The Marriage of John Clancy and Alice Bryan
Inistioge, County Kilkenny
|
S. S. Cephalonia |
Although John and Alice had a large family, and their first son Michael John was born on July 22, 1900, a mere 10 months after landing in Boston, I was never able to locate a marriage record for them in Massachusetts. I had looked in Boston, where they first lived, then in Lynn, where they eventually settled. When I was in Dublin last year I looked in Kilkenny, but there was no record marriage there either.
I expanded my search and found their marriage on September 12, 1899 in Queenstown, County Cork. Their names, age, condition and father's names matched. Since the ship left Liverpool on September 12, it appears they were married just before boarding by Fr. Thomas Madigan. Alice's name may have been listed as O'Brien on the manifest because the ticket was purchased in that name before she married. Residence at time of marriage for both is listed as Harbour Row, which is in the area of the docks.
Cobh is almost 90 miles from their home in Inistioge. On the map at left, Inistioge is in the upper right hand corner and Queenstown in the lower left. Even if they had planned to emigrate, if the marriage was approved by the families, you would expect it to be in the local parish.
Alice's mother had died earlier that year, and most of her siblings were grown. Her sister Mary had already married. Her brother Patrick and sister Johanna had both emigrated to Boston and married there. That left Edward, Kate, Nellie, William and Michael at home. Nellie and William eventually left to joined Alice in Lynn, Massachusetts. Her father may not have wanted to her to leave, with five children still at home. Why they were married in Cobh may never be clear, but it appears they eloped.
From now on, I'll take the possibility of elopement into account when looking for a marriage!
Pictured on the right, circa 1940, from left to right is Alice (Clancy) Hyde, Alice's daughter, Mary Scanlon, Nellie's daughter, Nellie (Bryan) Scanlon and Alice (Bryan) Clancy.
Copyright 2013 Kathleen Sullivan. All Rights Reserved
Great job! Kathie
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kat, for stopping by and visiting my blog. Glad to meet you. Hope your research trip has been successful!
ReplyDelete