GRIFFINs of Newry
My interest in this is because of its likely connection to my JACKSONs. Here are my current conjectures – based on circumstantial evidence which still needs more factual buttressing:
+ Sarah JACKSON b: 1774 d: 29 Feb 1828
2 Philip GRIFFIN d: Aft 1836
+ Rachel KIDD b: 1802 d: 21 May 1866
3 Sarah GRIFFIN b: Abt 1832
2 Jackson GRIFFIN d: Bef 1851
+ Elizabeth JOHNSON b: Abt 1817 d: 7 Oct 1851
2 George GRIFFIN d: Aft 1836
3 Philip George GRIFFIN b: 1830 d: 1905
+ Margaret GILMORE b: 7 Sep 1834 d: 6 Dec 1904
4 Anna Eliza GRIFFIN b: 20 Dec 1854
4 Samuel George GRIFFIN b: 3 Sep 1856
4 John Gilmore GRIFFIN b: 23 Oct 1858 d: 16 Jul 1912
+ Eleanor Sarah PELAN b: Dec 1863 d: 16 Feb 1955
4 Frederick Richard GRIFFIN b: 23 Oct 1858 d: 10 Jun 1890
+ Mary JACKSON b: 23 Nov 1844 d: 9 Aug 1921
4 Eva GRIFFIN b: Abt 1860
Here are the some of the recent clues that I have been referencing:
A story shared by Fred Griffin (1889-1946), a journalist and great-grandson of Philip GRIFFIN:
Father's forebears were, if not gentry since they were in business, at least genteel. They were an old Newry family, Mother loved to tell us. My great-grandfather and his brother had a business as decorators and sent painters all over Ireland, England and Scotland, even to France -- though why the French should have hired Irishmen to paint their houses I never could understand, unless it was in gratitude for Fontenoy. Mother relished the shadow, however faint in her day, cast by this nobility of her husband's folk and gathered to her heart every little scrap of information about it she could find.
"Your great-grandmother and your great-great-aunts," she would tell me in a tone that never failed to inspire awe, "all wore white silk stockings," This in a period when only rich and great ladies wore even black silk stockings, lesser women being content with woolen or cotton stockings. "They were magnificent women, your great-great-aunts being very tall like your Aunt Eva in Dublin, and were very proud. When they passed in their carriage or walked through the streets of Newry people turned their heads." Poor Mother! Newry people had ceased to turn their heads when a Griffin passed.
The New Zealand part of the saga is also described by Fred GRIFFIN:
In the meantime my gay grandfather went from bad to worse. Neither by training nor temperament a farmer, he lost his stock and land. Then, little more than a year after my grandmother had borne him a fifth child, he left her, left Ireland and sailed for New Zealand with another woman. And what do you think my fool grandmother did? She found a job as nursery governess with an army officer and his family going out to New Zealand and followed her errant husband, leaving behind five children. Aunt Eva just learning to walk, the twins, Father and Uncle Richard, three years old, the other two a little older. Whether my grandmother, when she was looking after the army officer's children on the way out, ever thought of the children she left behind I cannot say; in the years to come they must have often haunted her for she never saw one of them again. She reached New Zealand and there joined my grandfather and his light o' love. Nothing that I could ever learn threw light on the coming together; the scene that may have taken place must be imagined. It is sufficient to know that for some time the three of them, grandfather, grandmother and his concubine lived together in apparent amity. He certainly must have been a man of parts and of charm. In the course of time, according to the gossip which reached distant Ireland, either the other woman left or died and Grandfather and Grandmother found themselves once more alone as man and wife. In the course of the years she bore him four or five more children, but only one of the original family, the second one, Aunt Nancy, years later, when she was grown up, joined them. The other four never saw their parents again or were seen by them, though the latter lived to be old, old people. NOTE: Philip George GRIFFIN would have left his Ireland-based family in 1861. Perhaps Mary KING was the concubine. Perhaps David GRIFFIN was a son of either his wife or his other partner.
Ros Davies listings for GRIFFINs from Newry. NOTE: I have shaded the ones in the family tree.
CR = Civil Registration
POD = Post Office & Trade Directories
IIW# = Index Irish Wills 1484- 1858
MI = Monumental Inscriptions from various graveyards
NCT = Newry Commerical Telegraph newspaper- from a transcription by Alison Causton, by permission of the British Library; see http://www.irelandoldnews.com/
PPNZ = Papers Past New Zealand
Betty Ann |
GRIFFIN |
. |
wife of John Duffey; mother of Ann b. 1868 & Bridget b. 1870 |
CR |
Catharine |
GRIFFIN |
. |
of Fathom, Co Armagh; will probated 1817 |
IIW V4 p 168 |
Catherine |
GRIFFIN |
. |
wife of Thomas Caassidy of Upper Fathom ; mother of Margaret b. 20 Jul 1865 |
CR |
George |
GRIFFIN |
. |
of Water St, Newry; a painter & glazier in 1824 |
POD |
George |
GRIFFIN |
. |
of 21 Sugar Island; charity donation in 1836; an oil merchant & painter & glazier in 1852 |
V3 p100,104 OSM; POD |
Mary |
GRIFFIN |
. |
wife of John McGivern; mother of Michael b. 1873 |
CR |
Matthew |
GRIFFIN |
. |
of Chapel Street; father of Ellen (d. 1897) & Bridget (d. 1899) & Lawrence( d. 1918 aged 25) & buried St. Mary's Catholic graveyard |
MIs |
Michael |
GRIFFAN |
. |
husband of Mary McAnulty; father of Rose b. 23 May 1868 |
CR |
P. |
GRIFFIN |
. |
his wife Sarah, died 29 Feb 1828 aged 54 after a long & painful illness |
NCT |
Patrick |
GRIFFIN |
. |
of Fathom , Co Armagh; will probated 1824 |
IIW V4 p 168 |
Philip |
GRIFFIN |
. |
of Water St, Newry; a publican in 1824 |
POD |
Philip |
GRIFFIN |
. |
of 2 Queen Street, Newry; a publican in 1846 & 1852 |
POD |
Philip George |
GRIFFIN |
. |
son of George Griffin ; aged 24 married Margaret Gilmer 15 Apr 1854 |
CR |
Richard |
GRIFFIN |
. |
of 44 Water Street; charity donation in 1836; a baker in 1846 |
V3 p100,104 OSM; POD |
Sarah |
GRIFFIN |
. |
of Queen St, Newry; a publican in 1824 |
POD |
Sarah |
GRIFFEN |
. |
daughter of Philip Griffen ;aged 21 married William Campbell 23 Dec 1853 |
CR |
Sarah |
GRIFFIN |
. |
youngest daughter of George Griffin , late of Newry; married James Christie of Wangaroa, New Zealand (late of Glasgow, Scotland) 16 Jan 1866 in NZ |
PPNZ |
Sophia |
GRIFFIN |
. |
4th daughter of George Griffin, late of Newry ; married Oliver Payne Sweeting (eldest son of James Sweeting of Watford, Hertfordshire UK) 3 Jan 1866 at St. Paul's Church NZ |
PPNZ |