Patrick Brown, the oldest son of
Honora Kelly and Timothy Brown was baptized on November 26, 1830 in the
Catholic Church of Patrickswell, Adare, County Limerick, Ireland. Nothing is known of his early life in Fanningstown,
the townland where the family lived.
The property they occupied consisted of about 25 acres. In addition to a garden patch, they would
likely have raised wheat and had pasturage for livestock – cattle and
pigs. Patrick grew up helping with
chores and learning local farming methods.
It is interesting to note that Patrick was the only child of Hannah and
Timothy who farmed after they arrived in America. Patrick was age 15 when the potato blight
first hit Ireland. The family continued
on the property for the first couple of years of the famine; but, by 1848 things
had gotten much worse and they left Ireland for Boston. Patrick would have just turned 18. Because of the death of his father, Timothy,
before they left Ireland, Patrick likely felt an immense sense of
responsibility for the survival of the family.
That is certainly indicated by the narrative of the David Brown letter shown above left.1 Earlier blog
posts describe the journey to America, (The Voyage of the John Murray) their brief time in Boston (Boston)
and their time in Vermont (Vermont). It appears that the family split up when they
left Vermont. Most of them went to the
Chicago area. Patrick, and his younger
brother, John, went to Ohio.
A portion of Page 3 of the David Brown Letter (click to enlarge) |
The first confirmed reference to
Patrick in Ohio is a record for his oldest son, Patrick, who was baptized at
St. Patrick Catholic Church in Columbus, Franklin County, Ohio, on March 17,
1854. The twins, John and Mary, were
also baptized at St. Patrick’s on April 3, 1856.2 St Patrick’s is located at the corner of
Naghten Street,
known as “Irish Broadway,” and Seventh Street, now Grant
Avenue.3 I have consulted early city directories for
Columbus and, although I found a listing for John in the 1858 edition living
near St. Pat’s, I have not been able to find an entry for Patrick.4 By the beginning of 1859, Patrick was living
in Delaware County, north of Columbus where the next two children were baptized at
St. Mary Catholic Church, Delaware, Ohio - David on January 1, 1859 and, Sarah
on May 21, 1861.5 According
to the 1870 US Census, another child, James, was also born in Ohio about
1863-4, but a baptismal record could not be located for him.
St. Patrick's, Columbus, OH |
The 1860 US Census shows Patrick
living in Concord Township, Delaware County, Ohio with his wife, Ann, and four
children,
Patrick, (age six), John and Mary, (age four), and David, (age
1). He is identified as a “farm laborer”
with a personal estate worth $180.6 Based on close
neighbors listed in the census, I believe Patrick was living on the east side of
the Scioto River across from the small settlement of Bellepoint in the north
eastern section of the township.
1860 US Census, Concord Twp, Delaware County, OH (click to enlarge) |
Concord Township is located in the south west
corner of Delaware County bordering Franklin County. The Scioto River passes through the township. The Post Office in the 1860 census is given as “Dublin” in
Franklin County, quite a distance
south of Bellepoint. Early
settlers in Concord Township describe the area as “picturesque” with,
“primeval forests, rolling rivers, winding creeks, babbling brooks, . . . green hills and fertile valley[s].” It is also said that Concord Township was
noted for an “almost impassable swamp,” “woods . . . full of wolves,” and
numerous rattlesnakes, “often covering the driftwood in the river so completely
that their mottled skins gave it the appearance of calico.” 7
Early map of Delaware County, OH from Perrin's History of Delaware County Bellepoint identified on map (click to enlarge) |
I remember driving through
southern Delaware County as a young girl and visiting relatives in the Dublin
area. At that time, Dublin was a sleepy
little village of streets lined with small limestone buildings.8 Dry stacked limestone fences also lined the
fields in the surrounding area; and, while the fields and pastures lining the Scioto
River were rolling terrain, land away from the river leveled out and was
relatively flat. I mention this because
the first time I visited Ireland and drove through County Limerick, I felt
rather let
down. I guess I was expecting
something exotic. I had just gotten off
of an overnight flight to Shannon airport and jumped in a car to drive to
Tralee by way of Patrickswell. Needless
to say I was exhausted and probably not very alert, but, I thought Patrickswell
and the surrounding countryside looked rather common. It didn’t dawn on me until later when we were
driving in another part of the Ireland, (County Mayo), that the land there also
resembled an area I was familiar with around Lancaster, Ohio where a different
ancestor’s family settled. Then it hit
me - it looked like home. There was a
river, trees, stone fences, green fields, stone houses – it looked like home!
Fanningstown area, from Google Earth |
Now I don’t know for sure, but, I
suspect that had something to do with Patrick settling in Delaware County. Whatever it was that drew him to the area,
Patrick did not stay long -maybe it was the snakes. By 1865, Patrick and his family were living
in Belle Flower Township, McLean County, Illinois. Before we go there with the
story, there is another document from Ohio that we need to examine.
In his letter, David Brown
speculates on the possibility that Patrick was married in Boston. We know this was not the case since Patrick
is listed as “single” in the 1850 United States Census from Brandon,
Vermont. (See an image of that census in
the “Vermont” post above.) While he
could have been married in Vermont9,
there is some evidence that he was married in Ohio. See the
marriage record on the right for Patrick Brown and Ann Burns dated August 16,
1851.10 James Monaghan, a Catholic priest at St. Philip Neri, in Dungannon, Columbiana County,
Ohio, performed the marriage. Could this
be the correct couple, and, what were they doing in Columbiana County, a very
long way away from other locations known to the family?
Columbiana County marriage record, Volume 4, page 103 (click to enlarge) |
Columbiana County today is
somewhat of a backwater; but, that wasn’t always so. The southern border is along the Ohio River,
a major transportation source in the mid 1800s.
Fertile farm land
covers most of the area and there were rich deposits
of coal and salt providing employment opportunities. Railroads were being constructed in the 1850s.
The Sandy and Beaver Canal, which connected the Ohio River to the Ohio and Erie
Canal, operated from about 1848 to 1854.
A breach in one of the feeder lakes in 1852 lowered the water level in
the canal making it completely impassable by 1854. The canal passed through the towns of Hanover
and Dungannon where there was a moderate sized Irish community that built and
worked on the canal.11 Seven of the Irish families in the township
had children that were born in Vermont.
Ohio counties: Columbiana is blue, Delaware is green, Franklin is red |
One of the families listed in the
1850 US Census for Franklin Township in Columbiana County was for a “Burns”
family headed by “M.” The wife’s name is
given as Julia. Two of the eight
children listed were “Ann” and “Ellen.” 12 We know from family lore that
Ann, Patrick’s wife, had at least two sisters, Ellen and Martha, and that her
parents were Julia and Michael Burns.13 Ages given for Ann and Ellen in the 1850
census are consistent with later known records for the family. Martha is not shown, but, could have been
married by this time to a man who may have traveled through Vermont. I have not been able to trace additional
children shown on the census record.
1850 US Census for Franklin Twp, Columbiana Co., OH showing the M Burns family (click to enlarge) |
I did contact the Youngstown
Diocese (where St. Philip Neri is located), to see if records were available
for marriages and baptisms for 1850 to 1854.
I specifically asked for information about a marriage of Patrick Brown
to Ann Burns giving the information about the marriage from the county records,
and a possible baptism and/or death record for a child named Ellen.14
The Chancellor of the Diocese responded that the records from St.
Philip’s are “very hard to read and I have found nothing with the names
provided.”
Is the 1851 marriage record in
Columbiana County for our Patrick and Ann?
The date and information for the couple is consistent with other records
for the family and would provide validity to the story that their first child
was named Ellen born, probably, sometime in 1852. There is a US Census record for a family
fitting the description of Ann’s family.
There is also even a possible connection to Vermont. Jobs would have been lost about the time
Patrick and Ann moved to Franklin County because of the collapse of canal
business. The information does seem to
point to this being the correct record.
But, I would feel a lot more comfortable if there was information
containing names of witnesses to the marriage and a baptismal record for Ellen.
The next post will be about
Patrick’s time in Illinois.
1.
Brown,
David Earl, Kewanee, IL, 11 May 1943. Letter
to Esther _______, Columbus, OH. Letter
contains genealogical information for the Brown Family from County Limerick.
2.
Wolf, Donna
M., The Irish in Central Ohio: Baptisms
and Marriages, 1852-1861, St. Patrick Roman Catholic Church, Columbus,
Ohio, 1991
Also
verified through the Catholic Record Society, Diocese of Columbus, Columbus,
Ohio.
3.
Ibid. “St Pat’s” separated from the German
community church of Holy Cross in 1852 and formed their own parish in the Irish
area of Columbus around the railroad station and yards at the northern edge of
the city. It is now surrounded by
businesses and a state college, but still boasts a large attendance at masses
and other church functions. It is truly
the church of the “Irish” in Columbus!
4.
Williams,
C.S., 1858-1859 Williams Columbus City
Directory, City Guide and Business Mirror, J.H. Riley & Co., 1859. Directories
for Columbus begin as early as 1843, but, there is not a complete collection
with several years missing.
5.
St. Mary
Catholic Church, Delaware, Ohio is in the Diocese of Columbus. Baptismal records were also verified through
the Catholic Record Society, Diocese of Columbus, Columbus, Ohio. The church is located roughly six miles from
where the family was located in Concord Township and would have been easily
reached by someone with access to a horse and wagon, such as a farm laborer.
6.
1860 United
States Federal Census, Concord, Delaware,
Ohio; Roll: M653-957, available online at Ancestry.com. The record is indexed under “Paterick” Brown. There were several large farms in the area
where Patrick could have found employment.
7.
Perrin,
William Henry, History of Delaware County
and Ohio, O.L. Baskin & Co., Historical Publishers, Chicago, IL, 1880,
pp 491-493, available online through Google books.
8.
Dublin is no
longer a sleepy village. Today it is a
bustling community of nearly 42,000, and one of the fastest growing areas in
central Ohio. There are still stone
fences lining pastures of more rural areas.
9.
The Vermont
French-Canadian Genealogical Society, Baptism
Repertoire, St. Mary, Our Lady of Good Help, Brandon, VT; including the Old St.
Monica, Forestdale, VT Mission, Vermont Catholic Diocese, Burlington,
Vermont, 2014. Records for Old St.
Monica, Forestdale, Vermont, where the Brown family lived in 1850, do not begin
until 1856 – after records were found in Columbus, Ohio.
10.
Columbiana
County, Ohio, Marriage Records,
Volume 4, Page 103, Columbiana County, Ohio.
Also available online at FamilySearch.org database, “Ohio, County
Marriages, 1789-2013.”
11.
1850 United
States Federal Census, Franklin,
Columbiana, Ohio; Roll M432_669, available online at Ancestry.com. A total of 1,164 persons were listed in the
township with 224 giving their place of birth as “Ireland.”
12.
Ibid. Marion located this information!
13.
US Census
records, death records and tombstones do corroborate that the Burns family
consisted of, at least, Michael, Julia, Ann, Martha, and Ellen. It seems more appropriate to discuss the
Burns family later when we look at John, the second surviving son of Hannah and
Timothy Brown. Additional information
will be provided then.
14.
The David
Brown letter states that there may have been a child named Ellen born shortly
after the marriage of Patrick Brown and Ann Burns in 1851. The first recorded child, Patrick, was born
in 1854. If Patrick and Ann were married in 1851, it is very possible there
could have been a child born earlier than Patrick. It would also make sense that the child would
have been named Ellen since Patrick’s younger sister, Ellen, died in Boston in
1849.