Bustard Head, Queensland, Australia: lighthouse keeper's cottage
George and Margaret Goodfellow lived at Bustard Head from 1886 to 1889; an isolated interlude for town folk whose grandmothers were school teachers, embroidery merchants and wives of a druggist, painter, organist, soldiers and farmers.

Fitzpatrick Evidence 1747 - 1847

Communication with researchers on the Fitzpatrick List confirmed the Fitzpatrick ancestors of my grandmother, Grace (Goodfellow) Murphy were from Ballagh.  This townland, Ballagharahin, is in the Parish of Rathdowney, County Laois, formerly Queen's County, Ireland.

This evidence is summarised in the poster above, which was accepted by organisers of the Fitzpatrick Gathering, to be held in Kilkenny from 4 to 6 October 2024.

It begins with the marriage settlement for John Fitzpatrick and Dymphna Shanahan in 1747, continues with John "who owned the whole townland of Ballagh", his son Charles' Oath of Allegiance in 1778, Charles' son John's marriage to Jane Howe in 1820 to their daughter Grace's marriage to Henry Goodfellow in 1847.



Charles Fitzpatrick's Oath of Allegiance





On 25 November 1778, in Dublin, Charles Fitzpatrick Esq of Ballagh, Queen's County, took the Oath of Allegiance to the King.  Above his name in the National Archives, Catholic Qualification and Convert Rolls is Henrietta Fitzpatrick, spinster, also of Ballagh.  This confirms that Charles and Henrietta renounced being Catholic.  This would enable Charles' eldest son Joseph to inherit the land in Ballagharahin townland, Parish of Rathdowney.  It would also facilitate his younger sons John and Mathew joining the army.

This is the final confirmation that my great-great-great grandfather John Fitzpatrick came from Ballagh in County Laois.

My thanks to Andrew Wallace via the Fitzpatrick List of the Fitzpatrick-MacGiolla Phadraig Clan Society.


Fitzpatrick puzzles solved

Ballagh Castle, Ballagharahin townland, County Laois
Source: Google Maps, street view

Many thanks to members of the Fitzpatrick Society List for their prompt and pertinent responses to my questions about John Fitzpatrick (1785-1838).  He was not born in County Cavan, he left the army in 1830.  The marriage in 1820 is correct.  The children including Thomas Mapleson are correct.  There is an alternative General, who was Jane Howe's uncle. The Fitzpatrick reseachers sent records about John's father Charles in Ballagh.

The following corrections have been made to the relevant posts.


29 August, post added about Charles Fitzpatrick's Oath of Allegiance to the King.  

Charles Fitzpatrick's Oath of Allegiance

Clarified John and Jane Howe marriage licence and bond. Deleted John Fitzpatrick, born Urney.  Added Thomas Mapleson Fitzpatrick, died Crimea, and link to his late father, Capt. Fitzpatrick, 88th Foot.  Added John Fitzpatrick's military service record.

John Fitzpatrick and Jane Howe

Revised some information about Jane Howe's baptism, uncle William Gardiner, daughter Mary's marriage and daughter Grace's birth and baptism.

Jane Howe in London and Essex

Fitzpatrick and Howe ancestors

Questions about the Breifne origins of the family remain.

Fitzpatrick Family of Ossory

Fitzpatrick Clans in Ireland

These corrections and new information will be added to the Goodfellow family history booklet.

Margaret Johnson in London 1871


Margaret Johnson and George Goodfellow,
birth year from event age
When Margaret Robinson died in 1914, her second husband Joseph Robinson was the informant on her death certificate.  His information was that Margaret was aged 56 when she died, aged 38 when they were married in 1897 and aged 15 at her first marriage to George Goodfellow in England.  Margaret Johnston and George Goodfellow were both passengers on the Ship Winefred, which left London in October 1873.  Margaret's age indicates she was born in 1858-59.  

Margaret Johnson, age 13, Refuge Home, Christ Church Spitalfields Parish, London
1871 England, Wales & Scotland Census, Tower Hamlets Borough, Whitechapel District.
Public Record Office RG10 523, page 12. FindMyPast, 10 April 2024.

In April 1871, in the Census, there was a Margaret Johnson age 13, born in Liverpool, a boarder and scholar at the Christ Church refuge at 25 Commercial Street, Spitalfields, London.  This is not far from Holy Trinity Minories, where George Goodfellow was a railway porter.  Both addresses were in the District of Whitechapel, Borough of Tower Hamlets.  Could Margaret and George have known each other before emigrating to Australia?  Their daughter Florence was born in Brisbane in May 1874, but died in December that year.  Her cause of death was marasmus: malnutrition.  How were Margaret, perhaps aged only sixteen and George coping in a new country, in Brisbane with a baby who was not thriving?

On the passenger list in 1873, Margaret's age was 24 (born about 1859); on their marriage in Brisbane on 26 January 1874, her age was 22 
(born about 1852), which was over the age of 21 to be married without parental permission.  At the birth of their daughter Grace on 21 September 1879, Margaret's age was 27 (born about 1852).  At their son Henry's birth on 31 January 1883, Margaret's age was 30 years (born about 1853).  

Margaret consistently recorded her birthplace as Paris, France; specifically Dunstin Lees.  She was apparently very proud of her French connection and French songs.  
There is no confirmation whether she was born in Paris or Liverpool, that her family was in poverty so she was in a children's refuge in London, or that she was born about 1852 or 1858.

Fitzpatrick Family and the Errill Wayside Cross

 

In 1622, Geoffrey Fitzpatrick of Ballagharahin erected a cross in the neighbouring townland of Errill.  This was in memory of his parents, Florence Fitzpatrick and Katherine Moore, Lord and Lady Upper Ossory.  Florence was a younger son of Brian Oge (Barnaby) Mac Gilla Patraic, who submitted to King Henry VIII in 1537.  Geoffrey died in 1638, but he is recorded in the Down Survey in 1641 as the owner of Ballagharahin.  His land was confiscated and became a  Protestant land holding.

Errill Wayside Cross, opposite St Kieran's Church.  Google Street View 11 March 2024

In 2022, the Fitzpatrick Clan Society held a 400th centenary commemoration at the Fitzpatrick Wayside Cross.  It was Geoffrey's older brother Edmond of Castle Fleming, whose son Andrew's sons (Edward d.1696 and Richard, first Baron Gowran) were made heirs of John of Castletown in 1693.  Thereby, Richard became the great-grandfather of John Wilson Fitzpatrick (b.1809, 1st Baron Castletown) who was the lessor of Ballagharahin townland, occupied in 1851 by Joseph Fitzpatrick, his father Charles and grandfather John (d. 1784, buried at Errill).

The Stone Cross is marked on the Errill townland map in Griffith's Valuation 1850.  It is south of Errill village on the boundary with Ballagharahin townland, described with its geographic location at County Laois Ballagharahin Wayside Cross.

Griffith's Valuation, Errill townland, Rathdowney Parish
askaboutireland.ie 2 February 2024

Thady Fitzpatrick died in Dublin in 1674 and so was buried in St James' churchyard.  His Will had requested if he died in Ossory, he be buried at Errill, in his parents' grave. The Will of Thady Fitzpatrick

Errill townland, Rathdowney Parish.
townlands.ie 5 February 2024.

It is clear that the Ballagh and Errill townlands had long association with the Fitzpatrick family.

Ballagharahin





















Fitzpatrick Family of Ballyboden

 

What is the evidence for dismissing John Fitzpatrick as the link between Thady and Joseph Fitzpatrick?  Are the occupiers of Ballagharahin townland - Charles and Joseph Fitzpatrick - related to the head lessor - John William Fitzpatrick, Baron Castletown - and to the constructor of the Errill Wayside Cross - Geoffrey Fitzpatrick?

This relationship chart outlines two ancestral lines from Daisy Grace Goodfellow and from John William Fitzpatrick, back to Brian Og Fitzpatrick.  This follows the Shearman family tree, now contested by authors in the Fitzpatrick Clan Society.

In an article in 2023, Mike Fitzpatrick suggests that “the Fitzpatricks of Ballogh are not with certainty related to the Fitzpatricks of Ballyboodan”.  The Will of Thady Fitzpatrick  (M. Fitzpatrick, 'The Carrigan Manuscripts: the will of Thady Fitzpatrick, MD, 1674'.  The Journal of the Fitzpatrick Clan Society S1, pp.1-10.) 

There are two contested links within the Shearman Fitzpatrick family tree: the first, that Joseph, heir to his brother Thomas, was the son of John, son of Thady (d.1674).  Instead, a suggested link is rather to the Fitzpatricks of Rathdowney through Thady's brother Florence, Thady's nephew John, townlands of Kilcoran and Coolkerry and Teige Mac Fynen of Offerlane.

The second correction in the 2023 article, is that Thady's ancestor Teige Og Mac Teige was not the son of John Mac Brian of Ballygihen and Joan ni Carroll.  The reason given was that in 1566, Teige lived in Mondrehid in the Parish of Offerlane (north of Borris-in-Ossory), whereas John Mac Brian was from Ballygeehan (west of Abbeyleix).  The Mondrehid Fitzpatricks came from a Mac Giolla Padraig group -  Mac Fynen - originating from Fynen (d.1469) in Offerlane, grandfather of the brother of the first Baron.  This lineage is not clear from the Shearman family tree. 

A more intriguing link to the land of Ballagh is Geoffrey Fitzpatrick, of Ballyraghan [Ballagharahin] who married Mary O'Farrell and who died on 13 August 1638.  In 1622, Geoffrey erected a cross in the neighbouring townland of Errill.

Ballagharahin

Fitzpatrick Family in Ballagharahin

John Fitzpatrick ... "was a most respectable man and a catholic too ... owned the whole townland of Ballagh and lived in an old thatched residence or mansion, high and lofty, built up against the wall side of Ballagh castle".  This was written by Rev. William Carrigan and reported by Mike Fitzpatrick in  The Will of Thady Fitzpatrick.  Carrigan also noted that John, who died in 1784, was the son of Joseph.

Here is that residence, illustrated in an old drawing of tower houses in County Laois.

Ballaghrahin - an old drawing. 
John Feehan, Laois: an environmental history. 
Stradbally, Ballykilcavan Press, 1983, p.256, Fig.8.21c

The castle was a tower house of unknown date but similar to others built in the 15th and 16th centuries until about 1650.  The Ballagh tower house is described in The Standing Stone website. Its design suggests a later construction towards the end of the tower house era.  The Ballagh "castle" was shown on Rathdowney Parish map in the Down Survey 1655-58

A more intriguing link to the land of Ballagh is Geoffrey Fitzpatrick, of Ballyraghan [Ballagharahin] who married Mary O'Farrell and who died on 13 August 1638.  In 1622, Geoffrey erected a cross in the neighbouring townland of Errill.  This was in memory of his parents, Florence Fitzpatrick and Katherine Moore, Lord and Lady Upper Ossory.  Florence was a younger son of Brian Oge (Barnaby) Mac Gilla Patraic, who submitted to King Henry VIII in 1537.  

In 1641, Geoffrey - an "Irish papist" - owned land in several townlands in Rathdowney Parish.  By 1670, they had all been confiscated in the Cromwell transplanting of Catholics, replaced by Protestant landowners.  The Down Survey records other Fitzpatrick land: Florence, John MacBrian, Edmond, Taige Oge, Taidg. They all appear with their same townland in both the Down Survey and Shearman's family tree.  There are several townlands of Daniel Fitzpatrick in the Down Survey.  Is this the Daniel "executed for not transplanting", 3 April 1655, in the Shearman family tree?  He was a great-great-great grandson of Brian Oge Mac Gilla Patraic who submitted to Henry VIII in 1537.

By 1670, the Down Survey records only one Fitzpatrick, whose land is in Cork.  But in the next century Fitzpatricks still occupy land in Laois; Thady bought Ballyboodan in 1672.  

In 1823, there was a notice in the Dublin Evening Post, advertising the lease of the 255 acres of land in Ballagh and part of Errill.  This was part of the Estate of the Ladies Fitzpatrick.   John Fitzpatrick, who was born in May 1745, married Anne, daughter of Baron Ravensworth.  Anne died in 1804.  Her daughters were the Ladies Anne and Gertrude FitzPatrick (Shearman family tree, 1878).   John Fitzpatrick's second marriage had three children, one of whom was John Wilson Fitzpatrick, born 1809.  He became the head lessor of Ballagharahin townland. 

Dublin Evening Post, 8 March 1823.  British Newspaper Archive, 9 February 2024

In 1827, Joseph Fitzpatrick [older brother of John 1786-1838 who married Jane Howe] occupied 30 acres assessed for Tithe value of second and third class land in Ballagh townland, Rathdowney Parish.  

Ballagharahin townland, Griffith's Valuation 1850

By the time of Griffith's Valuation in 1850, Andrew Fitzpatrick was an occupier of 12 acres; the lessor was Hon John W Fitzpatrick.  This is only part of the small strips of land in the south-east of the townland.  This confirms Carrigan's assertion that the Fitzpatricks only leased Ballagh from the Earls of Upper Ossory (p.9).  In the town of Errill, Fanny Fitzpatrick occupied a house valued at  
£1/12/-.  This was part of a larger block west of the village; the lessor was Maurice Dowling, so Fanny could be Frances Dowling, widow of Joseph Fitzpatrick.

It appears that the Fitzpatrick family no longer occupied most of Ballagharahin and that Carrigan was correct that "in their best days the Fitzpatricks can only have held Ballagh by lease, at a low rent, from the Earls of Upper Ossory".  The Will of Thady Fitzpatrick

It is clear that the Ballagh and Errill townlands had long association with the Fitzpatrick family.

Errill

Fitzpatrick Clans in Ireland

How are our Fitzpatrick ancestors related to the Breifne Fitzpatricks?  

There are five Fitzpatrick clans registered with the Clans of Ireland. Fitzpatrick Clans

Kingdom of Breifne, Wikipedia, 2024
Mac Giolla Phadraig Osraighe - Fitzpatricks of Upper Ossory - in Laois and Kilkenny.

O Maol Phadraig Breifne - O'Mulpatrick of Breifne and some Mac Giollla Phadraig

Mac Giolla Phadrai Ulaidh - Mac Gilpatrick of Ulster - an older form of Fitzpatrick found in Ulster.

Mac Giolla Phadraig Laighin - Mac Gilpatrick of Leinster, associated with O'Carroll.

Mac Giolla Phadraig Dai gCais - Mac Gilpatrick of Cas, associated with O'Brien and O'Kennedy in south-west Ireland, Galway, Mayo and Roscommon.



The Breifne clan is associated with families in County Cavan.  The Fitzpatrick One Name Study includes John Fitzpatrick 1786-1838 as part of this group.  Shearman has John Fitzpatrick's military service with the 3rd Buffs, but he is not included in the UK National Archives records.  His military record was with the 88th Regiment.  Captain John Fitzpatrick

His ancestors, according to the Shearman family tree were from "Ballogh" a townland in Rathdowney Parish, Queen's County Laois.  These ancestors are also recorded in the Fitzpatrick One Name Study.  Fitzpatrick One Name Study.  

The Shearman family tree links the Fitzpatricks of Ballogh [Ballagh] to Thady Fitzpatrick and the Fitzpatricks of Ballyboden.  The link through Thady's son John is challenged in an article about The Will of Thady Fitzpatrick.

A more intriguing link to the land of Ballagh is Geoffrey Fitzpatrick, of Ballyraghan [Ballagharahin] who married Mary O'Farrell and who died on 13 August 1638. 

Ballagharahin 

In 1622, Geoffrey erected a cross in the neighbouring townland of Errill.  This was in memory of his parents, Florence Fitzpatrick and Katherine Moore, Lord and Lady Upper Ossory.  Florence was a younger son of Brian Oge (Barnaby) Mac Gilla Patraic, who submitted to King Henry VIII in 1537.  

In 2022, the Fitzpatrick Clan Society held a 400th centenary commemoration at the Fitzpatrick Wayside Cross.  It was Geoffrey's older brother Edmond of Castle Fleming, whose son Andrew's sons (Edward d.1696 and Richard, first Baron Gowran) were made heirs of John of Castletown in 1693.  Thereby, Richard became the great-grandfather of John Wilson Fitzpatrick (b.1809, 1st Baron Castletown) who was the lessor of Ballagharahin townland, occupied by Joseph Fitzpatrick, his father Charles and grandfather John (d. 1784, buried at Errill).  Thady died in Dublin so was buried in St James' churchyard.  His will requested if he died in Ossory, he be buried at Errill, in his parents' grave.

Errill

It is clear that the Ballagh and Errill townlands had long association with the Fitzpatrick family.





Fitzpatrick Family of Ossory


Fitzpatrick Ancestors of Thady Fitzpatrick. Family Maker chart with Fitzpatrick ancestors from Shearman, J. F. “Loca Patriciana: Part XII. The Early Kings of Ossory, 1978, between pp. 402-403.


I found this source when I searched for John E Fitzpatrick, 14th Hussars.  There is extraordinary detail about the ancient Lords of Ossory.  The Fitzpatricks of Ballogh are linked to the Fitzpatricks of Ballybodan through John, son of Thady Fitzpatrick (d.1674) and father of Joseph Fitzpatrick (born about 1702).  Some of the Fitzpatrick Earls of Ossory, were driven out of their land from Queen's County Laois and settled in about 1156 in County Cavan.  

Shearman, J. F. “Loca Patriciana: Part XII. The Early Kings of Ossory: The Journal of the Royal Historical and Archaeological Association of Ireland, vol. 4, no. 33/34, 1878, pp. 336–408, page 402.  JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/25506726. Accessed 16 Nov. 2023,

  
Our ancestor John Fitzpatrick 1786-1838 is listed in a remarkable data base in the website of the Fitzpatrick One Name Study.  This links backwards from John and Matthew to their 3x great grandfather Thady, and then back to the Ossorian Genealogy in the Appendix of the Shearman journal article in 1878. The list includes John and his ancestors as part of the Breifne Fitzpatrick clan.  The Kingdom of Breifne is further north of Ossory (Osraige) and includes the present County Cavan.

Why are they Breifne Fitzpatricks when their Ballagh lands are in County Laois in the former Kingdom of Ossory?  Birthplace may not accord with ancestry or the One-Name Study assigned John and his ancestors to the Breifne Clan based on the DNA results for descendants of Mathew Fitzpatrick FGC11134 ... BY12234.  
Sources: Ronan Fitzpatrick, Fitzpatrick List 2 July 2024 and Mike Fitzpatrick, 3 July 2024.

It has now been confirmed that John Fitzpatrick's ancestors were from County Laois, so the Breifne Clan link would be worth further research.

Kingdom of Ossory
Source: Wikipedia, 4 May 2024
 
The Fitzpatrick Society and Fitzpatrick Clan Society websites contains a lot of information, including Newsletters.  Articles warn about errors in the Shearman family tree.  In an article in 2023, Mike Fitzpatrick suggests that “the Fitzpatricks of Ballogh are not with certainty related to the Fitzpatricks of Ballyboodan”. The Will of Thady Fitzpatrick (M. Fitzpatrick, "The Carrigan Manuscripts: the will of Thady Fitzpatrick, MD, 1674".  The Journal of the Fitzpatrick Clan Society S1, pp.1-10.) 





Jeremiah Johnson

Who was Jeremiah Johnson?  Was he the grandfather of Margaret Rebecca Johnson, whose father was Arthur William Johnson?

More research could discover whether Colonel Jeremiah Martin Johnson was in the British East India Company in Java between 1811 and 1816.  Did he remain in Paris, France after the 1827  baptism of his son Arthur William Johnson?  Was Arthur's mother Saiba also in France? 

British Army landing at Cilincing, Java. 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Invasion_of_Java_(1811)
14 February 2024

Even though there is no confirmation that this Jeremiah Johnson had any link to the Goodfellow family, this record raises an interesting aspect of unfamiliar British colonial history.  The French had occupied Java prior to the annexation of the Netherlands by France in 1810.  The British naval and cavalry forces defeated the Dutch/ French in Java in 1811.  Why would a British soldier move to France, after the British had retreated from Java after 1816?  Jan Willem Janssens was the Governor of Java. Janssen appears as a similar-sounding surname for Johnson in searching names in France.

In England between 1790 and 1891, there were 54 results, searching for Jeremiah Johnson, with birth in France between 1790 and 1810 and residence in England, whose death was in England between 1790 and 1810. There were no results when death place was specified in Middlesex County, England. Searching FamilySearch, there were 218 Jeremiah Johnson in the 1841 Census in England, but none in Lambeth or St Marylebone Parish.  Jeremiah Johnson age 50 [b~1791] was at Clarges Street, St George Hanover Square with Sarah Johnson age 55 [b~1785], William Johnson age 25 [b~1816] and Louisa Johnson age 9.  There was Ann J. Johnson in St Martin parish age 37 [b~1804] with Wm John Johnson age 19 [b ~1822].  There were 21 Johnson, born between 1790 and 1810 [in France; not exact] in the 1841 Census.  However, there were no results when France birthplace was made exact in the search.

 



Arthur William Johnson

 


Java! What a surprise! Was Arthur William Johnson really born in Java on 12 September 1813? This was the Non-Conformist baptism record for Arthur in 1827 in Paris, France.  So by that time Arthur was 14 years old.  Attached to 
the page is a note:

“born at Java, according to a statement of his friends”.  The sponsors were Mary Augusta Webb, John William Latham and James Wilkinson.  Jeremiah’s occupation was Colonel.  This is an intriguing insight into another theatre of British Empire wars, with the conquest of Java by the English in 1811 and their colonisation of the island between 1811 and 1816.  This episode inspired several plays at the time – more theatre.  Was Arthur William’s father a soldier in the English East India Company and his mother Saiba was Javanese?

This was the first result when searching FamilySearch for William Johnson, death in England between 1845 and 1900, birth 1810 to 1832, birthplace specified as France: Arthur William Johnson, christening 1827, Paris France from the Non-Conformist Record Index (RG4-8).  His parents were Jeremiah Martin Johnson and Saiba [no surname].  

Few confirmed facts are known about Margaret’s father, Arthur William Johnston.  His occupation was recorded as farmer on Margaret and George’s marriage.  On that marriage transcription, Margaret’s father was named William Arthur Johnston.  Although Margaret's records state she was born in France, there is no evidence that her father was also born in France.

Could William Johnsone, born France in 1817 be related?  He was in the Royal Staff Corps, recorded in the GRO Regimental Birth Indices 1761 to 1924 from UK British Armed Forces and Overseas Vital Records, 1761-2005.   There was a William Johnston, a Sergeant Major (is that the Light Horse?) and his wife Agnes was born in Sterling (?), India.  So perhaps this family moved around if he was in the army (email 13 September 2013).

There were 501 results from searching FamilySearch for William Johnson, born in France 1810 to 1832, residence England between 1841 and 1871.  There were no results when these results were filtered to only born in France.  There were 11 results when specified to be William Johnson.  The only William Johnson born in France was born in 1817, his wife was Martha Johnson and children were William and George in the 1851 Census and George, Martha, Eliza and Alice in the 1871 Census.  This family continued to live in Norfolk until 1881 when William age 74, born France, British subject was a retired plasterer and “inmate” and 1891, widowed was a lodger pensioner Queens Household in Brighton, Sussex.  There does not seem to be a connection with the Margaret Rebecca Johnston who migrated to Queensland in 1871.

Searching Ancestry for Arthur William Johnson in France, there were several births and deaths, results in Paris France BMD, 1555-1929, but the baptism of William, born on 30 June 1841, son of William and Ann Johnson was too late - and the baptism record is Le Havre.  The 1857 marriage was to Justine Cetaz.

France, registres protestants, 1536-1897." Database with images. 
FamilySearchhttps://FamilySearch.org : 8 December 2023.
Societe de L'histoire du Protestantisme Francais
(Society of the history of French Protestantism), Paris.

On 9 May 2024, I  found Arthur Johnson’s marriage to Justine Tetaz on 20 August 1857.  The civil marriage was at the town hall in Batignolles, Paris.  

His parents were Jeremie Martin Johnson and Marie Saiba.  This confirms that he is the son born in Java in 1813 and baptised in Protestant records in Paris in 1827.



It is unlikely that he is Margaret Johnson’s father.  So this Arthur did not marry Annie Pasquie. 

There are many Ann* Pasquier in France births and marriages, but none of them married Arthur or William Johnson.  It seems like a very specific name for Margaret Goodfellow to have recorded as her mother.

There have been many suggested results for William Arthur Johnston on MyHeritage.  The birth dates are too early or late and none of these has spouse named Anne and daughter Margaret. 



The second result in Ancestry for Arthur William Johnson was a baptism on 13 November 1814 at Hackney in London.  His parents were Clement and Sarah Johnson. They lived in Kingsland Road; Clement was a packer.  This record is also in FamilySearch Genealogies source International Genealogical Index (IGI) of Arthur William Johnson birth 16 October 1814 at Shoreditch, London.  However, the record was submitted the Genealogies by unknown38379.  This family could be more relevant, given the 1866 burial of Arthur William Johnson in Hackney.  There was no Clement Johnson in the 1841 Census.

Another result from the England and Wales Non-Conformist Record Indexes (RG4-8) was the burial of Arthur William Johnson on 25 May 1866 at Hackney, Middlesex.  There was an old Non-Conformist burial ground at St Thomas Long Burial Ground in Well Street.  This is now a park.  An Arthur William Johnson’s death in London in 1866, was registered in the June quarter 1866 at St Marylebone.  In the 1861 Census, “Johnson” was living in Riding House Street, St Marylebone.  A single man, with many other unrelated surnames.

There is no evidence that this was the same Arthur William Johnson whose wife was Anne Pasquie and daughter was Margaret Rebecca Johnson. 

Updates in 2024

Information about John Fitzpatrick's brother Matthew was corrected in April 2024.  Mathew's wife Susan Louisa (Woolls) died in England, not in New South Wales.  It was Mathew's son Matthew who went to New South Wales and married Sabina Gadd.

The French origin of Margaret Johnson remains elusive.  It would be intriguing if her father were the Arthur William Johnson born in Java in 1813 and baptised in Paris 14 years later.  Were Arthur's parents, Colonel Jeremiah Johnson and Saiba Johnson involved in the British occupation of Java between 1811 and 1816?

The search for Arthur William Johnson in France and England was detailed in a new post. 

The discovery of more about the Fitzpatrick family led to new posts about the Fitzpatrick and Howe families and the origins of the Fitzpatrick Family of Ballagh, part of the former Barony of Ossory.

There are land and probate records for Fitzpatrick in County Laois for John Fitzpatrick's father Charles and grand-father Joseph.  John's brother Joseph (d.1852) married Francis Dowling.  John's father Charles married Catherine Purcell.  There were Fitzpatrick, Dowling and Purcell families in Aughanlee townland, Clonenagh Parish in 1829.

Ballagh [Ballagharahin] and Errill townlands were Fitzpatrick places from the 1620s, when Geoffrey Fitzpatrick erected the Errill Wayside Cross, to 1784 when John Fitzpatrick was buried at Errill and 1827 Tithes when Joseph Fitzpatrick occupied land at Ballagh.  The intriguing connection with John Wilson Fitzpatrick was explored.

Links to the Fitzpatrick family, Fitzpatrick Society, Fitzpatrick Clan and One Name Study websites, Errill stories in the Schools Collection, Cavan and Urney Ireland sources were added to the Sources Page.

The maps in the Places Page were inserted again as png images.  London residences from Census records were located for George Goodfellow, Grace (Fitzpatrick) Goodfellow and Jane (Fitzpatrick) Howe, mapped in Family Tree Maker maps and added to the Places Page.  Date and place names were added in PowerPoint to these Family Tree Maker maps.


Family trees were revised for birth and death dates and corrected family trees inserted again as png images in the Family Tree and Family Stories Pages.

Fitzpatrick Evidence 1747 - 1847

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