Hello Annie and thank you for your detailed reply. Your efforts are greatly
appreciated and have given me some new leads.

I should have said that my ancestors were from Tullykevan townland.

I hold the birth, death and marriage certificates (where applicable) for
most of the Regan family - the Wilsons have been more difficult, but I did
trace the death of Mary Jane (again Reigan) in Blackwatertown in 1893

I am aware of the new Ulster Historical Foundations Townland publication (I
am on their mailing list). Just have to justify the cost and then shipping
to Australia (I have bought from them before - "Researching Scots-Irish
Ancestors").

John Regan (shown as Reigan) on his death certificate of 1892 was my gggg
grandfather. As you say he is shown as being 102 when he died (which I have
not been able to prove) but I am fairly certain I have traced his marriage
to 1821, so regardless, when he died he was a very good age (my own mother
lived to 100).

I have tracked most of the children of John's son, my ggg grandfather
Charles Regan using Proni, Roots Ireland, Family Search, Ancestry, Find My
Past and the free Irish records web site and hold their birth, marriage and
death certificates (as applicable). Most never married and census records
showed that a number lived together all their lives.

It took a good deal of sweat to ultimately find my gg grandfather John's
baptismal record as Roots Ireland, while recording all his brothers and
sisters baptisms, did not have him. I did find it eventually - written in
Latin and recorded as Johannes, son of Carolus Regan and Maria Johanna
Wilson on March 9 1856.

I have traced John's granddaughter Bella (one of Charles' children -
Isabella Regan). She was one of the few to eventually marry

So many years of research (I have been doing this for over 40 years) but you
never stop learning and discovering.

So again, many thanks for your info which I will use and thank you for
taking the time to reply. 

With kind regards, Wayne 

Wayne Kedward
Sydney Australia
Email: [email protected]

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Today's Topics:

   1. John Regan & William Wilson of Tullykevan townland, Clonfeacle parish,
County Armagh
      (Annie Crenshaw)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Fri, 21 Feb 2025 11:01:14 -0600
From: Annie Crenshaw <[email protected]>
Subject: [CoTyroneMailingList] John Regan & William Wilson of
        Tullykevan townland, Clonfeacle parish, County Armagh
To: [email protected]
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
        boundary="------------z69vyz0w1UiM9xyZG29XrXwc"

It's very helpful when you have a document of your Irish ancestors that 
gives the TOWNLAND where these families lived -- such as the 1853 
marriage record that Wayne Kedward described. Townlands were hugely 
important in 19th century Ireland! Both Charles Regan and his bride of 
1853, Mary Jane Wilson, were residents of Tullykevin (Tullykeevan), a 
townland in the Armagh part of Clonfeacle parish. Tullykevin is on the 
north side of Blackwaterwater town, on the east side of and adjacent to 
the Blackwater River. It's bordered by Drumask townland on the east, 
Shanmullagh on the north, Stangmore (Magee) on the west, and of course 
Blackwatertown on the south.

In the 1833 Tithe Applotments, "Wm. Wilson" was counted at 
"Tullykeevan," but there were no Regans in the Armagh part of Clonfeacle 
parish. By the time of Griffith's Valuation (1860s for Armagh), "John 
Regan" was counted at "Tullykevan" in Clonfeacle parish. There were no 
longer any Wilsons at Tullykevan, but there was a William Wilson in 
Blackwatertown.

Have you checked for deaths of these men in the Blackwatertown area? 
Interestingly, a "John Reigan" died in 1892 at Blackwatertown, age 102. 
He was a widower, a laborer, and the informant was his granddaughter 
Bella Reigan, a resident of Blackwatertown.

Sir Isaac Wilson (1757-1844) was from the Blackwatertown area. He served 
as personal physician to the Duke and Duchess of Kent, and was also 
Director of the Haslar Naval Hospital. An obituary for him is posted on 
this very County Tyrone web site, thanks to Len Swindley -- see "Wilson 
Family Notes, Co. Tyrone 1823-79." I've gathered various references to 
Sir Isaac's relatives, but I don't have anything on a "Mary Jane Wilson" 
who married Charles Regan, or her father William Wilson, except that a 
William Wilson of Blackwatertown is referred to in several of his 
daughters' marriages in 1845 and 1855. He's the "late William Wilson" of 
Blackwatertown (in a marriage announcement in The Armagh Guardian) and 
"William Wilson, merchant" on the daughters' civil marriage records. 
He's obviously not a man who'd be described as a "laborer" in another 
record. But, I can share these specific references if you'd like to read 
them. I have a distant connection through marriage with Sir Isaac's 
family, but we're not blood-line related.

If you could find a direct male descendant of William Wilson of 
Tullykevin/Tullykevan, a Y-DNA test would be extremely helpful in 
determining which Wilsons were his ancestors. The test participant has 
to be a son of a son of a son, in a straight male Wilson line. If you 
ONLY know your ancestor Mary Jane Wilson, but haven't researched her 
siblings, you might find some of them by searching civil marriage 
records for Wilsons in Clonfeacle parish, 1845+, as well as deaths, 
1864+. Any Wilsons whose residence was Tullykevin are almost certainly 
in your ancestor's family.

Early Church of Ireland records for Clonfeacle parish didn't survive, 
but marriages 1845+, baptisms 1869+, and burials 1870+ are in local 
church custody and can be consulted by arrangement. Extracts of 
Clonfeacle's C. of I. vestry minutes (1763-1831) are on microfilm at 
PRONI, though less helpful than births/marriages/deaths.

On the subject of townlands, the new "Townland Atlas of Ulster" by 
Andrew Kane was published by the Ulster Historical Foundation this past 
year. It's a hefty and handsome compilation of county and parish record 
outlines and maps, almost 500 pages. The first printing sold out, and 
the UHF is taking orders for a second printing. There are reviews and 
many more details on-line.

Good luck with your Wilson-Regan search,

Annie
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