The Healan Family appeared in the US in the late 1790s, based on Federal Census records. But how did they get here? Family stories said the Healans came from Dublin, Ireland. However, a search of Irish databases yielded no family name spelled as "Healan." I was stuck, or as genealogists say, I had "hit a brick wall."
Several years ago, Google began digitizing books with expired copyrights, http://books.google.com/
I tried out the free service and searched for the name "Healan," not expecting to find any references. To my surprise, "The Calendar of Ancient Records of Dublin," vol. 3, popped up. Richard Healan, in the year 1615, was listed as a carpenter. Was this man related to me?
There is no way to prove a family connection to Richard, but my great grandfather, Michael Healan, was known to be a fine cabinet maker. A cousin has a desk the man made in the early 1800s. Maybe I don't have enough evidence to make a connection between the Richard of the 1600s and the Michael of the 1800s, but that doesn't keep me from thinking about it.
I perused this free book, learning about Dublin in the 1600s, and my imagination soared. I learned where Richard and his family might have bought oatmeal, flour, bacon and cheese. I leaned how local government regulations affected individuals.
If Richard Healan of the 1600s isn't my ancestor, I would adopt him if I could.
(Note: Since my initial discovery, Google has digitized more books, including those written by authors with the last name of "Healan." Some of these authors may be related to me. To get to my "Richard Healan," I have to search for his first and last names, using the quotes.)
Sunday, May 19, 2013
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Sarah, the Cow and
General William T. Sherman in the Civil War
As a child I had heard
my grandmother, Nana, tell the story of her mother Sarah confronting Gen.
Sherman in 1864 (in Georgia) and demanding that he return the cow that his
Union Army had stolen. It wasn’t until many years later that I realized that
the story sounded too good to be true.
According to Nana,
Sarah and her family lived on a 2300-acre plantation in northwest Georgia, a
Confederate state. During the fighting, Sherman’s army raided the plantation
and stole all the food and livestock, except for a cow that the cook’s son had
hidden. The boy fed the cow meal to keep it quiet. When the meal ran out, the
cow bellowed. Sherman’s soldiers followed the sound, found the cow and
confiscated it.
Sarah had heard that Gen. Sherman was a Mason, so she took her husband Jack’s Masonic Apron and walked to the General’s headquarters, which just happened to be on the plantation. He was very gracious, “and with a wave of his hand, he ordered his soldiers to return the cow and escort her home.”
Sarah had heard that Gen. Sherman was a Mason, so she took her husband Jack’s Masonic Apron and walked to the General’s headquarters, which just happened to be on the plantation. He was very gracious, “and with a wave of his hand, he ordered his soldiers to return the cow and escort her home.”
As an adult, I
discovered many holes in the story. Sarah and her husband Jack did not live on
a plantation. They lived in the town of LaFayette, Georgia. According to the
1860 slave census record, Jack had a 60-year-old mulatto cook. If the cook had
a son, he was not counted.
There were several true
facts in the story. Jack was a Mason, and the town of LaFayette had been
devastated by the fighting. A cousin recently speculated that two of Sarah and
Jack’s babies had died of malnutrition in 1864. I believe Sarah was desperate,
but did she confront the general? And would he have helped her, a resident in
hostile territory?
On the Internet, I
found General Sherman’s Memoirs that had been digitized by the Gutenberg
Project for public use. I discovered that the general had been in LaFayette,
but not on a plantation. His first priority was to feed his men, and he had
taken sheep from a local farmer. In the memoirs, he justified stripping the
land for food if he could not get supplies for his troops via the local railroad
that was often damaged during the fighting. http://www.gutenberg.org/files/4361/4361-h/4361-h.htm#ch16
Even more interesting –
the general may not have been a Mason. According to Christopher Hodapp, the
author of Freemasons for Dummies,
there is no indication that Sherman was in the Masonic order. http://freemasonsfordummies.blogspot.com/2011/04/masonic-passover.html
Did Sarah go to the
general for help? I think she may have. After all, her children did not have
enough to eat. Did he help her? I don’t know, but I like to think that even
Sherman would have given her at least some food.
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