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I am looking for descendants of my great grandmother's Catherine Mealia's family. They would be from her father's second marriage. She was born in 1870 in Derrynagower, near Balla and Claremorris, Co. Mayo. Her father was Patrick Mealia born in 1841. After my great grandmother's mother died he married Julia Kelly and they had John Mealia b. 1880, Patrick Mealia b. 1882, Ellen Mealia b. 1885, Julia Mealia b. 1886 and Annie Mealia b. 1889. I found a record for Patrick who died in 1955 and had a son John but have not found any other leads for John or any other descendants.

My great grandmother Catherine immigrated to US in 1886 and died of TB when my grandmother was 17. My grandmother then died when my mother was 9 so very little family history was carried down. Any info would be greatly appreciated.

warmly

Mary Kathleen Senchyna

Mary Kathleen

Wednesday 12th Apr 2023, 05:33PM

Message Board Replies

  • https://civilrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/images/marriage_re… 24/3/1918 Marriage of Annie Mealia and Martin Forde

    Eileen

    Wednesday 12th Apr 2023, 08:48PM
  • Here are Patrick, Julia, and family in 1901 Irish census:

    click below:

    http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/search/results.jsp?searchMoreVisi…

    Patricia

    Wednesday 12th Apr 2023, 08:49PM
  • According to rootsireland, Annie married Martin Forde and had the following children:

      Church Baptism Forde Patrick 1919 Co. Mayo  
      Church Baptism Ford Martin Joseph 1920 Co. Mayo

    Patricia

    Wednesday 12th Apr 2023, 08:56PM
  • What was Catharine's married name?

    And your grandmother's name?

    Patricia

    Wednesday 12th Apr 2023, 09:09PM
  • One of my great-grandmothers grew up just a couple of townlands east of Derrynagower, so I can offer some additional info.

    You can see more information about the townland of Derrynagower (including an interactive map) at this link:

    https://www.townlands.ie/mayo/clanmorris/mayo/kilcolman/derrynagower/

    There are links at that site to other info about the townland, including a link to the record for the townland in Griffith's valuation (mid-1800's), where a John Melia is listed as a tenant in the townland, as you can see at this link:

    https://www.askaboutireland.ie/griffith-valuation/index.xml?action=doNa…

    Since he's the only Melia listed, he was likely the father of your Patrick Mealia.

    Mealia and Melia are two ways that the North Connacht Irish surname Ó Máille was anglicized.  It was perhaps most often anglicized as the well-known name O'Malley (less often as O'Mailey), but the Mealia and Melia forms are not uncommon in Mayo.

    As you can see from the first link above, Derrynagower is located in the civil parish of Mayo, but the local Catholic parish is called Mayo Abbey.  Civil parishes evolved into administrative districts, and do not always have the same boundaries (or even the same names) as the more modern Catholic parishes (which are often larger, encompassing some or all of several civil parishes).  Comparing the available maps, though, Derrynagower does appear to be in the Catholic parish of Mayo Abbey. The parish records for Mayo Abbey can be viewed online at this link, and you can download copies of any relevant pages there:

    https://registers.nli.ie/parishes/1076

    The records go back to 1841 for marriages and baptisms, and earlier for some marriages, so you may be able to find baptismal records for Catherine and her father, and perhaps even a marriage record for John Melia, who may be Catherine's grandfather.  That should give you her grandmother's name as well.  Take with a grain of salt any year or age references you have, because people in those days were often not certain when they were born.  If you do not have any success, you could try the parish records for Kilcolman, the Catholic parish just to the east (where my great-grandmother was baptized), because the boundary between the two parishes looks to be very close to Derrynagower.  I have sometimes found relatives baptized in adjoining parishes, and you can access the records for that parish through the map at the last link I gave you.

    When the counties were created (at a fairly late stage in many places), the county was often named after a major town in the area, and County Mayo's name was taken from Mayo Abbey.

    kevin45sfl

    Wednesday 12th Apr 2023, 11:50PM
  • Thank you so much everyone for all the information! So impressed with all your responses!

    How can I find out more information about John Mealia who was Patrick's son and was born probably in the 1920s---Patrick died in 1955? 

    The O'Malley Clan has a DNA project to see who are descendants of Grace O'Malley but it has to be on the male line. 

    thanks much

    Mary Kathleen

    Mary Kathleen

    Thursday 13th Apr 2023, 05:55PM

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