Brief history

Brief History of Patrick and Bridget McIntyre

Patrick McIntyre (c1831-1901) married Bridget Stevens (c1829-1908) on March 3, 1851 in St. Attracta’s Roman Catholic Church, Toulestrane, County Sligo, Ireland. They had eleven known children. The first five were born in Ireland: Edward (1852-1931); Bartholomew (1854-1924); Mary (1856-1934); Dominick (c1860-1932); and Catherine (1861-1914). Patrick, his wife and five children, left Ireland in 1863 sailing on the SS Orient into New York harbor and finally settling in San Francisco, California where the last six children were born: John Dunn (1864-a1908); Elizabeth (1867-1869); William (1869-1879); James (1871-1874); Thomas (c1874-a1931); and Ellen (1879-1963). Patrick and Bridget homesteaded in Oregon in the 1880s. Patrick died in 1901 and Bridget died in 1908. They are both buried in Mt. Calvary Cemetery, Portland, Oregon.

Patrick's parents, Edward (c1805/6-1881) and Ann McIntyre (c1803/07-1889), both born in Ireland, also came to the US settling in the San Francisco area. From the records, it appears Edward and Ann came a few years before Patrick.


Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Manuel McIntyre, Grandson of Patrick and Bridget

The grandson of Patrick McIntyre (c1831-1901) and Bridget Stevens McIntyre (c1829-1908) and son of Bartholomew McIntire (1854-1924) and Concepcion Ramos (d1924) had a most interesting, and sometimes heavy-hearted, life.

Manuel McIntyre was born in San Francisco on August 15, 1890 on the feast of the Assumption. He joined the U.S. Army during World War I and by the end of his military career, he held the rank of Corporal.

1918

During the war, family history tells that he was exposed to mustard gas which caused nerve damage in both his legs and made him crippled but this did not stop him from loving life. He was very energetic and used two canes to get around.

In the very early 1920s, he married Anna M. Bergman who was born on January 16, 1890 in Sweden. The couple had two children born in San Francisco: a son Robert McIntyre born in 1922 and a daughter, Rose Catherine born in 1925. 

Manuel was a machinist in a machine shop, an auto mechanic and later a mechanic in the steel industry. He earned enough money to own his own home in 1930 in San Francisco on Brazil Avenue.

Joanie Hamilton Zandona recalls how her mother, Elizabeth Artiga Hamilton Snipper (1923-2013), told her many stories about how much fun had when Uncle Manuel would come to visit at her mother Mercedes McIntyre Artiga's (1896-1978) home. Manuel taught Mercedes how to drive in a 1926 Packard.  Joanie's mother told her how they laughed so hard they almost went off the road.  

By the mid-1930s, due to his infirmity and a stroke, Manuel was living at the Veteran's Home in Yountville, California. While at the Veteran's Hospital in 1949, he invented a lightweight inexpensive artificial leg. Since his Dad, Bartolo/Bartholomew, had an artificial leg, is it possible this could have been the inspiration for the invention?


Unknown newspaper, 1949


Manual died on July 19, 1950 in the Yountville Veteran's Home. He is buried in Golden Gate National Cemetery, San Bruno, California.


Golden Gate National Cemetery, San Bruno, California

In a letter translated by Patricia Morales Tijerino (grand niece of Manuel) from Maria McIntyre Ruiz (1883-1952) to her sister Elena McIntyre Morales (1886-1974), Maria told about their brother, Manuel's funeral. "On Friday they will go back to Yountville to do the military honors at one in the afternoon. Manuel liked the tribute ceremony to veterans very much."

Photo sources: Sal Bigone and Joanie Zandona

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