Smithwick Genealogy

Dedicated to bringing together the greater Smithwick family

Notes


Matches 151 to 200 of 871

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 #   Notes   Linked to 
151 Father is listed as John Neill in marriage registration. Neill, Mary Ann (I5378)
 
152 Father is Thomas Anderson of Clonshanny. Anderson, Annie (I6358)
 
153 Father is William Gamble Gamble, Isabelle (I6638)
 
154 Father L. Siegel Siegel, Israel Max (I6866)
 
155 Father may be Robert Getty, who is listed in Benvardin in the 1766 Religious Survey, the 1796 Flax Growers' Survey, and in Robert Trail's 1803 Agricultural Census for some parishes in Antrim (both available on BillMacafee.com website). In the latter, a Robert, John, and James are listed in Benvardin. Getty, James (I6538)
 
156 Father was Francis Daly. First marriage to John Dolan was 16 Oct 1873.  Daly, Margaret (I3505)
 
157 Father was John and Mary Anne (Dobson) Foster of Glenview Foster, Alice Elizabeth (I6418)
 
158 Father was John Fitzpatrick Fitzpatrick, Mary Ann (I3446)
 
159 Father was Kieran Monaghan Monaghan, Peter (I6365)
 
160 Father William Bunbury of Mount William (1707-1776) Bunbury, Hannah (I6050)
 
161 Father: Alexander Blue of Mullaghduff, Armoy, Co. Antrim Blue, Matilda (I6215)
 
162 Father: Archibald Curry Curry, John (I7911)
 
163 Father: Daniel Black, labourer Black, Mary Anne (I7244)
 
164 Father: Edward Power of Turagh, laborer Power, Bridget (I7810)
 
165 Father: Hugh Boyle of Ballybregagh Boyle, Catherine (I7213)
 
166 Father: John Harlow Harlow, Eliza (I3136)
 
167 Father: John McKaig McKaig, Margaret (I3020)
 
168 Father: Michael Hayes, laborer Hayes, Mary (I7807)
 
169 Father: Patrick Murray, gardener Murray, Bernard (I5180)
 
170 Father: Thomas Ryan, deputy county surveyor. Ryan, Edward (I7799)
 
171 Fisherman Kighan, Thomas (I5410)
 
172 For more information, visit https://www.geni.com/people/R-Joseph-Katzenellenbogen-A-B-D-Brest/6000000002764806457 Katzenellenbogen, R' Joseph (I10092)
 
173 Found 3 Mildreds in New York with this birthdate:
- Mildred V. Campbell - Brooklyn
- Mildred Burte - Manhattan
- Mildred I. Loomis - Paris, NY 
Mildred (I3217)
 
174 Found a Loughlin Buckley in the Ballinahown Parish registers (father of Elizabeth), which could be tied to this. Devine, Loughlin or Langley (I8956)
 
175 Found entries in the Israeli Genealogy site for a Benjamin and Peshe Binkowitz, born in 1907 and 1912 respectively, who are children of a Kalman. It is not known if this is the same Kalman, or if Kalman had migrated to Israel (British Palestine). Bonkiewicz, Kalman Beniamin (I7617)
 
176 Found this, which may apply to either Archie or his son: McIlroy Archibald of Currysheskan county Antrim farmer died 25 June 1933 Probate Belfast 21 December to John McLaughlin junior farmer. Effects £23 5s. McElroy, Archibald (I5011)
 
177 From "CITY OF GLEN EIRA POST-WAR & HIDDEN GEMS HERITAGE REVIEW 2020" by Built Heritage, Melbourne, VIC, AU:

"Born in Poland in 1930, Solomon (Sam) Kurtz was the eldest child of Herz Icko Kurcz (aka Harry Kurtz), who migrated to Australia in 1938. The family, comprising Kurtz, wife Sheine and their two young children, settled in Carlton North, which was then the principal heartland for Melbourne's Jewish community. Harry Kurtz duly became involved in the Rag Trade, entering into partnership with fellow émigré Leo Oberman as manufacturers of ladies' clothing, styled as the Supreme Mantle Company of 343 Little Collins Street, Melbourne (Age, 22/01/1951:7). That partnership dissolved in the early 1950s; by the end of that decade, Harry and son Sam had formed
their own investment business, Kurtz, Son & Company, with an office in High Street, St Kilda." 
Kurtz, Hersz Yitzchak (I9429)
 
178 From 1910 census Family F2188
 
179 From Alan Smithwick:

John was the first child and born in 1827. He married Catherine. He died before 1879 (likely before 1864 as the Irish Death Index, which began in 1864 does not record his death and Catherine is described as ''widow'' on her 1879 death certificate). Catherine arrived in Australia (Victoria) some time after the death of her son William's first wife in 1874.

It is assumed that this John, who was William's father, is a son of William and Anastasia based on the following circumstantial evidence.

William was born in Tipperary. his parents were John and Catherine Smithwick.

Catherine's death certificate records her as born in Tipperary (as does her newspaper death notice).

William's family grave is beside that of William and Anastasia's son Thomas and backs onto that of William and Anastasia. He was close enough to Thomas to be the witness to his will. Catherine would have been born about the same year as John (son of William and Anastasia) ie 1825/6.

John is described on his son William's death certificate as a farmer. Catherine died at her son's farm at Lauriston near Kyneton, aged 54 on the 5 th of May 1879 and is buried in the same grave as her son's first wife (Ann O' Sullivan).
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No other children other than William are mentioned on her death certificate. William married Ann O'Sullivan in Cork on January 17 th 1867, he was aged 17 and she was aged 16 (though his death certificate has him aged 29 at the time of his marriage and Ann aged 17).

(On the evidence it would seem the death certificate was wrong). Ann was a native of Timolegue. Their first son John Joseph was born in about 1868.

William and his family arrived in Melbourne in June 1869 on the ship Gresham (they were then aged 18 and 19). He was described in the ship's register as an agricultural labourer.

In 1870 another son, George Francis was born in Kyneton and then in 1872 a daughter Rose Ann in Melbourne. By 1873 they are recorded (Sands and McDougall) as living at 10 Mc Arthur Place. Carlton.

On the 13 th May 1874, aged 23, Ann died during the birth of another son, James, who also died. They were both buried in the Melbourne General Cemetery in the grave next to that of Thomas (probably his uncle).

It is presumed that his mother, Catherine then came from Ireland to help with his family of three children aged under7 years (though a Catherine Smithwick is recorded as arriving in South Australia in 1870).

At the same time he moved to Lauriston near Kyneton where his mother died in 1879. ( He may have been the William Smithwick recorded living at Staughton Vale as a cooper in 1875). He married the same year, Francis Middlemiss (aged 17). They had a daughter, Catherine, in 1883, then another, Eveline Mary in 1887 in Kyneton and finally a son, William Sarsfield in 1889.

In 1888 the Post Office Directory records that William is a farmer of Lauriston and Francis is at the Kent Hotel. Lauriston

In July 1901, William Sarsfield died aged 12 years. William himself died 9 months later of liver disease aged 52.

William Smithwick b 1850 was described on his death certificate (by his daughter Rose then resident at the Sunbury Asylum [resident or employee?] ) as a mining speculator.

He was resident at the time at 8 Union St.Brunswick. In 1908 his son George is recorded in the electoral roll (er) as living at number 12 Union St.Brunswick, and his daughter Katherine at 5Garden St.

By 1912 Francis is living at 127Canterbury Rd.Middle Park with her daughter Katherine (sic) Francis Smithwick (a milliner). Francis died on July 1 1942, aged about 80, at the home of her grand daughter, Joan (Mrs. Shapter) in Queenscliff.

She is described in the death notice in the Age as ''relict of the late William Smithwick (formerly of Bendigo and Kyneton) and loving mother of Catherine (sic) (Mrs.O'Grady), Eveleen (sic) (Mrs.T.W.Brook) and the loving grandmother of Mrs. Mellish (Brisbane), Mrs. Keith Bow and Ellie Brook (A.I.F.) and great grandmother of Raul,Paul and Noel Mellish . Diana and Patricia Shapter and Judith Bow''.

Of the children of William's first marriage, John Joseph married Mary Louisa Betts in about 1894 (he would have been aged about 26). She was 36 years old and had one child by a previous marriage. They had no children.
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In 1895 John is recorded in the directories as living at Casseldon Street.off Little Latrobe Street while Mrs. Louisa Smithwick is at 10 Lonsdale Street. Melbourne. They change addresses regularly in the following years, with only Mrs. Louisa appearing in the directories in 1896 and at 31 Little Latrobe Street in 1897 and John at 205 Latrobe Street in 1899 and Mrs. Louisa at both 32 Little Latrobe Street and 20 David Street.Carlton in 1900. These areas were both poor and to a certain extent disreputable at the time. John's last appearances in the directories are at 21 Nicholas Lane, Melbourne in 1909-1911, while Mrs. Louisa appears at various addresses from 4 Greeves Street, Fitzroy 1903 in 1903 to 1 University Place, Carlton from 1916-1924.

It is not known when John died. Mary Louisa died on July 29 th 1944 and is buried in the Coburg Cemetery.

The second son of William Smithwick, George Francis, married Ellen Agnes Slattery about 1911/12. They had 4 children, John William who died in the year of his birth. George Francis (who married Mary Burden and has children and grandchildren living in Victoria today),

Mary Theresa who married Jack Quirk and who lived in Sydney and Gerald Joseph who married Maureen and had one daughter (and one grand daughter [1982])

Of the daughter, Rose, nothing is known beyond the fact that she was alive and unmarried at the time of her father's death. 
Smithwick, John (I1521)
 
180 From Alan Smithwick:

The third child, There is some uncertainty about the year of Patrick's birth. By calculating from his death certificate (which states he was aged 51 in 1884) he must have been born in 1832 or 1833 but calculating from his father's death certificate (which states he was aged 42 in 1872) he was born in 1830. The latter date is confirmed by the baptismal record which has him baptised on St. Patrick's day 1830 with sponsors William Ryan and Mary Connors both of Kilbreedy, the townland where his family lived at the time.

Patrick was living in London at the time he married Ellen Shea in about 1855. She had been a parasol maker. They were living at 2 Devenport St. Ratcliff, near Commercial Road in East London when their first son William Patrick was born on the 14th October 1856. He was baptised a little later at their local church, St Mary and St Michael's in Commercial Road.

They were still in London when a second son, George was born in 1858 as is attested by William's first communion at St Boniface's church in May 1860? It is likely that their next two children were also born in London; Ellen in about 1863 and Mary Ann in about 1866.

Their last child Margaret was probably born in Melbourne in about 1869. The family arrived in Melbourne sometime about 1867. The directories of the time first record them in 1872 in Rosslyn Street .West Melbourne and in the same period at Dow Street. Sandridge (Port Melbourne). From 1875 until 1881 (except for 1876 when they are recorded in Arden St) they lived at 182 Wellington Street, Collingwood. Close to their brother Thomas and to the breweries and distilleries which operated in the area, and which would have provided employment for a cooper.

From 1882 until his death in 1884 Patrick lived at 94 Arden St Hotham (North Melbourne). Ellen died soon after their move to North Melbourne on October 25 th 1883. 
Smithwick, Patrick (I1406)
 
181 From Alan Smithwick:

William Verner Smithwick began his apprenticeship at the Federal Cask Company in 1919 and worked there for 33 years until it closed down. The Federal Cask Company supplied barrels to the Maize Products Company for storing and the carrying of glucose, which is used in the confectionery industry.

William Verner Smithwick died of a heart attack on the job 25 5 1960. 
Smithwick, William Verner (I985)
 
182 From Allan Berlin Herman, Phyllis B. (I7593)
 
183 From Andrew Henry:

Parish Priest at Wiatara, Sydney, Australia. Requiem Mass in St. Mary's Cathedral. Buried ? Rockwood Cemetery. Died by drowning in car at Athol Bight, near Taronga Zoo Park warf 
Smithwick, Father Michael Christopher (I755)
 
184 From Andrew Henry:

Sister Anna Maria CSC.
Saint Mary's Convent . Cemetery: Our Lady of Peace,
Notre Dame, St. Joseph (county) Indiana, USA
 
Smithwick, Sister Mary (I751)
 
185 From birth cert, parents were John Yeoman Cooke and Mary Ann Glanville. Cooke, Emma Sarah (I5280)
 
186 From birth of children Osowska, Fejga Rojza (I9961)
 
187 From Burke's - died unmarried.

He died unmarried. He was killed in South Africa at age 17 according to his niece Marjorie. 
Smithwick, Charles Standish (I599)
 
188 From Burke's, killed in action. Smithwick, Lieut. John David Standish (I607)
 
189 From Burke's: "commissn'd RA 1935, served in World War II, ret 1957, has American Bronze Star, b 1915 educ Wellington and RMA Woolwich" Smithwick, Major John Standish de Chair (I243)
 
190 From Burke's: "Henry Smithwick, of Lord Lisburne's Regt of Foot, later Capt in Co Richard Coote's Regt of Foot"

Listed in the English Army Lists in 1692.
 
Smithwick, Capt. Henry (I366)
 
191 From Burke's: Rector of Monasterevan and Chancellor of Kildare Cathedral Smithwick, Rev. Standish Poole (I305)
 
192 From Burke's: Resided in Shandrome, Co. Cork; Ballydarton, Co. Carlow; in Army of Lord Protector Cromwell.

In letter of 8 Aug 1644 from Lords Inchiquin and Broghill of Youghal, Cork to Lord Esmond of the Duncannon garrison, then navy Captain Henry Smithwick is sent to communicate resolutions.

From Patrick Little's book "Lord Broghill and the Cromwellian Union with Ireland and Scotland", Roger Boyle (Lord Broghill) joined forces with Parliament and Oliver Cromwell in August 1649 and commanded the local forces whose aim was to put down Catholic insurgence. Joshua Boyle, Major Francis Foulke, and then Captain Henry Smithwick appear to have been influential in bringing Lord Broghill over.

 
Smithwick, Lt. Col. Henry (I362)
 
193 From censuses, Patrick was a shopkeeper and later postmaster Smithwick, Patrick (I3868)
 
194 From Christine Woods: "I believe my grandmother used to correspond with her. Martha did live in Ireland for a time. I have a report card of hers from St. Mary's Convent School, Ennis.. Unfortunately there's no information as to year. I remember hearing a tale of young Martha playing outside in India, when she was suddenly scooped up in the trunk of an elephant (obviously domesticated) and saved from a poisonous snake of whose presence she was unaware.

Based on her age in this report card, it is my belief (RJS) that her mother passed away between 1862-1867 and that Martha was sent to Ireland to be cared for. 
Smithwick, Martha (I1903)
 
195 From daughter Hanora's marriage certificate. Murphy, James (I4902)
 
196 From daughter-in-law, Louise McMichael McMichael, John Alexander (I7044)
 
197 From death certificate Shea, Margaret (I4838)
 
198 From death certificate McCarthy, James (I4837)
 
199 From death registration Murphy, James (I8865)
 
200 From editor: Burke's makes the suggestion that William was probably the father of John Smithwick, but we can find no affirmation of this in any of the deeds or wills to date.

Current evidence starts the Tipperary tree with Patrick Smithwick. 
Smithwick, William (I792)
 

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