An early Byrne immigrant was Moses Byrne, born in Liverpool in 1820. After joining the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he sailed to America and founded the town of Piedmont in the southwest corner of Wyoming. While Piedmont is now a ghost town, the charcoal kilns Moses built to make charcoal for the smelters of Utah still stand and are on the National Registry of Historic Places.
Will be adding more later.
An early Byrne immigrant was Moses Byrne, born in Liverpool in 1820. After joining the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he sailed to America and founded the town of Piedmont in the southwest corner of Wyoming. While Piedmont is now a ghost town, the charcoal kilns Moses built to make charcoal for the smelters of Utah still stand and are on the National Registry of Historic Places.
Will be adding more later.
Family Members
-
Joseph Walter Byrne
1854–1922
-
John Phillip Byrne
1857–1931
-
David Byrne
1858–1918
-
James B. Byrne
1859–1874
-
Alice Byrne Hinshaw
1860–1931
-
William Byrne
1860–1949
-
James R Byrne
1862–1944
-
Michael Byrne
1863–1955
-
Charles L. Byrne
1864–1901
-
Albert Byrne
1865–1894
-
Edwin W. Byrne
1867–1946
-
Francis Kendell Byrne
1869–1928
-
Arthur Byrne
1870–1870
-
Mary J. Byrne
1871–1874
-
Anne Byrne Corey
1871–1953
-
Minnie Catherine Byrne Kendell
1871–1960
-
Katie Byrne Fife
1873–1952
-
Louis Moses Byrne
1874–1945
-
Martha Byrne Corey
1875–1937