ContinueAdded by Timeline Genealogy on May 16, 2014 at 8:30am — 6 Comments
My grandmother Susan C. Regan was born Susan Catherine Condon, the granddaughter of Irish immigrants. She was very excitable, what in another time…
ContinueAdded by Gerry Regan on May 15, 2014 at 5:30pm — 4 Comments
Orphan trains were a social experiment which transported the unwanted child and street kids from New York City, Boston, Chicago, and other crowded Northeastern cities to the Midwest U.S. for adoption. The genealogy of many of these 200,000 orphaned and abandoned kids who were moved…
ContinueAdded by Dee Notaro on May 14, 2014 at 4:30am — 4 Comments
For centuries, Irish matchmakers have performed a vital service, bringing people together in love and marriage. It is a mysterious art, and the very best matchmakers have an almost magical quality to them.…
ContinueAdded by annette counihan on May 13, 2014 at 11:30am — No Comments
Is is just me, or does anyone else find the release of private letters from Jackie Kennedy to Father Joseph Leonard, a Vincentian priest from Dublin, particularly distasteful?
Are there no sacred boundaries we won't cross for the voyeuristic pleasure of the unrelenting…
ContinueAdded by Maryann Tracy on May 13, 2014 at 9:00am — 12 Comments
Sláinte, everyone. You know who you are ... single, great company, and would love to have someone to share future dreams. So come on a singles' adventure to County Clare, Ireland to the town of love -- Lisdoonvarna. Attend the 150-year-old matchmaking event and…
ContinueAdded by annette counihan on May 12, 2014 at 10:30pm — No Comments
… that "Iron Bones" McNamara was our great-uncle.
There are a great many things my Father said and some encompassed his attitudes about what it took to get by in life. Some…
ContinueAdded by James McNamara on May 11, 2014 at 11:00pm — 10 Comments
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