[NI0001]
dni 24.702.273
padrinos de bautismo norma cristina houlin y jorge daniel panfili
[NI0002]
padrinos de bautismo: elvira ipichen de travesino y juan jose navarra
padrinos de casamiento: jose panfili y emils esther ipichen
[NI0004]
testigos de casamiento santiago houlin y amanda ipichen
[NI0005] nacio en campo leones, en una quinta entre la chispa y murphy, sus vecinos eran los vascheto y los demarchi, estudio la escuela primaria en rojas, donde trabajaba el marido de su hermana elvira
[NI0008] dni 26.220.091
[NI0009]
dni 41.849.245
padrinos de bautismo cristian ariel guiducci y maira corina houlin
[NI0010] fue uno de los primeros estancieros de cafferata
[NI0011] murio a los 61 años en la maria, estuvo viviendo en cordoba cuando contrajo tuberculosis donde fallecio de tuberculosis
[NI0013]
padrinos de casamiento horacio long y catalina houlin
vivio en la que actualmente es la casa del ovispado en venado tuerto
[NI0014]
padrinos de bautismo santiago macloughlin y catalina macloughlin
puede haber fallecido el 12-12-1937
[NI0015] puede figurar como juan houlin, padrinos de bautismo catalina ines m macloughlin y juan macloughlin
[NI0016] padrinos de bautismo tomas macloughlin y ana maria howlin
[NI0017] padrinos de bautismo santiago y anita macloughlin
[NI0019]
padrinos de bautismo juan macloughlin y margarita doyle
murio soltero
[NI0028] padrinos de bautismo carlos panfili y patricia houlin
[NI0031] padrinos de bautismo catalina houlin y ludovico ipichen
[NI0034] padrinos de bautismo: julia riquelme y roberto houlin
[NI0041] padrinos de bautismo: veronica martino y cristian houlin
[NI0046] padrinos de bautismo: roberto houlin y hebe gutierrez zorrilla
[NI0051] murio en un accidente de avion en entre rios
[NI0059] hija de Patrick Kennedy y Brennan y de Mary Daly
[NI0061] hermano de brigida gallagher casada con john carr
[NI0092] nacio con sindrome de down
[NI0111] tuvo meningitis a los 3 meses de vida
[NI0143] evangelista
[NI0162]
17 o 19 horas
boda civil teodelina
[NI0164] padrinos de bautismo: rosa m. esmee houlin y juan carlos del rio
[NI0171] fallecio a los 70 años
[NI0172] murio a los 69 años en la casa de patricio dunne
[NI0173] There are many variants of this name. In the form Pers it is recorded in Alen's Register as of Dublin in the thirteenth century. Pearce is the form in the 1659 census (Co. Kildare), while Pierce and Peirce appear in various parts of the country at that date. A Co. Cork probate of 1677 shows the name as Pearce and for the same county Peirce and Pierce are frequent in the eighteenth century. Richard Pierce was Bishop of Waterford and Lismore from 1701 to 1735. Pearse is of course famous on account of Padraig Pearse (1879-1916), schoolmaster, orator, poet and revolutionary leader. The Pearse brothers executed in 1916 were sons of an Englishman living in Dublin and of a Gaelic Irish mother.
[NI0177] Se radicó en Navarro y después en Las Heras. Presidente de la Sociedad de Fomento de Cafferata. Falleció en su estancia Santa Catalina el 3.8.1919. Casado en matrimonio en 1871 en Las Heras con Catherine O'Brien, nacida en Co.Wexford el 25.3.1844, que vino en 1870 y falleció en Cafferata el 15.9.1929. En 1884 se radicaron en Cafferata, siendo de los primeros colonos irlandeses en esa zona.
[NI0178] enterrada en venado tuerto
[NI0179] The surname MacLoughlin, also spelled MacLaughlin, is used in modern Ireland as the anglicized form of that of two entirely distinct Gaelic septs, both of considerable importance. One indeed which was of royal status, is not a Mac name at all but an O name, being O Maoilsheachlainn in Irish, and up to the end of the seventeenth century always anglicized O'Melaghlin (with some slight variants). They are descended from maoilsheachlainn, better known as Malachy II, King of Ireland from 980 to 1002, when he was dethroned by the great Brian Boru. Maoilsheachlainn signified servant or follower of Seachlainn, I.e St. Secundinus. Malachy was of the race of Niall of the Nine Hostages. After the Anglo-Norman invasion the O'Melaghlins, like all the Gaelic princes and chiefs of Meath and central Ireland, were greatly reduced in power. In 1543 they were still strong enough to be named in an order establishing martial law in the midland counties (see entry for Dunn) but in each of the successive waves of invasion, especially in the seventeenth century, they further declined, till after 1691 they disappear altogether as O'Melaghlins, and the remnant of the sept remaining in their ancestral territory where thereafter known as MacLoughlin. Surprisingly, MacLoughlin is one of the most numerous names in the Tipperary Hearth Money Rolls (1665). One of their descendants has of late years done a great deal of research on the O'Melaghlin genealogy and the pedigrees of their present day MacLoughlin representatives: the results of his work are deposited in the Genealogical Office (Office of Arms), Dublin Castle. Turning to the MacLoughlins proper, we have another powerful and important sept, or at least one which can be so described up to the thirteenth century, when they too declined in influence. This sept was called Mac Lochlainn in Irish, I.e son of Lochlainn, a forename of Norse origin, which does not, however, imply that the family as itself of Norse stock: the MacLoughlins of Ulster were, in fact, a senior branch of the northern Ui Neill and their territory was in Innishowen (Co. Donegal). At the present time the name, which is very numerous, is found chiefly in Counties Donegal and Derry. In Dublin the name appears as MacGloughlin, presumably from the variant forms in Irish, Mag Lochlainn. Up to 1241, when the MacLochlainn ascendancy in Ulster was finally ended at a battle of that date, the leading men of this sept are mentioned continuously in the Annals of our mediaeval history, as are the O'Melaghlins of Meath; but subsequently no outstanding figure of the name appears in any phase of national activity, though the branch of the Ulster sept, which had settled in Co. Leitrim under the O'Rourkes, was sufficiently established there to be included among the chieftains of that county in the Composition Book of Connacht (1585). In modern times the most notable person of the name was John MacLoughlin (1784-1857), of Hudson Bay Company Fame.
[NI0186] Nació en Las Heras el 14.1.1873. Falleció en Venado Tuerto el 4.5.1921. Casado en matrimonio con Margarita Doyle y Roche, hija de Robert Doyle (de Co.Wexford) y de Mary Roche, nacida en 1843 en Wexford, la que murió en CBsAs el 12.10.1959
[NI0192] puede figurar como anna angeli
[NI0204] desaparecido en la epoca del proceso militar de 1976
[NI0206] Radicado en Conesa
[NI0207] vivio en estancia santa catalina de cafferata
[NI0230] sin decendencia
[NI0231] sin decendencia
[NI0239]
Empresario. Dirigente de la Federación de Sociedades Argentino-Irlandesas. Presidente del Serra Club de Buenos Aires
direccion alsina 1441,esc, 315 buenos aires
[NI0245] sin decendencia
[NI0248] fallecio soltera
[NI0249]
Aviador militar. Brigadier. Embajador de la República Argentina en el Reino Unido. Ministro de Relaciones Exteriores. Secretario de Aeronáutica
sin descendencia
[NI0251] hija postuma
[NI0260] fallecio soltera
[NI0261] soltera
[NI0267] Fue censado en el Partido de Salto en 1895
[NI0289] Vino a CBsAs en 1865 y fue censado en Chacabuco en 1895
[NI0301] puede ser macnally el apellido
[NI0302] sin descendencia
[NI0307] Hacendado en Carmen de Areco, donde fue censado en 1895. Falleció allí el 24.4.1910
[NI0308] murio a los 23 años
[NI0311]
nacionalidad suizo/aleman
testigos miguel poquettini de 31 y constantino bruno de 56 ambos italianos
nombre en aleman luduvig anton hippichen
[NI0312] nacionalidad italiana
[NI0314]
testigos de nacimiento carlos gibone y jose puentes
hijo nº 12, murio soltera, era deficiente mental
[NI0331] mellizo de juana
[NI0333] fallecio unos dias antes de casarse
[NI0354] figura en el barco la zingara junto a james howlin, posible hermana
[NI0365]
The Ancient History of the Distinguished Surname
Long
The chronicles of England, shrouded by the mists of time, reveal the early records of the name Long as a Norman surname which ranks as one of the oldest. The history of the name is interwoven in the colourful fabric which is an intrinsic part of the history of Britain.
Careful research by professional analysts using such ancient manuscripts as the Domesday Book (compiled in 1086 by William the Conqueror), the Ragman Rolls, the Wace poem, the Honour Roll of the Battel Abbey, The Curia Regis, Pipe Rolls, the Falaise Roll, tax records, baptismals, family genealogies, and local parish and church records show the first record of the name Long was found in Wiltshire where they were seated from early times and their first records appeared on the early census rolls taken by the early Kings of Britain to determine the rate of taxation of their subjects.
Many alternate spellings of the name were found. They were typically linked to a common root, usually on of the Norman nobles at the Battle of Hastings. Your name, Long, occurred in many references, and from time to time, the surname included the spellings of Long, Longe, and many more. Scribes recorded and spelled the name as it sounded. It was not unlikely that a person would be born with one spelling, married with another, and buried with a headstone which showed another. All three spellings related to the same person. Sometimes references for different spelling variations either came from a division of the family, or, for religious reasons, or sometimes patriotic reasons.
The family name Long is believed to be descended originally form the Norman race. They were commonly believed to be of French origin but were, more accurately, of Viking origin. The Vikings landed in the Orkneys and Northern Scotland about the year 870 A.D., under their chief, Stirgud the Stout. Later, under their Jarl, Thorfinn Rollo, they invaded France about 940 A.D. The French King, Charles the Simple, after Rollo laid siege to Paris, finally conceded defeat and granted northern France to Rollo. Rollo became the first Duke of Normandy, the territory of the northmen. Duke William who invaded and defeated England in 1066, was descended from the first Duke Rollo of Normandy.
Duke William took a census of most of England in 1086, and recorded it in the Domesday Book. A family name capable of being traced back to this document, or to Hastings, was a signal honor for most families during the middle ages, and even to this day.
The surname Long emerged as a notable English family in the county of Wiltshire where they were recorded as a family of great antiquity seated with manor and estates in that shire. They were descended from a Norman noble of Preux in Normandy. This distinguished name settled in Wiltshire and Henry Long, Assistant to the Lord Treasurer of England, Hungerford, settled at Wraxall. By the 13th century they had branched to Symington, Rowde Aston, and Whaddon, and Beckington in Somerset, Monkton Farley and Bainton in Wiltshire, Preshaw in Oxford, and in the county of Norfolk. This prolific name had branched by the 16th century to Gloucester, Middlesex, and many other southern counties. They were elected to the peerage through Baron Farnborough but this line became extinct in 1838. Notable amongst the family at the time was Baron Farnborough.
The surname Long contributed much to local politics and in the affairs of England or Scotland. During the 12th century many of these Norman families moved north to Scotland, following Earl David of Huntington who would become King of Scotland. Later, in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries England and Scotland was ravaged by religious and political conflict. The monarchy, the Church and Parliament fought for supremacy. The unrest caused many to think of distant lands.
Settlers in Ireland became known as the "Adventurers for land in Ireland". They "undertook" to keep the Protestant faith, and were granted lands previously owned by the Irish. In Ireland they settled in county Wexford at Newross.
The attractions of the New World spread like wildfire. Many sailed aboard the fleet of sailing ships known as the "White Sails".
In North America, Migrants which could be considered kinsmen of the family name Long, or variable spellings of that same family name, included Edward Long settled in Virginia in 1649; along with Henry in 1774; James in 1642; Jane in 1624; Catherine in 1635; Ralph in 1638; Richard in 1642; Robert, his wife and two sons in 1643; Captain Long settled in Boston in 1768, David Long in 1765; John in Boston in 1635, and many more to the ports of Philadelphia, Maryland, San Francisco, Delaware, Barbados. From the port of arrival many settlers joined wagon trains westward. During the War of Independence some declared their loyalty to the Crown and moved northward into Canada and became known as the United Empire Loyalists.
Meanwhile, the family name was active in the social stream. There were many notables of this name, Long; Augustus Long, American Company director; Clarence Long, American Economist; Ernest Long, Canadian Clergyman; Franklin Long, American Educator; Gerald Long, American Lawyer; Russell Long, American Attorney; William Long, British Politician.
In the process of researching this distinguished family name was also traced the most ancient grant of Coat of Arms from the branches which developed their own Arms.
The most ancient grant of a Coat of Arms found was: Black with a silver lion rampant surrounded by eight crosses. The Crest is: A lion emerging from a crown. The ancient family motto for this distinguished name is: "Pieus Quoi Que Preux"
Scan of Postcard from Ireland
Scan of Tile from San Diego
[NI0376] hermano mellizo de sebastian
[NI0405] fallecio al nacer era melliza de ana maria infiesta
[NI0442] In this note we may disregard English settlers of the name Fox, one family of whom became extensive landowners in Co. Limerick and are perpetuated there in the place name Mountfox, near Kilmallock. The Irish Foxes got their name as a sobriquet: Tadhg O Catharnaigh (anglice O'Caherny - mod. Carney or Kearney), Chief of Teffia, Co. Meath (d. 1084) was called Sionnach, I.e The Fox, and in due course this branch acquired the name Fox as a distinct surname. (For Kearney see below) A report of the Registrar-General gives a list of alternative forms of surnames used by persons registering births, deaths, marriages. Few are so lengthy as that of Fox, the synonyms for which are Mac Ashinah (Co. Tyrone), MacShanaghy (Co. Louth) - from the Irish Mac a'Sionnaigh, son of the fox, Shanahy (Co. Westmeath), Shinagh (Co. Mayo), Shunny (Co. Louth), Shinnock (Co. Kilkenny), Shonogh (Co. Galway) and others, with O Sionnaigh in Irish in general use. It will be seen that these synonyms cover a wide stretch of country in three provinces. The name, as Fox, is found in every county, though nowhere in very large numbers; it is most numerous in Dublin, Longford, Tyrone and Leitrim. The head of the sept has for centuries since the English language was first introduced into Ireland been known as "The Fox" and this designation, still used to-day, is admitted as authentic by the Irish Genealogical Office - it cannot be called a title for titles are not recognized under the Irish Constitution. Among interesting bearers of the name we may mention Sir Patrick Fox of Moyvore, Co. Westmeath, who was State Interpreter (of Irish) in 1568, and Charlotte Milligan Fox (1864-1916), a collector of folk songs and founder of the Irish Folk Song Society.
[NI0444] Burke is much the most numerous of the Hiberno-Norman surnames. It is estimated that there are some 19,000people of the name in Ireland to-day: with its variant Bourke it comes fourteenth in the list of commonest names. Sir John Davis said in 1606: "There are more able men of the surname of Bourke than of any name whatsoever in Europe". It came to Ireland at the Anglo-Norman invasion in the person of William de Burgo (called William the Conqueror by Irish annalists and wrongly described as William Fitzadelm de Burgo), who succeeded Strongbow as Chief Governor. In 1179 vast estates in Connacht were granted to the de Burgos, or Burkes, but beyond sporadic ravaging, they did not, properly speaking possess the territory until the next generation when it was regranted to Sir Richard de Burgo, or Burke, by Henry III. Having regard to the large number of Burkes, or Bourkes, now living - the figure 19,000, given above, must be multiplied several times to include emigrants of Irish stock to America and elsewhere - it is hardly possible that they all stem from the one ancestor (the name, it may be remarked, is not found in England except in families of Irish background); nevertheless, even if several different Burkes came to Ireland in the wake of Strongbow, it is the one great family, mentioned above, which has been so prominent in Irish history. The Burkes became more completely hibernicized than any other Norman family. They adopted Brehon Law and proclaimed themselves chiefs after the Irish fashion, forming, indeed, several septs of which the two most important were known as MacWilliam Uachtar (Galway) and MacWilliam Iochtar (Mayo). Minor branches became MacDavie, MacGibbon, MacHugo, MacRedmond and MacSeoinin. Of these the name MacSeoinin is extant in Counties Mayo and Galway as Jennings, and MacGibbon as Gibbons. As late as 1518, when the City of the Tribes was still hostile to its Gaelic neighbours and the order was made that "Neither O nor Mac should strut or swagger through the streets of Galway", a more specific instruction was issued forbidding the citizens to admit into their houses "Burkes, MacWilliams, Kelly or any other sept". The original form of the name was often used even as late as the sixteenth century: two de Burgos were bishops of Clonfert between 1508 and 1580. After the Battle of Kinsale at which Lord Burke of Castleconnell distinguished himself (on the English side), the leading Burkes displayed more loyalty to their king than to their country, though when the two loyalties coincided during the reign of James II, they were to be found among the leading men of the Confederate Catholics and many of the name were attained and deprived of their estates, much of which, however, was recovered by them after the Restoration. The Earl of Clanrickarde, whose peerage dated from 1543, commanded one of the infantry regiments in JamesII's army. Of the many Burkes who took service with continental powers after the defeat of that King, none was more distinguished than Toby Bourke (c. 1674-c. 1734) whose expedition and later became a famous Napoleonic commander. Several other Bourkes or Burkes distinguished themselves in the army of France. Later in the eighteenth century the outstanding Burkes were the famous statesman Edmund Burke (1729-1797), whose only son, Richard Burke (1758-1794) was agent of the Catholic Committee, and Dr. Thomas Burke (1705-1776), Dominican Bishop of Ossory, author of Hibernica Dominicana. Another Dominican of note was Rev. Thomas Nicholas Burke (1830-1883), whose fame as a preacher, especially during his visit to America, was phenomenal - Pope Pius IX called him "the prince of preachers". His contemporary, also Galway born, Canon Ulick Bourke, P.P. (1829-1887), was a pioneer of the Irish language revival. The death of Richard Southwell Burke, sixth Earl of Mayo (1822-1872), caused a sensation as he was assassinated during his term of office as Governor General of India. Another sensation relating to a Burke of humbler origin was the trial and execution of the notorious William Burke (1792-1829): his activities in smothering the victims whose bodies he sold for dissection have added a verb - to burke - to the English language. Galway born Robert O'Hara Burke (1820-1861), also made headlines in his day when under conditions of almost incredible hardship he succeeded in crossing the Australian desert on foot: he died of starvation on the return journey. Many other Burkes, Bourkes, and de Burghs might also be mentioned. No account of the name, however brief, would be adequate which omitted Sir Bernard Burke (1814-1892), Ulster King of Arms, and his father, John Burke (1787-1848), a Co. Tipperary man, celebrated for their work on genealogy, peerages and family history.
[NI0477] Censado en el Partido de San Pedro en 1895
[NI0486]
Estanciero, censado en 1869
XV. Anne Dalton and Nicholas Howlin. Anne Dalton was born in 1837 and married Nicholas Howlin who was born in Ireland in 1830 and was living on a ranch in 1869; he died in 1895. Seven children are listed. p.487.
[NI0488] Censado en 1895
[NI0526] mellizo de Santiago, nacio por inseminacion artificial
[NI0527] mellizo de maria candelaria, nacio por inseminacion artificial
[NI0547] padrinos de bautismo: mateo pierce irlandes de 42 años y emilia hamlin de mercedes de 23 años libro 60 folio 317
[NI0595] Vino al Rio de la Plata en 1884 (en la actualidad aún se encuentran familiares suyos en Ferbane, Co. Offaly). Aquí en la Argentina se dedicó a las actividades rurales como ovejero aparcero en la estancia de Duggan en San Antonio de Areco. En 1900 compró un campo en Pergamino. Falleció en el partido de Pergamino en 1928
[NI0663] no se caso
[NI0666] melliza
[NI0667] melliza
[NI0678]
Notes for PATRICIO GUILLERMO HOWLIN:
padrinos de bautismo patricio howlin y margarita burke (libro 66 folio 230)
[NI0679]
puede ser guillermo solo
padrinos de bautismo andres bolger argentino de 29 años y anita howlin argentina de 28 años (libro 60 folio 389)
[NI0684] Integrante de la firma Boyle Hnos., de Venado Tuerto
[NI0686] Vino a la Argentina con sus padres y fue uno de los primeros colonos de Venado Tuerto. Censado en 1895
[NI0703] Vino al Rio de la Plata poco tiempo antes que sus padres y hermanos. Vivió primero en Carmen de Areco, donde se casó, y después en Maggiolo, como mayordomo de la estancia de Thomas Hogan. Algunos años después puso una casa de comercio en Ramallo, donde posteriormente vendió a William Joyce, regresando a Maggiolo, donde fundó la firma Eduardo Boyle e Hijos, que prosperó rápidamente. Se retiró a la vida privada en 1913, fijando su residencia en Rosario, donde falleció el 13.8.1914, siendo sepultado en Maggiolo
[NI0706] Se radicó en la Argentina en 1874. Después de estar algún tiempo en el norte de Buenos Aires, se estableció en Santa Fe, siendo censado en Rosario en 1895
[NI0767] Religiosa. Hija de la Misericordia
[NI0866] pertenecia a la orden de la santa union
[NI0893] Falleció después de cumplir los 70 años de edad. Fue criador de ovejas, y después se estableció en Rosario, trabajando en el F.C.C.A. (hoy Gral. Mitre).
[NI0916] Presidente de la Comisión de Fomento de Maggiolo
[NI0937] Posiblemente sea el mismo que en marzo de 1879 fuera designado Delegado del Partido de Moreno al Club Político Gral. Brown.
[NI0985] , que llegó al país en 1871 y se estableció con su tía Mrs. Isabel Kelly de MulleadyEn 1905 fue con su familia a Co.Longford, donde nacieron sus dos hijos menores. Volvió a Irlanda en 1937 y falleció en Ardagh el 21.9.1940. Con descendencia.
[NI1035] Vino en 1880 y vivió en Lobos hasta 1891, en que ingresó al F.C.Central Córdoba.
[NI1039] Estuvo hasta 1921 en el campo de Moore y después en Hersilia
[NI1116] murio soltero
[NI1120] sin descendencia
[NI1137] Se dedicó a la cría de ovejas en Pavón Arriba, Pcia. de Santa Fe. Después se radicó en Rosario, siendo entonces del personal del F.C.C.A. Al retirarse se radicó en Chañar Ladeado, donde pobló la estancia "San Patricio"
[NI1142] sin descendencia
[NI1165] mellizo de thomas
[NI1177] dedicó a la cría de ovejas en Salto y Arrecifes, donde falleció
[NI1185] mellizo de mariana
[NI1243] murio a los 17 años
[NF122] se caso con bernardo cuando enviudo de su primer marido