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| :: View the Killey Genealogy Log :: Sign the Killey Genealogy Log :: Contact Peter Killey :: Manxscenes.com :: |
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www.killey.net
This website is
new and under construction, but please find below a snippet of
information regarding the surname "Killey"
In due course I will add as much "Killey" information, photography
and genealogy to this site as possible.
Please feel free to contact me at peter@killey.net or log onto my Isle of Man Photographic website www.manxscenes.com for my personal views of the Isle of Man. >>> Feel free to make contact with other Killey's from around the world by signing the Killey genealogy log by Clicking Here or view the log by Clicking Here <<< Regards - Peter Killey, Isle of Man
Surname
"Killey My sincere thanks to everyone who has contributed to this page, especially primary school teacher Mrs. Jane Killey whose assistance has been greatly and very much appreciated. KILLEY, originally Mac Gilla Ceallaigh, anglicised in Ireland into Mac Killey Kelly and Killy Kelly. The MAC & the KELLY have been dropped, leaving KILLEY, which is identical in meaning with Gale, Gell and Gill. (Gaelic, guilley: Irish Giolla, 'a servant') Indeed, in the Isle of Man, formerly, the same person was called Gale, Gell, Gill and Killey indifferently.
In some place names Killey means "of the church", i.e. Ballakilley meaning the farm of the church. Click HERE to hear Dr. Brian Stowell's short explanation of the surname Killey (103KB). Charles Gell (d. circa 1870)Generally known as Chalse-y-Killey, wandered over the island " going on the houses." But, though he begged, he performed many useful offices for his numerous friends and acquaintances, and for this and his power of quaint and humorous anecdote he was welcomed everywhere. He was supposed to be, and no doubt was, in some respects, rather silly but he nevertheless possessed considerable shrewdness. Truly devout, and to this he appears to have owed his nickname, which signifies "Charles of the Church," he was a fanatic where Roman Catholics were concerned. On one occasion, when asked where he had been, he remarked that he had been at the Union Mills with " Pazon Drury putting the Romans out." Another subject which greatly excited him was the people being deprived of their grazing on the "commons." At a meeting at Sulby, with regard to: it, he said: " We muss put down this Popery, we muss hev a big grave made, and we'll hev the Pope in first, and then we'll hev Thomas Arthur. A little later, when Governor Loch, with a possé of police and special constables, perambulated the southern commons to clear them of sheep belonging to the evicted commoners - the battle of Cronk-ny-irree-lhaa as this perambulation was called - Chalse made his appearance early in the day, and walked along with measured tread and solemn look, carrying aloft a flag extemporised out of a pocket handkerchief. He said very little except that the 'great 'Captain' would in his own good time regulate all things and deal out equal justice to all. (Chalse, it should also be remembered, was a temperance orator In this, as in other respects he has been immortalised by the Rev. T. E. Brown, in the charming poem, "To Chalse in Heaven";
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| N.B. If you have any further information whatsoever regarding Killey genealogy or the surname Killey, please contact me at peter@killey.net or sign the above genealogy log. | ||||||
| All information contained on this website - www.killey.net is copyright of Peter Killey unless otherwise stated. | ||||||
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