My line of Carli(s)les, going back to John Carlile, b. 1618 in Stepney, London, Eng, were
Quakers from about 1646 until the American Civil War. They are easily traced in the Quaker
Monthly Meeting records of Burlington, NJ (about 1690), and Philadelphia. As was the
custom the line was John1, John2, John3, Abraham4, Abraham5, Abraham6, with lots of Johns
along the way.
Although they will appear in Pennsylvania records they would be easily distinguished from
other lines by records in Quaker databases and genealogies.
Craig Carlile
> On June 27, 2018 at 9:44 AM "Stephen D. Carlile"
<sdcarlile(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> My ancestor, William Carlile (or possibly his relatives) may have been in
> Chester County, PA in 1790, but I have a copy of a census record that
> indicates one of his daughter's was born on the Atlantic Ocean about 1796.
>
> Do you know where your Carlisle ancestors came from?
>
> On Mon, Jun 25, 2018 at 5:00 PM, william carlisle via CARLILE <
> carlile(a)rootsweb.com> wrote:
>
> > Stephen,
> > Our Carlisle line was traced back to approx. 1755 in the area where
> > Mifflin Co was later plotted. John Carlisle seemed to have been
> > born/appeared around this area. He married into the Sunderland family and
> > raised a family in Mifflin Co. with 10 known children and the majority of
> > them migrated to Ohio.
> >
> > On Monday, June 25, 2018 12:12 PM, Stephen D. Carlile <
> > sdcarlile(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> >
> > There are quite a number of people out there who are descendants of
> > William
> > Carlile, my immigrant ancestor born about 1753 in Ireland. He married Sarah
> > (some people believe her surname was Barker but I have seen nothing to
> > confirm this) about 1778 in Ireland. She was born about 1763 in Ireland
> > (some believe she was from County Cavan, but I have not seen any proof of
> > that either. My father always told me that our ancestors were thought to be
> > Scots-Irish, but again, no proof, although the surname Carlile/Carlisle
> > appears to have originated from the city of Carlisle, England in the
> > administrative county of Cumbria (formerly the old county of Cumberland)
> > which is located about 10 miles south of the border between Scotland and
> > England.
> >
> > It makes sense that the Carlile/Carlisle families emigrated to Northern
> > Ireland in the 1600's during "The Plantations" phase of English
dominance
> > over the Irish when the English Crown was importing both English and Scots
> > into Ireland and confiscating the estates of the Catholic Irish in favor of
> > the Protestant Scot and English foreigners.
> >
> > I have never been able to determine from which part of Ireland William
> > Carlile and his wife Sarah came from, until just recently, when I was
> > researching James Neal (Neel) Carlile (Pueblo County Colorado
> > Industrialist), the son of William Carlile and Nancy Ellen Whitcraft, and
> > grandson of William and Sarah. In some paperwork about the life of James
> > Neal Carlile, there is the mention of our immigrant William Carlile as
> > being from Ballynahinch, Ireland.
> >
> > I thought this was great news, until I found that there are several
> > Ballynahinch, Ireland locales, that are listed as townlands or Baronies as
> > follows:
> >
> > Ballynahinch, a townland in County Armagh, Northern Ireland
> > Ballynahinch, a town in County Down, Northern, Ireland
> >
> > Ballynahinch, a barony in County Galway, Republic of Ireland
> > Ballynahinch, a townland in County Galway, Republic of Ireland
> > Ballynahinch, a townland in Coutny Langford, Republic of Ireland
> > Ballynahinch, a townland in County Offaly, Republic of Ireland
> > Ballynahinch, a townland in County Tipperary, Republic of Ireland
> >
> > Given the history of the Scots-Irish, I tend to believe that our Carlile
> > ancestors were probably from Northern Ireland, although County Langford and
> > County Cavan border each other, and if William Carlile's wife Sarah is
> > truly from County Cavan, then perhaps our Carlile family resided in County
> > Langford at one time.
> >
> > I also discovered that the Carlile family in Pueblo, Colorado were thought
> > to be Presbyterians, and there is a mention of this in some of the history
> > of this family in Colorado. If anyone has any additional information please
> > contact me. Thank you very much.
> >
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