Noble

Helping to find Noble ancestors from the counties in the Province of Ulster. Six of these make up Northern Ireland (Derry, Fermanagh, Tyrone, Antrim, Down, Armagh) and the other 3 are in the Republic of Ireland (Donegal, Cavan, Monaghan).
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  • Phil Noble

    I'm looking for the Irish connection for John Noble. He married in 1730 Catherine Mary Calhoun b. 1714, d. 1752. She was from Crosh Hose estate, Newton Stewart in Co Tyrone. In 1731, they left Ireland with a large group of Calhouns and went to Chestnut Level, PA, then Wytheville in Agusta County, VA then the Waxhaws Distirct on the NC/SC line and fianlly to Abbeville District in SC. John C Calhoun was descendet of this group. I have a family history, as best I could put it togther, of this group and would be happy to share - see attached or Noble Family of SC.pdf pls contact me phil@philnoble.com. Would love to hear from anyone that can help with linking John Noble back to the family in Ireland. Thanks.
  • John Noble

    After further FamilyDNA testing - it would appear that Scot and I are in the same haplogroup-- however we are a genetic distance of 10!

    This is the results!

    Your Haplogroup Tests
    R1b1a2a1a1b5 P312+ L23+ L176.2+ U152- U106- SRY2627- M65- M153- L21- L165- L1-

     

  • Terry L Noble

    Phil,

    I believe you need to contact the head of the Noble DNA group on FTDNA.  His Name is Joseph Noble Jr. and he lives in Louisiana.  I am sure he is connected to the Calhouns.

     

  • Joe Lewis

    Thanks John, for the invitation to join your group.

    Our Noble family's DNA is on its way to FTDNA.  With a looming postal strike it was sent by courier.  I am hopeful once results are in I can get through my brick wall. 

    I am tracing the line of George Noble born 1813 in Cavan.  He came to Canada in 1832 probably with other family members.  He settled in Esquesing Township, near Georgetown.  About 1850 he relocated his family to Brant Township in Bruce County.  Other Noble families on neighbouring farms were probably of some relation.

     

  • Eileen Souza

    I am researching my g-g grandfather, Edward Noble, born in Ireland about 1826. He immigrated to England, sometime prior to 1851, where he met and married Mary Devine, born about 1831 in Ireland. At this time it is unknown if they knew each other in Ireland.  Edward listed his father’s name as John Noble. Recent information on Mary Devine indicates that she was born and baptized in Co. Longford, Ireland.

    Their son, my great grandfather, Thomas Noble, was born 1851 in Liverpool, England. Edward and Mary, with their family, appear in the 1861 UK Census in Co. Durham, England and, in the mid-1860s, the family immigrated to the US to settle in Locust Gap, Northumberland County, PA.

    I am trying to trace Edward back to Ireland.  I joined this group because I understand that the highest concentration of Nobles seems to be in Northern Ireland.  Edward was Roman Catholic.

  • Dennis Noble

    My great grand father was William Noble (Ohio), son of John Noble and grandson of David Noble.

     

    William married Etta L. Smith and moved to Bloomington, IL. The couple had two sons, Harry (my grandfather) and Raymond.

    Harry Noble married Mary Margaret Moore and settled in Chicago.  The couple had 3 children, Margaret, William Thomas and my father, Harry, Jr.

    From what I have read John Noble from County Donegal (1695-1752) was the first to settle in the US in Pennsylvania and married Mary Calhoun.  I am not sure if I am related to John Noble as the trail becomes thin after Ohio in the early 1800's. 

     

    Any help would be greatly appreciated.

  • Michael W. Noble

    Dennis and Eileen....Both of your histories are interesting and could provide some of the missing links in our Noble story.  I'm away from home for the holidays, so will check some of your references when I return next week.  Will let you know what I find. 

  • John Noble

    Hi Dennis - welcome to the Noble group. Hopefully, some of the others in the group might have more answers for you! Looking at your info, it dows not appear we are in the same Noble line!

  • John Noble

    Hi Group - just before Christmas, I had the opportunity to meet with Joe Lewis who lives a couple of hours away from me. She is researching Borden Noble. Borden's DNA results match similarly to Mike, Bruce & Terry!She had some photographs and one of the characteristics we noticed was a very distinctive narrow pointy chin in the males of her line and my line! Anyone else notice that in their lines?

  • Terry L Noble

    John, where is Borden's DNA result posted? I do not think have seen it.

  • John Noble

    Terry - Borden's DNA result iss on Family Tree DNA - it should match with you - there were 67 markers tested!

  • Terry L Noble

    Thanks John, I see he is a distance 4.  Not too bad. 

  • Michael W. Noble

    Anyone have a Eugene R. Noble, formerly from Idaho, in their line.  Ran across the attached obit from September 2007.

    Eugene%20R%20Noble%20Obit%20-%20091807.doc

  • James Thomas Noble

    My ancestor, John Noble, landed in NY on August 26, 1853, age 4, unaccompanied by parents. His US naturalization papers give his birth year as 1847, his mother's name was Rose, and he came from Fermanagh.

    He lived in Meriden CT with Anthony and Margaret Scollan, married Mary Moran from Co. Leitrim in 1869, and had six children. His first grandson, William Joseph Noble, was my grandfather.

    Can anyone help with Rose (Noble), Co. Fermanagh, with son John b. 1847?

    Thanks!

  • John Noble

    Hello James and welcome to the group - hopefully someone will be able to help. My ancestors came from Fermanagh as well but prior to 1840 and they came to the province of Ontario in Canada!

  • George "Pat" Noble

    Dennis -- Re your 12/28/2011 posting. I found this info at Ancestry.com.Looks detailed, but I can't verify any of it. A good set of clues, tho.

    William J Noble (b 11 Mar 1863) m Etta Louella Smith on 16 Apr 1891. William was son of James Karr Noble  (28 Jun 1829 - 24 Sep 1898) and Sara A Johnston ((1836 - 1918). James was son of David Noble (30 Sep 1795 - 15 Sep 1863) and Rebecca Karr (1796 - 1838). James was son of John Noble and Sarah Price.

  • Dennis Noble

    Pat, thanks.  William was my GGF.  I have most of my information from a historical family article I found and tracing back has been hit or miss.

    I found where Etta Louella Smith was buried and it was in Chicago all these years.  Small world. 

  • John Noble

    "Good news - James Noble and I now match on 66 of 67 markers - best results yet!" I am going for the 111 and so is Ray Noble!
  • David John Gerard

    Is their a master site for family trees of the Nobles of Ireland's County Fermanagh on this site.  I see the same names reappear  William & Rose & John.....

    My direct Noble ancestors ( John Noble & Rose {m/s Noble and the daughter of a John Noble } parents of William Noble ) went from Fermanagh, Ireland... back to Scotland.... than my own grandfather three generations later settled in Oyster Bay, Long Island, New York, USA.

    I have run into a dead end in Ireland  (early 1800's / late 1700's) with my Noble family.

    I keep a basic tree on TRIBAL PAGES ( a facebook site)  on which deceased are searchable via Google & Tribal Pages ...  do others do likewise.  If so what sites...?  

     

    Does anyone know where in Scotland, their Nobles came from before they moved to Ireland..?

    Again, as always thank you

     

    Dave Gerard.

    davegerard@hotmail.com

     

     

     

     

    Dave Gerard

    I keep some things posted on tribal pages family trees

  • John Noble

    Hi David  - I am not aware of any master site although there might well be. I think most people have their own family trees as I do. I do not put any of my trees up on the internet - especially NOT with Ancestry. I promised those who provide me information that it would not go on the internet! That being said, I am always willing to share what I have!

    There is an Arthur Noble born in 1654 in Ireland - his parents are believed to have come from Cornwall in England. The Noble name comes from France to England and from there to Scotland and Ireland!

  • Michael W. Noble

    David....I'm also not aware of any master site, although we could probably create one.  The biggest problem I see is that the folks on this site represent 5 or 6 different lines of Nobles, mostly from Co. Fermanagh, for which we have not been able to establish a common ancestor.  There is an Ontario line, Illinois line, South Carolina line, Missouri line, 2 Australia lines, and possibly one or two others.  Many of us have done the DNA testing and know that we are closely related, but like you, have hit one dead end after another.

    As John says, we all maintain our separate trees.  I have mine posted on both ancestry.com and myhistory.com where they are constantly updated by new databases coming online and by new trees placed online.  However, we could create our own website that is kept separate.  I belong to another family history organization that does just that -- and we have over 70,000 names.  We use TNG (The Next Generation - www.lythgoes.net) software with password protection and it is only available to members of our organization -- not to ancestry.com or familysearch.org.  I'm not in favor of doing anything on a social networking site.

    Anyone else have any interest in a Noble Family website?  I'd be happy to help get it organized and acquire the software (about $35), then we could share the cost of the website hosting ($5 per month) via a membership fee.  Any discussion?

  • Michael W. Noble

    Correction:  myhistory.com below should read my heritage.com -- sorry for the error.

  • James Thomas Noble

    Here's another twist on the Noble story. Our John (age 4) was raised by Scollons in Connecticut. He married Mary Moran from Co. Leitrim in 1869 and had 6 children. The whole family was very Catholic. It appears from reviewing data from our moderator (he and I are a 66/67 match) that his ancestors and a lot of other Nobles were Ulster Plantation/Protestant Ascendency people. Now, my ancestor may have been part of that family, but on the other hand, those Y chromosomes do get around, don't they?
  • Raymond A. Noble

    Yes, Jim. Back in high school (my class is celebrating our 50th high school reunion this year!), I strongly suspected that our seemingly staunchly Catholic Nobles, descendants from Ireland, had come from Protestant families at some point -- even Irish-American Catholic priests named Noble turned out to be in that category. In the intervening decades, that seemed even more likely when we learned that our John Noble of Meriden CT came from the County Fermanagh Nobles, who were staunch Protestants. That now seems even more evident from the latest close DNA match with our moderator, John Noble, who comes from a protestant family (For everyone else: as John mentioned here a few days ago, John and I are now awaiting the arrival of our 111 marker Y-DNA kits that may help pinpoint that relationship even more clearly). This opens a new string of tantalizing questions about the religion of the parentss of our first American ancestor: John Francis Noble, who arrived in Meriden CT at age four and was raised by the Scollan family there. DNA once again is proving to be a remarkable investigative tool in unravelling family mysteries!

  • James Thomas Noble

    I also wonder if the Nobles who stayed (the well-documented ones, to whom none of us appear to be related) are different somehow from the poorly documented ones that gave rise to us.
  • John Noble

    Well after 3 months, my 111-marker results are finally in. Ray and I now are a genetic distance of 3. I had hoped to stay the distance of 1 we had after the 67 markers, but 3 is still excellent. It is the best results so far!

  • John Scott Noble

    Hi, I was reading Ray and James Thomas' comments about John Francis Noble who came to Meriden CT in 1853 age 4.  What I believe might be significant is the name Francis.  There is a manuscript # 30, which is part of the Swanzy Pedigree Notebooks about the family of Francis Noble and Susanna Woolley from County Monaghan who maybe ancestors of your Francis. 

    Francis and Susanna were residents of Peterborow, Parish of Donamonie, County Monaghan.  Francis died in 1740.

    Are you familiar with this manuscript or this family??  

  • John Noble

    Hi Scott - I am familiar with that and in fact have kind of family tree made up of that family!

  • John Scott Noble

    Hi John, I also have put together a family tree for this family, starting with James Noble of Glassdrumond, County Fermanagh, born circa 1654 died Sept 21 1719 at the age of 65.  He was buried in the parish church cemetery. Aghalurcher parish, County Fermanagh.

    You are probably aware of the articles in 'The Irish Genealogist' by Talbot Green about the Noble families in Counties Fermanagh, Monaghan etc.  I found them extremely useful in augmenting my family tree.

  • John Noble

    That could be a strong possibility. When I did early research, I got a family tree of Maj. Arthur Noble (b. 1654) along with Francis and James. I think they are related - perhaps cousins to Arthur. SInce then throughother people I have augmented those trees but cannot of course make any link to mine! I will have to revisit this!

     

    I have a copy of Talbot Green's article and alos a follow-up article he wrote in a later edition of the Irish Genealogist!

  • James Thomas Noble

    Any news from anyone? I stumbled on a pair of researchers in Germany who have given me my mother's tree back to the 1500s!

    I though Ireland would be easy and Germany would be hard, but quite the opposite turns out to be the case.

    If I were to travel to Enniskillen or Belfast, is there anything to be done there that can't be done sitting at my desk? Has anyone tried contacting Nobles who are living in Fermanagh today?

  • John Noble

    Hi James - I have not found anything more - yes Ireland is very difficult to find things prior to the 1850's it seems. In Belfast you can visit PRONI - they have an online catalog that can be searched but you have to visit if you want to look at the actual documents!

    In Fermanagh, there are some historical societies that may or may not have anything. 

    I tried contacting one Noble in Fermanagh - runs a real-estate agency I believe. But I never heard back. That was some years ago!

  • Eileen Souza

    I recently found a tombstone photo of the grave of my 2nd great-grandfather, Edward Noble.  It states that he is from County Mayo.  It also gives a town and parish but so far the words have not been completely transcribed and the little we can see does not seem to match any parish or town in County Mayo. Edward was born around 1826. 

    Edward migrated from Ireland during the famine and first went to England, where he met and married Mary Devine, of County Longford.  They had several chidlren in County Durham, England and then migrated to the US, where they settled in Mount Carmel, Northumberland County, PA.  

  • Michael W. Noble

    I recently obtained a copy of the article "The Nobles in Swanzy's and Betham's Extracts" by Talbot K. Green, published in The Irish Genealogist.  This has a wealth of information contained in the wills and legal filings of five groups of Nobles:

    1.  The Nobles of Glassdrummond, Co. Fermanagh

    2.  The Nobles of Co. Monaghan

    3.  The Nobles of Lisnaskea, Co. Fermanagh

    4.  The Nobles of Donagh, Co. Fermanagh

    5.  Another family living in Donagh in the same period

    Most of this is 18th and 19th centuries.  If anyone would like a copy, I'd be happy to send you one (file size = 10.9M) -- e-mail me at mwnoble@me.com.  Much of this impacts my line, so I've been spending a good amount of time updating my tree.

    Have also been doing some work on one of my maternal German lines, the Schneiders.  Like James Thomas, I've found that German records are pretty good, but require translation.  Have got records back to the early 1700s but also have a German cousin who is doing family research, so he does all the translating!  Makes it easier for me.  

    Records in England also tend to be very good, but those in Ireland were either not created (to keep them out of English hands) or were lost over time.  So, as we're all finding out, research on Irish roots is difficult. Although more and more PRONI records are coming on line each year, they're charging to see the actual document to help offset some of their budget woes.

  • John Scott Noble

    Hi Mike, I came across this article recently and found it very informative as well.  Green published a second article "Hunting The Early Nobles", Vol 12, No. 1 in 2006 which has a number of corrections to the first article plus some thoughts on where in England the Nobles of Glassdrummond might have come from.

    Curious which line impacts you directly.  I believe I can trace mine back through the one from Donagh.

    Scott.

  • John Noble

    I have both of Greene's articles and in fact I wrote to him prior to the 2006 article and had a letter back from him. He shed no further light on what he had already covered in the articles. I would like to think that I can trace my ancestors back to these Nobles but so far cannot but one never knows! I would tend to think that I my line would be either from the Glassdrummond or Lisnaskea ones!

  • Ron Oakley

    Just joined the Noble group, and wondered if anyone has heard of, or is related to the following.

    My gr.grandfather Henry Noble born Mar 11, 1845 in Dromore, Co. Fermanagh,  married Margaret Mccutchen June 14, 1864 in Drumkeeran (according to IGI records, groom's father's name is John Noble, bride's fahter is James Mccutchen), and sailed for Canada the same year. They had four children, one died age 14 months in 1866, and the other three died along with their mother Margaret in 1871 of scarlett fever. Henry remarried and this second marriage produced my grandmother Marion Alma Noble.

    Any help would be appreciated

  • Bruce Noble

    Hi Folks: Happy Father's Day to all! A personal meeting with my "cousin" Mike Noble and his wife yesterday has inspired me to finally post something on this site. I am seeking information about the Irish background of my line of Nobles. My great-great-great grandfather, Andrew Noble emigrated from Ireland to Canada in c. 1855. He and his family settled in the town of Dunnsville, ONT located on the north side of Lake Erie. His family consisted of his wife Mary, sons Alexander, Robert, and John, and daughters Rebecca, Sarah, Mary, and Jane. Andrew evidently worked on the railroads and was killed in a train accident on Christmas Day in 1857. (I am descended from son John who was born in c. 1837.)

    Where these folks came from in Ireland is not at all clear. When my great-great grandfather died in 1913, his death certificate listed his place of birth as County Down, Ireland. Elsewhere there are other references to Counties Antrim and Tyrone. So the situation is not at all clear. With this admittedly scanty information, can anybody help shed some light on where this branch of Nobles came from in Ireland?

    Best Regards, Bruce Noble, Jr.

  • James Thomas Noble

    I was just notified of a Y-37 match - John Barry Noble II, who lives in the UK. I've sent him an email and I will report back on any info received.

    Probably going to Ireland next summer to poke around a bit.

  • Melanie

    Hi there! My maiden name is Noble. My 3rd great grandfather John Noble was born in Scotland in 1854. According to the 1900 and 1920 Census, he came here in about 1882. He settled in Youngstown, Ohio with his wife Martha who was born in England and their family (all born in Ohio). Apparently his nickname was Jackie.

    I have little information about his life in Scotland. I found that he was born in Greenock, Renfrewshire, Scotland. His parents were John and Sarah (Miller) Noble which I found on his death certificate.

    I had heard my great grandfather told stories that my family originally lived in Ireland, then Scotland, but I couldn't trace that information.

  • David John Gerard

    Melanie,  was the John Noble you are looking for in the foundry or mining industry.?  do you have an account with Scotland's people (gov't records office) to search B/M/D & census records? I did a quick search this morning and found no documents ( in Scotland) in their records that would match John & Sarah, or John & Martha.   Do you have additional info..?

    Dave in NY, USA

  • David John Gerard

    to: Ron Oakley,

    My mother is a Noble, I have traced part of my grandfather James Paterson Noble's family from Scotland to County Fermanagh, Ireland. 

    July 29, 1821 my 3rd great-grandfather John Noble of  Dromore, Par. of Drumkeeran married Rose Noble (daughter of John Noble & Helen Monaghan).

    Their (known) children are: William born 1823, John b'24 & Henry b'29. All three moved to Scotland, .....   so a connection going forward is unlikely. Does anyone know how big these towns were.?   

     

    -- I can only guess that if we do a little digging we'll find a connection going back just a little.   I see your Henry's Marriage cert. 14th June 1864 age 21 ( that would make his birth year 1843 (? they rounded ages a lot back then.?) bach., farmer, Dromore Big, son of John Noble, /// and Margaret McCutcheon age 20, spin.,  Residence: Russian (Rushin ? duel /questioned spelling Russian/Rushin appears under other births / marriage records also.)  father is James McCutcheon. I also see another McCutcheon birth to other parents who are also from Russian (Rusin sp?) also farmers, have you had any luck on that line..? 

     

    [ Fermanagh, marriage / birth / baptismal records, as transcribed by George Armstrong ]

    * note his spellings of McCuctheon vs. Mccutchen ..?

     

     I also see a Henry Noble,  born Oct 9, 1843, baptized Oct 22, 1843,  son of John Noble & Margaret (no last name listed) of Dromore, Farmer.  

    [this birth year matches the age on his marriage record ? But you have a different birth date ?]

     

    [ again this info is not from the original documents but transcriptions by Geo. Armstrong] 

     

    *** hope I have not muddied up the water here, but you might check those records, dates and spellings yourself.

     

    davegerard@hotmail

     

    =================================

     

    Comment by Ron Oakley on April 17, 2013 at 6:11pm           

    Just joined the Noble group, and wondered if anyone has heard of, or is related to the following.

    My gr.grandfather Henry Noble born Mar 11, 1845 in Dromore, Co. Fermanagh,  married Margaret Mccutchen June 14, 1864 in Drumkeeran (according to IGI records, groom's father's name is John Noble, bride's fahter is James Mccutchen), and sailed for Canada the same year. They had four children, one died age 14 months in 1866, and the other three died along with their mother Margaret in 1871 of scarlett fever. Henry remarried and this second marriage produced my grandmother Marion Alma Noble.

    Any help would be appreciated

  • Melanie

    David John Gerard: Most of the information I got from my dad's cousin. He did a lot of the research. In the U.S. Census records that I have, his occupation is listed as puddler (1900) and a watcher on the railroad (1920). On his death certificate his occupation is a retired steel worker.

    No I do not have an account with Scotland's records. The only documents I have are U.S. documents. My dad's cousin found the other information about his place of birth and his wife. He said he found some Scotland and England census records for John and Martha, but I haven't seen them personally. Martha was born in 1858 in England and her maiden name is Watson. I know from the U.S. Census records that they were married before they came to the U.S.

  • James Thomas Noble

    There is a marriage recorded at St. Mary's Ardess (Kesh, Fermanagh) between John Noble of Dromore Big and Rose McGolrick of Drumgregnahan in November 1842. My John Noble was born in 1847 or 1848, his mother's name was Rose, and he came to America alone in 1853. I do not know if this John Noble-Rose McGolrick couple are my ancestor's parents, but it seems a good bet. Anyone have any further information?

  • David John Gerard

    to: Ron Oakley,

    sorry typo, should have typed:

    * note his spellings of McCutcheon  vs. Mccutchen ..? 

  • James Thomas Noble

    I just heard from a 67-match named John Noble in Australia, and I invited him to join the group. His ancestor was born near Irvinestown, Fermanagh in 1820.

  • David John Gerard

    Recently read that at one time in Ireland, births had to be registered within a certian time or there was a fine.  ...   so people would fudge the birth date..? might explain why BC dates do not always match later documents where a person might list their actual birth date..?

  • Geoffrey Wade SOWDEN

    My Noble interest relates to James N who came to Geelong/Australia in 1830.   His home village was Newtownstewart in Nth Ireland.    Happy to share the Australian history & appreciate of any Irish data.

    Geoff     wadeallen1@bigpond.com

  • Maggi Biles

    I am searching for any information on a Mary Noble from Dores Scotland between 1811 and 1814 when her two sons were born to her and Donald Shaw. Have absolutely no information on her, I have searched Scotlands People site but can only presume the marriage was not officially recorded. Her son Alexander married and came to Australia in 1848 but have never been able to track other son William born 1811 either.

  • George "Pat" Noble

    Ancestry shows a William Shaw born 3 Nov 1811 to Donald Shaw and Mary Noble. It also shows a William Shaw (abt 1810), wife Margaret (abt 1810), with chilldren John (abt 1833), James (abt 1836), Jane (abt 1838), Robert (abt 1840), William (abt 1843), Margaret (abt 1845), George (abt 1847) and Agnes (abt 1849). They appear in the censuses of 1841, 51, 61 and 71. They were in Polmont Sterlingshire, among other places. Could that be your William?