Two Irish families, One Australian story
The Clancy and Flaven families in Colonial New South Wales In the late 1830s and early 1840s, two young Irish couples — strangers to each other but shaped by similar worlds — made the long journey to New South Wales. They arrived from neighbouring counties in southern Ireland, carried by faith, family ties, and the hope of stability in a distant colony. John Clancy was a native of Fermoy and his wife Mary Casey of nearby Glanworth, both in County Cork. William Flaven came from Cappoquin in County Waterford, and his wife Catherine Lonergan from Burncourt in County Tipperary. Although recorded across three counties, these places lie close together, forming a compact corner of southern Ireland. Within a generation, their children would be united by marriage in a rare double wedding at Concord in 1867. The Clancys: From Cork to Concord John Clancy was born in 1811 in Fermoy, County Cork. In December 1836, he married Mary Casey, born in 1814 at nearby Glanworth. Within a short time of the...