I have recently had confirmation of my great grandfather's family being from Keady through the latest release of C of I records. I now have a baptism for my GG uncle Samuel Maxwell: bapt. 16 Feb 1845. In researching I can see a number of townlands associated with the family names I have so far: Maxwell, Young and Toner. My GG Grandfather, Francis Maxwell's occupation was a mason on the 2 baptisms I have found. He left in 1850 with his wife, Jane Young, and 3 surviving children and settled in Scotland. He continued to work as a mason in Scotland. I have good documentation from then on for the whole family. I am interested to know more about Keady in the early 1800s. The townlands I have identified so far (where there are Maxwell families) are Crossdened, Drumderg, Dunlarg, Crossmore and Tullynamalloge. All are close to Keady town and I'm assuming as my GG grandfather was a mason that he was urban-based as opposed to having farming land. I would like to be able to access info about the town of Keady and possibly some family histories that may be available through the local family history societies - if there are some!
Many thanks
Paula Ritchie
Paula Ritchie
Saturday 26th Sep 2020, 10:39AMMessage Board Replies
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Paula,
When it re-opens Armagh City library has a local studies section which may have material on Keady. For a good description of life in the area in the 1830s, you could read the Ordnance Survey memoirs. These were compiled on the instructions of the Duke of Wellington (then Prime Minister) primarily for taxation purposes. So a bit like the Domesday Book. They were compiled parish by parish, and describe the inhabitants, their occupations, pastimes, habits, they analyse the various different denominations by number, and report on health, schooling, seasonal migration patterns as well as permanent migration. And so on. A typical parish contains about 20 to 30 pages of information and some drawings. They are well worth reading if you want to get a feel for life there at that time. (It’s probably the most detailed contemporaneous summary that exists from that period).
There are copies on the bookshelves in PRONI’s main research room in Belfast and Armagh library is likely to have a copy. If not, you can order a copy from the Ulster Historical Foundation. If you e-mail them with details of the parish(es) you are interested in, they’ll send you the relevant volume(s). Generally there are 3 or 4 adjacent parishes in each volume. I think they are between £5 and £10 per volume depending whether it’s old stock or newer reprints.
https://www.booksireland.org.uk
I looked to see if Keady features in the early street directories for the 1820s and 1840s but it wasn’t big enough to merit an entry.
If you want to get a feel for what life was like in the townland in 1901, look at the census entries. Here’s Crossdened for example, 35 houses and a total population of 105. (No Maxwells). Nearly everyone in the townland was engaged in farming one way or another.
http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1901/Armagh/Keady_Rural/Crossdened/
Crossmore is much the same with 10 houses and a population of 58. 1 Maxwell who was a single man and a farmer.
http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1901/Armagh/Crossmore/Crossmore/
MacLysaght’s “Surnames of Ireland” says Maxwell is a “Scottish name very numerous in Ulster”. So your ancestors are probably descendants of Scots who moved to Armagh in the 1600s as part of the Plantation.
Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘
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Many thanks Elwyn for your detailed and speedy response - that is exactly what I needed to know - I will check our local family history library as they do keep a number of copies of the Ordnance Memoirs - hadn't thought of that so thank you! and if not I will get in touch with the Ulster Historical Foundation - I will be (hopefully) with them nexrt Oct to reserch at PRONI and can now start looking at the various plantations and perhaps get a sense of their origins in Scotland. I will also visit the Armagh City Library. Thank you once again.
Paula
Paula Ritchie
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Here’s a bit on the Plantation and Philip Robinson’s book on the subject is worth reading. You probably get a copy from Amazon:
http://orrnamestudy.com/plantnire1610.htm
The Muster Rolls c 1630 list 1 Maxwell in Armagh then. He was William Maxwell who had a lease on 100 acres in Drumlack, in the barony of Fews on Sir Archball Atchison’s estate. Some of the tenants there came from Midlothian.
Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘
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Thanks Elwyn - I've seen some of RJ Hunter's books - yet to read! - but will have a look at Philip Robinson's - bit of a stretch I know the fill in all the 1600 and 1700s gaps but I've been able to get a copy of the Armagh Memoirs - sadly Keady Parish didn't rate for descriptions of individual townlands etc but it has given me a good sense of the population and activities at that time. Thanks again for the suggestions.
Cheers
Paula
Paula Ritchie