I am trying to find out about the ancestors and descendants of Stephen McGeown and Mary Kirk of the townland of Roan, Derrynoose, near Keady in the County of Armagh. They had a number of children - John McGeough (baptised 1857), Sarah McGone (1860), Thomas McGone (1862), Ellen McGeon (1865), Margaret McGone (1867), Catherine McGone (1870), Stephen Patrick McGone (1872), Henry McGone (1874) and James McGone (1878), all of whom were baptised at St Patrick's RC Church in Keady.
On birth certificates Stephen was described as a labourer but as a linen mill worker on one certificate; allegedly he had a big funeral that was reported in the newspapers (date uknown) as he allegedly held some position at the cathedral in Armagh. Nothing is known of Mary Kirk apart from the fact that she was dead in 1906.
Of the children, John moved to Broxburn, West Lothian, Scotland, and never married. Sarah also moved to Broxburn and married a Donoghue. Thomas - nicknamed Mowdu (meaning unknown) - also went to Broxburn and married a Mary Jane McArdle; one of their children, Harry, married in Winchburgh, near Broxburn, and emigrated to America. Catherine also went to Broxburn, marrying a John O'Brien, but dying in childbirth on Christmas day 1905. James also went to Broxburn.
At the time Broxburn attracted a lot of workers from Ireland due to the oil from shale works; Scotland was a pioneer in the production of petroleum and was, for a short time, dominant in the world production of oil - all centred in West Lothian where Bathgate was the largest manufacturer of coal oil in the world. Some 10,000 workers, many from Ireland mined the shale, and Paddy Mulhern - the foreman of the Uphall oil plant (Uphall is between Bathgate and Broxburn) - gave preference to Irish workers.
If anyone has any leads or ideas in finding out where Stephen McGeown and Mary Kirk came from (or, indeed, anything about them) I would be most grateful. Also, the same applies to the surname - as mentioned, the surnames of the children varied from McGeown, to McGone, to McGeon, to McGeough. Why was this - was it because the parish priest spelled the names phonetically?