Martin Powers was born about 1795, most probably in Killaloe, County Clare, Ireland. Very little has been found about this family before they arrived in the United States around 1850. During the 1922 Irish Civil War, the Public Record Office of Ireland (PROI) at Four Courts on the banks of the Liffey in Dublin was destroyed by fire, and seven hundred years of Irish records were lost. The PROI housed a number of key genealogical records of use to those researching their Irish ancestors. The pre-1858 wills, pre-1901 census records, and over half of the Church of Ireland parish registers were among the casualties in 1922.


What we do know is, that around 1824, Martin married Mary Cox, also born about 1795, most probably in the nearby townland know as Ballybran , County Clare, Ireland

 

 

 

Martin and Mary had five children;

Richard born about 1825,

Ann born about 1830,

Winifred born March 31, 1831,

Patrick born March 17, 1832 (and rightfully named for St. Patrick) and

Mary born May 3, 1840.

There most likely were a few other children who did not survive into adulthood.

 

Each of these children and their descendants are outlined on their own web page within this website. You may jump ahead to those pages by using the hyperlink on their names. Or you may read this page until the end of the story on Martin and Mary, where a link will then take you to the top of the page for the first child, Richard, at the end of his page, a link to the top of Anna Powers Glasheen, and so on thru all five children. 

 

Research performed by the Clare Heritage Centre at Corofin, County Clare in Ireland only found one possible record related to the Powers family. On May 3, 1840 a Martin Powers had a daughter named Mary baptized at St. Mary's Church in the Parish of Ogonnelloe. The priest listed the family as residing at Bealkelly, the same area where the Cox family lived. Mary’s baptismal sponsors or godparents are listed as Daniel Clancy and Margaret Kenna.

 

Patrick Cox, an older brother of Mary Cox Powers, also immigrated to the United States around 1850. His wife and several children are found living in the small town of Chicopee, Massachusetts in the 1850 Census. One of Martin’s daughters, Winifred Powers, aged 18, is also living with them. One can only assume, that Patrick Cox had enough money to leave his family in a safe home and pay rent, while he went ahead to Wisconsin to purchase land and build a suitable home to protect the family from Wisconsin’s harsh winters.

 

It is possible that Martin and his family also stayed in Massachusetts those first few years in the United States. Martin and his family do not show up in Wisconsin records until the 1860 Census, when they are found in Buchanan township of Outagamie County.

 

We do know that at least two of Martin’s children, did remain in Massachusetts for several years. Richard Powers married Margaret Noonan at what was then known as St. Matthews Catholic Church (now Holy Name of Jesus Catholic Church) in Chicopee, Massachusetts on November 4, 1855 by Rev W. A. Blenkinsop. The church marriage records (pictured here) list the witness names of Daniel Curtis and Ann Powers. The local civic records list Richard Powers aged 28 as a laborer, residing in Chicopee, son of Martin Powers. Margaret, her last name spelled in the Civic record as Noona, aged 26, daughter of Martin Noona, also a resident of Chicopee, the first marriage for both.

Less than a year later on August 6, 1856, Winifred Powers married Daniel Ryan in Chicopee, Massachusetts. Their church records could not be found but the civil record lists they were married by the same priest, Rev W. A. Blenkinsop and lists Daniel Ryan as aged 29, a laborer born in Ireland son of Michael Ryan and Winifred, aged 26, born in Ireland, daughter of Martin Powers. Daniel and Winifred would become prominent citizens of the Fox Valley area, as their son Thomas H. Ryan would become the first person from the Kaukauna area to graduate from The University of Wisconsin in 1891 and later would become the first Municipal Judge of Outagamie County.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thomas H. Ryan also is listed as the author of “The History of Outagamie County” published in 1911. This book at over 1200 pages is still today one of the finest documents of the History of Outagamie county and includes several hundred biographies of many of the original settlers and distinguished citizens of that county. Unfortunately, he did not include the Powers family biography other than a brief mention within his own biography.

 

He also wrote a small booklet entitled “The History of the Town of Buchanan and its Pioneers”. It was never really published so the exact date is unknown, (estimated to be written in 1942) but copies of it can be found in the Appleton and Kaukauna Public Libraries.

In that document, Thomas Ryan describes his own early life and that of his parents;

“The writer’s parents, Daniel and Winifred Ryan, shortly after their marriage in Chicopee, Massachusetts, came to Buchanan in the autumn of 1857. They purchased Lot 7 of Section 24, the deed of which was recorded April 7, 1858, in Vol. 20 D., Page 79, Outagamie County records. This 80 acre tract was covered by white and red oak, hard and soft maple, beech, birch, hickory, basswood, elm, cherry and ironwood. Many of the trees, particularly the white oak, from the ground to the first limb measured twenty to fifty feet. Some of the stumps measured five feet in diameter. Mr. Ryan cut down these trees with an axe. He and Mrs. Ryan, with a cross-cut saw, sawed them into logs and with a yoke of oxen, rolled them together into piles. They then piled limbs and branches thereon and burned the piles. Corroborative of their statement, I myself, have seen our farm stumps which measured five feet in diameter, also white and red oak fence rails 15 feet in length without a knot and split as straight as a line.

On Lot 8, Section 24, which father purchased in 1875, were hundreds of large hard maples, interspersed by basswood, oak, elm, beech, ironwood and cherry. These maples measured from two to four feet in diameter. Annually for years we made gallons of maple syrup and enough maple sugar to supply us for the coming year.

As a lad 8 years old I helped two of my brothers, who were older than I, saw basswood trees, some of which were four feet in diameter on the stump, into headings. I recall our making a canoe out of a hollow basswood log which easily held two of us. The white and red oak were of similar dimensions. These were cut into bolts and sold to the hub and spoke factory at Kaukauna. I mention this because the timber on our land was no different that that of our neighbors…”

 

To continue with this well written visual of what the area was like for many of our Irish, Dutch and German settlers that came to the Fox River Valley area in the 1850’s, Thomas H. Ryan writes;

 

“On the whole, Buchanan should be classed as hard woodland. No better timber of its kind can be found anywhere.

Its goes without saying that the land which was so prolific in mighty and extraordinary trees could not be other than fertile soil. The soil rests upon Trenton and Galena limestone. Adjacent to the river it is sedimentary red clay; a short distance from the river, the clay is interspersed by muck and alluvium deposits. There is little sand or gravel soil.

Buchanan is well drained; Range 18E by Robert’s Creek and Mud Creek and their tributaries; Range 19E by a tributary of Plum Creek, the source of which is in Section 32 on the county boundary line between Outagamie and Calumet Counties. From this point it flows northeasterly, leaving the county in Section 16 and emptying into Plum Creek in Section 10. Plum Creek itself is in Brown County.”

 

Add more pages 8-10

 

The Irish settlers of Buchanan were not all actuated by the same motive. (Speaking of the reason that the Dutch had come to the area) Some came to work on the government canal, the construction of which was begun in 1851 and completed in 1855; others, to acquire good land cheap. Denied the privilege of owning land in Ireland, they were land hungry. They wanted a part of mother earth which they could call their own. Those who came to work on the canal, upon completion of the project, purchased land with their earnings; the others, with their savings from employment in the eastern states. None came directly from Ireland. They had been employed on farms and in cotton and other factories in the eastern states. They came west to Green Bay by way of the Great Lakes, and from that point took up land. The exact date of arrival in Buchanan of each settler cannot be established. Undoubtedly, many took possession of and cleared land under an oral agreement or land contract which was never recorded. The date of the recorded deeds in many instances, may not be correct as to the year of the arrival of the grantee.

 

He goes on to list the dates recorded in Outagamie County records of the many families who settled in the area. I have further trimmed the list to those families related to the Powers, Cox or Ryan’s families.

 

Date Name Location Map #
October 1, 1856 John Cox Section 28 1
October 1, 1856 John Glasheen Section 28 2
October 16, 1856 Michael Finnegan Section 20 3
December 20, 1856     Maurice Ringrose Section 32, Range 18E 4
April 7, 1858 Daniel Ryan Section 24, Range 18E 5
March 7, 1863 John Rohan Section 28 6
April 9, 1865 Michael Maloney

Section 29

7
September 1, 1865 Henry Heardon Section 29 8
May 30, 1866 Edward Glasheen Section 29 9
October 6, 1866 Patrick Powers Section 33 10
October 31, 1868 John O’Connell Section 29 11
June 23, 1869 John Powers Section 19 12
August 30, 1870 James Keating Section 30 13
July 21, 1871 Daniel Clune Section 32 14
April 4, 1878 Richard Powers         Section 28 15

All of the above are in Range 19E excepted Ringrose and Ryan as noted.

 

I have taken an 1890 Plat map and numbered each of the above as to their approximate location.

 

This second map, the area west (to the left) of the above map, shows Daniel Ryan's land.

 

Martin Powers eldest son Richard Powers and his wife Margaret are found in Buchanan in the 1860 Census living next door to his parents. By now, his wife Margaret had given birth to three children, Sarah Ann Powers, born  March 3, 1857; John Powers born May 15, 1858 and Mary Powers born in Oct 24, 1858. Ann Powers, Richard’s sister and Martin’s eldest daughter is listed living with Richard and his new family, which is strange in that Ann most probably married Thomas Glasheen in 1859 and is also listed living with him with one child in the 1860 Census, also a few doors away from her father.

Richard & Margaret Powers and his descendants are outlined on their web page at: Richard & Margaret (Noonan) Powers

 

Martin and Mary’s youngest two children, Patrick and Mary are living with them. Winifred and Daniel Ryan are living just a ways west, in what is now called Combined Locks, the current Buchanan Road would have cut through Daniel Ryan’s fields. In the map above, #A.

 

Anna Powers married Thomas Glasheen probably sometime in 1859. He was born in Ireland about 1820, and most likely was the youngest of three brothers of  a John Glasheen, the other two brothers being John Glasheen born about 1815 and Edward Glasheen born about 1817, both which also settled in the Holland town area.

 

Thomas and Anna would raise their family on an 80 acre farm Thomas purchased ????? adjoining the Powers farm and across the road from the original Rohan farm in Section 28. 

Thomas and Anna and their descendants are outlined on their web page; Thomas & Anna (Powers) Glasheen.

 

About 1861 Patrick Powers, Martin’s youngest son married Catherine Finnel, she was born about 1829 in Ireland, the daughter of ?

Patrick appears to be the first of the family to actually own any land in the area. On October 6, 1866 he purchased 40 acres of land in Section 33 of Range 19E, Which today would be the North East corner of County Road CE and Haen Rd. (See #10 in the above map)

Patrick and Catherine and their descendants are outlined on their web page; Patrick & Catharine (Finnel) Powers.

 

By the 1870 Census, it appears that Martin Powers must have passed on. Mary is listed living with her son Patrick and his family, now aged 80 years old. She is not found in the 1880 Census, so it is assumed she died between 1870-1880. No death records, church burial records or tombstones have been found at any of the local churches and cemeteries in the area for either Martin or Mary.

THIS REMAINS ONE OF MY GOALS - TO FIND SOME EVIDENCE AND DATES OF DEATH FOR BOTH MARTIN AND MARY POWERS.

 

 

In 1874 Martin’s youngest daughter Mary, married Patrick Coyle on November 4th. Patrick Coyle was born in County Meath, Ireland about 1840. The new Mr. & Mrs. Coyle set up housekeeping in Menasha, where Patrick worked as a day laborer. Their descendants are outlined on their web page; Patrick & Mary (Powers) Coyle.

 

 

 

To Richard Powers