Do You Have Irish Genealogy? Use This Handy Surname Guide to Trace Your Heritage

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 3. 05. 2024
  • "Handy Irish Genealogy Handbook: Everything You Need to Find Irish Genealogy Records FAST!"
    amzn.to/4agAHla
    AF-261: Do You Have Irish Genealogy?
    ancestralfindings.com/do-you-...
    Tens of millions of Americans have Irish heritage, and many still proudly bear those original Irish surnames. But where did these surnames originate? More importantly, why does it matter? Knowing how your Irish surname evolved can not only tell you important details about your ancient Irish ancestors, it can actually help you trace your family tree in Ireland. If you have an Irish surname, this handy guide to the origins of surnames in Ireland will be a blessing for your family history research.
    Genealogy Clips Podcast
    ancestralfindings.com/podcast
    Free Genealogy Lookups
    ancestralfindings.com/lookups
    Genealogy Giveaway
    ancestralfindings.com/giveaway
    Genealogy eBooks
    ancestralfindings.com/ebooks
    Follow Along
    / ancestralfindings
    / ancestralfindings
    / ancestralfindings
    Support Ancestral Findings
    ancestralfindings.com/support
    Learn More:
    Tracing Your Scottish Ancestors: The Official Guide-National Records of Scotland
    amzn.to/448Sjfy
    The Family Tree Scottish Genealogy Guide: How to Trace Your Ancestors in Scotland
    amzn.to/3PjsHYW
    Scotland Travel Guide: The Ultimate Pocket Guide to the Scottish Allure: A Guide to the Breathtaking Landscapes, Culture, and Rich History. Everything ... Plan a Trip to Scotland (Travel Guides)
    amzn.to/445TPiu
    #irish #irishheritage #irishpeople

Komentáře • 3,9K

  • @Ancestralfindings
    @Ancestralfindings  Před 2 lety +118

    Thank you for listening to the podcast and subscribing... I really appreciate it.

    • @irishiz498
      @irishiz498 Před 2 lety +3

      Merciful God I need help !!! My mothers side were O'Reillys, my mother being the 1st of her side born in America. My fathers side was Hughes. He was named John Hughes after the priest that tried to stop the fighting in NY (or New Amsterdam) in the 1800s. I lived with Irish traditions my whole life as well as stories of my family. My son did his DNA. It came back that he is *NOT* Irish *AT ALL* !! I am utterly confused. Did I bring home the wrong child from the hospital or was I lied to about who my family is?? Where do i go from here??

    • @lauravastag8587
      @lauravastag8587 Před 2 lety +1

      ❤️🌎 thx u too sweetie

    • @Walesball1214
      @Walesball1214 Před 2 lety +1

      why would sombody from wales yous WALSH? an example of that would be better as Hugh O Cymru (hugh from wales) Hugh y Cymry (hugh the welshman (rough translation bc Cymry is Welsh)

    • @10solidrocks
      @10solidrocks Před rokem +4

      Totally funny.....there is a bit of scandal in all Irish families. :)
      Most of it is very interesting, however.

    • @10solidrocks
      @10solidrocks Před rokem +3

      @@lauravastag8587 You well be Norman. Many Normans settled in Ireland after their conquest in 1066. For instance, the surname Bailey came from the northwest area of France (Baille). The surname Gilliam also is Norman but those whom I k ow who are surnamed Gilliam do have a large percentage of Irish in them because they had intermarried with the Irish for 800 years or more before coming to the United States.

  • @johnm4541
    @johnm4541 Před 3 lety +1352

    My Irish father once told me he paid $500 to look up the family tree and another $500 to shut it up.

  • @Chafflives
    @Chafflives Před rokem +150

    I only learnt recently that as my father was born in Ireland, I was an Irish citizen from birth in another country and entitled to an Irish passport, which I now hold. Thanks Dad 👍♥️

    • @standingbear998
      @standingbear998 Před rokem +1

      your dad was irish so you are? what was your mother? was you not that? what about before there was a people called irish?

    • @Chafflives
      @Chafflives Před rokem +2

      @@standingbear998
      1. Yes
      2. English.
      3. Yes & no.
      4. Who knows?

    • @angellee5769
      @angellee5769 Před rokem

      @@standingbear998 were both of your parents bears? 🤣

    • @joancampbell8806
      @joancampbell8806 Před rokem +2

      Roach

    • @Chafflives
      @Chafflives Před rokem

      ?

  • @punkassparker
    @punkassparker Před rokem +58

    My father is a red-headed man named Mike Yates, and my great grandfather on my mom's side has a deep Irish heritage. I've always been proud of my Irish heritage and I always will be!

    • @davidparker9676
      @davidparker9676 Před rokem +4

      We're related.

    • @mikeyates7931
      @mikeyates7931 Před 11 měsíci +4

      My name is , Mike Yates !
      We must be cousins !

    • @terrell112
      @terrell112 Před 5 měsíci

      You want to know what interesting about my grandfathers father bloodline a man by the name Ambrose Nicholas Cramer (Yates) took up the last name of a man that wasn’t his father so my bloodline is kinda messed up due to this…. My grandfather & his father & so forth and so on are not true Yates we just carry the name our DNA is of the Cramer’s which is Irish

    • @terrell112
      @terrell112 Před 5 měsíci +1

      So you people are the true Yateses?

    • @suzannehaigh4281
      @suzannehaigh4281 Před 2 měsíci +1

      My step Grandfather is called Yates and his ancestors were true blooded Lancashire people, never went near Ireland.

  • @irishiz498
    @irishiz498 Před 2 lety +32

    For such a small country, we sure spread far and wide didn't we !!!🍀🍀🍀

    • @athenawilson4019
      @athenawilson4019 Před měsícem +5

      It wasn't a "happy" diaspora. It was all about tragedy. Today many more Irish live outside Ireland than in it. Not by choice, to survive.

    • @littleme3597
      @littleme3597 Před 28 dny

      @@athenawilson4019 Correct. IRISH SLAVES. "The slaves that time forgot". John Martin. Made to breed with black slaves for a cheaper slave, as black slave cost MORE than a white one. Treated as badly as any black slave, worse sometimes as they were cheaper.

    • @giffysstiffy8874giffytuck
      @giffysstiffy8874giffytuck Před 26 dny +1

      🙂Most white people in America have Irish DNA🙂😎

  • @waldoparsnip1025
    @waldoparsnip1025 Před 3 lety +48

    My father was Welsh , and my mother was Hungarian , I'm Well Hung !

  • @texasgigi3684
    @texasgigi3684 Před 2 lety +115

    Just wanted to encourage my fellow Irish to have a ferritin level taken (blood test). Hemochromatosis, is very common in people of Irish lineage. Turns out, I got the gene from both of my parents. (There are two different genes that can cause you to have hemochromatosis. I got one of each kind, from each parent). That means my kids will either have it, or be carriers. Read up on this disease-your body cannot get rid of iron. Thus the iron can accumulate in your organs-brain, liver, you name it. This isn’t a joke. Thanks for making this video-spread the word. I loved this video, it was so interesting!!

    • @jimkiernan13
      @jimkiernan13 Před rokem +7

      When was this screening introduced? I was born in Belfast in 1955 and did not discover until my mid 20's that I had haemochromatosis. At that time doctors thought it was a one in a million disease!

    • @rridderbusch518
      @rridderbusch518 Před rokem +5

      @@jimkiernan13 When my babies were born in '85 and '86 I was told the testing was only for blood type, but they probably tested for much more.

    • @annelowry357
      @annelowry357 Před rokem +5

      Northern Irish heritage, my brother has it!

    • @honey-feeney9800
      @honey-feeney9800 Před rokem

      Is that similar to amyloidosis?

    • @thesjkexperience
      @thesjkexperience Před rokem +8

      My brother has that! Strange, I have low iron.

  • @borjastick
    @borjastick Před 2 lety +134

    I do. My father was born in Dublin and all his side of the family were Irish save for his mother who was born in New York to Scottish parents. I am British but now live in France only to find that the roots of my family name are French. My dad never had an Irish passport because he moved to UK prior to the war then served in a British regiment after the war ended. I have dual nationality with UK and Ireland and a passport for both. My dad was so pleased when I got my Irish passport he became quite emotional. Sadly he is no longer with us.

    • @DHarri9977
      @DHarri9977 Před 2 lety +9

      I've always found it interesting how circumstantial situations (war, moving to a different country) influenced and in many cases changed the origins of families in general, your story is a great example of just that, thanks for sharing.

    • @theirishhammer9451
      @theirishhammer9451 Před 2 lety +11

      Butler is also of French origin! Butlier!

    • @didibrant7326
      @didibrant7326 Před 2 lety +4

      To any of my Irish 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, or 7th cousins of the WITHERS line who has their genealogy or have heard by mouth about William George Withers of the 37th Regiment of Foot who fought in the Indian Mutiny of 1857 in India, I implore you if you know what city he was born in as English Censuses and Indian records only state his birthplace as Ireland. Hoping one of my cousins will reply as all Irish records were destroyed in a fire and we have checked other records since 1969. He retired to Dublin in 1890,s or so. I estimate his birth round about Spring of 1836. Have checked all indexes too. My great- grandma was his child Henrietta Wiithers( married Samuel Davies)William was married to Elizabeth Sweeney( or known as Sullivan- another marriage) born in India to Irish soldier Alexander Sweeney. Are any of you descendants of William's children: Anne M., Alice Maude Adelaide, Emily, and William all born between 1861 to 1870. He may have had more later ( besides a Mary Anne deceased at 10 months in India). Of course Henrietta's kids likely born in England. But mainly, I ask my Irish cousins as it's been like looking for a needle in.......Do you know what it is like checking Sri Lanka (Ceylon) records? The same. William and Elizabeth were on the ship that left Ceylon as the mutiny had just broken out. If none know his birth town, at least I could supply you with more facts. Hoping one of you may have family records.

    • @anyat686
      @anyat686 Před 2 lety +6

      @@didibrant7326 We would have good connections to our 3rd cousins. But that far out you be better off get your DNA tested. A lot of those things that you might search are now online. Try gravestones and baptismal certs and Tide documents. ( fees for lands ) Many of those survived. Good luck. I’m sure they will welcome you ! ☘️

    • @anyat686
      @anyat686 Před 2 lety +6

      @@didibrant7326 if it’s any help, I’m guessing Withers and Davis are Protestant names. You could dig around in Belfast as a place to start your search. Even though Belfast didn’t become part of Northern Ireland till much later. I notice he retired in Dublin. You might try old mariners clubs for some records. Good luck.

  • @anneclark9508
    @anneclark9508 Před 2 lety +69

    The best records I got to trace a lot of my Irish ancestry were in the Catholic Church. Thank you for an interesting talk

    • @Sandwich13455
      @Sandwich13455 Před 2 lety +2

      Same as myself!

    • @grammie8190
      @grammie8190 Před 2 lety +3

      Where would I find info from the Catholic church?? My family is Catholic and had no idea! I use Family Search from the Mormon church

    • @anneclark9508
      @anneclark9508 Před 2 lety +7

      @@grammie8190 I was fortunate in knowing roughly where my family geographically came from and contacted the actual churches, but I would think you can use the ancestry sites and there is a site we used called "Find a Grave" as well as local newspapers. One thing is that when you receive Catholic sacraments the actual church records it and also all the information is sent to the original church where there were baptized. Hopefully that may help you work backward and forward with any information that you have. Sorry I can't be more help. Good luck

    • @grammie8190
      @grammie8190 Před 2 lety +1

      @Anne Clark Thank you!! That was really a great help!!

    • @pattibelcher2659
      @pattibelcher2659 Před 2 lety

      Yes, that is very true!

  • @damo690
    @damo690 Před 3 lety +223

    A detail that has been left out is that many Irish emigrants during the famine era changed their name when they got to America as they feared they would not get work or that having an Irish name they would be looked upon unfavourably. The Irish we're not always very welcome in America especially in cities like New York and the bigger cities. It is a known fact that people changed their names, sometimes to something similar to what it was originally. That's why you get names that sound vaguely like Irish ones but you never find here in Ireland.

    • @bruceglock5725
      @bruceglock5725 Před 3 lety +47

      The Irish were extremely oppressed in early America, in some areas they were they were viewed as disposable laborers. Less valuable than slaves in many cases. It was a struggle for sure.

    • @bethshadid2087
      @bethshadid2087 Před 3 lety +23

      There are a lot of irish and scottish in the south. My ancestry came to georgia and Texas.

    • @tainuibabe1812
      @tainuibabe1812 Před 2 lety +21

      Ours was changed from Doolaghty to Delahunty when the family fled County Clare in Ireland during the land wars to Dunedin, New Zealand. They changed their name because John Doolaghty was murdered and it was a high profile case. His sons couldn’t get work on any farms, so their mother Elizabeth Connor sued and won over 3,000 pounds. She moved her family to NZ and never looked back.

    • @samanthab1923
      @samanthab1923 Před 2 lety +2

      I thought that's why slot dropped the O' & MC

    • @earthwyrm6756
      @earthwyrm6756 Před 2 lety +19

      Yes, sometimes this was a choice by the immigrants and sometimes just imposed by a person filling out the paperwork for them (for example at Ellis Island).

  • @tomboed2097
    @tomboed2097 Před 3 lety +297

    My cousin, very proud of his Irish roots did the DNA thing and discovered he was only half Irish. I asked him how that was possible. He said men of his family were always successful with women from all over the world.

    • @smallfeet4581
      @smallfeet4581 Před 3 lety +10

      lol,

    • @alanaadams7440
      @alanaadams7440 Před 2 lety +10

      😂😂😂😂😂 good one

    • @donnastraube9393
      @donnastraube9393 Před 2 lety +5

      Funny

    • @shulamiteKINGSbride
      @shulamiteKINGSbride Před 2 lety +10

      That's a nice way to put it!

    • @kristinebailey6554
      @kristinebailey6554 Před 2 lety +7

      How it was possible? Easy! If your mother's family was Irish, and your dad's German for example. My Irish paternal grandad married a German woman. My mother's English mother married an Irishman. Makes for some interesting history.

  • @PeBoVision
    @PeBoVision Před rokem +17

    My grandmother was Irish, and my grandfather French Canadian. She spoke no french, he spoke no english, but they had 12 children, which suggests a language all their own.
    Tracing paternal surnames is easy, but I have no idea what my grandmother's maiden name was, so maternal Irish names gets lost with marriage. Luckily I knew her, and she was a proud Irishwoman, so I am certain of my geneology. I am french with an Irish temper.

  • @meanderer06513
    @meanderer06513 Před 2 lety +41

    One of my great-great grandmothers had mentioned (in her husband's pension record) that she was born in Blackcommon, Co Tipperary; and her death certificate lists her parents' names. I started looking through Irish baptismal records (+/- 4 years) for that parish (Ballingary), and found that a woman by the same name was born to parents (of the same name) 3 years before my great-great grandmother stated(which could be possible - people probably didn't have calendars hanging on their walls back then). I even found the property (according to Griffith's Valuation), that HER parents lived on. Sadly, according to Google Earth, no structure stands on that property now...).

    • @bahabobby8118
      @bahabobby8118 Před 2 lety +11

      Fun fact for you Mr. Anderson., The Irish immigrants settling in upstate NY stake claimed a neighborhood outside of Syracuse and called it, Tipperary Hill..
      the one traffic light in the center of the nieghborhood has always been upsidedown, ...so the green is on top.

    • @meanderer06513
      @meanderer06513 Před 2 lety +1

      @@bahabobby8118 Looks like a decent place for a proper pint...

    • @giffysstiffy8874giffytuck
      @giffysstiffy8874giffytuck Před 26 dny +1

      Most white people in America have a significant amount of Irish DNA🙂😎

  • @donnafletcher5386
    @donnafletcher5386 Před 3 lety +47

    Hello fam. I'm from the Garden of Eden. Just having a hard time finding where its located. My ancestors got on a REALLY BIG BOAT, that landed on a mountaintop. They decided they thought they knew better than God and built a tower reaching into the sky. The first skyscraper. After that all of us where separated and ended up in different places on this earth. So I have relatives all over this world. Too many to count and invite over to dinner. Talk about having a family reunion.
    It doesn't get any more ancient then that.
    Eventually those that went to England, Wales, Ireland, Sweden, and Scotland became my most recent ancestors.
    🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿🇮🇪🇸🇪🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

    • @esterherschkovich6499
      @esterherschkovich6499 Před 3 lety +12

      THIS MADE ME SMILE!

    • @lori8553
      @lori8553 Před 3 lety +6

      And we didn’t learn a thing from all that. It’s no wonder we ended up where we are now...

    • @vickiwykes1511
      @vickiwykes1511 Před 3 lety +8

      What an amazing coincidence! My ancestors did the same! We must be related 😉

    • @callahclan7456
      @callahclan7456 Před 3 lety +5

      Mine too, maybe we're related 😉

    • @xvsupremacy7190
      @xvsupremacy7190 Před 3 lety +1

      A Fletcher is an arrow maker English

  • @ateachableheart2649
    @ateachableheart2649 Před 3 lety +61

    Years ago doing heraldry research (which is ongoing albeit a casual hobby) I noticed subtle name changes, mostly in the spelling. Recently I purchased a book about white slavery which was really bad long before black slavery. Something I had no idea about but the historical facts back it all up.
    Many British, Scottish and Irish people were brought over to the New World through deceit and trickery and plain outright kidnapping. The numbers are astonishing to say the least. The names of some were changed or spelt differently once they got here (mostly the kidnapped ones).
    My husband's lineage is Scottish. According to this book many Scots came over to America (some legitimately, others by trickery). Where they mostly populated is the east coast of which this is where my husband's family is from.
    They took homeless people off the streets of London, (also done in Ireland and Scotland) orphans, prisoners, you name it, they took them. The adults were told they could be released from prison, or their current life made better, if they agreed to go over to America and work for seven years for a plantation owner. They would be given headrights but initially the acreage would be given to the land owner to increase his lot. however, in most cases if the indentured servant committed even the slightest infraction, the court system added additional years on to the contract and they never got the land they were promised.
    This is just one aspect of this, the book is chocked full of very eye opening history. When I first purchased the book I figured it might be light reading. Little did I know how much it would add to the research I've been doing. It's become a very important resource.

    • @abiyahabiyelbetsalel2869
      @abiyahabiyelbetsalel2869 Před 3 lety +7

      What was the title of the book and author? Thank you

    • @ateachableheart2649
      @ateachableheart2649 Před 3 lety +15

      @@abiyahabiyelbetsalel2869 "White Cargo". Can't recall the author's name but you can find it on Amazon.

    • @cynthiasnyder1561
      @cynthiasnyder1561 Před 2 lety +16

      Exactly right! Very few people are educated on any slavery except black slavery. But, unfortunately, slavery goes back much further and was much more widespread. Anyone who reads the Bible knows the Isrealites were slaves at one time.

    • @waltond1127
      @waltond1127 Před 2 lety +6

      The Vikings had slaves. The Chinese had slaves. The Native American Indians had slaves. The Colonists had slaves. The English had slaves. The Greeks had slaves. The Romans had slaves. I don't believe there is a country anywhere on the planet that did NOT own slaves at one point or another somewhere in its' history. Slavery goes back to the pre-historic era of history.

    • @bretthess6376
      @bretthess6376 Před 2 lety +8

      There were a lot of white slaves. Look up the TV series 1905 Victorian House. Tell me those English house servants weren't slaves. They had no rights and got paid 2 1/2 cents a day for 15 hour days.
      My great-uncle Herbert was born around 1895 and was in WW One. He told me when the British soldiers met the American soldiers, that was the end of the Victorian Age.
      He said the American soldiers changed the English soldier's attitudes from subservient to independent. And about time too.

  • @allenkinahan6955
    @allenkinahan6955 Před 2 lety +31

    One huge factor is that many that came to America would give their name on the ship and it would be written down however the writer wanted to spell it. Kinnehan for example turned into Cunningham in our family because of this. Not that they aren't interchangeable in some instances but this applies especially to folks who weren't literate. My mom's family's name has 14 variations, depending on what part of the family you're in. lol

    • @joanbyrnes4878
      @joanbyrnes4878 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Heavens !

    • @ItsCDoc
      @ItsCDoc Před 5 měsíci

      I guess this is why Daugherty is spelt 40 different ways

  • @eoghandoherty125
    @eoghandoherty125 Před 2 lety +21

    Good little documentary but I will correct you on 1 thing.
    The reason why Murphy Kelly pronounced in English was because the British outlawed Gaelic language and made it illegal to speak it along with other laws that more or less sabotaged Irish culture.

  • @alantaylor9593
    @alantaylor9593 Před 3 lety +52

    We are a mixed race African American family who ancestry dates back to 1619 to the Jamestown region. Mixed with Native American about 400 years we were made into indentured servants in the Charles County, Maryland bloodline and during that time mated with colonial Europeans.
    Then about 200 years later my mixed race 7th great grandmother who eventually migrated to Richmond, Kentucky had a son with a David Irvine, b. 1721 Gleno, Ireland d. 1804 Madison County, Kentucky.
    So by 2021 our family DNA analysis revealed we are basically on average 59% African, 40% European and 1% Native American. I alone have 25% Scots-Irish in my DNA... the rest is English and German.

    • @vannjunkin8041
      @vannjunkin8041 Před 2 lety +4

      Jamestown, VA one of the original families, what a family legacy to know.😊 when we repeat and say their name they live on and the legacy grows brighter each time.

    • @FM-ig3th
      @FM-ig3th Před 2 lety +11

      In other words, you're an American.

    • @mikes9117
      @mikes9117 Před 2 lety +4

      That's Cool, I've traced my ancestry to 1630's Virginia

    • @lagatha1037
      @lagatha1037 Před 2 lety +2

      So interesting👍

    • @kuniakai
      @kuniakai Před 2 lety +1

      We were often times put back on our own land.

  • @Musik48190
    @Musik48190 Před rokem +9

    The seed for my history was planted when I was too young to have interest. I wish I could have a conversation with my maternal grandparents. There is some paperwork collected by my Mom and her first cousin, that my cousin will not give me access to. She says I need to leave those dead people alone! Black genealogy is difficult enough without family members interfering and road blocking.

  • @redcarpeteater6903
    @redcarpeteater6903 Před 2 lety +36

    Some of my family came from County Mayo, western Ireland. Name was Baillie, was changed to Bailey after coming to America about 1670.

    • @KateBates22zabu
      @KateBates22zabu Před 2 lety +1

      My gran came from Mayo & her last name was Long & her mum's was Roche...not Irish sounding at all.

    • @redfive5856
      @redfive5856 Před 2 lety +3

      Ellis Island, eh?

    • @annieSorrow
      @annieSorrow Před 2 lety +2

      SAME HERE O' HAYLEY FAMILY HERE.

    • @teresamull9627
      @teresamull9627 Před 2 lety

      I have Baily, and Johnson in my family both mother and Father,s side

    • @shelleyforde7881
      @shelleyforde7881 Před 2 lety

      My grandfather's surname was Bailey and his mother's maiden name was Highland . Our family live in Trinidad WI , I believe we have both Scottish and Irish ancestry.

  • @fluidikons
    @fluidikons Před 2 lety +45

    We had a whole bunch of history open up for us once my brother figured out Courtney was changed from Cuirnane. He even found a farm in Killarney still in the family and got to meet them and they invited him in. Very cool.

    • @thejenr8tr922
      @thejenr8tr922 Před rokem +2

      Courtney or Courtenay was originally a distinguished Norman French name, who were prominent nobles who were married with English royalty. But when England became protestant, many fled to Ireland rather than renounce their faith. That Cuirnane might be the Gaelic spelling that they adopted.

  • @kyriljordanov2086
    @kyriljordanov2086 Před 3 lety +160

    So many folks changed their names when they came to America. My mother's family came to Mississippi and changed their Slavic surname to McBay to fit in with the rural mainly Scottish/Irish population of their region of the state. Part of my father's family changed the Bulgarian Jordanov to Jordan.

    • @mccaffreybeverley450
      @mccaffreybeverley450 Před 2 lety +5

      I'm in Hattiesburg. 3rd generation

    • @LDSVenus
      @LDSVenus Před 2 lety +6

      My Irish roots dropped the g off the end of their name when brother fought against brother in the American revolution to differentiate them selves, I’ve gone back far enough to find the 2 different spellings in one family with the previous line with the g still on the name. Family history is so interesting.

    • @sharoncrawford7192
      @sharoncrawford7192 Před 2 lety +5

      My great grandfather's name was Spot. He changed it to Spratt.

    • @missionaries7575
      @missionaries7575 Před 2 lety +5

      My great gpa was Slovak and changed his first name

    • @hachwarwickshire1718
      @hachwarwickshire1718 Před 2 lety +5

      Ha ha what your family didn't realise is that all the others were Lithuanian ! There wasn't a Jock Paddy Taff or Harry within a thousand miles.
      They all lied .... thinking all the others were from the British Isles.

  • @kevinnobody3052
    @kevinnobody3052 Před 3 lety +41

    I was adopted at 6 months of age and my name was changed.
    But my birth name was
    David Wayne O'Brien.
    I'd say there is some Irish in there somewhere.

    • @pauldunneska
      @pauldunneska Před 3 lety +14

      Your adopted surname is embarrassing (Nobody) i would take your birth surname back (O'Brien).

    • @MacSherry
      @MacSherry Před 3 lety +8

      David Wayne O’Brien is a lovely name, use it, the other name really isn’t you.

    • @debrap947
      @debrap947 Před 3 lety +3

      Official welcome Kevin(David)to one of the best people groups known to mankind. Yes...I said mankind. 🤗

    • @harrypmay
      @harrypmay Před 2 lety

      @@jimbodriver1015 Haha, me Grandad’s name is Kevin and me Grandma’s name is Eileen, both had Irish grandparents, but we’ve called Lancashire home for four generations now. Our Irish surname on my maternal side is Tasney (sometimes spelt Tansey) from the Connacht region. Although the different spellings of the surname has complicated any ancestry research I do, I have found out it is the anglicisation of Tánaiste which means they can’t have been doing too bad at some point in their lives.

  • @sharonmcandrews2482
    @sharonmcandrews2482 Před rokem +1

    So happy to have found your channel. Thank you🍀☘️🍀

  • @spirit1259
    @spirit1259 Před rokem +8

    My father (Torpy)and mother (Congdon) traced their Irish ancestory back as far as was possible, and both finished up at (County Clare) in 1555, where a Torpy had married a Congdon exactley 400 years to the day that my parents were married, the records before that had been lost to fire, and my father asked the priest if there was any older landmarks about, and the priest replied, he had heard of an old graveyard now barren of any headstones down near the river bank, my father visited this grassed area of riverbank and after a time started kicking tufts of grass up with his shoe, uncovering a massive granite slab with the word "Torpy" etched into it! 😱

  • @doloresparker8203
    @doloresparker8203 Před 3 lety +22

    I was told by my Father that Parkers originated in England but later settled in Northern Ireland! Looked up the origin of Parker and they were caretakers of the parks(land) and animals! Gave me some insight into my ancestory, I am an avid animal lover and love gardening and lawn care! I would love to visit Ireland one day!

    • @harry9392
      @harry9392 Před 3 lety

      There are farmers called Parker from were I am from Crumlin County-Antrim
      There is that care takers of animals bit

    • @nathan-ql5vh
      @nathan-ql5vh Před 3 lety

      every parker i know over here is short

    • @declan1278
      @declan1278 Před 10 měsíci

      Well done it while you still can

    • @nancystere3260
      @nancystere3260 Před 10 měsíci

      Malone and Watson are the sir names of my family . But I was raised as a Parker

    • @declan1278
      @declan1278 Před 10 měsíci

      Go to Ireland while you still can you will love it

  • @debrap947
    @debrap947 Před 3 lety +12

    Thank you so much for the notes! Just need to get my printer working and I can print this out. I am trying to leave ancestral info for my kids, this will help tons. 😃

  • @userbosco
    @userbosco Před rokem +17

    Our family's research led us to believe that my father's family came from the Republic of Cork, Ire. On my first visit to the City of Cork, I was quite floored when I found our surname was all over the place, from fish mongers to bakeries, to taxi's, and on and on. Here in the states, it's very uncommon, especially in the south. There's a number of "us" up in New England, but unicorns everywhere else.

    • @frazzledhaloz3184
      @frazzledhaloz3184 Před rokem

      Omg my uncle is a Cork…..lol

    • @kevinmorbidthelostcronin1984
      @kevinmorbidthelostcronin1984 Před rokem +3

      Exact same situation for me: Southern who's family is in New England and ancestry from County Cork. Until a couple years ago, I spent 3 decades in the South. I know of three people outside of my nuclear family with the same surname in the state across those 30 years. Meanwhile, I visited New England for a wedding and expected a "nice hall". Instead, the event was massive. Almost everyone shared one of three surnames (which included mine). One of my uncles said my dad had to join the military and get stationed in Florida, just so he could date someone he was not related to.

    • @audreynewell2460
      @audreynewell2460 Před rokem +3

      @@kevinmorbidthelostcronin1984 I grew up a Murphy and became a Newell both Irish I hear

    • @sharonprice42
      @sharonprice42 Před rokem

      Must be O'Sullivan

  • @jamesbradshaw3389
    @jamesbradshaw3389 Před rokem +14

    My family traces their ancestry way back to Niall of the Nine Hostages, high king of Ireland from about 379 to 405 A.D we also a few other very strong kingships connections but we do not like to talk too much about. Not until we get our hands on some property deeds with good lands, great views, lakes and fine free-flowing rivers

    • @rexanneendicott6079
      @rexanneendicott6079 Před rokem +1

      I too have Irish ancestry linked to Niall of the Nine. Found out some years back he's got over 3 million descendants...(probably even more now)

    • @MichaelmaxxxxX
      @MichaelmaxxxxX Před rokem +1

      I believe you, but how can you guys have records going back that far and that accurately? that would be astonishing to see.

    • @michaelbonner3908
      @michaelbonner3908 Před rokem +1

      Niall of nine hostages is like gengis khan alot of people trace back to him

    • @janewatson5388
      @janewatson5388 Před rokem

      😂 Yeah, I'm from the McNeill clan born in Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @tommymcallister9585
    @tommymcallister9585 Před 3 lety +10

    Good piece, I learned some things I never knew or heard of before!!!

  • @Wilkins_Micawber
    @Wilkins_Micawber Před 3 lety +85

    I am a McNeill. My ancestor Michael McNeill abandoned Ireland in the 1840s during the Potato famine moving first to Scotland with his wife Mary. I find fault with what the commentator suggests that I could find the origins of my family name. From his suggestion it seems that anyone having a father called Neil would call themselves MC or son of, that I understand. My problem is that, just that ANYONE! which means that Many people at different times and locations could call themselves "The Son of Neil". So in the course of time many families called "Sons of Neil" or "McNeills" and thereby all the other Mc's and O's could spring up anywhere in the country and be totally unrelated in any meaningful way. This theory also fails to account for the McNeills of Scotland. It also fails to account for the Viking invasions in that area of Scotland and Ireland and creating settlements bringing their family names that could have been altered as they adopted the local customs and languages. One such name such Vikings have brought is Neilson the exact Viking version of my family name. In fact DNA analysis of the McNeills of the Scottish islands suggests the family have Viking ancestors.

    • @tommurphy2332
      @tommurphy2332 Před 2 lety +5

      Is your DNA haplogroup RM-222 ? If so, you are traceable to the O'Neills of Viking history.

    • @whitetroutchannel
      @whitetroutchannel Před 2 lety +2

      id argue your wrong because there are plenty of neills still in ireland, the oneills were here 1st and i think neill is more scotch plantations and by that point in time most people were pinning there colours to the mast and oneill/neill was a method to discern by protestant and catholic

    • @bettywhite8407
      @bettywhite8407 Před 2 lety +1

      My family Vick is from Victor etc.

    • @ENTJ69
      @ENTJ69 Před 2 lety +5

      @@blu3i My ancestors abandoned Ireland too and I am very mad about it since Ireland is a beautiful place

    • @spirit1259
      @spirit1259 Před rokem +2

      I am sure the author of this narrative, does not intend for it to be the definitive, but merely a guide to assist discovery😇

  • @pongop
    @pongop Před 9 měsíci +1

    This is awesome! Thank you!

  • @seanturner1197
    @seanturner1197 Před 2 lety +16

    I'm Scottish and my uncle had done a geneology tracing our family's heritage. One of my ancestresses carried the surname, McGowan.

  • @doriswhite1348
    @doriswhite1348 Před 3 lety +24

    Kept my family surname of Noonan. Mother's maiden name was Kelley.
    Dad's ancestors went to Boston, Massachusetts, from County Cork during the famine.
    Both grandmothers were born in Nova Scotia, Canada.

    • @lisachaput2952
      @lisachaput2952 Před 2 lety

      Cool! There is a Irish Museum up in Nova Scotia that may have some information. There was a priest, Agnus McDonald that moved to an island to help start a Catholic church and another town which is where some of the Irish hung out in. It depends how far back your Grandmother's lived there.

    • @adeledorman6447
      @adeledorman6447 Před 10 měsíci

      My grandma was a Kelley married a Scot, Allan.

    • @kelleyborkowski1820
      @kelleyborkowski1820 Před 2 měsíci

      My mother's maiden name was Kelley. That is My 1st name!!!

  • @TK-ij2xi
    @TK-ij2xi Před 2 lety +5

    Through research of coloring, surname, and DNA, I was able to figure out I'm 65% Irish and my family came out of Galway.
    What's even more interesting (to me) is that most of my Irish background is from the darker side of the family.

  • @courtneycooper4905
    @courtneycooper4905 Před rokem +3

    My great times 100 grandfather escaped Ireland and came to the US and fought in the Revolutionary war. I’m always reminded of that

  • @robfla6471
    @robfla6471 Před 3 lety +23

    My surname is Flaherty. I visited Ireland 🇮🇪 for the 1st time last year. I did the Irish ☘️ Rail Tour. I never seen such beautiful country in my life. I can’t wait to go back. Beautiful people & Country 🇮🇪☘️🇮🇪☘️🇮🇪☘️

    • @esterherschkovich6499
      @esterherschkovich6499 Před 3 lety +3

      I have been a few times and now have an Irish Passport.I joined a very positive facebook page called Mythical Ireland,the information,photos are amazing!!Its getting used to all the Irish/Gaelic names..but its a great place to learn and enjoy.

    • @charlessmith1092
      @charlessmith1092 Před 3 lety +2

      Did you know that Robert Flaherty is credited with creating the documentary film. See "Nanook of the North" or "Louisiana Story," etc.

    • @vickiwykes1511
      @vickiwykes1511 Před 3 lety +1

      @@esterherschkovich6499 how did you manage to obtain an Irish passport?

    • @vickiwykes1511
      @vickiwykes1511 Před 3 lety

      How is your last name pronounced?

    • @williamrbuchanan4153
      @williamrbuchanan4153 Před 3 lety

      According to DNA that was Flaithertaig , McGuire , of the Fermanagh N Irish after Chief ( King) Donn Carragh uidhir d1303.
      Records of The ‘ Annals of The Four Masters’ .

  • @gunner678
    @gunner678 Před 3 lety +61

    This is incredibly simplistic and frankly applies to any lineage from any country.

    • @karenryder6317
      @karenryder6317 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes, I've heard that your Irish surname can tell a lot about where your Irish ancestors came from in Ireland. For example, my grandmother's surname was Mulligan and they were heavily concentrated in County Sligo

    • @RebeccaC2007
      @RebeccaC2007 Před rokem

      Yep, I thought the same. It’s the same all over the British isles. The video maker is clearly aiming to an American audience and anti English audience who are ignorant of true facts.

    • @giffysstiffy8874giffytuck
      @giffysstiffy8874giffytuck Před 26 dny

      Most white people in America have a significant amount Irish DNA 🙂

  • @marysmyth8288
    @marysmyth8288 Před 14 dny

    Have been happy to visit Ancestral Findings ✍️

  • @jasonshaddock9188
    @jasonshaddock9188 Před 2 lety +13

    My mom and dads family came from the south of Ireland. My moms from Tralee in Kerry and my dads in cork and Tipperary. My moms DNA showed her as 88% Irish the rest being Scottish Welsh and Norwegian. Her family came over through Canada into Buffalo

    • @raymonddixon7603
      @raymonddixon7603 Před 2 lety +1

      Jason my name is not Irish per se but we have been in Ireland since Jesus was a baby. We have not found a trace outside of Ireland. There are lots of people here without Irish names. We have been told by numerous doctors over the years that we have some kink in our blood which is common in Nordic countries.

    • @lindaestoll1104
      @lindaestoll1104 Před 2 lety +1

      @@raymonddixon7603 Those darn Viking marauders! 🙂

  • @patearly9492
    @patearly9492 Před 3 lety +6

    Very interesting and helpful! Thank you so much and God bless everyone

  • @mikeryan4524
    @mikeryan4524 Před 3 lety +12

    I'm of Irish ancestry and when I heard the new guy's accent I asked where he was from. "Ireland." was his reply. I was happy and excited and said, " You're Irish? Me too!" He looked at me deadpan and and said, "Are you, now?" I never felt so far from Irish...

    • @MsGilly1967
      @MsGilly1967 Před 3 lety +2

      Sometimes an American accent, upbringing, being here on holiday, thinking we know about your ancestors & American passport, lead us to suspect you're not Irish. A huge number of Americans claim to be Irish... look up the term *Plastic Paddy*

    • @soundmind6477
      @soundmind6477 Před 3 lety +1

      @@MsGilly1967 very harsh hahahaha 😣

    • @bigbird6039
      @bigbird6039 Před 2 lety +1

      @@MsGilly1967 My family came from Galway to Chepstow in the 1950s. I was born in 1961. I’ve never felt the slightest bit attached to Ireland , though I do find it interesting how people from North America are really enthusiastic about their roots. Maybe they keep alive what the rest of us takes for granted.

    • @debra4bees
      @debra4bees Před 2 lety +3

      Europeans all think we're strange to say we're Irish, German when we weren't born there and our parents weren't either

    • @tomgallagher4949
      @tomgallagher4949 Před rokem +3

      "Are you, now!" when used by the Irish is not a doubting rejoinder but simply a way of continuing the conversation. Irish are some of the best conversationalists in the world and have lots of little phrases to help develop the 'craic' (pronounced crack, meaning easy flowing, interesting chat). Similarly, 'you don't say'. Still means, tell me more. You can't take Irish literally. If he had said, "Is that right, tell me more," you wouldn't have been put off, but that is probably what was intended by, "Are you, now?"

  • @garygrant9612
    @garygrant9612 Před rokem +7

    From my DNA i learned that I did have an Irish background as I was told as a young boy. My surname is close to the name Fitz.
    Now for the kicker, I have two grandchildren, one boy and one girl, who happen to have light red or auburn hair. Before my DNA results I was amazed, where did this color hair come from, now I know, from their grandfather.

  • @briandavis7811
    @briandavis7811 Před 2 lety +11

    I'm sure I have Irish heritage . I was born in Dublin . My father's family was from County Mayo as far as can be traced . The same was true on my mother's side . My family moved to Canada and after 8 yrs of waiting to to enter legally , we moved to the US.

    • @Richard-od3gc
      @Richard-od3gc Před rokem

      You were born in Dublin ffs your more Irish than these my dogs cousins uncles was Irish Watered down German English yanks that's how the Irish tend to look at it anyway

    • @grudzz7049
      @grudzz7049 Před rokem

      ???...

  • @RobertLewisromper
    @RobertLewisromper Před 3 lety +38

    Surname does not mean "sired by". Wiktionary confirms it is from French sur-nom from the Latin super-nomen which means over-name. In other words, a name that describes all the members of one family

  • @i.m.s.s2564
    @i.m.s.s2564 Před 3 lety +29

    Thanks, my surname is Havron, in irish.
    Ó hAmhráin, or son of Amhrán, Supposedly the name of a family who were anciently chiefs of Dal Fiatach.

    • @winluben2909
      @winluben2909 Před 2 lety

      My grandfather was a Havron. I’ve had a hard time finding info on this name. Thank you. My DNA said I was Welsh/Irish and Gaul ( French) I always thought the Havron name was the French part .

    • @katharina...
      @katharina... Před rokem

      The letter Ó translates to grandson (or descendant), Mc or Mac translates to son (or descendant). The information in this video saying that both Ó and Mc mean "son of" is incorrect.

  • @tracymac1111
    @tracymac1111 Před 2 lety +8

    My father gave me the name Lynch which was originally Norman … d Luca from the time of William 1066…… my mother gave me the name OShea which is ab ancient clan name from the Cork area of Ireland. That’s all I know but I would love to know more of my family’s history.

  • @lynnomara601
    @lynnomara601 Před 2 lety +5

    My tutor at Uni when I did an Irish history module told me that the ‘O’ prefix stands for grandson of, whereas Mc is son of.

    • @joerudnik9290
      @joerudnik9290 Před rokem

      I had always heard the’O’ was indicative of being Catholic. Many dropped the ‘O’ during Protestant oppression.

  • @conorkelly947
    @conorkelly947 Před 3 lety +36

    Just a little distinction on the Brian O'Brien point it's doesn't really mean Brian jr that would be Brian óg (sometimes written as one word) the Brian in O'Brien refers to Brian Boru so you'd be Brian descendant of Brian Boru (or the clan he formed after his ascent to high king)

  • @ScooBdont
    @ScooBdont Před 4 lety +47

    I decided to do a little research on my family name, which is Dew, and was lucky to find a verified genealogy of my family that goes back to the early and mid 1600’s with Thomas Dew coming to the Americas around 1618 in the ship Alice. From what I’ve found the original spelling is spelled Dhu. The name means in Celtic, Gaelic, and Welsh, black or of dark complexion. It’s thought the dark complexion was possibly inherited from the dark-skinned Romans that invaded around 45A.D.
    I found a whole book about our genealogy that was published in the 1930’s and, and such, has my grandfather in it who was born in 1906. The book had been digitized and put online only 2 weeks before I randomly decided to research it. Kinda blows my mind.

    • @heavenslayer8903
      @heavenslayer8903 Před 4 lety +4

      Wow that's so amazing wish i can find mine.... it's THOMPSON

    • @lordmopton
      @lordmopton Před 3 lety +2

      @@heavenslayer8903 Sorry but thats as English as you can get ...

    • @lordmopton
      @lordmopton Před 3 lety

      That would be Dubh , pronounced Duv ...in Gaelic .

    • @dunneincrewgear
      @dunneincrewgear Před 3 lety +4

      RD RR
      Dublin, the capital of Ireland, in Gaelic is 'Dubh Linn' meaning Black (dark) Pool.

    • @ScooBdont
      @ScooBdont Před 3 lety

      Dunne in crew gear I did a little checking and Dhu seems to be Celtic and not, as you said, Gaelic. 🙂👍

  • @carmencolon8012
    @carmencolon8012 Před 2 lety +43

    Having been born and raised in the Caribbean, I always thought that I had gaellic Spanish ancestry until I went to the mainland USA. Then people started asking me why I had a "funny" accent and saying that I was French Irish. More recently, while completing genealogical research I have found last names like Irlanda, Morfi and Solivan among my ancestors. I do have very "Irish" looking relatives.

    • @Sandwich13455
      @Sandwich13455 Před 2 lety +6

      What's"Irish looking", European?

    • @johnkelly9463
      @johnkelly9463 Před 2 lety +6

      @@Sandwich13455 no, Gaelic, which is European, just like an Italian or German would have ethnic characteristics.

    • @johnnybracciole5490
      @johnnybracciole5490 Před 2 lety +1

      My mother's a Colon....👍

    • @Dilydaydream1
      @Dilydaydream1 Před 10 měsíci

      Irish people were first 'slaves' shipped to carribbean pre africans as unpaid servants by british rulers. As african slaves landed they mixed slaves for molato mixed race slaves. Hence a lot of irish names in carribbean families.

  • @guynorth3277
    @guynorth3277 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent video, intriguing and so interesting, thank you. I would love to hear about the folks just a couple hundred mies East of here, from the Prussian Region.

  • @nickiealley1995
    @nickiealley1995 Před 3 lety +31

    I started working on my family genealogy because I was interested in finding out where the epilepsy came from. I ended up doing my DNA and found out I was 76.2% Irish. I wasn't that surprised because 60% of my family has red hair. My husband and I have black hair but our children and grandchildren have red hair. After much research I found out my family's are all from the Dublin area. I have 5 separate families that migrated from Ireland. I'm proud of my discovery.

    • @mysterymansbattycrease9277
      @mysterymansbattycrease9277 Před 3 lety +3

      @@sallyire1 yeah I’m irish the most common hair here is black or brown I rarely see gingers tbh

    • @sarahjane9692
      @sarahjane9692 Před 3 lety

      I used 23&me which I kind of regret. On 23&me they link the Irish & British together, as well as the German & french 🤷🏻‍♀️. According to 23&me I'm 75% Irish & British, and 25% German & French. I wish 23&me was More specific & detailed. Maybe I should've used Ancestry.com🤔.

    • @amylynnhunt55
      @amylynnhunt55 Před 2 lety

      Ancestry's way of telling you where you're from is a bit of a mess. If you do that, be sure you've built a really strong family tree. If they both are telling you the same thing, yay.
      But if you look at their maps - for instance, my Mother got back a very surprising 60% Scotland on Ancestry's DNA test, and the map covers area that's all over the place. We have nothing but ancestors born in the United States for generations, then it's England, more England... not very spicy :0)

    • @zettemueller4540
      @zettemueller4540 Před 2 lety

      @@sallyire1 ALOT of black haired Irish were from the Spanish Armada. There was a terrible storm during the Spanish Armada’s attack of England. Many Spanish men washed up on Irish coasts. These were the “black “Irish.

  • @judithgallegos1748
    @judithgallegos1748 Před 3 lety +13

    My maiden name is O'Brien. All four of my father's grandparents were born in Ireland. We traced the family back to King MIlesius of A Coruña, Spain. I married a Spaniard.

  • @heffo67
    @heffo67 Před 2 lety +19

    For starters, Mont and Dale (for eg) are both English elements of names. People in Ireland with those in their names are descended from English.
    Irish people did not Anglicise their names or place names that was done by the English.
    O' as in O'Sullivan, does not mean really mean son of...that is Mac or Mc (coming from the Gaelige Mic, meaning son). O' means 'descendant of' or 'belonging to the clan of' it can also mean 'the grandson of'.

  • @catsmeow7839
    @catsmeow7839 Před 2 lety +1

    Just WOW!!! So interesting!!! Thank you..Jones here

  • @wodidos
    @wodidos Před 2 lety +10

    I been told my ancestors from scotland (McCord) were originally from the isle of skye but a big part of the family lived in northern ireland for a couple of generations before moving to america.

  • @patrickcoyle515
    @patrickcoyle515 Před 3 lety +148

    As an Irish person watching this his pronunciation of some words is funny

    • @esterherschkovich6499
      @esterherschkovich6499 Před 3 lety +4

      Of course he is guessing not being Irish but its an interesting video.

    • @vickiwykes1511
      @vickiwykes1511 Před 3 lety +1

      Which words?

    • @jerryoshea3116
      @jerryoshea3116 Před 3 lety +3

      @Úna Discamus Actually many Americans are more likely to pronounce a ☘️Irish☘️ name correctly.
      .I can't say the same for the UK,which is strange, considering how many Irish live there!

    • @anneconnolly4845
      @anneconnolly4845 Před 3 lety +2

      Yes lol

    • @anneconnolly4845
      @anneconnolly4845 Před 3 lety +4

      He no saying Gaelic irish names right

  • @roberthurd328
    @roberthurd328 Před 2 lety +1

    Wow very insightful very rich in information

  • @terrysoule8441
    @terrysoule8441 Před rokem +2

    Really good explanations. Through professional genealogists, I know that I have descendantcy to Brian Boru through my 6th great grandmother, Rebecca Bryan.

  • @JasonX00
    @JasonX00 Před 2 lety +4

    My paternal great grandfather was Irish with surname of Green. Paternal great granny's surname was Casson. My maternal great grandfather's surname was Feehan and great grandmother, a Scot, was Campbell.

  • @wmg111
    @wmg111 Před 3 lety +38

    My father's mother was an Obrian, and my mother's father was a Riley. They all combined with a smattering of German and English to make me a Canadian.

  • @marys1534
    @marys1534 Před 2 lety +3

    My grandfather's
    surname was McElroy😊 and my grandma's name was Mary Alice McAllister..good old fashioned Irish names, I've resigned myself to the fact that I will probably never see Ireland, it's always been a dream of mine..it's on my bucket list!

  • @ingridclarke9054
    @ingridclarke9054 Před rokem +3

    My Clarke’s in Ireland immigrated to Ontario Canada before the famine. Then made their way to northern Michigan. I a very old photo of that 4th or 5th great grandpa Clarke. They were Orangemen.

  • @williamblaney3316
    @williamblaney3316 Před rokem +6

    Blaney and Currie from Ireland here. Has been very hard to research due to the fact the families were so large and most used EXACTLY the same names for their kids in each family. Also found quite a few who had named a later child with the same first name as one child who had died young. Thanks for this info.

    • @tarsxenomorph8845
      @tarsxenomorph8845 Před rokem

      Sometimes families using the same names again in the next generation can actually help tracing a family. First son is named after fathers father. First girl after mother mother. Second son after mothers father. Third son after fathers brother.

    • @teresanash-mcneil-hf1fo
      @teresanash-mcneil-hf1fo Před 8 měsíci +1

      Blaney was a Norman name they came over with William the Conqueror. Roger de Montgomery was nobility given lands and a castle in what was then the Marshes now Mid-Wales, the Blaneys were with Roger de Montgomery, they established Montgomery the town, in what was then Montgomeryshire, now Powys. There are still Blaney’s in the area all descendants of the original Blaney

  • @LuciusDomitiusAurelianus1
    @LuciusDomitiusAurelianus1 Před 3 lety +17

    My mum's side is very Irish. Being entirely Irish until her generation. Her last name is Creagh and there is a lot of interesting history.

  • @jackiewilliams8543
    @jackiewilliams8543 Před 2 lety +67

    My mother's last name is Mckoy . So I went into a Scottish gift shop to try find out more. The shop owner was Scottish and from Scotland he' showed me a huge book with clan names in it he told me that Mckoy was native Irish a very old name before it changed to McCoy when migrated to Scotland so very interesting I've been searching a lot more now

    • @shaunalea823
      @shaunalea823 Před 2 lety +3

      I also have McCoy , but also Owens and Conway. My family on my fathers side derive from the lairds of the clan Campbell.

    • @eternalinternalinfernal7839
      @eternalinternalinfernal7839 Před 2 lety +2

      @@shaunalea823 not sure what you know, but i have a good friend of mine whos last name is owens. from what i recall its from welsh owains/oweins, commonly translated to eugene and such, "meaning" 'good' 'gene'. ain in scottish means own, as in "one of my own", typically referring to kin to my current knowledge, possibly through old norse eiginn/scottish éiginn, supposedly from old irish éicen, apparently connected to welsh angen, which could mean either/both anger as well as anglo (saxons). if you take my middle name allen into account, it is where we get the french name allein, the german word for alone. ein being 'one'. it is deeply intertwined to ano/annus meaning 'year', as well as anu meaning 'ancester'. it refers to 'one' as well as 'ring', whence, the words uno/anus. considering europe is from eury meaning 'broad/wide', i wonder if owens means/meant 'broad/wide anger/anglo/ancestry'. just my thoughts.

    • @paulflanagan3519
      @paulflanagan3519 Před 2 lety +4

      There is no k in the Irish alphabet.

    • @raymonddixon7603
      @raymonddixon7603 Před 2 lety +2

      There is no K in the Irish alphabet. Either in Irish or Scots Gaelic.

    • @raymonddixon7603
      @raymonddixon7603 Před 2 lety +2

      @@eternalinternalinfernal7839 Eoin is a Gaelic name Scot or Irish. It was anglicised to Owen by the English because that is how it is pronounced in Gaelic.

  • @firethewolf9922
    @firethewolf9922 Před 2 lety +10

    My family name is O'Donahue, and I've tried looking for stuff about it but I haven't been able to find out a lot. So I hope this video will help out some!

    • @edwardjoseph2993
      @edwardjoseph2993 Před rokem

      You will use to use the original Irish spelling of the surname

    • @pennymurphy5449
      @pennymurphy5449 Před 10 měsíci

      O'DONOHUE RAISED IN CANADA. RECORDED SOME AS HORSE WRANGLERS FROM NORTHERN IRELAND. OUR NAME WAS SPELLED O'DONGHUE AT ONE TIME

  • @johnharrington6122
    @johnharrington6122 Před rokem +1

    Mine is Harrington , my ancestors were from County Cork , Southern Ireland . They were “ Gentlemen Knights “ with a shield with a rope knot , I’m most likely related to famous Golfer , Padraig Harrington . My relative, James Harrington , settled in New Jersey in the 1880’s. John

  • @patedwards1128
    @patedwards1128 Před 3 lety +9

    My family name is Comyns, we came from Southern Ireland, this name is spelled in many different ways for simplicity’s sake. There is a castle in Scotland called Comyn Castle and this was a royal family name. It’s fascinating to me and one other thing in our family is how many of us have O neg blood, this may have come from The Basque region of France.

    • @patricialenaburg6553
      @patricialenaburg6553 Před 3 lety

      I have RH negative type O, and have some French from the Burgandy area. Also have Irish, and Scot.

  • @PatriciaPageMosaicArtsCrafts

    I am part black Irish we have Riley, Ryan, my mother is from a carribbean island called Montserrat where the Irish people lived as overseers during slavery, not that the irish folk were treated well even with the jobs they had, when slavery was abolished the islanders kicked out the British and many Irish people stayed and integrated with the islanders. There are a few more surnames in my family but I am not sure if they are Irish such as Semper, Bradshaw, Cabey to name but a few.

    • @theravyshow2570
      @theravyshow2570 Před 3 lety +22

      That's why the accent in the Caribbean is similar to an Irish accent!

    • @PatriciaPageMosaicArtsCrafts
      @PatriciaPageMosaicArtsCrafts Před 3 lety +11

      @@theravyshow2570 exactly 👍😊

    • @sarahjane9692
      @sarahjane9692 Před 3 lety +10

      I believe many of the Irish immigrants and African slaves procreated due to them both being treated in similar ways and both we're considered "less than" human amongst many other racial groups. This has happened since the beginning of time, in every country, continent, Etc. The whole world🤦🏻‍♀️ It's sad, but true.

    • @PatriciaPageMosaicArtsCrafts
      @PatriciaPageMosaicArtsCrafts Před 3 lety +7

      @@sarahjane9692 @Sarah Connor Absolutely there is a video on CZcams about the black Irish, they are clearly mixed, I heard tales of kindness from the Irish during slavery times, my family has a mix of complections from the light to the very dark even the accent has a touch of the Irish.

    • @waynebrady4296
      @waynebrady4296 Před 2 lety +6

      I have had the privilege to celebrate St Patrick’s day on this island….what a night the best ever

  • @Heartfeltdesigns54
    @Heartfeltdesigns54 Před 9 měsíci +3

    My father's family name is Savidge, an unusual spelling that I was told was of Celtic origin. Savage is Germanic and Savage is French. No matter how it's spelled, you can surmise how that surname was derived😂

  • @TheLightbright01
    @TheLightbright01 Před 2 lety +7

    My brother had DNA done and said was English and Irish. My sister said she was shocked. I said why I have been telling you this forever. Our sir name was Raymond. For years I told them lots of Raymond's live in London. My grandmother's sir name was Ward. She was red head.

  • @michellehoward6665
    @michellehoward6665 Před 3 lety +4

    My Grandad is an O’Brien and my Grandma is a Bourke and both came from County Mayo, Ireland. They both moved to Liverpool in England in a place called Wigan. My dad had a brother who stayed in Liverpool till his death and my dad moved around because he joined the airlines and married my mum who came from Portugal. My parents had 4 children born in different countries, Papua New Guinea, Hong Kong, Australia and Africa. We went to school in Africa, Malaysia, Kuwait and finally moving to Sydney, Australia but settling after a couple of years in Melbourne. My beloved father has since passed but his stories, faith and love live on. Rest In Peace dada and thank you for our faith and such an amazing life 🙏

    • @joegarry8983
      @joegarry8983 Před 3 lety +3

      O Brien comes from Brian Boru who was once high King of Ireland and was slain by the Norse men at Clontarf just north of Dublin. The Norse men were Danish and controlled the Dublin region and many coastal towns. Despite the Irish king been slain the Irish won the battle that day and ended Norse rule in Ireland. Some thing most do not know is most of the Celtic race who inhabited the British Isles are descended from the Tuatha de Dannan, the Tribe of Dan, one of the lost tribes of Israel who were exiled by the Assyrians, interesting stuff, can be found on y tube, Cheers.

    • @michellehoward6665
      @michellehoward6665 Před 3 lety

      @@joegarry8983 wow thank you! My dad use to tell us about Brian Boru and I did know he was once a King but I never new anything about a tribe from Israel. Now I am truly fascinated and can’t wait to investigate further. Thank you for the information 🙏

  • @Laynasmuse
    @Laynasmuse Před 2 lety +11

    💚 my father was a Casey but before they came to the US it was spelled O'cathasaigh 💚

  • @pagen5219
    @pagen5219 Před rokem +2

    Fun channel; ty!!

  • @AmberWool
    @AmberWool Před 2 lety +3

    Most people don't realize my Irish ancestry when I tell them my Irish surname was Sisk. That line of my family was in the New World before the Revolution.

  • @BrandonSmith84
    @BrandonSmith84 Před 3 lety +17

    I have O'Neill in my tree. Their American surname was Neill. They took out the O'
    William Neill was born in Ireland around 1725 he was the Captain of the North Carolina Militia. His Grandfather was a O'Neill. Possibly from the Ó Néill dynasty

    • @whitebird5383
      @whitebird5383 Před 3 lety

      My grandfathers name was also William Neill, I always wondered why there wasnt an O in front of it.

    • @tales7832
      @tales7832 Před 3 lety

      The O'Neills that dropped the O was due to widows trying to provide for their children due to extreme racism against the Irish

    • @brianbreen1026
      @brianbreen1026 Před 3 lety +1

      @@whitebird5383 The o*Neills came from Ulster,they were lords.Anyone who accepted soup from the Sassenagh{English} lost their title mc,Ni,O.This was during a so called famine in Ireland,there was any amount of food,it was shipped to England.Nothing against the Ordinary English ,Their lives were hell too.Slan.

    • @waltond1127
      @waltond1127 Před 2 lety +1

      Brandon, we could be distantly related. I am currently working on my family line with Neil in it and my understanding is that supposedly they came from NC with the McCulloch family.

  • @vangogo6819
    @vangogo6819 Před 3 lety +10

    I have a shrink with a very good sense of humor, because I'm mostly Irish and my face "is the very map" he always wishes me a Happy St. Patrick's Day, a couple of years ago he told me he was Irish for the day, he's from Turkey and I a Muslim. I laughed so hard, now every St. Paddy's i call him Dr. O'........, we both have a great laugh over it. If my mum was alive she would have a conniption!

  • @carolynesimpson6070
    @carolynesimpson6070 Před rokem +1

    My 2 nd Great Grandfather Michael Moloney (Maloney) came from Cashel, Tipperary, Ireland. He was a travelling Tailor. His wife Flora(Florence ) Donnelly came from CLONMEL, Tipperary, Ireland. She was a child when she came to Lancashire , England. Im proud to have Irish Ancesters. This is on my fathers Paternal side. On his maternal side I have 2 nd Great Grandparents, Owen King and Catherine Owens from Roscommon, Ireland.

  • @Mr67Stanger
    @Mr67Stanger Před 2 lety +2

    I come from the Armstrongs that lived in St Croix. One of them, married a Dutch fella with the surname Cuvelje. They migrated to Ponce, PR. One of their kids got my GGGrandmother pregnant by around 1870 and here I am!

  • @julesj5853
    @julesj5853 Před 3 lety +44

    I have 48% Irish dna, my grandpa is over 50% and his dad was 100%! Last name Sullivan, originated from Munster County Cork! They were wheat farmers after immigrating to America during the potato famine. I found a small community paper that spoke of the "new Irish settlers" moving into town(talking about my family). The writers made the community sound like they were nervous or curious about the Irish. Most if the community was made up of Norwegians.

    • @bigbird6039
      @bigbird6039 Před 2 lety +8

      That’s pretty cool having 100% DNA, on these islands where we all live on top of each other. It just shows that people were happy to stay local. In Cheddar caves in Somerset a 10,000 year old skeleton was discovered. DNA tests found a match from a man who actually still lives in the town of Cheddar. When you consider that there’s descendants from these little islands all over the world, that’s really quite remarkable.

    • @xmoomoo9158
      @xmoomoo9158 Před 2 lety +1

      Did my DNA and I’m 43% Irish ☘️ My descendants were from Munster also.

    • @bobc599
      @bobc599 Před 2 lety +2

      My Fathers side (Cullen) came from Cork County. My grandfather married a Sullivan from that area.They came to America in the late 1800's /early 1900's. I'll bet they were big families then!

    • @tammylawson3376
      @tammylawson3376 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm 52 years old. I get my Irish genes from my dad's dad's side --- SULLIVAN. I LOOK like them. Very clearly. I'm 5'2" tall, as well.

    • @deadpanbarry5442
      @deadpanbarry5442 Před rokem

      Greetings from the sunny South of Ireland (Cork) ☘️🇮🇪 All of yee need to get your asses over here for a few pints and enjoy the crack..... No not that kind of crack. 😂

  • @sandrastone5847
    @sandrastone5847 Před 3 lety +14

    My maiden name is McElhannon. Most people can’t pronounce it correctly. A lot of people who immigrated had their name mangled or changed completely by the people who processed them.

  • @thespritzwithpopfritz68
    @thespritzwithpopfritz68 Před rokem +1

    Need a whole video on Anglicization of Irish Gaeilge surnames. In one branch of my tree I had a slew of Rogers who I shared with McGrory , McCrory, Macgrorie

  • @kathisimmons3971
    @kathisimmons3971 Před 2 lety +2

    My mother was Culbreth,which is Galbraith in Scotland,she did her genealogy

  • @jgdooley2003
    @jgdooley2003 Před 3 lety +7

    McLysaghts book featuring Irish surnames is a good source of family histories on a very general way.

    • @dryflyman7121
      @dryflyman7121 Před 3 lety

      Thanks for that John, very useful. Am I right in thinking that McHugh is mainly from Mayo, Leitrim or Roscommon? My Great Grandmother was a McHugh. 👍

    • @dryflyman7121
      @dryflyman7121 Před 3 lety

      @johanna walsh thanks Johanna, much appreciated. One of the only positive things about lockdown in England is we can now buy Powers Whiskey over here !! My wife is a Kehoe from Wexford, but I fly fish in Mayo, have done for 26 years ! I never knew that was where my Great Grandmother was from ! 👍😘

  • @moorek1967
    @moorek1967 Před 3 lety +7

    My great-grandfather was a Moore. Beyond that, I have no idea. He claimed on the WWII draft notice (he was almost 70 at the time), he said he was born in County Clare. I called the County Clare genealogy department at the library, they said his name was rare for that part of Ireland.

    • @cathy2051
      @cathy2051 Před 3 lety +1

      A lot of Moore in limerick county not far from clare they share a border.

    • @whitetroutchannel
      @whitetroutchannel Před 2 lety +1

      im decended from moore's, its a common name in northern ireland

  • @janice506
    @janice506 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I’m Scottish my mum’s Scottish but my dads family were Irish my heritage results were 83% Irish/Scottish/Welsh in that order the rest is Southern Greece Southern Italy & 5% Baltic
    My surname is Muldoon & I’m definitely going to start my family tree.

  • @carlharrison1765
    @carlharrison1765 Před 2 lety

    How very interesting, fantastic, thank you

  • @NorthMountainFairy
    @NorthMountainFairy Před 3 lety +7

    We traced our Caldwell side of the family to Northern Ireland before they migrated. The name means “cold well” or “cold spring”, a reference to a local natural feature.

    • @cooldaddy2877
      @cooldaddy2877 Před 3 lety

      yes it can but it is also a native mid Ulster name Mac Cathmhaoil and has nothing to do with the origin you state.

    • @NorthMountainFairy
      @NorthMountainFairy Před 3 lety

      @@cooldaddy2877 I was given that info by my aunt who researched our genealogy with my mom before DNA analysis was a thing. I don’t know from where she got the info. Ancestry DNA has confirmed most of what they had found so I never had reason to doubt any of the info they provided the family. I apologize if the error ruffled your feathers.

    • @cooldaddy2877
      @cooldaddy2877 Před 3 lety +1

      @@NorthMountainFairy Hi, no my feathers are not ruffled. Its just that there is sssooooo much bad info out there about Irish/Scots surnames. This info sadly comes from Americans and English. If your DNA has been raced back to Ulster then you are native Irish Mac Cathmhaoil. This surname is also found phonetically as McCawell. If your DNA takes you back to central Scotland then you are indeed from the "cold well".

  • @maryg.249
    @maryg.249 Před 3 lety +52

    O’Briens, McWilliams, Neels, Daltons in our family tree. Been to Ireland twice. A lovely country with lovely people.

    • @ladycirclewoman3821
      @ladycirclewoman3821 Před 3 lety +7

      O'Brien, Mulcahy, Conway, Kenneally, Kiely in my family...went to Ireland once and met family still there...you and I have been lucky...Bless the Irish Spirit!!! AND it would be delightful to find myself related to you somewhere on the tree through the O'Briens...the world is a funny place!!

    • @djacobs3312
      @djacobs3312 Před 3 lety +1

      Mary G. I have O’Neil in my direct lineage

    • @dawnleopold1429
      @dawnleopold1429 Před 3 lety +1

      My maiden name is O’Brien but I don’t know many of my relatives on that side because they were from across the pond I was told and my parents were divorced when I was very young. Who knows lol. I never been to Ireland but I would love to go I heard it was beautiful 🙂

    • @fatimak1382
      @fatimak1382 Před 3 lety +4

      shameful what the RC church did to Irish children though in their Industrial Schools. Ireland lost at least a Million Irish people because of the Church and Bad ignorant Politicians, many who survived those child prisons left Ireland on turning 16 years old out of desperation to escape the clutches of the Church, never to return.

    • @valtimon
      @valtimon Před 3 lety +1

      @@fatimak1382 England was so terrified by the spread of French revolutionary ideals the after the Irish equivalent rebellion in 1798 which it succeeded in stamping out it befriended the official RC church which was used as an instrument for the continuance of English conservative oppression

  • @seamussc
    @seamussc Před rokem +3

    Genealogical research is rather difficult, since my ancestor with my surname was illiterate and his name was Patrick, and there are so many people named Patrick Walsh/Welch that it's basically impossible to figure out which one could be him prior to him settling in WV. Family history (including his grandchildren, insisted the name was originally Walsh).
    I do know that he came with a bunch of people from Galway to Baltimore, where they all were hired off the boat by the B&O Railroad and sent to work in WV. I know nothing for sure about him in Ireland, though. I believe I found his wife's baptism record in Galway, as her name is much rarer, but I don't know when or where they married. DNA records from more than one service specifically say my Irish ancestry comes from Galway.
    I also have conflicting information as to whether his son was born in Ireland or Ohio, but it would have been a baby or toddler when he came over either way. I believe he was most likely born in Ohio, though.

  • @pemj7360
    @pemj7360 Před 2 lety +3

    Yep definitely I. Irish on my nans side her blood line goes way way back . My great grand dad was German and my grandad was born in Ireland. I was born in Ireland 🇮🇪. So I'm a happy Paddy

  • @irishcoyne4371
    @irishcoyne4371 Před 3 lety +14

    My grandma Elinor Coyne came to USA in 1912, at the age of 16 by her self. So I’m really trying to to get my Coyne family to at least

    • @johnscanlan9335
      @johnscanlan9335 Před 3 lety +4

      I had a friend in elementary school named Stephen Coyne. He came from a very nice family.

    • @MikeyJMJ
      @MikeyJMJ Před 3 lety +1

      You can check the Irish census records available online from 1911 and 1901. If you know what county she came from and even better if you know the parish. Her name might've been originally spelled as Eleanor, so it might help to check both.

  • @wyominghome4857
    @wyominghome4857 Před 3 lety +5

    My great-grandfather was Irish and a Crandall - crane + dale, or from the valley of the cranes. I always thought that was lovely. Not many Crandalls around though.

    • @theravyshow2570
      @theravyshow2570 Před 3 lety

      Although a Cran in Irish is the word for tree. (Crann).

    • @wyominghome4857
      @wyominghome4857 Před 3 lety

      @@theravyshow2570 I didn't know that! I always assumed that since the name didn't sound obviously Irish that his family must have come from England originally. Perhaps not!

  • @julierodriguez5583
    @julierodriguez5583 Před rokem +2

    My grandmother was McGuire, and my greatgrand mother's was Powell they came from the county Cork

  • @JonDoeNeace
    @JonDoeNeace Před 24 dny +1

    Well all I have from my 2nd great grandfather is an immigration document from 1870 showing an ethnic category: "Irish Gaelic", and a birthplace: "Ireland", and point of departure: "Liverpool", and point of arrival: "New York City", and last name: "Cassini", which is not an Irish clan lineage but is an Italian name inherited from a male ancestor.
    Make whatever you want from that.
    It doesn't affect my lived experience.
    I grew up in the U.S. South West.

  • @barbaralynch3015
    @barbaralynch3015 Před 3 lety +4

    My family came from County Kerry.

  • @marshaboody9069
    @marshaboody9069 Před 3 lety +13

    Our name is McGill.My mothers aunts became nuns in Ireland.The three sisters were sent to work with Mother Theresa in Calcutta India.We would exchange letters and gifts.They also sent reports about everything they were doing to help the poor people and lepers.They spent the rest of their lives there helping Mother Theresa in all she did.

  • @janicesmith3042
    @janicesmith3042 Před 10 měsíci +1

    My Tooheys are from Tipperary, and my great great gran Mary Anne Kirk from Dublin.. i am so lucky to have a photo of her when cameras were first out.. she came to New Zealand age 16 on her own her nae goes back three generations all the irls names were Mary Anne and that included my great gran... The Tooheys moved to Australia so my great grandad was born in a tent in gold fields in Melbourne.. he moved to New Zealand.. Hokitika. yes my original name was O"Tuhaigh.. from Irish kings.Himany tribe going way back in time,