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Written by Lou Morgan
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Wednesday, 18 July 2007 |
‘Anyway, back to my
family!’ said the ubiquitous Lou Morgan to me.

‘My mother was from Kildare and her father
was a soldier in the British Army. In
fact he was Sergeant-Major Moran in the Black Watch and he fought both in the
Boar War and in the Great War. He became
great pals with a Colonel in the same regiment who was connected to the famous
Millen-Barbour Linen Mills of Lisburn. Through him he was offered a position as Transport Manager for that firm
and that is how my grand-mother came to settle in Lambeg. They were, I think, the only Catholics living
there.
They moved to Lisburn but unfortunately
they were burned out of there in the pogroms of the 1920s. I have photos of the effects of that pogrom
that I’ll show you some time! There are other Newry families who arrived here
too because of those Troubles. The
McGreaveys were burned out of Dromore and the Crimmins’ from outside Banbridge.
I think the Mussens of Hilltown, for
example, were burned out of neighbouring Dromore about this time.
My grandmother Sarah Judge, a schoolteacher
from Black Church in Co Kildare, became Moran on
her marriage. She spent the last decade
of her life in Newry and she died in 1935 and is buried in Dromintee. Her daughter Annie met Joe Morgan in Newry and
married him. The sisters met their husbands while in the
Hibernian Club dancing. Ann’s sister
Sarah fell in love with Eddie McAteer of Newry’s Chapel Street. This man was accused of complicity in the
famous murder of Wolfe Flanagan outside Newry’s Cathedral of that time and he
had to go on the run. She followed him
and they were married in New York.
.... to be continued .....
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