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			 “Growing up, my family never talked about our family 
			history, and I really don’t know why,” said Pat Hickey Freese. Pat 
			and her husband Gary set out to rectify that omission after hearing 
			a lecture by Paul Beaver on the Scully family. 
 Beaver mentioned that John Hickey had the first Scully lease in 
			Logan County.
 
 Scully came from Ireland and settled in the area after devising a 
			way to drain and farm the wetlands. Pat shared a last name with John 
			Hickey and set about discovering if they were related. It turns out 
			they are related and what’s more, the Hickey family has a huge 
			presence in the area.
 
			
			 
			 
 Pat Hickey Freese went to Holy Cross cemetery in Lincoln to see if 
			she could find her grandmother’s resting place. What she found 
			amounted to a Hickey family history lesson taken from all of the 
			tombstones with the name Hickey on them, many tombstones.
 
 To find out how she fit into this family history, she next went to 
			Holy Family church to search the records. What she found was a 
			treasure trove of Hickey family records from the predecessor church 
			of Holy Family, St. Patrick’s church. St. Patrick’s was the Irish 
			Catholic church in Lincoln.
 
			
			 Pat Freese holds an 
			Irish knitted sweater that identifies a specific clan in Ireland 
			because of the weave, much like a kilt colors identifies a clan in 
			Scotland.
 
			Pat’s relatives came from southern Ireland in the 
			mid-nineteenth century. They had met Lord Scully in Ireland. “John 
			and William Hickey saved Lord Scully from a beating in a bar fight 
			in Ireland,” she said. 
 When her relatives came to America to escape the potato famine in 
			the 1840’s they gravitated to central Illinois where Scully had 
			started farming. Thus began the long history of the Hickey family in 
			Logan County and Lincoln.
 
 The church history that Pat studied included many of the descendants 
			from the first Hickey’s in the area, and their children. “The church 
			records were very detailed and helped me understand where I stood in 
			the family history, a true family tree,” she said.
 
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Originally, the Catholics on Scully land brought a priest from 
Lincoln to the farms to hold services. Next, a Catholic church was founded in 
Lincoln, catering to the Irish and German families in town. The Irish members of 
the congregation decided to form their own church, and St. Patrick’s was founded 
in the late 19th century. Nuns were brought from Iowa to teach in the parochial 
school. Pat’s family was part of this new congregation. When the current St. 
Patrick’s Church was built, the lovely stained glass windows were donated by 
John and Ellen Hickey. 
 “I was baptized at St. Patrick’s church, had my first communion there, was 
confirmed in the church, and married Gary there,” said Pat Hickey Freese. “All 
of my records and family history are contained in the church records. These 
records were instrumental in finding my roots and Hickey family history in Logan 
County,” she added.
 
 The Illinois Prairie Pioneer Certificate presented to Pat Freese.
 
 
  The LCGHS Pioneer Certificate presented to Pat Freese honoring her family’s long 
history in Logan County.
 
The Logan County Genealogical and Historical Society has a 
monthly meeting on the third Monday of the month at 6:30 p.m. There is always an 
interesting speaker and the public is always welcome. The April meeting will 
feature Logan County historian Bill Donath. His topic will be the Spanish flu in 
Logan County.
 [Curtis Fox]
 
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