James was born in Antrim, I have been DNA matching to Glen Arm and Ballycastle. He was born 1825-1827, he was Catholic and emigrated in 1849 to Boston and later settled in Chicago. As soon as he emigrated he married in 1849 to an Elizabeth "Eliza" O'Neill born 1830 and I am supposing she was from the same area. Names associated with her were McAllister and Murray. There first born son was Robert born in 1849 and other sons were Hugh, James, John, Joseph and Charles. James died in 1895 in Waukegan, IL. He was listed as a farmer. Would love to hear from anyone with information on this family, I have very little to go on and I apologize for that.
jcarolan
Saturday 17th Sep 2022, 05:39PMMessage Board Replies
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jcarolan,
The surname McNeill is fairly common around the Ballycastle area. Most are descended from Scots who came over from Gigha and Kintyre. A good background read is: “Family names in the Glens of Antrim” by Brian S Turner. Plenty on McNeill, O’Neill, McAllister (another Scottish name) and Murray.
Writing about the McNeills, Turner says: ”For various reasons members of these southern Argyll families made their way to the Antrim coast. They may have come as fighters, farmers, fishermen or migratory harvest labourers. There are 11 recorded in the 1669 Hearth Money Roll, in four parishes – Culfeightrin 5, Ramoan 2, Ardclinis 1 and Tickmacrevan 3. This dispersal of settlement is similar to the McKays, and map 24 shows the modern distribution of these 2 families in the Glens is very similar.” (Turner page 116.)
So that information tells you that in 1669 there were 11 McNeill households in the area where your own ancestor apparently lived.
Your problem is that these parishes really don’t have records for the years you need. Ramoan start in 1838, Culfeightrin 1825, Ardclinis & Tickmacrevan have no records before 1872. So tracing the family will be difficult.
Bill McAfee’s site has the 1803 agricultural census, so you can see where McNeill families were living then, but there’s no direct way of saying which is yours. http://billmacafee.com
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 ☘
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Thank you so much for the reply. I was told years ago we came originally from Gigha. You’ve given me some good leads, thanks so much.
john
jcarolan
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John,
Gigha to Ballycastle is about 20 miles, so no great distance at all.
Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘