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Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. JOHN HENRY Hamill: Birth: 15 NOV 1852 in Newark, Essex, NJ. Death: 24 SEP 1913 in Shelby, Oceana, MI

  2. Robert James Hamill: Birth: 1 MAY 1856 in Newark, Essex, NJ. Death: 4 AUG 1857 in Newark, Essex, NJ


Sources
1. Title:   U S Federal Census 1850
Page:   New Jersey, Essex County, City of Newark, West Ward, p 328A
2. Title:   U S Federal Census 1850
Page:   New Jersey, City of Newark, West Ward, p328A
3. Title:   David W Baldwin, Justice of the Peace, Marriage Record - Hamill/Daily County of Essex, New Jersey, filed 5 July 1850
Text:   As the Clerk of the County of Essex, I David W Baldwin, one of the Justices of the Peace in and for the County of Essex do hereby certify that...
  And on the 20th day of June 1850 I joined Robert Hamill and Josephine Daily both of Newark in the Holy bands of Matrimony...
 Witness my hand this 5th day of July 1850. David W Baldwin, Justice of the Peace

Notes
a. Note:   -Ádhmaill, Ághmaill which, according to Woulfe, means "ready, active". A branch of Cineál Eoghain, noted for learning and attached to the O'Hanlons in Oriel (Monaghan).
  And following, the same text in Celtic:
  Ó h-Adhmaill Hamill: líonmhar, Oirthear Uladh. Clann de Chineál Eoghain & dream liteartha a bhain le Muintir Anluain in Oirghialla.
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 HAMILL
 This popular Ulster name is most common in counties Antrim and Armagh and can be of Irish, Scottish or English origin, In England the name, originally Hamel, derives from the Old English word hamel, meaning ''scarred' or 'mutilated'.
 In Scotland the name is of Norman territorial origin. The first of the name on record there was William de Hameville in thirteenth-century Annandale in Dumfriesshire. The name is well recorded in Lothian but was most common in Ayrshire and indeed, Hugh Hammill of Roughwood in Ayrshire was one of those who accompanied Montgomery of the Ards to Ulster.
 However, already in Ulster at that time, the O'Hamills, Gaelic Ó hAghmaill, were one of the leading septs of the Cenél Binnigh, a brianch of the Cenél Eoghain. As such the O'Hamills claim descent from Binneach, son of Eoghan, son of the fifth-century Niall of the Nine Hostages, founder of the Uí Néill dynasty. The O'Hamills ruled a territory in south Tyrone and Armagh and from the twelfth century were poets and ollovs (learned men) to the powerful O'Hanlons. By the seventeenth century the name was most numerous in Armagh and Monaghan and by 1900 was also common in Louth. The prefix O' is now used only in Co. Derry, and there rarely. The name has also been made Hamilton in that Country and elsewhere.
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 B T Pierson's Newark City Directory
  1856-57 - Hammill, Robert, carpenter, 189 Court
 1858-59 - Hammill, Robert, 6 Hedges Alley
 1861-62 - Hammell, Robert, carpenter, 10 Shipman
 1866-67 - Hammill, Margaret, rags, h 19 Searing
 https://cdm17229.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p17229coll50
Note:   BIOGRAPHY: Hamill numerous: E Ulster, Louth-Monaghan, Leitrim etc. Ir. Ó h


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