As mentioned in the Irish Research page, a James Hiade from Derryluskan, Rathcoole was in the Hearth Money records in 1665/6/7. He was probably one of the 10 families shown in the 1659 census of the area.
In 1766:
This area is in the middle of the triangle between Cashel, Fethard and Ballinure.
At the time of the Tithe taxes in the 1820s, there were 3 families in this area that could have descended from James or Nich. These are:
These areas can be seen on the map below:
It is entirely possible that these families may link more directly back to other areas. For example, Monameagh is just south of Dually where Trees # 1, 9 and 10 can be traced back to. The elder Thomas in Monameagh may well be a son of Richard and Margaret Croagh who had a Thomas in 1762 in Killenaule parish, however this of course is speculation.
For the purposes of this web site, these families are treated as descendants of either James Hiade from Derryluskan or Nich Head from Railtown.
In the Monameagh, Cashel parish in 1827, a Thomas Heade and Mary Dustil (or Portal) farmed a 1a 0r 0p plot owned by Lady Caroline Damer while a son, Thos Hayde (b 1799) and Catherine Cuddihy farmed a very small plot owned by Lord Portlington.
Thomas and Catherine married in 1821 (as Hade) and had at least 6 children in the 1820s and 1830s. By 1850 Thomas had died and his wife Catherine was farming 1a 1 r 23p on land owned by Thomas Dwyer (who was the major landowner in Monameagh at this time). Catherine was in the Cashel Poor Law Rate Books in 1849 and in the valuation records up until circa 1856.
The family can be seen as:
Thomas and Mary Dustil
There was also a Thomas born 1821 who could be from this area. He was a mason in the civil war records. He arrived USA 1848 according to 1900 census. He was a widower in 1900.
Monameagh is:
Patrick and Mary Glifson
Patrick and Mary farmed a small plot in 1827. Their children were:
Patrick defaulted on his tithes in the 1830s. By 1850, Mary Hayde was farming 3 acres of the part of Coolmoyne owned by the Taylor family. This family originates from Nathaniel Taylor, an officer in Cromwell’s army, who was granted an estate of approximately 1,000 acres in the barony of Slievardagh, county Tipperary, including the townland of Noan in 1666. His grandson, Lovelace Taylor, purchased Ballinure in 1742.
Lovelace’s son Godfrey Taylor of Noan, county Tipperary, married as his second wife, Lydia, daughter and heir of Nicholas Bacon, in 1758. Edward Taylor of Noan, barony of Slievardagh, county Tipperary, married Elizabeth Hewetson of Kilkenny and had three sons who all died childless and a daughter Anne. Edward died in 1802 and was succeeded by his son Nathaniel who died in 1828. His daughter Anne married John Bagwell of Kilmore in 1819 and the Bagwell family was in possession of this estate by the mid 19th century. It was sold to Stanley Black in 1853.
A younger brother of Edward, Nathanial Taylor, inherited Ballinure, a townland bordering Noan, but without a residence. Godfrey L. Taylor of Durrow, Queen’s County (Laois), owned 996 acres in county Tipperary in the 1870s. In the mid 19th century the Taylor estate was in the parishes of Graystown, barony of Slievardagh, Peppardstown and Rathcool, barony of Middlethird. The estate of the trustees of the will of Godfrey Taylor at Rathkenny, barony of Middlethird, county Tipperary, was advertised for sale in May 1854.
Godfrey Taylor was the landowner at Coolmoyne where Hayde families were present from 1766.
Brickendown is in the same area as Mayfield. It is not entirely clear who this widow Heade is from the parish records.
Thomas and Catherine Brophy
Edmund and Margaret Mullane
Nicholas and Nancy Wall
James and Mary Herrick. James died Mayfield 1816.
John and Mary Heffernan
There are also families in later time periods which cannot be easily traced to any of the above. The detailed Cashel records provide more information at Cashel area – Tree # 12
]]>In the Monameagh, Cashel parish in 1827, a Thomas Heade and Mary Dustil (or Portal) farmed a 1a 0r 0p plot owned by Lady Caroline Damer while a son, Thos Hayde (b 1799) and Catherine Cuddihy farmed a very small plot owned by Lord Portlington.
Thomas and Catherine married in 1821 (as Hade) and had at least 6 children in the 1820s and 1830s. By 1850 Thomas had died and his wife Catherine was farming 1a 1 r 23p on land owned by Thomas Dwyer (who was the major landowner in Monameagh at this time). Catherine was in the Cashel Poor Law Rate Books in 1849 and in the valuation records up until circa 1856.
The Cashel Posts covers more background on the families in this area.
One of the sons of Thomas and Catherine, a Patrick Joseph born 1826, immigrated to America, probably on the City of Washington on 31 May 1851 (as Patrick Heade). He married Bridget Barry in New York in 1851 and they had their first child in 1853. Patrick served in the Engineers during the Civil War of 1861-1865 (as Patrick Hade).
Patrick used the New York Emigrant Savings Bank along with his sister Mary in the 1860s. He also placed an advert in the Irish Relatives and Friends publication in 1856 when he was looking for Thomas Hayde, who was living in New York in 1854. Patrick stated that he served his time at Higgins and Thurston, NY and was then living in Keokuk, Ohio and was working as a bricklayer.
Thomas was probably a brother however I can find no trace of him in the census or any other records.
In 1860 Patrick and family were still in Lee, Keokuk, Iowa (as Hade) with their 4 children and by 1870 they were in Missouri (as Hayde and Hayd) with an enlarged family.
Patrick and Bridget had 5 sons, 4 daughters and another child that died at birth. All the existing Haydes in Missouri and some in California, Chicago and Florida are descendants.
The early parts of the family tree are:
A photo of Matthew (b 1865) and William Patrick (b 1863) taken about 1890 is below. Matthew is on the left and William on the right. The person in the middle is unrelated.
This family is Tree # 12 and the family tree can be viewed in more detail at https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/tree/51476676/family
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