Saturday, December 21, 2019
Was it Chemistry? Or a Miracle?
Friday, October 18, 2019
Where did they come from? Part 2: Mooneys & Morans.
As noted in Part 1 of this post, almost all the Hallinan & Mooney ancestors can be traced to Ireland. (The lone exception is the Morris family. More about them below.) While getting more specific than "Ireland" isn't always possible, we can identify at least a county of origin for most of the ancestral families, and for some we can be even more precise.
Where did they come from? Part 1: Hallinans & Laracys.
With the exception of one family, the Hallinan & Mooney ancestors can be traced to Ireland. (The exception is the Morris family. More about them later.) Given the significant gaps in 19th-century (and earlier) records, getting more specific than "Ireland" isn't always possible. Still, for most of the immigrant ancestral units it's possible to identify at least a county of origin, and for some we can cite even more precise locations.
The Great Mackinac Island Car Caper of 1938.
Last month, Vice President Pence's visit to Mackinac Island ruffled a few feathers because it involved the VP's eight-SUV motorcade cruising around on the formerly car-free resort island. Inevitably, the incident called to mind a much earlier breach of Mackinac's strict anti-internal-combustion-engine protocols. This one took place more than 80 years ago, and the culprits were that pair of Painesville anarchists, the Notorious Hallinan Brothers, Paul and Art.
Wednesday, April 10, 2019
Episodes in Ye Life of Ye Florist.
(An introduction to C.C. and Jane Hallinan — and their business — can be found in The Little Shop on Erie St., located here.)
C.C. and Jennie Hallinan closed the greenhouse and nursery in 1943, when their younger son (and business partner), Art, was drafted into military service during World War II: the work was too much for them alone, and the war's tight labor market made it difficult to find able-bodied hired hands. They kept the flower shop open. By the time Art was discharged from the Army in 1946, however, he had decided to pursue a career in accounting. With some regret, C.C. and Jennie, now in their seventies, chose to close the shop and retire, to "take it easy and do a little traveling," as they told the Painesville Telegraph.
The Hallinans in 1946. |
Sunday, March 24, 2019
The Little Shop on Erie St.
Saturday, January 19, 2019
On the Frontenac, Summer 1939.
As mentioned in the first Evangeline post, Capt. Bill's position as master of various freighters permitted him to take family and other guests on the ships' voyages. As a follow-up, Chuck O'Malley has sent an outstanding video clip with scenes from one such voyage — on the Frontenac in the summer of 1939. The cinematographer is Capt. Bill's son-in-law Bob O'Malley Sr. The cast includes Cap and three of his children: Eileen, Dorothy (in the black-and-white plaid), and Tom. But the star is either a very young Shirley Temple or else Bob and Eileen's daughter Sharon O'Malley Cassidy.
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