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When my daughter was blessed upon us in 1984 it was a bitter-sweet time. My Grandfather had just passed on and it was obvious that Jessica, and later Bridget, would never get to know him. I respected him as a role model and valued his beliefs. How could my girls learn from him? That started my quest for finding out why he became the man he was to become.

They say a person suffers three deaths.
The first is when their body finally goes "splatt".
The second is when we memorialize them at their funeral.
The final, and most painful, is the last time their name is ever spoken!

"...to be remembered and nothing more, that may be the secret of immortality."

My goal is to keep my family with us for a little while longer. Enjoy.
In search of Patrick Croghan in Ireland
Updated March 5, 2008

Joseph Crogan, Jr
PO Box 5385
Poland, OH 44514-0385
United States
330-757-7528
Fax: 330-757-9287
joe@crogan.com

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  • St. Joseph's RC Church, Stockport, England (14 KB)
    This church was were Thomas Croghan married Catherine Kilroy in 1883. My wife and I were fortunate to visit it in 1999 on our 20th anniversary and stood at the very spot where they had been married so many years prior. The circle was complete. The history of St Joseph's Church
    More church history FYI-Martin Croghan was married at the Church of Sts. Philip and James in 1853 by Canon Randolph Frith. Their son Thomas was babtized there in 1854.
    More Stockport history FYI-Thomas left Stockport for Kingston, Pennsylvania in 1884 after the birth of Elizabeth. Catherine and Elizabeth joined him there in 1885.
  • Thomas Croghan & Catherine Kilroy (16 KB)
    Thomas used the surname "Croghan" in England and for several years after arriving in America. The Irish pronounciation would be much closer to his father's spelling of "Crohan". The Irish pronounce the "h" whenever there is a "gh" combination. Located here is an historical map of Stockport. This was home from before 1853 to 1885. A modern map with an aerial view is available. Check "Local Info" to find where all the current Public Houses are located and then "electronically" drop in for a pint (or two).
    I hope to get us back to Ireland someday, until then some interesting reading on the folklore of East Mayo.

    Did you know that the very roots of the communist ideology sprang from circumstances confronting the Irish in greater Manchester? "Friedrich Engels espouses his opinion on the influx of Irish in the English labour market and the competition that results;
    'To this competition of the worker there is but one limit; no worker will work for less than he needs to subsist. If he must starve, he will prefer to starve in idleness rather than in toil. True, this limit is relative; one needs more than another, one is accustomed to more comfort than another; the Englishman who is still somewhat civilized, needs more than the Irishman who goes in rags, eats potatoes, and sleeps in a pigsty. But that does not hinder the Irishman's competing with the Englishman, and gradually forcing the rate of wages, and with it the Englishman's level of civilization, down to the Irishman's level'."
    Even the very founder of the working man's movement himself had little respect for the Irish of the late 1840's and early 1850's. More
 

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