O’HARA FAMILY HISTORY
Surname
Origins
Most
hereditary surnames in Ireland only came into use in the tenth century
by command of the illustrious King Brian Boru. Historians believe Irish
pedigrees are fairly accurate back to the 6th and possibly to the 5th
century. Most Irish are descended from one of the three sons of
Milesius who had issue, named Ir, Heremon, and Heber. Their father
Milesius of Spain (Gaul) was a valiant warrior and contemporary with
Solomon. He planned to invade Ireland to avenge the death of his
brother Ithe and also to fulfill a prophesy. After his death his
eight sons took on the charge and five of the eight were killed in the
landing upon the treacherous coast of Ireland including the son
named Ir.
Heber and
his younger brother Heremon were jointly the first Milesian
monarchs of Ireland. They began to reign over 3700 years ago in 1699
B.C., the first of one hundred eighty three Kings or sole Monarchs
of the Gaelic, Milesian, or Scottish race who governed Ireland
successively for two thousand eight hundred and eighty five years,
from the first year of their reign to submission to the Crown of
England - King Henry II. Heber was slain by Heremon in a quarrel.
From the Heber came the afore mentioned King Brian Boru and from
him also came the O’Haras'.
The O’Haras'
were of the Clan Cian. Cian was a son of Heber line descendant Olioll
Olum, the King of Muster in the 3rd century. Olioll Olum’s
father Owen Mor had battled continually with "Conn of The Hundred
Battles" - the 110th Monarch of Ireland. Finally they divided the
Kingdom into equal parts. Owen Mor was eventually slain by Conn
and his son Olioll Olum married a widowed daughter of Conn. Seven
of Olioll Olum’s sons were subsequently killed in waging
war against his son-in-law Maccon, whom Olioll Olum had banished
from Ireland but who raised an army in Scotland and returned.
Olioll had only two sons left, Cormac Cas and Cian. From Cormac
Cas came King Brian Boru and from Cian came the O’Haras'.
In Irish
the name is OhEaghra of which the anglicized form O’Hara is a phonetic
rendering. The O’ indicates the ancient Irish name origin and descent
from the three sons of Milesius who had issue. According to O'Cleary, who
compiled The Annals of The Four Masters in 1632, in ancient
days the O’ was reserved for the Milesian Irish families of
high or noble rank. The "O’" prefix can reasonably be taken
as meaning something akin to "of", in the sense of "of the bloodline
of . . ."
Eaghra
(pronounced Ara), was chief of Leyney (or Lughne) in
County Sligo, now the barony of Lieney, Co. Sligo. It
previously included parts of Costello and Gallen in Mayo. The
O’Haras had castles in Castlelough, Memlough, and others in
parts of Leyney. About 1350 the O’Hara
Clan formed two divisions:-
(1) Chief was
O’Hara Boy (i.e. buide, the tawny). O’Hara
Boy was seated at Collooney in Co. Sligo.
(2) Chief was O’Hara
Reagh (i.e. riabhach, grizzled). O’Hara Reagh was seated at
Ballyharry, which is a contemporary English attempt at writing
Baile ui Eaghra or Ballyhara (Bally meaning town).
In the
reign of Queen Anne and King George I the O’Haras were created Barons
of Tirawley and Kilmain, Mayo. That is until Cromwell came along. The
famous manuscript known as The Book of O’Hara contains a very full
record of chiefs of the name. 1
Killinkere Parish - County Cavan
The Garden of Eden has vanished, they
say,
But I know the lie of it still.
Just turn to the left at the Bridge of Finnea
And stop when halfway to Cootehill. 2
The
earliest record placing an O’Hara in Killinkere Parish
(pronounced Cillin Ciar) in eastern County Cavan is a list of
persons known as the 1796 Flax Grower’s List or Spinning
Wheels Entitlements List. It is a list of about 58,000 farmers
who grew a ¼ acre or more crop of flax in
Ireland that year. The only person listed for County Cavan with the
O’Hara surname was John O’Hara who grew a ¼ acre
crop in Killinkere, thus earning him an entitlement to a free
spinning wheel 3.
Indicating this John O’Hara was likely the progenitor of the O’Hara
family of this parish, whose descendants mostly emigrated to
Australia from the 1850s to the 1880s, is that the name of "John"
as an eldest son is subsequently found in the parish in the line
of Samuel O’Hara of Greaghadossan townland, and whilst not
definitely established at this time was also likely the case in
the line of Thomas O’Hara of Coolnacola townland. From early
in the 2nd millenium Country Sligo was the seat of the O’Hara
clan in Ireland, so it seems likely John O’Hara or an ancestor
would have migrated initially from Sligo to Killingah Parish in
western County Cavan, which adjoins County Leitrim and is only
about thirty miles from County Sligo, before later moving further
east to settle in Killinkere.
None of
the 19th century census records have survived for Killinkere parish so
it is necessary to determine the townland locations of O'Haras' from other
records. After the 1796 Flax Growers List the next available record of
land occupation is the 1833 Tithe Applotment Valuation. This valuation
was done for the purpose of arriving at a basis for assessment of an
annual tithe payable by occupiers of land to the established Church
of Ireland for its use to maintain the church establishments catering
for the needs of the aged, poor etc. At this
valuation there were three named O’Hara listed in
different townlands in Killinkere parish.
The two relevant to this particular O’Hara family were
Samuel O’Hara in both adjoining Greaghadossan and Lismagiril townlands,
and Thomas O’Hara in Coolnacola
townland 4.
In addition to the two there was also a known brother of Samuel O'Hara
named Joseph who at this time in 1833 was likely on a farm in
Lissannymore townland where the parish record of the birth
of his daughter Martha had him as residing in 1840. Lissannymore
is one of a number of Killinkere townlands whose 1833 Tithes
Applotment Valuation record has not survived. No evidence
is available to link this family to a third O'Hara named Ambrose
listed in the Tithes Valuation for Killinkere on a small farm
in Carricknamaddoo townland who was perhaps of the Roman Catholic
faith.
The next
general valuation of Ireland was the Griffith Valuation done for County
Cavan in 1856/57. It had half of the 43 farm occupiers listed for the
County with the name of O’Hara situated in the three most westerly
parishes
of Killingah, Kinawley and Templeport. The O’Haras' listed in
eastern
Co. Cavan, occupying farms in Killinkere
parish townlands, who were likely related to one another were:- Samuel
in Greaghadossan and his eldest son John in Lismagiril, Joseph in
Drumfomina and Thomas in Coolnacola. Australian immigration
records
of their children establish Samuel and Joseph were brothers 5.
It is possible the Thomas O'Hara in Coolnacola listed at the earlier
1833 valuation was the father of the Thomas who was there in 1856.
Under this
scenario the Killinkere family progenitor John O'Hara had three sons -
Thomas, Samuel and Joseph of whom Thomas was deceased by 1856. There
was also a possible close relative of the Thomas listed at the Griffith
named William O'Hara who was listed at this 1856 valuation occupying
a farm in Seefin townland in adjoining Knockbride Parish. There is
an indication he was possibly Thomas's younger brother. It is possible
the Thomas farming in Coolnacola at the 1856 valuation was a brother
of Samuel and Joseph O'Hara. However because he was considerably
younger than either it is thought he was more likely their nephew.
The eldest known son of this Thomas named Adam arrived in Australia
in 1863 in company with John eldest son of Samuel of Greaghadossan.
This suggests a close family relationship. However as John O'Hara’s
wife and Adam’s mother were Loughheads the relationship
of John to Adam could have been on either their O'Hara or Loughhead
side or on both. Thus the precise basis of the relationship of Thomas
of Coolnacola to the other two known brothers Samuel Sr. and Joseph
remains uncertain. It seems to this compiler Thomas of Coolnacola
and William of Seefin were likely brothers and thus nephews of Samuel
Sr. and Joseph.
In the 1857 Griffith Valuation, a ggg
grandfather of this compiler Joseph
O’Hara was listed as one of the
twenty-nine land occupiers in Drumfomina townland, where he leased
a 15 acre farm designated number "23 a & b" from the
landowner "Elliott & Others" who owned much of the 267 acre
townland. His farm was located just off the main Dublin Road,
between New Inn and Billis, and had two dwellings of which one
was sublet to a Margaret Brayson. The baptism records for a
daughter Martha and next born child Susan indicate he would have
moved to the Drumfomina farm between 1841 and 1843, as they record
he was in Lissannymore townland in December 1840 and in Drumfomina
by December 1843.
The Billis
Church of Ireland burial book records Joseph O’Hara of Drumfomina died
on 18 April 1879 aged 85 years and his wife Margaret née Kellett
on 12 April 1888 aged 88 years 7.
Joseph’s civil death registration also gave his age at death as 85
years 9.
However Margaret’s civil record at 94 years was six years older than
her parish record! 10
No tombstone marks their graves in the Billis Church of Ireland
graveyard or that of similarly interned youngest son James who died
in 1882 aged 32.
In the words of an unknown poet:-
They sleep in
secret, but their sod,
Unknown to man, is marked by God.

Billis Church of Ireland 34
Listed below are the seven known children of Joseph O’Hara
and Margaret Kellett as ascertained from records of Ireland
marriages 1845-1882, Billis Church of Ireland baptisms from 1840,
Billis C of I burials from 1851, and the Ireland civil deaths
indexes 1864-1912 :-
(1)
Thomas O’Hara b. 17 May 1831, Co. Cavan, Ireland - a
farmer of Drumfomina, Killinkere Parish when he married on 7 Jul
1852 in Killinkere Church of Ireland, Sarah O’Hara b.
ca. 1831 of Greaghadossan, Killinkere, his cousin and daughter
of Samuel O’Hara and Elizabeth Jordan, (witnesses James
Clisdell and Samuel O’Hara). Thomas and his wife emigrated
to Australia, arriving at Moreton Bay, Queensland on 25 Apr 1853
on the Florentia. A pioneer settler from abt. 1858
at Glen Innes on the New England tablelands in northern NSW, where
he was a farmer and grazier, a member of the first Municipal
Council and the area's Guardian of Minors. They had 11 children
and at least 81 grandchildren -
see History & Family Tree
(2) Jane
O’Hara b. ca. 1835, Co. Cavan, Ireland - of
Drumfomina townland, Killinkere Parish, when she
married on 1 Mar 1855 in Billis Church of Ireland, William Sheils
(or Shiels) b. ca. 1832, a farmer, of Coolnacola, Killinkere Parish,
son of John Sheils, a farmer. (by Rev. Walter C. Peyton rector of
Billis C of I church from 1848-1896, witnesses John Wilson & Henry
Elliott). The couple emigrated to Australia, arriving in Sydney,
New South Wales, on 28 Jul 1855 on the Mangerton. They
settled initially that same year at Manning River, NSW. After her
first husband's death in 1859 Jane remarried New York born
blacksmith John Thomas Williams and in 1866 they moved north
to Bellinger River where he was that district's first blacksmith.
From the early 1880 they had a hotel in Surry Hills in Sydney where
Jane died in 1886 aged 51 years. From her two marriages there
were a total of 16 children and at least 56 grandchildren
- see History that has a link to her family tree.
(3)
Margaret O’Hara b. 1837 6,
Co. Cavan, Ireland. She arrived in Australia on 28 July 1855 on
the Mangerton in company with her sister Jane, Jane's husband
William Sheils, and three female cousins. She was a resident of Manly,
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia when she married Robert Mildwater
on 19 May 1870. Prior to the 1870 marriage Margaret had an apparent
marriage, of which no record has been located, to William Smith
from which there was one issue 16.
From the two relationships Margaret had a total of six known children
and at least 24 grandchildren -
- see History & Family Tree.
(4) Martha
O’Hara b. 10 Dec 1840 17,
Lissannymore, Killinkere, Co. Cavan, Ireland - a dressmaker
of Billis, Killinkere Parish. She married on 15 Jan
1866 18 in Billis Church of
Ireland, John Sheils (Shiels) b. ca.1841, a baker of
Coolnacola townland, son of John Shiels (Sheils) and brother
of William who married her older sister Jane, by Rev. Walter
C. Peyton - witnesses Joseph O’Hara & Jane Jackson.
They emigrated to New Zealand. They departed London, England,
on 10 March 1866 on the John Temperley and arrived in
Lyttleton in the South Island on 21 June 1866.
They had eight children - all born in New Zealand -
see History & Family Tree.
(5) Susan
O’Hara b.10 Dec 1843 17,
Dumfomina, Killinkere, Co. Cavan, Ireland. No marriage record to 1880,
or Billis C of I church death post 1851, or civil death registration
post 1864 noted. Assumed she likely died 1846 - the worst year in Co.
Cavan of an
Gorta Mor (the great hunger).
(6) Joseph
O’Hara b. June 1845 17,
Dumfomina, Killinkere, Co. Cavan. Ireland. No marriage record to
1880, or post 1851 Billis C of I church death record, or post 1864
civil death registration noted. Likewise to sister Susan assumed
he likely died in 1846 during the great famine.
(7) James
O’Hara b. 21 Jul
1849 17, Drumfomina, Killinkere, Co.
Cavan,
Ireland; died aged 32 on 2 Feb 1882 7,8,
buried Billis C of I graveyard. Likewise to his parents no
tombstone
marks his grave. There is no record of a marriage prior to his death.
His
civil death record gave an incorrect age of 35 years. His Billis C of
I parish burial book age of 32 is confirmed by his same church 1849
baptism book record).
It seems Samuel O’Hara
of Geaghadossan townland was likely born in the late 1780s making him
the elder of the two known Killinkere Parish O’Hara brothers.
It is likely he was the Samuel O’Hara listed in the 1833 Tithe
Applotment Valuations occupying a 10 acre farm in Geaghadossan plus
6 acres in adjoining Lismagiril townland. It is known from Australian
immigration records Samuel was deceased before 1863 when his son
John and family emigrated to Australia. There is no record of his
death as civil death registration did not commence in Ireland until
1864 and surviving Killinkere C of I church burial records commence
from 1877. There is no surviving census covering the period of his
life. So baring the unlikely mention of his age appearing on a
registered lease in unconsulted deed records, or in a record such
as that of Killinkere residents holding firearms, it will never be
known when Samuel was born. Same applies to his date of death unless
there is an inscribed marker in the Killinkere Church of Ireland
graveyard. All that can be inferred from the available records is
that he died between 1857 and 1863. His wife Elizabeth Jordan died
in 1873 at the age of 82 years which gives her a circa 1791 birth
year 13.
As no index of inscriptions is available for Killinkere C of I
graveyard it is not known if there is a stone marking either
of their graves. After his father's death their last born son
William apparently continued on as the tenant of the Greaghadossan
farms until he and his family emigrated to Australia in 1880.
The Griffith Valuation of Ireland, done for Killinkere parish in
1856/57, listed Samuel O’Hara
in Geaghadossan townland on a
33 acre farm comprised of two portions designated 7 & 8 each
with a dwelling, as a tenant of Maxwell family member Lord Farnham
who owned the whole of the townland. The below photograph is
purported to be of Samuel O'Hara's stone walled cabin on what was
once farm portion #8. It was taken in 1995 when in use as a cattle
shelter on land said to then form part of a farm owned by a George
Thompson 35. Whether this cabin was in fact located on
what in 1856/57 was farm portion #8 could be established from aerial
survey photographs. To have been the Samuel O'Hara cabin it would
need to have been located about one mile after the Greaghadossan
townland access lane crosses a creek
marking the SE boundary of the townland with that of adjoining
Cleefin townland. For the route from the Virginia to Bailieborough
road to the approximate location of where the Samuel O'Hara cabin
would have been on farm portion #8 in 1857 see the one inch to mile
scale Hill Map.

Known
children of Samuel O’Hara and Elizabeth Jordan
were as follows:-
(1)
Margaret O’Hara b.ca.1815, d.26 Jul 1891;
m. Charles Kellett d. bef. Apr 1855 - she came to Australia
as a widow. All her known issue also came to Australia.
(2)
Mary O’Hara b.1822, d.1903; she married in Sydney,
Australia in 1852 widower Hugh Wauhop b.1807, d. 2 Oct 1877,
who arrived in Sydney from Knockbride, Co. Cavan on 30 Nov 1841 on
the Albatross with two brothers, his first wife Jane Edmondson,
and an infant son Joshua. He was a dairy farmer (and probably a milk
vendor), and from at least 1848 also a landowner in Surry Hills
where he acquired several properties and from 1856 had
a licenced hotel signed the - True Irishman 36.
There were no issue of the marriage.
(3)
John O’Hara b.ca.1827, m. 1847,
Elizabeth Loughhead b. ca.1827 - he arrived Australia on
the John Vanner in 23 Nov. 1863 with his wife and five
children and four other relatives. He later sponsored the
emigration of his brother William and family
in 1880.
(4)
Samuel O’Hara b. ca. 1828; m.
2 Mar 1854 in Bailborough, Co. Cavan, Martha McAuley b. ca.
1830 - he arrived Australia with his wife on the Truro in
1855. By 1857 he was at Woolongong and by the early 1860s had
joined his first cousin Thomas O'Hara in the Glen Innes district
on the New England tablelands in northern NSW, where he had a
farming and grazing property named
"Strawberry Hills" no doubt after the locality of that name in
the Sydney suburb of Surry Hills.
(5)
Eliza O’Hara b. ca. 1827;
married 22 Mar 1859 in Sydney English born Thomas Wilkinson -
she arrived in Sydney with a group of six
cousins on the Mangerton in 1855 sponsored by her
brother-in-law Hugh Wauhop.
(6)
William O’Hara bapt. 29 May 1831,
d. 25 Dec 1911, m. 2 Dec 1857 in Seefin Presb. Meeting House, Gola
townland, Killinkere, Co. Cavan, Isabella Watson, bapt. 22
May 1836 in Presb. Church, Ballyjamesduff, dau. of Samuel Watson
and Nancy Lockhead - he arrived with his wife and family in Sydney,
Australia on the Peterborough in 1880.
(7)
Sarah O’Hara b. ca.1831,
d. 4 Jun 1881; married 7 Jul 1852 her first cousin Thomas O’Hara
b.1831; d. 9 Sep 1896 - they arrived in Brisbane, Australia on
the Florentia in 1853. Pioneer settlers
at Glen Innes on the New England tablelands in northern NSW.
(8)
Matilda O’Hara b. ca. 1834,
d. 1914; she married on 9 Aug 1854 in Sydney, Australia Andrew
Love b. ca. 1831, d.5 July 1906 - also a native of County Cavan
who when aged 19 yrs. arrived in Sydney on 29 Jun 1850 on
the Lloyds. They had 13 children.
The third of the Killinkere Parish O’Haras, who was likely either a
much younger brother to the other two or perhaps a nephew,
was Thomas
O’Hara who was on farm number 6 of 22
acres in Coolnacola townland at the time of the 1857 Griffith
Valuation.
It is known from the Australian immigration record of his son Adam that
the wife of Thomas was Mary Loughead. It is presumed she was one of the
Lougheads of Seefin townland in Knockbride Parish which adjoins
Killinkere
to the north. The Loughead relationship to the O’Haras also
existed
in the line of Samuel O’Hara of Greaghadossan, as his eldest son John
who
came to Australia in 1863 married Elizabeth Lougheed in 1847 who was
likely
the daughter of Adam Loughead of Seefin.
The birth
year of Thomas O’Hara of Coolnacola is uncertain. His civil and church
parish death records differ by nine years, indicating only that he was
born between the years 1808 and 1817. According to the Killinkere
C of I burial book he was aged 72 when he died on 11 May 1880 24.
He was aged 63 according to his civil death record 14.
It is not known if he has a headstone in Killinkere C of I Church
graveyard.
It seems possible his wife Mary remarried almost immediately after his
death, which if so would explain why she and daughter Margaret
decided
not to come to Australia with son William in 1881 to join her children
Adam and Elizabeth. The marriage indexes list a Bailieborough district
marriage of a Mary O’Hara in the 3rd quarter of 1880 19.
With any pre
1840
births in this area to Church of Ireland families, establishing
names
and birth dates can usually only be done from a record of their
marriage
which often gives the then ages of each party. In respect of post 1840
births, the Killinkere baptism book 1840-1878 is "missing" at the local
level, leaving the only available source as the PRONI microfilms
of those records. It is essential these "missing" records be consulted
to identify all post 1840 children.
Seven
possible children of Thomas
O’Hara and Mary Loughhead as identified from records other
than
the 1840-1878 Killinkere C of I baptisms were:
(1)
Catherine O’Hara (possible
child) b.ca. 1840; d.1870 11
- however she may have been the wife of the John O’Hara below if
he married her in Lurgan in 1869.
(2)
John O’Hara d. 29 Jul 188125
"of Coolnacola" - no age or parent names were recorded. His civil
death record has his age as 27 i.e. born 1854 12.
He was likely the John O’Hara who married either (1) at Coothill in 187120
which seems the most probable OR (2) at Lurgan in 1869 21.
Perhaps the father of a Lissie O’Hara, who when of full age i.e.
born before 1874, married Henry White (or Whyte) on 22 June
1895 22,27.
The birth of Lizzie (Elizabeth) O’Hara is not recorded in the civil
birth indexes for the Bailieborough district nor has a baptism been
noted in Billis C of I records. However if she was in fact born in
Killinkere Parish such would be expected to have been recorded in
the Killinkere C of I baptisms which as the book is currently in 1999
missing at the local level is only available for the pre 1878 period
on the PRONI microfilm which has not been researched by this compiler.
(3)
Margaret O’Hara b.ca.1842;
d.18 Dec 1884 when "age 42 of Coolnacola". This is a church parish
record of death - no civil death record was noted. Margaret was to come to
Australia with her mother Mary in 1881 to join sponsor son Adam.
Neither came then as the deposit money was refunded to their sponsor.
Alternatively it is possible this Margaret was the wife of John O’Hara
above. Such should be clarified by the marriage record of John O'Hara
especially if neither the 1869 or 1871 marriage spouses were named
"Margaret".
(4)
Adam O’Hara b.ca.1842 came
to Australia in 1863 with uncle John O’Hara.
(5)
Elizabeth O’Hara b. 22
Dec 1842 12.
Came to Australia. Married George Leng.
(6)
Annie Jane O’Hara b. 15
May 1845 12,
Coolnacola,
Killinkere; m. 19 August 1862 26
in the Kilmount Presbyterian Church, Kildrumsherdan Parish, Co.
Cavan Joseph McFadden, son of John McFadden of Leighan,
Kildrumsherdan Parish. Kildrumsherdan is the parish in which
Coothill is located. At the time of their marriage, Joseph
was listed as 18 years of age and Anne Jane was listed as
17. Both were a bit younger than usual for marriage
at that time.
(7) William
O’Hara b.ca.1860 32.
His brother Adam sponsored him to Australia. He was to come with mother
Mary & sister Margaret but instead came alone.
William
O’Hara of Seefin townland, Knockbride
Parish, born ca. 1822 31;
died 1912 31; buried in Seefin Graveyard
in Gola townland 28,29.
He married in 1847 23
Jane Leech born ca. 1823 15;
died 1 Jan 1894 15,30
; buried in Seefin Graveyard. He was listed in the 1856/57 Griffith
Valuation occupying a farm in Seefin townland in Knockbride
Parish which adjoins Killinkere Parish on its northern border.

Australian O'Hara descendant
Tracy
Fisher & the headstone in Seefin Graveyard
in Gola erected by William
O'Hara for his wife
Jane née Leech - a 1995 photo 35
It has been been said by an elderely Killinkere Parish resident that a
early 1930s High Court contested will of the batchelor son of William
O'Hara of Seefin named Thomas, in which Thomas bequeathed a farm
in Coonacola townland to the grandson of John O'Hara of Coolnacola,
indicates William of Seefin would have been related to Thomas
O'Hara of Coolnacola. If it can be established, as has been
presumed here, that John O'Hara who died in July 1881 was the
son of Thomas of Coolnacola such undoubtably would
have been the case. However a complicating factor is that unlike
the three Killinkere Parish O'Haras' it seems apparent from the fact of
the burial of William and his wife Jane Leech in Seefin Presbyterian
Cemetery in Gola townland that William of Seefin was of that faith.
Such should be confirmed by his yet unsighted 1847 marriage record.
However it is possible he converted from the Church of Ireland to
Prebyterianism after he married Jane Leech, perhaps during a early
1850s Presbyterian membership drive.
William of Seefin was born ca. 1822 so was at the least 28 years
younger
than the known brothers Joseph and Samuel O'Hara of Killinkere Parish.
Such indicates it unlikely he had been their brother. In that regard
two
records establish Joseph's birth year as 1794 and Samuel could well
have
been born in the late 1780s as it is known fron her death record his
wife
Elizabeth Jordan was born about 1791. The third Killinkere Parish
O'Hara
- Thomas of Coolncola - has an indicated birth year range from
1808-1817.
So despite the religious denomination difference of Thomas of
Coolnacola,
who was of the Church of Ireland faith, and is still very possible
he
was an older brother of 1822 born William, and that their father, who
may
have been also named Thomas, was deceased before the available records
commenced.
Suggesting
such a relationship was likely is that it is said that William of
Seefin's
batchelor son Thomas, who died in the 1932, bequeathed a farm in
Coolnacola
townland to the son of Lizzie White (or Whyte) née O'Hara whose
the birth is not recorded in the civil indexes but whose 1895 marriage
record has her father's name as John O'Hara 33.
Presumably her father was the John O'Hara who died in 1881 and was of
the C of I faith as indicated by his Killinkere C of I burial record.
However as the names of the parents of this John O'Hara are not
available
from either civil or parish baptism or death records, although
their names may possibly have been mentioned in the judgement handed
down by the court in the 1930s case which it is said arose from the
afore
mentioned Thomas O'Hara farm bequest, and John's marriage record would
have shown his father's name, by itself the bequest of the farm to the
son of Lizzie O'Hara only establishes John O'Hara of Coolnacola had
been
in some way related to the Presbyterian family of William of Seefin.
The mere proximity of John O'Hara's Coolnacola townland farm to the
larger farm of Thomas O'Hara in the same townland, whilst it has been
postulated in this article that John was most likely Thomas's son, and
also was the nephew of William of Seefin and thus the first cousin of
his batchelor son Thomas, does not by itself establish it as so.
However
the probability is that William O'Hara of Seefin and Thomas of
Coolnacola
were brothers. Until a father son relationship between Thomas O'Hara
and
John O'Hara of Coolnacola is established it will remain a possibility
John O'Hara was related to William O'Hara of Seefin through other than
to the Killinkere O'Haras, such as through the Coothill O'Hara families
to the north or those noted in adjoining southern parishes.
The only two
known children of William
O’Hara and
Jane Leech
were:
(1) Thomas O’Hara b. ca. 1852; d.1932
28
farmed Seefin, Knockbride
(2) Margaret O’Hara
Emigration
I'm sayin’
farewell to the land of my
birth
And the homes that I know so well,
And the mountains grand of my own native
land,
I'm biddin’ them all adieu .......
The majority of identified family members emigrated to other lands
during the 19th century. Emigration to Australia from Ireland that
century is estimated to have numbered around 400,000. About ten
times that number went to the United States. It was often the case
that a male family member emigrated first in the role of a scout and
reported back to the family on the availability of land in the
new place etc.. In the case of the emigration of the Killinkere O’Haras
to Australia that role seemed to have been fulfilled by women
with the male family members following later. Similarly with New
Zealand the first O'Hara to arrive was a woman.
To expand
the family's knowledge of itself and create a comprehensive
database, if you care to contribute additional data re the
history/genealogy of the family in Ireland, or in respect of the
multitude of the Australian, New Zealand, Irish and other country
descendant lines, please feel free to make contact with the
compliler via the below email facility. The policy is to acknowledge
here or where relevant on linked web pages all contibutions from
others that are included. In that respect birth dates for those
believed to be still living will not appear.
To provide or obtain more info on this particular O'Hara family
SOURCES:
1
Originally extracted from : John O’Hart’s,
Irish Pedigrees,
Composition
Book of Connacht, The Annals of The Four Masters
2
Percy French, Come Back Paddy Reilly, To Ballyjamesduff (song)
3
LDS Church Microfilm - Spinning Wheel Enitlement List
4
LDS Church Microfilm #0256641 - Tithe Applotment Books
1824-1840
(Killinkere)
5
NSW State Archives, NSW Immigration, Persons on Bountry Ships -
reel #2137 & #2471 - Mangerton 28 Jul 1855
immigration
record of Jane O’Hara (dau. of Joseph) states Hugh Wauhop, husband of
Mary
O’Hara (a dau. of Samuel Sr.) was her cousin-in-law.
6
Ibid immigration record for Margaret O’Hara aged 18
7
Herbert W. Stewart, Billis Church Headstones and Burial Book Records
(1997) p.18
8
LDS Church Microfilms - Death Indexes 1882 1st Qtr. Vol 2, p.297
9
Ibid 1879 Vol 2, p.341
10 Ibid 2nd Qtr. 1888 Vol 2, p.287
11 Ibid 1870 Vol 2, p.350 - age 30 years.
12 Ibid 3rd Qtr. 1881 Vol. 2, p.243 - the "4" is
indistinct so may be another number.
13
Ibid 1873 Vol 2, p.351 (aged 82 years)
14
Ibid 3rd Qtr.1880 Vol 2, p.271 (aged 63
years)
15
Ibid 1st Qtr 1894 Vol 2, p.327 "age 71"
16
Informant for William Sheils 1859 death registration was his
"sister-in-law
Mrs. M. Smith". Margaret & William Smith had a daughter named
Martha
Amelia Smith whose birth was registered in 1860.
17
Billis C of I Baptisms extracted by Herbert Stewart, Termon,
Virginia
- letter 19 Nov 1999
18
LDS Church - Ireland Marriages microfilm #0101488, 1866 Vol. Vol.2,
p.565
19
LDS Church Microfilms - Ireland Marriage Indexes 1880 3rd Qtr. Vol. 2,
p. 297
20
Ibid 1871 Vol 8, p.149
21
Ibid 1869 Vol 1, p.848.
22
Ibid 2nd Qtr. 1895 Vol 2, p.367
23
Ibid 1847 Vol 1, p. 473
24
Killinkere C of I Burials - "age 72 years" extracted by Herbert
Stewart
- letters of Sept 1999 & 19 Nov 1999
25
Ibid
26
Dec. 1999 email advice from Patricia Kostelnick of the USA who
extracted
the record from the Kilmont Church marriage records.
27
Dec 1999 email from Pat Moreau of Canada who had the marriage record.
28
Headstone in Seefin Presbyterian Graveyard in Gola townland erected by
Margaret
O’Hara for her father William (it does not give his 1912 death year or
the date) & her brother Thomas d. 1932 aged 80 years.
29
Eugene Markey, Knockbride a History - has names/details
from
the headstones in Seefin Graveyard in Gola.
30
Headstone Seefin Graveyard in Gola townland - death date & age,
erected by husband
William O’Hara.
31
Ireland Death Indexes: 1912 Bailieborough Poor Law Union, Vol. 2 page
289
"aged 90 yrs."
32
NSW State Archives, Immigration Deposit Journals, 1853-1900
33
1999 letters to the compiler from Gwenda Andersen of QLD. passing on
information contained in corro from John Lynch - President of the
Killinkere Parish Heritage Society.
34
From the cover of: Billis Church Headstones and Burial Book
Records,
(to
Oct. 1998) by Herbert W. Stewart.
35
Photographs of Gola headstone and purported Samuel O'Hara cabin
courtesy of Gwenda Andersen, QLD.
36
Hugh Wauhop addesses and occupation listings from 1844 in Sydney
directories, Surry Hills land ownership and 1856 hotel license,
researched by Sherie McEvoy of Hunter River, NSW at the Sydney
Council Archives - copies of records provided courtesy
of same.
Researched
and compiled by J. Raymond Brisbane, Australia
first posted 1 Dec 1999 - last modified 16 May 2009
Special acknowledgement to
Hebert W. Stewart of Co. Cavan, Ireland, for extractions from the
parish records of the Killinkere and Billis Church of Ireland,
without which development of the genealogy to this stage would
not have been possible

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