AN ANALYTICAL INDEX.
- A British raid on Warren, R. I., [130].
- A brother of the Baron Kinsale settles in Newport, R. I., [127].
- Absurd claims of the imaginative “Scotch Irish” cult, [23].
- Adams, John, is hospitably treated by Irish merchants in Spain, [34].
- A defective “tradition,” [114], [115].
- “A distinguished officer of dragoons,” [36].
- Adjutant-General Sackett of Rhode Island. 17.
- Admiral Lord Nelson’s animosity towards the Americans, [85].
- A Dublin ship bound to Virginia is lost at sea, [67].
- “A few miles southwest of Fort Hamilton, N. Y.,” [71].
- “A Forecast of Irish Influence on American Life,” [26].
- “After that it went through Chantilly, South Mountain and Antietam,” [27].
- “Ah, the Baron of Kinsale is dead!” 127.
- Alarm, The Lexington, [50], [53].
- Albany, N. Y., Early Irish in old, [138].
- Albany, N. Y., Irish in an early military organization of, [64].
- A letter from Dr. Lucas of Ireland read at a town meeting in Boston, [68].
- Alexander, Sarah, The romance of, [137].
- “A liberal mixture of Irish blood,” [31].
- Alien and sedition laws, [89], [90].
- “Allan Mullins, surgeon, son of Dr. Alexander Mullins of Galway, Ireland,” [58].
- Allen, Ethan, kindness of people of Cork to, [34].
- Alphabetical list of those who have contributed papers to the Society, or who have made addresses under its auspices, [141].
- Ambassador Baron Speck von Sternberg, Letter to the Society from, [24].
- Ambassador Cambon, [15], [19].
- Ambassador Jusserand writes to the Society, [24].
- American Academy of Social and Political Science, [157].
- American colonies, Irish teachers in the, [71].
- American Continental army, [23], [36], [52].
- American-Irish Historical Society, Chronology of the, [7].
- American-Irish Historical Society, General information regarding the, [176].
- American-Irish Historical Society, Membership roll of the, [146].
- American-Irish Historical Society, Officers of the, [5].
- American-Irish Historical Society, Papers by members of the, [30].
- American-Irish Historical Society, Presidents-General of the, [145].
- American-Irish Historical Society’s papers and addresses, [134].
- American-Irish Historical Society’s publications, [139].
- American Oriental Society, [160].
- American Revolution, Irish Rhode Islanders in the, [22].
- American Revolution, Sons of the, [160], [174].
- Americans take possession of Boston, [64].
- Amory’s Transfer of Erin, [122].
- A native of Dublin, Ireland, the first settler of Ashfield, Mass., [49].
- “A native of Ireland who had become a wealthy planter in Virginia,” [53].
- “Ancient County of Albany, N. Y.,” [58]-59.
- Ancient patrimony of the Maguires, [126].
- Andrew, Governor, of Massachusetts, [27].
- Andrews, E. Benj., [20].
- An early Irish settler on Cape Cod, Mass., [159].
- “Anglo-Saxon” fallacy, The, [22].
- An “honest and industrious set of people,” [63].
- An Introductory Note, [3].
- An Irish colony of sixteen families, [71].
- An Irish company from Massachusetts in the war with Mexico, [16].
- An Irish immigration took place in 1643 “that far out-numbered the Plymouth colony in Massachusetts,” [51].
- An Irish lord exiled to the continent, [124].
- “An Irishman and one of the oldest settlers in this vicinity,” [52].
- “An Irishman from Philadelphia,” William Nugel, [75].
- “An Irishman who hated England with a ten-horse power,” [105].
- An Irish member of the party of “Long Hunters,” [101].
- An Irish Protestant clergyman is hanged at his own door, [90].
- An Irish Quaker, Samuel Neale, visits America, [57].
- Annals of the Four Masters, [116].
- Annals of Trinity Church, Newport, R. I., [129].
- Anniversary celebration by the Society of the surrender of Cornwallis, [25].
- Anniversary of the evacuation of Valley Forge, [23].
- Annual meetings and dinners of the Society, [7], [12], [22], [25].
- Antiquarian research, Irish, [17].
- Antiquaries of Ireland, Royal Society of, [148].
- Antietam, Battle of, [10], [27].
- Antrim, Ireland, [33], [71], [110], [126].
- A “plantation in the Narragansett and Niantick countries,” [117].
- Archælogical Society of America, [160].
- Archdiocese of Boston, Mass., Roman Catholic, [147].
- Archdiocese of Philadelphia, Pa., Roman Catholic, [171].
- A real estate deed in 1665 witnessed by Cornelius Conner, [56].
- A Rhode Islander becomes an Irish baron, [127].
- Armagh, Ireland, [83].
- Army and Navy Club of Connecticut, [158].
- Army at Valley Forge, The, [65].
- Army of the Potomac, [28].
- Arnold’s expedition to Quebec, [70].
- Arnold’s Narragansett Historical Register, [120].
- Arnold, Susannah, weds John Malavery, [117].
- Arnold’s Vital Record of Rhode Island, [131].
- Arrival at Salem, Mass., in 1795, of a brig from Ireland with 89 emigrants, [63].
- Arrival of the Charlotte, in 1774, from Waterford, Ireland, with 100 passengers, [62].
- Arundel, William, “an Irishman from Canada,” [102].
- A ship from Ireland, with 428 passengers, arrives in 1798 at Norfolk, Va., [89].
- “As soldiers in the Indian wars,” [109].
- Assault on Santiago de Cuba, Capt. John Drum killed in the, [22].
- “A thorough and most impudent falsehood,” [114].
- “At length it was proposed that a colony of Irish might be sent over to check the growth of this countrey,” [77].
- Attack on Marye’s Heights at Fredericksburg, The, [27], [149], [171], [172].
- Attempt by England to divert emigration from the United States, [91].
- Austin’s Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island, [110].
- A vessel sent to Ireland from the Massachusetts Bay Colony for provisions, [78].
- A vessel with Irish passengers, bound for Virginia, touches at Boston, [76].
- A “useful and prominent citizen for 60 years,” [62].
- A voyage from Belfast, Ire., to Wilmington, Del., [88].
- “A young lady named Pine, the daughter of an Irish gentleman,” [56], [57].
- Bacon’s rebellion, [39].
- Baker, Miss Virginia, of Warren, R. I., [70], [137].
- Ballard, Rachel, marries Cornelius Merry, an Irishman, [70].
- Bandon, Ireland, [123].
- Bantry, Ireland, [22], [118].
- Barbadoes, Irish in, [32], [67], [70].
- Barrett, David L., Death of, [14].
- Barry, Capt. John B., commands an Irish company in the war with Mexico, [16].
- Barry, Commodore John, [138].
- Barry, Hon. P. T., A paper by, [95].
- Battery Drum, [22].
- Battery Kearny, [23].
- Battery Sullivan, [23].
- Battle flags of the Irish Brigade, [28].
- Battle monument at Lexington, Mass., The Society places wreaths on the, [9], [14].
- Battle near Fort George, [55].
- Battle of Antietam, [10], [27], [171].
- Battle of Blue Licks, [104].
- Battle of Brandywine, [62].
- Battle of Bull Run, [10], [27], [34].
- Battle of Bull Run, Second, [149].
- Battle of Bunker Hill, [53], [136].
- Battle of Chancellorsville, [35], [171].
- Battle of Chantilly, [27].
- Battle of Clontarf, [113].
- Battle of Fair Oaks, [10].
- Battle of Fredericksburg, [10], [27], [28].
- Battle of Gaines’ Mill, [10].
- Battle of Gettysburg, [10], [14], [149], [156].
- Battle of Glendale, [10].
- Battle of Guilford Court House, [35].
- Battle of Lexington, Concord and Cambridge, Celebrations by the Society of the anniversary of the, [9], [14].
- Battle of Long Island, [100].
- Battle of Malvern Hill, [10], [149], [171].
- Battle of Maumee Rapids, [104].
- Battle of Monmouth, [100].
- Battle of New Orleans, [91], [137].
- Battle of Peach Orchard, [10], [150].
- Battle of Point Pleasant, [37].
- Battle of Princeton, [53], [59].
- Battle of Queenstown Heights, [90].
- Battle of Resaca, [170].
- Battle of Rhode Island, Celebration by the Society of the anniversary of the, [11], [17], [18], [19], [20].
- Battle of Saratoga, [53].
- Battle of Savage’s Station, [10].
- Battle of South Mountain, [27].
- Battle of the Thames, [90].
- Battle of Tippecanoe, [39], [100].
- Battle of Trenton, [53].
- Battle of White Oak Swamp, [10].
- Baxter, James Phinney, [20].
- Belfast, Ire., [63], [88].
- Belfast, Ire., to Wilmington, Del., Incidents of a voyage from, [88].
- Bennett, Hon. Charles P., Secretary of State of Rhode Island, [17].
- Berkeley, George, “the Kilkenny scholar,” [74].
- Bequest by Sir William Johnson to Patrick Daly, [63].
- Bethell, Jarvice, “late of Ireland,” locates at Boston (in 1714), [68].
- Black Horse Inn, The, [59], [107].
- Blue Licks, Battle of, [104].
- Bodge’s Soldiers in King Phillip’s War, [131].
- Boies family, The, of Blandford, Mass., [47].
- Boies, Hon. Patrick, of Hampden county, Mass., [47].
- Boies, James, writes in 1749-’50, from Cork, Ire., to Samuel Waldo of Boston, Mass., [62].
- Boies, Patrick “came up from Hartford,” [47].
- “Bold and hardy actions in ye Indian war,” [76].
- Boone, Daniel, [39].
- Boston Globe, [13], [20], [158].
- Boston Herald, editorial in the, [9].
- Boston Massacre, The, [68].
- Boston, Mass., Extracts from the Records of, [66], [67], [68], [75].
- Boston, Mass., Supplies brought from Ireland to, [78].
- Boston, Mass., The ship Lime arrives from Ireland at (in 1738), [78].
- Boston News Letter, [72], [76].
- Boston Transcript, [16], [76].
- Boston University, [7].
- “Bound from Ireland to Philadelphia,” [68].
- Boyd, Andrew, clerk of the company of Kentish Guards, [127].
- Boyds of Rhode Island, Early, [126], [127].
- Boyd, Sarah (Moore), [126].
- Boyle, Mayor, of Newport, R. I., [16], [147].
- Brady, Thomas, Exploits by, [102].
- Brandon, Edward J., Mention of paper by, [134].
- Brandywine, Battle of, [62].
- Breed, Samuel, an immigrant from Ireland, [63].
- Brennan, Hon. James F., Mention of paper by, [135].
- Brennan, Rev. Edward J., is appointed a chaplain in the U. S. navy, [12].
- Brenton, Ex-Governor, [114].
- Brenton, Sarah, [114].
- “Bridget, daughter of James and Bridget Cary,” [60].
- Brig Eliza arrives at Portland, Me., from Ireland, [63].
- Bristol, R. I., Baptisms at, [60].
- British armed vessel Gaspee destroyed, [69].
- British army at Yorktown, Surrender of the, [25].
- British evacuate Boston, [64].
- Brown University, [11], [19], [135], [144], [166].
- Bryant, William Cullen, [45].
- Buchanan, President James, [75].
- “Built the first grist mill,” John Ford, [46].
- Bulkeley, Hon. Morgan G., [23].
- Bull, Congressman, of Rhode Island, [11], [20].
- Bull Run, Battle of, [10], [27], [34].
- Bunker Hill, Battle of, [53], [136].
- Bunker Hill Monument Association, [10], [147].
- Burk, John Daly, [34].
- Burke, Edmund, Death of (Milwaukee, Wis.), [23].
- Burke, Governor of North Carolina, [59], [74].
- Burke, Major John, [46].
- Burns, Thomas, “and Bridget, his wife,” [31].
- “Burn, waste, spoil, consume, destroy, and demolish,” Lord Ormund is ordered to, [115].
- Butler, Abigail, of New London, Conn., [58].
- Butler, Thomas, settled in Kittery, Me., (before 1695), [67].
- Caldwell, Rev. James, a patriot of the Revolution, [136].
- California, Irish Pioneers of, [137].
- Callahan, Dorothy, of Barbadoes, [70].
- Cambon, Jules, French Ambassador, [15], [19].
- “Came from Kinsale in Cork,” [33].
- Campbell, Col. John, “an Irishman by birth,” [101].
- Canada, Invasion of, [77].
- Canonicus, an Indian sachem, [113].
- Cape Ann, Mass., Irish survivors of a shipwreck brought to, [71].
- Cape Cod, Mass., Charles Clinton and friends are landed there “inadvertently or by design,” [71].
- Cape Breton expedition, [66].
- Capen, President, of Tufts College, [7].
- Capitulation, in 1763, of Quebec, [96].
- Captains of Emigrant ships, Many unscrupulous, [88].
- Capt. Hugg’s Western Company of Artillery, [65].
- Capt. Marsh’s Troop of Light Horse, [65]
- Capture of Fort William Henry, [53].
- Capture of Ticonderoga, [69], [70].
- Carey, Mathew, [89], [90].
- Carey, Rev. Patrick P., of New York, nominated by President Roosevelt to be a chaplain in the army, [14].
- Cargill, Hugh, a friend of liberty, [136].
- Carleton, Sir Guy, [96].
- Carnsore Point, [110]
- Carrickfergus, Ireland, [115].
- Carroll, Bishop, [86].
- Carroll, Hon. John Lee, [7].
- Carroll, Michael, sells land in Hartford, Conn, (in 1728), [53].
- Casey, Col. William, a native of Virginia, [39].
- Casey, John, a participant in King Philip’s war (1675-’76), [61].
- Casey, Thomas, a Rhode Island settler, [114], [115], [116].
- Catholic Church in Colonial Days, The, [59].
- Catholic religious confraternities in St. Augustine, Florida (in 1674), [59].
- “Catholics, Presbyterians, Quakers and Episcopalians were united like a band of brothers,” [72].
- Catholic Summer School (Cliff Haven), [146], [156].
- Catholic Transcript, Hartford, Conn., [70].
- Catholic University of America, [7], [141], [153].
- Celebration at the Narragansett hotel, Providence, R. I., by the society, [17], [18], [19], [20].
- Celtic-American Publishing Co., [146].
- Celtic Medical Society, of New York, [146], [170].
- Centipede, The privateer, [67].
- Chadwick, Patience, weds Edward Kenney at Newport, R. I., [131].
- Chamberlain, Governor, of Connecticut, [23].
- Chancellorsville, Battle of, [35], [171].
- Chantilly, Battle of, [27].
- Chapin, Henry, in 1684 sells land to John Riley, [45].
- Chapman, Elizabeth, of New London, Conn., [61].
- Charitable Irish Society, Boston, Mass., [57], [166].
- Charleston, S. C., Sunday News, [20].
- Cherokee nation, The, [37].
- Chester, Mass., settled almost entirely by Irish, [48].
- Chevalier Macarty, an officer in the French service, [95].
- Chevalier Rocheblave, [99].
- Chicago Citizen, The, [146], [154].
- Chicago Eagle, [152].
- Chronology of the Society, [7].
- Cincinnati, Society of the, [18], [60], [137], [166].
- Clancarthy, [123], [124].
- Clan O’Brien, The, [138].
- “Clark affiliated very closely with the Irish,” [99].
- Clarke, Joseph I. C., Mention of address by, [138].
- Clark, Frances Eleanor, [100].
- Clark, George Rogers, [99], [100], [101], [102], [104], [107].
- Clark University, [7], [142].
- Clary, John, “of Newcastle, province of New Hampshire,” [149].
- Clary Family Reunion, The, [149].
- Clifford, Bridget, comes from Ireland, 1635, in the Primrose, [51].
- Clinton, George, governor of New York, [71].
- Clonakilty, Ireland, [124].
- Clontarf, Battle of, [113].
- Cloyne, Ireland, [74].
- Cochran, James, an Irish boy, escapes from the Indians, [76].
- Coddington, William, of Rhode Island, [109].
- Codmans, The, descended from William Cod, who came from Ireland, [53].
- Coffey, John J., Letter from, [27].
- Coffey, Michael J., a color sergeant of the Twenty-eighth Massachusetts, [27].
- Coleraine, Ireland, [58], [65], [70].
- Collections of the Georgia Historical Society, [58].
- Collins, Mayor, of Boston, Mass., [12], [13], [149].
- “Color sergeant of this green flag,” [27].
- Colonial Wars, Society of, [147], [160].
- Colorado state library, [24].
- Colt, Hon. LeBaron B., [20].
- Colony of Connecticut, First regiment of the, [55].
- Columbia College, An Irishman professor at, [90].
- Conanicut, Michael Kelly of the island of, [112], [113], [114].
- Condon, Edward O’Meagher, Paper by, [138].
- Congratulations between the American-Irish Historical Society and the Massachusetts Society of the Sons of the Revolution, [9].
- Congressman Henry F. Naphen presides at a celebration by the Society, [9].
- Congressman Melville Bull, of Rhode Island, writes to the Society, [11].
- Congressman Sperry of Connecticut, [23], [24].
- Congressional Library, The, [28].
- Connaught, Ireland, [113], [116], [124].
- Connecticut, Army and Navy Club of, [158].
- Connecticut Gazette, [68].
- Connecticut river, Keeney’s ferry over the, [64], [65].
- Connecticut Valley Historical Society, [157].
- Connecticut valley, Irish pioneers of the, [43], [138].
- Connolly, James, Mention of paper by, [146].
- Connolly, Thomas, “a fifer in the regiment of Col. George Rogers Clark,” [135].
- Connor, Philip, of Virginia, [39].
- Continental army, [23], [36], [52].
- Continental Congress, [66], [69], [74], [96].
- Conquest of the Northwest, [100].
- Corcoran, Hon. John W., Death of, [29].
- Corcoran’s Irish Legion, [17], [167].
- Cork, Ireland, [33], [34], [51], [52], [57], [62], [64], [67], [72], [73], [75], [76], [115], [122], [123], [124], [125].
- “Cornelius, the Irishman,” [52].
- Cornwallis, Surrender of, at Yorktown, [25], [100].
- Corr, Bernard, Mention of paper by, [134].
- Cosmopolitan Magazine, The, [7].
- Courier-Journal, Louisville, [154].
- Crane, Governor, of Massachusetts, [19].
- Crimmins, Hon. John D., volume by, [137].
- Croghan, George, [96], [97], [99], [100].
- Crowley, Death of Hon. Jeremiah (Lowell, Mass.), [11].
- Crowninshield, Sally, of Salem, Mass., [65].
- Crown Point, Expedition against, [76].
- Cromwellian Settlement of Ireland, Prendergast’s, [115].
- Cromwell’s atrocious regime in Ireland, [109].
- Cruelties of Lord Broghill in Ireland, [115].
- Cruelties of Sir Charles Coote in Ireland, [115].
- Cummins, Thomas J., Mention of paper by, [136].
- Curry, James, “the noble-hearted,” [103].
- Curtis’ Life of James Buchanan, [74].
- Cusack’s History of the City and County of Cork, [122].
- Cygnet, John Sullivan, purser of the, [61].
- Dailey, John, an early Rhode Island settler, [116].
- Dalrymple, James and Sarah, immigrants from Ireland, [63].
- Danaher, Hon. Franklin M., Mention of paper by, [138].
- “Darby ye Son of Darby and Elizabeth Mallonee,” [67].
- “Dark and Bloody ground,” The, [39].
- Dartmouth College, [161].
- Daughters of the American Revolution, [36].
- Daviess, Col. Joseph M., “who fell at Tippecanoe,” [39].
- Deane’s History of Scituate, Mass., [60], [71].
- Decatur, Stephen, [56], [57].
- Declaration of Independence, The, [49].
- Declaration of Lord Gosford and thirty magistrates, [83].
- DeCourcy, Thomas, a native of Newport, R. I., becomes an Irish baron, [127], [128].
- Dedication of the Rochambeau monument, at Washington, D. C., [15].
- Defection in a British regiment, [87].
- Defenders of Hickey’s Fort, [33].
- Derry, Ireland, [74].
- “Descended from old Daniel Cooley from Ireland,” [48].
- “Descendants of those early Irish settlers,” [48].
- Deserted Irish emigrants rescued by an American vessel, [88].
- “Despatched to Boston with a coach and four,” [71].
- Destriche, Father John, visits Irish Catholics in St. Kitts, [125], [126].
- Devereaux, James, of Salem, Mass., [65].
- Dexter, Richard, a pioneer of Boston, Mass., [137].
- Diary of Rev. Ezra Stiles, [62], [69].
- Dillons, The, of Newport, R. I., [129].
- Diocese of Duluth, Minn., Roman Catholic, [163].
- Diocese of Great Falls, Mont., Roman Catholic, [160].
- Diocese of Los Angeles, Cal., Roman Catholic, [149].
- Diocese of Sioux City, Ia., Roman Catholic, [155].
- Diocese of Springfield, Mass., Roman Catholic, [157].
- Diocese of Wilmington, Del., Roman Catholic, [164].
- “Direful Swamp fight,” [73].
- Dobbs, Gov. Arthur, of North Carolina, [60].
- Doherty, Rev. Francis B., of California, nominated by President Roosevelt to be a chaplain in the army, [14].
- Dominicana, San Francisco, Cal., [25].
- Donahoe, Patrick, of Boston, [27].
- Donegal, Ireland, [75].
- Dongan, Gov. Thomas, [62], [137].
- Donnelly, Hon. Ignatius, [7].
- Donohoe, Col. Michael T., of the Tenth New Hampshire, [42].
- Donohoe, Major Thomas, of the Revolution, [60].
- Dorothy Callahan, of Barbadoes, [70].
- Down, Ireland, [90].
- Doyle, Rev. A. P., Mention of paper by, [7].
- Drake’s American Biography, [66].
- Drake’s Boston, [78].
- Drake’s French and Indian War, [66], [69].
- Drake’s Town of Roxbury, Mass., [65], [72].
- Driskell, Mary, of Barbadoes, [70].
- Drum, Capt. John, killed, [22].
- “Driven by foul weather upon the coast of Ireland,” [109], [110].
- Dublin, Ireland, [49], [51], [53], [57], [61], [66], [67], [68], [71], [74], [109], [110], [129], [174].
- Dunlap, Robert, an immigrant from Ireland (in 1736), [71].
- Dunleary, Ireland, [88].
- Eames, Gilbert, dies at Newport, R. I., [129].
- Early Boyds of Rhode Island, [126], [127].
- Early Immigration from Ireland to New England, [109].
- Early Irish settlers in Virginia, [30].
- Early Larkins of Rhode Island, [110], [111].
- Early Maguires of Rhode Island, [126].
- Early records of Springfield, Mass., [45].
- Early Rileys in Connecticut, [51].
- East Greenwich, R. I., Charles MacCarthy a founder of, [57], [117], [118], [119], [120], [121], [122], [123], [124], [125], [126].
- Eaton’s Annals of Warren, Me., [73].
- Eighth South Carolina regiment, [34].
- Elder, Samuel and Robert, come from Ireland (about 1730), [55].
- Ellis, Richard, a native of Ireland, the first settler of Ashfield, Mass., [49].
- Emmet, Robert, Search for the grave of, [22].
- Emmet, Thomas Addis, attorney-general of New York state, [90].
- Emmet, Thomas Addis (M.D., LL.D), New work by, [25].
- Emmet, Thomas Addis, Mention of paper by, [135].
- England attempts to divert emigration from the United States, [91].
- “England’s failure in Ireland,” [9].
- English are defeated at New Orleans, [91].
- English, Hon. Thomas Dunn, Death of (Newark, N. J.), [14].
- English penal laws in Ireland, [82], [83], [84], [86].
- English policy of extermination, [109].
- Enniskillen, Ireland, [126].
- Essentials of American History, Thomas B. Lawler’s, [16].
- Essex Antiquarian, The, [56].
- Excursion of the Society to Washington, D. C., [15].
- Executive Council of the Society, [5], [6].
- “Ever green isle,” The, [44].
- “Even worse than being called ‘Scotch-Irish,’” 44.
- Fair Oaks, Battle of, [10].
- “Falls Fight,” The, [46].
- Faneuil Hall, Celebration in, [11].
- Farmer’s Genealogical Register, [57], [59], [73].
- Farrelly, Patrick, Death of (New York), [26].
- Faunce, President, of Brown University, [11], [19].
- Fawcett, Thomas, Irish Quaker, American pioneer, [137].
- Fermanagh, Ireland, [126].
- Fellowship Club, The, [59].
- Felt’s Annals of Salem, Mass., [56], [57], [62], [63], [67].
- Fenian movement, The, [167].
- Flatley, Death of Patrick J. (Boston, Mass.), [11].
- Flatley, Rev. John, Death of (Cambridge, Mass.), [22].
- Field-day of the Society at New Haven, Conn., [23], [24].
- Field, Richard, of Newport, R. I., [129].
- First Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteers, in the war with Mexico, [16].
- First Regiment of the Pennsylvania line, [61].
- First settlers of Granville, Mass., almost all from Ireland, [48].
- Fitzgerald, Capt. John, [36].
- Fitzgerald, Elizabeth, daughter of the Earl of Kildare, [123].
- Fitzgerald, Miss Margaret A., Mention of paper by, [137].
- Fitzgerald, Richard, “a veteran Latin schoolmaster,” [71].
- Fitzpatrick, Edward, Papers by, [134], [135].
- Fitzsimons, Hon. James M., Death (New York), [26].
- Foreign Wars, Military Order of, [147].
- Forfeiting proprietors in Ireland, [124].
- Fort Amory, [165].
- Fort Cahokia, [96].
- Fort Chartres, [95], [96], [97].
- Fort Foster, [165].
- Fort Gage, [103].
- Fort Miami, [97].
- Fort Parke, [165].
- Fort Pitt, [96], [97].
- Fort Pulaski, [155].
- Fort St. Joseph, [102].
- Fort Stephenson, [100].
- Fort Ticonderoga, The Ruins of, [16].
- Fort William and Mary, [134].
- Fort William Henry, Capture of, [53].
- Fourth Virginia regiment, [100].
- Francis V. Mott (Newport, R. I.), [20].
- Fredericksburg, Battle of, [10], [27], [28].
- French Ambassador Cambon, [15],19.
- French Ambassador Jusserand, [24].
- French and Indian wars, [54].
- French colonists on the St. Lawrence, [84].
- French Embassy, Washington, D. C., The Society attends a reception at the, [15].
- French Legion of Honor, [155].
- Frelinghuysen’s Eastern Company of Artillery, [59].
- Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, New York, [72].
- Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, Philadelphia, [72].
- “From Cork in Ireland,” [76].
- “From Dublin, in the brig Darby,” [68].
- “From early colonial days the Irish have been one of the great factors in our growth as a nation,” [24].
- “From the days of Sullivan in the Revolutionary War to those of Sheridan in the Civil War,” [24].
- Frothingham’s Charlestown, Mass., [78].
- “Funds were collected and arms promised,” [89].
- Gaines’ Mill, Battle of, [10].
- Galway, Ireland, [35], [56], [58], [78], [109], [110], [118].
- Gardiner, Asa Bird, addresses the Society, [18], [137].
- Gargan, Hon. Thomas J., Papers and addresses by, [135], [136].
- Garret and Miles Riley who came from Ireland in 1634, [51].
- Garretson, Mayor, welcomes the Society to Newport, R. I., [11].
- Garrison, Mary, weds Timothy Murphy, [69].
- Gaspee, Destruction of the, [69].
- Genealogies and Estates of Charlestown, Mass., Wyman’s, [57], [58], [59], [62].
- Gen. John Sullivan and the Battle of Rhode Island, [16].
- Geoghegan, Stephen J., Death of (New York), [24].
- Georgia Historical Society, [58].
- German Ambassador Baron Speck von Sternberg, [24].
- Gettysburg, Battle of, [10], [14], [149], [156].
- Ghent, Treaty of, [91].
- Gibault, Father, [99].
- Gibbs, Capt. Daniel, brings 381 passengers from Ireland in 1737, in the ship Sagamore, [67].
- Glendale, Battle of, [10].
- Gookin, Daniel, comes from Ireland (about 1621), [67].
- Governor Andrew of Massachusetts, [27].
- Governor Arthur Dobbs of North Carolina, [60].
- Governor Burke of North Carolina, [59], [74].
- Governor Chamberlain of Connecticut, [23].
- Governor Crane of Massachusetts, [19].
- Governor Gregory of Rhode Island, [11].
- Governor Jefferson of Virginia, [34].
- Governor John Winthrop of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, [78].
- Governor Jordan of New Hampshire, [19].
- Governor Kimball of Rhode Island, [17].
- Governor Thomas Dongan of New York, [62].
- Grace (O’Dea) Riley, [51].
- Granary Burial Ground, Boston, Inscriptions from the, [66].
- Grand Army of the Republic, [156], [161].
- Grant of land in 1663 to Cornelius Merry, an Irishman, [70].
- Granite Monthly, The, Concord, N. H., Article in, [23].
- Grannon, Ky., The town of, [8].
- Grant of land to Cornelius, “the Irishman,” [52].
- Grattan, Henry, the Irish orator, [130].
- Grattan, Mrs. Lucia C., widow of Colonel Grattan, [130].
- Greaton, Gen. John, of the Revolution, [76], [77].
- Great Swamp fight, [61].
- Greene, Christopher, of Warwick, R. I., [127].
- Greene, Edward Aborn, [19].
- Gregory, Governor, of Rhode Island, [11].
- Greyhound Tavern, The, [77].
- Griffin, Martin, I. J., [74], [157].
- Griswold, Hon. Edward, [24].
- Guilford Court House, Battle of, [35].
- Hall, Edward A., Springfield, Mass., Paper by, [43].
- Hall, G. Stanley, Address by, [7], [136].
- Hall of Records, New York, [8].
- Hamilton, David, an Irish soldier of the Revolution, [52], [135].
- Harkins, Rt. Rev. Matthew (D. D.), Providence, R. I., [17].
- Harper, President, of the University of Chicago, [7].
- Harvard College, [142].
- Harvey, General, an Irish commander, [90].
- Heath’s regiment, [76].
- Hefernan, William, an early Rhode Islander, [112].
- Heffernan family, The Stem of the, [112].
- Henry, John J., “was with Arnold’s expedition to Quebec,” [70].
- Henry, Patrick, [99], [102].
- Henry, William, from Ireland, establishes a manufactory of arms in Pennsylvania, [65].
- “He was an Irishman and had been a member of the parliament of that country,” [59].
- Hibernian Institute, New York, [21].
- Hibernia, Regiment of, [113].
- Hickey’s Fort, Defenders of, [33].
- Higgins, Cornelius, buys land in Rhode Island (in 1682), [60].
- Higgins, Owen, an early resident of Newport, R. I., [117].
- Hillhouse, Rev. James, an Irish settler in Connecticut, [69].
- Hillhouse, William, an officer in the Revolution, [69].
- “His father, an Irishman, had been a clothier in Dublin,” [66].
- History of Springfield, Vt., [62].
- History of the City and County of Cork, Cusack’s, [122].
- History of the Ninth Regiment, Connecticut Volunteer Infantry, [24].
- Hoar, U. S. Senator George F., [19].
- Hogan, Very Rev. Abbe John Baptist, Death of, [11].
- Holden, Susannah, weds Lawrence Carroll at Newport, R. I., [131].
- Holland’s History of Western Massachusetts, [48].
- Hooper, Elizabeth, weds John Mulholland at Newport, R. I., [130].
- Hopkins, William, Death of, [20].
- Hotel Brunswick, Boston, Dinner of the Society at, [9].
- Hotel Manhattan, New York city, Events of the Society at, [12], [15], [22], [25].
- Hotten’s Lists, [31], [32], [42], [67], [70].
- “How History is Taught in Secular Universities,” [21].
- Humphries, Edward, “from Ireland,” [60].
- Hurley, Hon. John F., ex-mayor of Salem, Mass., [24].
- Hutchinson, Selectman, of Lexington, Mass., welcomes the Society, [14].
- Hyde’s Literary History of Ireland, [122].
- Illinois, The first Irish in, [95].
- Immigrants arrive at Portland, Me., from Ireland, [63].
- “Inasmuch as I am myself of part Irish blood,” [24].
- Indians massacre Virginia settlers, [31].
- Infamous mandate issued to Lord Ormund, [115].
- Intentions of marriage posted up “at the meeting-house door,” [64].
- Interesting reminiscences of Newport, R. I., [128], [129].
- Interstate Commerce Commission, [143].
- Invasion of Canada, [77].
- Irlanda, Regiment of, [113].
- Ireland, A letter from Dr. Lucas of, read at a town meeting in Boston, [68].
- Ireland, An emigrant ship from, is stopped by English frigates, [88].
- Ireland, Bridget, John and Oliver Glifford come from (in 1635), [51].
- Ireland, Cromwell’s atrocious regime in, [109].
- Ireland, Cruelties of Lord Broghill in, [115].
- Ireland, Cruelties of Sir Charles Coote in, [115].
- Ireland, Daniel Gookin comes from (in 1621-22), [67].
- Ireland, Deserted emigrants from, rescued by a passing American vessel, [88].
- Ireland, Emigrants from, drowned, [67], [70].
- Ireland, First settlers of Granville, Mass., almost all from, [48].
- Ireland, Forfeiting proprietors in, [124].
- Ireland from the Restoration to the Revolution, Prendergast’s, [122].
- Ireland, Garret and Miles Riley come from (in 1634), [51].
- Ireland, Harsh treatment shown many emigrants from, [88].
- Ireland, Heavy emigration from, to France, [82].
- Ireland in New York, [137].
- Ireland, Large numbers of people leave, for the United States between 1790 and 1812, [82].
- Ireland makes a determined effort to shake off English tyranny, [84].
- Ireland, Many estimates regarding direct immigration from, are far too low, [88].
- Ireland, Massachusetts towns called after places in, [47].
- Ireland, Over 60,000 people transported from (between 1652 and 1658), [84].
- “Ireland parish,” [45].
- Ireland, Persecuted Irish leave, for Scotland, [83].
- Ireland, Persons in, meet to confer about their voyage to New England, [110].
- Ireland, Philip and Mary Connor come from Cork (in 1634), [51].
- Ireland, Presbyterians in, excluded from power and position, [83].
- Ireland, Robert Farrell comes from (in 1720), [52].
- Ireland, Savage fury of English soldiery in, [115].
- Ireland, Ships from, greatly crowded, [88].
- Ireland, Supplies brought to Boston from, [78].
- Ireland, Supplies from, for the Massachusetts Bay Colony, [78].
- Ireland, The Bacons from, [134].
- Ireland, The ship Lime arrives at Boston in 1738 from, [78].
- Ireland, Towns in western Massachusetts settled almost entirely by people from, [47].
- Ireland Under English Rule—A Plea for the Plaintiff, [25].
- Irish Academy, Royal, [148], [150].
- Irish-American memorials, Loan collection of, [26], [27], [28].
- Irish antiquarian research, [17].
- Irish Brigade, Meagher’s, [10], [27], [149], [170], [171], [172].
- Irish Brigade Association, [27], [28].
- Irish Catholics being refused permission to land in Virginia take possession of Monserrat, [125].
- Irish Catholics are falsely accused of a massacre, [114].
- Irish Catholics in St. Kitts visited by Father John Destriche, [123], [126].
- “Irish Charity,” The, [62].
- Irish colony, An, settles Greenwich, Mass., [45].
- Irish colors displayed at St. Kitts, [85].
- Irish company from Massachusetts in the war with Mexico, An, [16].
- Irish element in the composition of the American people, Tributes to the, [9], [10].
- Irish emigrants arrive at Salem, Mass., [63].
- Irish emigrants drowned near Fisher’s Island, [70].
- Irish emigrants meet disaster at the Isle of Sable, [71].
- Irish enlist in the service of France, [82].
- Irish fishermen visit the shores of Newfoundland, [86].
- Irish Gimlet, A brig called the, [70].
- Irish historical literature, [17].
- Irish immigrants from British North America, [86], [88].
- Irish immigrants from Newfoundland, [86], [87].
- Irish immigrants from the West Indies, [84], [86].
- Irish immigration in 1643, Large, [51].
- Irish immigration to the United States since 1790, [80].
- Irish in America before the Revolution, The, [21].
- Irish in a New Hampshire regiment (in 1756), [76].
- Irish in a Virginia regiment commanded by Washington, [73].
- Irish influence on American life, [26].
- Irish in Illinois, The first, [95].
- Irish in Montserrat, [85].
- Irish in Newfoundland form a plan to expel the English from the island, [86], [87].
- Irish in old Albany, N. Y., Early, [138].
- Irish in the West Indies sympathize with the American Revolution, [85].
- Irish Jasper Greens, [155].
- Irish Landed Gentry when Cromwell Came to Ireland, [17].
- Irish Legion, Corcoran’s, [17], [167].
- Irish linens, poplins, muslins, sheetings and beef advertised for sale at Newport, R. I., [129].
- Irish Lynns of Antrim, The, [33].
- Irishmen of Pelham, Mass., issue a patriotic address in 1773, [49].
- Irish merchants in Spain extend hospitable treatment to John Adams, [34].
- Irish names in Rhode Island (previous to 1776), [131].
- Irish of Lancaster county, Pennsylvania, The, [58].
- Irish passengers are seized and placed aboard English frigates, [88].
- Irish passengers are treacherously landed on the island of Inagua, [88].
- Irish passengers bound for Virginia, [53], [67], [76].
- Irish passengers embark for Barbadoes in the Alexander (1635), [70].
- Irish passengers on the Welcome with William Penn, [73].
- Irish passengers sail for Philadelphia, [71], [75].
- Irish patriots emigrate to Newfoundland, [84], [86].
- Irish Pedigrees, O’Hart’s, [17], [112], [116], [122].
- Irish pioneers in Glen, N. Y., return to Ireland, [71].
- Irish pioneers of California, [137].
- Irish pioneers of the Connecticut Valley, [43].
- Irish Presbyterians excluded from power and position, [83].
- Irish Presbyterian settlers of Pelham, Mass., [49].
- Irish Quaker, An, Samuel Neale, [57].
- Irish rebellion of 1798, The, [62].
- Irish regiments in the Spanish service, [113].
- Irish “restorees,” Mention of, [125].
- Irish Rhode Islanders in the American Revolution, [22].
- Irish schoolmasters in Warren, Me., [73], [74].
- Irish sentiment in the Royal Newfoundland regiment, [87].
- Irish settlement of Londonderry, N. H., The, [49], [52].
- Irish settle Montserrat, [125].
- Irish settlers in Glen, N. Y., [71].
- Irish settlers in Kittery, Me., [66], [67].
- Irish settlers in Rhode Island, [109].
- Irish settlers in Salem, N. Y., [55].
- Irish settlers in Virginia, [30].
- Irish settlers of Blandford, Mass., [47].
- Irish settlers of Chesterfield, Mass., [49], [50].
- Irish settlers of Chester, Mass., [48].
- Irish settlers of Granville, Mass., [48].
- Irish settlers of Palmer, Mass., [50].
- Irish settlers of Pelham, Mass., [49], [50].
- Irish settlers of Pittston, Me., [62].
- Irish settlers of Rowe, Mass., [48].
- Irish settlers of Shelborne, Mass., [49].
- Irish soldiers in the “Great Swamp fight,” [73].
- “Irish Soldiers in the Union and Confederate Services during the Civil War,” [21].
- Irish soldiers of the old French outposts, [99].
- Irish survivors of a shipwreck reach Canso, [71].
- Irish survivors of a shipwreck taken to Cape Ann, Mass., [71].
- Irish teachers in the American colonies, [71].
- Irish transported to Barbadoes, [70].
- Irish transported to the continent of North America, [109].
- Irish transported to the West Indies, [84], [109].
- Irish troops embark for Spain, [118].
- Irish Vanguard of Rhode Island, The, [109].
- Irish voyagers taken by a French privateer, [68].
- Irish Washingtons, The, [136].
- Isle of Sable, Irish emigrants meet disaster at the, [71].
- Isles of Shoals, Roger Kelley of the, [57].
- Jackson, Gen. Andrew, [39], [91], [137].
- Jackson, Hon. Charles, governor of Rhode Island, [57].
- Jackson, Stephen, “a native of Kilkenny, Ireland,” [57].
- Jan Andriessen, “de Iersman van Dublingh,” [22], [138].
- Jasper Greens, The, [155].
- Jefferson, Governor of Virginia, [34].
- Jones, Edward, solicitor-general of North Carolina, a native of Ireland, [58].
- John Riley and his wife Grace (who came from Ireland about 1624), [51].
- Johnson, Sir William, an Irishman, “of Johnson Hall, in the County of Tryon and Province of New York,” [63], [98].
- Jordan, Governor, of New Hampshire, [19]
- “Joseph Doyle from Rhode Island,” [75].
- Judith Carroll, Mention of (in 1775), [75].
- Jusserand, M., French Ambassador, writes to the Society, [24].
- Kansas State Historical Society, [73].
- Kaskaskia, [95], [96], [97], [98], [99], [101], [102], [103], [104], [105], [106].
- Kavanagh, Hon. Edward, of Maine, [58].
- Keeney’s ferry over the Connecticut river, [64], [65].
- Kelley, Mrs. Grace, of Providence, R. I., [61].
- Kelly, Capt. Warren Michael, [42].
- Kelly, Darby, “a soldier, a schoolmaster and a farmer,” [41].
- Kelly, Gen. Benjamin F., [41].
- Kelly, John, who in 1633 settled in Newbury, Mass., [51].
- Kelly, Michael, of the island of Conanicut, [112], [113], [114].
- Kelley, Rev. Erasmus, of Rhode Island, [129], [130].
- Kent, Pierce, Death of (New York), [20].
- Kentish Guards of Rhode Island, The, [127].
- Kentucky, The town of Grannon, [8].
- Kentucky, Death of Dennis H. Mulligan, an old resident of, [8].
- Kentucky, Hon. James H. Mulligan of, [8].
- Kerry, Ireland, [123].
- Kildare, Ireland, [121], [123].
- Kilkenny, Ireland, [57], [74].
- Killybegs, Ireland, [78].
- Kimball, Governor, of Rhode Island, [17], [20].
- Kindness of people of Cork to Ethan Allen, [34].
- King Philip’s War, [62], [118], [119], [131], [159], [160].
- “King Philip’s designs,” [112].
- Kingstown, Ireland, [88].
- Kinsale, Ireland, [33], [109], [118], [121], [124], [125], [127], [128].
- Kittery, Me, Early Irish settlers in, [66], [67].
- Knights of St. Patrick, New Haven, Conn., [23].
- Knights of St. Patrick, San Francisco, Cal., [136].
- Knox, Gen. Henry, of the Revolution, [57], [137].
- LaBussoniere, a French officer in the Mississippi valley, [95].
- Larkin, Edward, a settler as early as 1655 at Newport, R. I., [110], [111].
- Larkin, Edward, of Charlestown, Mass. (1638), [59].
- Larkins Early, of Rhode Island, [110], [111].
- Larrabee, Joanna, [79].
- Las Guasimas, Spanish Trenches of, [8].
- “Launching a Battleship from the Congressional Ways,” [13].
- Lawless, Hon. Joseph T., Mention of paper by, [135].
- “Leading men of the Bay,” Roger Williams the bearer of letters to, [72].
- Lear, Tobias, private secretary to Washington, [33].
- Lee’s surrender, [149].
- Lefferty, Bryan, attorney and private secretary to Sir William Johnson, [63].
- Letters to the Society from President Theodore Roosevelt, [18], [24].
- Lexington Alarm, The, [50], [53].
- Lexington, Battle of, [9], [134].
- Lexington, Mass., Historical Society, [14].
- Lewis family of Virginia, The, [36], [38].
- Librarian of Congress, The, [28].
- Limerick, Ireland, [61], [82], [113], [118], [129].
- Limerick, Regiment of, [113].
- Limerick, Treaty of, [82].
- Lincoln, Abraham, [10], [152].
- Lincoln’s first call for troops, [10].
- Linehan, Hon. John C., Paper by, [30].
- List of Persons Whose Names Have Been Changed, [74].
- Literary History of Ireland, Hyde’s, [122].
- Loan collection of Irish-American memorials, [26], [27], [28].
- Lochlin, Dennis, of Putney, Vt. (prominent in 1777), [55].
- Lodge’s Peerage of Ireland, [122].
- Londonderry, Ire., [165].
- Londonderry, N. H., The Irish settlement of, [49], [52].
- Longford, Ireland, [51], [71].
- Longevity of Irish settlers of Granville, Mass., [48].
- Long Island, Battle of, [100].
- Long, M. D., of O’Neill, Neb., Death of, [16].
- Louisiana Purchase Exposition, at St. Louis, Mo., [26], [27], [28].
- Loyal Legion, Military Order of the, [150], [158], [160].
- Lucretia, daughter of John Downing, [50].
- Lynn, Hon. Wauhope, Mention of paper by, [137].
- McAdoo, Hon. William, Addresses by, [135], [137].
- McCartee, Owen and Charles, Virginia pioneers, [32].
- MacCarthy, Charles, a founder of East Greenwich, R. I., [57], [117].
- MacCarthy, Cormac, “had been lord of Muskerry for 40 years,” [123].
- MacCarthy, Cormac Oge, becomes a viscount, [123].
- MacCarthy, Dermot, feudal lord and founder of the house of Muskerry, [123].
- MacCarthy, Donogh, is created Earl of Clancarty, [123].
- MacCarthys Glas, The, [118], [123].
- MacCarthys Reagh, The, [118], [123].
- MacCarthys, Many castles built by the, [123].
- MacCarthys Mor, The, [116], [118].
- Maccarty, Dennis, of Warren, R. I., [137].
- Maccarty, Florence, buys land in Roxbury, Mass, (in 1693), [65].
- McCarty, Capt. Page, [33].
- McCarty, Capt. Richard, “a resident of Cahokia,” [99].
- McCormick, Daniel, first president of the New York Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, [72].
- McCoy, Rev. John J., mention of paper by, [135].
- McCurtin, Daniel, at the siege of Boston, [68].
- McGee, Thomas D’Arcy, [107], [108].
- McGinnis, Capt. William, killed in battle, [55].
- McGinness, Col. John R., Ordnance Corps, U. S. A., [15].
- McGuinness, Bernard, Death of (Providence, R. I.), [13].
- McGuinness, Hon. Edwin D., Death of (Providence, R. I.), [9], [13].
- McGuire, Capt. Francis, an officer in the Revolution, [35].
- McGuire, Dr. Hunter, of Virginia, [35].
- McGuire, Rev. Francis D., Death of (Albany, N. Y.), [26].
- McKechnie, Rev. J. H., Death of (Worcester, Mass.), [12].
- McKeever, Capt. and Brvt. Lieut.-Col. Samuel, Death of (Somerville, Mass.), [15].
- McLaughlin, Thomas, an officer in Stark’s regiment at the battle of Bunker Hill, [64].
- “McLaughlin was made captain of the company the morning after the battle,” [64].
- McNamee, Mayor, of Cambridge, Mass., [14].
- McNulty, Rev. J. J., Death of (Boston, Mass.), [13].
- McMahon, Capt., an officer under Wayne, [37].
- McQuade, James, killed by Indians, [69].
- MacSparran, Rev. James, an early Irish clergyman of Rhode Island, [136].
- Machias, Me., The O’Briens of, [25].
- Mack, Mayor, of Elizabeth, N. J., [15].
- Macneven, William J., [90].
- Macoone, John, an early Rhode Island settler, [116], [117].
- Macroom, Ire., [124].
- Madison, President, [90].
- Magee, Capt. James, “a convivial, noble-hearted Irishman,” [72].
- Magoon family, The, [50].
- Magoon, Isaac, from Ireland, [50].
- Maguire, Bryan, baron of Enniskillen, [126].
- Maguire, Connor, attainted by British law, [126].
- Maguire, Constant, of Rhode Island, [126].
- Maguire, Thomas, lord of Fermanagh, [126].
- Maguires, Ancient patrimony of the, [126].
- Maguires of Rhode Island, Early, [126].
- Mahone, Gen. William, [42].
- Mahoney, Jane, weds (in 1750) John Clary, [149].
- Maine Genealogist and Recorder, [64].
- Maine Historical and Genealogical Recorder, [62], [63], [67].
- “Major Burke was clerk of the town for twenty-two years,” [46].
- “Major George Croghan,” [17].
- Malvern Hill, Battle of, [10], [149], [171].
- Malavery, John, an early resident of Providence, R. I., [117].
- Manners, customs and phrases of the mountaineers, [41].
- Many castles built by the MacCarthys, [123].
- “Many of the Prison ship martyrs were Irish,” [16].
- Mark, Patrick, of Charlestown, Mass. (in 1650), [62].
- Marye’s Heights, [27], [149], [171], [172].
- Maryland, First colonists to, [125].
- Maryland line, The, [68].
- “Mary ye Wife of Morgan Murphy,” [67].
- Mason and Dixon’s line, [42].
- Massachusetts Bay Colony, Supplies from Ireland for, [78].
- Massachusetts Historical Society, [74].
- Massachusetts Society of the Sons of the Revolution, [9].
- Massachusetts State Constitutional Convention, [152].
- “Massacre after massacre” by the English soldiery in Ireland, [115].
- Massacre ordered by English lords justices, [115].
- “Master John Sullivan and Family of Somersworth and Berwick,” [15].
- Mather, Increase, [69].
- Mather, Cotton, Sermon by, [77].
- Maumee Rapids, Battle of, [104].
- Maxwell, Benjamin, patriot of the Revolution, [54].
- Maxwell, Col Hugh, of the Revolution, [53], [54].
- Mayor Boyle of Newport, R. I., [16], [147].
- Mayor Collins of Boston, Mass., [12], [13], [149].
- Mayor Garretson of Newport, R. I., [11].
- Mayor Mack of Elizabeth, N. J., [15].
- Mayor McGuinness of Providence, R. I., [9], [13].
- Mayor McNamee of Cambridge, Mass., [14].
- Mayor Studley of New Haven, Conn., [23].
- Mayor Van Wyck of New York city, [8].
- Meagher’s Irish Brigade, [10], [27], [149], [170], [171], [172].
- Meath, Ireland, [116].
- Medal of Honor Legion, [166], [170].
- Membership roll of the American-Irish Historical Society, [146].
- Memorials, Loan collection of Irish-American, [26], [27], [28].
- “Men, women and children perished alike,” [115].
- Mexico, The war with, [17].
- Middletown, Ireland, [45].
- Michael and Bridget Phillips, children of Michael and Bridget, [60].
- Miles, Gen. Nelson A., [19], [150].
- Military History of New Hampshire, Adjutant-General’s Report, [66], [76].
- Military Order of Foreign Wars, [147].
- Military Order of the Loyal Legion, [150], [158], [160].
- Minute Men, [50], [53], [66].
- Mississippi valley, The, [95], [96].
- Monaghan, Lieut. David, of Col. Wm. Thomson’s regiment of rangers, [63].
- Monmouth, Battle of, [100].
- Montgomery, Capt. John, [101].
- Montgomery, Gen. Richard, [9], [10], [96].
- Montgomery tablet and monument, St. Paul’s church, Broadway, New York city, [10].
- Montserrat settled by Irish, [125].
- Monument unveiled at Elizabeth, N. J., to Hon. W. A. M. Mack, [15].
- Mooney, John A. (LL. D.), Death of (New York), [23].
- Moore, Col. James, of the First regiment, North Carolina Continentals, [61].
- Moore, Judge Maurice, [61].
- Moore, Roger, famous Irish chieftain, [68].
- Moore’s History of North Carolina, [58], [59], [60].
- Moran, Col. James, Mention of paper by, [137].
- Morrell, Lysbell, “an Irish woman,” [56].
- Morrison, Mrs. Robert, [105], [106].
- Mortimer, Capt. Philip, “who came from Ireland,” [71].
- Moseley, Edward A., Mention of paper by, [137].
- “Mostly Irishmen from Pelham and elsewhere,” [50].
- Mountcashel, [123].
- Moylan, John, patriot of the Revolution, [37].
- Moylan, Stephen, of the Revolution, [72].
- “Mr. Mark Lynch, merchant in Nantes,” [34].
- Mulligan, Dennis H., an old resident of Kentucky, [8].
- Mulligan, Hon. James H., of Kentucky, [8].
- Mundy, Death of Rev. John F. (Cambridge, Mass.), [7].
- Munster, Ireland, [123], [124].
- Murfey, Capt. John, of Newport, R. I., [129].
- Murfey, Phœbe, dies at Newport, R. I., [129].
- Murphy, Edward, of Newport, R. I., [129].
- Murphy, James, Death of (Lawrence, Mass.), [9].
- Murphy, John, of Salem, Mass., [65].
- Murphy, Timothy, a patriot of the Revolution, [69].
- Murray, Daniel, “an Irishman who supplied provisions for Clark’s Illinois army,” [104].
- Murray, Thomas Hamilton, Papers by, [55], [109], [134], [135], [136], [137], [138].
- Muskerry, [123], [124], [125].
- “My business here is to carry passengers and servants,” [62].
- “My three sisters’ three sons,” [117].
- Narragansett country, The, [117], [119].
- Narragansett Historical Register, [120].
- Narragansett Hotel, Providence, R. I., Dr. James E. Sullivan entertains the Society at the, [17], [19].
- “Nearly one half of the passengers perished,” [71].
- Nebraska, University of, [15], [20].
- Neil, John, “from Ireland,” [60].
- New England Historic, Genealogical Register, [69], [74], [78].
- New England Historic, Genealogical Society, [20].
- Newfoundland Irish serve on American privateers in the War of 1812, [88].
- New Hampshire Historical Society, [15].
- New Hampshire State library, [147].
- New Haven Colony Historical Society, [24].
- New Haven, Conn., The Society holds a field-day at, [23].
- New Jersey, Daniel Neil an artillery officer of, in the Revolution, [59].
- New Orleans, Battle of, [91], [137].
- Newport Historical Society, [20].
- Newport, R. I., marriages, Some, [130].
- Newport, R. I., Mercury, [129].
- New Ross, Ireland, [58].
- Newry, Ireland, [62].
- Newtonards, Ireland, [90].
- New Willard Hotel, Washington, D. C., Headquarters of the Society at the, [15].
- New York Chamber of Commerce, [146], [150].
- New York Court of Common Pleas, [151].
- New York, Fourth Heavy Artillery of (in the Civil War), [149].
- New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, [62], [65].
- New York, Greater, Charter Revision Commission, [150].
- New York Herald, [13].
- New York, One Hundred and Eleventh Infantry of (in the Civil War), [149].
- New York, Some marriage licenses issued in the province of, [75].
- New York State Civil Service Commission, [154].
- New York Produce Exchange, [153].
- New York State Constitutional Convention, [150].
- New York State Board of Law Examiners, [152].
- New York Sun, [9].
- New York Supreme Court, [18], [142], [143], [151], [167], [168].
- New York Volunteers, The Sixty-ninth, [10], [28], [34].
- Nineteenth Army Corps Association, [158].
- “Ninety-six of the ship’s company had died on the voyage,” [71].
- Ninth Connecticut Infantry (in the Civil War), [23], [24], [148], [158].
- Ninth Massachusetts Infantry in the Civil War, [20].
- North American Review, [13].
- North Carolina Foot, Sixth Regiment of, [60].
- North Carolina, Governor Dobbs of, [60].
- North Carolina, Provincial Congress of, [56], [59].
- “Not a child, were it but a hand high, was left alive,” [115].
- “Not a Tory in his town,” [53].
- Nugent, Gen. Robert, Death of, [10].
- O’Bannon, Capt. James H., of Virginia, [12].
- “Obnoxious to the royalists,” [77].
- O’Brien, Captain Laurence, Address by, [137].
- O’Brien, Kennedy, an early resident of Augusta, Ga., [58].
- O’Brien, Lucy Todd, [55].
- O’Brien, Nancy, of New London, Conn., [60].
- O’Briens of Machias, Me., The, [135], [138].
- O’Briens, The, of Machias, Me., [25].
- O’Brien, The Clan, [138].
- O’Brien, Very Rev. Michael C., Death of (Portland, Me.), [12].
- O’Connell, Capt. John, president of the Irish Brigade Association, [28].
- O’Dea, Margaret (who came to this country about 1624), [51].
- O’Donnell, Rev. James H., Norwalk, Conn. (quoted), [65], [69], [70], [71], [137].
- O’Donoghoe Mor, The, [123].
- O’Driscoll, Daniel M., Death of (Charleston, S. C.), [22].
- O’Driscoll, Daniel M., Mention of paper by, [135].
- O’Fallon, Col. John, [39].
- O’Fallon, Dr. James, of Virginia, [38].
- O’Fallon family of St. Louis, Mo., [38], [39], [100].
- O’Farrell, Capt. Patrick, Death of (Washington, D. C.), [22].
- “Of Galway in Ireland,” [56].
- Official Register of the Officers and Men of New Jersey in the Revolutionary War, [65].
- Officers of the Society, [5], [6].
- O’Flaherty, Dr. John, Death of (Hartford, Conn.), [168].
- O’Hanlon, Canon, of Ireland, [17].
- O’Hart, John, Death of (Dublin, Ire.), [16].
- O’Hart’s Irish Landed Gentry, [122].
- O’Hart’s Irish Pedigrees, [116], [122].
- O’Kelley, John, an Irish settler of Warren, R. I., [70].
- O’Kellys, The, eminent in Ireland, [113].
- O’Killia (O’Kelly), David, an Irish pioneer of Cape Cod, Mass., [159].
- Old Dominion, The, [30], [31].
- Olson, A. B., Denver, Col., [25].
- O’Mahoney, Rev. D. J., is ordered to the Philippines, [20].
- O’Malley, Thomas F., Papers by, [135], [136].
- O’Neal, Major Ferdinand, [36].
- O’Neil, Rev. James L., Death of (San Francisco, Cal.), [25].
- O’Neils of Maine change their names to Neil, [74].
- O’Neill, Captain “Bucky,” [7].
- O’Neill, James L., Paper by, [136].
- Ordnance Corps, U. S. A., Col. John R. McGinniss of the, [15].
- Ormonde, The house of, [67].
- Ormund, Lord, Mandate issued to, [115].
- O’Reilly, General, [104].
- O’Reilly, Francis C., Death of (Orange, N. J.), [8].
- O’Reilly, Mary Boyle, of Boston, Mass., [27].
- O’Shea, J. Augustus, [14].
- O’Shea, Marion, [14].
- O’Sullivan, Mor, The, [123].
- Over 4,000 acres allotted Major Thomas Quirk, [101].
- “Owned about 1,400 acres of the best land in Ware, Mass.,” [50].
- Oyster Bay, N. Y., [18], [24].
- Pan-American Exposition, [159].
- Papers and Addresses under the auspices of the American-Irish Historical Society, [139].
- Papers Relating chiefly to the Maryland Line During the Revolution, [68].
- Parole for the day; “Boston”; countersign; “St. Patrick,” [64].
- “Patrick and Richard Riley come to Windsor and Weathersfield, Conn., in 1639,” [51].
- “Patrick’s swamp,” [46].
- “Paymaster of the Third Regiment and also of the three companies of Light Horse,” [59].
- Peach Orchard, Battle of, [10], [150].
- Pearson’s Genealogies, [58].
- Peerage of Ireland, Lodge’s, [122].
- Pennsylvania Bar Association, [157].
- Pennsylvania Line, First Regiment of the, [61].
- Penn, William, on the ship Welcome, [73].
- “People of Consequence,” [73].
- “People of property,” [73].
- Perry, Commodore O. H., [137].
- Philip’s War, King, [62], [118], [119], [131], [159], [160].
- Pierre de Margerie, French charge d’Affaires, [19].
- Pilgrims and Puritans, [42].
- Pitman, Margaret, weds James Murphy at Newport, R. I., [130].
- Platt, U. S. Senator O. H., [24].
- Plymouth Colony, Early Irish in the, [137].
- Point Pleasant, Battle of, [37].
- Polk, President, [106].
- Pollock, Oliver, an Irishman who financed Clark’s military campaign in Illinois and Indiana, [104].
- Pontiac, Chief, [97], [98].
- Portrush, Ireland, [77], [78].
- Prendergast’s Cromwellian Settlement of Ireland, [122].
- Prendergast’s Ireland from the Restoration to the Revolution, [122].
- Presbyterians, Persecution inflicted upon the Irish, [83].
- Preservation of historic landmarks, [13].
- President Buchanan’s father, a native of County Donegal, Ireland, comes to this country in the brig Providence, [75].
- President Lincoln’s first call for troops, [10].
- Presidents-General of the American-Irish Historical Society, [145].
- Preston, William, a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses, born in Ireland, [63].
- Princeton, Battle of, [53], [59].
- Prison-ship Martyrs, The, [16].
- Proctor, Gen. Thomas, a native of Ireland, [62].
- Proscriptive laws against Catholics, [84].
- Providence, R. I., Gazette, [129].
- Providence, R. I., Patriots of, destroy the British armed vessel Gaspee, [69].
- Provincial Assembly of Virginia, [40].
- Provincial Congress of North Carolina, [56], [59].
- Publications of the American-Irish Historical Society, [139].
- Queenstown, Ireland, [52].
- Quinton, Col. William, is appointed a brigadier-general, [20].
- “Quirk was a brave and a fine-looking Irishman,” [101].
- Randolph, Governor, of Virginia, [37].
- Reception to the Society by Governor Kimball of Rhode Island, [20].
- Records of the General Assembly of Rhode Island, [131].
- Records of the Town of Providence, R. I., [62].
- Redding, James F., Death of (Charleston, S. C.), [26].
- Regiment of Rangers, Col. William Thomson’s, [63].
- “Remained and went not away,” [109].
- Revolution, Gen. John Sullivan of the, [11], [18].
- Revolution, Sons of the, [147].
- Reynolds, Ex-Gov. John, [105], [107].
- Rhode Island, Battle of, [11], [16], [17], [18], [19], [20], [135], [137].
- Rhode Island, Congressman Bull of, writes to the Society, [11], [20].
- Rhode Island, Death of Ex-Secretary of State McGinness of, [9].
- Rhode Island, Early Caseys of, [114], [115], [116].
- Rhode Island, Early Larkins of, [110], [111].
- Rhode Island, Early Murphys of, [129], [133].
- Rhode Island, Gov. Charles Jackson of, [57].
- Rhode Island, Governor Gregory of, writes to the Society, [11].
- Rhode Island Historical Society, [19], [141], [157], [166].
- Rhode Island, Interesting Reminiscences of Newport, [128], [129].
- Rhode Island, Irish names in, previous to 1776, [131].
- Rhode Island Normal School, [20].
- Rhode Island, Records of the General Assembly of, [131].
- Rhode Island Supreme Court, [18], [19], [20].
- Rhode Island, The Irish Vanguard of, [109].
- Riddle, Patrick E., Death of (Boston, Mass.), [13].
- Riley, Garret and Miles, [51].
- Riley, Grace (O’Dea), [51].
- Riley, John, and his wife Grace, [51].
- Riley, John, buys land in 1684 in Springfield, Mass., [45].
- Riley, Patrick and Richard, [51].
- Rileys in Connecticut, Early, [51].
- Roach, John, is given a tract of land in Connecticut, [73].
- Rochambeau’s army, The Irish in, [135].
- Rochambeau Monument, at Washington, D. C., Dedication of the, [15].
- Roche, James Jeffrey, Mention of paper by, [135].
- Rogers, Hon. Horatio, [20].
- Rogers, Lucy Clark, [100].
- Roman Catholic archdiocese of Boston, [147].
- Roman Catholic archdiocese of Philadelphia, [171].
- Roman Catholic diocese of Duluth, [163].
- Roman Catholic diocese of Great Falls, [160].
- Roman Catholic diocese of Los Angeles, [149].
- Roman Catholic diocese of Sioux City, [155].
- Roman Catholic diocese of Springfield, Mass., [157].
- Roman Catholic diocese of Wilmington, Del., [164].
- Roosevelt, Mrs. Robert B., [14].
- Roosevelt, President Theodore, expresses his interest in the work of the Society, [12].
- Roosevelt, President Theodore, receives the Society in the East Room of the White House, [15].
- Roosevelt, President, writes to the Society, [18], [24].
- Rosary Magazine, The, [25], [153].
- Roscommon, Ireland, [129].
- Ross, Rev. Robert, patriot of the Revolution, [77].
- “Roule of ye Freemen of ye colonie of everie Towne,” [56].
- “Rough Riders” regiment, [7].
- Rowan, Archibald Hamilton, [90].
- Rowe, Matthew, “at New Haven, Conn., in 1650,” [59].
- Rowe, Nicholas, “at Portsmouth, N. H., in 1640,” [59].
- Royal Historical and Archæological Society of Ireland, [17].
- Royal Irish Academy, [148], [150].
- Royal Newfoundland regiment, Irish sentiment in the, [87].
- Royal Society of Antiquaries (Ireland), [148].
- Sackett, Adjutant-General, of Rhode Island, [17].
- Salem [Mass.] Press Historical and Genealogical Record, [64].
- Sally Crowninshield of Salem, Mass., [65].
- St. Kitts, Charles Mac Carthy a resident of, [117], [125].
- St. Kitts, Irish Catholics in, visited by Father John Destriche, [125], [126].
- St. Kitts, Irish colors displayed at, [85].
- St. Kitts, Large numbers of Irish in, [125].
- St. Louis, Mo., Louisiana Purchase Exposition, [26], [27], [28].
- “St. Patrick”: American countersign at Boston, March 17, 1776, by authority of General Washington, [64].
- St. Patrick’s day, Early celebrations of, [137].
- St. Patrick, Friendly Sons of, New York, [72].
- St. Patrick, Friendly Sons of, Philadelphia, [72].
- St. Patrick, Knights of, San Francisco, Cal., [136].
- St. Patrick’s lodge of Masons, [58].
- St. Vincent de Paul, Society of, [156], [157].
- Savage fury of English soldiery in Ireland, [115].
- Savage’s Genealogical Dictionary, [58], [70].
- Savage’s Station, Battle of, [10].
- Scharff-Wescott History of Philadelphia, Pa., [73].
- Scituate, Mass., Early residents of, from Ireland, [60].
- Scott, General, [16].
- Scully, Martin, Mention of paper by, [135].
- Scully, Rev. Thomas, Death of (Cambridge, Mass), [20].
- Selectman Hutchinson of Lexington, Mass., welcomes the Society, [14].
- Selectman Taylor of Lexington, Mass., entertains the Society, [14].
- Sellick, David, craves pardon “for his offence in bringing some of the Irish men on shoare,” [110].
- “Seneschal of the manor of Macroom,” [124].
- “Sent by his father from Ireland to America,” [69].
- Shahan, Rev. Thomas, Death of (Malden, Mass.), [21].
- Shay’s insurrection, [49].
- Sheahan, Dennis Harvey, Mention of address by, [136].
- Shea, John Gilmary, [59].
- Sheridan, Gen. Michael V., [14].
- Sheridan, Gen. Philip H., [14].
- Sherman, Rev. Andrew M., Mention of paper by, [25], [138].
- Sherry’s, New York city, Gathering of the Society at, [9].
- Simms’ Frontiersmen of New York, [63], [71].
- Sixteenth (Mass.) regiment (in the Civil War), [160].
- Sixth Regiment of North Carolina Foot, [60].
- Sixty-ninth New York Volunteers, [10], [28], [34].
- Smilie, Senator, a veteran of the Revolution, [90].
- Smith, Joseph, Mention of papers by, [134], [135].
- Smith, Mary, “great granddaughter of the second landgrave of South Carolina,” [68].
- Smithsonian Institution, [151].
- Society of Colonial Wars, [147], [160].
- Society of St. Vincent de Paul, [156], [157].
- Society of the Cincinnati, [18], [60], [137], [166].
- Society, The, welcomed to Newport, R. I., by Mayor Garretson, [11].
- Soldiers in King Philip’s War, Bodge’s, [131].
- Some Voices from ye olden time, [55].
- Sons of the American Revolution, [160], [174].
- Sons of the Revolution, [7], [9], [147].
- Southern Cotton Exchange, [155].
- Southern Historical Society, Richmond, Va., [10].
- South Mountain, Battle of, [27].
- Spain, Irish troops embark for, [118].
- Spain, War with, [7], [147], [152], [165].
- Spanish flag replaces the British, [102].
- Spanish service, Irish regiments in the, [113].
- Spanish trenches of Las Guasimas, [8].
- Spencer, Lady Elizabeth, [124].
- Sperry, Congressman, of Connecticut, [23], [24].
- Spottsylvania militia, [33].
- Stackpole’s History of Durham, Me., [61], [78].
- State vice-presidents of the Society, [6].
- Sterling, Conn., named in honor of an Irish physician and surgeon, [68].
- Stiles, Rev. Edward, [128].
- Stiness, Chief Justice, of the Rhode Island Supreme Court, writes to the Society, [19].
- “Stonewall Brigade,” The, [12].
- Strangers warned to depart according to law, [75].
- “Strongly affected to Popery,” [30].
- Studley, Mayor of New Haven, Conn., [23].
- Sullivan, Captain, “an officer in the Virginia forces,” [36], [37].
- Sullivan, Death of John A. (New York), [14].
- Sullivan, Dr. James E., of Providence, R. I., entertains the Society, [17], [18], [19], [20].
- Sullivan, Dr. John, a descendant of Gen. John Sullivan, [11], [18].
- Sullivan, Gen. John, of the Revolution, [11], [16], [18], [26], [134], [137], [138].
- Sullivan, George, son of Gen. John Sullivan of the Revolution, [26].
- Sullivan, George Rogers Clark, [100].
- Sullivan, John, purser of the Cygnet, [61].
- Sullivan, Miss Margaret, granddaughter of Gen. John Sullivan of the Revolution, [26].
- Sullivan, T. Russell, of Revolutionary ancestry, [11].
- Sullivan’s Militia, [37].
- Supreme Court of South Carolina, [68].
- Swedish-Americans purpose forming an historical society, [25].
- Sweeny, William M., Mention of paper by, [135].
- Swords, Cornet George, [173].
- Swords, Francis Dawson, [174].
- Swords, Joseph F., Mention of paper by, [134].
- “Symon Tuchin, master of the Due Return,” [30].
- Taft, Hon. Royal C., of Providence, R. I., [18].
- Tandy, Napper, [90].
- Tate’s Academy, Wilmington, N. C., [55].
- Taylor, Gen. Zachary, [16], [101].
- Taylor, Selectman, of Lexington, Mass., entertains the Society, [14].
- Tecumseh, Indian chief, [90].
- Tenth New Hampshire Infantry, [42].
- Tenth U. S. Infantry, [22].
- Thames, Battle of the, [90].
- “The battle flags of the Irish Brigade had become so torn and shattered by shot and shell of the many battles,” [28].
- The Charming Molly brings 162 passengers from Ireland, [66].
- “The finest horseman in the American army,” [36].
- “The four other regiments of the Irish Brigade,” [27].
- “The last MacCarthy Mor,” [123].
- “The O’Briens of Machias, Me., patriots of the American Revolution,” [25].
- “The old Catholic church at Fredericksburg,” [28].
- The “precincts of ye said Towne of Providence,” [60].
- “The record of an Irish regiment in our great war,” [24].
- “The Requiem of the Drums,” [7].
- The Salem Book, [55].
- “These battle-scarred relics,” [28].
- The ship Hope arrives from Ireland with 200 passengers, [62].
- The ship Sagamore brings 381 passengers from Ireland, [67].
- The title and dignity of “MacCarthy Mor,” [124].
- “They named one of the principal streets of the town, Ireland street,” [50].
- “They were a robust set of men,” [52].
- Third Middlesex regiment (Mass.), [160].
- Thirteenth U. S. Infantry, [10], [11].
- Thirtieth Virginia Cavalry, [34].
- “This was an Irish regiment,” [23].
- Three thousand acres willed to John and Benjamin O’Fallon, [100].
- Ticonderoga, Capture of, [69], [70].
- Ticonderoga, The Ruins of Fort, [16].
- Tillinghast, Hon. Pardon E., [18].
- Tippecanoe, Battle of, [39], [100].
- Tipperary, Ireland, [14].
- Tone, Theobald Wolfe, [88], [90].
- “To the memory of the Irishmen in the American Revolution,” [18].
- Towns in western Massachusetts named after places in Ireland, [47].
- “To ye care of mr Winthrop, mercht in Cork,” [62].
- Transfer of Erin, Amory’s, [122].
- Treaty of Ghent, [91].
- Treaty of Limerick, [82].
- Trinity Church Annals, Newport, R. I., [129].
- Trinity Church, New York city, Records of, [72].
- Trinity College, Dublin, [66], [174].
- Tufts College, [7], [141].
- Twelfth Massachusetts Infantry (in the Civil War), [156].
- “Twelve weeks from London and seven from Cork,” [75].
- Twenty-eighth Massachusetts regiment in the Civil War, [27], [149].
- Ulster, Ireland, [33], [114], [115], [116], [122].
- Ultonia, Regiment of, [113].
- United Irishman, The, [168].
- United Irish Society, [83], [87], [89], [90].
- United States Circuit Court, [20].
- United States District Court, [20].
- United States Ordnance Corps, [163].
- United States Navy Department, [162].
- United States Senator George F. Hoar, [19].
- United States Senator O. H. Platt, [24].
- United States Senator Wetmore, [19], [20].
- United States War Department, [22], [23].
- Unscrupulous captains of emigrant ships, [88].
- “Until he fell mortally wounded at the second battle of Bull Run,” [27].
- University of Chicago, [7].
- University of Pennsylvania, [90], [157], [174].
- University of Nebraska, [15], [20].
- University of Wisconsin, [143].
- Valentia, Ireland, [123].
- Valley Forge, Anniversary of the Evacuation of, [23].
- Valorous charges of Meagher’s Irish Brigade, [149], [171], [172].
- Van Bergens “of Catskill and Coxsackie,” [61].
- Van Rensselaer, Sanders, [74].
- Van Rensselaer, Schuyler, [74].
- Van Wyck, Mayor, of New York City, [8].
- Vermont, Rutland County Medical and Surgical Society, [157].
- Vice-presidents of the Society, [6].
- Villanova College, [15].
- Virginia, Brian Kelly sails for, in the Safety (1635), [70].
- Virginia, Capt. James H. O’Bannon of, [12].
- Virginia, Daniel Gookin locates in, [67].
- Virginia, Early Irish Settlers in, [30].
- Virginia Historical Magazine, [55], [63], [67], [73].
- Virginia House of Burgesses, [63].
- Virginia, Irish Catholics are refused permission to land in, [125].
- Virginia Legislature, The, [12].
- Virginia, Irish passengers bound for, [53], [67], [76].
- Virginia Line, The, [36].
- Virginia, Provincial Assembly of, [40].
- Virginia settlers massacred by Indians, [31].
- Virginia, The Lewis family of, [36], [38].
- Virginia, The Lynch family of, [35].
- Vital Record of Rhode Island, Arnold’s, [131].
- Von Sternberg, Baron Speck, German ambassador, [24].
- Voyage of the Seaflower, [138].
- Voyage of the ship Lime from Ireland to Boston, [77], [78].
- Walsh, Hon. Patrick, Mention of paper by, [136].
- Walter, Nehemiah, is “sent by his father from Ireland to America,” [69].
- War Department, U. S., [22], [23].
- War of 1812, [82], [88], [90], [107].
- Warren, President, of Boston University, [7].
- War with Mexico, An Irish Company from Massachusetts in the, [16].
- War with Spain, [7], [147], [152], [165].
- Washington and his compatriots, [86].
- Washington, D. C., Dedication of the Rochambeau monument, [15].
- Washington, D. C., Excursion of the Society to, [15].
- Washington, George, [33], [64], [73], [77].
- Washingtons, The Irish, [136].
- Waterford, Ireland, [62], [115], [118].
- Waters, Major William, patents land in Maryland (as early as 1663), [56].
- Watson, Matthew, an Irish pioneer of Barrington, R. I., [136].
- Wayne, Gen. Anthony, [104].
- Webster Regiment, The, of Massachusetts, [156].
- “Were mostly Irishmen,” [96].
- West Indies, Irish transported to the, [84], [109].
- “West of the Connecticut River and north from the Riley tract,” [45].
- Wetmore, U. S. Senator, [19], [20].
- West Point, [150].
- Wexford, Ireland, [58], [65], [73], [86], [90], [110].
- Wheeler’s Historical Sketches of North Carolina, [59], [66], [74].
- “While at Galway, John Cate, the master, died of smallpox,” [78].
- White House, The Society received by President Roosevelt at the, [15].
- White Oak Swamp, Battle of, [10].
- White, Rev. Andrew (S. J.), [125].
- Wicklow, Ireland, [115].
- “Wild Geese,” The, [83], [87].
- Williams, Abigail, weds Miles Coursey at Newport, R. I., [130].
- Williams, Roger, of Rhode Island, [72], [109].
- Wilson, Hester, weds Timothy Egan at Newport, R. I., [130].
- Winthrop, Gov. John, [78].
- Wisconsin, University of, [143].
- “Wound, kill, slay, and destroy,” Lord Ormund is ordered to, [115].
- Wyman’s Genealogies and Estates of Charlestown, Mass., [57], [58], [59], [62].
- Yorktown, Surrender of Cornwallis at, [100].
[1]. Treasurer-General of the Society, and State Insurance Commissioner of New Hampshire.
[2]. This paper deals chiefly with that portion of the Connecticut valley within the state of Massachusetts.
[3]. Secretary-General of the Society.
[4]. This paper recently appeared in the columns of The Pilot, Boston, Mass. The writer is a member of the American-Irish Historical Society.
[5]. Very plainly not Galloway in Scotland.
[6]. The O’Larkins were chieftains in the present Irish counties of Wexford and Galway. They had a castle and fortress at Carn, now the headland called Carnsore Point, Wexford. That and the adjacent territory was at one period known as “O’Larkin’s country.”
[7]. See Austin’s Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island, a work of great value and interest.
[8]. See “The Stem of the Heffernan Family,” in O’Hart’s Irish Pedigrees. The clan is a very old one in Irish history and has produced many people of note.
[9]. The O’Kellys, from which come the names Kelly and Kelley, were of great eminence in Ireland. An O’Kelly commanded the Connaught division at the battle of Clontarf, A. D. 1014. O’Kellys were princes of Hy-Maine, Ireland, down to the reign of the English Queen Elizabeth. Twelve of the name were distinguished in the Spanish service, between 1718 and 1788, as officers in the Irish regiments of Irlanda, Hibernia, Ultonia, and Limerick.
[10]. In his work on the Cromwellian Settlement of Ireland.
[11]. The form O’Dalaighe has been anglicized O’Daley, O’Daly, Daly, Daley, Daily, Dailey, Dayly, etc. The ancestor of the O’Dalys of Meath, Ulster and Connaught was Adam, brother of Fargal, monarch of Ireland. Fargal was killed in battle, A. D. 718. (See Annals of the Four Masters, O’Hart’s Irish Pedigrees, and similar authoritative works.)
[12]. This name also appears in Ireland as Lavery and O’Lavery.
[13]. The greater part of the will was reproduced in the Narragansett Historical Register, James N. Arnold, editor, Providence, April, 1891.
[14]. The names Gerard and Gerrard are found in Ireland. This name Garard, however, may have been Garratt or Garrett, and therefore derived from Garritty or MacGeraghty.
[15]. Dunn,—a typical Irish name; from the Irish O’Duin, and anglicized O’Dunn, Dun, Dunn, Dunne and Doyne. The sept was prominent, in the olden time, in Kildare and Queen’s.
[16]. For interesting mention of the MacCarthys, see Burke’s Dormant, Abeyant, Forfeited, and Extinct Peerages (London, 1866); O’Hart’s Irish Pedigrees (Dublin, 1881); Burke’s Vicissitudes of Families (London, 1859-60); Lodge’s Peerage of Ireland (Dublin, 1789); Burke’s Landed Gentry (London, 1871); Burke’s General Armory (London, 1884); Washbourne’s Book of Family Crests (London, 1882); the Royal Book of Crests, London, (Macveigh); O’Hart’s Irish Landed Gentry (Dublin, 1877); Howard’s Miscellanea Genealogica et Heraldica; Nichols’ Topographer and Genealogist (London, 1853); the Complete Peerage (edited by G. E. C.), (London, 1893); the Book of Dignities (London, 1894); Cusack’s History of the City and County of Cork (Dublin and Cork, 1875); Prendergast’s Ireland from the Restoration to the Revolution (1660 to 1690), (London, 1887); Amory’s Transfer of Erin (Philadelphia, 1877); John O’Kane Murray’s Prose and Poetry of Ireland (New York, 1882); Douglas Hyde’s Literary History of Ireland (London, 1899); An Historical Pedigree of the McCarthys, by D. McCarthy (Exeter, Eng., 1880); Lower’s Patronymica Britannica (London, 1860).
[17]. The Spencer name is found in Ireland for many generations, and appears under both spellings. Bearers of the name were among the “Forfeiting Proprietors” and other Irish who, during the Cromwellian regime, were ordered to migrate “To Hell or to Connaught.”
Many descendants of English settlers in Ireland became thoroughly Irish, some dropped their English surnames and assumed Irish ones, wedded Irish wives, were rated as “Papists,” and dressed “after ye Irishe fashion.”
[18]. The author is indebted for the facts in this sketch mainly to Peterson’s History of Rhode Island.
[19]. Including the Records of the General Assembly and Arnold’s Vital Record of Rhode Island. Other works consulted include Bodge’s Soldiers in King Philip’s War.
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
- Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
- Archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings retained as printed.
- Footnotes have been re-indexed using numbers and collected together at the end of the last chapter.