===========================

Mairead Finucane.

 

A NEW principal has been appointed at Presentation Secondary School in Tralee.

 

The Board of Management has announced the appointment of Ms. Mairéad Finucane as the new Principal. She follows on from Ms. Mary Kennelly, who recently retired from the post, and Ms. Chrissie Kelly who was acting principal.

 

Originally from Kilflynn, Mairéad is a former student of Moyderwell Secondary School. Mairéad has, for the past seventeen years, been working with the Limerick and Clare Education and Training Board.

 

 

“I am very humbled, honoured, and excited to be appointed to the position of Principal of Presentation Tralee,” said Mairéad.

 

“I look forward to continuing the great work and building on the proud tradition of Presentation Tralee. I look forward to meeting and working with all the students, staff, parents/guardians, the Board of Management, the Parents Association, and all groups that are part of school life in Presentation Tralee. Ní neart go cur le chéile,” she added.

 

Mairéad takes up her appointment on Monday, January 16.

 

Mairéad graduated from St. Catherine’s College, Sion Hill, Dublin (Trinity College) with a B. ED in Home Economics and Religious Education in 2001.

 

She graduated from the University of Limerick with a Master’s in Education (M. Ed) in 2013 and a Postgraduate Diploma in School Leadership (PDSL) in 2022.

 

During her career to date, Ms. Finucane has been an Assistant Principal and Teacher of Home Economics and Religious Education at Vocational School Abbeyfeale/ Coláiste Íde agus Iosef from 2005-2019 and Coláiste Chiaráin, Croom from 2019-2023.

 

She has also worked as an Advising Examiner with the State Examinations Commission (SEC) and as a Lecturer with Mary Immaculate College (U.L) and St. Angela’s College Sligo (NUIG).

http://traleetoday.ie/new-principal-appointed-at-presentation-secondary-school-tralee/?fbclid=IwAR05oV43ZVcubWu7AoiLbps_iWIEkc2kl_mD97sytEsLmlAWvK4lTt20Xuk

====================

From Listowel Connection

 

 

 

>>>>> 

 

 

 

Recently I had an email from a lady called Susan Twomey of California who traces her McKenna ancestors back to North Kerry. Here are some extracts from our correspondence.

 

 

 

"My great-great grandfather Patrick McKenna from Listowel was born c. 1802, married Sarah/Sally M Stack from Duagh...they married c. 1832 and had their 14 children in Ireland before moving to America c. 1862 and settling in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.  Pat died in 1865 in Negaunee, Marquette County, Michigan. Pat and Sally were my mother's great grandparents."

 

.........

 

"Another cousin Sister Mary Brendan Brosnan who came from Kerry to America when she was 13 to enter the Mercy Convent in Los Angeles was somehow connected with a Father Hegarty also from Kerry, priest of the San Diego diocese here, who is responsible for the gravestone for Thomas and Jane McKenna and their children in the cemetery of Kilshenane (sp?).  Sister Mary Brendan was always part of our family gatherings when I was growing up in southern California.  I am not sure how she was related either...but she was close to my grandmother Jane/Jenny McKenna Lynch, my mother's mother. "

 

 

 

.........

 

 

 

Re: Brosnans - my relative was born in 1897, Mary Elizabeth Brosnan, from Knochreagh, Irremore, Listowel, Kerry.  Parents John and Nellie (Ellen?). She came to America in 1908 to join her aunt  (Sister Mary Pius) who had joined the Sisters of Mercy some years before.  Mary Elizabeth/Sister Mary Brendan Brosnan was 13 when she arrived, but they would not let her enter the community as a postulant until she was 15, in 1910.  She died in 1970 while visiting relatives in Philadephia, Pennsylvania...she had been living in Burlingame, near San Francisco, California.  She was a teacher most of her life. Last year her community sent me a copy of a short biography of her...I am happy to send you a copy of the couple of pages.

 

 

 

..........

 

Susan was as good as her word and sent me the account of Sr. Mary Brendan Brosnan's life. I'll post it on the blog tomorrow.

 

Posted by Listowel Connection at 07:30 No comments:

 

Labels: McKenna's, Sr Mary Brendan Brosnan, Vincent Carmody

 

LC Dec 2012

 

======================================================

 

 

 

>>>> 

 

 

 

A Kennelly travels back to his North Kerry roots

 

 

 

Senior Editor of The Huffington Post Craig Kanalley recently journeyed from the US to Ireland to explore his family heritage. Here, he shares the highlights of the experience, which include meeting relatives, touring the countryside and learning a few things about the land of his ancestors.

 

Since I was a kid, I've dreamed of going to Ireland. My last name is Irish and I've long been curious about my roots, particularly my Irish heritage, as I never knew my paternal grandfather. He was nearly 100 percent Irish. When my Dad found a great deal on LivingSocial for a trip for one to Ireland (through Great Value Vacations), and passed it along, I felt it was tailor-made for me. It allowed the flexibility of a rental car to drive the country and B&B vouchers to stay anywhere I chose. It would allow me to visit townlands my ancestors are from (and that's what I did, including Eyrecourt, Co. Galway; Killanena, Co. Clare; Tinahely, Co. Wicklow). When I booked the trip, I also tried something with hopes of finding more about my roots -- a DNA test. To my surprise, the FamilyTreeDNA results came back in June 2012 -- just five months before my trip -- with stunning information. I came back with a close match -- a living man in Ireland today with the surname Kennelly. (This is my surname -- the spelling changed after our branch arrived in Canada and the United States.) DNA traces your male line only. So if you go back to my father's father's father, etc., and you do the same with this man, we go back to a single Kennelly who likely lived in the 1700s, according to the test. What luck this was. Not only did I need a living relative in Ireland to get a result like this, but he too would have taken a DNA test. What are the chances? I immediately shot an email to the email address listed for this Tom Kennelly (ironically, my immigrant ancestor, who came from Ireland to Canada in 1849, was also named Thomas Kennelly). It ends up the email went to a cousin of his, Helen Smith in Australia. She helped me connect with Tom though. In August, I spoke with him by phone. On Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012, I visited him at his home in County Limerick(!) and met his lovely wife Nora, daughter Margaret, and grandson Jayden.Our Family Reunion We spoke about many things when we met. Of course, we talked about our families. We went through old pictures and were blown away by the resemblance between our families especially in some of the older photos. We talked about our family's medical histories, and we found similarities there too. We discussed cultural differences, what it's like growing up and living in the United States, what it's like in Ireland.

 

 

 

 

 

Some of the conversation was emotionally riveting.

 

"What do you remember about that day?" Margaret asked me about 9-11 while I was seated at the Kennelly's kitchen table. We also talked about the economy that is in so much trouble, particularly in Ireland. The need to create new jobs. How the Irish people are struggling, and how the United States hasn't been immune to the global economic crisis either. There are so many young people in Ireland without job opportunities ahead of them. What will come of them? "Emigration," Margaret said. There are few other choices. After Nora served me the most wonderful tea and homemade bread, Tom and Margaret walked me to the old Kennelly family home -- from the 1800s! It still stands near their current home. Tom explained that he still works to keep it up. It's part of history. A lot of old homes like it, from that time period, have since fallen apart across Ireland, in ruins. He doesn't want that to happen to this place. "What did you learn from that DNA test?" I asked Tom, his wife Nora and daughter Margaret. They learned the County Kerry Kennelly's are relatives of ours. Brendan Kennelly, a well-known Irish writer, is of that group, and he's related, they told me. I asked if there might also be relation with Tadgh Kennelly, a famous Gaelic/Australian football player; he's from County Kerry as well. Oh, yes, absolutely, they said. After Nora served me the most wonderful tea and homemade bread, Tom and Margaret walked me to the old Kennelly family home -- from the 1800s! It still stands near their current home. That means I have roots that lie in County Kerry too. "Kennelly -- Kerry," it was a familiar refrain I heard all week in Ireland, whether in Dublin or Galway. "You're good," I would tell the locals as I met them across the country. But since my own immigrant ancestor was actually from Co. Limerick, I wondered if I truly had roots there. Thanks to my meeting with Tom, I confirmed I do. I am related to the Kerry Kennelly's. And there are so many of them.On to County Kerry It was getting dark, but how often am I in Ireland? I took a risk by driving out of my way to County Kerry after this exciting discovery (I was already an hour from my bed & breakfast; this would be further out). I knew I'd come back at nighttime. I'm glad I took that chance. Not only did I make it back safely, I added to my experiences in a really awesome way. After punching up Kennelly in the GPS, something popped up for Moyvane, Co. Kerry. It just said "Kennelly." It could be a pub, perhaps a townland even, it could be anything. It was a hardware store. I smiled as I pulled up. I waited patiently as a worker behind the counter helped other customers. When he was alone, I walked up and asked if he knew if the owner was around. "I am the owner," he said. "You're a Kennelly?" I asked. It was probably a bizarre question given the store's name, but he simply answered in the affirmative. "I am too," I said. I then explained I was visiting Ireland from the United States, looking for my roots. How I met a cousin in Co. Limerick, and he told me I had links to Co. Kerry. He seemed interested, and we chatted for a bit. I then asked for a photo. He said sure. Before leaving, I explained to him how my cousin said we're related to Brendan Kennelly. He's from Ballylongford, the hardware store owner told me. Just 10 minutes up the road. I asked about the "Kennelly's" pub I've heard about. That's in Ballylongford too, he said. It was going to be dark soon, but I might never be just 10 minutes away again. I thanked him, he gave me his business card, and I headed on to Ballylongford. I pulled up in the small town and lit up with a smile when I saw a Kennelly's auto shop. But it wasn't the pub. Then I saw it across the street from the auto shop. "Kennelly's." The pub. I promptly parked the car and walked out. The pub was closed. No one around. I got my picture in front of it anyway. I then crossed over to the auto shop. No one around there either. Just before leaving, I thought I'd try circling the building. It was there that I saw a little office with a man inside. I gave him a wave at the window and smiled, to show I mean no harm. He came outside to meet me. "Do you know the Kennelly's around here?" I asked. He nodded with a slight hint of a smile but I couldn't be sure. "Are you a Kennelly?" I asked. It was an awkward line of questioning but I wasn't sure how else to start the conversation. "Yes, I am," he said. I then explained the same way I explained with Mike Kennelly, the owner of the hardware shop. He opened up, introduced himself as Tim Kennelly, and we chatted for a bit. He was extremely knowledgeable about the Kennelly's so I was really fortunate to meet him. He then told me about his uncle -- none other than Brendan Kennelly himself. And how his parents owned the pub across the street. Brendan Kennelly is in Dublin now, he said, but from Ballylongford. He showed me a quote from Brendan hanging up at his business. Ballylongford was the inspiration behind the quote, he told me, and he showed me the exact spot Brendan was inspired by. Besides his name being Tim, he said his grandfather was Tim too. Of course, I have an uncle named Tim Kanalley. It's a small world after all.This article originally appeared in The Huffington Post.

 

 

 

Craig Kanally's lineage

 

 

 

Lineage:

 

 

 

Thomas Kennelly b. abt. 1820 Ireland --> James Bernard Kanalley b. 1868 Canada    Wallace James Kanalley b. 1902 Ohio --> Kenneth Wallace Kanalley b. 1932 N.Y.                     Patrick Kenneth Kanalley --> Craig Patrick Kanalley

 

 

 

Locations: Co. Limerick, Ireland; Cobourg, Ontario, Canada; Cleveland, Ohio; Buffalo, N.Y.;   Rochester, N.Y.; New York, N.Y.; Toronto, Ontario, Canada; San Francisco, Calif.

 

 

 

Surname Variations: Kanaley, Kennelly, Kenneally, Kenealy, Kinneely, Kinaley

 

 

 

Immigration: Thomas Kennelly arrived in Canada from Ireland in 1849, first settling in  Asphodel Township, not far from Peterborough.  He eventually settled in Cobourg and    married Rose Flynn on Nov. 26, 1852

 

 

 

.Immigrant Children: 9 - John, Michael, Ann, Mary, Isabella, Thomas, Ellen, James, Martin

 

 

 

Associated Families: Flynn, Cox, Pierce, Hutton, Horgan, Wallace, Cook, Raines, Young

 

 

 

 

 

===================================

 

THE story of a courageous priest who took on New York gangsters and inspired a classic film is the subject of a TV documentary.

 

For over a decade, Fr John Corridan, a Jesuit priest who was the son of emigrants from Kerry, challenged Irish mobsters and corrupt union officials who controlled the New York waterfront during the 1940s and 1950s.

 

 

 

His one-man crusade struck at the heart of organised crime in the city and exposed extortion, corruption and murder.

 

 

 

His campaign for the rights of dock workers led to the 1954 movie On the Waterfront, starring Marlon Brando, which won eight Academy awards.

 

 

 

Fr Corridan’s father, John Corridan, of Duagh, Listowel, emigrated to New York at the turn of the last century. His mother, Johanna Shanahan, came from a small farm in Lisheenbawn, near Castleisland.

 

 

 

Coinciding with the centenary of Fr Corridan’s birth, a documentary chronicling his remarkable crusade has been made by RTÉ Nuacht journalist Seán Mac an tSíthigh, a native of the west Kerry gaeltacht.

 

https://listowelconnection.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2012-09-19T07:30:00%2B01:00&max-results=7&start=70&by-date=false

 

===================================

 

 

 

The Kennelly family Woodford

 

 

 

The following are excerpts from The Lamp 1914;

 

 

 

Dr. Margaret Lamont of Ashcroft . BC, was the first woman physician to go to the mission fields  under the Catholic Medical Mission Propaganda , she went on the Empress of Japan on July 23rd 1914 from Vancouver. The Rev M Kennelly SJ who hailed from Woodford in Listowel wrote from Shanghai, China to Fr Paul of Greymoor about the recent arrival of Dr. Lamont and her need of help and difficulty with the language.

 

Macmillan published a book in 1925 under the title Catholic Medical Missions by Floyd Keeler.

 

 

 

 

 

Fr Patrick Kennelly born, Listowel son of Pat Kennelly and Mary Purcell was V.G. stationed in Warrnambool; at Hamilton 1902, Clunes; 1906-10,Colac 1920-1928, V.G. & Mons at Warrnambool 1932-47. Died 15 Feb. 1947 aged 78 years, brother of Martin above.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Warrnambool, Victoria 1940

 

Sisters of St John of God first went to Warrnambool in Western Victoria in 1939. The parish priest, Father Patrick Kennelly who had played a central role in the foundation of St John of God Hospital in Ballarat, had been swift to realize Warrnambool needed a Catholic hospital.

 

He purchased a house and land and gave it to the Sisters where a hosital was quickly established. As was the case in the opening of other St John of God hospitals at that time, emphasis was placed on the fact that the hospital be opened to people of all faiths.

 

www.sjog.org.au The Sisters continue to live and minister to the people of Warrnambool.

 

 

 

Bishop Foley opened Catholic School in Sept. 1932, for Dean Kennelly at Dennington it cost £1,500 , there was only £200 debt left and a collection at the opening ceremony  amounted to £ 136.

 

 

 

Rev Mgr Patrick Kennelly   Clunes, Ballarat, Colac, Warrnambool, etc,died,15 Feb 1947.

 

 

 

=====================================

 

"Hello,

 

I googled historian and Listowel and it sent me to your blog.

 

 I am from the Boston area and interested in local famlies of 18th century Listowel.

 

 I am particularly wondering if anyone can tell me about the Bolton's crossroads area and which Bolton family it is named after.

 

I descend from a Mr Bolton (perhaps John) who married Mary Justice prior to 1752. His wife's family was descended from Eliott (McEligott?) and Fitzgerald of Castle Lick families. I believe the Boltons of Listowel might have descended from Sir Richard Bolton, the 17th century judge and Chanceller or Ireland, possibly a branch located to Mallow where most of the Justices were living.

 

 

 

I'd appreciate any pointers in the right direction.

 

 

 

Thanks,

 

Jonah McKenna Moss

 

Boston, Massachusetts"

 

 

=============================================

 

 

 

DEATH has occurred on 30th December 2020 of Siobhan Tobin of Main St., Abbeyfeale. Daughter of the late Danny and Mai Tobin and predeceased by her brothers Cyril and Richard. Deeply regretted by her sister Philomena Gillan (Isle of Wight) and brother Mattie (Dublin), nephews, nieces, brother in law Shaun, sisters in law, Traoine and Mona, extended Tobin families and Kennelly family, Knockanure.

 

---------------------------------------

 

My sincerest sympathies on the sad passing of Siobhan to her sister Phjlomena  brother Mattie and extended family.

 

Siobhan was in our care just 13 years and she was a real lady and an absolute pleasure to look after.Siobhan will be solely missed.

 

Ar dheis de go raibh a anam dilis.

 

MarieLeahy  co Killeline Nursing Home  NCW

 

 

 

-------------------------------------------

 

Rest In Peace Aunty Siobhan. Love to all my family.

 

Peggie, Michael, Alisha, Patrick and Emily-Therese

 

Auckland, New Zealand

 

Peggie Tobin Joines

 

==================================

 

Our deepest sympathy to the Tobin family on the sad passing of Siobhan. May her gentle soul rest in peace. Have many fond memories of meeting her on the way into the cinema.

 

Maura, Dan O Donnell & family, The Hill

 

--------------------------------------------

 

Sincete condolences may she rest in peace.

 

Tim & Imelda Cusack Patrickswell

 

-----------------------------------------------------------------

 

With deepest sympathy to the Tobin  Family on the death of Siobhan. May she rest In peace.

 

Matt Kennelly and family  Cloth Hall  Listowel

 

Dr Siobhán Kennelly (grad RCSI 1998) is a Consultant Geriatrician in Connolly Hospital & CHO9 and Honorary Clinical Senior Lecturer, RCSI. She has been National Clinical Advisor in Social Care with the HSE since 2015 and within that role has been clinical lead on the Integrated Care Programme for Older Persons. Her clinical and research interests include the care of older patients in community settings including residential care, the development of integrated care pathways in older person’s services and end of life care.

 

https://www.icpop.org/our-team

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Title

 

Evaluation of the Connolly Hospital Dementia Pathways Project

 

Research team

 

Prof Anne-Marie Brady, Dr Mairéad Bracken-Scally, Dr Brian Keogh, Mr Brendan Kennelly, Dr Louise Daly, Dr Geralyn Hynes, Dr Amanda Drury, Dr Aurelia Ciblis, Prof Mary McCarron

 

Results 2018

 

https://www.genio.ie/publications/evaluation-connolly-dementia-pathways

 

Peter Francis Cronin1889–1954

 

Birth 15 JAN 1889 • Scartaglin, County Kerry, Ireland

 

Death 10 JUL 1954 • Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA

 

Cornelius Cronin   1854–1897-    Ellen Leary   1859–1893

 

Spouse & Children-  Edna D O'Brien- 1888–1937

 

    Alice F Cronin 1913–2008

 

    Frances Cronin 1915–1920

 

    Edward Joseph Cronin  1919–1981

 

    Rev Peter Francis Cronin Jr  1923–1996

 

    Mary Bernadette Cronin 1926–1999

 

    Rev Vincent Ignatius Cronin  1928–1999

 

 

 

Daniel O'Donoghue- 1843–1913

 

Birth ABT 1843 • Tooreenagowan, Brosna, County Kerry, Ireland

 

Death 9 APR 1913 • Toureen, Duagh, Kerry, Ireland

 

Parents-  James O'Donoghue  1781–1854-  Johanna Connor  1803–1880

 

Spouse  Margaret Kennelly 1846–1927

 

  Children;  Michael Joseph O'Donoghue  1878–1956

 

    Johanna O'Donoghue  1879–1879

 

    Margaret O'Donoghue 1880–1881

 

    James O'Donoghue  1880–1882

 

    Cornelius O'Donoghue 1882–1902

 

    Maurice O'Donoghue  1883–1948

 

    Rev. Patrick J O'Donoghue   1885–1944

 

    Mary Anne O'Donoghue  1887–1960

 

Kerryman North Edition, Thursday, January 05, 2006; Section: News

 

Listowel man dies suddenly at holiday home

 

BY AIDAN O’CONNOR

 

 

 

THE towns of Listowel and Killarney were united in an outpouring of disbelief and grief at the loss of Cornelius A Kennelly from Pallas in Listowel who died suddenly on Monday, aged just 42 years.

 

Married to Ann Marie O’Shea from Killarney, Mr Kennelly died suddenly on Monday afternoon as he and his wife tidied up their holiday house in Glenbeigh.

 

His death has come as a complete shock to his family and many friends all over the county.

 

But Cornelius’s death comes as particularly striking loss to his wife and his two children, Emma (6) and David (3).

 

As an accountant and business executive, Cornelius was a brilliant man, having rose to one of the top positions with the world’s largest health care company, Johnson and Johnson.

 

In a short but established and recognised career, Cornelius is acknowledged as one of Ireland’s most successful exports to multinationals operating on a global scale.

 

His latest promotion to executive level with Johnson and Johnson had him responsible for key elements of the company’s operations in Europe and the United States.

 

But ahead of his professional brilliance, Cornelius was remembered this week as a kind and loving father, husband, son and sibling. He was also a very proud Kerryman.

 

At a time when his family are trying to make sense of his untimely death, they are finding some consolation in that Cornelius and his family had come home from Brussels for two weeks to Kerry for the Christmas holidays.

 

It was a week longer than Cornelius and Ann Marie would normally spend at home. It was also a happy and memorable fortnight that will forever remain in the hearts and minds of the Kennelly and O’Shea families.

 

As a sporting enthusiast, Cornelius’s love of GAA remained etched in his heart from the moment he left Listowel to follow a distinguished career.

 

A cousin of the late Tim Kennelly, Cornelius did not pick up his love of GAA from the streets of Brussels. He was passionate about Kerry football and waited child-like for any opportunity that arose when he could return home to witness successive green and gold armies in search of Munster and All-Ireland glory.

 

He was also one of those responsible for founding the Ross Golf Club in Killarney – the picturesque and coveted nine-hole course.

 

Despite the appreciated efforts of local Glenbeigh nurse Mary O’Sullivan and other medical professionals, Cornelius lost his fight to stay alive early on Monday afternoon. His wife Ann Marie was by his side.

 

He is also survived by his parents Matt and Nora, brother Ned and sisters Siobhán, Mary and Ann.

 

Cornelius’s remains were brought from Listowel to his family’s (O’Shea’s) funeral home in Killarney for a family rosary on Tuesday night.

 

Removal is from O’Shea’s funeral home, Killarney, on this Wednesday at 6.30pm to the Cathedral and burial on Thursday after 10.30am Mass at the Cathedral to Aghadoe Lawn cemetery.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

vikki1959 (View posts)

 

Posted: 18 Jan 2014 12:06AM     

 

Classification: Query

 

Edited: 18 Jan 2014 12:08AM

 

I was very interested in the posts about Jeremiah Kennelly. I too live in Australia and I'm wondering if my Kennelly/Kennaly relatives are related in some way.

 

 

 

My second great grandfather was Jeremiah Kennelly or Kennaly. He was born in London around 1814 and his father was also Jeremiah and he was married to Harriot Hook.. I don't know where he was born as I can't find any birth records for him.

 

 

 

My second great grandfather immigrated from London to Hobart,Tas in 1842 with his wife Sarah. They had with them two of their children - John Jeremiah Kennaly and Sarah Ann Kennaly. There were two other daughters, Harriot and Emma who where with them in London but appear to have not come with them on the boat to Hobart.

 

 

 

Any info would be greatly appreciated,

 

 

 

Vikki Kennelly

 

. Jimmy Deenihan was a great driving force at Seanchai and Listowel heritage Town.

Met a Kennelly in his 80’s, he came first to Listowel the town of his ancestors about 40 years ago and met J B Keane and now this time he brought his grandchildren to see Listowel. When he came the first time J B Keane introduced him to Ml Kennelly the Travel Agent across the street from J B. He told me his grandmother was Walsh did not know from where, but may have married his G F in America. Forgot to note the G father name, July 2018.

Her father Cornelius passed away on February 17, 1885, in Duagh, Kerry, Ireland, at the age of 75.

 

Cornelius Kennelly

 

 

 

1810–1885

 

17 Feb 1885 • Toureen, Duagh, County Kerry, Ireland

When Nora C Kennelly was born on April 13, 1841, in Kerry, Ireland, her father, Cornelius, was 31, and her mother, Margaret Barry, was 29. She married Timothy Daniel Buckley on February 13, 1870, in Duagh, Kerry, Ireland. They had 11 children in 20 years. She died on November 12, 1928, in Wilmerding, Pennsylvania, at the age of 87.

 

In the blood

 

by Matthew W. Kennelly             

 

 

 

As we walked the field webbed by early century water lines, I noticed in moments of stress, he’d lift his hat with a hand on his head, favor a leg, and take a deep breath. I used to wait, like a kid who lit a firework, for the explosion. But, the explosion never came and I don’t expect it to anymore. We continued on, walking the field he grew up walking with his grandfather. I asked him how he doesn’t lose his composure after a day full of broken-down machines, avoidable mistakes made by employees, and the inevitable obstacles farming presents.

 

https://kindredmag.com/2018/03/21/in-the-blood/

 

 

 

Matthew W. Kennelly. Documentary Photographer

 

 

 

An artist I look up to once wrote about me, “He has an uncanny eye for capturing people in a way that is profoundly affecting - he somehow gets their stories, their movement, their faults and glories all crammed into a single shot. […] At just 22, he has the understated grace of a seasoned photographer, hanging back, unnoticed, getting all the real shots without disrupting the scene.”

 

At the time, this meant a great deal to me simply because of its author, but it didn’t occur to me till I spent a year photographing life on a farm that he described the thesis of my work as a documentarian. I am deeply passionate about capturing the subtle intricacies of what make us all human. The faults and the glories.

 

Be it a birth, a funeral, and all between the two, I want to document it. As of 2018, I am accepting all inquiries: editorial, studio portraits, wedding, engagement, family, senior, etc. Send me an email at booking@fortvanity.com or fill out a form here and we’ll get the ball rolling!

 

 

 

FROM Moyvane.com

 

 

 

July 1, 2018 at 6:29 pm

 

Jim Kennelly

 

 

 

A branch of the Kennelly family returns for the first time to Moyvane after 112 years to visit this July 18-21. Jim Kennelly, brother of Tim Kennelly, son of Daniel Kennelly and Catherine Thornton, left for America in September 1906. We hope to say hello and find out what happened to the family farm…

 

Reply ?

 

 

 

    July 1, 2018 at 7:56 pm

 

    Jim Kennelly

 

 

 

    The Kennelly farm was in Kilbaha, not sure yet if North, South or Middle, but investigating. It was in the care of Tim Kennelly and his finance, Mary Jane Hanrahan, (a lovely singer according to an article on this site) when Jim emigrated to New York City in September 1906. One of Tim and Mary Jane’s 15 children, Michael, eventually came to New York and lived with Jim and his family (which included my father) while he completed his high school education before entering into his training to join the Jesuit order. Fr. Michael Kennelly went on to serve as President of Loyola University in New Orleans and be named a member of the Papal Household. Although probably not the same branch, we’re still looking forward to stopping by Kennelly’s Homevalue Harware in the village, seeing Our Lady of the Assumption Church, the Co-op, the GAA football pitch, and seeing as much as we can of the Middle Plain.

 

St Marys Cathedral Sculpture Commemorates Irish Soldiers in WW1

 

 

 

A new sculpture to commemorate the 35,000 men of the fifteen Irish Regiments, who made the supreme sacrifice during World War 1, was unveiled at St Mary’s Cathedral, Limerick. The unveiling took place in conjunction with the annual service of remembrance.

 

https://www.ilovelimerick.ie/st-marys-cathedral-sculpture/

 

 

 

I remember my best friend October 2017

 

Tom Boardman became a prisoner of war when British forces surrendered to Japan in Singapore in 1942.   23 October 2017, Tom, now aged 99, volunteered for service in the Royal Army Ordnance Corps in 1939 and was detailed to go abroad in 1941.

 

http://www.britishlegion.org.uk/community/stories/remembrance/i-remember-my-best-friend/

 

 

 

 

 

Pilot, Volume 36, Number 20, 17 May 1873

 

KERRY. Of Patrick Connors, a native of Listowel, county Kerry, son of Terrence Connors and Jug Collins, who came to this country when a young boy. Patrick Connors was brought up in the parish of Killadysart, county Clare. Information of his whereabouts will be gladly received by his step-brother, Michael Connors, or by Michael Woods, No.8 Eighth street, East Cambridge, Mass.

 

Of Mary Kennelly, of Leamore, parish of Ballylongford, county Kerry; when last heard from was in New York. Information of her will be received by Pat Kennelly, Wyanet P, 0., Bureau county, Illinois.

 

 

 

Boston Pilot (1838-1857), Volume 19, Number 4, 26 January 1856

 

Conversion. —Miss Catherine Kennelly and Mrs. Harriet Lennon, of Russmore, were received into the Catholic Church on Sunday last by the Rev. Mr. Cregan of Adare. — Munster News.

 

 

 

Pilot, Volume 37, Number 17, 24 April 1874

 

Mrs. Lucy Kennelly, who died recently in Newark, N. J., was a relative of Nano Nagle, Foundress of the Order of Presentation Nuns in Ireland, and also of the family of Edmund Burke.

 

 

 

The Sacred Heart Review, Volume 33, Number 24, 10 June 1905

 

Interesting light is thrown on the Catholicity of the Church when we read of a Father Kennelly, S. J., in China, who has a brother a parish priest in South Australia, and two sisters belonging to the Mercy Order in California. They belong to a North Kerry family in Ireland. The Chinese priest speaks English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, and several Chinese dialects, and is proud of his knowledge of his Irish tongue.

 

 

 

 

 

The Sacred Heart Review, Volume 43, Number 24, 4 June 1910

 

We learn from Father Kennelly that a Synod has been recently held in China for the third division of the missionary field in that country. The Bishops attending were those of Chekiang, Kiangsi, Hunan, Hupeh and part of Honan, making ten in all together with one Prefect Apostolic. Father Kennelly also refers to the death of Bishop Perez, who belonged to the Augustinian Order, who was accidentally drowned on his way to the Synod

 

 

 

The Sacred Heart Review, Volume 44, Number 22, 19 November 1910

 

The Rev. M. Kennelly, who for the last twenty-five years has been a missionary in China, preached last Sunday night at the Church of the Immaculate Conception on “The Work of the Church in China." He spoke encouragingly of the outlook for the spread of the Catholic religion among the Chinese. In the entire country, nearly five times the size of the United States, in  a population of about 420,000,000,  there were, he said, 1,500,000 Catholics, whose spiritual wants were attended to by forty-five Bishops and 2,110 priests, 630 of them natives.

 

 

 

The Sacred Heart Review, Volume 46, Number 6, 29 July 1911

 

DEATH: Father Perrin had been in China for more than twenty-five years. He was a native of Brittany, where he is survived by an aged father, with whom sincerest sympathy will be felt. The deceased is to be buried at Wuho, on the Hwai River, to which place his remains are to betaken. "The illness of Father Perrin is the fifth case of typhus among the Catholic and Protestant missionaries who have been distributing relief, but fortunately all the others have survived. '' Father Perrin died as heroically and faithfully as any martyr, and his name will be long remembered as an example of earnest devotion to duty and of Catholic brotherliness." The Rev. M. Kennelly, S. J., of St. Joseph's Church, Shanghai, writing of the late Father Perrin, says : " He was born in Brittany on Nov. 21,1858. He joined the Jesuits of the Pari Province in 1877, and came to China in 1885. During the preceding year he was professor of mathematics and French at Mungret College, Limerick. During his long stay of twenty-six years in the China field, he was much connected with educational work in Shanghai and at Siccawei. During the last few years he laboured out on the mission, especially at Yingchowfu, in Anhwei Province, where he was head priest and administered a flock of ten thousand converts and twenty two thousand catechumens preparing for baptism. His death is a heavy blow to our much afflicted mission."

 

 

 

The Sacred Heart Review, Volume 54, Number 14, 18 September 1915; Mission Notes.

 

The heroism of missionary life surpasses all romance, and many a missionary's deeds if made known to the world could not fail to inspire many others to dedicate their lives to the service of God in the mission-field. —Father Kennelly. S. J.,

 

 

 

 

 

The Sacred Heart Review, Volume 56, Number 10, 19 August 1916           

 

A great many missionaries have been on the sick list this spring. Father Kennelly, S. J., of Shanghai, spent Holy Week and Easter week in the hospital where under the skilful care of the Sisters of Charity he recovered sufficiently to return to his mission about the middle of May. It is little wonder that these overworked priests are forced to call a halt to their labours, for since the war began their numbers have teen so reduced that they are overwhelmed with work.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Publisher:           

 

Southern Star Date: 06 NOV 1999, Title: J.D. Kennelly celebrates

 

Abstracts: Informative advertising feature on a Skibbereen hardware store which is celebrating its 90th anniversary Subjects: Kennelly Ltd (Hardware store) -- Skibbereen (Cork County)

 

Page: p. 4-5

 

 

 

Publisher:           

 

Sunday Independent Date: 2011 05 29

 

Title: Padraig Kennelly. Author: O'Sullivan, Majella

 

Abstracts: Obituary. Subjects: Kennelly, Pádraig, 1929-2011, Photojournalist

 

Page: p. 31

 

 

 

Publisher:           

 

Sunday Independent (Sunday Buisiness) Date: 2015 08 23

 

Title: Picture perfect: What Jerry Kennelly did with all that Stockbyte money

 

Abstracts: Interview with entrepreneur and business man Jerry Kennelly.

 

Subjects: Kennelly, Jerry, Entrepreneur Page: p. 7.

 

 

 

Publisher:           

 

Sunday Tribune Date: 2004 08 01

 

Edition: Supplement, Title: Brendan: The Brendan Kennelly Summer Festival, Ballylongford, Co. Kerry

 

Abstracts: 24-page special supplement on the festival Subjects: Brendan Kennelly Summer Festival – 2004. Kennelly, Brendan, Poet

 

From Daniel’s death certificate in Australia, his mother is recorded as Honorah (perhaps Honora) Fallon.

The photo was taken in Kyneton, Victoria, Australia.

When Julia died, the following obituary was featured in the North Eastern Ensign newspaper, Benalla, Victoria, Australia:

 

The North Eastern Ensign Benalla, July 30th 1915.

 

Mrs  Julia, relict of the late Mr Daniel  Kenneally, died at Goomalibee on Saturday, at the ripe age of about 80 years. 

Deceased was the mother of a large and respectable family, among them being Messrs Matthew Kenneally, of Winton, J. J.  Kenneally, at one time an auctioneer in Benalla, Mrs Robert Ryan, of Yarrawonga, and Sister M. Benedict, of the Presentation Convent, Windsor.

The late Mrs  Kenneally was a typical Irishwoman, and like most of her sex hailing from the Green Isle, was a generous warm-hearted woman whose hospitality was unbounded. 

Many old friends throughout Benalla district will regret to hear of her demise. Her remains were interred it the Catholic portion of Benalla cemetery on Monday alongside those of her late husband - one of the district's most worthy pioneers - the burial service being read by the Rev J. O'Reilly, P. P., whilst the mortuary arrangements were carried out by Mr Hanlon.

Griffin and more October 2017

ichael Dore; http://www.limerickcity.ie/media/limerick%20families%2010.pdf

 

 

Search papers

 

http://search.freefind.com/find.html?oq=another+of+our+centenarians.&id=58746539&pageid=r&_charset_=UTF-8&bcd=%C3%B7&scs=1&query=listowel&Find=Search&mode=ALL&search=all 

 

 

 

LGA        1815       8              11           NPM      BENNETT             Edmond               Rev        Lately at Listowel church, Co Kerry, —— DALTON, Esq of Ballybunion in said county, to Miss BENNETT, daughter of the late Rev Edmond BENNETT, of Bruff in this county.

 

 

 

Index to printed voter lists of 1768 and 1776

 

VOTERS: John FERRAR printed lists of voters in the county elections of 1768 and 1776 under the titles A complete list of the gentlemen, clergy, and freeholders (with their freeholds and places of abode) who voted at the election for knights of the shire for the county of Limerick: Which begun ar St. Francis's Abbey on Monday the 11th, and ended the 18th day of July 1768. Sir H. Harstonge bart. Hugh Massy Esq; and Silver Oliver Esq; candidates Richard Taylor Esq; high sheriff and A list of the free holders of the county of Limerick who voted at St. Francis's Abbey, at the election, began on Monday the 27th of May and ended on Wednesday the 5th of June, 1776, before Ben. Frend, Esq; high sheriff: Candidates, Right Honourable Silver Oliver, Sir Henry Hartstronge, bart. Hugh Massy, the younger, Esq . Both these books are available at the National library of Ireland and available to registered readers on the National Library of Australia.

 

 

 

These lists give for whom the people voted and their residence and the land for which they had freehold. These lists give valuable information for the family historian as they connect people and land.

 

The list below is an index to the two lists.

 

Freeholders; TAYLOR     Anselm                 Woodcliff            Listowel               m o        1768

 

BENNIS                 James   Ballinfrira             Glin        h m        1768                      

 

CANTILLON         David (sen)         Ballyorgan           Ballyorgan           o h          1776       Ballyorgan           Killflyn

 

CARMODY           Arthur   Garryno               Kilmallock            m o        1768       Kilmallock            Kilmallock

 

DALTON               Rev. Michael      Shannagolden   Killonehan           o m        1776      

 

DALY      John      Newmarket        Newmarket        o m        1776      

 

DILLON                 Robert Attea     Clonbrock            o h          1776

 

ENRIGHT              William Duncaha              Shanagolden      o m        1776      

 

GLAZIER               Peter     Ballyorgan           Ballyorgan           o h          1776       Ballyorgan           Killflyn

 

GRADY Standish               Cahir      Cahir      o h          1776

 

GRIFFIN               John      Morgan's             Tarbert                 o h          1776

 

HIFFERNAN        William Trienmana          Dublin   o             1768

 

LANE     Anthony              Glin        Glin        o m        1776

 

LANGFORD         John      Coolnaline           Killorgan               h o          1768      

 

MONGANE         Thomas                Disart    Shannongolden                h m        1768

 

MOOR William Gortneskehy     Limerick               h o          1768

 

O'BRIEN               Mathew               Newcastle           Newcastle           o h          1776

 

O'SCANLAN        Michael                Altea     Ballinakill              o m        1776      

 

PONSONBY         James   Fantstown          Crotto   o h          1776

 

RICE       Thomas                Shannongolden                Dublin   h o          1768

 

ROYSE   Thomas                Lurraga                 Ballinverrick        h m        1768                        

 

ROYSE   Thomas Henry   Nantenan            Nantenan            m            1776                        

 

RUCKLE                Daniel   Ballingarane       Ballingarane       o h          1776

 

STACKPOOLE     Massy   Glinlaragh            Dublin   o m        1776

 

TAYLOR                Richard                 Moy       Askeaton             h m        1768

 

 

 

 

 

http://members.iinet.net.au/~nickred/limerick/limerick_voters.html

 

 

 

 

 

GRIFFIN:

 

http://search.freefind.com/find.html?oq=newtown&id=58746539&pageid=r&_charset_=UTF-8&bcd=%C3%B7&scs=1&query=griffin&Find=Search&mode=ALL&search=all

 

WMT J  1828       8              07           NPD       GRIFFIN               Edward Esq         In the bloom of life, at Hip-hall, county Limerick, Edward Griffin, Esq., second son of the late lamented James Griffin, Esq. of said place.               SdeM

 

FJ            1849       9              24           NPM      GRIFFIN               Henry    Rev        September 19, in Benburb church, Walter HORE Esq eldest son of the late Rev Walter HORE, rector of Ferns, co Wexford, to Marion Sadlier, youngest daughter of the Rev Henry GRIFFIN, rector of Clonfeacle  NickR

 

WMT J  1828       8              07           NPD       GRIFFIN               James   Esq         In the bloom of life, at Hip-hall, county Limerick, Edward Griffin, Esq., second son of the late lamented James Griffin, Esq. of said place.               SdeM

 

LGA        1805       9              23           NPM      GRIFFIN               Johanna               Miss       Cooing Cooks     NickR

 

LEP-CS  1828       10           14           NPS        GRIFFIN               John                     A most melancholy accident occurred, a few days since, at Kilflyn, in the County Kerry. Several persons of that neighbourhood were engaged playing in a Ball-Court, in that village, when one of the walls suddenly fell in, and, horrible to relate, one of the party, named John GRIFFIN, who lived near Ballyseedy, was killed on the spot. Three other men were dreadfully bruised, one of them whom has since died.    NickR

 

FJ            1849       9              24           NPM      GRIFFIN               Marion Sadlier                  September 19, in Benburb church, Walter HORE Esq eldest son of the late Rev Walter HORE, rector of Ferns, co Wexford, to Marion Sadlier, youngest daughter of the Rev Henry GRIFFIN, rector of Clonfeacle              NickR

 

WMT J  1827       11           15           NPD       GRIFFIN               Richard Esq         In Ennis, aged 89, Richard Griffin, Esq. He served as Assistant Surgeon in the Navy, and was at the taking of Quebec in 1759, and the following year at that of Montreal.

 

 

 

Landholders 1832

 

2151       GRIFFIN               Gerald Esq         Corgrigg               rent charge         Caharah                               Lower Connello                 20

 

 

 

2145       GRIFFIN               Patrick constable of police          Anhid    freeholder          Anhid                    Coshma                10

 

2291       HARNETT             Bartholemew    farmer Knockbrack         freeholder          Portrennard                       Lower Connello              20

 

 

 

Freeman's Journal

 

28 January 1848 Calendar of prisoners for the county Limerick; Kennelly

 

http://members.iinet.net.au/~nickred/lists/limerick_prisoners_1848.htm

 

 

 

Limerick General Advertiser

 

23 October 1812, Voters

 

http://members.iinet.net.au/~nickred/lists/limerick1812.htm

 

Aurora Griffin

 

Aurora Catherine Griffin attended Harvard University, where she graduated Magna Cum Laude and Phi Beta Kappa with a degree in classics in 2014. There she served as president of the Catholic Student Association. She was awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to study at Oxford University, where she received a graduate degree in theology. She now lives in Washington, D.C. and works at the Catholic University of America.

 

http://www.ncregister.com/blog/auroragriffin/how-to-keep-your-kids-catholic-in-college

 

 

 

 

 

 

Kennelly Index Check spelling

KENNELLY Honora  DRISCOL Timothy

 

Event : Marriage – Individual colgnecm1584964 between 1825 and 1875 Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY Margaret HUNT William

 

Event : Marriage – Individual colgnecm1584964 between 1825 and 1875, Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY Edmond DEVANE Bridget

 

Event : Marriage – Individual colgnecm1584964, between 1825 and 1875, Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY John HEALY Johanna

 

Event : Marriage – Individual colgnecm1584964, between 1825 and 1875, Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY Margarett Event : Death – Individual, colgnecm1584965

 

between 1750 and 1875, Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY Edmond DEVANE Bridget

 

Event : Marriage – Other colgnecm1584964, between 1825 and 1875, Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY John HEALY Johanna

 

Event : Marriage – Other colgnecm1584964, between 1825 and 1875, Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY Honora DRISCOL Timothy

 

Event : Marriage – Other, colgnecm1584964, between 1825 and 1875, Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY Margaret HUNT William Event : Marriage – Other, colgnecm1584964

 

between 1825 and 1875 Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY Martin Event : Marriage – Other colgnecm1584964

 

between 1825 and 1875, Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY Timothy, Event : Marriage – Other colgnecm1584964

 

between 1825 and 1875, Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY John, Event : Marriage – Other, colgnecm1584964

 

between 1825 and 1875, Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY John, Event : Marriage – Other colgnecm1584964

 

between 1825 and 1875, Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY Martin Event : Marriage – Other colgnecm1584964

 

between 1825 and 1875, Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY John Event : Marriage – Other colgnecm1584964

 

between 1825 and 1875, Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY John Event : Marriage – Other, colgnecm1584964

 

between 1825 and 1875, Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

  

 

KENNELLY Timothy Event : Marriage – Other colgnecm1584964

 

between 1825 and 1875, Listowel, Kerry, Ireland

 

 

 

 

 

Mayor Kennelly’s Jitney War (8-22-1950)

 

Aug 22, 2016

 

https://wordpress.com/read/blogs/8577505/posts/8857

 

 

 

    Politics South Side

 

 

 

On this date, Mayor Martin Kennelly ordered a crackdown on jitney cabs operating on South Park Way (King Drive) and other South Side boulevards. The jitneys were carrying groups of up to six passengers at a time, charging 15 cents per person. Though this was more expensive than the current 12-cent CTA fare, it was significantly less than the meter rate on licensed cabs.

 

 

 

 

 

The jitneys were breaking the law. The mayor warned that any drivers operating without a taxi license would be arrested. The Park District would also be holding public hearings on how to deal with this problem on its boulevards.

 

 

 

Kennelly’s warnings had little effect.  The jitneys kept running.  He also alienated the powerful South Side congressman, William L. Dawson.  Dawson and most of his constituents were African American.  Since many white cab drivers wouldn’t serve black passengers in 1950, the local community relied on the jitneys.

 

 

 

Kennelly was succeeded by a more politically-astute mayor, Richard J. Daley.  When a reporter asked him if he was going to do anything about the jitneys, Daley simply said, “They perform a public service.”  And that was that.

 

 

 

Today, of course, we have Uber.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Adventures of Mayor Martin Kennelly

 

Feb 24, 2015

 

 

 

 Martin Kennelly looked like a statesman. Tall, white-haired, and reserved, he gave off a vibe of quiet dignity.  He might have been the movie version of a senator, or an ambassador, or perhaps even President of the United States.

 

 

 

Martin Kennelly was actually the Mayor of Chicago. During most of his two terms in office, he did seem more like an actor playing a role.

 

Like Ed Kelly before him and Daley Senior after him, Kennelly was an Irishman from Bridgeport. Born in 1887, he grew up poor.  He opened a moving business, worked hard, got rich, and left the old neighborhood behind.

 

 

 

He dabbled in Democrat politics as a contributor. Though he accepted appointment to the Park District Board, Kennelly turned down offers to run for public office—until 1947.

 

 

 

Mayor Ed Kelly was finishing up 14 years on the job.   There had been a series of scandals, and the Republicans looked like they had a shot at reclaiming the mayor’s chair.  Remember, this was back in 1947.

 

 

 

The party mandarins told Kelly it was time to retire.  Martin Kennelly was a popular civic leader with no political taint, and was the perfect “clean” candidate for mayor.  He agreed to run.  Though the Republicans did pick up 18 of the 50 city council seats, Kennelly was easily elected.

 

 

 

Chicago was enjoying a postwar boom. Kennelly’s tenure saw many major public works projects, including the Congress (Eisenhower) Expressway, O’Hare Airport, and the extensions of both Lake Shore Drive and Wacker Drive. After two decades of depression and war, private construction was also rebounding.

 

 

 

Kennelly worked to clean up the public school system, and had some success. His efforts to reform civil service had less impact.  His raids on open gambling generated a lot of newspaper ink—and brought him political trouble.

 

Congressman Dawson

 

 

 

Congressman Dawson

 

 

 

The Mayor’s gambling raids were nearly all in the South Side fief of Congressman William L. Dawson. Dawson and his constituents were African American, and he thought the raids were racist.  Calls for party unity finally convinced Dawson to support Kennelly for re-election in 1951.

 

 

 

Kennelly won that 1951 election without much bother. Still, the party old guard had decided the mayor was a loose cannon, and had to be replaced the next time around.

 

 

 

City Clerk Richard J. Daley became Democrat county chairman in 1953. Two years later, when Kennelly appeared before the party slate-makers to ask for their endorsement, he was dumbfounded when they picked Daley instead.  Refusing to go quietly, he ran against Daley in the mayoral primary.

 

 

 

Kennelly mounted a vigorous campaign. But he was learning to say “hello” when it was time to say “good-bye.”  Daley won the primary, and then the general election.

 

 

 

Kennelly retired to his Sheridan Road apartment, and very little was heard from him after that. He died in 1961.  Years later, one scholar began an essay on Kennelly’s political career with a simple sentence that might serve as his epitaph—“He was a nice man.”

 

KENNELLY TREE Canada

 

 

 


 

                         
         
 

 Father:    Jeremiah Kennelly
   Born:    1810, Ireland      Marr:    1840      Died:    1875, Canada
 Mother:    Ellen Mulvihill
   Born:    1823, Ireland      Died:    1887, Canada

 

 Father:    Cornelius Hunt
   Born:    1832, Ireland      Marr:    1854      Died:    1912, Ontario
 Mother:    Honora Lynch
   Born:    1832, Ireland      Died:    1905, Canada

 
         
 

 Jeremiah Kennelly                
   Born:    19 FEB 1852  - Marysburgh, Prince Edward County, Ontario, Canada
   Marr:    16 OCT 1887  - Flinton, Lennox & Addington, Ontario, Canada
   Died:    22 JUN 1926  - Barrie Township, Frontenac County, Ontario, Canada
 Other Spouses:    

 

 Margaret Hunt      
   Born:    24 NOV 1858  - Sheffield Township, Lennox & Addington, Ontario, Canada
    
   Died:     3 MAR 1933  - Barrie Township, Frontenac County, Ontario, Canada
 Other Spouses:    

 
 
 

 1.    Cornelius Vincent "Neil" Kennelly  
   Born:    16 JUL 1888  - Barrie Township, Frontenac County, Ontario, Canada
   Marr:     - 
   Died:    28 OCT 1907  - near Webbwood, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada

 

 2.    Mary Ellen Kennelly  
   Born:    25 DEC 1889  - Barrie Township, Frontenac County, Ontario, Canada
   Marr:    1915  - Daniel Michael Evans  
   Died:     APR 1941  - 

 
         
 

 3.    William John Kennelly  
   Born:    14 MAY 1891  - Barrie Township, Frontenac County, Ontario, Canada
   Marr:    1931  - Mary Margaret Barrett  
   Died:     AUG 1945  - 

 

 4.    James Edward Kennelly  
   Born:    22 NOV 1892  - Barrie Township, Frontenac County, Ontario, Canada
   Marr:              - Ella Devlin  
   Died:     1978  - 

 
         
 

 5.    Timothy Jeremiah Kennelly  
   Born:    20 FEB 1895  - Barrie Township, Frontenac County, Ontario, Canada
   Marr:              - Nora Keegan  
   Died:      - 

 

 6.    Patrick Joseph Kennelly  
   Born:    21 MAR 1898  - Barrie Township, Frontenac County, Ontario, Canada
   Marr:     - 
   Died:    28 MAR 1958  - Kingston, Frontenac, Ontario, Canada

 
         
 

 7.    Daniel Clayton Kennelly  
   Born:    26 OCT 1901  - Barrie Township, Frontenac County, Ontario, Canada
   Marr:    1938  - Mildred Hartman   (other spouses)

             

 

Brendan Kennelly Ballylongford 21 Jan 2017

 

 

 

Brendan aged  (80),  recently moved back from Dublin to Kerry, was joined by his extended family, neighbours and friends at the reception in Ballylongford Parish Hall.

 

 Addressing the reception, Brendan Kennelly said he been away from his beloved ‘Bally’ and Kerry for over sixty years but the village and county always stayed with me.

 

“Dublin was my home and a place that I loved dearly but my original home was always with me, all the time, wherever I went. Bally and its people would come to me at night as I slept; I would dream of the streets, of the river going up through the village, of the football field, of the laneways, and the teams of young people and the rhyme that we had:

 

 

 

Puddings and pies for the Ballyline Boys

 

 

 

Sods and ciarógs for the Well Road Rogues

 

 

 

Meal and bran for the Saleen Clan

 

 

 

Eggs and rashers for the Tae Lane Dashers

 

 

 

“Like all places, Bally has its own uniqueness,” said Brendan. “When I was growing up Ballylongford was a busy, self-sufficient place that was full of life and energy. It had a cinema, two dance halls, draperies, shoe shops, chemists, several pubs, tailors and dressmakers, bakeries and grocery shops.

 

 

 

“It had everything that its people needed. The big show-bands of the day came to Bally during the carnival. The farmers came in every day with their milk to the creamery – they were a daily visiting presence. They would come in with their horses and carts and you would hear the noise of the wheels on the street while lying in bed in the early morning. Soldiers stationed at Fort Shannon were regular visitors to the village,” Brendan continued.

 

 

 

“Bally is full of stories – we have the great history of the O’Connors of Carrigafoyle and the story of Lislaughtin. There is the story of the girl who worked for the O’Connor’s who fell in love with a British soldier and who lit a candle in one of the windows of the castle to indicate this was the weakest part of the building and the Cromwellian soldiers attacked it at that point.

 

 

 

“There is an amazing history attached to the place. It was the story of Cromwell’s army coming to Bally that ignited my interest in the man and I wrote an epic poem about him. I went to his home in Ely in England and I read all his letters for my research. I remember phrases that he used, one in particular about ‘work I have to do in Ireland’. He was a mass murderer but he saw what he was doing as work that had to be done.

 

 

 

“I am back living near Bally again. I carry the Bally that I wrote about in The Crooked Cross within me and see it as I pass through the village and, although a lot has changed, I still know this to be my heart’s home place,” said Brendan.

 

 

 

The Cathaoirleach of Kerry County Council, Cllr. Michael O’Shea and Vice Chairman, Liam Purtill held a reception organised by the local authority to honour Brendan Kennelly Saturday, January 21 2017 at Ballylongford Hall.

 

 

 

Brendan Kennelly is one of Ireland's most famous authors and literary figures. Brendan Kennelly was born in Ballylongford Co. Kerry in 1936. He was educated at St. Ita's college in Tarbert, Co. Kerry and later at Trinity College Dublin where he has been professor of Modern Literature since 1975. He has published more than twenty books of poems.

 

He is best known for two controversial poetry books, Cromwell (published in Ireland in 1983 and in England by Bloodaxe in 1987), and his epic poem The Book Of Judas, which topped the Irish bestsellers list when it was published in 1991. Brendan Kennelly is also a celebrated dramatist and has published six volumes of selected poems, most recently A Time For Voices - Selected Poems 1960-1990.

 

Brendan has brothers Kevin, Fr. John, Alan and Paddy and his sister Nancy. His sister Mary lives in the US and his brother Colm is deceased, his extended family includes his nieces Mary and Kate, arts officer with Kerry County Council, and her brother Mark, special adviser to Taoiseach Enda Kenny.

 

 

 

January 22, 2017

 

Huffingtonpost

 

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/news/dna%20genealogy/

 

MARS LIGHT: The Mars light was an early mechanical flashing/warning light.

 

 

 

"A railroader had worked out the general idea…"

 

 

 

Actually, it was the brainchild of Chicago aerial truck (hook & ladder) driver Jerry (Jeremiah) Kennelly.

 

 

 

City traffic was already getting bad in the 1920s, making it increasingly dangerous and difficult for emergency vehicles to get through. Fire apparatus in this period were usually fitted with small hand-held spotlights (Chicago apparatus also carried (and still carry) small red and green forward-facing warning lamps). Kennelly realized that if he wiggled the spotlight by hand, it caught the attention of oncoming drivers. He continued his experiments into the 30s (as city traffic got worse), replacing the white lens with a red one and eventually adding a motor and gearbox so it would turn in a unique horizontal figure-8 pattern. This made the beam visible to both oncoming traffic and in rear-view mirrors, and produced a noticeable flashing effect.

 

 

 

Kennelly later made the acquaintance of Frank Mars, head of the famed Chicago candy company, who liked what he saw and provided both financial and engineering help, which his wife continued after Mars' death in 1933. This is where the Mars in Mars Light came from.

 

 

 

The first railroad tests came in 1936 on the CNW, but used a blue lens, as red would be misinterpreted as a stop signal. This was later replaced with a standard white lens.

 

 

 

"The original "Green Diamond" had a light that pointed straight up as an attention getter. The Pacifics assigned to the original C&NW "400" also had a headlight angled upward at a 45-degree angle."

 

 

 

As high-speed trains were introduced, there was a lot of concern that motorists would never see or hear them coming especially at night – humans have a hard time judging the speed of anything bigger than we are coming at us. These earlier warning lights were fixed searchlights, positioned to point straight up or at an angle so they would not blind oncoming train crews or motorists, however the powerful light beam did make them easier to see at night. Diesels, being much quieter and nearly smokeless, were also that much harder to see by day and railroads began looking at ways to make them more visible.

 

 

 

The Mars Light was liked by some railroads, and was also seen on a lot of fire apparatus in the 1940s-60s.

 

 Lance Burton

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

04-13-2005, 10:57 AM

 

I thought that Federal Signal and Mars combined several years ago. I may be incorrect on this. I remember someone telling me this.

 

Why not contact your local Pierce or Seagrave dealer and ask them this question??

 

I found this ifnormation while doing a google search.

 

 

 

"Search for Mars Signal Light Co:"

 

 

 

A copy of a cover of a 1940? catalog (WR-5000-A catalog – see misc.) shows the address of the Mars Signal Light Company as 5737 W. Division St.; Chicago, IL.

 

 

 

I contacted Mars, Inc. of McLean, VA (the candy company), and was informed by their personnel and organizational manager, S. A. Heffelfinger, that they have no record of what became of the 'MarsLite Corporation'. She did say that in April of 1933, Mr. Mars and Mr. Kennelly formed a company named the 'MarsLite Corporation', with Mr. Mars providing $1000 of it's working capital. She found a file on it with a large drawing which must have been used to apply for the patent. She also provided me with information about Jerry Kennelly:

 

 

 

Apparently, Jerry Kennelly suggested using a flashing light for police and fire vehicles to enhance their safety. It appeared that no one was interested in the idea until two fire trucks collided in Chicago with grim results. The mayor suddenly became interested in the concept and the 'MarsLite Corporation' was born. It set the criterion for flashing lights for emergency vehicles until World War II.

 

I contacted the Federal Signal Corporation of University Park, IL, and was told that they did not take over the Mars Signal Light Company and were not a subsidiary of it.

 

 

 

John Blair suggested contacting SPAAMFAA (Society for the Preservation and Appreciation of Antique Motor Fire Apparatus in America). He remembered seeing "Bubble Gum Machines" on tow trucks and various emergency vehicles in the 1980's in Syracuse, N.Y. (in which SPAAMFAA has roots) which bore the slogan "The Light From Mars" and the name "The Mars Signal Light Company".

 

 

 

Trade-Mark 343,236 for "THE LIGHT FROM MARS" was registered to Jeremiah D. Kennelly on Feb. 16, 1937. A metal plate bearing this trade-mark was attached to the products sold by the Mars Signal Light Co.

 

 

 

Investigation of SPAAMFAA led me to John Dorgan of the Rusty Bucket Volunteer Fire Company, Inc.; Arizona Territorial Chapter of SPAAMFAA. John provided me with this information:

 

 

 

The MARS Signal Light Company manufactured many different lights and sirens starting with the model FL which dates back to Kennelly's original patent (US Pat. 1,991,101 cited above). The company simultaneously made both emergency vehicle warning lights and railroad lights. They manufactured both train lights and several types of crossing lights. In the late 60's or early 70's, the operations moved to Naples, Florida and they operated from this location until the company was purchased by Trippe Light Co. The resulting corporation became known as TRI LITE MARS. It is located in Chicago, once again, and is located at 1335 W. Randolph St.; Chicago, IL 60607. Tel. 1-800-322-5250. John goes on to say that TRI LITE MARS doesn't have any information as to the early days prior to TRI LITE.

 

 

 

Rich Sitler contacted me with information on the address for the company. He listed the phone and fax numbers as well as revealing that the company makes an "888" light used for fire trucks and locomotives.

 

 

 

I called the company using the 1-800 number. The company identified itself as "TRI LITE INC.". The address is what John and Rich have stated. (phone: (312) 226-7778/fax: (312) 226-5335)

 

 

 

Information from TRI LITE INC. catalog:

 

 

 

TRI LITE INC. is made up of the TRI LITE division and the MARS Signal Light division. They also identify themselves as TRI LITE MARS (evidenced by their logo and catalog cover). Their present product line includes warning lights, back up alarms and sirens. Both belt and gear drive rotating light units are available. They manufacture the MARS "888" Traffic Breaker Light which generates a "figure 8" moving pattern which they claim to be the leading fire truck warning light for years. This light is sold in a pedestal mounted unit (TB8-P) or as a flush mounted unit (TB8-F). The catalog specifications state that these units are rated 60,000 (optional 100,000) candlepower. This unit is available with either a clear or red lens. The "888" light is also incorporated into roof bar units.

 

 

 

From the product line, emergency vehicle equipment is what this company now specializes in. I verified this with their customer service representative.

 

 

 

Regarding the sale of rotating flashers or strobes to the railroad industry, the representative stated that this may be taking place through their distributors, but TRI LITE INC. has no records of distributor sales.

 

This is what I found and the light was first designed by a fireman in Chicago and the Mars candy Co.

 

Last edited by allineedisu; 04-13-2005, 01:35 PM.

 

From https://forums.firehouse.com/forum/firefighting/firefighters-forum/53917-mars-lights

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bob DelbridgeMember Digital Subscriber

 

4/18/136:23 AM

 

 

 

Here's a couple of things I found on the SAL/ACL forum:

 

ACL - The rule book (Rule 17-A) required the use of the Mars light when

 

ever the train was moving forward at night. It was to be turned off

 

when approachin terminals, junctions, meeting points, and stations

 

where stops were to be made. Also, it was to be turned off when ever

 

the rules required that the main headlight be dimmed.

 

 

 

 Before there were Ditch lights, there were Mars Lights

 

During the spring of 1936, an astonishing sight stopped motorists and

 

attracted crowds of curious spectators to highway overpasses along

 

the Chicago & North Western line from Chicago to Minneapolis. The

 

engine was one of the railroad's rebuilt Pacific-type set aside for

 

service on the famous "400s," but the oscillating blue light flashing

 

from the top of the smokebox was definitely something new.

 

The light was the brainchild of a Chicago city fireman, Jerry

 

Kennelly, whose encounters with oncoming street traffic during

 

emergency runs led him to tinker with various warning-light devices.

 

The most effective, he discovered, swept the path in a horizontal

 

figure-8 motion that caught the attention of motorists both in front

 

and to the sides of the truck. But it wasn't until Chicago candy

 

magnate Frank Mars and his wife, Ethel took an interest that

 

Kennelly's invention became reality. Mars offered the inventor use of

 

the candy company's machine shop to turn out prototypes, and after

 

Mars' death, his widow continued financial support of the project. In

 

return, Kennelly assigned patent rights to the Mars Light Co.

 

Working with a group of Chicago policemen, Kennelly developed the

 

device further, offering it to railroads for use at highway

 

crossings. Finally, it caught the attention of Chicago & North

 

Western's chief safety officer; he agreed to mount a Mars light on

 

engine #2908, one of the four E-2's assigned to the new "400"

 

service. Additional tests were conducted with a Mars light on a

 

J-class 2-8-2 that shuttled back and forth on the Orchard track in

 

Proviso Yard.

 

On one of its runs to Milwaukee, the 2908 struck a large bird,

 

shattering the blue lens. A clear lens was located in Milwaukee, and,

 

on the return trip to Chicago, it was discovered that the white light

 

was even more effective in catching attention. Gyrating in a

 

horizontal figure-8 that was 800 feet in diameter, 1000 feet down the

 

track, the new Mars oscillating headlight was adopted by C&NW for its

 

steam-powered engines and, despite the initial indifference of EMD

 

officials, by the Rock Island for use on its first passenger diesels.

 

Other railroads soon followed.

 

(from Chicago & North Western Vol. 1, by Lloyd A. Keyser, Morning Sun

 

Books, 1997. Thanks to Charlie Willer, Heartland Rails, Ft. Wayne, IN)

 

 

 

From what I found out a while back, Seaboard used them for emergency situations, but don't know what defined an "emergency".  Also, some of Seaboard's E7s had red lenses, others had clear.

 

http://ogrforum.ogaugerr.com/topic/required-use-of-mars-light

 

 

 

 

 

Mary Regan nee Kennelly, The Orchard, Dromin, Listowel and late of Smerla Bridge, Listowel

 

Tuesday, January 29th, 2013 at 4:18 pm.

 

Reposing at Lyons’s Funeral Home, Derry, Listowel from 5.30 to 7 O Clock today followed by removal at 7 O’Clock to St.Mary’s Church, Listowel. Requiem Mass will take place on Wednesday at 11.30am. Burial afterwards in St Michael’s Cemetery, Listowel. From Radio Kerry.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mary was born in 1970 and was raised along with her five siblings in the North Kerry village of Ballylongford.

 

 

 

Mary Kennelly studied theology and history at St. Patrick’s College, Maynooth. She studied for the Higher Diploma in Education in University College Galway. In recent times she undertook a Postgraduate Diploma in Learning Support and Special Educational Needs in Mary Immaculate College, Limerick. She has just completed her Masters degree in Educational Management in Waterford Institute of Technology.

 

She teaches in Presentation Secondary School, Listowel, Co. Kerry. She also works for the Special Education Support Service. She worked in the Arts for many years including time with Writers’ Week Listowel and the Brendan Kennelly Summer Festival. She has written features for a number of publications including ‘The Kerryman’, ‘The Sunday Independent’ and ‘The Sunday Tribune’. She has edited a number of publications.  In 2004 she published ‘Sunny Spells, Scattered Showers’ a collection of poetry and paintings with the artist Rebecca Carroll. In 2010 she published another body of work, ‘From the Stones’, a collection of poetry and paintings with the renowned artist Brenda Fitzmaurice.

 

 

 

Mary currently lives in Glin, Co. Limerick with her husband Gus and their three children Ruth, Matthew and Caleb.

 

Dermot Kennelly

Birth: Jan 7 1919, Skibbereen

Marriage: 1948, Skibbereen

Death: Oct 12 1982, Skibberreen

Wife: Mary Mc Carthy

Site: Family tree Web Site

http://www.myheritage.com

 

Edwin Arthur Kennelly

Birth: July 19 1847, Hobart Tasmania, Hobart & Southern Tasmania - Tasmania, Aust

Marriage: May 12 1873, 128 moore st. fitzroy victoria

Occupation: Tailor

Death: Aug 14 1890, Sydney

Father: Jeremiah Kennelly Or Kennally

Mother: Sarah Walker

Wife: Mary Jane Mann

Site: dianne bellette Web Site

http://www.myheritage.com

 

Francis Carrol Kennelly

Birth: Sep 19 1929, Jefferson, Union, SD

Marriage: Aug 7 1948, Reno, Washoe, NV

Death: Dec 6 2000, Sacramento, CA

Burial: Feb 7 2001, Sweet Home, Lynn, OR

Wife: <Private> George

Site: AndrewHinshaw Web Site

http://www.myheritage.com

 

KENNELLY. Funeral Mass of Mr Ronald Francis Kennelly will be offered at S. S Peter and Paul Catholic Church, cnr of Montague and Dorcas St, South Melbourne on FRIDAY (Dec. 18, 2015) at 10 a. m. The Funeral will leave at the conclusion of Mass for Burial at Melbourne General Cemetery, College Cres, Carlton North. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Diabetes Australia, envelopes will be available at the Church.

 

KENNELLY Ronald Francis (Ron) CPSU Staff and Officials were saddened to hear of the passing away on Dec. 10, 2015, unexpectedly at home, of Ron Kennelly. He was an active member of the ROD Executive Committee and a delegate to Branch Council for many years. His long service to this Union (including its predecessor, VPSA) before and after his retirement from the Public Service, was highly recognised with Life Membership of the Victorian Branch of the CPSU SPSF Group. His many visits to the office with his charming smile and wit will be sadly missed. Our thoughts are with the Kennelly boys, their families and friends, at this very sad time. Rest in Peace CPSU SPSF Victorian/Branch Secretary, Staff and Officials.

 

KENNELLY Ronald Francis Passed away Dec. 10, 2015 Loving son of Patrick and Jess Kennelly, twin brother of John (dec. ), Neil (dec. ) and Joan (Burke). Brother-in-law to Richard, uncle of Jane, Dean and Nicki. In God's Care


Facebook;

Hello Brigid. I welcome you to my page, I knew Mattie Mcgrath (Martin) RIP around the late 50s...went to Moyvane school with him and lived a few house away from his in Gurtdromosillihy, I have many happy memories from that time...we went out in the wren on St Stephens day a couple of years, Mattie played the accordion that time and I played the tin whistle and the two Hanrahan’s...Patrick and Michael RIP played bothrans I left Moyvane around 1959--60 and went to live with my aunt about 4 miles away in the parish of Glin....and lost contact with Mattie....but i am delighted to see his photo and hear him playing music....i still play the Concert flute, Banjo and Accordion and Uilleann pipes, happy to make contact. John McAuliffe.


Corrib Tragedy January 18 1934

 

Over the years, the River Corrib has seen many tragic moments because of drowning accidents. While the Anach Chuain disaster of 1828, was terrible, with the loss of 19 people, one of the saddest must be the tragedy that occurred during a cold winter’s night of January 1934.

What makes this accident so haunting is the fact that the people who lost their lives were neither boating or swimming: they were occupants of a motor car who should not have been in that particular area on that night. What is even sadder still is that they drowned within ear-shot of a dance that was being held in the Commercial Boat Club. As young people enjoyed the dancing and music in the hall, four others struggled for their lives in a submerged car just outside. Many people say that one cannot escape fate, and this is a story of just that: it is haunting to say the least as one examines the circumstances that led to this appalling tragedy.

 

The following account of the accident was published:

“Drowned Within Sound of Dance – Agonising Search – For Four Bodies in Motor Car – Pathetic Final Scenes.”

“Whilst the band played and the dancers danced at the Commercial Boat Club, Galway, on Thursday night last, a motor car returning from Ballinasloe plunged into the Corrib at the end of Steamer’s Quay, carrying its four occupants to death in four feet of water.

No one heard the splash: no one witnessed the grim tragedy of a mistaken road. All was over in less time than it takes to write the story. It was not until Saturday morning, after a diligent search by the Civic Guards, that the car with its huddle of dead bodies in the back seat was found lying on its left side beneath the waters.

The names of the victims were as follows:

            Sergeant Forde (28) in charge of Maam station, a native of Tynagh, Co. Galway, married; leaves a widow, a son and a daughter.

            Guard Kenneally (32) Maam, a native of Newtownsands, Co. Kerry, married; leaves a widow and one son.

            Martin Keane P.C. (45) Maam, shopkeeper and farmer the driver of the car, married; leave a widow, three boys and two girls.

            Miss Margaret Laffey (25) Carragh, Cornamona.

 

The purpose of the ill-fated journey that day was to take a girl, Sarah Laffey, who had been ill for some time, to a hospital in Ballinasloe. The first leg of the journey was from Maam to Carragh in Cornamona, where the girl lived. Her sister, Margaret, decided to accompany her and travelled with them. The party started on their journey for Ballinasloe about 12:30pm and arrived there at 3:30pm. They travelled in a 1929 green saloon, Fordor Ford car, the property of Martin Keane of Maam, who was also the driver.

 

The drowning tragedy happened on their way back to Galway.

( Source: Alice Kennelly, granddaughter of Garda Michael Kennelly)

Garda Michael Kennelly of Knockanure

 From Clifden 200 site Clifden celebrating 200 years from May 25th to June 4th 2012. See from Clifden to the South the Brandon Hills, in Kerry, 90 miles away. Garda Michael Kennelly is featured in the 'Gardai 1930' photo, seated extreme left. He hailed from Newtownsandes (now Moyvane) Co. Kerry and lived in Aillebrack with his wife Alice McHale-Kennelly. He was killed 'on duty' in January 1934 when he and his colleague Sergeant Forde, were returning to Maam Garda Station after escorting a female patient to Ballinasloe Mental Hospital. On driving through Galway the hackney car in which they were travelling left the road and entered the River Corrib at Woodquay. Garda Kennelly was drowned along with the others in the car.

http://media.photobucket.com/user/Knockanure/media/Old%20Knokanure/ClifdengardaKennellyseatedleftDSCF1254.jpg.html?filters[term]=garda%20kennelly&filters[primary]=images&filters[secondary]=videos&sort=1&o=0

 

 

 

KENNELLY

 

2 April 2015 Chicago Sun Times.

Kennelly, his family are believed to have come from Ballylongford.

In the early 1960s, a Chicago alderman proposed naming what is now the Eisenhower Expressway after Mayor Martin H. Kennelly, who headed the city from 1947 to 1955, but that effort obviously failed. In fact, there doesn’t seem to be any public memorial to Kennelly. The exception is in the suburbs. A Kennelly great nephew has made a financial donation toward the renovation of an athletic facility at Riverside Brookfield High School, to be known as the Kennelly Athletic Complex. Is there something wrong with this scenario? Kennelly rose from working in the stockroom of Marshall Field’s. Under his leadership, the groundwork for Chicago’s expressways was begun. He was not involved in political corruption, and he replaced political appointees with civil service workers. Kennelly lost in his run for a third term because he was trying to clean up the city. Just imagine what Chicago would be like today had Kennelly been able to stay in office and destroy the Democratic machine.It’s more than time to honor Kennelly in a way that he’ll be remembered in Chicago history. We went to bat for Mayor Jane Byrne, and now it’s Kennelly’s turn. He can be honored in Riverside and Chicago.

M.L. Chin, Lincoln Park.

 

 

    9 Apr 2015  Chicago Sun-Times

JUDGE RULES IN FAVOR OF FAIR TRIALS

Hidden police files and secret deals with witnesses have been a common thread in many of the wrongful convictions that have come to light in Illinois in recent years.

So it was encouraging to see U.S. District Judge Matthew Kennelly take a strong stand against both this week in the case of Nathson Fields, a former death row inmate who is suing the city because a Chicago cop withheld or fabricated evidence against him.

Kennelly ruled late Monday that Fields gets a new trial in his lawsuit partly because authorities hid a “bonanza” get-out-of-prison-early deal with a key witness. Kennelly also said Fields’ lawyers can investigate whether police have kept some murder case files hidden from defence lawyers.

Secret incentives to witnesses have been a recurring problem in high-profile trials. Juries take the witnesses’ testimony at face value without ever learning the witness is talking in exchange for something of real value, such as having years knocked off a prison sentence.

Similarly, investigative notes and files that could prove a defendant’s innocence all too often turn up only after a conviction, in violation of the law.

 

 

TADHG KENNELLY: "I came out thinking 'I'll give it a crack and see what happens', not thinking I'd be a hall of famer." His grandmother came from Kilbaha, Moyvane. March 2015.

 

How I met living cousins in Ireland

By The Gathering Ireland, 23 November 2012

Senior Editor of The Huffington Post Craig Kanalley recently journeyed from the US to Ireland to explore his family heritage. Here, he shares the highlights of the experience, which include meeting relatives, touring the countryside and learning a few things about the land of his ancestors.

Since I was a kid, I've dreamed of going to Ireland.

My last name is Irish and I've long been curious about my roots, particularly my Irish heritage, as I never knew my paternal grandfather. He was nearly 100 percent Irish.

When my Dad found a great deal on LivingSocial for a trip for one to Ireland (through Great Value Vacations), and passed it along, I felt it was tailor-made for me. It allowed the flexibility of a rental car to drive the country and B&B vouchers to stay anywhere I chose.

It would allow me to visit townlands my ancestors are from (and that's what I did, including Eyrecourt, Co. Galway; Killanena, Co. Clare; Tinahely, Co. Wicklow). When I booked the trip, I also tried something with hopes of finding more about my roots -- a DNA test.

To my surprise, the FamilyTreeDNA results came back in June 2012 -- just five months before my trip -- with stunning information.

I came back with a close match -- a living man in Ireland today with the surname Kennelly. (This is my surname -- the spelling changed after our branch arrived in Canada and the United States.)

DNA traces your male line only. So if you go back to my father's father's father, etc., and you do the same with this man, we go back to a single Kennelly who likely lived in the 1700s, according to the test.

What luck this was. Not only did I need a living relative in Ireland to get a result like this, but he too would have taken a DNA test. What are the chances?

I immediately shot an email to the email address listed for this Tom Kennelly (ironically, my immigrant ancestor, who came from Ireland to Canada in 1849, was also named Thomas Kennelly).

It ends up the email went to a cousin of his, Helen Smith in Australia. She helped me connect with Tom though. In August, I spoke with him by phone. On Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012, I visited him at his home in County Limerick(!) and met his lovely wife Nora, daughter Margaret, and grandson Jayden.

Our Family Reunion

We spoke about many things when we met. Of course, we talked about our families. We went through old pictures and were blown away by the resemblance between our families especially in some of the older photos. We talked about our family's medical histories, and we found similarities there too. We discussed cultural differences, what it's like growing up and living in the United States, what it's like in Ireland.

 

Some of the conversation was emotionally riveting.

"What do you remember about that day?" Margaret asked me about 9-11 while I was seated at the Kennelly's kitchen table.

We also talked about the economy that is in so much trouble, particularly in Ireland. The need to create new jobs. How the Irish people are struggling, and how the United States hasn't been immune to the global economic crisis either.

There are so many young people in Ireland without job opportunities ahead of them. What will come of them?

"Emigration," Margaret said. There are few other choices.

After Nora served me the most wonderful tea and homemade bread, Tom and Margaret walked me to the old Kennelly family home -- from the 1800s! It still stands near their current home.

Tom explained that he still works to keep it up. It's part of history. A lot of old homes like it, from that time period, have since fallen apart across Ireland, in ruins. He doesn't want that to happen to this place.

"What did you learn from that DNA test?" I asked Tom, his wife Nora and daughter Margaret.

They learned the County Kerry Kennelly's are relatives of ours. Brendan Kennelly, a well-known Irish writer, is of that group, and he's related, they told me. I asked if there might also be relation with Tadgh Kennelly, a famous Gaelic/Australian football player; he's from County Kerry as well. Oh, yes, absolutely, they said.

After Nora served me the most wonderful tea and homemade bread, Tom and Margaret walked me to the old Kennelly family home -- from the 1800s! It still stands near their current home. That means I have roots that lie in County Kerry too.

"Kennelly -- Kerry," it was a familiar refrain I heard all week in Ireland, whether in Dublin or Galway. "You're good," I would tell the locals as I met them across the country. But since my own immigrant ancestor was actually from Co. Limerick, I wondered if I truly had roots there.

Thanks to my meeting with Tom, I confirmed I do. I am related to the Kerry Kennelly's. And there are so many of them.

On to County Kerry

It was getting dark, but how often am I in Ireland? I took a risk by driving out of my way to County Kerry after this exciting discovery (I was already an hour from my bed & breakfast; this would be further out). I knew I'd come back at nighttime.

I'm glad I took that chance. Not only did I make it back safely, I added to my experiences in a really awesome way.

After punching up Kennelly in the GPS, something popped up for Moyvane, Co. Kerry. It just said "Kennelly." It could be a pub, perhaps a townland even, it could be anything.

It was a hardware store. I smiled as I pulled up. I waited patiently as a worker behind the counter helped other customers. When he was alone, I walked up and asked if he knew if the owner was around.

"I am the owner," he said.

"You're a Kennelly?" I asked. It was probably a bizarre question given the store's name, but he simply answered in the affirmative.

"I am too," I said. I then explained I was visiting Ireland from the United States, looking for my roots. How I met a cousin in Co. Limerick, and he told me I had links to Co. Kerry.

He seemed interested, and we chatted for a bit.

I then asked for a photo. He said sure.

Before leaving, I explained to him how my cousin said we're related to Brendan Kennelly.

He's from Ballylongford, the hardware store owner told me. Just 10 minutes up the road. I asked about the "Kennelly's" pub I've heard about. That's in Ballylongford too, he said.

It was going to be dark soon, but I might never be just 10 minutes away again.

I thanked him, he gave me his business card, and I headed on to Ballylongford.

I pulled up in the small town and lit up with a smile when I saw a Kennelly's auto shop. But it wasn't the pub. Then I saw it across the street from the auto shop. "Kennelly's." The pub.

I promptly parked the car and walked out. The pub was closed. No one around. I got my picture in front of it anyway.

I then crossed over to the auto shop. No one around there either. Just before leaving, I thought I'd try circling the building. It was there that I saw a little office with a man inside.

I gave him a wave at the window and smiled, to show I mean no harm. He came outside to meet me.

"Do you know the Kennelly's around here?" I asked. He nodded with a slight hint of a smile but I couldn't be sure.

"Are you a Kennelly?" I asked. It was an awkward line of questioning but I wasn't sure how else to start the conversation.

"Yes, I am," he said. I then explained the same way I explained with Mike Kennelly, the owner of the hardware shop.

He opened up, introduced himself as Tim Kennelly, and we chatted for a bit. He was extremely knowledgeable about the Kennelly's so I was really fortunate to meet him.

He then told me about his uncle -- none other than Brendan Kennelly himself. And how his parents owned the pub across the street.

Brendan Kennelly is in Dublin now, he said, but from Ballylongford. He showed me a quote from Brendan hanging up at his business. Ballylongford was the inspiration behind the quote, he told me, and he showed me the exact spot Brendan was inspired by.

Besides his name being Tim, he said his grandfather was Tim too.

Of course, I have an uncle named Tim Kanalley.

It's a small world after all.

This article originally appeared in The Huffington Post.

 

 

 

DEATH took place of John Kennelly best known resident of St. Philip Neri’s Parish Philadelphia on January 26th 1898. He was a native of Newtownsandes, Co Kerry. He went to Philadelphia in autumn of 1856 as a young man, for nearly 30 years he has been in the undertaking business. John never married, his sister Mary Kennelly was his housekeeper. He is survived by sisters Mrs Hannah Kennedy and Mrs Ellen Lacy and brother Thomas Kennelly who is also an undertaker.

 

Glendalough waterfall : http://youtu.be/nh5e9U7K82U

 

 

New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXXIII, Issue 26, 29 June 1905, Page 3

 

An Irish Missionary

 

The missionaries in Shanghai are mostly of French nationality, a few countrymen of the saintly martyr of Molokai, and one worthy son of St. Patrick. The Rev. F. M. Kennelly, S.J., was born about forty years ago at Listowel, North Kerry, and belongs to a highly respected family still represented there. One of his brothers is parish priest at Clunes, Victoria. (Father Kennelly of Clunes is a personal friend of the editor of the N.Z. Tablet). Two members of the family are Sisters of Mercy in Sacramento, Cal., and two brothers reside in New York. Father Kennelly, like the saintly Brendan of Clonfert, was early imbued with the missionary spirit. He came to China in 1885, and has not seen the land of his birth since. He was ordained a priest in 1890 and had been engaged for six years teaching in Shanghai. The field of his missionary activity is immense and also extends to visiting men-o-war, hospitals, prisons, police stations, and the many other arduous duties of a priest, which are known only to himself and Almighty God. From his busy life, however, he snatches moments to contribute articles to the local press and the New York Messenger. His name is on every tongue from Hong Kong to Chefoo, and many a poor, hard-up sailor he has befriended. Being an eminent lingiuist, speaking French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, and several Chinese dialects he still is proud of the Gaelic tongue of his beloved Eire, which he regards as an invaluable auxiliary in the acquisition of languages. Father Kennelly is rather difficult to catch, but if you happen to be occasionally lucky you are introduced to a plain room with a bare floor, a crucifix on the wall, a picture of our Lady, a portrait of the Pope, a few books on a shelf, a secretaire, and the only other chair in the room is offered you with a hearty cead mile failte. Though a little beyond the prime of life and a few silvery hairs discernible, the intellect and vigor of the Gael is at once apparent in the ample forehead, the firm lips and chin, the hearty hand shake, the natural smile, the twinkling, kindly eye, the sympathetic expressions of the priestly heart, and the magnetic versatility polished by culture and the touches of that rich accent alone peculiar to those born under the shadows of the hills that inspired vigor and eloquence in The Liberator. Father Kennelly intends shortly to publish, probably in the New York Messenger, an interesting history of the Catholic missions in China, which promises to be a literary as well as a historical treat.

 

 

Duagh Church 1800

 

 

 

 

Husband

 

 

Wife

NameJOHN SHANAHAN HELEN SHEEHY

AddressKNOCALOUGHA SCRAHAN

OccupationNR NR

FatherMAURICE SHANAHAN PATRICK SHEEHY

MotherALICE KENNELLY MARGARET HORAN

 

Further details in the record

Husband AgeNR

Husband Marital StatusNR

Wife AgeNR

Wife DenominationRC

Wife Marital StatusNR

Husband's Father's OccupationNR

Wife's Father's OccupationNR

Witness 1JOHN KENNELLY

Witness 2BARTHOLOMEW SHANAHAN

 

 

Listowel Church

Name JAMES KENNELLY

Date of Birth 11 December 1802 (BASED ON OTHER DATE INFORMATION)

Address NR

Father MORGAN KENNELLY

Mother MARGARET MCCORMICK

 

Further details in the record

Child Denomination RC

Father Occupation NR

Sponsor 1 JOHN MCMAHON

Sponsor 1 Address NR

Sponsor 2 ANN FEIGH

Sponsor 2 Address NR

NR

 

 

 

 

Name MICHAEL BRODERICK

Date of Birth 4 October 1802 (BASED ON OTHER DATE INFORMATION)

Address NR

Father MICHAEL BRODERICK

Mother MARGARET KENNELLY

 

Further details in the record

Child Denomination RC

Father Occupation NR

Sponsor 1 TIMOTHY SCANLON

Sponsor 2 CATHERINE KENNELLY

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/SOM/Minehead/BurMi1885.html

22 Aug 1888 Henry James Age: 74

6 Sep 1888 Mary Katherine Kennelly Age: 43 (By Roman Catholic Priest)

26 Sep 1888 Richard Kennelly Age: 45

10 Oct 1888 Sarah Ann Chapman Age: 45

http://www.irelandgenweb.com/~irltip/Records/1766ReligousCensus-K.htm

Kennelly John Papist Tipperary Kennelly Maurice Papist Tipperary Kenney John Papist Templemore

http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/d/o/r/James-Doran/GENE36-0005.html

7. PATRICK HUGH3 BOYLE (HUGH (DANIEL/JULIA)2, DANIEL (OR HUGH)1) was born March 15, 1856 in York District, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and died September 14, 1881 in Beaver Island, Manitou Co., Michigan. He married ANNA (ANNIE) KENNELLY January 23, 1878 in Peaine Township, Beaver Island, Manitou Co., Michigan, daughter of JAMES KENNELLY and CATHARINE CULL. She was born Abt. 1861 in Beaver Island, Manitou Co.., Michigan, and died Abt. 1936 in Prob. Delta Co., Michigan.

Notes for PATRICK HUGH BOYLE:
Holy Cross Parish Death Register 1866 - 1898, Beaver Island, Michigan Page 5

"Patrick Boyle a native of Beaver Island aged 25 years departed this life January 22nd 1881. Was buried according to the rites of the Church. Peter Gallagher"

More About PATRICK HUGH BOYLE:
Author's Note: 1881, The Holy Cross Parish Death Register shows a Patrick Boyle died on January 22, 1881. Irene Reidsma's Holy Cross Cemetery Records shows "Patrick H. Boyle, son of Hugh, died Sept. 14, 1881 aged 24 years".
Baptism: March 16, 1856, St. Paul's Roman Catholic, Toronto, York Co., Ontario, Canada; Baptized by F. T. Fitzhenry; Sponsors - John Eglys & Ann O'Donnell
Burial: 1881, Holy Cross Cemetery, North Section, on same stone with Hugh & William, Beaver Island, Michigan
Occupation: 1880, Schoolteacher

More About ANNA (ANNIE) KENNELLY:
Census 1: 1910, Anna, a widow, daughter Anna J Boyle, children Margaret & William, & father-in-law Richard Fitzsimmons, a widower, living at 504 South Jennie Street, Escanaba, Delta Co., Michigan
Census 2: 1920, Anna, daughter Margaret Fitzsimmons, & daughter Anna Boyle, living at 500 13th St. South, Escanaba, Delta Co., Michigan
Occupation: 1910, Dressmaker, At Home
Probate: 1936, Fitzsimmons, Anna 1936 Deceased 7069

Marriage Notes for PATRICK BOYLE and ANNA KENNELLY:
Civil marriage record information:
Date: January 23, 1878
Patrick Boyle, age 22, b. Canada, occupation - Farmer
Ann Kennelly, age 17, b. Beaver Island, Michigan
Residence: Both, Beaver Island, Michigan
m. in Peaine Township, Beaver Island, Michigan
by Peter Gallagher, Catholic Priest
Witnesses: John Conahan and Mary Carmody, both of Beaver Island, Michigan

Author's Note: John Conahan is a brother of the Author's great-grandmother, Mary (nee Rodgers) Connahan

From Holy Cross Parish Register; Marriage Records 1862 - 1908, Page 37

"Groom Patrick Boyle, residence at time of Marriage, Beaver Island, Michigan, aged 22 years, birthplace Canada, occupation - Farmer.
Bride Ann Kennelly, aged 17 years, birthplace Beaver Island, Michigan
The parties above named were joined in Matrimony by me this 23rd day of January A. D. 1878 at the Church of the Holy Cross, in the presence of John Connahan and Mary Connelly.
[signed] Peter Gallagher"

Children of PATRICK BOYLE and ANNA KENNELLY are:
i. ANNA JANE4 BOYLE, b. November 04, 1878, Beaver Island, Manitou Co., Michigan; d. Unknown.
More About ANNA JANE BOYLE:
Baptism: November 07, 1878, Baptized by Father Peter Gallagher of Holy Cross Parish, Beaver Island, Michigan; sponsors - Hugh Boyle and Anney Boyle
Occupation: 1920, Teacher, Public School


ii. CATHERINE ELIZABETH BOYLE, b. March 21, 1880, Beaver Island, Manitou Co., Michigan; d. November 08, 1880, Beaver Island, Manitou Co., Michigan.
More About CATHERINE ELIZABETH BOYLE:
Baptism: March 31, 1880, Baptized by Father Peter Gallagher of Holy Cross Parish, Beaver Island, Michigan; sponsors - John Kennelly and Mary Kennelly.


http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~mccarthykathryn/bruff_baptismal_records.htm

http://clarke.cmich.edu/resource_tab/information_and_exhibits/beaver_island_history/church_records/church_records_k.html

 

James Kennelly


1864 church membership:

James Kennelly + 29

Mrs. Kennelly, 29 - Catherine Cull

John Kennelly, 7

(Anna Kennelly - listed in 1870 census - married Patrick Boyle, Jan. 23, 1878)

Sue Kennelly, 5

Peter Kennelly, 4

Catherine Kennelly, 3 - April 12, 1863 - a Catherine Kennelly is a parent, along with a

Manes Boyle, of Sarah B., June 9, 1886

Mary Kennelly, 1

James Kennelly, infant - Feb. 11, 1865

Same parents:

Patrick Kennelly, Mar. 19, 1868

Daniel Kennelly, Sept. 4, 1869

Elizabeth Kennelly, June 16, 1871

Sarah Kennelly, Nov. 28, 1875

Margaret Kennelly, Oct. 12, 1877


Died:

Patrick Kennelly, June 5, 1871, age 57; born Co. Kerry.

 

 

 

http://boards.ancestry.co.uk/surnames.kennelly/17.56.92.94/mb.ashx
Michael Kennelly
Andria (View posts) Posted: 14 Feb 2001 12:49PM GMT

Classification:
Surnames:
Hi Dorothy!
This is the only information I have on Michael: He and his wife Ellen Larkin first settled in West Bend, WI. In 1868 they moved to Princeton, MN. I do not know when they came to America, or if they were married here or in Ireland. I do not know when either were born or when they were married. Michael died April 11, 1892 and Ellen June 6, 1898. They had seven children: Mary Jane, Clarissa, James Albert, Kathrine E., C.M., Winnifred, and Agnes. They were Catholic, and then Ellen got into a disagreement with the Priest and was not allowed to be buried in the Catholic cemetery.
I know that it isn't a lot to go on, but hopefully it helps!
Thank you!!
Andria Simpson
Kennelly Kin of GA, IA, SD and MN
Replies: 13
Kennelly/Kenely
Andria (View posts) Posted: 14 Aug 2000 6:21PM

Classification:
Surnames:
My ggg grandfater was Michael Kenely (we believe he changed the spelling of his last name, but cant find documentation. He owned a farm in Princeton, Mille Lacs County, MN. He was born in Ireland, I don't know where. He was married to Ellen Larkin. I unfortunately don't have dates at this time, we are in the process of moving and that information is packed, but if this is a possible link, I would love to hear from you! I will be able to get to the specific dates after 8/20/2000. You can e-mail me at rts906@cs.com
Thanks!
Andria

 

New Hibernia Review
Volume 10, Number 3, Fómhar/Autumn 2006
E-ISSN: 1534-5815 Print ISSN: 1092-3977

DOI: 10.1353/nhr.2006.0057

Kennelly, James J.
Thomas A. Finlay S.J., 1848-1940: Educationalist, Editor, Social Reformer (review)
New Hibernia Review - Volume 10, Number 3, Fómhar/Autumn 2006, pp. 147-149

Center for Irish Studies at the University of St. Thomas

James J. Kennelly - Thomas A. Finlay S.J., 1848-1940: Educationalist, Editor, Social Reformer (review) - New Hibernia Review 10:3 New Hibernia Review 10.3 (2006) 147-149 Muse Search Journals This Journal Contents Reviewed by James J. Kennelly Thomas A. Finlay S.J., 1848-1940: Educationalist, Editor, Social Reformer, by Thomas J. Morrissey S.J., pp. 171. Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2004. Distributed by International Specialized Booksellers, Portland, OR. $35. Thomas Morrissey's biography of the Reverend Thomas A. Finlay at long last addresses the need for a full-length biography of the man W. E. H. Lecky called "perhaps the most universally respected man in Ireland." The subject did not make this an easy task: Finlay appears to have destroyed all of his personal papers and letters before his death. Despite Finlay's...

 

http://animalscience.ucdavis.edu/faculty/Tucker/pubs.htm

Weary, D.M. and Tucker, C.B. 2006. Dairy cow comfort. Proceedings of the North American Veterinary Conference. Orlando, FL. In press.
Tucker, C.B. and Weary, D.M. 2005. Improving cow comfort. Four-State Dairy Nutrition and Management Conference. Mid-West Plan Service, Ames, IA. pages 45-52.
Weary, D.M. and Tucker, C.B. 2004. The science of cow comfort. Advanced Dairy Nutrition and Management 2004. Cornell Total Dairy Management, Ithaca, NY.
Tucker, C.B., Weary, D.M., Rushen, J. and de Passillé, A.M. 2004. Designing better environments for cattle to rest. Advances in Dairy Technology. John Kennelly, editor. University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB. 16:39-53.
Rushen, J., de Passille, A.M., Borderas, F, Tucker, C.B. and Weary, D.M. 2004. Designing better environments for cattle to walk and stand. Advances in Dairy Technology. John Kennelly, editor. University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB. 16:55-64.
Weary, D.M. and Tucker, C.B. 2003. The science of cow comfort. Proceedings of the Joint meeting of the Ontario Agri Business Association and the Ontario Association of Bovine Practitioners, Guelph, ON. pages 23-49.
Gaworski, M.A., Tucker, C.B., Weary, D.M. and Swift, M.L. 2003. Effects of two free-stall designs on dairy cattle behavior. Proceedings of the 5th International Dairy Housing Conference. Fort Worth, Texas. American Society of Agricultural Engineers, St. Joseph, MI. pages 139-146.
Tucker, C.B. and Weary, D.M. 2001. Stall design: enhancing cow comfort. Advances in Dairy Technology. John Kennelly, editor. University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB. 13:155-168.
http://www.eoearth.org/article/Kennelly,_Arthur_E.

Arthur E. Kennelly. (Source: IEEE History Center)


Arthur Edwin Kennelly, the son of an Irish naval officer, was born near Bombay, India, on 17 December 1861. After having attended a variety of elementary schools, Kennelly obtained a position as office boy with the London society of Telegraph Engineers (predecessor of the Institution of Electrical Engineers), where he remained for two years. He then left England, procuring practical experience in the field through such positions as assistant electrician in Malta, 1878; chief electrician of a cable repairing steamer, 1881; and senior ship's electrician to the Eastern Telegraph Co., 1886. Kennelly came to America in 1887 and joined the staff of Thomas A. Edison as principal electrical assistant, acting, in addition, as consulting electrician for the Edison General Electric and the General Electric Companies. He left Edison in 1894 to form, with Edwin James Houston, the firm of Houston & Kennelly, Consulting Electrical Engineers, in Philadelphia. Kennelly was retained in 1902 by the Mexican government to be in charge of the laying of the Vera Cruz-Frontera-Campeche cables.

That same year, however, Kennelly moved his main activities from the world of business to that of academia, serving as professor of electrical engineering at Harvard University from 1902-1930 as well as at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1913-1924. In addition, he was an exchange professor in applied science to France during 1921-1922, a research associate of the Carnegie Institution 1924-1930, and the first visiting electrical engineering lecturer to the lwadare Foundation, Japan, in 1931.

Kennelly's contributions to electrical engineering were numerous. In 1893, he presented a paper on 'Impedance" to the American Institute of Electrical Engineers in which he discussed the first use of complex numbers as applied to Ohm's Law in alternating current circuit theory. He also later elucidated the use of complex hyperbolic functions in the solution of line problems. Independently of Oliver Heaviside, Kennelly proposed the existence of an ionized layer in the upper atmosphere, now known as the Kennelly-Heaviside layer, as the reflecting surface which made transoceanic wireless communication possible.

Kennelly was the recipient of the awards of many nations, including the IEEE Institution Premium (1887), the Franklin Institute Howard Potts Gold Medal (1917), the Cross of a Chevalier of the Legion d'Honneur of France and the AIEE Edison Medal (1933) "For meritorious achievements in electrical science, electrical engineering and the electrical arts as exemplified by his contributions to the theory of electrical transmission and to the development of international electrical standards."He was awarded the IRE Medal of Honor in 1932, "For his studies of radio propagation phenomena and his contributions to the theory and measurement methods in the alternating current circuit field which now have extensive radio application."He was an active participant in professional organizations such as the Society for the Promotion of the Metric System of Weights and Measures, the Illuminating Engineering Society and the U.S. National Committee of the International Electrotechnical Commission, and also served as the president of both the AIEE and the Institute of Radio Engineers during 1898-1900 and 1916, respectively.Kennelly died in Boston on 18 June 1939.



Kerry's Eye Editor "ashamed" of Michael Healy-Rae - Politics.ie
4 Apr 2009 ... I wouldn't exactly describe myself as a fan of The Kerrys Eye editor Padraig Kennelly, but he's opinon piece in last weeks paper about ...
www.politics.ie/.../34281-kerrys-eye-editor-ashamed-michael-healy-rae.html -



Daniel Kennelly, Editor - dkennelly@americasfuture.org Daniel Kennelly is editor of Doublethink Online and Senior Managing Editor of The American Interest. His reviews and essays on culture, politics, and foreign policy have been published by The American Interest, The Weekly Standard, The American Enterprise, Crisis, and Doublethink, and he is also a reviewer for Kirkus. He is a graduate of the University of Dallas (1998) and a member of Phi Beta Kappa.


Kennelly definition of Kennelly in the Free Online Encyclopedia.
At Rubber World Magazine, Dennis Kennelly, vice president of sales, has been promoted to senior vice president-associate publisher; Don Smith, editor, ...
encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Kennelly - Cached - Similar


JOHN KENEALY

was born in County Cork, Ireland, in October, 1838. At the age of fifteen years
he was employed as a clerk in a large dry-goods establishment in the city of
Cork. In a few years he was advanced to the position of buyer and commercial
traveler. In September, 1865, he was arrested by the British Government for
connection with the Irish National party known as the Fenian movement. He was
convicted and sentenced to ten years penal servitude for the crime of trying to
restore to Ireland her national independence. He served two years in the prisons
of Pentonville and Portland, England, and two years in the penal colony of
Western Australia.
Forced by public opinion, the British Government released the political
prisoners before the term of their sentences expired. Mr. Kenealy arrived in San
Francisco in January, 1870. Here he married Miss Hennessy, a sister of one of
his fellow compatriots. He became connected with a large wholesale house in that
city, as general salesman and manager of a department. In March, 1875, he came
to Los Angeles, with Mr. Richard Dillon, his brother-in-law, and engaged in the
dry-goods business, under the firm name of Dillon & Kenealy. After a very
successful business career, they closed out their dry-goods stock in this city,
three years ago. They have yet a store at Phoenix, Arizona. They have a fine
young vineyard of over 200 acres, from four to six years old, near Roscoe, four
miles above Burbank; also have large wineries and make their own wine and
brandy. They are also interested jointly and separately in other valuable real
estate. Mr. and Mrs. Kenealy have two children, a daughter sixteen and a son
fourteen years of age.

An Illustrated History of Los Angeles County, California - Chicago, The Lewis
Publishing Company, 1889 Page 524
Transcribed by Kathy Sedler


Archbishop Anselm Edward John Kenealy, O.F.M. Cap.


http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=2055322156&page=2 John Kenealy


James E. Kenealy James E. Kenealy, a 43-year resident of Tomahawk Lake in Blooming Grove, died December 26, 2005 at Orange Regional Medical Center, Arden Hill Campus. He was 69.The son of James A. Kenealy and Marie Free Kenealy, he was born February 12, 1936 in Brooklyn, N.Y.A retired High School English Teacher for Washingtonville schools, he was also a Town of Blooming Grove Justice since 1980. He was the first registered Conservative to be elected to office in New York State. Mr. Kenealy was a graduate of Xavier High School in New York City and St. Joseph's University in Philadelphia, Pa. He received his Masters at Fordham University.He was an avid fan of fishing, boating and water sports with his grandchildren.He is survived by his wife, Mary M. McCafferty Kenealy, at home; four sons: Dr. James F.X. Kenealy and his wife, Vanessa, of Hopkinton, Mass., John Kenealy and his wife, Sandra, of Turner, Maine, Edmund Kenealy and his wife, Deborah, of Sudbury, Mass., and Terrence Kenealy of Newbury Port, Mass.; sisters, Karen Baker and husband, John, of Staten Island, N.Y., Anne Logan and husband, Joseph, of Staten Island, N.Y.; grandchildren: Andrew Kenealy, Diana Kenealy, Aidan Kenealy, Allyson Petit and Thomas Petit; and many nieces and nephews.Visitation will be held on Wednesday, December 28, 2005 from 4-6 p.m. and Thursday, December 29 from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the David T. Ferguson Funeral Home, 20 North St., Washingtonville, N.Y.A Funeral Mass will be celebrated on December 30, 2005 at 10 a.m. in St. Columba Church, Chester, N.Y. Cremation will be private.In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the American Lung Association, 35 Orchard St., White Plains, NY 10603, or Priests for Life, P.O. Box 141172, Staten Island, NY 10314.


https://www.findmypast.com/signin.action?keepTargetUrl=1


http://www.library.georgetown.edu/dept/speccoll/fl/f163%7d10.htm
Box: 10 Fold: 61 Anselm Edward John KenealyLetter(s) dated 2/17/1921 DESCRIPTION: Contains ALS from Anselm E.J. Kenealy, archbishop of Simla: "Many thanks for your two papers for the S. Times. I shall keep my part of the contract in due course & let you have a paper on "Pen Years in India"..." Box: 10 Fold: 62 Elsie (Hope) KerryLetter(s) dated 6/24/1917-3/1/1918 DESCRIPTION: Contains 2 dated ALS, 1 undated ALS from Elsie (Hope) Kerry, wife of the 6th marquis of Landsdowne. Box: 10 Fold: 63 Henry William Edmund Petty-Fitzmaurice KerryLetter(s) dated 12/10/1919-12/29/1930 DESCRIPTION: Contains 2 ALS from Henry William Edmund Petty-Fitzmaurice Kerry, 6th marquis of Landsdowne, to Shane Leslie. Reference to Dr. John Leslie of Torbert (ALS 12/10/1919): "It is curious there should have been two Dr. J.L.s living in Ireland about the same time. I thought when I wrote that Torbert was in Scotland, but I see it is in Co. Kerry, which I should have known!..."


http://archdioceseofdelhi.com/sub/history/sub_history_main.htm
Archbishop Anselm Edward John Kenealy, O.F.M. Cap.

Events
Date Age Event Title
25 Oct 1864 Born Abersychan, Great Britain
1887 22.2 Ordained Priest Priest of Order of Friars Minor Capuchin
21 Dec 1910 46.2 Appointed Archbishop of Simla, India
1 Jan 1911 46.2 Ordained Bishop Archbishop of Simla, India
13 Jan 1936 71.2 Resigned Archbishop of Simla, India
13 Jan 1936 71.2 Appointed Titular Archbishop of Ratiaria
8 Dec 1943 79.1 Died Archbishop Emeritus of Simla, India





Set against a back-drop of sparkling snow-capped peaks, the distinctive grey and scarlet of Loreto Convent, Tara Hall, whether kissed by the brilliance of a summer sun, or veiled by the frosty whiteness of winter snow or bathed in the deep hues of a vivid monsoon sunset, is ever a source of pride and joy to all associated with it. But let us turn back the pages of time to 1892 when, in response to a pressing request from the Archbishop of Agra, Dr.Van Den Bosch, O.C. for a school to provide a good education to Catholic children, Mother Gonzaga Joyce and a few Sisters arrived in Simla, the summer capital of the Viceroy, to plant Loreto's banner in this hill station.

The journey had been fatiguing and arduous, the roads winding perilously round cliffs or along ridges with an abyss on either side but the elderly Superior was a soul of prayer and had all the gifts or organization which mark a pioneer. The only comment left by her companions reads : "Those who travel first on any road get all the hardness bumps and jolts, but they have the honour of leaving beaten, smooth tracks for those who come after them. At first the Sisters took up the day school below the Bazar which had formerly served as the Catholic Church and had been managed by lady teachers. Some time later "Firewood" was rented and the nuns took in boarders as well as day pupils. Later again, the "Mythe" a larger house with more extensive grounds, was rented for a year.
Finally it was in Kaithu, on the edge of the town, that Mother Gonzaga found what she wanted - the two properties of Tara Hall and Belle Vue offered for sale together. Here the Sisters established themselves on 30-11-1895, overcoming the hazards of space, restraints of finance, problems with domestic help, inclement weather. The early Nuns owe a debt of gratitude to their good friend Fr. Callistus, O.C. who was always at hand and never missed a Mass. If the Franciscan spirit of poverty and simplicity left its mark on Tara Hall so did the Franciscan spirit of Joy. Plays and concerts did their shares in fashioning. The young minds and in a short time the pupils were distinguishing themselves in the Music Examinations of Trinity College and the Royal Academy, London. Debating the literary clubs flourished and games were played with zest Of special delight were picnics to places of scenic beauty.

The school population was largely Catholic and the Sodality of our Lady flourished among the Senior Girls. In 1889 the Mother Superior opened "St. Joseph's Day School". For six years the two schools ran side by side but when Tara Hall sought recognition, the Ministry of Education granted it on condition that the two schools should amalgamate and be known as "the Loreto Boarding and Day School". This benefited both sets of students and enabled the nuns to be used far more advantageously.

St. Patrick's Day School was opened in March 1946 at Willoiw Bank, The Mall, with 4 pupils. We transferred to the Chalet in July 1947. Numbers grew, improvements were made in the house. Finally in 1977 the Sisters withdrew and it was disposed of to the Evanmgelical Church. Meanwhile Tara Hall advanced from strength to strength, additions being made in the form of classrooms, laboratories, a Concert Hall and a Library. It advanced from the High School Examination of the Punjab to the Cambridge Overseas Examination. However, December 1975 witnessed a dramatic change - gone were the days of dormitory chatter and dining room clatter, of splashig in washrooms and excitement at favourite puddings for, regretfully Tara Hall was compelled to close the residential school, bringing to an end a very special era of its history.

With this began a new epoch - As a day school Loreto Convent could accommodate larger numbers till today we have 1150 on the rolls. This points to the veried social spectrum represented, to the variety of children and to the variety of opportunities, from Computer Sciences to Social Service, which Tara Hall affords them. Loreto Convent, now a hundred years old, stands as a monument to the perseverance and success of those pioneers who paved the way for generation upon generation of young women to become fully human persons, with a sense of personal worth, a good relationship with God, self and other - women of honesty and integrity, agents of change in a changing world - a mission as immense as a mightly Himalayas that stand guardian to Tara Hall, Shimla.

TARA HALL" A CENTURY OF EXCELLENCE TARA Hall celebrated its centenary on a grand scale with an Old Girls' Reunion. Five years ago,in 1995, the daughters of the Sacred Heart took over the management of this institution with the same objective as that of the Loretto nuns - to educate the girls child and to mound her into a responsible citizen. Over the years, Tara Hall took the identity of Sacred Heart Convent School. But its basic values of sincerity, justice and freedom - the path on which the educational tradition were set up - remain as before. They maintain the motto - "Those who travel first on any road get all the bumps and jolts, but they have the honour to light the torch, to lead those who come after them. The student strength is around 1,300 with 42 qualified teachers who are supervised by the nuns. The School was converted into a day scholar's school in 1976.

Affiliated to ICSE,the school is divided into two sections within the campus. One is the junior section of students from KG upto class V with a separate sister in charge. The other is the senior section till Class X. The subjects taught include science, social sciences, English, Hindi and Computer Science. The school has a well-stocked library and has well-equipped laboratories. The students are encouraged to participate in academic as well as co-curricular activities.

The latter comprise competitions in athletics, quiz, education, debate, dance, drama, flower arrangement and the annual function. The school is continuing its endeavour to improve the infrastructure. New course as well as modern facilities are also being ushered in. The school plans to have its own auditorium in the future.





http://www.tullowparish.com/PARISH/FeastBrigid.htm

" Faoi Bhrat Bhride"
A Tribute to the Brigidine Sisters
at Scoil Mhuire Lourdes Tullow
1807 - 2005
Editor Bro Camillus Regan, Patrician Brothers
Photographs and some articles

A word from the Principal

I first came to Scoil Mhuire Lourdes in 1977 as a young, newly qualified teacher. I began my career under the caring, expert and inspiring guidance of Sr. Philomena, the Principal at that time. In 1977, the teach¬ing staff comprised of 5 nuns and 3 lay teachers.

I consider myself privileged to have worked under the leadership of Sr. Philomena, Sr. Betty and Sr. Francesca and also to have worked closely with many nuns from the Brigidine Order as fellow teachers.

Since I came here, many good people have come and gone and many changes have taken place, not only in our educational system but also in our school staffing. Gradually the number of lay teachers increased as the

number of teaching sisters decreased. But, sadly, the retirement of Sr. Betty and Sr. Paula last year also her¬alded the end of an era. This school year is the first in the school's history without a Brigidine staff member. It is indeed a sad loss.

Mo bhuiochas ar son scolairi, tuismitheoiri agus foireann teagaisc Scoil Mhuire Lourdes leis na mna rial¬ta go leir idir bheo agus mharbh a raibh aon bhaint acu leis an scoil o bunaiodh i.

Go raibh mile maith agaibh agus guim Rath De oraibh go leir

Anne Kennelly

http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~irlker/birthbalg.html


Mary Kennelly, birth, 1796, IRELAND
Replies: 0
Mary Kennelly, birth, 1796, IRELAND
Irishlovey_1 (View posts) Posted: 16 Jan 2007 10:27PM GMT

Classification: Query
Surnames: Kennelly
Mary Kennelly

Name: Mary Kennelly
Estimated birth year: abt 1796
Age in 1870: 74
Birthplace: Ireland
Home in 1870: Titusville Ward 3, Crawford, Pennsylvania
Race: White
Gender: Female
Post Office: Titusville

David Kennelly
Estimated birth year: abt 1837
Age in 1870: 33
Birthplace: England
Home in 1870: Titusville Ward 3, Crawford, Pennsylvania
Race: White
Gender: Male
Post Office: Titusville

Ann Kennelly
Estimated birth year: abt 1838
Age in 1870: 32
Birthplace: England
Home in 1870: Titusville Ward 3, Crawford, Pennsylvania
Race: White
Gender: Female
Post Office: Titusville


Mary Kennelly
Estimated birth year: abt 1840
Age in 1870: 30
Birthplace: Ireland
Home in 1870: Titusville Ward 3, Crawford, Pennsylvania
Race: White
Gender: Female
Post Office: Titusville

Kennelly, James
(Co. Kerry)
1870 Census Peaine Township
Age Born Occ. P.Prop. R.Est.
Kennelly, James 33 Ire. Wagon Maker $300 $120
Kennelly, Catherine 33 Ire. H. Keeper (Maiden name-Cull)
Kennelly, John 10 Can.
Kennelly, Anna 9 Mich. (Married Patrick Boyle)
Kennelly, Catherine 7 Mich. (Baptism record)
Kennelly, Peter 8 Mich.
Kennelly, Mary 6 Mich.
Kennelly, James 4 Mich.
Kennelly, Patrick 2 Mich.
Kennelly, Dennis 1 Mich.
Kennelly, Patrick 60 Ire.
(At home, died June 5, 1871, age 57, born Co. Kerry)

1880 Census Peaine Township
Age B FB MB Occ.
Kennelly, James 48 Ire. Ire. Ire. Carpenter
Kennelly, Catherine Wife 44 Ire. Ire. Ire. H. Keeper Can't W
Kennelly, John S 21 Mich. Ire. Ire. Farmer
Kennelly, Peter S 18 Mich. Ire. Ire. Laborer
Kennelly, Bithie D 17 Mich. Ire. Ire. At Home
Kennelly, Mary D 15 Mich. Ire. Ire. Dress Maker
Kennelly, James S 12 Mich. Ire. Ire. School
Kennelly, Patrick S 11 Mich. Ire. Ire. School
Kennelly, Daniel S 10 Mich. Ire. Ire. School
Kennelly, Elizabeth D 9 Mich. Ire. Ire. School
Kennelly, Sarah J. D 4 Mich. Ire. Ire.
(Birth record November 28, '75, James and Catherine Cull, both Ireland, list himself as "farmer")
Kennelly, Maggie D 3 Mich. Ire. Ire.
(Birth record October 12, '77, lists himself as "wagon maker")

 

http://clarke.cmich.edu/resource_tab/information_and_exhibits/beaver_island_history/census/census_k.html

 

 

 


John Joseph KENNELLY b. Phila m. Anna Brown d.NJ 1929; YOUNGEST AND LAST OF 16
Posted by: KennellyLass (ID *****4051) Date: June 01, 2009 at 22:18:19
of 333


Hello All,
This is my paternal G grandfather. I started researching over ten years ago, put it down, picked it up again...you know the cycle. I'm searching from a distance so now that there is so much on the internet I'm back at it.
I have his parents as John + Bridget (Danehy) both b.Ire and arriving abt 1847 but I'm having trouble documenting them. They lived in Phila's Ward 3. Does anyone know this line or which parish would have served this area of Phila.?
Thanks, everyone. I'll be busily reading the digests.

Kennelly's From Chicago Ill.
Posted by: Dahl Perry (ID *****3250) Date: November 03, 2008 at 14:40:42
of 333

I'm looking for Help on my Kennelly side of the family
great grandfather Edward Philip Kennelly Born 1874 in Ill.
Died 1928 married Mary Winifred McDonnell in 1898
I've always been told that Edward Philip Kennelly's
father came from Ireland.
from the same area that Mary Winifred McDonnell"s
parents were from Greneaugh County Cork Ireland.
Anyone know of any Kennelly's that came from this part of Ireland? that was in Ill.


Kate Kennelly - Abbeyfeale, Limerick Co/Philadelphia
Posted by: Donna Cowell (ID *****2833) Date: July 22, 2008 at 17:42:21
of 333

Hi -
I'm looking for information on my great grandmother Kate Kennelly, born Sept 1865 in Abbeyfeale, Newcastle West, Co. Limerick. Her parents were Michael Kennelly and Elizabeth Danaher. Siblings were Martin b. 1867, Michael b. 1868, and Margaret b.1872. Kate immigrated to Philadelphia in the mid 1880s. She married Joseph Butterworth in 1893. Please email me if you have any info about this family.

Donna

Kennellys from Athea, County Limerick
Posted by: S C (ID *****9547) Date: July 16, 2008 at 12:45:01
of 333

Looking for anyone connected to the Kennellys of this area of Ireland. Great great grandmother was Bridget Kennelly Cunningham...married to Cornelius Cunningham and came to the US with her son Denis in 1906.

Kennelly-Cork to Philadelphia
Posted by: Eugene Canally (ID *****0890) Date: July 14, 2008 at 16:56:00
of 333

My ggfather, Richard Kennelly arrived NY in 1865. Married Ellen Connors in May of 1868 in Philly. Settled in Montgomery County, Pa. in 1870.Died here in 1887, leaving Ellen and 8 children, including my gfather, Richard Francis Cannalley.
Info now strongly suggests the the first Richard came from County Cork where he was born circa:1840. May have had a Mary and a Margaret as siblings on same passage to NY.


Mary Kennelly/Kenelly? married John Daniel Scalon
Posted by: Sue Shuppy (ID *****0222) Date: September 29, 2007 at 21:42:34
of 333

Hi, I'm looking for Mary Kenelly b. 6 May 1864 Kerry Ireland died 21 Feb. 1909 Los Angeles CA married in Philadelphia PA to John Daniel Scanlon Born 1862 in Cork Ireland, died 1 Apr. 1901 in Colton CA
Children:
Daniel J. born 15 Mar 1885 Pennsylvania
Maurice Joseph born 28 Nov. 1887 San Francisco California
Timothy born 4 Nov 1890 Oakland CA
Ella Deborah born 14 Jan 1892 Oakland CA
May Agnes born 18 Apr 1894 Oakland CA
John Francis born 24 Oct 1900 San Francisco California

These are my husbands great great grandparents, I have no further leads as to who their parents are.Any information would be greatly appreciated


looking for John Kennelly, son of Martin Kennelly and Alice Mary Kennelly
Posted by: stella osullivan (ID *****3359) Date: October 09, 2006 at 13:09:22
of 333

Hi,
I am looking for my mom's 1st cousin. He is John Kennelly from NY city. His father was Martin Kennelly and his mother was Alice (McDonough) Kennelly. She is my grand aunt. John was born about 1920. Martin died in 1968 and Alice in 1973.
I would like to get in touch with John or any of his surviving family.
Alice was from Kiltubrid, Leitrim and also had a brother Thomas who emigrated to USA in the early 1900's. I am trying to trace Alice or Thomas families.
If anyone can help, that would be great
Stella.


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Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Link to Chicago Mayor Kennelly?
Posted by Craig Kanalley on 8/12/2009
Last September, when I first moved to Chicago, I threw together a blog post of my genealogical connections to the city.

The most interesting and ironic link from that list was that my great-grandfather Wallace Kanalley came to Chicago looking for work in 1920 at the age of 18, not far away from my coming at 23. He spent time as a watchman, but obviously didn't stay, as he was in Buffalo a few years later (where I grew up), and had my grandfather Kenneth in Buffalo in 1932.

Since then, I've also learned that some of my Bulger relatives came from Canada to Chicago in the late 1800's (not listed in that original post).

And tonight, an old video triggered an old memory.

The video is literally old, though I found it in the most new media of ways. A YouTube video depicting 1948 night life in Chicago, I came across it while doing work with Twitter during my internship today at the Chicago Tribune.

At 1:39-1:43, the video mentions Colonel McCormick, former Tribune publisher, who @ColonelTribune was inspired by.

Interestingly, the man introduced in the video right before Colonel is "the honorable Mayor Martin H. Kennelly." Mayor of Chicago from 1947 to 1955, the name immediately brought back memories.


Chicago Mayor Martin H. Kennelly, 1947, Photo by Time (OK for personal use)

 

About five years ago or so, long before I knew I'd ever come to Chicago, a distant relative of mine said they had heard we're related to a Mayor Martin Kennelly. I knew he was from Chicago, but I didn't know when he served. How ironic I came across him in the video...

INTERESTINGLY, the guy in the video pronounces the surname the way I pronounce mine, and even more interesting I think, I know for a fact my name used to be spelled Kennelly in Ireland. I'm very confident there's a link.

I did a little digging. He was born in Chicago in 1887 and his father is said to have come from Ballylongford, Co. Kerry, according to genealogy forums. County Kerry neighbors County Limerick, where my ancestor Thomas Kennelly was born in about 1820. Again, I'm sure there's some kind of connection. It's even possible that Thomas had a brother who was Martin's grandfather, making the former Mayor and my great-grandfather Wallace just second cousins.

So here's the video... watch from about 1:34-1:39.

http://blog3.craigkanalley.com/2009/08/link-to-former-chicago-mayor-martin-h.html

http://blog3.craigkanalley.com/2009/08/link-to-former-chicago-mayor-martin-h.html

Kanalley http://blog3.craigkanalley.com/2008/08/passage-of-time.html


Overview | Interesting Tidbits | Their Lives

Lineage: Thomas Kennelly b. abt. 1820 Ireland --> James Bernard Kanalley b. 1868 Canada
Wallace James Kanalley b. 1902 Ohio --> Kenneth Wallace Kanalley b. 1932 N.Y.
Patrick Kenneth Kanalley --> Craig Patrick Kanalley

Locations: Co. Limerick, Ireland; Cobourg, Ontario, Canada; Cleveland, Ohio; Buffalo, N.Y.;
Rochester, N.Y.; New York, N.Y.; Toronto, Ontario, Canada; San Francisco, Calif.

Surname Variations: Kanaley, Kennelly, Kenneally, Kenealy, Kinneely, Kinaley

Immigration: Thomas Kennelly arrived in Canada from Ireland in 1849, first settling in
Asphodel Township, not far from Peterborough. He eventually settled in Cobourg and
married Rose Flynn on Nov. 26, 1852.

Immigrant Children: 9 - John, Michael, Ann, Mary, Isabella, Thomas, Ellen, James, Martin

Associated Families: Flynn, Cox, Pierce, Hutton, Horgan, Wallace, Cook, Raines, Young

Contact me for more information or if you think we may connect.

 

 Ellis Island sample

 

1. Edmond Kennelly Listowel, Ireland left in 1912 age 25
. Eileen Kennelly Sralee, Ireland 1914 age 1
99. Ellie Kennelly Newtownsand 1902 age 19
Eward Kennelly Listowel, Ireland 1902 19
. Hannie Kennelly Ballylongford, Ireland 1916 29
. J. Martin Kennelly Listowel, Ireland 1923 23
James Kennelly Newtownsandes, Ireland 1909 21
Jeremiah M. Kennelly Tarbert, Ireland 1909 32
ohanna Kennelly Glin 1895 22 139.
Johanna Kennelly Tarbert 1904 22
. John Kennelly Ballylongford, Ireland 1910 17
147. John Kennelly Ballylongford, Ireland 1916 41
50. John Kennelly Cra...ghdaling 1902 24
. Johnny Kennelly Ballylongford, Ireland 1916 3
Julia Kennelly Tarbert, Ireland 1907 20
Kate Kennelly Cra...ghdaling 1902 26
7. Kate Kennelly Farbert 1899 20
. Katie Kennelly Listowel 1902 22
. Katie Kennelly Tarbert 1899 20
9. Margaret Kennelly Listowel, Co. Kerry, Ireland 1920 29
1. Margaret Kennelly Listowel, Ireland 1920 34
. Margaret Kennelly Turbert, Ireland 1911 23
Martin Kennelly Lenamore, Ireland 1907 24
Martin Kennelly Abbeyfeale, Ireland 1911 40
28. Mary Kennelly Listowel 1905 18
229. Mary Kennelly Listowel 1900 23
230. Mary Kennelly Listowel 1904 25
231. Mary Kennelly Listowel, Ireland 1913 19
. Mary Kennelly Newtown . . . 1905 20
. Mary F. Kennelly Listowel 1899 25
Mich'l Kennelly Tarbert 1903 20
53. Michael Kennelly Balloyz..., Ireland 1909 18
254. Michael Kennelly Ballybunion, Ireland 1913 26
. Michael Kennelly Newtownamder, Ireland 1911 44
. Michael Kennelly Tarbert 1903 20
264. Michael Kennelly Tarbert, Ireland 1900 19
265. Michael J. Kennelly Listowel, Co. Kerry 1906
Micl. Kennelly Ballylongford 1905 25
Molly Kennelly Ballylongford, Ireland 1916 9
Nellie Kennelly Abbeyfeale, Ireland 1924 18
4. Nellie Kennelly Listowel 1903 24
. Nora Kennelly Listowel 1901 20
294. Nora Kennelly Listowel, Ireland 1906 20
295. Nora Kennelly Listowel, Ireland 1912 33
296. Nora Kennelly Listowel, Ireland 1912 40
Norah Kennelly Ballylongford, Ireland 1909 19
300. Norah Kennelly BallyTagfort, Ireland 1914 24
Patk. Kennelly Listowel 1898 24
. Patrick Kennelly Ballylongford, Kerry, Ireland 1921 25
Patrick Kennelly Listowel 1898 24
312. Patrick Kennelly Listowel 1901 27
. Peter Kennelly Ballylongford, Ireland 1920 21
Teresa Kennelly Listowel, Co. Kerry 1906
Thomas Kennelly Liseltown 1904 24
. Timothy Kennelly Tarbert 1895 24
William Kennelly Salgantan Ballylongford 1906 19
Aleester Kennelly Sralee, Ireland 1914 34
Annie Kennelly Listowel 1900 20
5. Annie Kennelly Listowel, Ireland 1908 24
. Brgt Kennelly Ballylouyford, Ireland 1912 24
. Bridget Kennelly Newtownards, Ireland 1908 20
. Bridie Kennelly Ballylongford, Ireland 1916 5
. Catherine Kennelly Liscowel 1906 21
7. Cornelius Kennelly Ballylongford, Ireland 1909 23
Dan Kennelly Abbyfeall 1903 24
1. Daniel Kennelly Abbeyfeake 1903 24
Denis Kennelly Lisselton Cross, Coxerry, Ireland 1909 23
Edmond Kennelly Listowel, Ireland 1912 25
Ellie Kennelly Newtownsand 1902 19

 

 

From Steve.

Cunningham and Kennelly Athea and Moyvane

 

Descendants of Patrick KENNELLY

-------------------------------

1-Patrick KENNELLY

+Ellen MULLANE , par. Unknown and Unknown

|-----2-Nora KENNELLY

|-----2-Patrick KENNELLY b. Abt 1836

|-----2-Bridget KENNELLY b. Abt 1839, Athea, Limerick, Munster, Ireland, d. 27

| Nov 1922, Kansas City, Kansas Wyandotte County, bur. 29 Nov 1922,

| Kansas City, MO St. Mary's Cem.

| +Cornelius CUNNINGHAM b. Abt 1836, Kilbaha, Co. Kerry, Ireland

| |-----3-Catherine CUNNINGHAM b. 10 Jan 1864, Athea, Limerick, Munster,

| | Ireland

| |-----3-John CUNNINGHAM b. 1 Dec 1864, Athea, Limerick, Munster, Ireland

| |-----3-Michael CUNNINGHAM b. 24 Sep 1866, Athea, Limerick, Munster,

| | Ireland, d. 1922

| | +Mary Agnes (Mollie) CURTIN b. 1875, m. 1899, d. 1935

| | |-----4-Cornelius A. CUNNINGHAM b. 11 May 1902, Kansas City, MO, d.

| | | 20 Apr 1954, Kansas City, MO, bur. 23 Apr 1954, Kansas

| | | City, MO

| | |-----4-Laurence CUNNINGHAM b. 1909, d. 1911

| |-----3-Mary CUNNINGHAM b. 20 Sep 1868, Kilbaha, Co. Kerry, Ireland

| |-----3-Catherine CUNNINGHAM b. 24 Apr 1870, Athea, Limerick, Munster,

| | Ireland

| |-----3-Mary Agnes CUNNINGHAM b. 19 May 1870, Athea, Limerick, Munster,

| | Ireland, d. 21 Jan 1945, Kansas City, MO 6024 Swope Parkway, bur.

| | 24 Jan 1945, Kansas City, MO Calvery Cem.

| | +Wm. James LAUGHLIN b. Abt 16 Mar 1870, Athea, Limerick, Munster,

| | Ireland, m. 26 Oct 1898, Kansas City, MO Cathedral, d. 6 Dec

| | 1931, Kansas City, MO 2745 Madison, bur. 9 Dec 1931, Kansas City,

| | MO Calvery Cem., par. Patrick LAUGHLIN and Ellen BARRETT

| | |-----4-Cornelius Joseph LAUGHLIN b. 8 Sep 1899, Kansas City, MO,

| | | d. 14 Aug 1986, Laurie, MO (Osage Beach)

| | | +Frances GOETZ b. 28 Nov 1901, Katzdorf, Germany, m. 25 Jun

| | | 1925, Kansas City, MO, d. 8 Jun 1991, Grandview, MO

| | | |-----5-Marion C. LAUGHLIN b. 18 Apr 1927, Kansas City, MO

| | | |-----5-Henry James LAUGHLIN b. 15 Jan 1931, Kansas City, MO,

| | | | d. 20 Mar 1986

| | | |-----5-Gerald Lee LAUGHLIN b. 3 Mar 1934, Kansas City, MO

| | |-----4-Wm. Patrick LAUGHLIN b. 31 Dec 1900, Kansas City, MO, d. 10

| | | Nov 1977, Kansas City, MO Mt. Olivet

| | | +Mary Frances McCREADY b. 31 Mar 1903, Kansas City, MO, m. 2

| | | Jun 1926, Kansas City, MO, d. 14 Sep 1982, Indepenence, MO

| | | |-----5-Eugene Joseph LAUGHLIN b. 4 Dec, Kansas City, MO

| | | |-----5-William Francis LAUGHLIN b. 13 Sep 1927, Kansas City,

| | | | MO, d. 24 Dec 1981, Stamford, CT

| | | |-----5-James Bernard LAUGHLIN b. 17 Nov 1932, Kansas City,

| | | | MO, d. 7 Oct 1970, Kansas City, MO

| | | |-----5-Mary Joann LAUGHLIN b. 17 Nov 1934, Kansas City, MO

| | | |-----5-Patricia Marie LAUGHLIN b. 4 Jul 1945, Kansas City, MO

| | | |

| | |-----4-James Francis LAUGHLIN b. 28 Nov 1902, Kansas City, MO, d.

| | | 12 Nov 1952, Excelsior Springs, MO Mt. Olivet

| | | +Frances Meta JOHNSON b. 7 Mar 1903, San Francisco, CA, m. 5

| | | Nov 1935, Kansas City, MO, d. 5 Oct 1972, Sacremento, CA

| | | |-----5-Margret Ann LAUGHLIN b. 17 Aug 1936

| | | |-----5-Mary Theresa LAUGHLIN b. 8 Nov 1940

| | |-----4-Dennis LAUGHLIN b. 8 May 1905, Kansas City, MO, d. 12 Dec

| | | 1928, bur. 1928, Calvery Cem.

| | |-----4-Stephen LAUGHLIN b. Kansas City, MO

| |-----3-Patrick CUNNINGHAM b. 12 Feb 1872, Athea, Limerick, Munster,

| | Ireland, c. 16 Feb 1872

| |-----3-Johanna "Nonie" CUNNINGHAM b. 4 Jun 1873, Athea, Limerick,

| | Munster, Ireland, d. 26 May 1969, Kansas City, MO St. Mary's

| | Hosp., bur. Kansas City, MO

| | +James J. DEE b. 2 Feb 1877, Co. Kerry Ireland, m. 29 Oct 1901,

| | Kansas City, MO, d. 22 Feb 1954, Kansas City, MO, bur. Kansas

| | City, MO Mt. St. Mary's Cem., par. John DEE and Ellen WALSH

| | |-----4-John Joseph DEE b. 27 Apr 1904, Kansas City, MO, d. 13 Dec

| | | 1975

| | |-----4-Helen Bernetta DEE b. 27 Sep 1906, Kansas City, MO

| | +Francis Schrock SHATTO b. 16 Mar 1907, Reger, MO Sullivan

| | Co., m. 23 Aug 1930, Kansas City, MO, d. 6 Jul 1962, Kansas

| | City, MO, bur. Mt. St. Mary's Cem., par. William SHATTO and

| | Ethel Burns REGER

| | |-----5-Joseph Francis SHATTO b. 22 Aug 1937, Kansas City, MO

| | |-----5-Dee Anna SHATTO b. 25 May 1941, Kansas City, MO

| |-----3-Bridget CUNNINGHAM b. 30 May 1875, Athea, Limerick, Munster,

| | Ireland

| |-----3-Cornelius CUNNINGHAM b. 1 Aug 1877, Athea, Limerick, Munster,

| | Ireland

| | +Julia CURTIN

| |-----3-Denis J. CUNNINGHAM b. 24 Sep 1879, Athea, Limerick, Munster,

| | Ireland, d. 16 Dec 1957

| | +Catherine O'SULLIVAN b. 3 Mar 1882, Athea, Limerick, Munster,

| | Ireland, m. 1 Aug 1903, Athea, Limerick, Munster, Ireland, d. Jan

| | 1958, Kansas City, MO, par. Patrick O'SULLIVAN and Mary MULLANE

| | |-----4-Mary M. CUNNINGHAM b. 29 Oct 1903, Athea, Limerick,

| | | Munster, Ireland, d. 13 Aug 1988

| | | +John V. McGRAW b. 11 Sep 1903, m. 1 Mar 1930, Kansas City,

| | | Missouri Gaurdian Angel Church, d. 1 Feb 1970

| | | |-----5-Jack McGRAW b. 26 Dec 1930

| | | |-----5-Jane McGRAW b. 26 Dec 1930

| | |-----4-Cornelius P. CUNNINGHAM b. 7 Feb 1905, Athea, Limerick,

| | | Munster, Ireland

| | | +Kathryn L. McDEARMON b. 9 Nov 1903, Kansas City, MO, m.

| | | Abt 1929, d. 3 Apr 1936, Kansas City, MO, bur. 6 Apr 1936,

| | | Kansas City, MO St. Mary's Cemetary, par. Thomas Author

| | | McDEARMON and Pearl Ethel DUNCAN

| | | |-----5-Rose Marie CUNNINGHAM b. 27 Sep 1929, Kansas City, MO

| | | |-----5-Jo Ann CUNNINGHAM b. 10 Jan 1931, d. 8 Jun 1931,

| | | | Kansas City, MO, bur. 9 Jun 1931, Kansas City, MO St.

| | | | Mary's Cemetary

| | | |-----5-Thomas Dennis CUNNINGHAM b. 10 Feb 1936, Missouri, d.

| | | | 12 May 2004, Shawnee Mission, KS

| | |-----4-Patrick Joseph CUNNINGHAM b. 4 Jul 1907, Kansas City, KS,

| | | c. 14 Jul 1907, Kansas City, KS, d. 18 Aug 1971, bur. Mt.

| | | Calvary

| | | +Blanche RAWLINS m. 30 Jan 1937, Kansas City, KS

| | |-----4-Dennis Francis CUNNINGHAM b. 12 Feb 1909, Kansas City, KS,

| | | c. 7 Mar 1909, Kansas City, KS, d. 4 May 1917, Kansas City

| | |-----4-Thomas J. CUNNINGHAM b. Abt 1912, Kansas City, KS

| | +Julia ZUPAN m. 18 May 1942, Kansas City, Missouri Blessed

| | Sacrement Church 3911 Agnes

| |-----3-Kate CUNNINGHAM b. 1881, Athea, Limerick, Munster, Ireland, d.

| | 1935

| +Matthew CURTIN m. 1899

|-----2-John J. KENNELLY b. 19 Mar 1859, d. 1918, Kansas City

+Mary CASEY b. Between 1865 and 1866, m. 12 Nov 1888, d. 1924, Kansas

City, par. Thomas CASEY and Margaret MULLEN

|-----3-John J. Kenneally II (KANALLY)

| +HERD

| |-----4-John J. KENNELLY III

| +BETH

| |-----5-Jim KENNELLY

|-----3-George Kenneally (KANALLY)

|-----3-Charles Kenneally (KANALLY)

|-----3-Pearl Kenneally (KANALLY)

-------------------------------

 

Patt

• References:

o Notes of Richard Emmet Ryan.

 

Thomas Patt, born 1789, or poss. 1786,

of Leanamore, Aghavallen par, nr Ballylongford, Co.Kerry,

"John" in [King] is wrong,

his descendants claim "Patt" was short for a longer surname, but the contemporary records all just say "Patt",

Mary Jacobson (née Whelan) said the surname was Patwell or Pattwell, "Pat" for short,

his dau Anna's obituary says it was Patten, Ann Frederick says she used "Patton",

"sometimes perhaps Patten, Patton or Pattwell" [Richard Emmet Ryan],

however the Ballylongford par records, [Tithe Survey], [Griffiths Valuation, 1852], [GROI], [King], letters and prayerbook all say "Patt",

mar c.1830 to Eliza Rahilly [bapt 12th May 1808],

his dau Anna bapt Ballylongford 1833,

he must be "Thomas Patt", Main St, Ballylongford, holding house and yard, rate value £5, in [Griffiths Valuation, 1852],

listed as "Thomas Patt, clerk" in 1867 [GROI],

listed as "Thomas Patt, shopkeeper" at death,

died 25th May 1875, Ballylongford, age 86 yrs [GROI], or poss. age 89 yrs,

Eliza was living Ballylongford, 30th Aug 1881, when wrote letter to her just-widowed dau Anna Dillon (née Patt),

living Ballylongford, 1st Sept 1886, when wrote letter to her grand-dau Anna Park (née Dillon),

she is Elizabeth Patt, widow of a shopkeeper, who died Ballylongford, 23 Dec 1886 [GROI], age 78 yrs (death cert incorrectly says age 87), death reported by Michael Kennelly, son in law,

had issue:

 

1. Dan Patt,

Daniel, born c.1830,

emig to Chicago pre-1853,

mar Betsy ---- [or Betsey, prob. Elizabeth],

survived the Great Chicago Fire, 1871, which raged for 2 days, "they were able to identify their property after the fire because they had buried their kitchen stove on their land to protect it as the fire approached their home" [Richard Emmet Ryan],

never wrote home to Ireland, "disappeared from home and nobody ever heard from him" [Mary Jacobson, née Whelan],

his mother wrote to her dau Anna in 1881 referring to "her" [Anna's sister Bridget's] "only good brother Dan. Oh may God forgive him for the way he is treating me. Oh my dear Anna if I only got an empty letter, what a consolation it would afford me.",

had issue:

1. (son) Patt,

"who was blind and made his living making brooms" [Richard Emmet Ryan]

Dan is believed to have descendants but contact lost.

2.

3. (dau) Patt,

emig to Chicago pre-1853 [her sister Anna's obituary],

she must be the sister living with Anna in Galesburg, Illinois [Mary Jacobson, née Whelan],

poss. mar --- Shaughnessy [or poss. confusion with Anna's dau].

 

4. Anna Patt,

born Co.Kerry,

bapt 29th May 1833 [Ballylongford RC par records],

another reading says bapt 26 June 1832, (todo) see original,

obituary says born 29th July 1834,

emigrated to USA, age 18 (1850-52), settled Chicago, where her sister and brother were living,

lived Galesburg, Knox Co., WC Illinois, at one time, with her sister,

Ann Frederick says "The story I was told was that at 17 she stowed away to America to be with Patrick.",

mar 29th Sept 1856, Chicago, to Patrick M. Dillon [born 1836] and had issue.

 

5. Mary Patt,

bapt 17 September 1835 [Ballylongford RC par records],

mar John Barrett [of Glin, Co.Limerick] and had issue.

 

6. Margaret Patt, born 1840, Co.Kerry [according to age in census],

NOT Margret,

mar John McCoy [of Glin, Co.Limerick] and had issue.

 

7. Bridget Patt,

born Co.Kerry, bapt 1 March 1844 [Ballylongford RC par records],

not to be confused with a Bridget Patt who married John Scanlon in an earlier generation,

not to be confused with Bridget Patt, dau of John Patt and Helen Enright, who married Patrick Kennelly,

she looks like Bridget Patt who sp bapt of (apparently) her niece Bridget Barrett 1864,

mar Michael Kennelly [or Keneely or Kenneally, born 1833, Co.Kerry],

listed as living Ballylongford at children's bapts 1870-88, he apparently travelled around with the Coastguard, kept permanent base at Ballylongford,

at time of her mother's letter 1881 they were living Coastguard Station, Ballyduff (mouth of Cashen River, which is the final part of the River Feale), Rattoo par, just S of Ballybunion, NW coast of Co.Kerry,

he registered her mother's death 1886, listed as living Ballylongford,

they are listed as living Main St, Ballylongford, in [Census, 1901], he is "Naval pensioner", she is "seamstress",

had issue:

1. Mary Ann Kennelly, born 17 May 1870, bapt 19 May [Ballylongford RC par records].

2. Thomas Kennelly, after grandfather Thomas Patt, fl 1881.

3. (1 other son) Kennelly, fl 1881.

4. Patrick Kennelly, born 7 January 1877, bapt 11 Jan [Ballylongford RC par records].

5. Anna Kennelly, after her aunt Anna Patt, fl 1881,

she is NOT Ann Kennelly, born Listowel, [GROI], 1869,

she is NOT Hanorah Kenneally, born Glin, [GROI], 1st qr 1881.

6. Dan Kennelly, youngest son (as at 1881), after his uncle Dan Patt, fl 1881.

7. Margaret Kennelly, born 1879, Co.Antrim,

at home in 1901 census, she is listed as "seamstress".

8. Christina Kennelly, born 23 December 1882, Co.Kerry,

bapt 24 Dec [Ballylongford RC par records],

at home in 1901 census, she is listed as "seamstress",

she is listed in [Census, 1911] as "housemaid - domestic servant", living and working in a hotel (manager Francis Augustus Esch), Lahinch, W coast of Co.Clare.

9. Catherine Kennelly, Kate, born 20 June 1888, Co.Kerry,

bapt 24 June [Ballylongford RC par records],

at home in 1901 census.

 

Think Bridget Patt and Michael Kennelly have descendants living in Ballylongford.

8.

9. Ellen Patt, born 1848,

her obituary says born Ballybunion, but this is prob. just error for Ballylongford,

school teacher in Ireland before her marriage, gave up after marriage, one of her pupils was her niece Kate Barrett,

listed as "assistant teacher", living Ballylongford, at mar,

mar 17th Sept 1867, Ballylongford [GROI] to James Cahill Ryan and had issue.

 

 

Patt

ORahilly/patt.html

death reported by Michael Kennelly, son in law,

who married Patrick Kennelly,

mar <B>Michael Kennelly </B> [or Keneely or Kenneally, born 1833, Co.Kerry],<BR>

<li> Mary Ann Kennelly, born 17 May 1870,

<LI> Thomas Kennelly, after grandfather Thomas Patt, fl 1881.

<LI> (1 other son) Kennelly, fl 1881.

<li> Patrick Kennelly, born 7 January 1877,

<LI> Anna Kennelly, after her aunt Anna Patt, fl 1881,

she is NOT Ann Kennelly,

<LI> Dan Kennelly, youngest son (as at 1881), after his uncle Dan Patt, fl 1881.

<LI> Margaret Kennelly, born 1879, Co.Antrim,<BR>

<LI> Christina Kennelly,

<LI> Catherine Kennelly, Kate,

 

 

Hi From Jer Kennelly

Met you in Tralee Library on Tuesday last.

I have a neighbour Margaret Shanahan Kennelly aged 93 she says Rahilly in Listowel are her cousins.

They may also be relater to the Troy Family of Listowel.

Her grandmother was Connor from just outside Listowel, she is related from the Connor side.

Jer

 

 

+- Morgan O'Rahilly

| | +- Fionn O'Rahilly

| | | +- Julia O'Donoghue

| | |

| | +- Conn O'Rahilly

| | | |

| | | | +- Dónall O'Sullivan

| | | +- Mary O'Sullivan

| | |

| | +- Michael Rahilly

| | | |

| | | | +- Daniel O'Riordan

| | | +- Johanna O'Riordan

| | |

| | +- Michael Joseph Rahilly

| | | |

| | | | +- Philip O'Sullivan

| | | +- Hanoria O'Sullivan

| | |

| | +- Richard Rahilly, JP

| | | |

| | | | +- Richard McEllistrem

| | | +- Margaret McEllistrem

| | | +- Mary McCarthy

| | |

| +- Nell Rahilly

| |

| | +- Denis Mangan

| +- Ellen Mangan

| | +- James Nolan

| +- Ellen Nolan

|

 

 

 

FAIRFIELD, Conn. – The following letter was submitted by former state Rep. Tom Drew in support of Board of Education candidate Jennifer Maxon Kennelly.

 

Dear Editor:

I give my strongest support to Jen Kennelly for election to Fairfield’s Board of Education. Jen has a truly exceptional background that would make her ideal to provide unique value to our school board. Jen currently teaches English literature at Greenwich High School, providing her with the personal know how to prepare students to successfully compete from one of the most advanced public high schools in Connecticut. We need Jen Kennelly’s real life experience for our children in Fairfield.

As a young professional administrator, Jen turned around a parochial school in New York’s “Hell’s Kitchen,” achieving significantly raised academic performance, increasing enrollment, reversing fiscal deficits, creating financial stability and, as coach of the basketball, team turning around a failed program into state champs.

Jen and her husband have three children attending Fairfield public schools and are dedicated to our community with many years serving with PTA activities, co-founding our Board of Education Cultural Diversity Task Force and achieving a gold medal performance as coach of the Stratfield Elementary School’s fifth grade International Odyssey of the Mind Competition.

Jen believes in excellence for our children and she has demonstrated that she brings out the excellence in our children. Please vote for Jen Kennelly for Board of Education on Election Day.

— Tom Drew

 

 

 

 

 

I have just joined this list and have been scanning through the archives

to see what has already been posted. I was pleased to see some names

there of list members whom I have corresponded with in the past on other

lists. Some background on my research interests:

 

I live in Burnaby, BC, Canada (near Vancouver) and am descended from a

line of Kennellys that I have been able to trace back to Limerick City

in 1820. Earlier than 1820 is estimation/reasoned deduction at this

point in time.

 

My ggg grandparents were Edmond Kennelly and Anne Fitz Gerald both b.

circa 1790 and m. circa 1811. They had four known children, based on

information in the 1841 census of Liverpool: Jeremiah b. circa 1813;

John b. circa 1817; Mary bap. 1 Feb 1820 @ St. Michael's (RC), Limerick;

and Margaret bap. 24 April 1821 also @ St. Michael's. Jeremiah m.

Johanna Lynch 18 May 1832 also @ St. Michael's and they had a dau. Ann

b. 1833 - probably in Limerick. Sometime between May 1832 and December

1839, the family moved to Liverpool where Edmond and Anne's dau. Mary m.

Cornelius Donovan 8 Dec 1839 and Jeremiah and Johanna's second dau. Mary

was b. Christmas Day 1839. With the exception of Edmond, the entire

family is recorded as living together in the 1841 census of Liverpool.

Jeremiah and Johanna had three more children born in Liverpool: Jeremiah

30 May 1842, Michael 19 Dec 1843 and Bridget 8 Jul 1846. After this

date, that branch of the family disappears from the face of the earth.

 

My gg grandfather is Edmond and Anne's second son, John, who m.

Catherine Collins (b. circa 1821 in Waterford, Ireland - dau. of

Bartholomew Collins) 20 Sept 1841. John and Catherine's family - all

born in Liverpool - consisted of three sons: Edward b. 29 Jun 1842, m.

Ellen Campion 31 Oct 1871 (they had 12 children, all born in Liverpool)

and d. 7 Jan 1918; John (my g grandfather - details to follow) and

William b. 1854, m. Ann Murray 24 Jan 1881 (1 dau. Mary Margaret b. 17

Jul 1889) and d. 8 Feb 1891; and four daughters: Catherine b. 27 Jun

1844; Ellen b 23 Dec 1846; Mary b. 27 Jun 1851; and Ann b. 6 Apr 1856.

gg gm Catherine d. 17 Jan 1879 and gg gf John d. 4 Feb 1888.

 

John Kennelly ( my g grandfather) b. 3 Apr 1849, m. Margaret Ann Doyle

(b. 4 Apr 1862, dau. Gregory Doyle & Catherine Furlong) 11 Oct 1881.

They had five children: John Gregory b. 7 Aug 1882, Thomas b. 21 Jan

1885, Catherine b. 15 Apr 1887, Mary b. 9 Aug 1889 and Dora b. 21 Mar

1891. Mary and Dora both died in infancy. John (ggf) d. 25 Jul 1927 and

Margaret (Maggie) d. 18 Jun 1938.

 

My grandfather, Thomas, joined the Royal Navy and served as a signaller

aboard H.M.S. Shearwater in the far East (China Station). He took his

discharge from the R.N. in Vancouver, Canada, in 1901 where he met

Marguerite Ann Smart (b. 29 Jan 1883, dau. of blacksmith George William

Smart and Mary Ann Elizabeth Carter) and they were m. 10 May 1911. They

had two children, Francis John (my father (Frank)) b. 12 Sept 1912 and

Doreen Elizabeth Sheila, b. 9 Jan 1916. In 1917, the family moved from

Vancouver to Victoria and in 1926 Thomas joined the BC Provincial

Police, retiring from the force in 1950 with the rank of sergeant.

 

Frank married Joan Margaret Read (b. 26 Dec 1915, dau. Robert Avery Read

and Amelia Annie Mellor) on 25 Mar 1937. Frank and Joan both died in a

motor vehicle accident on 7 Sept 1992.

 

I am in regular contact with descendents of John Gregory and Catherine

(siblings of my grandfather) as well as some descendents of Edward,

Catherine and Ann ( siblings of my g grandfather). I am hoping to,

someday, make contact with descendents of Jeremiah and Johanna's children.

 

My research now will focus on the Limerick area as it is only in the

last couple of days that I have learned the date of Jeremiah and

Johanna's marriage through http://www.irish-roots.ie. It is also fairly

recently that I learned of Dr. Jane Lyons'

website http://www.from-ireland.net where I was able to get information

that corrected some errors in the information regarding the baptisms of

Mary and Margaret in the 1820s that I had received from the Limerick

Archives 10 years ago.

 

If any of the list members know of others whose lines may cross the ones

I have described here, please have them get in touch with me.

 

Thanks,

Greg Kennelly

 

 

 

Thanks for sending me information.

 

I don't think my Jeremiah Kennelly is related to yours. you have:

 

"Jeremiah and Johanna had three more children born in Liverpool: Jeremiah

30 May 1842, Michael 19 Dec 1843 and Bridget 8 Jul 1846. After this

date, that branch of the family disappears from the face of the earth."

 

While the Jeremiah born in 1842 is close in age to mine; on his marriage certificate he said his parents were John Kenneally and Maria Lynch.

 

A professional genealogist helping me thinks my Kenealys came from County Cork. If you ever come across a John and Maria, please let me know.I realize these are very common names and even suspect that they may be first names and that is their middle name (unknown to me) that was more commonly used.

 

Sorry I cannot help you. If you ever find that you need information on Keneallys that settled first in Wellsville, Allegany County, NY then moved to Bradford, McKean copunty, PA let me know.

 

Yes, I know I used many different spellings of surname. All showed up in different records for the same couple during my research.

 

 

 

 

The Kennelley family that lived in Bradford, are my line of Kennelleys.

There was James & Stephen who had gone to visit their brother Michael

Kennelley. James & Stephen decided to hop a freight & go back home, I believe in

Mill Hall or in that area. James had been drinking & possibly Stephen. When

the freight slowed as they came into Ridge Way, Stephen said, he was

getting off to check on something & told his brother, James, to stay put, that

he'd be right back. Then, James decided to get off and jumped. When he did

his body was cut in half, a horrible death. His body was taken back to

Bradford. It is thought that James was buried there. Their father was James Sr. I

notice there's a William that lived there. My family has many with the

names, Daniel, Stephen, William, & James Kennelley-Kinley- Kennelly-Kenley

etc. If are interested get in contact with me at _Irishlovey@aol.com_

(mailto:Irishlovey@aol.com) . I would certainly appreciate it & will share with

you. Dorothy (Kennelley) Aulenbacher/Cote.........from Erie, PA

 

 

 

Hi Greg, I've read your posting on your Kennelly Family and just thought

you may want to hear from another Kennelly. I'm descended from Daniel

Kennelly, b. 24 dec 1775. It's believed he came to America when he was 9-12

years old. He lived at Hagerstown, Washington Co., Maryland, when he m 26 May

1803 Jane Shannon, b. 13 Feb 1786. Her father, a Scotchman, John Shannon,

from MD. had served in the Am. Rev. The Shannons were living in Mercersberg,

PA when Daniel & Jane married, so that's where they went to live for a

short while. Then both families packed up wagons and moved to Penns Valley, a

place in Spring Mills, Haines Twp (later Gregg Twp) Centre Co PA where

Daniel & Jane had 16 children. I have their names dates & who they married etc.

Their 6th child was my GG grandfather James Kennelly, b 1812. Hoping to

hear from you. Dottie from Erie, PA

 

 

 

 

My Patrick Kennelly was from the Ballingarry area of Co. Limerick. He was

b. between 1827-32 (differing dates on different records), to Daniel

Kennelly and Catherine Flynn.

 

I have been unable to locate any records of him or his parents in the fairly

extensive, online Co. Limerick records at BRSgenealogy.com which is

disappointing. The Ballingarry records on microfilm are very scant, and I

have looked them, but with no positive results.

 

The Ballingarry location was provided by his wife, Mary Hoare, in the NY

Emigrants Bank records. I have located her family records in Patrickswell,

a bit to the northeast of Ballingarry (both, south of Limerick City).

 

My Patrick Kennelly and Mary Hoare, raised their son Daniel and 6 daughters

in NYC, NY.

 

I continue trying to locate my Kennellys in the Ballingarry area, and would

appreciate any leads that any of you may have.

 

 

Best Wishes,

Judy Herbert

Kennelly List Administrator

 

 

Craig Kanalley

I've been researching my family tree since 1998, and I've long been curious about DNA as a way to learn more about your roots. The technology has come a long way in the last decade, and it's become more affordable too. Finally, I went ahead and ordered a Y-DNA test (for my paternal line).

On Friday night, at 1:30 a.m., the results popped in my email inbox from the FamilyTreeDNA lab in Houston, Texas!

When I logged in to see the results, 29 "matches" popped up -- these are living people today with whom I share a common direct male ancestor with in about the last 1,000 years. (To be clear, the Y-DNA only passes father to son, so this traces my father's father's father, etc., and same for them.) These matches live in Ireland, England, Scotland, South Africa, the United States and presumably elsewhere (some don't list a location).

2 CLOSE MATCHES!

Of course, for any matches to come up, I need to have living blood relatives through the male line who took DNA tests themselves. And I'm so grateful and excited that two people I'm about to address did...

I had two close matches, genealogically-speaking, and the rest were more distant. The surnames to those closest matches? A Kennelly and a MacNeely, variations of my own last name. They both live in Ireland!

My relationship to the MacNeely, who I learned is about 28 years old today and lives in County Mayo, Ireland, goes back to a common male ancestor with the surname Kennelly (sometimes Mac an Fhaili in Ireland), MacNally, or McAnally who lived around the 1600s.

My relationship to the Kennelly is closer. He lives in Ireland today in County Cork near the border with County Limerick (where my great-great-great-grandfather Thomas Kennelly was born -- he immigrated to Canada during the Potato Famine). We seem to both descend of a Kennelly born in the 1700s.

What makes the connection to these two men so interesting is that most Irish genealogical records burned in fires in Dublin and don't exist today. Without them, it's hard to trace Irish roots any further back than the 1800s. But nonetheless I've made links with long lost cousins, prior to that time so many Irish researchers hit a brick wall.

I've written emails to both of them and hope to hear back!

MORE LINKS + THE 'ADAMS' FAMILY

The rest of the matches are more distant, though interestingly I found both a McKee and a McGee, with whom I have a common male ancestor in Ireland who lived around the 1400s or earlier. Also a McSorley, a Koster, a Walker, a Crauford and a Hannon who all share common male ancestors with me back around the same period.

But what I found most interesting of the distant matches -- the ADAMS connection. Three of my matches were males with the last name ADAMS. There was also one female whose maiden name was ADAMS (likely submitting a male relative's DNA) and one Smith who says he traces back (father's father's father, etc.) to a male Adams. There was a second Smith who I suspect could also go back to an Adams.

In all, that's five Adams descendants, possibly six, in my 29 matches. And sure enough, I learned the DNA subgroup / family group of former U.S. presidents John Adams and John Quincy Adams matches my own.

John Adams and John Quincy Adams trace their Adams roots back to southwestern England, right across the water from southern Ireland, where my Kennelly roots lie.

My matches showed that my genealogical relationship to the Adams family lies in a common male ancestor way back, around the 1100s or 1200s. It's my best guess that an Adams, or a member of the same family in which male relatives took Adams as a surname, migrated from southwestern England to Ireland around that time period or shortly after, and that my Kennellys descend from this family.

It's also possible, however, that the connection goes back to before surnames were used at all, as they were just sprouting up around that time.

Either way, there is no doubt that I am blood related to the Adams family if you trace back through Y-DNA (my father's father's father, etc., and theirs). Eventually, we hit a single male figure who we both come from. And that's pretty cool.

ANCIENT HISTORY

I did some more research on my Y-DNA haplogroup, R1b1a2, and if you keep going back (through my father's father's father, etc.), my direct male ancestors were Celtics. They seem to have lived in Western Europe at the time of Jesus Christ and the Ancient Romans and Ancient Greeks likely saw them as uncivilized barbarians. They were likely tribal people in B.C. times, nomadic herders, moving around as famines and droughts hit.

Migration patterns show that my DNA group likely originated in western Asia, in the Middle East or Black Sea region (modern day Turkey), living there 20,000 and 30,000 years ago. There are relatives with similar DNA going thousands of years back in what is now Iran, India, Syria, Israel and Turkey. This family group also branched off into Africa, where the Y-DNA is alive and well in Central Africa. One branch ended up in Egypt specifically, and the Egyptian Pharaoh King Tut belongs to the same haplogroup as I.

After the Ice Age around 10,000 B.C., the larger haplogroup I come from R1b is believed to have brought agriculture to Europe from western Asia. It ended up becoming one of the most popular family groups in Europe, with some 50% of Western Europeans and Americans tracing back to them and 90% of those in Ireland.

My more specific subgroup R1b1a2a1a1b4 seems to have lived in southern Ireland, northern Ireland, and southwestern England in the last 1,000 years or so.

WHAT'S NEXT?

I was so excited by these results that I upgraded my account to trace my maternal line too. I also put in a "Family Finder" request so it gives me a rough overall breakdown of my genealogical DNA (what percentage I am Western European, what percentage other origins, etc.).

My DNA is already at the lab, so now I just have to wait another month or so, and I'm sure to find more interesting things.

Until then, I hope to hear back from my Kennelly and McNeely cousins overseas, who I emailed as I said earlier. I may contact some of these more distant relatives as well.

And later on, in November, I'm going to Ireland for the first time ever. I hope to track down Mr. Kennelly, Mr. MacNeely or at least more of my roots based on the new evidence I've uncovered. The power of DNA... it's really something.

Note: This post originally appeared on a personal blog.

 

 

Follow Craig Kanalley on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ckanal

Craig Kanalley

Senior Editor, Big News & Live Events, The Huffington Post

 

 

20 Oct 2005

Meanwhile, a post-mortem examination is to be carried out to determine the cause of death of a 30-year-old schoolteacher who died in Navan hospital on Tuesday after a routine operation.

She was named as Caitriona Kennelly, originally from Tournafulla, Co Limerick. She was teaching at Julianstown, Co Meath.

Popular local teacher dies during routine operation

By Fiona Magennis (DROGHEDA INDEPENDENT)

HUNDREDS of students, staff, parents and friends lined the rainy streets of Julianstown last week to pay a fitting final tribute to popular Whitecross NS teacher Caithriona (Cáit) Kenneally who died suddenly on Wednesday. Cáit died following complications during a routine back operation in Our Lady’s Hospital in Navan. She was undergoing the operation on a disc in her back when she began to bleed profusely. Doctors at Navan hospital are understood to have sent for help to Dublin’s Beaumont Hospital. Sources said a vascular surgeon from Beaumont was given a garda escort and rushed to the hospital. However, the popular teacher’s life could not be saved.

Refusing to apportion blame, her sister Bríd praised the staff of Our Lady’s Hospital in Navan, explaining the family had absolutely no problem with the treatment facility and thanking them for all their help. The Health Service Executive would not comment on the case but passed on their sympathies to her family.

Those who knew her formed a guard of honour in the village as the 31-year-old’s remains made the long journey from Navan to her home in Tournafulla, County Limerick. Just days earlier, Cáit had been part of the wedding party for best friend Daria Cashman and her husband Gerard Courtney, acting as bridesmaid on the big day and enjoying the celebrations.

The popular teacher, who principal Liam Burke described as ‘the best, most committed and most dedicated teacher I have ever worked with’, had endeared herself to all who knew her since moving from Limerick to Drogheda eight years ago. Her sister, Bríd, this week spoke of her ‘bubbly, outgoing personality’ and said Cáit was a person who loved life and lived it to the full.

 

Paul Murphy (Meath Chronicle)

WIDESPREAD tributes have been paid to the young Co Limerick teacher at Whitecross National School, Julianstown, who died in tragic circumstances during an operation she was undergoing at Our Lady’s Hospital, Navan, last week.Cathriona Kenneally (31), originally from Ballycommane, Tournafulla, Co Limerick, was undergoing what was described as a routine operation on a disc in her back when she began to bleed profusely.

Doctors at the Navan hospital sent for help to Dublin’s Beaumont Hospital and a vascular surgeon from Beaumont was given a Garda escort from the city and rushed to the hospital. However, the woman’s life could not be saved.The Health Service Executive (HSE) North East Area confirmed that a woman had died on Tuesday of last week due to complications that occurred during surgery.The HSE said that it would not comment further pending a post mortem examination and extended sympathies to Ms Kenneally’s family.

A spokesperson for the family said this week that they did not wish to comment on Cathriona’s death other than to say that they had no issues to raise with the hospital.

During her time at Whitecross NS, Ms Kenneally was deeply involved in the schoolchildren’s soccer movement This week, Paul Holland, co-ordinator of the Meath and Leinster FAI Schools Five-A-Side Soccer League, said he had known Cathriona Kenneally since 2001. “She was involved with the league for the past five years. She was well-known and popular with all the children and she was a very sporting person. In fact, she was the epitome of what the word sport meant.

“She was able to take defeat as well as victory in a very sporting fashion and she passed this on to the children. I remember when her team was involved in a semi-final in 2001 with my own team, Gaelscoil na Rithe, Dunshaughlin. It was a very tight match which we won by the golden goal.Cáitríona was outstanding in defeat.”

Mr Holland said Ms Kenneally was a “very cheerful, friendly and caring person to all the children. She will be sadly missed . I extend my deepest sympathy to her family and friends.”

Deceased is survived by her parents, Michael and Eileen; brothers, Michael, David and Brendan, and sisters, Bríd and Deirdre.The funeral took place in Tournafulla on Saturday.

 

 

 

http://landstewards.blogspot.ie/2012/07/kennelly-bridge-complete.html

 

 

Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Kennelly Bridge Complete!

The bridge at Kennelly Forest in Dublin was completed about a week ago! This bridge has been a complicated project from the beginning, as we realized that in order to span this extremely flashy stream we'd need a bridge that was roughly 30 feet long.

All told, we estimate that the Kennelly bridge involved well over 300 hours of volunteer power! Many thanks all the volunteer land stewards who worked on this project, espeically Bart Hunter, Walter Weeks, Alan Cort, Hiel Lindquist, Ray Jackson, Mark Kresge, Ruth Ward, and Karl Putnam. Amazing work everyone!

 

 

 

 

Flavin 1856

http://churchrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/details/5d43820513391

 

Kennelly Carmody Dromin 1858

http://churchrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/details/ca9c2b0371718

 

Donoghue Kennelly 1877

http://churchrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/details/f2310e0547630

 

1826 Kennelly Grady Tarmons

http://churchrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/details/5402970067721

 

Kennelly Flavin Moyvane 1820

http://churchrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/details/ecb0d70365997

 

Pat Scannell Kennelly 1888

 

http://churchrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/details/0ccfd00377585

 

1859 Scannell Daly

http://churchrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/details/34e1560371853

 

 

1886 Scannell Kennelly

http://churchrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/details/7955d30377341

 

1889 Kennelly Scannell

http://churchrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/details/b40bdb0377845

 

 

 

 

KENNELLY KILBAHA

 

Denis Bergin

 

               

 

24 Feb (1 day ago)

 

               

 

to me

 

 

 

August 9, 2014 at 7:27 am

 

 

 

Hud Cofb

 

 

 

 

 

My grandfather, Jim Kennelly left Moyvane for America August 25, 1909. His brother Tim and Mary Jane Hanrahan were married in November 1909. Tim and Mary Jane farmed the land Tim inherited from his father Daniel. They had 15 children bet. 1910 and 1926, including Michael in 1914 who came to live with my grandfather and his family in New York in 1929. Michael eventually became a Jesuit priest and and president of Loyola University.

 

 

 

 

 

I imagine some of his brothers and sisters descendants may still live in or near Moyvane. Just curious if any of you out there had a grandfather or great grandfather Tim Kennelly, a farmer (he died in 1955, Mary Jane in 1970)? their children included: Fr. Michael Kennelly SJ, Danny Kennelly (1910-2005), John Joe Kennelly ( a champion Irish Step dancer), Jimmy Kennelly (1913-2005), Elizabeth Kennelly Kelly, Tim Kennelly, Mary (Mai) Kennelly Conlon. These all might have been grandparents to adult villagers today. I’ve traced our family in Moyvane back to Daniel Kennelly’s marriage in 1876 to Kate Thornton in the Kilbaha, Moyvane church. Daniel’s father John Kennelly owned a farm that the Kennelly’s supposedly farmed for more two centuries from the 1700’s to 1900’s.

 

 

 

 

 

If anyone out there has a family connection to any of these folks above. I’d love to hear about it. Much thanks. PS: You have some great athletes in this village!

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.moyvane.com/guestbook/comment-page-4/