Tag Archives: Cushendall

Marriage Index. Layde (Cushendall, Ardclinis, Ballygowan) Antrim. 1837-38

Layde (Cushendall, Ardclinis, Ballygowan) Antrim

  Layde (Cushendall, Ardclinis, Ballygowan) Marriage Index 1837-38

This is an index of the names of the people who were married in the Roman Catholic parish of Layde (Cushendall, Ardclinis, Ballygowan) during the years 1837-38.  The following table of marriages is transcribed from Microfilm No. 5472 held online by the National Library of Ireland accessible through their Roman Catholic Parish Register Search page.   All names and surnames given here are as I read them.


My list is sorted by the surname of the groom.  Question marks indicate letters or words I had a problem reading.  The letters ‘sic’ indicate that is how I read the letters I have typed.
[ ] indicates that the letters within the brackets are my best guess at what the letters might be. n.g=Not given  The man whose surname is given as O’Neill and whose first name was not given was from Belfast.  Outside of this one placename townlands are not given in this section of the register.

Nicknames, Shortened names used in Irish records

If you go to the page i have linked to below and are sitting at a PC and want to search the records for a surname that you are interested in then press Ctrl and F together.  A box will pop up for you to enter the characters you’d like to find on the page you are on. Pressing enter will bring you to the next entry for that name and so on.  My thanks to Clare Lawler Kilgallen who posted this information on a Facebook page.

If you are working with a Mac then press ⌘ & F and continue as above.

Page 39 Marriage Records Layde (Cushendall, Ardclinis, Ballygowan) Roman Catholic Parish : Transcription begins on this page of microfilm.  A note about this microfilm (this section of it): there are some pages which are upside down, don’t worry about them as these are baptisms.  Some pages are repeated e.g. p.41 is a repeat of 1837 marriages & baptisms.

 

NameSurnameBride NameBride SurnameDateYear
Jno[O]'NeillJaneMcC[o]rmac29-Aug1837
MichlBlackMargtBoyle18-Jul1837
MichlBlackMaryBoyle19-Nov1837
JsBlackBiddyWelsh12-Dec1838
JohnBlackBellMcKillip30-Dec1838
AlexanderCraigMaryMcAulay14-Sep1837
JosephDoghertyAnnHill12-Dec1838
WilmGrahamEllenCampble04-Nov1838
JohnHamiltonMaryMcHendry27-Jul1838
DanlHarveyRoseMcCauley17-Feb1838
JamesLorkanCathBoyle11-Feb1838
HenryMagileGraceDillon15-Nov1838
ArcheyMc[F]aulCathMcCarey15-Jul1838
RobertMcAleseMa[r]yMurray01-Nov1837
JamesMcAlisterMaryMcAlister27-Nov1837
JohnMcCa[r]tMaryO'Neil (sic)19-Nov1838
JohnMcCambridgeAnnMcCauley04-Nov1838
BryanMcCarey or McCaseySallyMcKillip14-Feb1838
HenryMcCauleyMaryMcCauley13-Oct1837
HenryMcCauleyMaryDelargy01-Dec1837
HughMcCauleyPeggyMcCauley15-Feb1838
MichlMcCauleyMaryMcFaul25-Dec1838
AlexrMcCayMaryMcCalish10-Jun1838
PatMcCayNancyGillen24-Dec1838
JohnMcCormickPennyCampble07-Oct1837
JohnMcCormickBettyMcCarty06-Jan1838
JohnMcDonellNancy??Allen20-Nov1837
n.g.McGavockAnnQuin20-May1838
PatMcHendryMaryMc[F]aul02-Sep1838
JohnMcKillipAnnMcDonald?8 Nov1837
JohnMcKillipAnnMcReegan10-Oct1838
AlexerMcKinleyKittyMcKillip15-Nov1838
DuncanMcMullinCathMcCart??11 Nov1837
JamesMcReeganMaryMcCambridge01-Dec1837
HughMcReeganMaryMcLoughlin30-Dec1837
PatMcSparrowMaryConnor15-Nov1838
NealMurrayPeggyMcCauley02-Nov1838
n.g.O'NeillWidowKenny15-Jul1838
BartholomewQuinAnnO'Neill01-Jul1837
DanlReidBettyMcCallion29-Dec1838
n.g.ScullinMaryMcCambridge01-Jun1838

Mrs. Mary Stone of Cushendall, Co. Antrim

I have intended from the very first that this web site and the newsletter From Ireland will be used to remember people by. I know that what I put on my ‘Glimpses’ page and this page will only appeal to a few, yet, some day – maybe someone will come along and read through these pages and see their ancestor in one of my extracts or in one of these tributes. Regardless, I know so far that those few who have read my extracts in ‘Glimpses’ have gained pleasure from the reading of them and I know that by including these I am achieving that which I wanted to do in the first place. Tributes is a new addition to this web site – I thought I had finally decided how many pages I was putting up the first time and had promised myself ‘No more!’. However, today I came across something in a journal and I knew that the tributes page had to be included on my web site now.


Glimpses was one of the first pages I created and the story of Mrs. Stone and Cushendall was the first extract used, so when I found this tribute I knew I had to include it. This comes from ‘The Glynns’ and it as as written. A tribute to Mrs. Stone, written by Jack McCann.

Written by Jack McCann.

Mrs. Mary Stone of Cushendall

Mrs. Mary Stone of Cushendall

“Mary Stone died on the 6th of April, 1977. Word of her death sent my thoughts jostling down the years, past ghost and ghost, to sunlit summer holidays, pictuire-postcard clear. Nothing much happened in our quiet corner of Red Bay. The tides came and went. It was all so peaceful; so personal too, even the char-a-bancs had names – like Henry McNeill’s — ‘Maid of the Mountains.’

A two mile walk to Cushendall was worth every step of the way to linger and look around in Mrs. Stone’s shop, with all the time in the world to decide what our coppers would best buy, while she talked history with the grown-ups; not the ‘far foreign fields’ stuff we were reading about in school but of people and places, customs.and curiosities in the wee townlands around us. She was a tourist attraction to visitors in search of ‘the quiet land of Erin …… “sure the man who wrote that air – ‘Aridicoan’ he called it – lived down Cushendun way. McCambridige was his name, a Gaelic-speaking ancestor of Lord Glentoran.”

In due time my children were swithering between her toys and toffees while I learned the local lore ….. “Did you know that a Chief Justice of England defended a woman from Waterfoot here in Cushendall…..?”

“Have you over heard tell of Ailsa McFredjin …?” “You’ll have seen the McAlaster stone in Cregagh Churchyard . . ?” “The Pope called the other day to talk about Eoin MacNeill … ” “Sean Murray was a gentleman . . .” “John Hewitt’s ‘Fame’, there’s a poem about poets for you …” “He could whistle like a blackbird, young Gore . . .” “Did I tell you about Shane the Proud and his …” “You’ll have to call back then.” And I did, again and again, to hear about MacDonnells and McQuillans, McAuleys and Turnlys, Crommelins and Breckenridges, countrymen and boleymen, raths and racing gigs.

The thought that one day it had to end prompted the idea of a local body to encourage interest in the story of the Glens. So when Mary Stone shut shop, for the last time she had the pleasure of knowing that the Glenns of Antrim Historical Society was carrying on where she left off, and that she was, its first honorary life-member.

Her last days were spent among her own in Clushendall Cottage Hospital as Glensfolk campaigned against a Ministerial decision to close it down. That they won was due in no small measure to their awareness of ‘their history’. Now Mary Stone is part of that history, part of the quiet land.”