Some time ago, I found Mark Gillen, brother of my great-great-grandmother Mary Gillen Quinn, in the naturalization indexes online at Ancestry.com. I pondered whether I would learn anything new by trying to get my hands on the record, and decided on inaction for the time being. Sometimes, good things come to those who wait. Mark Gillen's naturalization record came to me!
Two years earlier, a Patrick Gillen had also been naturalized in the King County Court. His naturalization, too, had been witnessed by a Hugh Quinn. They were not then kind enough to their descendants to record their addresses, so I don't know whether this was the same Hugh Quinn who would marry Mary Gillen about a year later, around 1893.
We're still working on figuring out the connection between the two Gillen families. I've got a couple lines of questioning to follow up with some relatives, and I've ordered the marriage certificate between the two Gillen grandchildren, Agnes Quinn and Bill Maines. I don't know whether that will shed any light. What undoubtedly would, if it existed, would be any dispensation Agnes and Bill might have needed to be married in the Catholic Church if they were related, but according to the Diocese of Brooklyn's website, only dispensation records from before 1890 are open for research. I'm trying to gather as much information as possible on the families at this point, and hoping something will clear things up. Any research avenues you can suggest?
2 comments:
Hi Katie, I enjoy your blog. I write a blog entitled Genealogy Frame of Mind - its over at
Http://genealogyframeofmind.blogspot.com
I'm giving you the Ancestor Approved Award. Stop on by & grab it off my page!
Karen
Hi Katie,
I really enjoy your blog, and I just nominated you for the same award Karen did. You can pick it up here. http://meandmyancestors.blogspot.com/2010/04/ancestor-approved-award.html
I checked all my nominees first but I didn't check the comments.
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