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9798201750756 - Joseph P. Garland: Bridget & in 1918
Joseph P. Garland

Bridget & in 1918 (1918)

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Niederlande ~EN NW

ISBN: 9798201750756 bzw. 8201750756, vermutlich in Englisch, neu.

0,99 + Versand: 3,45 = 4,44
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Lieferung aus: Niederlande, Direct beschikbaar.
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Joseph P. Garland did not have things easy. His parents came from Ireland. He was born on Manhattan's Lower East Side on March 1, 1888—he was baptized a bit over a week later at St. Brigid's on the southwest corner of Avenue B and Eighth Street—and his father Patrick Garland came from just outside Dublin and he died when he was 44 or so, on February 7, 1890. Joseph's mother, Ellen Hickey, was also from Ireland but I do not know where. She died in 1897. I do know that she and Patrick had a second child, another boy, named Samuel after Patrick's father, who died in 1890. So my great grandmother was widowed when she was pregnant with a child who would not survive the year. And with Joseph. When she and Patrick came to America I do not know. Joseph ended up in a Catholic orphanage on Madison Avenue, where he is listed as an "inmate" in the 1900 Census. By 1910, he again lived on the Lower East Side; we find him there in the 1910 Census. In 1917, he told the draft board that he worked as a clerk in what was then New York City's diamond district, on Maiden Lane near Wall Street and that he lived on Ridge Street, which, since the census only lists men there I assume it was a boarding house. Bridget Dermody was born on August 22, 1888 on the Lower East Side and was baptized eleven days later at St. Mary's Church on Grand Street. (To give a sense of the density of the Irish Catholic population at the time, the events in this story take place at St. Rose of Lima Church (now gone), and it was only a few blocks from St. Mary's (still there).) Bridget's parents were from Illinois but her grandparents were from Ireland, though we cannot say from what County. Her father died when she was young, but her mother Mary remarried, and she became a Campbell. By 1910, she lived only a few blocks from Joseph. The 1910 Census lists Joseph two pages away from Bridget. The 1910 Census also lists Bridget (also known as Delia) with her older brother John as well as five half-siblings. It also reports that Maria (or Mary) Campbell gave birth to twelve children, of whom seven were still alive in 1910. (In 1900, it was 9 and 6.) Bridget and Joseph married on June 15, 1918 at St. Rose of Lima Church near where they lived. It was a heavily Irish neighborhood just on the southern side of the ramp to the Williamsburg Bridge, which opened in 1903. Joseph entered the Army on that same day, June 15, 1918. He was discharged in January 1919. I do not know whether he went to Europe, but I doubt it. Americans did not start arriving in large numbers until the late spring of 1918. This is what we know. This story was inspired by the fact that the marriage and the enlistment took place on the same day. This story attempts to piece together how they came to be a couple. My father (also Joseph) took "Dermody" as his middle name. I took Patrick as my Confirmation name. Joseph P. Garland did not have things easy. His parents came from Ireland. He was born on Manhattan's Lower East Side on March 1, 1888—he was baptized a bit over a week later at St. Brigid's on the southwest corner of Avenue B and Eighth Street—and his father Patrick Garland came from just outside Dublin and he died when he was 44 or so, on February 7, 1890. Joseph's mother, Ellen Hickey, was also from Ireland but I do not know where. She died in 1897. I do know that she and Patrick had a second child, another boy, named Samuel after Patrick's father, who died in 1890. So my great grandmother was widowed when she was pregnant with a child who would not survive the year. And with Joseph. When she and Patrick came to America I do not know. Joseph ended up in a Catholic orphanage on Madison Avenue, where he is listed as an "inmate" in the 1900 Census. By 1910, he again lived on the Lower East Side; we find him there in the 1910 Census. In 1917, he told the draft board that he worked as a clerk in what was then New York City's diamond district, on Maiden Lane near Wall Street and that he lived on Ridge Street, which, since the census only lists men there I assume it was a boarding house. Bridget Dermody was born on August 22, 1888 on the Lower East Side and was baptized eleven days later at St. Mary's Church on Grand Street. (To give a sense of the density of the Irish Catholic population at the time, the events in this story take place at St. Rose of Lima Church (now gone), and it was only a few blocks from St. Mary's (still there).) Bridget's parents were from Illinois but her grandparents were from Ireland, though we cannot say from what County. Her father died when she was young, but her mother Mary remarried, and she became a Campbell. By 1910, she lived only a few blocks from Joseph. The 1910 Census lists Joseph two pages away from Bridget. The 1910 Census also lists Bridget (also known as Delia) with her older brother John as well as five half-siblings. It also reports that Maria (or Mary) Campbell gave birth to twelve children, of whom seven were still alive in 1910. (In 1900, it was 9 and 6.) Bridget and Joseph married on June 15, 1918 at St. Rose of Lima Church near where they lived. It was a heavily Irish neighborhood just on the southern side of the ramp to the Williamsburg Bridge, which opened in 1903. Joseph entered the Army on that same day, June 15, 1918. He was discharged in January 1919. I do not know whether he went to Europe, but I doubt it. Americans did not start arriving in large numbers until the late spring of 1918. This is what we know. This story was inspired by the fact that the marriage and the enlistment took place on the same day. This story attempts to piece together how they came to be a couple. My father (also Joseph) took "Dermody" as his middle name. I took Patrick as my Confirmation name. Inhoud:Taal: Engels;Bindwijze: E-book;Verschijningsdatum: maart 2021;Ebook formaat: Epub zonder kopieerbeveiliging (DRM); Betrokkenen:Auteur(s): Joseph P. Garland; Lees mogelijkheden:Lees dit ebook op: Android (smartphone en tablet) | Kobo e-reader | Desktop (Mac en Windows) | iOS (smartphone en tablet) | Windows (smartphone en tablet);Ebook formaat: Epub zonder kopieerbeveiliging (DRM); EAN: Overige kenmerken:Studieboek: Nee; Engels | E-book | 9798201750756.
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9798201750756 - Joseph P. Garland: Bridget & in 1918
Joseph P. Garland

Bridget & in 1918 (1918)

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Deutschland DE NW EB

ISBN: 9798201750756 bzw. 8201750756, in Deutsch, Dermody House LLC, Dermody House LLC, neu, E-Book.

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Lieferung aus: Deutschland, zzgl. Versandkosten, in stock.
Bridget & Joseph in 1918: ab 0.99 €.
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