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Roots
Research Web Pages
This is where we have discovered
web sites with good amounts
of information on Scots and Scots-Irish information |
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Murrah's Genealogy Page
Contains information on Albritton, Anderson, Ashworth, Bachiler/Batchelder, Baker, Bangs, Barnes, Barss/Bearse, Beasley,
Bettinhom, Blackston, Boatman, Bower, Brewster, Broughton, Burton, Chavis, Chittington, Cobb, Coles, Collins, Council, Craig, Dean, Dearth, Dewey, Dial, Doane, Dollarhide, Duckworth, Evans, Forsythe, Foster, Freeman, Gale, Gammon, Gibbs, Gratwicke, Hamilton, Hardy, Harman, Harris, Haviland, Hepworth, Hide, Hinckley, Hobart,
Hodsoll, Hopkins, Hyanno, Johnson (Allen), Johnson (Benjamin), Johnson (Patrick), Indenden, Knight, Knowles, Landrum,
Largent, Lear, Leatherlin, McGibbon, Man, Mayo, Mercer, Miller, Minster, Mixon, Morgan,
Murrah, Norsworthy, Parker, Parrott, Perkins, Petit, Pitts/Pitt, de la Poole, Powe, Powell, Prence, Rawlinson,
Reddwood, Riall, Richardson, de Shelton, Sapp, Smith / Smythe, Smythe-Simkinson, Soole, Sparrow, Spears, Stanley, Swift, Taylor, Thompson, Tolderby, Walters, Watson, Whelden, White, Whitfield, Willford, Wilson, Wing, Young, and
Zachry.
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The
Naughtons in Ireland
This narrative summarizes an ongoing effort to trace the history
of the Naughton (originally O'Neachtain) family line in Ireland:
from its arrival from Normandy to its ancestral rule within Ulster
Province and later within the Hy-Many (Ui-Maine) kingdom within
Connaught Province, to its rule of the extensive plains of Maenmagh
in County Galway until the Anglo-Norman conquest, to its movement to
rule the Fews (woodlands) of southern County Roscommon--historically
known as "Naughton Country".
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