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O'Kelley Research Library
Below is a listing of books that contain important
information about O'Kelleys great and small. Each book listed on this
page records part of our family story, a story shared by many more
descendants than appear on this website. If you read or in this
case listen to no other book, I strongly recommend that you obtain the
audible book "The
Short History of Ireland" by Dr Jonathan Bardon as this book
provides a stark and chilling description of the life our Irish
ancestors lived giving an explanation as to what may have happened to a
great many of those who remained in Ireland after our ancestor(s) came
to America and giving an explanation why our ancestor may have never
spoke about his former life in Ireland mostly because the memories were
too painful to recall or seek to preserve. We are lucky, few
families have so much available and documented by so many authors which
is an indicator as to how important the O'Kelleys of Ireland may have
been. Books are only written about important people and
important families and our O'Kelley line is one of the lines of regional
Kings who ruled over a selected area of about 1000 square miles in
western Ireland.
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Abbeys of Ireland |
A listing of Abbeys and Priors of Ireland. |
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Baronies of Ireland |
Map of the Baronies of Ireland |
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Book of Ui Maine Ireland 1394
Digital Image. Some believe that J R R Tolkien borrowed from
the Welsh and the Irish for his book the
Lord of the Rings and indeed the
elvish language that Tolkien created does resemble Gaelic script
somewhat. The similarities doesn't end there, if you look at the
map of Middle Earth one will find the evil Mordor in the east just as
England was to the east of Welsh and Ireland and both have many tales and
folk lore about Elves and little people.
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Great Book of
Lecan (MS) by
Ádhamh Ó Cuirnín 1397 1418 (Gaelic)
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Annals of the Four Masters 1632 - 1636 Collector's Edition at
Amazon
This is a must have two volume collection of high quality books for
those building their own library of ancient Irish books. This book
contains Irish history beginning in the 12th century and bring the
reader into the 17th century when it was first translated from Gaelic
into English and published by Owen Connellan. If you own only one
book of Irish history this two volume set should be it.
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| Hearth Money Rolls |
1665 Co
Monaghan Hearth Money Rolls
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If you are researching Irish families
The King James Army List should be at the top of your lists.
It was complied and publish by John D'Alton and is the who's who of many
great Irish families who either voluntarily or were forced to become
part of King James II's Army during the time he was still King of
England. The English protestant chaised King James II out of
England into Ireland and put William of Orange on the English Throne
solely because he was protestant and King James II was catholic. A
great war occured, Ireland was laid waste and at the war's conclusion in
the favor of King William of orange a great many of those who appear in
this book were either forced from Ireland or left Ireland
due to the English confiscation of their lands and estates. These
Irish lands that had been in some Gaelic family longer than there had
been and England were by the English to wealthy English Lords causing considerable
and understandable hate of the English by the Irish. The book is
huge, at least as large as many modern family bibles and while I
don't know anyone with enough time on their hands to count them, it is
estimated that 30 to 40 thousand Irish that came to be know as the "Willd
Geese". What may be a little confusing about this book this
The King James was not the King James Bible, this was Catholic King
James II who the Irish put great hope in, thinking he would restore the
Irish to their lands, I doubt that would have every happened because
James II was like all the others, he was an Englishman first, his only
interest in the Irish was to fight the English protestants who by that
time in history dominated England. If the Jacobites had won that
war it would not have changed anything in Ireland and I am of the
opinion the Irish were foolish to risk their lives on such a promise.
The English have an evil history that spans almost 800 years in Ireland, far
exceeding the rule of Adolf Hitler but often just as deadly and evil.
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Macariae Excidium by Col Charles O'Kelley1, 9th Lord of Screen, CO
Roscommon Ireland, MS Written in 1692, you can read it on line in pdf
format or buy the book in both paperback and hardback from Amazon. Col
Charles O'Kelley's Macariae Excidium provides the
reader an eye witness description of the Jacobite Williamite War of 1690
and 1691, a war that saw the death or exile of many of our ancestors.
I have read that at the Battle of Aughrim as many as 25 Gaelic Gentry
O'Kelleys died clearly setting in motion the pending immigration of our
ancestor from Ireland.
Col O'Kelley served in that war under an assumed name as to protect his
family and their wealth and position. A man charged with treason
lost not just his life but his family lost his property. This
story is hidden in the fictional place and event and it is an example as
to how some Gentry Irish had to live, surely many came to American under
assumed names thus their true names are not found in ship records.
The book also appears in an interpreted version titled "The
Jacobite War in Ireland 1688 - 1691"
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Linea
Antiqua (MS) by Roger O'Farrell 1709 (Gaelic). Dr John
O'Donovan quoted from O'Farrell's work in his English work Tribes
and Customs of Hy-Many. This is a Gaelic Manuscript that has
never been published and I am unaware of an English version. It is
reportedly stored in a library in Dublin Ireland.
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| 1749 Elpin Census |
1749 Elphin Co Sligo Census
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| 1788 |
Early Virginia Property Tax Records
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| 1823 to 1837 |
The Tithe Applotment Books of Ireland
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Tribes and
Customs of Hy-Many: Commonly called O'Kelly's Country by Dr
John O'Donovan P 1843 (English and Gaelic) Available for reading
on line. Dr O'Donovan's Tribes and Customs of Hy-Many
is the authority for every thing Irish about my family line. The
families that Dr O'Donovan describes in his book are the Irish ancestors
of those listed on this website and Dr O'Donovan does the work for us by
translating and quoting heavily from the Great Book of Lecan
and O'Farrell's Linea Antiqua which are both
Gaelic manuscripts never widely copied. The DNA results of 3 descents of
my family prove that we did not descend from the O'Kellys of Hy-Many.
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Griffith Valuation 1858 |
Ask about Ireland Website |
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An Index
to Printed Pedigrees: Contained in Country and Local Histories by
Charles Bridger 1867and page 234 provides documentation that at least three
Gaelic Gentry lines use the double "e" O'Kelley spelling of our name
including the Lord of Screen family. There are only five lines in
this book important to our family but I believe these five lines provide
the proof of truth in our family tradition story that the double "e"
Kelleys descended from the "old Irish" Gentry O'Kelleys.
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Lives of Christian ministers: over two hundred
memoirs by Peter Jefferson Kernolde P 1909. Available
for reading on line. Peter Kernolde
Lives of Christian Ministers provides us early
documentation of the connection between our O'Kelley line and that of
Rev James O'Kelly.
The life of Rev. James O'Kelly and the early history of the Christian
church in the South by
Wilbur Earnest MacClenny P 1910 Available on loan from your local
library from Elon University. MacClenny in his Life of Rev James
O'Kelly tells us the name of Rev James's father and mother. MacClenny
makes a claim that Rev James O'Kelly descends paternally from the O'Kellys of Hy-Many Ireland something my DNA testing has confirmed to
likely be
true. A free download of Rev James O'Kellys genealogy as given by MacClenny is
available. Most of what W E MacClenny claims about Rev
James O'Kelly's origins can be disproven by
MacClenny's own documentation that he references to support his claims. You may read
my analysis of claims along with some excerpts from
his book
here. MacClenny's book is not without merit, it provides a
true account of the importance of Rev James O'Kelly
and some of his fellow ministers in the founding of our nation. I
don't think our founding fathers could have gain the support of the
common man without ministers such as Rev James
O'Kelly.
"Rev
James O'Kelly, A Champion of Religious Liberty" by
J F Burnett published 1921. Burnett makes the claim that
Rev James was high born but this cannot be proven by any documentation
and is contradicted by Rev James own description where he states he came
from poor parentage.
Some
Descendants and Ancestral
Kin of James Stamps O'Kelley and Lucy Woodruff
England by J Fred O'Kelly P 1966.
Out of Print availability unknown. A
free download is available. J Fred O'Kelly
focuses on just one small branch of the modern O'Kelley tree, my great
great grandfather and grandmother, James Stamps O'Kelley and his wife
Lucy England. Because this book does not bear the required
Copyright notice it is now public domain and you can
read it in it's entirety
here. The DNA results of a descendent of
Thomas,
descendent of Charles
and a descendent of Benjamin
prove that these three men were not brothers but cousins.
Thomas and
Charles were
likely 1st, 2nd, or 3rd cousins and
Benjamin was likely their 6th, 7th or 8th cousins.
Because these 3 men did not have the same mother and because
Charles names
his first born daughter
Elizabeth Dean O'Kelley it seems likely that
Elizabeth Dean
was the mother of Charles
but not the mother of Thomas
and Benjamin.
Elizabeth Dean's husband the father of Charles may have been William
Dennis O'Kelley or he may have been James O'Kelley. I suspect the
reason the name Thomas Dean runs in the line of
Thomas is
because his mother was likely Nancy Dean. The name of
Benjamin's
parents is still unknown but because names ran in the Irish families his
parents could have been a different James O'Kelley and Nancy aka Anna
Dean.
Mary Evelyn Thompson published a paper for College in
1966. A
free download is available.
Origins of the Surname O'Kelly 1968 by Anthony Mathews
Four O'Kelley Sons and Some of their Descendants by
Alethea Jane Macon Paperback 1969,
Hardback 1970 Out of Print availability unknown but a
free download of her book is available. Alethea Jane Macon is the author of modern
O'Kelley history; a difficult and time consuming task in her day but one
that she accomplished with a great deal of accuracy and one that was picked up later by Harold O'Kelley and Judith Ries
and will surely be continued by new generations yet to be born. Thanks
to the descendants of Alethea Jane Macon I am able to provide her book
as a free download so
Ms
Macon, in your honor I have made your work available here for all to
enjoy. Thank you for leaving us this legacy.
Ms Macon's book may be
read or downloaded
in its entirety as a PDF at this
link.
You may not use this PDF for commercial purposes, please respect Ms
Macon's descendants who have graciously given permission to aid family
research. Alethea Jane Macon makes a claim in her book that we
descended from the O'Kellys of Hy-Many Ireland something my DNA testing
has proven to be true. The DNA results of a descendent of
Thomas,
descendent of Charles
and a descendent of Benjamin
prove that these three men were not brothers but cousins.
Thomas and
Charles were
likely 1st, 2nd, or 3rd cousins and
Benjamin was likely their 6th, 7th or 8th cousins.
Because these 3 men did not have the same mother and because
Charles names
his first born daughter
Elizabeth Dean O'Kelley it seems likely that
Elizabeth Dean
was the mother of Charles
but not the mother of Thomas
and Benjamin.
Elizabeth Dean's husband the father of Charles may have been William
Dennis O'Kelley or he may have been James O'Kelley. I suspect the
reason the name Thomas Dean runs in the line of
Thomas is
because his mother was likely Nancy Dean. The name of
Benjamin's
parents is still unknown but because names ran in the Irish families his
parents could have been a different James O'Kelley and Nancy aka Anna
Dean.
A Patchwork of Memories, a
Knowles/O’Kelley genealogy by Judith Ries p 1976 Out of print but
an undated version is reported in the works by the author. I will
list it when it becomes available.
Our Ancestors
by Jessie and Adelle Ashford 1977, descendants of Rev James O'Kelly pdf
download
Four families through Georgia: a southern history
of the Adcock, Blackwell, O'Kelley, Yates and related families
by Harold Ernest O'Kelley P 1985. Out of
Print availability unknown. A
free download of a portion of his book is available.
Harold relies heavily on
Alethea Jane Macon but the DNA results of a
descendent of Thomas,
descendent of Charles
and a descendent of Benjamin
prove that these three men were not brothers but cousins.
Thomas and
Charles were
likely 1st, 2nd, or 3rd cousins and
Benjamin was likely their 6th, 7th or 8th cousins.
Because these 3 men did not have the same mother and because
Charles names
his first born daughter
Elizabeth Dean O'Kelley it seems likely that
Elizabeth Dean
was the mother of Charles
but not the mother of Thomas
and Benjamin.
Elizabeth Dean's husband the father of Charles may have been William
Dennis O'Kelley or he may have been James O'Kelley. I suspect the
reason the name Thomas Dean runs in the line of
Thomas is
because his mother was likely Nancy Dean. The name of
Benjamin's
parents is still unknown but because names ran in the Irish families his
parents could have been a different James O'Kelley and Nancy aka Anna
Dean.
O'Kelley Bowen
Heritage Cook Book complied by Mary Emeline O'Kelley Montoya 1992
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If you can trace your ancestral tree back so far but can not
find ship records it may be possible that your ancestors may not
have come to America willingly. This book provides a
chilling account of how many whites were transported from their
homeland and into slavery in America |
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Ed O’Kelley: The Man Who Murdered Jesse James’ Murderer by Judith
Ries P 1995. Available at Amazon. |
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The Thomas O'Kelley Website P
1997 by Kathleen O'Kelley
A website of American O'Kelleys and Allied families.
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(Ronald B. Lansing, 2005) Available at
Amazon.
From the moment I started to
read, I could not put it down. The author covers Nimrod's
story from beginning to the end and provides a great deal of
documentation and sources. Being a retired criminal
investigator I found the story very believable, in my mind's eye
I was observing the happenings as surely as if I was there.
Nimrod was the grandson of our family's Irish immigrate ancestor
and this book contains much information that is of interest to
anyone researching our family line. I highly recommend it
as an addition to any O'Kelley family library as it provides a
detailed account as to how our first ancestors lived and
traveled during their lifetime. Comments by
Rick O'Kelley |
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Ui
Ceallaigh of Eirinn P 2011 by
Rick O'Kelley A genealogy website of the O'Kelley's of Hy-Many
Ireland
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"The
Short History of Ireland" by Dr Johnathan Bardon P 2008.
This audible book is critical in understanding the life and experiences
of the Irish as to gain a better understanding how their history impacts
genealogy research. This is only available as an audio
book and is not available in written form. |
"The
Short History of Ireland" by Dr Johnathan Bardon P 2008.
This audible book is critical in understanding the life and experiences
of the Irish as to gain a better understanding how their history impacts
genealogy research.
Library of Virginia Online Catalog
The Southern Banner Newspaper Archives
- Newpaper in Athens Georgia with online archive going back to the
early 1800s. This is a great resource for learning more details
about early ancestors living in the counties mostly in Northeast
Georgia; Clark, Crawford, Gwinnett, Habersham, Hall, Madison, Walton,
and White counties.
March 30 1827 page Wm Kelly Land Lottery Clarke Co Georgia
April 6 1827 pare 2 Wm Kelly Land Lottery Hall Co Georgia
Oct 25 1831 page 4
William
O'Kelley Hall County, Gainsville Georgia Post Office, unclaimed
letter.
July 9, 1837 page 3 Thomas O'Kelley Walton Co Georgia
August 5, 1837 page 4 Thomas O'Kelley Walton Co Georgia
August 19, 1837 page 4 Thomas O'Kelley Walton Co Georgia
August 26 1837 page 4 Thomas O'Kelley Walton Co Georgia
August 9 1839 page 3 James O'Kelley unclaimed letter at Clark
County, Athena Georgia Post Office
July 10 1840 page 3 unclaimed letter for C D
O'Kelley at Monroe Post Office Walton Co GA.
Jan 8 1841 page 3 unclaimed letter for Francis D
OKelly at Monroe Post Office Walton Co GA.
Jan 8 1841 page 3 unclaimed letter for Wm and
Nancy Kelly at Monroe Post Office Walton Co GA.
June 3 1842 page 3 Elizabeth O'Kelly 200
Acres of Land in Habersham Co
July 12 1849 page 3 Ben F OKelly Letter at Athens Clarke Co Georgia
Post Office
July 15, 1843 page 3
W J and
Lucinda O'Kelley Oglethorpe Co Georgia, debt notice
July 11, 1850 page 3 Benj F O'Kelley notice
to sell Negros of late George W Madison Co Ga.
October 3 1850 page 4 Benj F O'Kelley notice
to sell Negros of late George W Madison Co Ga.
November 7 1850 page 4 Benj F O'Kelley
notice to sell Negros of late George W Madison
Co Ga
November 21, 1850 page 4 Benj F O'Kelley notice
to sell Negros of late George W Madison Co Ga
this notice names the Negros and location and description of land to be
sold on the courthouse steps at Danielsville.
Feb 17 1853 page 4 James O'Kelley seeking dismissal as Exec on
Estate of Francina Spratling Madison Co GA
March 24 1853 page 4 James O'Kelley seeking dismissal as Exec on
Estate of Francina Spratling Madison Co GA
above
notice ran for six months
July 26 1855 Charles O'Kelley deceased notice to
sell estate Madison Co Ga. Two
additional notices.
Additional
notices for property and estate in 1856 including the sale of a six
year old Negro named John.
Additional
notices for property and estate in 1857 including the sale of a six
year old Negro named John.
Nov 12 1857 page 2 James Francis
O'Kelley photographer Clarke County Georgia
Dec 9 1858 page
1 James Francis O'Kelley
photographer advertisement Clarke County Georgia
Dec 30 1858 page
1 James Francis O'Kelley
photographer advertisement Clarke County Georgia and numerous months in
1960
Jan 21 1859 a chilling description of North Carolina justice.
This is certainly not a complete listing. If you
are aware of a book about the O'Kelley family that isn't listed here
please contact me.
Wanted for purchase
Some
books relating to the O'Kelley family are out of print and in only a few
public libraries. If you have books or are
aware of those who have O'Kelley books that they might be
interested in selling, please contact
me.
Books that are
wanted:
A Patchwork of Memories, a
Knowles/O’Kelley genealogy by Judith Ries p
1976
1 Most authors lists
Col Charles O'Kelly as a single "e" spelling but Charles Bridger in his
1867 book titled
An Index
to Printed Pedigrees: Contained in Country and Local Histories lists
the O'Kelley's of Screen as double "e". He lists three branches as
double "e" and two as single "e" a clear indicator that the last name
spelling wasn't an accident or a mistake. Some families who used a
translated name very early used the middle English spelling of O'Kelley
which included the unneeded extra "e" and I suspect this is the source
of my families story that our double "e" spelling is the way the "old
Irish" spelled our name.
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