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Ireland (Historical Counties) => Ireland => Antrim => Topic started by: robbieg on Thursday 08 January 09 06:05 GMT (UK)

Title: Braid, County Antrim. Where is it?
Post by: robbieg on Thursday 08 January 09 06:05 GMT (UK)
        According to my GGGrandfathers marriage certificate (Scottish BMD) he was born about 1815 in Braid, County Antrim. I cannot find an exact location using Google search, it gives me the Ballymena area. There are no Townlands or Civil Parishes of that name that I can find. Further searches
gave me the RC parish of Glenravel and Braid and the Presbyterian parish of Braid-island. Doing a search on this site I found someone else who had an ancestor listed on a marriage certificate as being born in Braid, county Antrim in 1817.
        Does anyone know where this area is?
                         gillie   
Title: Re: Braid, County Antrim. Where is it?
Post by: aghadowey on Thursday 08 January 09 07:46 GMT (UK)
Welcome to Rootschat.
The Braid is an area not a townland which might be why you are having trouble finding it.
The website below (even though it's about sheep) will give you an idea:
www.antrim.net/braidsheep/index.htm
"Braid District near Broughshane, Ballymena."  "The 'Sheddings' a focal point for the local community is located in the scenic heart of County Antrim - six miles from Ballymena. The River Braid cuts through this valley on its Journey through the award winning village of Broughshane and then on to the District Town of Ballymena and into Lough Neagh."

Presbyterian Churches are grouped in Presbyteries, not parishes. However, I did find this reference which might be what you refer to:
"The parish of Braid-island in the county of Antrim, which contains 5,000 acres Irish plantation measure, was the first Presbyterian parish of the Plantation in the reign of James I. which had a Presbyterian Minister."
-from www.libraryireland.com/articles/BraidIslandDPJ1-28/index.php
Title: Re: Braid, County Antrim. Where is it?
Post by: Christopher on Monday 12 January 09 04:52 GMT (UK)
Hello Gillie,

There's a map on this link which shows the Sheddings and the Braid Valley http://tinyurl.com/73ujmn

Martin Cassidy, the BBC NI rural affairs correspondent, describes the Braid as a rural townland of Ballymena. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/4615813.stm

Christopher
Title: Re: Braid, County Antrim. Where is it?
Post by: Anne_T on Tuesday 07 May 19 05:35 BST (UK)
Try Braade Townland in County Donegal.
Title: Re: Braid, County Antrim. Where is it?
Post by: aghadowey on Tuesday 07 May 19 09:24 BST (UK)
Welcome to Rootschat but this query is over ten years old and Braid is an area in County Antrim not a townland in County Donegal.
Title: Re: Braid, County Antrim. Where is it?
Post by: DGBunch1972 on Wednesday 27 September 23 11:53 BST (UK)
Hi Robbie.

I am also a Gilliland that has connections to Rachel O'Hara of Braid. She is my GGGG Grandmother and married around 1805 to John Gilliland. They had a son named Robert Gilliland and then moved to West Kilbride in Scotland.
I am looking for info on Rachel O'Hara's family.
Title: Re: Braid, County Antrim. Where is it?
Post by: Kiltaglassan on Thursday 28 September 23 07:20 BST (UK)

Welcome to RootsChat but the OP for this thread has not been online here since January 2009 and is unlikely to reply.


Title: Re: Braid, County Antrim. Where is it?
Post by: LH on Thursday 28 September 23 08:07 BST (UK)
Hi DGbunch1972

As Aghadowey previously mentioned, Robbieg’s query was posted in 2009.

Regards
Title: Re: Braid, County Antrim. Where is it?
Post by: robbieg on Sunday 28 July 24 12:47 BST (UK)
DGBunch1972 Hi cousin. I would be interested in sharing info etc., with you. Eventually found out that Braid was an electoral division when the Ulster Covenant was signed.
Title: Re: Braid, County Antrim. Where is it?
Post by: Kiltaglassan on Sunday 28 July 24 12:57 BST (UK)

robbieg,

You need to remove your personal e-mail address as this isn't allowed on the RootsChat forum. This is to protect all concerned from spam, identity abuse, internet abuse, etc. The sharing of information should be exchanged via personal message.




Title: Re: Braid, County Antrim. Where is it?
Post by: scotmum on Wednesday 21 August 24 08:14 BST (UK)
Possibly already seen, but just adding this for others who may find it useful, as it covers Gilliland family members in the surrounding area:

https://freepages.rootsweb.com/~elsinger/genealogy/gilliland/g0/p652.htm

Do you know what religion your Gillilands were? There are a number of Gillilands of mid to late 1800s or so, mentioned in the book Presbyterianism in Buckna 1756-1992.
Title: Re: Braid, County Antrim. Where is it?
Post by: robbieg on Wednesday 21 August 24 12:31 BST (UK)
They were more than likely Presbyterian.
Title: Re: Braid, County Antrim. Where is it?
Post by: HughC on Wednesday 21 August 24 18:29 BST (UK)
By the way,
the original Irish is spelled Bráid, which I think tells us it should be pronounced braad
-- not as in the English word meaning a plait,
though I admit the pronunciation I heard in my youth was brad.
Title: Re: Braid, County Antrim. Where is it?
Post by: KGarrad on Wednesday 21 August 24 20:33 BST (UK)
In the Isle of Man, there is a place called Braaid -pronounced braid.
Also called Braid in Manorial Rolls of 1543 and 1703.

Manx Breid, Irish Braghad. Literally "Throat, gullet or windpipe" applied to "a gorge, glen, or sheltrtrf vale".

From "The place-Names of the Isle of Man", J.J. Kneen (1925).

Manx Gaelic is quite close to Irish.