Any idea where a Roman Catholic who died in Parish Raheen between 1820 and 1849 might be buried? I have the birth certificate of Michael Dowling, baptised at St. Fintan's in 1820 to Timothy Dowling and Ann Fanning. Michael came to the US in 1849, and apparently Timothy has died before that. Supposedly Ann died on the way to Cork to catch the ship and was buried along side of the road. We will be visiting Ireland in July and are hoping to visit the cemetery where Timothy and other Dowlings and/or Fannings might be buried. Would the burial likely be in Cromogue or Clonenagh due the year? Any help would be appreciated. Bill Dowling
Sunday 14th Apr 2019, 10:48PM
Message Board Replies
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Dear Bill:
Thank you for your post to the Ireland Reaching Out message board. I have forwarded your post to one of our Laois volunteers who may be able to assist. She will reply to this thread.
In the meantime, you might check out the website https://historicgraves.com/
The Historic Graves project is a community based project that has trained communities all over Ireland to record, photograph and transcribe their local graveyards. You can search by graveyard, location and/or surname.
Please let us know if you need further assistance.
All the best,
Jane
Jane Halloran Ryan
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Bill, Here is a copy of grave inscription from Raheen Graveyard on Historic Graves
Exact wording of epitaph:
IHS
Gloria in Excelcius Deo
Here lies the body of Timothy Dowlin
of Mount Eagle who departed this life
the 17th day of March 1797 Aged 19 yrs
May the Lord have Mercy on his soul
Amen
Memorial Type:
Ledger Slab
County:
Latitude:
52.966833333333
Longitude:
-7.3716666666667
This is the only recorded headstone in this old graveyard in Raheen of a Dowling. There are no Fannings recorded as buried here though there are several un-recorded headstones. Propably they were illegible. There is a photograph of the headstone on the site also. Was there a townland mentioned on the birth record of Michael? I will see if I can get any further information for you before your visit.
Regards
Margaret
Margaret, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘
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Thank you very much Margaret. Maybe this Timothy could be an uncle, or even a namesake? Unfortunately Michael’s baptismal record does not mention a townland. I realistically don’t expect to find the actual grave because it was so long ago and they probably didn’t have enough money to afford a quality gravestone that could last close to 200 years. However, I was not aware of this Timothy’s grave or cemetery. At this point I’m just trying to an idea of where Catholic burials would have occurred in the early to mid 1800s.