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Christopher Crowe b.1768 was the grand father of my great grandfather Francis Crowe b.cerca 1833 in Peterborough County, Ontario, Canada.  Christopher Crowe, and son James Crowe b.1793 and two other sons left Clones around 1830 and settled in Dummer twp., Peterborough, where Christopher died around 1857.  Around 1850, James Crowe, his children and some other family moved another 150 miles west to Arran twp. in Bruce county and for a second time cleared forest for their farms.  I grew up on the main farm which my parents Grace nee. Crowe and Stanley Greig owned from 1949 to 89.  I would very much like to know something about these Crowes in Ireland: why did they leave, what did they do before,  did other family remain in Clones or in Ireland, even to this day.  As far as I know they were Methodists and not of the Orange Lodge (after 1798).  In Ireland and again in Ontario  two of these Crowes married women of the family Welsh, who may also have roots in Monaghan.                                                                                          In 2011, my wife and I visited the Republic of Ireland, Dublin, Wicklow, Galway, Killery Bay, absolutely loved the place!

 

 

 

 

The Gardener

Friday 14th Aug 2020, 01:57AM

Message Board Replies

  • Your best chance of locating this family is in church records. 

    Methodism took a lot longer to become established in Ireland as a separate denomination than in England. In Ireland there was considerable resistance to separating from the Church of Ireland. It was 1815 before Methodists started to conduct their own baptisms and the 1830s before they started to marry. 

    You are unlikely to find many Methodist baptisms before 1820. Few marriages before the 1840s and only a handful for many years after that. If there are no Methodist records in the location you are researching, I would search Church of Ireland records instead, as that’s the most likely place to find the relevant event.

    Not many Methodist Meeting Houses have graveyards and so they may be buried in public or Church of Ireland graveyards (which are open to all denominations).

    Clones Church of Ireland has baptism, marriage and burial records going back to 1682. There’s a copy of those records in PRONI (the public record office) in Belfast.

     

     

    Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘

    Friday 14th Aug 2020, 07:34AM
  • Thanks Elwyn.  So I guess I should get back to Ireland and start rooting around in church yards, cemeteries, archives and the like.  The other part of my mother's family were Neelands apparently fromTyrone and of the Presbyterian tendency.

    I am about as interested in the general history of the Crowe's home area as specifics of their own lives.  Since they were Protestants, I assume that they may have roots in British settler colonial project of the 16th and 17th century, the "Ulster Plantation(s)".   Was Monaghan a major scene of that bloody process?  Is it true that very few of the native Irish survivors converted under pressure of religious persecution?  Did the plantation colonists and descendants eventually form some ties to the surviving native population?  I understand that some people with that background did make common cause against British rule, in 1798-1803, the United Irishmen, even as leaders, Emmett and Tone.  And what of 1916-22, did many leave for the other side of the partition line so close to Clones?  Monaghan voted for Ireland in 1919, but how much Brit sentiment was there.  Was Orangeism powerful there at that time?                                                   So many questions, maybe some out of order in this forum.  Thanks anyway, David

    The Gardener

    Saturday 15th Aug 2020, 02:56AM
  • David,

    MacLysaght’s “Surnames of Ireland” says: “Crowe is MacEnchroe. Now generally Crowe (which is also an English name). All Crowes in their homeland, Thomond, are of native Irish stock. In Ulster they are mainly of English origin”.

    Given that Monaghan is in Ulster and your family were almost certainly Church of Ireland, at least until the 1800s, then that points to them being of settler origins, probably from England though the name Crowe is found in Scotland too.

    There were no Crowes in Monaghan in the 1630 Muster Rolls so it looks as though they arrived after that date.

    Monaghan wasn’t included in the main formal Plantation but quite a number of settlers from Britain did go there throughout the 1600s. If you want to study the background of the Plantation, I recommend “The Plantation of Ulster” by Philip Robinson. You’ll get it on Amazon and the other usual outlets. Robinson explains that in the 1500s the main native Irish families in Monaghan pledged allegiance to Queen Elizabeth: 

    “In 1591 land tenure in Co. Monaghan had been anglicised under the Tudor policy of ‘surrender and re-grant’. This was accompanied by the transference of extensive church lands to English servitors and by the retention by the crown of part of Farney barony, which in 1575 had been granted to the Earl of Essex. Nevertheless the remaining area, which consisted of most of the county, was re-granted by Queen Elizabeth to Patrick McKenna and five leading McMahons. These Irish lords were to hold their lands under English law and pay rent to the crown, and many of the lesser in the county were to be made freeholders. This establishment of an English tenurial system in Monaghan was to survive the Elizabethan war and was the principal reason why the county was not included in the official scheme. The Irish freeholders of Monaghan were not included in the Flight of the Earls in 1607, so that their lands were neither confiscated nor surrendered.” (Robinson, Page 54).

    I am certainly not going to attempt to justify or support what England did in Ireland but it is sometimes worth taking a step back and look at what had been happening before this time and what was happening elsewhere in the world.  Native Irish tribes had been fighting amongst themselves endlessly for thousands of years seizing each others lands. The arrival of the English - initially invited there by the deposed King of Leinster (Dermot MacMurragh) around 1169, who wanted their help to regain his title and lands – just put a new dimension on the cruelty and fighting. King Henry’s troops were successful in putting Dermot back on his throne. Unfortunately they didn’t go home again afterwards.

    In the late 1500s England had nearly been invaded by Spain ie the Spanish Armada. Through a combination of bad weather and the British Navy defeated the Spaniards, Queen Elizabeth was very concerned that Spain or France might still use Ireland as a sympathetic stepping stone to launch an attack on England. So she needed to be sure there were sufficient loyal people in Ireland to prevent that or at least to organize a defence if it did happen.  Hence her wish to plant the country with folk loyal to the Crown. However many native Irish pledged allegiance too (possibly for tactical reasons but whatever the reason they did). Many native Irish landholders held on to their land as in Monaghan and overall about a third of Ireland remained in “Irish” hands.  As an academic at Trinity College Dublin described things, the Crown: sought to “civilise those rude parts” whilst at the same time enriching itself by interfering in land titles. See: 

    https://www.1641.tcd.ie/historical_background.php

    But elsewhere in Europe, Spain, Portugal, France, and the Netherlands were all busy establishing empires and were likewise invading and dominating countries they wanted to rule in the Americas, Caribbean, Indonesia and elsewhere. Subjugating others was the norm for the time. The views of the locals were rarely taken into account and most were obliged to swear loyalty to their new hosts, and often to completely change their religious inclinations.  Then in Ireland, starting in the 1700s, large numbers of people dissatisfied with conditions there, left for north America where they often repeated the same process by seizing land from native Americans and imposing treaties and other obligations on them. Plus ca change? 

    You ask about upheaval in Monaghan. There was certainly resistance to English (and Scottish & Welsh) settlers. The native Irish rose up in 1641 and there was a big rebellion with a lot of bloodshed.  There are details of fighting in Monaghan.  (If you go to the tcd 1641 site (above) and enter Monaghan in the search field it will bring up 5 pages of first hand evidence about atrocities in the county. Ultimately the uprising failed and across Ireland some land was forfeit as a consequence. I haven’t read about any land being forfeit in Monaghan though.

    You ask whether many people changed denomination as a result of “pressure of religious persecution.” The short answer is no they didn’t. To this day the country remains mostly Roman Catholic. (According to a google search, the Republic of Ireland is 84% RC, and 3.5% Protestant. Northern Ireland is slightly different with 41% Catholic and 42% Protestant).  The population of Monaghan in 1901 was 74,425 of which 54,180 were RC, leaving around 20,000 Protestants of assorted denominations.

    No-one was compelled to change denomination. The English Government wished to “anglicise” Ireland to ensure it would support its political objectives. So the Church of Ireland (ie the Church of England in Ireland) was made the “state” church. If you were of another denomination various restrictions and obstacles were put in your way. These mostly affected Catholics but did also affect Presbyterians and other minor denominations. The worst time was the Penal Laws period (approx. 1665 to 1760, though the last laws were not repealed until about 1825). A “ragbag of laws” as one academic has described them. Power and property was to be kept in Protestant hands. So you could be fined for not attending the Church of Ireland (though I am not sure how many people ever were) and if you weren’t a member of the church of Ireland, there were restrictions or prohibitions on carrying arms, owning a good horse, having leases of over 30 years, holding public office, being a lawyer, standing for parliament and many other things. The Catholic Church wasn’t prohibited. They just made it very difficult for it. So priests couldn’t be trained in Ireland (nor could Presbyterian Ministers). So the priests were trained in France or Italy instead.  The Presbyterians trained in Scotland. An Act of 1705 allowed a Catholic priest to minister to his flock but he wasn’t allowed a curate. New priests seeking entry to Ireland were to be refused entry. A Minister or Priest conducting a mixed marriage could be fined £20 or subject to a year’s imprisonment. Many priests took to conducting mass at remote places in the countryside, often by a suitable rock, and to this day there are hundreds of Mass Rocks around the country. There were some high profile cases where people were prosecuted and received dreadful punishments but for the average farm labourer it probably didn’t make any significant difference to their lives, other than not having a proper church to attend. The traditional view has been that the draconian laws victimized the entire Catholic population. A more revisionist view is that they were used fairly selectively and in many cases they were ignored or rarely enforced. 

    An interesting example is horse fairs. It was illegal for Catholics to own a good horse. However our IRO site has a link to information on Ireland’s many horse fairs, some of which are the oldest in Europe. 

    https://mail.google.com/mail/u/1/?tab=wm&ogbl#inbox/FMfcgxwChmQPtRrbMJfdCNVthxdJLBKn

    So the obvious question is, if it was illegal for the vast majority of the population to own a decent horse, who exactly was attending these horse fairs and why?  There are also numerous descriptions of farmers working with horses during this period too. The reality seems to be that most people carried on owning and dealing in horses without any significant difficulty all through this period.

    It was also illegal for Catholics to own the freehold to property or to have a lease for more than 30 years. Cromwell had sized a massive amount of Catholic owned land in the 1660s but by 1688 22% was still in “Irish” hands. In Co Antrim the Catholic McDonnell family (Earls of Antrim) owned 25% of the county in the 1600s and early 1700s.  They routinely granted their catholic tenants leases for much more than 30 years, and did so with impunity till the mid 1700s when they converted to the Church of Ireland. (They still live in Co Antrim and I think they have converted back to RC. So these things go around sometimes).   So no-one was enforcing that law there. Many land owning Catholic families got around the penal laws by nominally converting to the Church of Ireland or by using trustees or protestant nominees. (Some protestant landowners were sympathetic to their catholic neighbours plight and did what they could to help). There is also evidence to suggest that many magistrates simply chose not to enforce the law either because they didn’t have the resources to do so or because they wished to keep the peace.

    You ask if the settlers formed ties with the native population. Up to a point they did and there are plenty of mixed marriages to confirm that.  The Presbyterian Scots had a reputation for regarding their Catholic neighbours as inferior and followers of a pagan religion. They tended to keep themselves to themselves though there were obviously exceptions.  Mixed marriages did cause problems in many families and could often be a factor in a young couple’s decision to emigrate.

    Yes both sides of the community came together during the United Irishmen’s uprising in 1798. It was well supported in pockets of the country where there were some bloody clashes but overall support was a bit patchy and it didn’t take too long for the uprising to be suppressed. Just how much the protestants and Catholics had in common was debatable and not helped during the uprising by the Catholic massacre of 200 Protestant women and children in a barn at Scullabogue, Co Wexford. That rather damaged the relationship. Soon after the '98 rebellion industrial changes, particularly in what is now Northern Ireland meant that the economy there started to pick up. Protestants there mainly decided that being part of the UK was to their advantage, and support within that part of the population for Irish independence dwindled, though they continued to press for other social changes including votes for all.

    The film The Quiet Man is a very corny representation of Ireland with much stereotyping, and of course it’s fiction. But there is an incident in it based on a real life event. In the film the Church of Ireland Vicar tells the local priest that he’s in a bit of difficulty. He has a tiny congregation and his bishop is coming to visit shortly.  There will be hardly anyone in the church, and he’s expecting to get into trouble for not having increased his congregation. The priest takes pity on him and at mass on the relevant day, tells his Catholic congregation to go up and attend the Church of Ireland service. To the vicar and the bishop’s surprise the church is overflowing with people.  I can’t quote the source but apparently the real life incident caught the writers’ attention and so it went into the film. I am sure the catholic congregation were both shocked and amused at the time.

    Partition of Ireland in 1922 led to a large number of people who opposed Home Rule leaving and moving to Northern Ireland, Britain or further afield. However many remained and there is still a modest Protestant population in Monaghan today including some Orange Lodges.

    Ireland’s relationship with Britain could be discussed for a fortnight without pause and many books have been published on it. Whilst in most of the country there was resentment at the way they had been treated by the British, there was a degree of pragmatism as well. In Ireland there was never conscription to join the British army and tens of thousands of people freely joined it, to get a trade, a regular salary and to see the world. Hundreds of thousands of Irish people went to England or Scotland to work. There isn’t a family in Ireland that doesn’t have cousins somewhere in England today. Ireland gained independence in 1922, and set up it's own army, navy etc. Today called the Irish Defence Forces. During the second world war Ireland was strictly neutral. However about one third of the Irish Defence Forces left without notice and went and joined the British Army to fight against the Germans.  Technically they were deserters but their reasons for doing so were fairly noble I feel. On their return to Ireland they were treated shamefully and it was many years before reparations were made. Background in this article:

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-22425684

    So yes Irish people largely resented the way the British treated them. Some loathed them but some benefited from them.  At a personal level many got on reasonably well, and there was intermarriage.  But if you utterly loathe the British, how likely are you to desert your own army and go and fight for them? It was a tricky complex relationship which is difficult to summarise fully or fairly here. You should go to Monaghan and speak to people living there today and ask for their views. Do so with some tact and discretion though.

    You might get some good local material in the local studies section at the library in Clones:

    http://www.askaboutireland.ie/reading-room/culturenet/archives/monaghan…

    If you intend visiting Monaghan, e-mail the local studies librarian a couple of months in advance of your visit and ask if they have any books or documents that describe life in and around Clones in the 1700s and 1800s. They’ll then hopefully have some recommendations ready for you. One document you might want to look at is the Ordnance Survey memoir of Monaghan 1834 – 38 (It’s in Volume 40 of the OS memoirs, counties of South Ulster) and should describe life in the area in some detail.

    Your Presbyterian ancestors from Tyrone are almost certainly of Scottish origins. If you are interested in reading about their history, try Eagles Wing’s – The History of the Scotch-Irish and Ulster-Scots by Dr David Hume.  It explains why they left Scotland for Ireland in the 1600s and why many left Ireland for North America in the 1700s.

     

     

     

    Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘

    Sunday 16th Aug 2020, 10:59AM
  •  

     

     

    Well, thank you! I could hardly have expected such an extensive response, love it!                       

    One matter you did not comment much on was the famine.  I looked at population stats for around 1840 and again in 1852: a drop of more than a third, and then it continued to drop.  I long thought that these Crowes had left at that time, perhaps 1848 even though Protestant farmers might have faired better than the RC majority.  But my recent interest led me to verify that Christopher, already about 62, and sons, took land near Peterborough in 1831.My mother b.1913 was already far enough from the original migrants of 1831 that when older family referred to "coming out from Dummer", she thought they referred to Ireland.  She did know they had passed through Peterborough area.  There is a "Crowe Bridge", "Crowe River" and "Crowes' Landing" in that area.

    And Orange lodges in the Republic!?  What do these guys talk about, conspire?  Returning the British admin. to Dublin Castle?  The lodge was a big deal in my home area in Ontario til mid 20th century.  There had been ugly anti RC incidents earlier, and must have been involved in anti German incidents during WW1 (public humiliation of 2nd and 3rd generation CANADIANs of German descent).   Cavan twp. near Peterborough had a quasi official prohibition on property sale to RCs until 1970's.  A neighbour near my home married an RC in 1970s and was denied the usual community collection.  Some hard core sectarians in the lodge, knew one personally.  Neither my Crowes nor Neelands were in it as far as I know.  One distant corner of my father's family, the Waughs were.

    A very distant Neelands cousin, those of Tyrone, did write a family history 75 years ago.  The name is Norse in origin of course, appearing in Scotland after 1200, and they moved to Ireland as part of the colonial project, but he did not say much about that.  And on to canada about 1825.  He was more interested in trying to connect them to aristocrats and royalty, a common disorder among genealogists.

    Thanks again, David

     

    The Gardener

    Sunday 16th Aug 2020, 10:28PM
  • David,

    Clones library is likely to have detailed information on how the famine affected Monaghan in particular.

    Many farmers with a decent amount of land and a range of crops came through the famine not too badly. The price of grain rose and though potatoes were blighted they were able to sell or use the other crops. It was the poor old labourers (ie the majority of the population) who bore the brunt of the famine.  They only had a small strip of land and usually grew only potatoes. You can get more potatoes to an acre than any other crop, they are also low maintenance and grow well in Irish soil and climate. If you had a large family and were away working somewhere then they were ideal for feeding them. Until blighted of course.

    I agree with you about the obsession with aristocrats and royalty. "He was disinherited from his expected title and estate after he eloped with a servant girl. They stowed away on a ship to America." (I read that about once a month).  Finding the family castle (ideally, taken off them by the English) is another. Proving descent from Niall of the 9 Hostages features too.

    Regarding the Church of Ireland records for Clones, according to my guide to church records, the originals are held by the RCB library in Dublin with a microfilm copy in PRONI in Belfast. (So the church itself doesn’t have them).

    There is also “some coverage on rootsireland”. That’s a pay to view site. “Some coverage” means they haven’t transcribed all years.

    With both the RCB library and PRONI you have to go in person to look them up. PRONI is free. Not sure about the RCB library.

    Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘

    Monday 17th Aug 2020, 07:17AM
  • Thanks again!  Would still love to know what the Republic's Orangemen are up to!  (Don't worry about my capricious query; others will have more important questions.)

    The Gardener

    Monday 17th Aug 2020, 10:38PM
  • Thanks again!  Would still love to know what the Republic's Orangemen are up to!  (Don't worry about my capricious query; others will have more important questions.)

    The Gardener

    Monday 17th Aug 2020, 10:38PM
  • Some information on the Orange Order in the Republic of Ireland and in Co. Monaghan here:

    https://www.historyireland.com/20th-century-contemporary-history/southern-orange-commemorations-past-and-present/

    An article here from 2016 about Protestants in a village in Monaghan some of whom are in the local Orange Lodge:

    https://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/protestant-drum-is-still-beating-strong-in-border-village-1.2748306

    Assuming the link works OK where you are, here’s an interview in 2017 with a member of the Orange Order in the Republic of Ireland. Numbers don’t seem very big but there are still some functioning lodges.

    https://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/republic-s-orangemen-proclaim-their-identity-1.3148713

    Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘

    Wednesday 19th Aug 2020, 12:06AM
  •  

     

    You've certainly provided a lot of info for my somewhat idle curiosity.  I understand you are a volunteer, so I hope you enjoy your efforts.  If that is the case, I will try to favour your enjoyment from time to time.

    The LOLs in the Republic are certainly news to me.  The majority and government seem very accommodating considering past history.  And the lodge members in the Republic do not sound like Ian Paisley or some of the Orange bigots I have known here.  Still, I do not see that there is anrthing to celebrate about the Boyne, the British rule over Ireland, still over the north, the sectarian spirit that always worked against a free and united Ireland.  Although I have not dug far into the details, the lodge and the Orange sectarian spirit over the whole period late 18th century to present seems very negative.

    While I was digging a few of our praties earlier today, I remembered some things from back in Arran twp.  It was settled mainly by Ulster rooted Protestants, as other twps. near were by Scots or Germans.

    Among those families were two surnames, Jacques and Lesperance.  The first was obviously also a common French name, but I never heard why.  The other no one thought curious.  But then I noticed that it must have been "L'esperance".  Would I be right to suspect both surnames may be rooted in the planting of 20000 Huguenot refugees in 17th century Ireland?  Was that down south, not Ulster?

    And a story you could maybe verify or debunk:  that the first people with roots in south Sahara Africa arrived in Early 9th century Ireland.  Apparently the Dublin Vikings had raided Sevilla in Moorish Spain and captured slaves, brought them back.

    And while I am on it, did survivors of the Spanish Armada settle in Ireland? Any surnames?  Not De Valera though, a different story.  (My wife, of Colombia, I , my daughter and even two grand children speak Spanish as well as English).

    One truth certainly, there are no pure "races" , Irish or otherwise.  Every nation is an amalgamation of diverse peoples, of migrations from many directions and over thousands of years.   

     

     

     

    The Gardener

    Friday 21st Aug 2020, 02:10AM
  • Huguenot refugees settled in Ulster and down the east side of Ireland (often in places where there was linen making as that was one of their trades). There used to be a large number in Dublin and at one time there was a Huguenot church there plus a graveyard. Over the years they changed denomination. Many became Presbyterians because that aligned with their fairly Calvinistic views.  So to answer your question, whilst lots of Huguenots did settle in Ulster (they were fleeing Catholic persecution and so favoured places where there were large numbers of Protestants), many did also settle in and around Dublin.

    64 people named Jacques in Ireland in the 1901 census, Mostly Protestant. None named L’esperance.

    People often speculate that their ancestors may have inter-married with survivors from the Spanish Armada, shipwrecked off Ireland. That may have happened but some accounts suggest the natives weren’t all that friendly at all.  So I wonder how much intermarriage there actually was. If not slaughtered by the English or by the locals, I suspect most Spaniards were only too pleased to get back to Spain as quickly as possibly. 

    Here’s a link to Captain Francisco de Cuellar’s account of being hunted in 1588 by English soldiers (which he expected) but also repeatedly robbed by hostile Irish natives (which he didn’t expect) after being shipwrecked in Co Sligo. He called Sligo a “land of savages”. He was on the run in Ireland for 7 months. The locals sometimes helped him but frequently brutalised him. He eventually escaped to Amsterdam where he wrote an account of his experiences. A Docudrama has been written based on his account:

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jul/06/armada-docudrama-sligo-normal-people-irish-spanish

    So did any survivors of the Spanish Armada settle in Ireland? I don’t know but if they did it was not in big numbers. (In most places there would have been a major language barrier with neither side able to speak to the other). It sounds as though many had a difficult time with the natives and I suspect most were pretty relieved to be able to get back to Spain.

    There are records of Barbary pirates operating from Algiers capturing people from Baltimore, Co Cork in 1631. See:

    https://www.irishcentral.com/roots/history/moors-invaded-west-cork-irish-slaves

    I don’t know about earlier incursions.  The Vikings made it to Newfoundland so I don’t see why they couldn’t have travelled to Seville if they had wanted to.  (Roman pottery has been found in the Orkney islands at the far north of Scotland, indicating that there was routine trade there with the Mediterranean 2000 years ago). 

    http://orkneyjar.com/history/ironage.htm

    I haven’t heard of Vikings bringing slaves to Ireland. If they did I would say it wasn’t huge numbers. (The Vikings themselves weren’t really here in large numbers either and have not left much of a mark behind. A few place names (eg Strangford Lough. Strangford = strong fjord), and the odd lost longboat preserved in a peat bog, but that’s about it really. They didn’t bring any women with them and so if any Viking men remained here they were soon absorbed into the local culture. (In contrast with the Presbyterians who brought an equal number of women with them and so kept their own identity, even to this day). I have read that a shortage of women in Scandinavia was one of the reasons why the Vikings went raiding in the first place. 

    Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘

    Saturday 22nd Aug 2020, 08:45PM
  • Thanks, I wish I could remember the source for that raid on Al Andaluz.  And to go further on my curiosity I had better get back to Ireland before I am truly ancient.  Best wishes, David

    The Gardener

    Friday 28th Aug 2020, 01:07AM

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