James Joyce once wrote, “The shortest way to Tara is via Holyhead.”
The Hill of Tara is in Ireland and was the seat of the High Kings of Celtic Ireland.
Holyhead is in Wales. If you look at a map of Ireland find Dublin and make a straight line with your finger across the water until you hit the first piece of land. That’s Holyhead.
Joyce’s message was that if the Irish people were to understand themselves and their country then they would have to leave the island.
Maybe there is some truth to that. I don’t know. Maybe it worked for him.
So here is the story I was going to write about the siblings of my great-great grandmother, Margaret Haughey. In my last posting I shared that she was the tenth of eleventh children born in the area of Lurgan, County Armagh.
For the record, I should note that most of them were born in Magheralin, County Down although some would later marry and live in the town of Lurgan. Magheralin borders Armagh, Down and Antrim.
There was a twenty-four year age difference between Margaret’s oldest brother Charles and her youngest sibling. Not at all uncommon in big families.
The family consisted of Charles, Henry, Mary, Luke, Arthur, James, Catherine, Edward, Rachael, Margaret and a male child born after Margaret.
Her oldest brother Charles married Mary Ann Leatham when Margaret was only five years old in 1845. She would soon become a very young auntie to Charles’ and Mary Ann’s two children, Arthur (1847) and Maria (1849).
Sadly, Charles’ wife Mary Ann died in 1850 the year after little Maria was born. And Maria soon followed her mother to heaven when she died at the age of five in 1854.
That left Margaret’s big brother Charles on his own caring for his young son, Arthur.
But as many of them did back then. They kept on going.
Charles remarried. To a lady by the name Margaret McCusker and his sister Rachael Haughey married Andrew Pepper on the very same day, November 25, 1855 in a double wedding ceremony.
Other siblings married. The family expanded with lots of babies being born.
But when it was Margaret’s turn to hit the altar with her first husband, in 1863, she was not surrounded by all of her siblings. Her sister Rachael was not present at the wedding. Neither was her older brother Charles. Nor her brother Edward.
Because this is what happened.
Rachael and her husband Andrew Pepper boarded a ship to New Zealand in 1860.
Andrew PEPPER . Co Down a labourer aged 24 with his wife Rachael aged 23 & son, William John aged 2, arrived in Lyttelton, New Zealand on board Gananoque’ (785 tons) 9 May 1860;left London 9 Feb 1860 under Capt Norris.
That’s a very, very long way from home. An eighty-five day journey. Rachael had another child in Lurgan named Andrew but he must have died just before they set sail.
Things might have been good for awhile in New Zealand. But who knows?
This is what happened the following year. A little more than a year after they made the incredible voyage.
That’s tragic on so many levels. The newspaper article alone is blog worthy.
Rachael’s husband was dead at the age of twenty-five and Rachael was on her own with no family or means of support. At the young age of twenty-four, stuck in a strange land so very far from home. And no way to get back home.
Could you imagine?
But family is family. And good families do their best to help each other.
Her eldest brother Charles hopped on the ship “Mersey” in 1862 and made his way to sister Rachael in New Zealand. Left his wife and family in Ireland.
Charles’ wife and children would arrive the following year in 1863 -along with Charles’ and Rachael’s brother Edward Haughey.
Another brother James Haughey would follow with his wife, Hannah and their very large brood.
Andrew’s untimely death prompted an influx of many members of this one clan to the shores of New Zealand. This one tragedy altered the course of their futures. Altered the history of my family.
The good news is that Rachael met a fellow from Tipperary and remarried. Had a bunch of kids. The other good news is that the Haugheys all did well on the islands. They survived, multiplied and spread across the land. Loads and loads of their descendants exist now.
Sad thing is that my great-great-great grandparents Luke and Mary had to wave goodbye not just to one daughter and a grandson in 1860. They, and the other remaining family members like their daughter, my great-great grandmother Margaret, would continue waving goodbye to loved ones for the next decade. While their countless family members boarded the ships. The numerous grandchildren. Nieces and nephews. And while they were waving they also knew they’d never see any of them again. Ever again.
Maybe James Joyce’s sentence had some truth to it. Maybe the shortest way to Tara is via Holyhead. Maybe, in the end, in order to understand themselves, their family and their country, they had to leave. I don’t know. Maybe it worked for them.
Note: A fellow by the name Lyndon Fraser wrote a book titled, “To Tara Via Holyhead: Irish Catholic Immigrants in Nineteenth-century.” Some of my family’s history is documented in the book with accompanying facts and photographs.
Litterhody
Very much enjoyed reading this blog thanks. My mother Gloria was a Lafferty – her paternal grandfather, Charles, married Susannah (Annie) Haughey, one of the younger children of Charles and Margaret. Coincidentally, I borrowed the Lyndon Fraser book yesterday as I’ve been researching the early immigration to our city of Christchurch of our common ancestors. The Lafferty clan came here from Donegal – via Brisbane – 12 or so years after Margaret and the children followed Charles Haughey here. Charles Lafferty was 12 at the time. There is a little bit of Charles Haughey’s dairy farm still evident here; still called Rostrevor. i am guessing it was the beauty of that place and Carlingford Lough that he would have treasured as a memory here. Google Maps will show this remnant the end of Haughey Lane, a cul-de-sac off Hills Road in Marshlands. Hills Road is where the Haughey farmhouse was, and where Charles and Annie had their first little house, I think. Back in the day, it supplied milk to most of the north of the city.
I’m glad you enjoyed it, cousin! 🙂 The Laffertys are on my tree. Thirteen of them! I had a look at the map. Wonder who owns the remaining land. Certainly built up since the dairy farm days, I’d say! I had hoped to get to NZ this past year-I live in Malaysia-but didn’t make it. 😦 One day!
I am trying to fit some puzzle pieces together, I cant for the life of me figure out who Luke Haughey born 1789 who married Mary Mcdonnall who was his father and mother? Do you know? Thank you,
Hi! It’s really hard to get records that far back and we are probably quite lucky we have Luke’s information. I do have (not sure where I got the information from) that Luke’s father’s first name was Charles…..Mary McDonald was said to have come from the Clan McDonald of Glencoe (Massacre of Glencoe)
I thank you for your reply, I have done my dna for the sole purpose of finding decendents of my great grandfather. My great grandfathers last name was hockery, 9 yrs of searching daily I found he had a sister, I overlooked the census thinking he was boarding it turned out to be his sister, in her war papers 1862, she listed her name as haughrey, then another spot haughey, in the 2 yrs since the test I recently got a haughey match. I was trying to find any link in this persons genealogy, in fact I was waiting for it to be my mothers side I am like 500 names in the tree and no sign of my mothers side, and no sign of my fathers mothers side, I am left with my grandmothers fathers side Haughey-Haughrey-Hockery. In lukes tree, I see a lot of henry haughey’s. My grandfathers name was henry but he was born 1833, If I can find lukes brothers it may be my golden egg, it may be Hugh Haughey or names above. I cant prove it, My hugh would have been born in Lukes era, late 1700’s. Maybe some day a closer match will come in and I can connect my dots..Thank you.
Where are your people from?
Philadelphia Pennsylvania, the hugh and Catherine is Ireland but where I don’t know. I have a family tree on ancestry.
I did a lot of searching for Haughey branches and there was one Hugh Haughey (I don’t know connection to mine) married to Susanna Aitken, couple of the kids born in Scotland and they lived in philadelphia (on 1850, 1860)
Hi Gerard Smyth here. I understand that Charles Haughey is my great great grandfather. His daughter margaret Shaw my great grandmother. Her daughter Winifred Smyth my granny. Her son Bernard Smyth, my Dad. I have the odd photograph. Cheers
Hi cousin Gerard 🙂 Pleased to make your acquaintance. I have a tree full of folks -if you ever want a look let me know. Cheers-Mary
Hi Gerard. My mother Gloria nee Lafferty knew your father Bernard and told me the Smyths were our cousins.
A small world! Thanks for reading!