Share This:

Looking for ancestry/family of my wife's 3x great-grandfather Thomas Nugent, who per Ancestry was born about 1807 in Tandargee (Armagh). He became a soldier in the 36th Regiment of Foot (his regimental number 546), which was posted to Ireland in 1827. He had enlisted at age 20 on 3 Nov 1827.  In 1839 he married Mary Ross in Greenwich, London. Pensioned on 27 July 1847, afterwards lived in the Woolwich Arsenal district of Greenwich, London, occupation Principal Warder, likely in a jail. Died sometime after 1881, likely in London. Any ideas as to him or his family?

G. v. Studnitz

Saturday 6th Mar 2021, 07:55PM

Message Board Replies

  • Thomas’s birth was long before the start of statutory birth registration in Ireland (1864). Normally in that situation you search church records for a baptisms. You haven’t said what denomination he was but I’ll guess Catholic. 

    There are 2 townlands called Tandragee in Armagh. There are no Nugents  in Ballymore (which has one) but I do see Nugents in Lisnadill parish. The tithe applotment records in 1832 list a number including one farm held by Peter Nugent in Tandragee. That could be Thomas’s family.

    http://www.irishgenealogyhub.com/armagh/tithe-applotments/lisnadill-parish.php

    No Nugents in the townland by the time of Griffiths Valuation in 1864.

    http://www.irishgenealogyhub.com/armagh/griffiths-valuation/lisnadill-parish.php

    The tithes were a tax on land, so that was primarily farmers. Servants, labourers, people staying with relatives etc weren’t listed (because they had no land) so there might have been other Nugents around, just not listed. 

    No Nugents in Tandragee in the 1901 census:

    http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/pages/1901/Armagh/Lisnadill/Tandr…

    Statutory birth registration didn’t start in Ireland till 1864. Prior to that you normally rely on church records. I assume the Nugents were Catholic. Unfortunately the parish records for that area (RC parish of Kilclooney) don’t start till 1844 so you are unlikely to find any record of Thomas’s birth, or of his relationship to Peter. 

    There are few other records that might include a reference to Thomas, so researching him in Ireland may prove hard going.

    Possibly DNA testing may also be a way of matching with others who have additional information about where the family originate. Family Tree DNA reportedly has more people with Ulster roots than any other company. That obviously increases the chances of finding a match. You might want to try them or, if you have already tested, you can transfer your results to them for no fee.

    The North of Ireland Family History Society is running an Ulster DNA project in conjunction with FTDNA and can offer testing kits at a reduced price.  http://www.nifhs.org (Go to DNA project on the website).

    Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘

    Saturday 6th Mar 2021, 09:35PM
  • Elwyn, thank you for your reply and information, Thomas Nugent did indeed come from the Tandragee in Lisnadill parish. I will do as you suggest and transfer my wife's DNA (we tested with 23andMe) to FT DNA. At least we have some information on Thomas, another of my wife's 2x great-grandfathers is far more problematic: Patrick Gibbons who appeared in Washington County, New York State, sometime before 1864, and came from "somewhere" in Ireland, with his death certificate from 1901 listing parents William and Julia but no more specific origin, though a Irish researcher opined he may have come from the area of The Neale in County Mayo. Thanks again.

    G. v. Studnitz

    Sunday 7th Mar 2021, 08:20AM

Post Reply