Patrick Rooney, son of Michael ""Daddy Mick"" Rooney and Catherine ""Mammy Kitty"; Catharine on gravestone" Caulfield.Born 2 Feb 1808 Ireland, died 9 Apr 1889 Bangor Township, Pope County, Minnesota Event Description: St. Anthony of Padua Cemetery, Stearns, Minnesota, age 81 years, buried Padua, Stearns County, Minnesota Cause of death: Old age
Married ± 1834 Ireland or Canada, age approximately 26 years (married approximately 35 years) to:
Elenor "Ellen" Tracy, age by marriage approximately 18 years Born 1816 Ireland, died 25 Apr 1869 Padua, Stearns County, Minnesota Event Description: St. Anthony of Padua Cemetery, Padua, Stearns, MN, age 52 or 53 years Ellen died of a stroke.
The "Tracy" name seems to disappear in the Gatineau valley after the 1861 census. Children: 1. Bridget RooneyBorn 16 Nov 1834 Wakefield Township, Outaouais, Quebec, Canada
2. Maria "Mary" RooneyBorn 14 May 1836 Wakefield Township, Outaouais, Quebec, Canada, died 26 Aug 1905 Bangor Township, Pope County, Minnesota Event Description: Padua Cemetery, Stearns, Minnesota, age 69 years, buried Padua, Stearns County, Minnesota Originally published September 1, 1905, The Glenwood Herald
Mrs. James Egan
Mother is dead. These short words are comparatively meaningless to those who have not suffered the loss of their dearest friend on earth. To those who have a world of sadness they convey. On Saturday morning of last week, James Egan and the several members of his family realized as they never did before the sad and solemn meaning of these words. On that morning the ever true and loving wife and mother bade adieu to dear ones and closed her eyes forever in the dreamless slumber of death.
Mary Egan was born in Canada 68 years ago. During the last 20 years together with her husband and family she has lived in the town of Bangor, this county. About 4 mos. ago she suffered a stroke of paralysis disabling completely one side of her body. A day or two before her death she experienced a second stroke affecting the other side and terminating in her demise as already stated. Sad and lonely is the home she loved so well. No more is heard the familiar sound of mothers voice -- her place in the family circle is vacant, never to be filled again. Her taking away means to the husband, the three sons and three daughters the loss of a true, loving and solicitous wife and mother, to the community in which she lived a kind friend and christian neighbor.
On last Monday her remains were consigned to their last resting place in the cemetery at Padua, Stearns Co. Friends, neighbors and relatives from far and near being in attendance to manifest for the departed on their last token of esteem and love. May she rest in peace.
Originally published August 1998, Padua Cemetery, by Ginny Walz Borgerding
James Egan was born about 1826, probably in County Mayo, Ireland, since that was where his father was from. He was the second son, born to Thomas Egan and Mary Ann Welsh, both of whom are buried in Farrellton, Quebec, Canada.
Mary Rooney was born May 28, 1837, in Canada, to Patrick and Ellen (Tracy) Rooney. She was the oldest of nine children.
James Egan married Mary Rooney on June 18, 1860, in Canada. They had four children while living in Canada. The youngest, Mary Ann, died as an infant in January of 1867. Probably later that year they made their way to Minnesota with their other three children: Ellen, Edmond, and John Thomas. When they moved to Minnesota, it was probably to join others in the Rooney Settlement (Padua). In Padua, they had five more children: Juliana, Mary Louise, Elizabeth Agnes, James G., and Joseph Michael.
James was known by the children in the area as "The Candy Man", since he could always dig in his pocket and find a piece of candy. He died on February 6, 1912. Mary died on May 26, 1905, in Bangor Township, Pope County. James and Mary's children, Edmond and Juliana Ann Flahavin, are buried in Padua. James' brother Patrick, and Mary's mother Elenor Rooney, sister Elinor, and brother Thomas are buried in Padua.
3. Patrick ""Little Pat"" RooneyBorn 1 Nov 1837 Wakefield Township, Outaouais, Quebec, Canada, died 13 May 1909 Philbrook, Fergus County, Montana Event Description: Moore Cemetery, age 71 years, buried Moore, Fergus County, Montana Sauk Centre Herald
April 17, 1875
Caught __
On Tuesday U.S. Marshall McLaren visited this section of country, and unearthed a small distillery in what is known as the Rooney Settlement, about nine miles from Sauk Centre, and arrested the proprietor, Patrick Rooney, and secured his still. He stopped overnight here with his prisoner and proceeded with him to St Paul on Wednesday.
The "still" was likely located in the general area of Richard, Josephine & Francis Rooney's farm.
The 1870 census says he was born in Ireland.
4. Elinor "Elinor on gravestone" RooneyBorn 21 Dec 1842 Wakefield Township, Outaouais, Quebec, Canada, died 18 Nov 1902 Raymond Township, Stearns County, Minnesota Event Description: Padua Cemetery, Stearns, Minnesota, age 59 years, buried Padua, Stearns County, Minnesota Elinor died of paralyasis.
John Martin, Sr. wrote about Elinor Rooney and her husband Patrick Egan in Canada in 1870. Elinor's father Patrick was in Minnesota at the time.
5. Joseph RooneyBorn 18 Oct 1843 Wakefield Township, Outaouais, Quebec, Canada, died 15 Aug 1854 Wakefield Township, Outaouais, Quebec, Canada Event Description: buried at Farrelton, Quebec, Canada, age 10 years, buried Farrellton, Outaouais, Quebec, Canada
6. Michael Tracy ""Black Mike" or "M.T."" RooneyBorn 2 Aug 1845 Wakefield Township, Outaouais, Quebec, Canada, died 1922 Hobson, Judith Basin County, Montana Event Description: Philbrook Cemetery, age 76 or 77 years Michael T Rooney (aka Black Mike) built the first permanent building in Billings, Montana . He was the first of the three brother to go to Montana. They first settled in Miles City, then moved to Billings, then Judith Basin. He was a contractor in freighting and ditching, and there's a big Rooney ditch above Utica, irrigating land on the south bench.
His Montana death index says he died in 1923, while his gravestone says is was 1922.
7. John J RooneyBorn 11 Jul 1847 Wakefield Township, Outaouais, Quebec, Canada, died Feb 1894 Hobson, Judith Basin County, Montana, age 46 years John died of pneumonia, leaving his wife with some young children. His uncle, Michael J. Rooney, helped Sarah with "rearing up" the four youngest children.
John Rooney's wife, Sarah Tracy, was a "double" first-cousin to him: Both his parents were siblings to her parents.
John was buried in an unmarked grave, Utica, Judith Basin, Montana
8. Thomas RooneyBorn 6 Jul 1849 Wakefield Township, Outaouais, Quebec, Canada, died 10 Dec 1868 Padua, Stearns County, Minnesota Event Description: Padua Cemetery, Stearns, Minnesota, age 19 years Thomas Rooney died of a gunshot accident at Sand Lake (near Padua) at the age of 19 in early December 1868. He is the first Rooney buried in the Padua cemetery, and it is said he was the first person buried at Padua.
Thomas shares a tombstone with his mother Ellen Rooney.
9. Katherine Alice RooneyBorn 2 Apr 1852 Wakefield Township, Outaouais, Quebec, Canada, died 2 May 1939 Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California, age 87 years Baptismal sponsors: Michael Killeen and Mary Cahill
Katherine Ann Rooney: A Grandma for All
"Grandma McKanna: now there was a woman!" Whenever he spoke of her, my father, Judge Willis, inevitably came around to this glowing phrase of praise. Others who knew her echoed those sentiments: Katherine Willis, named for her; Mickey McKanna, son of Phillip and Kathleen Doyle McKanna, her grandson; Frances Penglase Barnhill, "Panky," lifelong friend of Elizabeth McKanna Willis, her daughter. What electrified them about this woman?
Patrick Rooney and Ellen Tracy gave life to Katherine on April 2, 1852. Patrick had emigrated from Ireland to Quebec Province, Canada, in 1835; Ellen had done likewise in time to marry him in 1837 in a small farming and logging community in Upper Wakefield Township. There Patrick farmed while Ellen gave birth to, cared for, and raised her ever-growing family. Katherine made child number eight; she would in two more years welcome her youngest sibling, Elizabeth, the ninth and last child. The family being Catholic, Katherine was baptized at St. Camillus Catholic Church in Farellton– a rural town now called La Peche and existing to this day alongside the Gatineau River. As always, the gothic steeple dominates the surrounding landscape.
In 1862 the United States Congress passed the Homestead Act. It offered 160 acres of unused public lands in the Northwest Territories to any one who wished to settle on, and improve their homestead. Much of the Rooney clan– Patrick and Ellen, and his married brothers and sisters– immigrated to Minnesota to claim its deliciously rich farming soil. They settled in Stearns County in a place they named "Rooney's Settlement," eventually renamed Padua in honor of St. Anthony of Padua, its patron saint and title of its Catholic parish.
Katherine, fifteen at the time of the move, finished her schooling in her new home. When she evidenced a mature twenty years, the community leaders judged her sufficiently educated to become the first employed school teacher of Raymond Township. A small, wooden-shingled, one-room schoolhouse where she taught, though no longer in use, still exists.
I treasure a picture of her from that period of her life:
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10. Elizabeth T "Eliza" RooneyBorn 31 Mar 1854 Wakefield Township, Outaouais, Quebec, Canada, died 30 Aug 1936 Sauk Centre, Stearns County, Minnesota, age 82 years Baptismal sponsors: Nicholas McGary and Maria McGary
A WPA Interview
BROWN, ELIZA (ROONEY)
Eliza (Rooney) Brown was born in the Gatineau River district in Ontario, Canada in the year 1854, a daughter of Patrick and Elenor (Tracy) Rooney. As a little girl she saw her father, a lumber contractor, clear the timber for their home on the Gatineau River on what is today part of the city of Ottawa.
In 1862, Patrick and Eleanor (Tracy) Rooney migrated to Minnesota by ox team, taking up a homestead in Raymond township, Stearns county. The Padua church of today is located on part of this original homestead and she herself planted some of the trees that now adorn the church yard. The old Red River Trail passed their home and here the young lady for years saw the ox teams, freight laden, plod their weary way toward the Red River Valley and the Dakotas.
On September 10, 1872, Eliza Rooney was married to John A Brown, a young man who had seen service on Mississippi River packets, transporting supplies for the Union soldiers during the civil war. The young couple settled on what is now known as the "Old Brown Farm", fourteen miles south of Sauk Centre. On this farm ten children were born. They are John A. Jr. who died in 1925; William A.; Henry H.; George F.; Thomas A.; Emily;
Eliza (Rooney) Brown's life might stand out as a beacon light to people of successive generations, to those who know only the trials of their own times. It was her pioneer spirit, the spirit of the ox-team and covered wagon days, that prompter her to carry on, when in 1893 her husband died, leaving her with ten small children, the oldest 18 and the youngest 2 years old, with their living to be made from the farm .
Eliza Brown went into the fields with her boys and carved out for her family their living and education. Eliza Brown carried on, doing a man's work on the farm, driving a team of horses fourteen miles to Sauk Centre each week to do her shopping, doing a mother's work in her home, raising a family. She was of the Catholic faith.
The last few years Eliza Brown made her home with her children in Sauk Centre. She died August 15, 1936 at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Robert Malloy.
OBITUARY:
Sept. 10, 1936 Herald
Mrs. Eliza T. Brown Buried
Services Held At St. Paul's Church
Thursday Morning Largely Attended
Funeral services for Mrs. Eliza Brown, pioneer resident of Stearns County who passed away in this city on August 30th, were held in St. Paul's Catholic Church Thursday, September 3, and the thronged church together with the hundreds of people who viewed the remains at her home at tested to the love and esteem in which the lady was held.
A Solemn Requiem High Mass was celebrated. Rt. Rev. Monsignor August Plachta, Rector Mayer, of Our Lady of Angels Catholic Church was Deacon of the Mass and Reverend Vincent Fettgather, of Brooten, Minn. was Subdeacon of the Mass. the funeral sermon was preached by Rt. Rev. Monsignor Plachta.
The three priests accompanied the remains to Calvary Cemetery where the Ritual for the Dead was recited.
Mrs. Eliza T. Brown was born near Ottawa, Canada, March 21st, 1856. Her father was John Rooney. Her mother's maiden name was Eleanor Tracy . More than 70 years ago, she came with her parents to what is now the Padua district in this county. Here later the young lady was married to John A. Brown and with him built up the farm known today as the Old Brown Farm. On this farm their ten children were born.
Besides the ten children the deceased is survived by one sister, Mrs. Catherine McKenna, Seattle,Wa., and by thirty-one grandchildren and seven great grandchildren.
The active pall bearers were Mr. Thomas Kinsella and the following nephews of the deceased: George and Frank Brown, William Riley, Joseph Egan and Frank Hoffman.
Honorary pall bearers were Dr. J.A. Dubois, J.F. Cooper, O.W. Winslow, William M. P., Henry Borgmann all of Sauk Centre and Mr. Charles Riley, Sedan. Minnesota.
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