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GEDCOM Trees
To see the full Morry family tree, comprised of some 5000 + individuals please click on the link below which will take you to my Family Tree Maker website. This is necessary because there is insufficient space to house this large set of files on this website. Be forewarned that not everyone in this family tree is a Morry nor even necessarily related to the Morrys by blood. This is the entire database of people I have found to be in some way related to the Morrys by blood and by marriage and includes many side trips down alleys that are likely to be of little interest to those only interested in the main Morry line. Still, it gives some interesting insights into how one small family from rural Devon fanned out over the subsequent 16 generations to most parts of the world. If you would prefer to narrow in on just one segment of the Morry family line, search through the database from the beginnings of one of the following family trees. The first in the Morry line of descendants is Gregory Mawry, the man we believe is the sire of this clan. He was married to English Maunder and so, in the nomenclature of the Morey Forum, our clan is called Clan English Maunder. If you are inclined to explore the patrilineal lineage of Fredris Marion Powdrell Minty, our Scottish grandmother, you might like to start with the birth of James Minto in about 1752.
Click her for the Family Free Maker Website
Just for fun I have included here the matrilineal line of my wife Katherine (Jamie) O'Brien Morry, the Quinlisk line. This is a rather small family tree because I have not yet researched the O'Brien line and that will have to await my retirement! The Quinlisk line apparently descends from Patrick Quinlisk in Cloughjordan, Co. Tipperary, Ireland, who was born about 1730, but there is much conjecture in this information at the moment.
And now for something completely different! One of the key merchant class families into which the Morrys inter-married in Devon and with whom they had many financial dealings during their early years in Caplin Bay and Ferryland was the Sweetlands. They seem to have arrived in this part of the world about the same time, but the Sweetlands moved on for other parts much sooner than the Morrys. One of their descendants who now lives in Australia (Jolyon Sweetland) has compiled the enclosed abbreviated family tree with some assistance from Kevin Reddigan, Enid O'Brien and myself. Unfortunately, because his tree focuses on the line of immediate descent to him, it doesn't follow the many progeny of the marriage that links the Morrys and Sweetlands: William Sweetland and Priscilla Ann Morry, February 15, 1810, at St. Saviour's, in Dartmouth, Devon. |