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I would like to know if James Hogan was a son and brother to those noted below.  James arrived as a Bounty Immigrant  on the William Metcalf, from Cork in August 1841, carrying all unmarried males.  There were no sponsors for this ship. 

James was from Tipperary and was Roman Catholic.

 

Martin Hogan (age 74) and his three sons, Malachi/y (26), William (22) and John (20)   who were transported for manslaughter to Australia in 1836 on the Captain Cook 3. 

Convict Indents note Martin had 2 daughters and one son still at home.  I am wondering if this son was James.

They were tried at Clonmel according to the Clonmel Constitution 15 and 22 March 1836 where it was stated they came from (Townland) Shra.

Martin was married to Ann Kennedy and they were all Roman Catholic.

The 1826 Tithe Applotment Book of the Parish of Finnoe (10 years prior to crime) notes) notes a Martin Hogan (ref sheet 2, Valuation & Applotment sheet p.10).     

faye7hogan

Thursday 18th Oct 2012, 03:26AM

Message Board Replies

  • I have forwarded your request to a volunteer who may be able to advise/assist you.

    All the best.

     

    cynoconnor

    Tuesday 23rd Oct 2012, 11:13AM
  •  

     

     

    Finnoe is a Civil Parish in the barony of Lower Ormond, County Tipperary North, and province of Munster, 1.50 miles (W.S.W.) from Borrisokane.The  Irish Family History Foundation     http://www.rootsireland.ie/ Tipperary North  have Birth, Marriage and Death records for North Tipperary online. (Fee) 

     The following links may also help   http://www.igp-web.com/tipperary/Census/finnoe.htm  (Sragh is a Townland.)        http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/ 

    If you know where James died in Australia the following link may help you find an Obituary for him. Trove Digitised Newspapers.http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper

    Best wishes..

    Borrisokane Tipperary

    Wednesday 24th Oct 2012, 01:24PM
  • Hi Faye,  my HOGAN and DARCEY ancestors lived on the adjacent townland to Sragh. It was Grailillane (Gralagane).  My ancestor Michael Darcey emigrated to Qld Australia sometime before 1870.  A Margaret KENNEDY is a sponsor on one of the  Darcey baptisms.

    news4kaz

    Friday 13th Jun 2014, 11:28AM
  • Hi Faye,  my HOGAN and DARCEY ancestors lived on the adjacent townland to Sragh. It was Grailillane (Gralagane).  My ancestor Michael Darcey emigrated to Qld Australia sometime before 1870.  A Margaret KENNEDY is a sponsor on one of the  Darcey baptisms.

    news4kaz

    Friday 13th Jun 2014, 11:28AM
  • Hi,

    I can see this post is a few years old but I am hoping to clarify some connections if possible. The William Hogan named above is my 3rd great grandfather, he and his brothers and father were transported for manslaughter and eventually settled around Bathurst, NSW. 

    In regards to the son still in Ireland, I have found an article regarding a Stephen Hogan and his wife Winifred Cahill (alias Michael and Winifred Darcy) who were found near Manchester, England and arrested for a murder in 1835 in Ireland. There are census records of an Irish family Michael and Winifred Darcy with their daughters Ann and Mary living in Manchester in 1851.

    Article is below:

    From The Hobarton Mercury, 4th July 1855

    Trial for Murder Committed in 1835.

    At the Tipperary assizes a man named Stephen Hogan was arraigned before the grand jury, charged with Committing murder so long ago as 1835. It appears that the person who was murdered was a bailiff, and that having in the year 1835 gone to execute some law process at the residence of the male prisoner and his brothers, near Borrisokane, he was attacked and killed. Three persons named Hogan were convicted at the spring assizes, 1836, but the parties charged at the assizes fled the country, and eluded the vigilance of the police until the present year when they were arrested in Manchester, near which place Stephen Hogan carried on business as a pedlar. They were brought over to this country in January last, the female prisoner Winifred Cahill, protesting that she was " English," and never in lreland. However most of the witnesses, the coroner, doctor, and other parties concerned in the case, have died in the interim since the occurrence, and the grand jury had to ignore the bills from the want of sufficient evidence.

    I am trying to narrow down the townland and parish that my ancestors lived before they were transported, and ideally the names of the two Hogan sisters also. I'm not sure if the above news article is about the same family but it all seems to fit to me at this stage. Hope someone can help me shed some light!

    Thanks, Gemma

    Gemma

    Thursday 5th Jan 2017, 01:29AM

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