From Ireland to America: The First Wisconsin Ducklows
[Updated December 16, 2008]
[Updated December 16, 2008]
Thomas and Elizabeth Dukelow are the ancestral immigrants to which nearly all Ducklows living in Wisconsin and Minnesota today can trace their family roots. [see other posting in this blog to read about how the name changed from Dukelow to Ducklow]. Seven generations of descendant children can point to them as distant great grandparents. Many other families surnames of Wisconsin link to Thomas and Elizabeth. These


Above: Thomas Ducklow / Dukelow Circa 1890
Elizabeth nee Nicholson Ducklow / Dukelow Circa 1890
Photos from Deb Good Ehlers Collection
The combination of suffering cataracts and sitting very still
for the photo make them appear a bit scarey
Photos from Deb Good Ehlers Collection
The combination of suffering cataracts and sitting very still
for the photo make them appear a bit scarey
Thomas and Elizabeth were both born in County Cork, Ireland. On separate voyages their families immigrated to America seeking a better lives. Thomas came in October of 1841, arriving at the Port of Rochester, New York. Elizabeth's family also arrived in Rochester, coming in 1840.
The city of Rochester was where Thomas married Elizabeth Nicholson. They wed in Saint Luke's Episcopal Church in 1842 and shortly after began a family. Six years after their wedding they, along with their first four children, moved from Rochester to Dodge County in southern Wisconsin. T

Location of Ashippun Township, Dodge County, Wisconsin
Image from Wikipedia Source
As pioneers in the untamed wilderness, they cleared and worked the land transforming it into a productive farm. To help succeed in farming, Thomas and Elizabeth raised a large family. In all, “Betsey” bore fourteen children over a period of twenty-three years. Of these, eleven children lived into adulthood, nine married, and eight raised their own families. Today the number of descendants from Thomas and Elizabeth number more than 720.
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