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 - Arkiechic

Pages: [1]
1
Dublin / Re: Parish of ST PETER'S C of I Dublin
« on: Sunday 29 January 12 18:39 GMT (UK)  »
Thank you for your help. I'll send my queries off to the address listed.

Best regards

2
Dublin / Re: Parish of ST PETER'S C of I Dublin
« on: Sunday 29 January 12 18:35 GMT (UK)  »
Thank you for looking, Shane. Other than the marriage record and the baptism records for four of the five children at St. Peter's, all of my information comes from a little history written in 1942 by my GGM, Charlotte Chapman Rowett Tansey. She was the daughter of the youngest Byrne child, Cecilia Charlotte, and was well-acquainted with her uncles, Henry and Charles. But, of course, there could be errors in the history.

According to that history, Henry, Sr. died before his children were grown, not sure of the year, am guessing it was around 1835, possibly earlier? and haven't found a death notice yet. His wife, Mary Shean Byrne, also died, not too many years after her husband, and I don't know if they had to leave their house at that point, but I would assume they did. According to the history,  Charles and Henry did attend college, and the girls were sent to boarding school before the family money ran out. After that, they all earned their livings teaching, and the girls were finishing governesses for a period of time.

Henry Lowe Byrne taught mathematics at LSU in New Orleans, among other things, and then went back to Dublin about 1876, his health in decline, and died there about 1881. I might have found his death online, will have to send for it to see if looks correct.

The records at St. Peter's spell the name Byrn and Byrnes, but Charlotte uses the spelling Burns for her mother's maiden name. "My grandfather, Henry Burns was a barrister, an alumnus of what is now larger and is the University of Ireland. Then it was Dublin College. When Mother remembers her father she was a small child, the youngest of five, Mary Anne, Charles, Francis Dorothea (Fanny), Henry Lowe, and herself, Cecilia Charlotte."

I haven't located anything to back up her memories yet, except for the marriage and baptism records, though. I have been trying to organize myself as to which addresses to send away to for what type of record.

Alexander Campbell, Jr. was a first cousin to the Byrnes children, and I found his parents marriage records and his baptism in the St. Peter's records. He was a divinity student and emigrated to Canada, where he became, according to that little history, the ranking Episcopal bishop in Canada by 1882.

The extended family, whoever they were, must have been involved with the younger children after the parents were both gone, because when Cecilia, the youngest, followed her brothers to America, the family made her wait until she was 18, and then she came over under the chaperonage of a much older and reliable woman, a governess, Miss Leigh, and on a sailing ship, because the family had no faith in steam ships.

Mary Anne Byrnes (Burns?) stayed in Ireland and England, and became a bluestocking. She wrote articles for The Freeman's Journal, though I don't know if she used her own name or a pen name.

Well, that is considerably more info than you asked for! Sorry, I'm losing perspective, so deep into the fun of trying to unravel this mystery. Thank you for any direction you can point me in.

3
Dublin / Re: Parish of ST PETER'S C of I Dublin
« on: Saturday 28 January 12 04:12 GMT (UK)  »
My ancestors, Mary Shean and Henry Byrne were married at St. Peter's COI on 1 December, 1816, and their five children were christened there. In my browsing it seems the Byrnes were probably members there for a few generations. I know the Alexander Campbell family was related, as well.

My question is, how would I determine where their remains ended up when the Y tore the church down in 1982 and dug up the graves? An article I read said the Huguenot graves were transferred to Mount Jerome, but what about the rest of them? And has anyone ever copied the information on the tombstone slabs that were excavated from the site later?

I was in Dublin briefly in 1974, but hadn't enough information then to proceed with. How I wish I had visited the church before it was demolished!

Henry was a barrister, and they lived on St. Stephen's Green in the 1820's and 1830's. I know that many of those old homes were torn down long ago, but I'd like to try to figure out which home was theirs and if it still stands. Does anyone have an idea where I would seek that information?

Thank you for any assistance,


Pages: [1]