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depressing moment

Jul. 6th, 2005 | 07:34 pm

Today I googled "bay ridge blog," hoping to find blogs based in my neighborhood. What I found was a couple of people hanging out on a White Supremacist forum, making racist remarks and discussing which local bars are White enough for their comfort. Thankfully, not bars I had been in, though I have been by them. Now I will never go into them. Some people get this heritage thing all wrong.

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slow progress

Jul. 6th, 2005 | 08:05 am

I have succeeded in moving my genealogy data from my old Windows computer to my new Ibook, using Reunion software for Mac. We'll see how this goes now. I am trying to organize my research files and figure out where to pick up.

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The Great Hunger

Apr. 2nd, 2005 | 11:43 pm

The History Place has a long and informative article about the Irish Potato Famine and the associated exodus from Ireland in the mid-nineteenth century. Depressing reading. My own direct ancestors did not emigrate then; they mostly left Ireland in the 1890s.

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Images Canada: picturing Canadian culture

Mar. 25th, 2005 | 11:43 pm

The Canadian government has opened Images Canada, an online gallery of Canadian images, including many of the maritime fisheries.

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(no subject)

Mar. 23rd, 2005 | 11:43 pm


This 2002 New Yorker article by Gay Talese on the Verrazano Narrows Bridge is an excellent sociological look at how the bridge affected the lives of ordinary people. I live practically under this bridge, and I got this apartment from a Kennedy fifth cousin, so I'm stretching just a bit to post the article link here. But neighborhood history is important too.

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this blog is moving to blogger

Mar. 21st, 2005 | 07:14 pm

I'm moving this blog to blogger, though this account will remain in case I want to come back.
But for new updates, slow as they may be, visit Related.

Edit 13 May 2005: As it turns out, I hate Blogger, so I'm back here on LiveJournal. I transferred the few entries over.

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Hegarty family history

Mar. 8th, 2005 | 10:25 pm

I wrote this article for a family newsletter.

The Hegarty Name in History
The name Hegarty is an English spelling of the Gaelic name O hEigcertaigh, which means "unjust." Haggerty, Hagerty and Heggarty are just different spellings of the same Gaelic name. Back in the very olden days, the O hEigcertaigh clan was from the north of Ireland, and there are still a lot of them in Derry and Donegal. In the 1600s, however, one branch of the clan moved south to County Cork; that is the group from which we are descended. I'm using the term "clan" loosely. In technical terms, the O hEigcertaigh sept, or family group, was a subgroup of the larger Donegal- and Derry-based Cenel Eoghain (i.e., Clan Owen), themselves descendants of the Ulster Ui Nialls (O'Neils). But all that clan stuff goes way back to the High Kings of Ireland and gets very mythological and speculative. The main point is the Hegarty family is from County Cork, but has ancient roots in the north of Ireland.

19th-century Cork
In tracing our own branch of the Hegarty family, I have only got back as far as the Famine years (1840s). My earliest known Hegarty ancestor was John Hegarty, a laborer who lived in Cork. There is an oral tradition that his three sons -- Michael, Jeremiah, and John -- all emigrated to the United States, and that John Jr. went West and was never heard from again. The problem with this oral tradition is that it is a standard folklore explanation for how farflung families came to share the same surname, and is not very reliable. I have no indication at all that Michael Hegarty emigrated anywhere.

I do know that Michael Hegarty, the son of John, was still in Cork in 1866, because that is when he married a servant girl named Ellen Cronin. Michael and Ellen had fifteen children, six of whom survived to adulthood. The six surviving children were John, Cornelius, Julia, Lena, Elizabeth, and Nora. Cornelius and Elizabeth remained in Ireland. Cornelius married and had ten children. Elizabeth Hegarty married a man named Michael Phipps. They had a son, but Elizabeth died giving birth to their second child. The rest of Michael Hegarty's surviving children emigrated to the United States around the turn of the century. The girls all married -- Lena married twice -- and had children. Julia and Nora moved with their families to New York.

John Hegarty 1867-1947
The emigrant son, John, was my great-grandfather. After attending the Christian Brothers school in Cork, John Hegarty joined the Royal Munster Fusilliers and served in India and South Africa. (There were other Hegartys in the RMF during these Victorian times, but I haven't figured out how they are related yet.) In 1890, after leaving the RMF, John emigrated to Cambridge, Massachusetts. Five years later, in St. Joseph's Church, he married a servant girl named Margaret Teresa Deasy, of Somerville, MA, originally from Kilmurray in County Cork. Margaret was the sister of John's friend Jim Deasy, who introduced them after bringing his sister over from Ireland. John got a job at the Cambridge Electric company where he worked from 1895 until his retirement. The Hegartys lived in Cambridge until 1929, when they moved to Brighton. They had nine children: Ellen, Honora, Michael, Teresa, James, Margaret, Joseph, William, and Francis.

All of John Hegarty's children married and had their own kids except for Ellen (aka Helen) and James. Michael Hegarty (1898-1970) followed in his father's footsteps by working at Cambridge Electric. He married Agnes Murphy (1902-1984) of Cambridge, MA and eventually became my grandfather. In the picture below, that is my grandfather on the far right, posing with some friends.

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Quest for the Sea

Jan. 28th, 2005 | 01:18 pm

I've been watching repeats of the series Quest for the Sea on PBS (Long Island). Quest for the Sea is a "reality show" like Frontier House, only it's set in a 1930s Newfoundland outport. The women do housework. The men fish. Last week they didn't salt the cod properly and it got maggoty, which was kind of like a horror show. One of the participants is a professor at Memorial University, which profiled him.

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semi-achievement

Jan. 18th, 2005 | 01:19 am

I got my website updated, at last. I went with an oldschool nofrills look, because it seemed to convey information most directly.
I wish I could get the Google site search thingy to work on it, but I tried several times and I can't. I wonder if it's something to do with Earthlink's servers.

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just getting started

Aug. 1st, 2004 | 02:11 pm
mood: creative

This is a journal to accompany my new, updated family history and genealogy site. We'll see how it goes.

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