Michael Corcoran, Mary Quinn, and their Descendants

per RHN  6/1/96

Michael Corcoran
Born 1833, Crossmolina, County Mayo;  married Mary Quinn 11/18 1855 in Cincinnati;  died 9/1/1905 in Lickrun Ohio;  buried in St Joseph's New Cemetery, Cincinnati.  They had five children.

Michael emigrated from Ireland as a young man "to better his chances".  His sister Bridget also emigrated.  Their parents were Richard and Bridget Corcoran née Flanigan (or possibly Patton).  Michael worked in Cincinnati as a contractor specializing in public works.  He and Mary Quinn were married 11/18/1855 in St Francis Church, Cincinnati;  witnesses were Dora Culligan and Edward --.

Michael was listed on June 14 in the 1870 Census as Boarding House Keeper, Hamilton County, 4th ward.  The Cincinnati Directory of 1880 lists as living at the address 117 East 5th St:  P J Corcoran attorney;  Richard Corcoran, student;  and Michael Corcoran, Policeman.  Michael's death notice says he was at the time resident at the home of his cousin Mrs B. Manley, 686 West 3rd St., Cincinnati (he had been a widower almost ten years).


Mary Quinn

Born 1832 in Killevy Parish, County Armagh, Ireland, daughter of Patrick and Elizabeth Quinn;  married Michael Corcoran 11/18 1855 in Cincinnati;  died 5/29/1896 in Cincinnati Ohio.  They had five children.
 
Mary's Cincinnati residence at the time of her death is given as 1347 Broadway.  She was reported four years before her death to have "contracted the grippe", from which she never fully recovered.   Mary's had a sister, Bridgett, born 1840 in County Armagh, who married a man named Tobin, and died 10/6/1880 in Cincinnati.  Mary also had a half sister, Ellen, born 1848, also in County Armagh, daughter of her father's second wife Margaret.  Listed as a domestic, Ellen died of emphysema 9/9/1876.  All three sisters are buried in St Joseph's New Cemetery, Cincinnati.

Mary died at age 64 "surrounded by her family" presumably her husband Michael and her sons Michael and Patrick.  Her Jesuit son Richard was reported as being telegraphed at Woodstock, but too late.

An article about her, and her death notice, appear in the Cincinnati Enquirer, 30 May 1896, page 5.


Patrick J Corcoran
Born 4/19/1857 (witnesses at baptism were - Braddock and Anna Quinn);  not known ever to have married;  died 3/2/1912 in St Vincent's Hospital, NYC;  buried in the family plot in St Joseph's New Cemetery, Cincinnati.

Patrick graduated from St Xavier College in 1887, and from Cincinnati Law School in 1889.  He was the Hamilton County Prosecuting Attorney, elected for one term in 1889.

Burial papers listed his mother as "Ann" (presumably in error), and showed him as married (?).  When he emigrated to NYC (either with his brother Michael or later after the death of their father in 1905), he moved in with his brother and sister-in-law Josephine, remaining there after Michael died in 1911, until his own death of "Rheumatism of the Heart" in 1912.

The Cincinnati Enquirer article filed from New York at the time of his death says of the brothers: "There was a very strong bond of affection between the two, and in this city most all their leisure time was spent together."

Ref.: Obituary in the Cincinnati Enquirer, 4 March 1912, page 2.


Father Richard F Corcoran, S. J.

Born 2/10/1859 (witnesses at baptism were Henry Garien (?) and (?) Corcoran);  died in Good Samaritan Hospital in Cincinnati, 1/6/1939, buried in the Novitiate Cemetery, Milford Ohio.

Richard was educated at St Xavier Parish School, St Xavier High School and St Xavier University in Cincinnati.  He was baptized, confirmed, and said his first Mass at St Xavier Church, Cincinnati.

He won a number of gold medals for academic excellence (now in the Neergaard curio cabinet), and was famed for "eloquent tongue and commanding oratory".

Richard entered the Jesuit Order 21 July 1883 at Florisant, Mo., and studied at St Louis University and Woodstock.  He then taught at Detroit University and St Mary's College, Kansas.  For 21 years he occupied the chairs of Rhetoric and Oratory at Creighton University, Nebraska;  Marquette University;  and St Louis University.

For the next 6 years Richard did pastoral work in Chicago and Detroit, finally becoming chaplain, for 8 years, of General (now University) Hospital in Cincinnati.

Father Corcoran was prominent in the St Xavier community, Schools and Church, in Cincinnati.   Of the six Jesuits who established St Xavier's traditions and created its culture, he was the last to survive.  He was widely admired;  there was a two-day civic celebration for his Golden Anniversary in 7/33.

Father Corcoran died of a stroke suffered 1/1/39, at age 80.


Ann Elizabeth Corcoran
Born 11/2/1860 (witnesses at baptism were Jacob McLaughlin and Bridgett Kelly);  died 2/27/1872 at 24 Broadway in Cincinnati, age 11;  buried with her family in St Joseph's New Cemetery.


Michael T Corcoran

Born 6/2/1862 (witnesses at Baptism were Adreas Sheny (?) and Margareta Smith.  Church record says he was born in June 1863, not '62);  married Josephine Kilb 10/17/1899 in Hamilton County, Ohio;  died 6/15/1911 in New York City;  buried with his family in New St Joseph's Cemetery in Cincinnati.  They had one child, Virginia.

Michael graduated in 1882 from St Xavier College, where he won a number of gold medals (now in the Neergaard curio cabinet) for academic achievement;  he graduated from Cincinnati Law School in 1886.   He was professor of Greek and Latin at St Xavier College while he studied Law.

Michael's sister and sister-in-law died at the address 24 Broadway, in 1872 & '76, when Michael was 9 and 13.  His mother died at 1347 Broadway in 1896 when he was 33.

Michael was a member of the Cincinnati law firm Corcoran and Corcoran (with brother Patrick);  address in the 1890 Cincinnati Directory was given as 5th and Main, Room 229.
He was the Ohio State Senator 1990 - 1992 (Democrat) for Hamilton County.  Elected at  26, he was the youngest person ever from the district to hold that office.  While in the Senate, Michael introduced 26 bills;  all became law.  One provided a new city charter for
Cincinnati;  another laid out the code governing loan and building associations;  another was the law which established free employment agencies.  Michael and Patrick were both quite active in Cincinnati Democratic politics, Michael being named the leading Democratic orator of Hamilton County.

Michael emigrated with his family to New York City in 1900, to reside there until his death in 1911.  He became a familiar of Manhattan's famed Algonquin Club.

When first in New York, Michael went with the law firm of House, Grossman and Vorhaus for several years.  Then, probably after the death of their father Michael 9/1/1905, brother Patrick came to New York from Cincinnati to join Michael, living with him (they were very close) and setting up the law firm of Corcoran and Corcoran.  Their law office addresses were given as the Pulitzer Building, then the old World Building.  Michael acted as attorney for the Brunswick-Balke-Collender Company (of which his wife's uncle was Secretary and Comptroller).

Michael won an important libel case against The Tribune Association on behalf of Samuel F. B. Morse, for a defamatory article alleging Morse's public drunkenness, published 7/26/1905.  Legal action was initiated 8/25/1905, adjudged 5/7/1909.  Michael's wife Josephine collected a $10,000 fee for this case after his death.  (Copies of the brief and judgment are on hand).  Michael's obituary also mentions a case he argued and won before the New York Supreme Court during the last few months of his life, the period between the time that he was stricken by typhoid fever six months before he died, and his six-week terminal illness.

Michael was an active member of the Society of Elks;  Esteemed Lecturing Knight, Cincinnati Lodge #5.  (Ref.:  Elks speech published in "The Eleven O'clock Toast", vol. III #6, Cincinnati, 12/1899;  also see the program for the Annual Memorial Service, Newark Lodge #21, 12/4/1910, featuring an address by M. T. Corcoran and entertainment by a quartet including his wife Josephine Corcoran, contralto.

Michael was an active member of the Phi Delta Psi fraternity, a frequent contributor to literary journals, and a member of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences.

Michael died of typhus at his home at 151 W 96th St (96th St and Amsterdam Avenue) in Manhattan at age 49, and was buried with his family in New St Joseph's Cemetery in Cincinnati.  (Certificate #19532;  undertaker was Hugh O'Hare 733 Amsterdam Ave, NYC).  

Ref.:  History of Cincinnati and Hamilton County, pg 621;  in Cincinnati Main Library, R977.199qH67.  Also ref.:  Obit in Enquirer 6/16/1911 page 7 col. 5,  and death notice 6/18/1911 page 5.


A Fifth Child born of Michael Corcoran and Mary Quinn did not survive.


Miriam Josephine Kilb
Born in Cincinnati 4/13/1868 (baptismal sponsor:  Joanna Troescher);  married Senator Michael Corcoran 10/17/1899 in Hamilton County, Ohio;  died 2/22/1970 in St Patrick's Home, New York City;  buried in the Gate of Heaven Cemetery, Hawthorn,  New York, in a plot with her three brothers and sister-in-law.  They had one child, Virginia.

Josephine, as she was called by all, graduated with the gold medal from the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music and became a professional opera and concert singer.  She was soloist in Cincinnati's May Festival under the baton of Theodore Thomas, sang with John Philip Sousa's band, had leads in various Gilbert and Sullivan operettas, and was soloist for many Cincinnati churches, among them the Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church and the Plum Street Synagogue.  She gave a joint recital in Carnegie Hall with her daughter Virginia.

Though Josephine sometimes spoke of living next door to the Longworths, a daughter of which family married Teddy Roosevelt, and of a murky wrong-side-of-the-blanket ancestral connection to the German armaments family von Mauser, her Cincinnati beginnings were in fact quite modest.  Her parents were German immigrants in the cigar-making business, and although Josephine was born in America, she did not learn to speak English until she was 16.  

When Josephine's husband died still a young man in New York, her mother's brother, Anton Troescher, was fortunately there to help.  Anton had started as an accounting clerk in a small Cincinnati firm manufacturing billiards equipment, the Balke Company.  He rose to become its secretary and chief financial officer as the company itself developed into a major corporation, the Brunswick-Balke-Colander Company.  Anton moved to New York with the company's headquarters and became a man of means.  He supported his newly widowed niece and her young daughter in high style, including a grand European tour with a sojourn in a palazzo in Venice.

Josephine was celebrated for her determination, for her combination of irrepressibility and stoicism,, for her cheerful willingness to volunteer definitive judgment on any issue she cared about, and for her utter disdain for any infirmity, particularly her own.  At 92, en route from City Island to a bridge game in Manhattan, she was seen to give her seat to an "old man" in the subway.  At 99, she recovered consciousness from a stroke before the ambulance arrived, in time to drive off the astounded stretcher-bearers with a cane, saying that if she was going to die, it would be in her own house.  Forced nevertheless by the incident to go into a retirement home (she had for years been living with her daughter and son-in-law), she was threatened with ejection for insisting she play cards for money.  That New Year's Eve, she was put out of commission for the first time in her life (not counting the few minutes lost to the stroke) when she fell while dancing the Turkey Trot.  The administration insisted thereafter that she use a walker, which she defiantly dragged behind her.  She was alert, feisty and admirable almost until her death shortly before her 102nd birthday.


Virginia Mary Corcoran

Born 2/12/1900 in New York City;  married Clifford Gould Neergaard 9/9/1931;  died 6/2/1988;  buried in her husband's family plot in Greenhills Cemetery, Waynesville, North Carolina.  They had one child, Richard.

Virginia attended Holy Child Academy, Riverside Drive at 140th St, NYC, and was awarded a scholarship to Granberry Piano School at Carnegie Hall (Director Nicholas Elsenheimer) 1912 - 1918.  She gave a recital in Carnegie Hall at 13, and other private recitals in New York City every year from 1913 to 1918.  Virginia was the organist for the Church of Incarnation, NYC, at 18 years of age.  She attended Columbia University Teacher's College.

Virginia  lived at 270 Convent Avenue, NYC, at the time of her marriage.

She was appointed music supervisor in the New York Public School System in 1922 and held that position until her retirement in 1957, after which she became choral conductor and organist in St Mary's Star-of-the-Sea Church.  Then in 1960, she was named choral conductor of the New Rochelle Women's Club.  Virginia was a member of ASCAP (she had musical compositions published), and of the American Guild of Organists.

In spite of being a most sensitive and fragile person, Virginia pursued her career as Music Supervisor in some of New York's toughest inner-city schools (eg PS 159), with great determination and courage.  During this period, she and her husband moved from Convent Avenue to Riverside Drive in Manhattan, then to City Island in the Bronx, then to Pelham Manor, and after both had retired, to Ft Lauderdale in the early sixties.  Around that time Virginia was diagnosed as having Parkinson's disease.  Its slow debilitation inexorably forced curtailment of the couple's many social and travel activities, though never of their music-making.  When their son returned from living in Europe in 1978, they took up residence in a retirement home near him in Cincinnati.  There, even when she could no longer sit upright without being helped, Virginia would somehow find the power in herself to enthrall audiences with beautifully played concert piano pieces. By the time of her husband's death ten years later she was no longer aware, but nevertheless followed him in a few months.


Clifford Gould Neergaard

Born 11/21/1896 in New York City;  married Virginia Mary Corcoran 9/9/1931;  died 11/25/1987;  buried in the Westcott family plot in Greenhills Cemetery, Waynesville, North Carolina.  They had one child, Richard.

Gould, as he was called, was born in New York City but as a tot moved with his mother after her divorce, to Waynesville North Carolina, under the care of his grand-aunt Caroline.  When he was 14, he went to live with his mother's sister in Bordeaux, France, returning four years later to be with his mother in Waynesville.  He earned a BS in architecture from Georgia Tech;  a BA in architecture from the University of Pennsylvania, and a Master's in architecture from Columbia.

Gould worked as an architect in Chicago (in the same building in which the St Valentine's day massacre occurred), then in Philadelphia.  After his marriage, he moved to New York City, where, when the depression curtailed architectural activity, he took up a parallel career as professor of Descriptive Geometry at the City College of New York (now CUNY).  Despite the arcane nature of the subject, his class was extremely popular due to his irreverent sense of humor and his unique Continental-cum-Huck-Finn charm.  While in New York, he moved from Manhattan to City Island, then to Pelham Manor.  After retirement, he and his wife moved to Fort Lauderdale, and finally to Cincinnati.

Although he didn't read music, Gould's musical talent was formidable.  He played a joyfully raucous honky-tonk piano, and could within minutes of picking up any instrument have it singing, sometimes composing impromptu second and third part harmonies to the melody as he went .  When he and his wife did four-hand improvisations on the piano, she with her classic style and he with his ragtime, the house was inevitably brought down.

Gould had an interesting lineage on both sides of his family.  His mother's ancestors were all from English colonial families, his father's were Danish, more recent immigrants to America.  A branch of the Neergaards in Denmark had been ennobled in the mid-nineteenth century, resulting in a "de" being placed before their name.  Gould, persuaded as a young man that he was a descendant of this branch, adopted the de, and for the rest of his life gave his name as "de Neergaard".   Research since his death has shown that this belief was incorrect;  the "de" does not after all attach to his branch of the family.

Gould was a member of:  The Larchmont Shore Club;  City Island Yacht Club;  Sons of the Revolution;  Sons of the American Revolution;  St. Nicholas Society;  Society of Colonial Wars;  Elks (Ft Lauderdale).  He was registered as an architect in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York, and was a member of the Society of American Registered Architects and of the Architectural League, New York.


Richard Hampton Neergaard

Born 4/30/1932 in NYC;  married Lois Jeanne Gardner 6/1/1957.  They have four children:  Susan, Arthur, Richard, and Peter.

Dick went to Regis High School in Manhattan, then earned a BS at the Sloan School of MIT.  His entire career (6/1957 to 11/1989) was with Procter and Gamble, in manufacturing.  The first third of his career with P&G was in the area of factory management, his first assignment being in P&G's Staten Island plant during which he and his wife lived in Elizabeth, New Jersey.  He then worked in Europe (Germany and Belgium) from 11/1961 to 1/1978 during which period started the second phase of his career:  coordination of international manufacturing operations, which phase concluded with his relocation to P&G’s headquarters in Cincinnati, as International Manufacturing Coordinator for the company's international paper products business.  The final phase of Dick’s career was the development and application of approaches by which managers could unravel, then resolve, complex systemic business problems.   Dick and his wife have continued to live in Cincinnati since his retirement.

Lois Jeanne Gardner
Born 1/22/1934 in NYC;  married Richard Hampton Neergaard 6/1/1957.  They have four children:  Susan, Arthur, Richard, and Peter.

Lois went to Lodge School (for professional children - she was a model) in Manhattan;  Fox Hollow School in Lenox, Massachusetts;  then to Miss Hall's in Pittsfield.  She earned a BA in Interior Design at the Rhode Island School of Design.  She lived with her husband, in Elizabeth New Jersey, then in Europe, then in Cincinnati.


Susan Westcott Neergaard

Born 4/10/1958 in Elizabeth, New Jersey, married Peter Tanke 8/22/1982, divorced;  married Jan Willem van der Werff 4/7/1995.  There have been no children but as of the writing, one is expected 11/96.

Susan, like her three younger brothers, was brought up in Belgium and Germany, attended secondary school at St John's in Waterloo, Belgium.  She graduated from the University of Cincinnati with a BA in German Literature and is fluent in several languages.  She currently works for General Electric as Human Resources Manager in their Plastics Division at Bergen op Zoom, Netherlands, where her husband is in charge of Lexan production.


Arthur Hampton Neergaard
Born 11/23/1958 in Elizabeth, New Jersey.  Unmarried.

Arthur took a mechanical engineering degree at MIT, then in 1983 joined Procter and Gamble, in Packaging R&D.  He has spent half his career to date at P&G's European headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, the balance at P&G's headquarters in Cincinnati, is base for developing packaging machinery for European and South American locations.


Richard Corcoran Neergaard
Born 2/7/1963 in Brussels, Belgium;  married Ishraq Gharib 5/27/1993 in Cairo, Egypt.  They have no children but as of the writing, one is expected 10/96.

Richard took a degree in International Relations at Tufts, then in 1984, joined Procter and Gamble in Marketing.  He spent the first half of his career with P&G in Cincinnati, the balance internationally, first at the company's German headquarters near Frankfurt, then at its Egyptian office in Cairo where he met Ishraq, then director of marketing for an Egyptian consumer goods company.  At the end of 1994, Richard left P&G to join Benckiser, a German household products firm, where he was initially responsible for developing new markets and is currently General Manager of Benckiser’s Israeli subsidiary.  He and Ishraq live in Tel Aviv.


John Peter Neergaard

Born 5/8/1964 in Heidelberg, Germany.  Unmarried.

Peter took a degree in Applied Mathematics at Carnegie Mellon, and has since worked for that University at their Computer Center where he was in charge of software development for computer operations.  He has recently moved into upstream development of object-based computer languages.