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Pastimes : Genealogy -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Frank Sully who wrote (433)1/14/2018 10:12:22 PM
From: ManyMoose1 Recommendation

Recommended By
lightshipsailor

  Respond to of 443
 
Thanks so much for the information, Frank.

I'm pretty sure I'll be able to find links to my heritage. My blood grandfather on my mother's side was named Russell Davy. He was a jerk who left my grandmother while she was pregnant with my mother. He descended from Sir Humphry Davy, who is well-known in Wales. King George III knighted him in 1812 for inventing the Davy carbide lamp, which revolutionized the coal mining industry.

Sir Humphry was one of the first substance abusers but I suppose he can be forgiven because in that era it was the only way to test the effects of some of his inventions, such as nitrous oxide, which some of you may have inhaled at the dentist's office.

He wrote the first book on Fly Fishing: 'Salmonia', or Days of Fly Fishing.

He was also an art critic, and declared that the Louvre in France held the finest collection of picture frames he'd ever seen.

Davy ran around with Mary Shelley, who may have gotten her idea for Frankenstein in his labs. Samuel Taylor Coleridge was one of his poet friends.



To: Frank Sully who wrote (433)3/17/2021 6:02:05 PM
From: Frank Sully1 Recommendation

Recommended By
ManyMoose

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 443
 
The migration of our family, the Sullivans, from Ireland to upstate New York State around 1820 can be seen in the context of the British oppression of the Irish Catholic population. The Sullivans were poor farmers in the tiny town of Clunsast, in King's County (now Offaly County), west of Dublin. There was a more well-to-do family in Clunsast, the Ennis family. Their son, Thomas, was a revolutionary who became involved in the failed Rebellion of 1798 against the British occupiers. The British put prices on the heads of the organizers of the Rebellion and Thomas Ennis fled Ireland for America. He was an educated man (rare for Irish Catholics in those days) who had studied mathematics and engineering. He became a surveyor for the original Erie Canal in upstate New York State. He was well paid for his efforts, and received gold and land. He received a tract of land called the Pagan Purchase near Verona, New York, because it had been purchased from the Oneida Indians who were presumably pagans. He desired to establish an Irish Catholic town on his land and wrote back to his home town of Clunsast, Ireland that any family which would immigrate to America would receive forty acres of land and 100 dollars in gold. Our ancestors, the widow Elizabeth Sullivan and her sons, were among the dozen families who immigrated and formed the Irish Catholic town of Irish Ridge around 1820. They eventually moved to the western part of New York State, south of Buffalo, where my grandfather was born. He became a high school mathematics teacher. and married and moved to the New York City region, where I was eventually born and raised. Happy St. Paddy's Day!

Slainte!
Frank