Matthew Curran is my Great Grand Father. My birth name is Ann Marie Curran. My dad is John Coleman Curran. On my wedding day May 28 1988 my dads cousin from Saint Paul , Minnesota gave me a picture of Mary Ann Curran 2 years old in her casket. My mom thought that was a real morbide thing to give someone on there wedding day. The picture must have been a picture of Matthew and Ann O"Maleys daughter. If I can find it I will post it on here. Michael Curran must be my Great Great Grandfather from Ireland. This is so exciting to find out where my family came from and why. When my dad was 5 his dad -Coleman John Curran left and went to the state of Washington. He did not see his dad for 10 years. I often wondered why he went to Washington, now I know. My dad was 43 when I was born. These people and all there stories were long gone by the time I was born in 1963. My dad was not close to his dads family so we did not know much of the history. My dad grew up on Concord Street in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Born 1920 and died 2007. He was in WW2. Lived in Austin Minnesota and had 7 children. Married Florence Dehrer.
References
Michael Curran was probably born in the Carna area of Connemara in around 1828. The only indication of his birth date comes from his death record. Michael and Ann Flaherty Curran had at least four children. In January 1862, Stephen was baptized in the Moyrus parish church which still stands today close by the sea inlet in the heart of Carna. His brother Patrick was born 12 March 1866 in Carna and baptized in the parish church there. No birth or baptism records have been found for their brother Matthew and sister Bridget. Their years of birth are thought to be around 1860 and 1863 respectively.
Michael and family arrived in Boston on 22 June 1880, having left Galway on the steamship SS Austrian with over 30 other families adversely affected by the 1879-1880 famine. From there they traveled by train to their new home near Graceville, Minnesota. They spent less than a year farming land made available to them by Bishop John Ireland and the Irish Catholic Colonization Association. After the experiment failed in the spring of 1881, due to weather and a lack of farming expertise, the family moved to St Paul.
Michael and family settled into a small enclave on the east side of St Paul, off Phalen Creek, near the railroad tracks. The community came to be known as the Connemara Patch from the many newly arrived Irish immigrants living there. In May of 1883 the family lived in a small shanty a few yards from the railroad tracks. On the morning of the 24th, Michael went out to gather pieces of wood around the tracks for the morning fire. While standing on a switch track, he failed to hear a freight train coming towards him, despite the warning cries of onlookers. The train struck Michael pulling him under the two lead cars. According to a newspaper report, “...he was horribly mangled and must have been killed instantly.” The tragedy devastated his family. A week later, undoubtedly still upset over the tragic death of his father, Stephen was arrested with two of his cousins, Patrick and Margaret Curran, and another man, for creating a disturbance in the Patch. When the municipal court pronounced his sentence of $100 or 100 days in prison, Stephen, probably unable to pay $100 protested:
...it was only Thursday last his father was run down by the cars and killed, and that by his imprisonment his old mother, whose sole supporter he had become, would be rendered houseless and homeless.
Ann died of natural causes a mere three years later in November or December 1886 (the exact date is unknown). Their four children all married in St Paul, Minnesota. In around 1889, they moved to Tacoma, Washington, became United States citizens, and with the exception of Matthew, who eventually returned to Minnesota, raised families and spent the rest of their lives in Tacoma.
Read more about Michael Curran and the experience of the Curran family from Carna
Additional Information | ||
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Date of Birth | 1st Jan 1828 (circa) | |
Date of Death | 24th May 1883 | VIEW SOURCE |
Associated Building (s) | Carna Emigrants Centre | |
Spouse (First Name/s and Maiden/Surname) | Ann Flaherty | |
Place & Date of Marriage | 2 Dec 1855, Moyrus parish church in Carna, County Galway | VIEW SOURCE |
Number of Children | At least four children: Matthew Curran, abt 1860-1924; Stephen Curran, 1862-1939; Bridget Curran, abt 1863-1930; Patrick Curran, abt 1866-1946 | |
Occupation | Farmer and laborer | |
Place of Death | St Paul, Ramsey County, Minnesota, USA |
Comments
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Ann Marie Lange
Tuesday 28th January 2020 03:53AM -
Great information, Ann Marie! Do you have an Ancestry or Facebook account? I'd like to send you a separate message.
michca
Tuesday 28th January 2020 06:19PM -
Ann Marie, that is a great connection you have made! Please keep in touch and let us know how you get on. Please join the Moyrus IrelandXO group and feel free to add your ancestors to the Chronicles so that we can connect more descendants from the area.
Laura
IrelandXO Volunteer LC
Thursday 30th January 2020 11:20AM -
Micha, I'm not on social media. But you can e mail me. annlange92@gmail.com
Ann Marie Lange
Friday 14th February 2020 08:19PM -
Micha, I'm not on social media. But you can e mail me. annlange92@gmail.com
Ann Marie Lange
Friday 14th February 2020 08:19PM