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Showing posts with label Michael Meehan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Meehan. Show all posts

Friday, March 16, 2012

Lake County's Irish Place Names


St. Patrick's Day postcard, 1911. Curt Teich Co postcard, G1428

There are at least ten place names in Lake County attributed to the Irish. 

Some of the earliest Irish place names were surnames given to an area by settlers. Meehan's Settlement, for example, was located in today's West Deerfield Township along Telegraph Road, approximately one-mile south of Everett. In 1835, the location was settled by Michael Meehan (1808-1892) and his wife Bridget (nee Monahan), from County Meath, Ireland. 

Dulanty was located on Greenbay Road on the Shields-Deerfield Township line (and sometimes referred to as an early name for Lake Bluff). In 1837, Michael Dulanty (1799-1886) and his wife Ellen (nee Armstrong), arrived from County Tipperary, Ireland. They established a stage relay station and tavern known as the Centerville Inn or Dulanty's.

The area became officially known as Dulanty in 1846, when the post office took that name. It was common for post offices to be named for the postmaster, since the post office was located in their home or place of business. 

Leahy Hill in Newport Township is located south of Wadsworth Road and east of Cashmore Road. It was named after the Leahy family, Irish settlers, who owned the land. 

The place name Kennedy appears to have been used in southern Shields Township in the area where Irish immigrant, John Kennedy,  settled. 

Two locales in Lake County were named for the high percentage of Irish who settled there: Irish Hills in  Newport Township, and Ireland in Libertyville/Vernon Townships. Irish Hills was named for the settlers and the hilly topography in the area west of Route 41 along Route 173; and Ireland was the region east of and adjacent to the Des Plaines River. These names were commonly used in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. 

Though Killarney Lake no longer exists, the name suggests an Irish connection. The "lake" was a marshy area once located in Antioch Township, west of Fox Lake, in Section 35.   The area was most likely drained for development and farming. 

The only Irish-influenced place names still in use are O'Plaine and Blarney Island. O'Plaine is derived from Aux Plains River, an early appellation of the Des Plaines River. Irish settlers reportedly changed the spelling of Aux Plains to O'Plain, and through the 1870s, the river was listed on maps as the O'Plain River. Today, the name is preserved in O'Plaine Road, with the addition of  an "e" on the end. 

Blarney Island was named by Irish immigrant, Jack O'Connor, who took over the famous bar on Grassy Lake in the 1920s. 

St. Patrick's Day postcard, 1908.
Curt Teich Co postcard G4296
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The most anecdotal of the county's Irish place names is Codfish Town. This name described an Irish settlement in Lake Forest near Washington Road. The name seems to have originated in the mid to late 1800s from the smell of codfish cooking on Friday evenings. Residents in the area were also referred to as "codfishers."

Friday, October 10, 2008

Meet Mrs. Redmond (1838 - 1929)

Ann Devon Redmond photographed at her home on Telegraph Road in 1918. 
Everett/Briarwood School History, Bess Bower Dunn Museum 2003.0.16

This pleasant photograph of Mrs. Redmond was taken in 1918 by students of Everett School working on a community history project for the Illinois centennial. 

The school students wrote: “It is a pleasure to visit Mrs. Redmond. She is so lovable, active, and quick witted, a laugh as ringing as a girl’s, and a keen sympathetic interest in her friends and neighbors."

One source notes that Mrs. Redmond was born in Meehan’s Settlement in 1838. Her parents were Irish immigrants, Michael Devon (1805-1841) and Ann Elizabeth Fagan (1810-1895). 

Everett School History showing the students' handwritten story of  "Mrs. Thresa Redmond." Photo taken by a student.
Bess Bower Dunn Museum, 2003.0.16. 

Meehan's Settlement was named for Michael Meehan (1808-1892) from County Meath, Ireland, who settled in Lake County in 1835. The Irish "settlement" was located in today's West Deerfield Township along Telegraph Road (Section 18), approximately one-mile south of Everett. 

Michael Meehan's portrait from Portrait and Biographical Album of Lake County, Illinois. 1891.

It's unclear why the school children noted Ann Devon Redmond in the history as "Thresa Davin Redmond." 

Ann Redmond's father died in 1841, and the following year her mother married Irish-born Lawrence Masterson (1805-1882).

In 1861, Ann Devon married James Redmond (1834-1901). James had immigrated from Ireland in 1850. 
Location of Ann Devon Redmond's property and the schoolhouse, shown along Telegraph Road (bottom star). The cemetery where her father was buried in 1841 is noted by cemetery symbol on Yore property (top star) and became St. Patrick Catholic  Cemetery. 
Illustrated Atlas of Lake County, Illinois, 1885.

This clipping from the obituary for Redmond's son, Michael Devon Redmond (1862-1928), devotes a paragraph to her story. The Lake County Register, December 12, 1928. 

Ann and Lawrence Redmond spent several years in St. Joseph, Michigan, where their sons were born. By 1870, they had returned to Deerfield Township, Lake County, Illinois. 

Post updated: A descendant of the Fagan Family confirmed Mrs. Redmond's identity as Ann Devon Redmond. 7/21/2025