Extracted from a page on the website of New England Historical Society:
Beginning in 1831 and over the course of the next eighty-five years, the nationally distributed, Boston Pilot newspaper printed some 45,000 �Missing Friends� advertisements placed by friends and relatives. No one knows how many of these families found each other as a result of the ads, but these nineteenth-century notices continue to help families today find their ancestors.
These advertisements typically referred to the exact place of origin of the seeker and/or the sought. Many of the ads also describe the process and route of immigration, and even the name of the passenger ship. Many advertisements refer to women, for whom determining exact origin is even more difficult, due to the lack of naturalization records. So the Missing Friends advertisements help fill a great gap in nineteenth-century records for a mobile, impoverished, immigrant population.
Date: 22 February 1851
Name: Bernard Scahill
Record: Of BERNARD SCAHILL, son to Michael Scahill and Catherine Howley, from parish Oughwale, County Mayo, who ran away from his parents from Clintonville, Lancaster Mills - he worked there near 2 years, and left his parents very unhappy. He is 14 years of age, tall and thin, dark brown hair, blue eyes, face freckled. Any information respecting him will be thankfully received by MICHAEL SCAHILL, Clinton, East Village, Ms.
Published Volume: Vol II, 1851 to 1853
Allan Scahill
Saturday, May 12, 2007
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