The Cliffs of Mohr
My mother always said that her family hailed from both
Uncle Alec learned that in the 1880’s, an Irish lass named,
Mary Jane, had done the unthinkable. She was about to have a child but had no
husband. Shamed and humiliated, her family turned her out, and she fled from
the green hills of
With the proof Uncle Alec had, Mother’s entire family slowly
absorbed the fact that they were one-hundred per cent Irish on both parents’
sides. Being in my teen years at the time of this discovery, I thought the
whole thing terribly romantic, and I secretly wished to visit
It was a time that
only the wealthy vacationed overseas. Working class people like mine stayed
close to home. But I held on to my dream to visit the land of my Irish roots.
I held on for fifty years before it became a reality. My
husband and I had done some foreign travel after he retired but
back to the northeastern coast. From the moment I stepped
onto Irish soil, I felt completely at home.
I had a name and address in a county in
The green, rolling land filled me with a joy I found hard to
understand. I warmed to the people and the little pubs where we ate lunch and
dinner. I felt completely at home in the various B&B’s, and the lilting
Irish speech sounded like music to my ears.
When I stood on the Cliffs of Mohr as the chill wind whipped
my hair and I watched waves crashing far below, I wanted to stay forever. A
visit to
famous kissing stone enchanted me. I’d visited my Irish
roots and the images of all the places we saw will stay with me forever.
It’s still possible to visit your roots without crossing an
ocean. We have books, movies, documentaries, TV shows and websites that bring
you to the country of your ancestors. There are genealogy libraries and
websites that will allow you to research your own family, wherever they came
from. It’s never been easier to find your roots.
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A great post, and the perfect background for a novel (if you ask me!). One of my biggest regrets is that I didn't pick my great-grandmother's brain more while she was alive. My great-grandmother was with me until my early-30s, but I always thought I'd get around to it. What a shame.
ReplyDeleteI would love to do some research into family history, sooner rather than later. Later never seems to work out well.
PS I was going to read you movie post, but the formatting (with one letter per line) was too hard. It might be my computer, though.
Tia@DepressionCookies