Hello and thank you for this website. My father's family left Ennistymon in the late 1840s and arrived, we think, at one of the Canadian ports. They were briefly in Maine before settling in Kentucky, where my father was born and raised. The family name is Cain (later an e was added for some reason and my father was Caine) but I'm not at all sure that Cain was the name of my ancestors. I have been told that Kean(e) or Cahan is the more likely origin of my name. I have good records of my family once they were in the US, but I have had no luck in locating them in Ennistymon. My ggg was named James and his wife (unclear if they were married beofre leaving Ireland) was Bridget. I hope you can shed some light on my roots in Clare. Thank you.
ngclare
Sunday 24th May 2020, 03:37PMMessage Board Replies
-
Dear ngclare:
Thank you for your post to the site. You are correct that there are a number of variations of the spelling of the surname Cain including: Caine, Kane, Kaine, Kane & Keehan/Keane.
I have had a quick look at the Griffith's Valuation list of surnames for Ennistymon with those above variations and I see that there was a Patrick Kane living at Tullygarvan West in Kilmanaheen civil parish in the Union of Ennistymon in 1855. He is the only Kane/Cain/Caine surname that I see. I do note that there are Kane/Cain surnames in Oughtmama civil parish in nearby Balllyvaughan. However, Patrick Kane may be a good start for you as he is in the Ennistymon area. Unfortunately, those parish registers are only available from 1870-1880. Here is the link to the civil parish references from the Clare Library website for Kilmanaheen civil parish: http://www.clarelibrary.ie/eolas/coclare/places/kilmanaheen.htm
If you have any siblings' names or other information, that would be great. You might also consider looking at some of the adjoining civil parishes for baptism and marriage records. These parishes would include:
Kilfarboy Civil parish (Tullygarvan West is adjacent to this civil parish. http://www.clarelibrary.ie/eolas/coclare/places/kilfarboy.htm
If you need any further help, please let me know.
All the best,
Jane
Jane Halloran Ryan
-
Thank you so much, Jane! Can you help me understand the relationship between civil parish, union, and townland? - Nancy
ngclare
-
Hi Nancy:
Here is a quick synopsis which I hope that you will find helpful:
townland is the smallest land division in Ireland. It is akin to a neighbourhood. You will find very often (and certainly pre-Famine) that many of these families are not only neighbours but cousins.
The civil parish is the administrative and often old Gaelic territories that were used in medieval times. They can contain a number of townlands (numbers can vary). The English and Church of Ireland used them as administrative units and very often, parish records will use the civil parish name as opposed to the Roman Catholic name. For example, Ennistymon is the Roman Catholic parish, but the civil parish is Kilmanaheen. The civil parishes then make up the Union. The Union is the Poor Law Union which was created in 1838. The purpose of the unit was another administrative division which was used (and the earliest government unit) in Ireland and in England. The Union was a cluster of civil parishes (and a larger cluster of townlands). The Union administered poor laws and later local government laws. Every Union contained a workhouse or some form of poor relief for those residents within the union.
These administrative divisions are still important for research as records are divided within these divisions. The Census and the Civil Registration (Births, Marriages & Deaths) are all based upon Union and therefore important to know.
As an example from my reply above about a Patrick Kane, you will note that one is in the townland of Tullyvarga West, in the civil parish of Kilmanaheen and Union of Ennistymon. The other Kane surnames are in various townlands (Aughinish, New Quay, Rine, Turlough, Aughwillian) in the civil parish of Oughtmama and the Union of Ballyvaughan. This union lies to the north of Ennistymon. It is worth keeping in mind both Unions and Civil parishes when you are looking at records/censuses and other administrative documentation.
I hope that the above helps. There is also a link on the website about townlands which is here: https://irelandxo.com/ireland-xo/news/irelandxo-insight-what-townland
Please let me know if you have any other questions.
All the best,
Jane
Jane Halloran Ryan