Janet
25-03-13, 13:39
Interesting story in this morning's paper about Duffy's Cut near Malvern, Pennsylvania where a mass grave is being unearthed:
With Shovels and Science, a Grim Story Is Told (http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/25/us/secrets-of-duffys-cut-yield-to-shovel-and-science.html?hpw&_r=0)
A cholera epidemic broke out shortly after the John Stamp, sailing from Derry, docked in Philadelphia in late June 1832 with Irish immigrants aboard. Some of the surnames quoted in the article are Ruddy, Devine, McIlheaney, and Skelton.
The youngest found so far, John Ruddy, has been linked to some Ruddys in County Donegal who are unusual in their absence of an upper right first molar. The remains of John Ruddy were lately interred in a church cemetery in the small Donegal town of Ardara.
With Shovels and Science, a Grim Story Is Told (http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/25/us/secrets-of-duffys-cut-yield-to-shovel-and-science.html?hpw&_r=0)
A cholera epidemic broke out shortly after the John Stamp, sailing from Derry, docked in Philadelphia in late June 1832 with Irish immigrants aboard. Some of the surnames quoted in the article are Ruddy, Devine, McIlheaney, and Skelton.
The youngest found so far, John Ruddy, has been linked to some Ruddys in County Donegal who are unusual in their absence of an upper right first molar. The remains of John Ruddy were lately interred in a church cemetery in the small Donegal town of Ardara.