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Hoey, Frances Cashel
Pessoa singular · 14 Feb 1830 - 9 Jul 1908

Frances Sarah Johnston, eldest child of Charles Bolton Johnston (1802-1872) and Charlotte Jane Shaw (1809-1890), was born 14 Feb 1830. She was the eldest of nine children. On 14 Feb 1846 she married Adam Murray Stewart (d. 1855). They had two daughters. In 1853 she started writing reviews and articles for the Freeman's Journal, the Nation, and other Dublin papers and periodicals. Adam Murray Stewart died on 6 Nov 1855, so Frances moved with her two daughters to London. There she started writing for the Morning Post, and the Spectator. In 1865, she began writing a story, 'Buried in the Deep' for the Chambers' Journal, where she continued to contribute articles until 1894. She wrote a total of eleven novels, five of which were published under the name of Edmund Yates. Frances remarried on 6 Feb 1858 to John Baptist Cashel Hoey (1828-1892), a writer and journalist. Her husband John died on 7 January 1892. Frances Cashel Hoey died on 9 July 1908, and was buried in the churchyard of the Benedictine church at Little Malvern, Worcestershire.

Cronhelm, Edward Theodore
Pessoa singular · 1797-18 June 1815

Edward Theodore Cronhelm was the sixth child of Wilhelm Georg Otto Von Cronhelm and Sarah Clarke, born around the year 1797. He died in the battle of Waterloo in 1815.

Neville, Mrs
Pessoa singular
Crosbie, Sir, Edward William, 5th Baronet
Pessoa singular · 1755 - 5 June 1798

Sir Edward William Crosbie, eldest son of Sir Paul Crosbie, 4th Baronet of Maryborough (1723-1773), was born around the year 1755. He married Castiliana Westenra on 14 December 1790 in Dublin. They had one daughter, Hester Dorothea Crosbie (1793-1857). He next married Margaret Patience Ferguson, and they had three children: Sir William Edward Crosbie (1794-1860); Louisa Dona Crosbie; and Elizabeth Crosbie. On 2 June 1798, Sir Edward William Crosbie, 5th Baronet of Maryborough, was charged with traitorous and rebellious conduct even though he denied membership of the United Irishmen. He was found guilty without a judge advocate and was hanged 5 June 1798 in Carlow, County Carlow.

Howard Carroll
Pessoa singular · 1827 - 29 Sep 1862

Howard Carroll, a relation to the Earl of Effingham on his mother’s side, was born in Dublin in 1827. He attended Dublin University where he studied law, medicine, and engineering. Around the year 1855, he moved to Albany, New York, where he worked as a civil engineer, designing iron bridges for the New York Central Railroad. On 27 October 1861 Howard Carroll voluntarily joined the Union Army after he was offered the position of Brigade Quartermaster in General Meagher’s Irish Brigade. He helped with organising the brigade of Irishmen, and after it had become a success, he left determined to joint the fighting where he could be of further use. On 27 March 1862 he became Lieutenant Colonel of the 105th Regiment, which was made up predominantly of Irishmen, and they left New York on 4 April 1862.

Howard Carroll is mentioned in the letter of another Irish soldier, Francis a surgeon of the 88th Regiment of the New York Infantry. Francis wrote to his father that he had sent his letters through his friend, Mr Howard Carroll of New York, and that Mr Carroll had enclosed his own letter introducing himself to Francis’ family and letting them know where to send further letters. This letter was written on 29 July 1862.

Four days later, on 2 August 1862, Howard Carroll was promoted to Colonel after the resignation of Colonel James M. Fuller, who had been charged with issuing improper orders while in command of Camp Upham, LeRoy, and enabling a contractor to defraud the United States Government of large sums of money. Before his resignation, Colonel Fuller spoke with the Governor and Adjutant General suggesting that Howard Carrol take his place as Colonel, due to his merit as, “One of the most accomplished officers, as well as one of the coolest and bravest soldiers in the volunteer service of the State” (Clarke, 237). Howard Carroll proved his worth at the Battle of Cedar Mountain, and he five days of fighting during Pope’s Retreat outside Washington DC. His regiment earned an honourable reputation under his command, and when their numbers dwindled to some four-hundred odd men, they were transferred to General Hooker’s division in the advance of the Army in Maryland, where they took part in all of the fighting that led up to the Battle of Antietam.

On 16 September 1862, Howard Carrol was ordered to cross Antietam creek and take the summit, in order to secure the advantage of the high-ground and gain a position from which the Union Army could attack the left flank of General Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia. On 17 September 1862, under the instruction of Brigadier-General Abram Duryea, Thomas Carroll led what remained of his own 105th regiment as well as four others up the hill. They were under direct rifle fire from the Confederate forces, and

Over half of the New York Regiments were killed in the Battle of Antietam, and it is remembered as the bloodiest encounter of the American Civil War. This battle was the Union Victory that allowed President Lincoln to issue the Emancipation Proclamation, which freed the slaves in the Confederate States. The Irish Brigade which Howard Carroll had helped organise lost over 4,000 Irishmen fighting for the Union Army, which was far more men than ever served in their regiment at any one time.

Howard Carroll was shot in the leg as he led his men up the summit. Due to how many men were wounded that day, he was sent back to Washington to receive care, and despite his objects, Carroll was carried in an ambulance on a trek of over one hundred miles back to the capital. On the way his wounded leg became infected, and he died of fever on 29 September 1862 at the age of thirty-five.