The journal of the American-Irish Historical Society, Vol. V, 1905

Volume IV, a gift to the library from Thomas Hamilton Murray, Esq.,

Chapter 87,502 wordsPublic domain

for which they return a grateful acknowledgment. Thomas Carroll, Chairman of Lyceum and Library Committee, Placed in the library. Lyman P. Osborn, Librarian.”

From the Public Library, Bangor, Me.: “The managers have received the publication named on the other side (Volume IV, Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society), a gift to the library from the American-Irish Historical Society, for which they return a grateful acknowledgment. F. O. Beal, President of the Board. Placed in the library, Mary H. Curran, Librarian.”

From the College of the City of New York: “I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of the following book: Journal of the Irish-American Historical Society, Vol. IV, which you were kind enough to present to the library of the College of the City of New York. Please accept our sincere thanks. Yours respectfully, Henry Evelyn Bliss, Deputy Librarian.”

From the New York Historical Society: “The New York Historical Society has received The Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society, by Thomas Hamilton Murray, Secretary-General, Volume IV, 8vo, Boston, 1904, a gift from the American-Irish Historical Society, for which I am instructed to return a grateful acknowledgment. Robert H. Kelby, Librarian.”

From the Free Public Library, Jersey City, N. J.: “I am directed to convey to you the thanks of the trustees of the Free Public Library for your gift of Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society, Vol. IV. The same will be duly placed to your credit upon our records, carefully preserved and made useful to the public. I have the honor to be E. E. Burdick, Librarian.”

From the New Hampshire State Library, Concord: “Dear Sir: In behalf of the trustees I beg to acknowledge the receipt of the following volume sent this library through your kindness: Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society, Volume IV, 1904. It will be their pleasure to give the book a fitting place upon the shelves. Yours very truly, Arthur H. Chase, State Librarian.”

From Mr. John J. Slattery, Louisville, Ky.: “I have received Volume IV of the Journal of the Society, which you kindly sent me, and delayed acknowledging its receipt until I had read it. Need I say what pleasure it afforded me? The series are all good, but this is one of the best. Because these publications furnish proof of facts stated—from the records—they are invaluable to many, to whom such knowledge is otherwise inaccessible.”

From the Public Library of Toledo, Ohio: “I beg to acknowledge with thanks the receipt of Volume IV of the Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society. I would very much like to secure Volumes I, II and III, in order to have a complete file. Please advise me if this is possible. I hope, also, that our library may receive subsequent volumes. Thanking you for your kindness, I am yours very truly, Willis F. Sewall, Librarian.”

From the University of Maine: “By authority and on behalf of the trustees of the University of Maine I desire to acknowledge with thanks the receipt of the Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society, Volume IV, which has been added to this library through your courtesy. If available for distribution, we should be glad to receive the earlier volumes of the Journal and others of your Society’s publications. Yours truly, Ralph K. Jones, Librarian.”

From the Reynolds Library, Rochester, N. Y.: “The trustees of the Reynolds Library acknowledge with thanks the receipt of your gift (Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society, Volume IV, 1904). We should be very glad if you could find it possible to place the name of our library on your regular mailing list, and also present us your first three volumes if you have copies to spare. I think a set would be appreciated here. Very respectfully, Alfred S. Collins, Librarian.”

From the Public Library of Milwaukee, Wis.: “We are greatly indebted to you for Volume IV of the Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society received this morning. It would be advantageous to our Irish-American citizens who are patrons of this library to have the complete set and to be able to consult the volumes as they come out. If you can send us the first three volumes and place us on your mailing list, we shall be under renewed obligations to you. Very truly yours, George W. Peckham, Librarian.”

From Mr. Dennis H. Tierney, Waterbury, Conn.: “I wish to congratulate you in the production of Volume IV, Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society for 1904. And in reading your paper entitled “Some Voices From Ye Olden Time,” I saw in it great research and pains taken on your part which I, as state president of the Society, feel prompted to commend, and on the part of the members of the state of Connecticut, I thank you for your very efficient work which I regard as a milestone, as it were, to guide the present and future historian.”

From the Librarian of Trinity College, Washington, D. C.: “It is a pleasure to thank you for the copy of The Journal of the American-Irish Historical Society, Volume IV, which you courteously sent to our library. I have examined the whole volume with a glow of pride and interest and feel sure the same sentiments will be awakened in our young people as they read. It is a valuable addition to our library. Should the Society publish monographs, bibliographies, or any thing relating to the Irish element in America, we shall be glad to be informed.”

GENERAL INDEX.

Annual Meeting and Dinner, 8.

Executive Council of the Society, 5, 6.

General Information Regarding the Society, 188.

Historical Papers, 16.

Introductory Note, 3.

Letters from Hon. Theodore Roosevelt, 12, 128, 133.

Lexington, Mass., Patriotic Pilgrimage to, 13.

List of Presidents-General of the Society, 187.

Membership Roll, 152.

Necrology, 147, 186.

Officers of the Society, 5, 6, 7.

Patriotic Pilgrimage to Lexington, Mass., 13.

Proceedings of the Society, 8.

Review of the Year, 135.

Roosevelt, Hon. Theodore, Letters from, 12, 128, 133.

State Vice-Presidents of the Society, 6, 7.

ANALYTICAL INDEX.

“A better American, a more capable, a more useful, or more fearless citizen than John Sullivan, New Hampshire never had,” 68.

“About a tenth part of the whole state,” 123.

“A brave and fine-looking Irishman,” 93.

“A bright, quick-witted Irishman,” 35, 40.

A British gunboat is destroyed at Elizabeth, N. J., 25, 26.

“A British officer of equal rank,” 103.

Accident at a military review near Trenton, N. J., 98.

Acting Governor of Maine, Edward Kavanagh, 107.

Adams, John, the second president of the United States, 66, 68.

“A descendant of James Butler, the immigrant,” 113.

A detail told off to keep the fires along the American front burning, 120.

“A fast friend to the liberties of America, and studied to promote the public weal,” 107.

“A Forgotten Heroine,” 16.

“A friend and staff officer of General Washington,” 143.

“A gallant young Irish patriot” killed at Princeton, 27.

“A granite monument stands on Boston Common,” 110.

“A great parade this day with the Irish, it being St. Patrick’s,” 107.

“A handsome, good-natured looking Irishman,” 94.

“A handsome little Irishman, always neatly dressed,” 117.

“A Kerry Irishman,” 104.

Albany, N. Y., British garrison at, 94.

Alexander, Sarah W., a native of Newry, Ireland, 122.

Allen, Ethan, 122.

“A man of excellent manners and good acquirements,” 111.

“America by a desperate effort has nearly emancipated herself from slavery,” 125.

_American Catholic Historical Researches_, Griffin’s, 104, 110.

American camp at Cambridge, Mass., 111.

American forces at New York, The, 56, 111.

American minister to the French Court, 125.

_American Museum, The_, published by Mathew Carey, 129.

Amherst College, 44.

Amory, Thomas, emigrates from Limerick, Ireland, 94.

Amory, Thomas Coffin, 63, 76, 94.

A most historic corps, 120.

A native of Newry, Ireland, Commodore O. H. Perry’s mother, 122.

Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company (Boston), 151.

Andrew, Governor, of Massachusetts, 136.

Andriessen, Jan, “the Irishman,” 113.

“And some returned to Ireland,” 119.

Angell, Col. Israel, of the Second Rhode Island regiment in the Continental Line, 107.

Anglican dean of Derry, George Berkeley, 119.

“An ingenious and useful citizen,” 97.

An Irish clergyman locates at Derby, Conn., 119.

“An Irish gentleman much respected,” Henry Paget, 91.

An Irishman, Robert Beers, slain by the Indians, 93.

“An Irishman transplanted to America, where he has already made a fortune,” Marquis de Chastellux mentions, 118.

An Irish pioneer of Boston, Mass., 28.

“An Irish servant-man,” John Hamilton, 115.

“An Irish Teague and foreigner,” 119.

An Irish trader at Fort Pitt, 98.

_Annals of Multifernan_, 29.

_Annals of Witchcraft in New England_, 17.

“A noble gentleman,” 94,

“An officer of the Irish army,” 70.

Annual Meeting and Dinner of the Society, 8.

Antietam, Battle of, 181.

A party of refugees from the West Indies, 119.

Apprehension of Mathew Carey requested, 126.

“A Quakeress of Flushing,” 104.

A Rhode Islander becomes an Irish baron, 103.

Armagh, Ireland, 96, 97.

Artillery companies organized in New Jersey, 23.

“A schoolmate of the wife of General Washington,” 123.

A sortie of marines at midnight, 66.

Assault on Quebec, 117.

Assembly of Virginia, 102.

“A thriving Irish settlement,” 83.

A tract of 2,000 acres granted to David Mooney, 117.

A tract of 18,000 acres is granted Michael Byrne and others, 117.

A tract in New York of some 4,000,000 acres, 123.

A tradition concerning George Berkeley, 119, 120.

Attack on Savannah, 120.

“At that period there were many Irish in Salem,” Mass., 91.

At “the ring of the town,” 93.

Attucks, Crispus, 110.

Austin’s _Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island_, 92.

_Ave Maria_, The, 16.

“A victim to British cruelty,” 119.

“A victim to the Terror,” 120.

“A wealthy Irishman of Charleston, S. C.,” 96.

“A young Irish weaver,” 106.

Baird, Henry Carey, Paper by, 124.

Baltimore, Lord, 105.

Bandon, Ireland, 101.

Bank of Pennsylvania, 131.

Bank of the United States, 108, 131.

Baron Bernard O’Neill, 103.

Baron Kinsale, 103.

Barrett’s _Old Merchants of New York_, 121.

Battle at Sudbury, Mass., 97.

Battle of Antietam, 181.

Battle of Bemis’ Heights, 120.

Battle of Bennington, 122.

Battle of Black Rock, 61, 62.

Battle of Brandywine, 67, 105, 111, 118.

Battle of Bull Run, Second, 144.

Battle of Bunker Hill, 31, 48, 66, 109, 111.

Battle of Cedar Creek, 181.

Battle of Chancellorsville, 181.

Battle of Chickamauga, 181.

Battle of Clontarf, 137.

Battle of Fredericksburg, 39, 138, 181, 182.

Battle of Germantown, 67, 105, 111, 118.

Battle of Gettysburg, 144, 155, 164.

Battle of Lexington, Concord and Cambridge, 13.

Battle of Long Island, 106, 111, 112.

Battle of Malvern Hill, 181.

Battle of Monmouth, 27, 113, 116, 123, 142.

Battle of Peach Orchard, 155.

Battle of Princeton, 27, 105, 111, 113.

Battle of Rhode Island, 42, 89.

Battle of Saratoga, 122.

Battle of Spottsylvania Court House, 181.

Battle of Stillwater, 120.

Battle of Trenton, 27, 105, 111, 120.

Battle of White Plains, 111, 112.

Battle on Lake Erie, 122.

“Became captain of a troop of Light Horse,” 111.

Beers, Robert, an Irishman slain by the Indians, 93.

Bellingham, Richard, governor of Massachusetts, 116.

Bemis’ Heights, Battle of, 120.

Bennington, Battle of, 122.

Berkeley, George, “the Kilkenny scholar,” 119, 120.

Birthplace of the children of Master John Sullivan, 63, 64, 65, 74, 75.

Black, Alexander, an early Irish resident of Providence, R. I., 107.

Black, James, of Providence, R. I., 107.

Black Rock, Battle of, 61, 62.

Blaine, Col. Ephraim, 101.

Blaine, James, “came from Ireland with his family prior to 1745,” 101.

Blaine, James G., of Maine, 101.

Blair, James and Robert, natives of Ireland, members of the Commander-in-Chief’s Guard in the Revolution, 92, 93.

_Bonhomme Richard_, The, 94.

“Born at sea of Irish parents,” 98.

Boston Common, A granite monument on, 110.

Boston Massacre, The, 110.

Boston, Mass., An Irish pioneer of, 28.

Boston, Mass., Charitable Irish Society of, 93, 106, 114, 141, 150.

Boston, Mass., Goody Glover executed in, 21.

Boston records, Extracts from the, 110, 111, 121, 122.

Boston, Siege of, 41, 111.

Boston University, 150.

Bourk, James, “captain of the brig _Neptune_,” 89.

Bradford’s Coffee House, New York, 57.

Bradt’s Rangers in the Revolution, 90.

Brandywine, Battle of, 67, 105, 111, 118.

_Brave Little Holland and What She Taught Us_, Griffis’, 102.

Bridget Dexter signs a petition of Charlestown and Malden women, 30.

British are defeated in battle on Lake Erie, 122.

British attack on New London, Conn., 90.

British at Yorktown, Surrender of the, 109.

British evacuate New York, 56.

British garrison at Albany, N. Y., 94.

British ship _Glasgow_, Engagement with the, 105.

Browne, Margery, 69, 72, 75, 78, 79.

Brown University, 93, 108.

Brunswick, Me., Thomas Crowell an Irish schoolmaster in, 105.

Bryan, Alexander, “from Armagh in Ireland,” 96.

Buchanan, James, father of President Buchanan, 92.

Buchanan, President, 92.

Bull Run, Second battle of, 144.

Bunker Hill, Battle of, 31, 48, 66, 109, 111.

Bunker Hill Monument Association, 153.

Bunker Hill to Yorktown, 47.

Bunker’s _Long Island Genealogies_, 104.

Burke, Patrick, “Orderly to the General,” 95.

Burke, Richard, an early settler of Sudbury, Mass., 92.

Burke, Capt. William, of the armed schooner _Warren_, 103.

Butler, Deacon John, 113.

Butler, James, came from Ireland, and is heard from in Lancaster, Mass., 1635, 113.

Butler, John and Thomas, early settlers of Waterford, Conn., 115, 116.

Butler, Richard, a patriot of the Revolution, 120.

Byrn, Daniel, lieutenant in a Rhode Island regiment, 89.

Byrne, Michael, and others are granted a tract of 18,000 acres, 117.

“By whom he was introduced to Dr. Franklin,” 125.

Caldwell, Andrew, a patriot of the Revolution, 100.

Caldwell, James, a patriot of the Revolution, 118.

Calef, Robert, expresses Sympathy for Goody Glover, 17.

_Calendar of Colonial State Papers_, 116.

Calhoun, James, grandfather of John C. Calhoun, 100.

Calhoun, John C., 100.

“Calhoun settlement,” The, 100.

“California, a land of health where almost endless summer reigned,” 84.

California, An Irish pioneer of, 82.

Cambridge, Mass., Hon. Augustine J. Daly, mayor of, 13.

Cambridge, Mass., The American camp at, 111.

Campaign against Canada, 122.

Captain Commandant O’Neill, 102.

“Captain of the Isles,” Roger Kelly, 33.

“Captain of the Quaker Blues,” 92.

Capture of Ticonderoga, 122.

Capture of Yorktown, 92, 120.

Cape’s Tavern, New York, 57.

“Captured twelve British soldiers,” 118.

Carey, Henry Charles, 134.

Carey, Mathew, Memoir of, 124.

Carleton, Sir Guy, 56.

Carroll, Bishop John, 110.

Carrick-on-Suir, Ireland, 168.

Carroll, Charles, of Carrollton, 105.

Carrolls, The, of Maryland, 105.

Casey, Thomas, an early settler at Newport, R. I., 94.

Castle Jordan, in Meath, 29.

“Catholics, Baptists and Quakers,” 18.

“Caused the book to be burned in Harvard College yard,” 17.

Cavan, Ireland, 156.

Cavenaugh, Patrick, saves General Lincoln from being captured by the British, 96.

Cedar Creek, Battle of, 181.

Cedars, The affair at the, 91.

Celtic Medical Society (New York City), 152.

Chancellorsville, Battle of, 181.

Charitable Irish Society, Boston, Mass., 93, 106, 114, 141, 150.

Chastellux, Marquis de, 118.

Chautauqua County, N. Y., 59, 60, 61, 62.

Cherokee Indian frontier, 100.

Chesapeake and Delaware canal, 133.

Chevalier Armand O’Connor, 91.

Chevalier de Chastellux, 109.

Cincinnati, Society of the, 115.

Clare, Ireland, 97.

Clark, Gen. George Rogers, 93.

Clary Reunion Family, 155.

Clay, Henry, 133.

Clay’s Compromise Tariff Act, 133.

Cleveland, President, 137, 138, 148.

Clogston family of New Hampshire, 109.

Clontarf, Battle of, 137.

Clotworthy, Sir John, License issued to, 116.

Cloyne, Ireland, 29, 31, 119.

Coeymans patent, The, 106.

“Col. Hercules Mooney’s regiment,” 38, 42, 46.

Colles, Christopher, 110.

Collins, Hon. Patrick A., 147, 148.

Collins, William, arrives at New Haven with a party of refugees from the West Indies, 119.

Colonial Wars, Society of, 153.

“Color sergeant of the Irish flag of the regiment,” 155.

Commander-in-Chief’s Guard, The, 92, 100, 104, 113.

Commodore Perry’s mother a native of Newry, Ireland, 122.

Conference at Dobb’s Ferry, 56.

Confined on board a British prison ship, 103.

Conley, John, a Connecticut soldier of the Revolution, 90.

Connaught, Ireland, 28, 29, 35.

Connecticut Volunteer Infantry, Ninth, 154.

Conner, Philip, of Maryland, 97, 98.

Connolly, Michael, captain and paymaster, during the Revolution, of a New York regiment, 98.

Constable & Co., 123.

Constable, William, 121, 123.

Constitutional Convention of New Jersey, First, 98.

“Contained elegant rooms suitable for the reception of persons of the first condition,” 106.

Continental Army, The American, 44, 45, 47, 67, 110, 118, 123.

Continental Congress, 67, 68, 102, 106, 123.

Continental Dragoons, Col. George Baylor’s, 100.

“Convenient and Fitt to be one of the fyre masters for ye Citty,” 113.

Copley, John Singleton, the eminent artist, 97.

Copley, Mary (Singleton), 97.

Copley, Richard, 97.

Cork, Ireland, 29, 31, 49, 75, 76, 78, 95, 103, 114, 122, 138, 149.

Cornwallis, Surrender of, 145.

Corps of Sappers and Miners, 89.

Cotton Mather, who “countenanced the executioners by his presence, and in various ways urged the terrible work of blood in Salem,” 18.

“Could not find the island of Bermuda,” 119.

Council of the Society, 5, 6.

Count Arthur Dillon, 120.

Courtney, Ruth, 103.

Craig, Sarah (mentioned in President Roosevelt’s letter), 12.

Crane’s regiment of artillery in the Revolution, 94, 95.

Crehore, Teague, stated to have been stolen from his parents in Ireland when a child, 112.

Crimmins, Hon. John D., Paper by, 53.

Crispus Attucks, 110.

Croghan, George, 117.

Cromwellian and Williamite regimes, 29.

Cronin, Ensign Patrick, 98.

“Crossed the Delaware with Washington,” 120.

Cross of St. Louis, The, 109.

Cross, Lieut. William, 117.

Crowell, Thomas, an Irish schoolmaster in Brunswick, Me., 105.

Crowley, Lieut. Florence, Tribute to by Gen. Henry Knox, 93.

Crown Point, 35, 47, 102.

Cullen’s _Story of the Irish in Boston_, 92, 116.

Daly, Hon. Augustine J., mayor of Cambridge, Mass., 13.

Dame Nourse of Salem, 19.

Danaher’s _Early Irish in Old Albany, N. Y._, 90, 113, 143.

Danes at Clontarf, The, 137.

Dartmouth College, 42, 139.

Decatur, Stephen, marries a woman of Irish lineage, 94.

Declaration of Independence, 23, 27, 45, 98, 115, 146.

DeCourcy, Jordan, 28.

DeCourcy, Thomas, a native of Newport, R. I., 103.

“Dedham Plain,” Rendezvoused on, 91.

Definition of Witches, Leonard Scot’s, 16.

“De Iersman van Dublingh,” 113.

Delany, Sharp, a patriot of the Revolution, 115.

Delaware, John Haslett locates in, 112.

Denniston, Hugh, “a true Irishman,” of Albany, N. Y., 114.

Destruction of a British gunboat by the patriots, 25, 26.

Dexter, Bridget, 28.

Dexter Family in Ireland, The, 28, 29.

Dexter, George, 28.

Dexter, John, “born in 1639 and probably in Ireland,” 28.

Dexter-Mac Jordans, The, 28, 29.

Dexter, Richard, one of Boston’s Irish pioneers, 28.

Dexter, Stephen, “of the Parish of Templemurry, County Limerick,” 29.

Dexter, Thomas, “of Cloyne, Cork,” 29, 31.

Dexter, William, “likewise of Templemurry,” 29.

“Died of wounds received at Bunker Hill,” 109.

Dijon, Harold, Paper by, 16.

Dillon, Count Arthur, 120.

Dillon, Regiment of, 89, 101, 102, 120.

_Discoverie of Witchcraft_, 16.

Dobb’s Ferry, Conference at, 56.

_Documents Relating to the Colonial History of the State of New York_, 121.

Donegal, Ireland, 92, 97, 100, 102.

Dongan, Gov. Thomas, of New York, 53, 94, 104.

Dongan, Thomas, John and Walter, 104.

Donnaldson, John, “son of Hugh Donnaldson of Dungannon, Ireland,” 105.

Donnelly, Terence, town schoolmaster of Newport, R. I., 89.

Donovan, Capt. John, of the Rhode Island merchantman _Abby_, 91.

Donovan, Maj. Matthew, of the Ninth Virginia regiment in the Revolution, 91.

Dorrance, Rev. Samuel, an Irish clergyman, pastor of a church in Voluntown, Conn., 112.

Dover, N. H., Extracts from the records of, 71.

Dowling, Dick, the Confederate hero of Sabine Pass, 140.

Down, Ireland, 159.

“Doyle was voted 1,860 pounds of tobacco,” 102.

Doyle, Thomas, a Virginia trooper, 102.

Drake, Gen. Madison, Paper by, 23.

Drogheda, Ireland, 94.

Dromore, Ireland, 76.

Dublin, Ireland, 89, 98, 99, 105, 108, 120, 123, 124, 126, 127, 136, 139, 148.

Duke of Orleans, 123.

Dungannon, Ireland, 105.

Dunkerron, Ireland, 76.

Dunlap, John, a patriot of the Revolution, 111.

Dunmanway, Ireland, 49.

Dutchess County, N. Y., 59.

Earl of Limerick, 104.

Earl of Ulster, John De Courcy, 28.

Early Irish schoolmasters in New Hampshire, 34, 35.

East Greenwich, R. I., Charles McCarthy, a founder of, 114.

_Ecclesiastical History of New England_, Felt’s, 119.

Elizabeth, N. J., _Evening Times_, 23.

Engagement with the British ship _Glasgow_, 104.

“Enlisted under Sullivan’s call,” 47.

Enniscorthy, Ireland, 88.

Enniskellen, Ireland, 123.

Execution of Robert Emmet, 48.

Executions of reputed witches and wizards in New England, 21.

Expedition against Savannah, 102.

Expedition against the Six Nations, 67.

Fanning, Dominick, of Limerick, exempted from pardon by Ireton, is beheaded, 107.

Fanning, Edmund, a victim of the Cromwellian confiscation, settles in Groton, Conn., 107.

Felt’s _Ecclesiastical History of New England_, 119.

Fermanagh, Ireland, 89, 123.

First child of Irish parentage born in Woburn, Mass., 113.

First City Troop, of Philadelphia, 98, 100, 105, 109, 111, 114, 118.

Fitzgerald, Lord Edward, 48.

Fitzgerald, Miss Marcella A., 82.

“Fitzgeralds, O’Neills and O’Briens,” The, 12.

Fitzgerald, Thomas, a midshipman during the Revolution, 90.

Fitzsimons, Christopher, of Charleston, S. C., 96.

Flynn, John, a Connecticut soldier of the Revolution, 90.

Fort Griswold, The massacre of, 119.

“Fort Herkimer in the Mohawk valley, N. Y.,” 100.

Fort William and Mary, Seizure of the powder at, 66, 67.

France, The Irish brigade in the service of, 120.

Franklin, Dr., 125, 128.

Fredericksburg, Battle of, 39, 138, 181, 182.

French and Indian War, 111.

Friendly Brothers of St. Patrick, 55, 56.

Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, New York, 57, 58, 121, 147, 151, 157.

Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, of Philadelphia, 110, 123.

“From Bandon in Ireland,” 101.

“From Strabane, Ireland,” 104.

From “Yrland in de Kings county,” 113.

Fullerton, George, “a native of Ireland,” 98.

Fyne, Jan, “van Waterfort in Irlandt,” 109.

Gaine, Hugh, 131.

Galway, Ireland, 32.

Gates, General, 118.

“Gave good dinner parties, and had choice old wines upon the table,” 121.

_Genealogical Dictionary_, Savage’s, 30.

General Assembly of Rhode Island, 89, 104, 114.

“General Knox, commanding the American artillery,” 24.

_Generals of the Continental Line in the Revolutionary War_, 103.

Germantown, Battle of, 67, 105, 111, 118.

Gettysburg, Battle of, 144, 155, 164.

Girard, Stephen, 130, 131.

Glover, Goody, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22.

Goodwin Children, Goody Glover is charged with afflicting the, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22.

_Goody Glover, an Irish Victim of the Witch Craze, Boston, Mass., 1688_, 16.

Greaton’s regiment, 97.

Greene, General, 67, 96, 116.

Greene, Rudolphus, an Irish school teacher in New Hampshire, 101.

Haggerty, Hugh, of the Commander-in-Chief’s Guard, 113.

Hamilton, John, “an Irish servant-man,” 115.

Hand, Gen. Edward, 93.

Harrison, Hannah, 106.

Harrison, President William Henry, 106.

Hartford, Conn., William Collins teaches school at, 119.

Haslett, John, a soldier of the Revolution, 112.

“Having been banished out of Ireland was reported as strongly affected to popery,” 101.

Henry, Patrick, 49.

“Her one cat was there, fearsome to see,” 21.

Hessians are surprised at Trenton, 120.

“He was an honor to the country that gave him birth,” 107.

“He was in the public service of Maryland for nearly 40 years,” 108.

Hibernia Fire Company of Philadelphia, 110.

Hibernian Society of Philadelphia, The, 98, 110, 123, 130.

“His daughter, Anne, married one of the Hamptons,” 96.

_History of King Philip’s War_, Bodge’s, 102, 103.

Hogan, William, an early settler of Albany, N. Y., 113.

Hotten’s _Original Lists_, 104, 105.

House of Commons, Irish, 126, 127.

Hutchinson, Anne, banished from Boston, 119.

“I made application in a letter written in seven languages,” 75.

“In De Burgo’s time,” 29.

Indians, Treaty proceedings with the, 106.

“Inherited the military spirit of his ancestors and transmitted it to his posterity,” 38.

“In 1661 he bought of the Indians the last twenty acres they owned on Milford Neck,” 96.

Ireland, “And some returned to,” 119.

Ireland, Commodore Perry’s mother a native of, 122.

Ireland, First funds for Rhode Island College were obtained in, 93.

Ireland, John Ring of the kingdom of, 100.

Ireland, Ten ships from, arrive at Boston in 1736 and 1738, bringing nearly 1,000 passengers, 93.

Ireland, The ship _Sally_ arrives at Boston from, 90.

Irish Academy, Royal, 154.

Irish ancestors of President Roosevelt, 12.

Irish ancestry, People of, 102.

Irish brigade in the service of France, 120.

Irish brigade, Meagher’s, 136, 138, 139, 144, 181, 182.

Irish Catholic Benevolent Union, 138.

Irish Catholics stood, Oppressions under which the, 125.

Irish Dexters, The, 28, 29.

Irish “do flock into town,” 112.

Irish-French regiment of Dillon, 89, 101, 102, 120.

Irish-French regiment of Walsh, 91, 109.

Irish Grove. Settlement known as, 83.

Irish House of Commons, 126, 127.

Irish immigrants, Five ships arrive in Boston harbor, 1718, with, 92.

Irish in Boston, Cullen’s work on the, 92, 116.

Irish Independence, Movement for, 48.

Irish in Salem, Mass., Early, 91.

Irish in the Third New York regiment of the Line, 117.

Irish kingdom of Connaught, 29.

Irishmen in this country, One of the earliest, 112.

Irish names found in Connecticut at early periods, 117, 118.

Irish nation, St. Patrick patron of the, 57.

Irish Pioneer of California, An, 82.

Irish pioneers, Richard Dexter, one of Boston’s, 28.

Irish principality of Meath, 29.

Irish Roman Catholic, Gov. Thomas Dongan, an, 53.

Irish schoolmasters in New Hampshire, 34, 35.

Irish sent to Jamaica, 116, 117.

Irish settlement, A thriving, 83.

Irish soldiers in King Philip’s War, 97, 102, 103.

Irish trader at Fort Pitt, An, 98.

Irish transported to America, 116, 117.

“Irish who were conveyed to Virginia, Barbadoes and other parts,” 104.

Irish victim of the witch craze, An, 16.

Irvine, Gen. William, of the Revolution, 123, 145.

Isidore de Lynch, “an intrepid Irishman,” 109.

“It is scituate on mistik syde nere the south springe,” 30.

Jamestown, N. Y., James Prendergast founder of, 61.

Jamestown, N. Y., The James Prendergast Free Library at, 61.

Jamestown, Va., Francis Maguire arrives at, 112.

Jan Andriessen, “the Irishman,” 113.

Jefferson, Thomas, 68, 109, 122.

Johnson, Sir William, 39, 117.

Jones, John Paul, 94, 95, 96, 105.

Jones, Teague, a resident of Yarmouth, Mass., as early as 1645, 113, 114.

Jones, Thomas, “from Strabane, Ireland,” 104.

Jordan Teutonicus, 28.

Kaine, Patrick, an American marine who served under Esek Hopkins, 104.

Kaley, Hon. Timothy, 49, 50.

Kavanagh, Edward, acting governor of Maine, 107.

Kavanagh, James, came to Boston during the Revolution, 107.

“Keen as an Irish greyhound,” 117.

Keiley, Hon. Anthony M., 137, 138.

“Kelly and Burke and Shea,” 34, 50, 51, 52.

Kellyburg, Kellyvale, and Kelly Grant, 44.

Kelly, Capt. Warren Michael, “great-great-grandson of Darby Kelly,” 39.

Kelly, Col. Moses, 45

Kelly, Darby, an early New Hampshire settler, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40.

Kelly Hill, New Hampton, N. H., 37.

“Kelly, Huntoon and Bowdoin,” 37.

Kelly, James, one of the grantees of Holderness, N. H., 43.

Kelly, John, of New York, is granted nearly 100,000 acres in Vermont, 44.

Kelly, John, “one of the selectmen of Salem,” N. H., in 1775, 44.

Kelly, John, “who came to Newbury, Mass., in 1635,” 32, 41, 42.

Kelly, Joshua, one of the proprietors of Conway, N. H., 46.

Kelly, Maj.-Gen. Benjamin F., “great-grandson of Darby Kelly,” 38.

Kelly, Maj. Nathaniel, “grandson of Darby Kelly,” 38.

Kelly, “Old Master,” 122.

Kelly, Richard, “a grantee and one of the first settlers of Contoocook, now Boscawen,” N. H., 41.

Kelly, Roger, of the Isles of Shoals, 32, 33, 34, 42.

Kelly, Samuel, “planned and built the first meeting-house in town,” 37.

Kelly’s Falls, 45.

Kelly, William, of “the alarm list of the town of Warner,” N. H., in 1777, 42.

Kerry, Ireland, 76, 104, 141.

Kildare, Ireland, 101.

Kilkenny, Ireland, 59, 98, 119, 120, 136.

“Kilkenny scholar,” The, 119, 120.

Killoween, Ireland, 76.

King Philip’s War, 97, 102, 103, 114.

Kinsale, Ireland, 157.

Kinsmen of Governor Dongan, 104.

Knox marches his men in from Harlem as far as “Bowery Lane,” 56.

Lady Penelope O’Connor, 29.

Lafayette, Marquis de, 123, 125, 127, 128, 133.

Lake Chautauqua, N. Y., 59.

Lake Erie, British are defeated on, 122.

“Larchmont,” Reception to the Society by George W. Taylor at, 14.

_Le Jason_ of the fleet of Count De Ternay, 91.

Leonard, Patrick, a soldier of the Revolution, 111.

_Les Combattants Francais De La Guerre Americaine_, 92, 97, 101.

Lexington, Concord and Cambridge, Battle of, 13.

Lexington, Mass., Official letter from Chairman George W. Taylor of the Selectmen of, 15.

Limerick, Ireland, 29, 31, 70, 75, 77, 107.

_Life of Commodore Perry_, Mackenzie’s, 122.

Lightfoot, Susannah, a native of Ireland, 103.

Long Island, Battle of, 106, 111, 112.

_Long Island Genealogies_, Bunker’s, 104.

Lord Edward Fitzgerald, 48.

Lords of Athleathan, 29.

Lyon, Matthew, “the Hampden of Congress,” 122.

Lyons, Rev. Mr., an Irish clergyman, locates at Derby, Conn., 119.

McCartee, Thomas, of Hartford, Conn., 89.

McCarthy, Charles, a founder of East Greenwich, R. I., 114.

McCarthy, Capt. Charles, 76.

McCarthy, Capt. Owen, 76.

McCarthy, Col. Florence, 76.

McCarthy, Dermod, of Killoween, 76.

McCarthy, Joan, 76.

McCarthy, Reagh, 76.

McCarthy, Thomas, of the Commander-in-Chief’s Guard, 100.

McCarty, David, a member of the Committee of Safety, Albany, N. Y., 106.

Macarty de Marteigue, 95.

McCormick, Daniel, of New York city, 121, 123.

McFinnen, The title of, 76.

McGinnis, John, a New York soldier of the Revolution, 90.

Mac Jordan-Dexters, The, 28.

McKean, Hon. Thomas, 98.

McLaughlin, Patrick, a soldier of the Revolution, taken prisoner by the British, 97.

McMullen, Patrick, a marine during the Revolution, serving under John Paul Jones, 105.

McNee, William, an early settler of Peterborough, N. H., 109.

McSweeney, Capt. Edmund, 76.

McSweeney, Col. Owen, 76.

Macomb, Alexander, 121, 123.

Maguire, Constant, “of County Fermanagh,” Ireland, 89.

Maguire, Francis, arrives at Jamestown, Va., with Capt. Christopher Newport, 112.

Mahoney, Honora, of Dromore, 76.

Maine, Edward Kavanagh, acting governor of, 107.

Mallins, Mary, “from Bandon in Ireland,” 101.

Malvern Hill, Battle of, 181.

Marquis de Chastellux, 118.

Marquis de Lafayette, 125, 127, 128.

Marye’s Heights, 144, 155, 181, 182.

Maryland, The Carrolls of, 105.

Mason and Dixon’s line, 38.

Massachusetts cities, Mayors inaugurated in 1905 in, 135.

Massachusetts General Court, 33, 68.

Massachusetts Historical Society, 17, 68.

Massacre at Fort William Henry, 36.

Massacre of Fort Griswold, The, 119.

_Master John Sullivan of Somersworth and Berwick, And His Family_, 63.

“Masters Knox and Crocker, natives of Ireland,” 96.

Mather, Cotton, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22.

Mather, Increase, 17.

Matthias Alexis de Roche Fermoy, 103.

_Mayflower_, The, 102.

Mayo, Ireland, 28, 29.

Mayor Daly of Cambridge, Mass., 13.

Meade, Andrew, “a Kerry Irishman,” 104.

Meade, Col. Richard Kidder, 104.

Meagher’s Irish brigade, 136, 138, 139, 144, 181, 182.

Mease, John, a patriot of the Revolution, 120.

Mease, Matthew, a patriot of the Revolution, 94.

Meath, Ireland, 29.

Membership roll of the Society, 152.

_Memoirs of an American Lady_, 94, 108.

Mexican War, 135, 136.

Merchants’ Coffee House, New York, 58.

Mohawk valley, N. Y., 100.

Molly Pitcher, “a young Irishwoman,” at the Battle of Monmouth, 116.

Monmouth, Battle of, 27, 113, 116, 123, 142.

Mooney, David, Land patent granted to, 117.

Mooney, Hercules, 35, 38, 42, 46, 72.

Morgan’s Rifle Corps, 120.

_More Wonders of the Invisible World_, Calef’s, 17.

Morris, Robert, 127.

Montgomery, General, 117, 144.

Mount Vernon, 127.

Moylan, Jasper, 114.

Moylan, John, 114.

Moylan, Stephen, 108, 114.

Munster, Ireland, 29.

Murphy, Brian, a soldier in King Philip’s War, 103.

Murphy, Martin, Sr., an Irish pioneer of California, 82.

Nantucket, Mass., Extract from the records of, 89.

Narragansett campaign (1675), 91.

Narragansett Indians, 113.

Necrology, 147, 186.

Neal, Jeremiah, a soldier in the Narragansett campaign, 91.

Neale, Samuel, of Dublin, 101.

Neill, Capt. Daniel, an artillery officer of the Revolution, 23.

Neill, Owen, sustains losses by the British attack on New London, Conn., 90.

New Hampshire, Darby Kelly, an early settler in, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40.

New Hampshire, Early Irish schoolmasters in, 34, 35.

New Hampshire Historical Society, 70, 81, 150.

New Hampshire, Patriotism of, in the Revolution, 41.

New Hampshire, Tenth regiment of, in the Civil War, 38.

New Hampshire, The Clogston family of, 109.

New Hampshire Veteran Association, 150.

New London, Conn., British attack on, 90.

New Jersey, First Constitutional Convention of, 98.

New Jersey _Journal and Political Intelligencer_, 24.

New Jersey, Provincial Congress of, 23, 24.

Newport, Captain Christopher, 112.

Newport, R. I., George Berkeley’s arrival at, 119, 120.

Newport, R. I., Mason’s _Reminiscences of_, 100.

Newport, R. I., Terence Donnelly, a schoolmaster of, 89.

New York _Gazette_, 54, 55, 56.

New York _Genealogical and Biographical Record_, 28.

_New York in the Revolution_, 98, 99, 100, 117.

New York regiment of levies, Colonel Malcom’s, 98.

New York State Assembly, 61, 62.

New York State Library, 142.

New York, The British evacuate, 56.

Ninth Connecticut Volunteer Infantry, 154.

“No family in the state has the equal of this illustrious record,” 68.

Nourse, Rebecca, 19, 22.

O’Brien, John M., a Rhode Island soldier of the Revolution, 100.

O’Brien, Michael Morgan, 109.

O’Connor, Armand, of the Irish-French regiment of Walsh, 91.

O’Connor, Lady Penelope, 29.

O’Donnell, Rev. James H., 112, 115, 117, 118.

O’Dougherty, Bryant, in Salem, Mass., in 1683, 91.

O’Driscoll, Jacques, an officer in the Irish-French regiment of Walsh, 93.

Officers of the Society, 5, 6, 7.

O’Gorman, Charles, an officer of the Irish-French regiment of Walsh, 97.

O’Killia, David, “the Irishman,” of old Yarmouth, Mass., 96.

Old Elm, The (in Cambridge, Mass.), 13.

“Old Master” Kelly, an Irish school teacher in Rhode Island, 122.

_Old Merchants of New York_, Barrett’s, 121.

Old North Church, Boston, 16, 18.

_Old Orchard Mirror_, 106.

Old Orchard, Me., Patrick Googins, a young Irish weaver, settles at, 106.

Olney, Col. Jeremiah, of Rhode Island, 92.

O’Mahony, Abbe Bartholomew, chaplain of the French warship _L’Ivelly_ during the American Revolution, 97.

O’Neill, Bernard, of the Irish-French regiment of Dillon, 102.

O’Neil, Thomas, saves the life of Franklin Pierce, 135, 136.

“One of a party of forty-eight settlers,” 114.

One of the earliest Burkes to settle in America, 92.

“One of the earliest Irishmen in this country of whom we have record,” 112.

“On scouting duty in Penacook,” N. H., 42.

“Orderly to the General,” Patrick Burke, 95.

Oregon trail, The, 85.

Original members of the Charitable Irish Society, 114.

Orleans, Duke of, 123.

Ormsby, John, an Irish trader at Fort Pitt, 98.

O’Sullivan, Daniel, lord of Dunkerron, 76.

O’Sullivan, Madam, 77.

O’Sullivan, Major Philip, 70, 77.

Otsego patent, 100,000 acres, is granted to George Croghan and others, 117.

Paget, Henry, “an Irish gentleman much respected,” 91.

Patton, John, a native of Ireland, colonel of the Sixteenth Pennsylvania regiment in the Revolution, 110.

Peisley, Mary, a native of Kildare, 101.

Pennsylvania, Bank of, 131.

Pennsylvania Line, Eighth regiment of the, 96.

Pennsylvania Line, Second brigade of the, 123.

Pennsylvania, Senate of, 131.

Pennsylvania, University of, 108.

Perry, Christopher R., of Rhode Island, 122.

Philip, the Indian king, 97, 102, 103.

Pierce, Franklin, is saved by Thomas O’Neil, 135, 136.

Pitcher, Molly, at the battle of Monmouth, 116, 142.

Platte Purchase, The, 83.

Prendergast, Col. Henry A., 62.

Prendergast, Col. William, 61.

Prendergast, James, founder of Jamestown, N. Y., 61.

Prendergast, Martin, associate judge of Niagara County, N. Y., 61.

Prendergast, Matthew, participated in the battle of Black Rock, 62.

Prendergast, Miss Helen, Paper by, 59.

Prendergast, Thomas and Mary, 59.

Prendergast, Thomas, John and Stephen, early settlers of Barnstead, N. H., 42.

President Buchanan, 92.

President Cleveland, 137, 138, 148.

President Jefferson, 109, 122.

President Roosevelt, 136, 137, 139, 140, 141, 144.

President William Henry Harrison, 106.

Princeton, Battle of, 27, 105, 111, 113.

Proctor’s regiment of artillery, 27, 111.

Prophesied that “Goody Glover would be hung,” 18.

Providence, R. I., George Taylor prominent in, 107.

Provincial Congress of New Jersey, 23, 24.

Provincial Congress of Massachusetts, 31.

Putnam, Gen. Israel, 31.

Quaker Blues, The, 92.

Quakers come from Ireland, 101.

Quakers persecuted in Boston, 101.

Quirk, Thomas, “a brave and fine looking Irishman,” 93.

_Rambles Around Portsmouth_, Brewster’s, 44.

Rancho de Las Animas, 86.

Rancho San Francisco de las Llagas, 86.

Reade, Michael, of Dover, N. H., 74, 75.

Reception to the Society at Cambridge city hall, 13.

Reception to the Society at the Lexington town hall, 13.

_Redemptioners and Indentured Servants in the Colony and Commonwealth of Pennsylvania_, 115.

Regiment of Dillon, 89, 101, 102, 120.

Regiment of Walsh, 91, 93, 94, 97.

_Reminiscences of New Hampton_, N. H., 35, 36, 37, 40.

_Reminiscences of Newport, R. I._, Mason’s, 100.

Review of the Year, 135.

Rhode Island, Battle of, 42, 89.

Rhode Island campaign, The, 67.

Rhode Island College, 93, 108.

Rhode Island Continental Line, Edward Fitzgerald, a soldier of the, 99.

Rhode Island, General Assembly of, 89, 104, 114.

Rhode Island, George Berkeley’s arrival in, 119, 120.

Rhode Island, “Old Master” Kelly, an Irish school teacher in, 122.

_Richard Dexter, One of Boston’s Irish Pioneers_, 28.

Ring, John, “of the Kingdom of Ireland,” 100.

“Roger Kelly, the ancient magistrate and taverner,” 32.

Rogers, Hester, Patrick Googins marries, 106.

Roosevelt, President, 136, 137, 139, 140, 141, 144.

“Rough Riders,” The, 143.

Rutledge, Edward, 146.

“Sadly perplexed and befooled Cotton Mather,” 18.

Salem, “The terrible work of blood in,” 18.

San Juan Bautista, Mission of, 86, 87.

San Ysidro ranch, 86.

Sappers and Miners, Corps of, 89.

Saratoga, Battle of, 122.

Savage’s _Genealogical Dictionary_, 30.

Savannah, Attack on, 120.

Scales, John, of Dover, N. H., Paper by, 63.

Schuyler, Cortlandt, marries a handsome Irish woman, 108.

“Scored to death and did not give up his religion, which same I will hold to,” 17.

“Seized the truncheon of the king’s officer,” 33.

Selectmen of “the towne of Yarmouth returne the name of Teague Jones for not coming to meeting,” 114.

“She and her husband were sold to the Barbadoes in the time of Cromwell,” 17.

“She died a lunatic, frightened to death,” 18.

Sheldon’s Continental Light Dragoons, 90.

“She took up her residence on the island of Rhode Island,” 119.

Shute, Governor, 30.

Siege of Boston, 41, 111.

Siege of Limerick, The, 70.

Siege of Yorktown, 89, 120.

Six Nations, Expedition against the, 67.

Sligo, Ireland, 147.

“So shall wee be bound to pray as we desire dayly to doe for yr prsptie & peace temporall & Eternall,” 30.

Spain, War with, 136, 143, 160.

Stamp Act Congress, 100.

Stark, General, 45, 46.

State Council of Censors, 123.

State Vice-Presidents of the Society, 6, 7.

St. Clair, General, 111, 120.

St. Mary’s churchyard, Philadelphia, 134.

St. Patrick’s Day, Some Early Celebrations of, 53.

Stiles’ _History and Genealogies of Ancient Windsor, Conn._, 90.

Stillwater, Battle of, 120.

Storming of Stony Point, 106, 120.

Stony Hill tract, 18,000 acres, is granted to Michael Byrne and others, 117.

Strabane, Ireland, 104.

Stuart, Christopher, “an Irishman and soldier of the Revolution,” 106.

Stuyvesant, Peter, 121, 123.

Sullivan, Benjamin, a son of Master John Sullivan, 65.

Sullivan, Capt. Ebenezer, a soldier of the Revolution, 69.

Sullivan, Daniel, a patriot of the Revolution, 65, 66.

Sullivan, Hon. George, attorney-general of New Hampshire, 68.

Sullivan, Gov. James, of Massachusetts, 63, 68, 69, 93, 157.

Sullivan, Gen. John, 34, 41, 45, 46, 47, 49, 66, 67, 68, 75, 93, 157.

Sullivan, Master John, Statement concerning himself, 75, 76.

Sullivan, Mary, fifth child of Master John and Margery (Browne) Sullivan, 69.

“Subscribed, in 1780, £10,000 in aid of the Patriot army,” 109.

“Surprised a British picket, took 36 prisoners, 60 muskets, and two pairs of colors,” 112.

Surrender of Yorktown, 109.

Sutter, J. A., “that grand old pioneer,” 85.

“Taught school there for over twenty years,” 105.

Taylor, George, an Irish signer of the Declaration of Independence, 115.

Taylor, George W., chairman of the Lexington board of Selectmen, 13, 14, 15.

Taylor, John M., “keen as an Irish greyhound,” 117.

Templemurry, Ireland, 29.

Temple, Robert, arrives at Boston in 1717 with a party of Irish Protestants, 106.

Tenth New Hampshire regiment in the Civil War, 39.

“That glorious band of brothers,” 126.

Thayer, Capt. Simeon, of Providence, R. I., 117.

“The affair at the Cedars,” 91.

_The First Commencement of Rhode Island College_, 93.

“The gentlemen of Ireland,” 54.

“The Irish do flock into town,” 112.

“The golden milestone of life,” 83.

“The last Commander of old Kent,” 98.

“The last of the cocked hats,” 120.

“The magistrates, long annoyed by the presence of an obstinate Papist in Boston, ordered Goody Glover to be taken into custody,” 19.

The magistrates visit Goody Glover in prison, 20.

“The man of truth,” 106.

“The patriots secretly moved in another direction to fall upon the British at Princeton,” 120.

“The petition of Many Inhabitants of Malden and Charlestown on Mestickside,” 30.

“The Proof Against Her Was Wholly Deficient,” 17.

“The Sullivan family is one of the most notable families in the history of New England,” 65.

“The western province of Ireland,” 35.

“There was a great concourse of people to see if the Papist would relent,” 20, 21.

“There were many Irish in the command,” 98.

“They chained the Papist till she could not move,” 19.

“They put other chains on Glover,” 19.

“The three polite Irishmen,” 114.

“They were men of energy and substance,” 32.

“They were thrifty, prosperous and leading citizens in the towns in which they settled,” 34.

“Thomas the Irishman,” 121.

“Thursday, March 1, 1770, went to Malachi Murfee’s,” 108.

Ticonderoga, 44, 46, 99, 122.

Tipperary, Ireland, 138.

“To seize the personal effects of traitors,” 115.

“To transport to America 500 natural Irishmen,” 116.

Tracy, Patrick, a Rhode Island soldier who was killed in the assault on Quebec, 117.

“Traveling in wagons and on horseback,” 60.

Trenton, Battle of, 27, 105, 111, 120.

Trinity College, Dublin, 105.

Tuchin, Symon, master of the _Due Return_, 101.

Ulster, Ireland, 28.

United States, Supreme Court of the, 98.

University of Pennsylvania, 108.

Valley Forge, 113.

Virginia, Francis Maguire arrives in, 112.

Virginia, General Assembly of, 108.

Virginia Historical Society, 143.

Virginia Light Dragoons, First regiment of, 96.

Virginia officers in the Revolution, 115.

Virginia, “Poll list for the election of burgesses for the County of Prince William,” 112.

Virginia records, Symon Tuchin mentioned in the, 101.

Walsh, Regiment of, 91, 93, 94, 97.

Washington, General, 13, 56, 67, 102, 104, 113, 116, 118, 120, 123, 127, 133, 143.

Waterford, Ireland, 48.

“Went in defense of the nation against Orange,” 76.

Wreath placed on the monument in Lexington by the Society, 13, 14, 15.

“Wrote an account of his voyage to Virginia and submitted it to the Privy Council of Spain,” 112.

Yorktown, Surrender of, 109.

“Your letter by Thomas the Irishman has just been received,” 121.

Footnote 1:

Died Sept. 19, 1905.

Footnote 2:

Died March 18, 1905.

Footnote 3:

Of Baltimore, Md. This paper is reproduced, by permission, from the _Ave Maria_, of Notre Dame, Ind., in which publication it recently appeared under the title “A Forgotten Heroine.”

Footnote 4:

That there be no interruption to this narrative, let it be said that the facts relating to Mrs. Glover have been gleaned from Cotton Mather, Upham, Drake, Moore, Owens, Calef, Cartrie, and papers of the Massachusetts Historical Society.

Footnote 5:

Of Elizabeth, N. J. This paper was originally contributed to the Elizabeth _Evening Times_, Jan. 27, 1905.

Footnote 6:

Colonel Proctor was a native of Ireland.

Footnote 7:

General Knox was born in Boston of Irish parentage.

Footnote 8:

Of New York. President-General of the Society. This paper is from Mr. Crimmins’ recent work, _Early Celebrations of St. Patrick’s Day_.

Footnote 9:

Of Mayville, Chautauqua County, N. Y. A descendant of William Prendergast, the pioneer.

Footnote 10:

This paper was prepared by Mr. Scales for the New Hampshire Historical Society, and was read by him before that body. It is here republished by permission.

Footnote 11:

At A meeting of the Select men in Dover the 20^{th} of May 1723 ordered that 2 Schoolmasters be Procured for the Towne of Dover for the year Ensuing, and that ther Sallery Exceed not £30 Payment a Peece and to attend the Directtions of the Select men for the Servis of the Towne in Equi’ll Proportion.

Test

Thomas Tebets, Towne Clark

At the Same time Mr. Sullefund Exseps to Sarve the Towne above^{sd} as Scoole master three months Sertin and begins his Servis y^e 21^{th} Day of May 1723, and also y^e S^d Sullefund Promised the Selectmen if he left them Soonner he would give them a month notis to Provide themselves with a nother, and the Select men was also to give him a month notis if they Disliked him.

Test.

Thomas Tebbets, Towne Clark.

Dover Town Records, A. D. 1723.

Footnote 12:

This name has also been rendered Darby.—EDITOR.

NOTE. As Master John Sullivan here states that he was the son of Major Philip O’Sullivan, his own name was, therefore, originally O’Sullivan. At what period, and under what circumstances he dropped the “O,” is not now known.—ED.

Footnote 13:

This sketch was written by Miss Fitzgerald, for the American-Irish Historical Society, at the request of the Knights of St. Patrick of San Francisco. The latter organization is, collectively, a life member of the Society. Miss Fitzgerald is a granddaughter of Mr. Murphy, the pioneer here mentioned, and resides in Gilroy, California, in the beautiful Santa Clara valley.

Footnote 14:

Grandson of Mathew Carey. This memoir is mainly compiled from a paper contributed by Mr. Baird to _The American Bookseller_, New York City.

TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES

1. Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling. 2. Anachronistic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings retained as printed. 3. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_. 4. Enclosed bold font in =equals=. 5. Superscripts are denoted by a caret before a single superscript character or a series of superscripted characters enclosed in curly braces, e.g. M^r. or M^{ister}.