Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Messages - Gary Rea

Pages: [1] 2 3 4
1
Down / Re: Thomas REA, born before 1755
« on: Monday 10 March 08 01:47 GMT (UK)  »
Sorry, Christopher; It must have been 2005 or 2006, then. I really don't remember.

Gary

2
Down / Re: Thomas REA, born before 1755
« on: Monday 10 March 08 00:23 GMT (UK)  »
Sorry, Christopher, but that data is no longer relevant, as I discovered, in 2004, that this is not my line, after all. Thanks, though.

Gary

3
Roxburghshire / Re: REA/RAE/RAY in Roxburghshire, 17th Century
« on: Monday 02 April 07 23:22 BST (UK)  »
Thanks, Sandra, but my ancestors had left Northern Ireland 38 years before then and had left Scotland perhaps three generations earlier, still. Though I'm sure there were members of my line who stayed behind and whose descendants might even still be living there, I have no way of knowing who they are, at this point. But, thanks, anyway.   ;D

Gary

4
Dumfriesshire / Re: Surname Interests: REA/RAE/RAY
« on: Sunday 09 April 06 15:20 BST (UK)  »
I don't have any data on that period, Margrace, but if you try www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk you can find many records from the 1820s. It's a pay site, but quite reasonable. I recommend searching the Old Parish Records, as they go back to 1553. The Statutory Records only go back to 1855 and the census records to 1851. Good luck.

Gary

5
Angus (Forfarshire) / Re: REA/RAE/RAY in Angus
« on: Monday 23 January 06 00:55 GMT (UK)  »
Thanks for the reply, Heather. That's a bit too specific and a bit late, though. I really have no idea where in the lowlands my family came from, yet. Angus is one of several counties where I found Reas living in the 1600s. As for my particular line, the earliest ancestor I know of for certain was William Rea, born in Drumskee, Dromore Parish, County Down, Northern Ireland in 1680. I have found Reas living in County Down from as early as the 1630s, and I believe these may have been William's ancestors, though I can't establish the link to them. So, any emmigration from Scotland would have occurred probably around 1630 or earlier.

Gary Rea

6
Roxburghshire / Re: REA/RAE/RAY in Roxburghshire, 17th Century
« on: Monday 20 June 05 03:14 BST (UK)  »
Sorry, Shazzam, but my Reas left Scotland for Northern Ireland in the early 1600s. By 1701 they had lived in County Down for at least a couple of generations. I don't even know where in Scotland they came from, just that's it's probably one of the lowland counties.

Gary

7
Stirlingshire / Re: REA/RAE/RAY of St. Ninians Parish, 17th Century
« on: Saturday 14 May 05 22:51 BST (UK)  »
Thanks for the effort, Ann, but that's still about a century too late.

Gary

8
Roxburghshire / Re: REA/RAE/RAY in Roxburghshire, 17th Century
« on: Saturday 07 May 05 16:29 BST (UK)  »
I would imagine so, Andrew, if your Rea line stayed in Roxburgshire a few centuries. There was an Adam Rea living in Airth Parish in 1666-1687 and there was a Rea family in Jedburgh Parish, as well, around the same time.

However, I'm not interested in connecting them with any Reas who were still living in Scotland as late as 1800. My quest is to find out where my Rea line emmigrated to Northern Ireland from in the early 1600s. BY 1800, my line had been in Pennsylvania for 26 years, from County Down, Northern Ireland.

So, I'm sure your Janet Rea is related to some Reas who might have been in Roxburgh since the 17th century, but I don't know if they're mine, as I'm searching several lowland counties at once, looking for the origin of my line. Roxburgh is only one of several places they may have come from. Thanks.

Gary Rea

9
Ayrshire / Re: REA/RAE in Ayrshire, 16th to 17th Century
« on: Saturday 07 May 05 08:30 BST (UK)  »
I'm not even sure which county in Scotland my Reas came from, Slogger. I'm just going by information I've found that suggests Hugh Rea and James Rea of County Down, Northern Ireland (who are both found on the Hamilton Estate rent rolls in 1681 and 1688) may have come from anywhere in Aryshire, Renfrewshire, Wigtownshire, Dumfriesshire or Kirkcudbright. So, I'm researching all these areas, plus others where I found Rea/Rae families living in the 17th century. Currently, I believe my line emmigrated to County Down sometime prior to 1631, as there was a William, James and Gilbert Rea found on the 1631 muster roll for County Down, which was taken in Bangor.

Anyway, the "Plantation Period" was the 1600s, when James Hamilton and other wealthy Scots landowners bought estates in Northern Ireland and then recruited men from the lowlands of Scotland and from England to occupy and farm these lands. The idea was to "plant" loyal subjects of King James I in Northern Ireland in order to pacify the Irish and to subjugate them, hence the term "Plantation." We can see how well that's turned out. Oddly enough, the same term was used in the southern United States to describe the estates founded by Scots-Irish immigrants of the 18th century, though the circumstances were entirely different.

Gary

Pages: [1] 2 3 4