I am researching a Tipperary ancestor and his family, who were natives of Fethard in the early to mid 1800s.
Of interest is William A. Byrne, born the eldest child of William Archer Byrne and Ellen Byrne (born Lee), in Fethard, County Tipperary in 1841. William Archer Byrne was a licensed Fethard apothecary. I do not have the exact date of his son William's birth, unfortunately. William was christened, according to my research, in Fethard on January 10, 1842. His father and mother were also born and raised in Fethard and christened in a parish within the Diocese (William Archer Byrne was born in 1814 and christened on November 11, 1812). I do not have the information for Ellen Lee Byrne, unfortunately. William Archer and Ellen were married in Fethard in 1840, according to my research.
William A. Byrne (by the name possibly a Jr.) had three younger siblings, also born and christened in Fethard: Eliza Byrne (born 1843 and christened April 15, 1843), Alicia Byrne (also known as Alice, born 1844, no christening date), and John Johnson Byrne (born 1846, who I believe may have died young).
The family emigrated to New York in the late 1840s or early 1850s, during the Famine.
Although not pertinent to his life in Tipperary, but for general interest, William Jr. fought and died (July 21, 1863) on the Union side at the Battle of Gettysburg in the American Civil War (1861-65), and is buried in the National Military Cemetery at Gettysburg which was dedicated in 1864 by US President Abraham Lincoln. William was shot in the thigh on the second day of the battle and lingered and died in a military field hospital thereafter, only 21 years of age. Given the medical practice of the time, William's leg was likely amputated to prevent sepsis, so the chances for his survival would have been very grim indeed. William is one of many brave Irish soldiers who gave their young lives in the American Civil War.
I would be most appreciative for any information and assistance finding surviving, available information on my ancestor and/or his family.