Duplicate post today from "When I was 69" because it looks at my ancestors from Ireland...maybe
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For St. Patrick's Day...from an area with a few Irish descendants, in western North Carolina.
Have a happy St. Paddy's Day all! Raise a glass of green beer to cheer everyone for a good new year ahead. May all experience peace, abundance, good health, love and joy!
Slàinte ! To your health!
And for the non-alcoholic among us, the same wishes apply!
A shamrock blooms in my window on my desk, but it's a ruddy version, so doesn't remind one of the Isle of Green!
My roots include the Scotch-Irish, which means some ancestors were born in Ireland, though they had been immigrants from Scotland.
One ancestor is:
John Francis Beattie II, (1718-1790) b. 1718 Killishandra, Cavan County, Ireland, d. 18 Aug 1790 Emory, Washington County, Virginia
Another descendant attached this coat of arms to his page in Ancestry. (yes a tiny file and there're no details about it.)
And the more I look into his life story on Ancestry, the more confused I got. A will written by one John Beattie says his wife is Margared, and he had 8 children which are named. He died in Virginia.
Another John Beattie lived in New York.
And there were 3 different wives names given, Ellen or Eleanor, Martha, and Margaret/Margared.
My ancestress, Margaret Beattie (1762-1861) married a man named Rev. Thomas "Junior" Hansford (1758-1841). They were both born in Virginia and married there in 1788. There are 13 children listed, but some duplicate names with different birth dates...so they may actually be the same persons.
Right after their marriage they moved to the frontier of Kentucky, where they raised all their children and are the Hansford parents buried in Crab Orchard KY.
So whatever the connection to Ireland may be, these are some American documented ancestors. I can sometime go through all the siblings of my direct line and sort out who was duplicated, but that's for another day.
Today (Wednesday March 12 while I'm writing this) is warm again and I'm going to enjoy some of the green shoots that are finally showing after the greys of winter.
Happy St. Patrick's Day if you celebrate, with or without any Irish roots.
Many large cities have a parade!