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Sweeny Family History & Genealogy

1,060 biographies and 17 photos with the Sweeny last name. Discover the family history, nationality, origin and common names of Sweeny family members.

Sweeny Last Name History & Origin

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Name Origin

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Spellings & Pronunciations

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Nationality & Ethnicity

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Famous People named Sweeny

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Early Sweenies

These are the earliest records we have of the Sweeny family.

George Sweeny of Melbourne, St Francis Melbourne Parish County Australia was born in 1812, and died at age 32 years old in 1844 in Melbourne.
Bridget Sweeny of Blue Mountain Australia was born in 1819, and died at age 70 years old in 1889 in Blue Mountain.
Harry Sweeny of Australia was born in 1822, and died at age 52 years old in 1874.
Jeremiah Sweeny of Dford Hosp Australia was born in 1825, and died at age 66 years old in 1891 in Dford Hosp.
David Sweeny of Woods Pt Australia was born in 1832, and died at age 54 years old in 1886 in Woods Pt.
Samuel Sweeny of Australia was born in 1839, and died at age 30 years old in 1869.
Margaret Sweeny of Hotham West Australia was born in 1841, and died at age 79 years old in 1920 in Hotham West.
Margaret Sweeny of Yarra, St Francis Melbourne Parish County Australia was born in 1841 in Yarra. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Margaret Sweeny.
Ellen Sweeny of Melbourne, St Francis Melbourne Parish County Australia was born in 1844 in Melbourne. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Ellen Sweeny.
Austin Sweeny of Melbourne, St Francis Melbourne Parish County Australia was born in 1845, and died at age 3 years old in 1848 in Melbourne.
Mary Sweeny of Pentridge, St Francis Melbourne Parish County Australia was born in 1845 in Pentridge. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Mary Sweeny.
Bridget Sweeny of Melbourne, St Francis Melbourne Parish County Australia was born in 1846 in Melbourne. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Bridget Sweeny.

Sweeny Family Photos

Discover Sweeny family photos shared by the community. These photos contain people and places related to the Sweeny last name.

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Sweeny Family Tree

Discover the most common names, oldest records and life expectancy of people with the last name Sweeny.

Most Common First Names

Updated Sweeny Biographies

Spencer A Sweeny of Toledo, Lucas County, Ohio was born on March 25, 1912, and died at age 71 years old in September 1983.
Albert F Sweeny of Glenolden, Delaware County, PA was born on October 14, 1920, and died at age 60 years old in September 1981.
Michael F Sweeny of Rockaway Park, Queens County, NY was born on August 6, 1929, and died at age 78 years old on October 28, 2007.
Thomas Richard Sweeny of Dallas, Dallas County, TX was born on July 12, 1944, and died at age 65 years old on May 8, 2010.
Paul L Sweeny of Mc Lean, Fairfax County, VA was born on January 13, 1914, and died at age 79 years old on November 17, 1993.
George A Sweeny of Dayton, Montgomery County, Ohio was born on September 1, 1927, and died at age 38 years old in June 1966.
Robert F Sweeny of Bronx, Bronx County, NY was born on February 27, 1921, and died at age 84 years old on May 28, 2005.
Beverly K Sweeny of Sweeny, Brazoria County, TX was born on February 23, 1962. Beverly Sweeny was married to William L. Sweeny on June 26, 1986 in Cameron County, TX, and died at age 43 years old on March 9, 2005.
Charles D Sweeny of Trenton, Mercer County, NJ was born on May 14, 1920, and died at age 55 years old in August 1975.
Joseph P Sweeny of Staten Island, Richmond County, NY was born on July 29, 1924, and died at age 60 years old in December 1984.
Frank E Sweeny of Lima, Allen County, OH was born on October 23, 1917, and died at age 86 years old on July 31, 2004.
Daniel Joseph Sweeny of Kings County, New York United States was born on August 20, 1914, and died at age 36 years old on November 26, 1950. Daniel Sweeny was buried at Long Island National Cemetery Section K Site 19493 2040 Wellwood Avenue, in Farmingdale.
William R Sweeny of Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, OH was born on May 8, 1920, and died at age 77 years old on July 11, 1997.
William B Sweeny of Ridley Park, Delaware County, PA was born on June 18, 1921, and died at age 77 years old on March 10, 1999.
Francis J Sweeny of Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, PA was born on October 2, 1908, and died at age 67 years old in August 1976.
Kermit P Sweeny of Clinton, Clinton County, IA was born on October 6, 1921, and died at age 74 years old on April 17, 1996. Kermit Sweeny was buried at Rock Island National Cemetery Section W Site 505 Bldg 118 - Rock Island Arsenal, in Rock Island, Il.
Henry Michael Sweeny of Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, PA was born on July 22, 1906, and died at age 59 years old on August 2, 1965. Henry Sweeny was buried at Beverly National Cemetery Section M Site 2170C 916 Bridgeboro Road - Bridgeboro Road, in Beverly, Nj.
Eugene M Sweeny of Longmeadow, Hampden County, MA was born on April 25, 1908, and died at age 70 years old in March 1979.
Richard P Sweeny of Pointblank, San Jacinto County, TX was born on February 8, 1928, and died at age 74 years old on April 24, 2002.
James Sweeny of Trenton, Mercer County, NJ was born on August 5, 1910, and died at age 67 years old in February 1978.

Popular Sweeny Biographies

The only thing known about this child is that he existed. No one talked about how he died or how long he lived.
Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Doreen Berry-Sweeny.
Percy Adolphus Sweeny-Orton of Collingwood Australia was born in 1891 in Collingwood. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Percy Adolphus Sweeny-Orton.
Harry Alfred Sweeny-Orton was born in 1892 in Collingwood, VIC Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Harry Alfred Sweeny-Orton.
Ella J (Sweeny) Shedleski was born in 1897. She was in a relationship with Harry Shedleski, and had children Harry J Shedleski, Cecelia A Shedleski, Frances Shedleski, Henry W Shedleski, and Mary Shedleski. Ella Shedleski died at age 95 years old in 1992. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Ella (Sweeny) Shedleski.
Violet May Sweeny-Orton was born in 1888 in Collingwood, VIC Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Violet May Sweeny-Orton.
Jane (Mcquire) Sweeny of The Leigh Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Jane Mcquire Sweeny.
Jane Jane (Sweeny) Mahar of Melbourne, St Francis Melbourne Parish County Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Jane Sweeny Mahar.
Mary (Glasgow) Sweeny of Melbourne, St Francis Melbourne Parish County Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Mary Glasgow Sweeny.
Catherine (Cairn) Sweeny of Amherst Australia, was married to Owen Sweeny, and has a child Owen Sweeny. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Catherine Cairn Sweeny.
Catherine (Sweeny) Gibson of Lethbridge Australia. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Catherine Sweeny Gibson.
Mary (Sweeny) Buckley of Melbourne, St Francis Melbourne Parish County Australia, was married to Thomas Buckley, and has children Julia Buckley, Mary Anne Buckly, Bridget Buckley, Ellen Maria Buckley, Eliza Buckley, and Agnes Teresa Buckley. Family, friend, or fan, this family history biography is for you to remember Mary Sweeny Buckley.

Sweeny Death Records & Life Expectancy

The average age of a Sweeny family member is 73.0 years old according to our database of 771 people with the last name Sweeny that have a birth and death date listed.

Life Expectancy

73.0 years

Oldest Sweenies

These are the longest-lived members of the Sweeny family on AncientFaces.

Olive G Sweeny of Bluffton, Wells County, IN was born on August 18, 1900, and died at age 99 years old on May 1, 2000.
99 years
Marie H Sweeny of Pine Valley, Chemung County, NY was born on March 12, 1905, and died at age 98 years old on September 8, 2003.
98 years
Frances Sweeny of Auburn, Placer County, California was born on October 29, 1884, and died at age 97 years old in May 1982.
97 years
Genevieve Sweeny of Eastlake, Lake County, OH was born on July 15, 1900, and died at age 98 years old on December 20, 1998.
98 years
Lily W Sweeny of Wethersfield, Hartford County, CT was born on June 29, 1898, and died at age 98 years old on December 30, 1996.
98 years
Osa L Sweeny of Wheatland, Hickory County, MO was born on July 13, 1897, and died at age 98 years old on December 9, 1995.
98 years
Helen M Sweeny of Saint Louis, Saint Louis County, MO was born on June 9, 1890, and died at age 97 years old on December 29, 1987.
97 years
Alta Sweeny of Akron, Summit County, Ohio was born on February 3, 1885, and died at age 96 years old in January 1982.
96 years
Hugh Sweeny of Westport, Fairfield County, CT was born on June 3, 1887, and died at age 97 years old in October 1984.
97 years
Roma P Sweeny of Covina, Los Angeles County, CA was born on April 30, 1901, and died at age 97 years old on June 30, 1998.
97 years
Celia D Sweeny of Marquette, Marquette County, MI was born on November 27, 1902, and died at age 96 years old on June 23, 1999.
96 years
Nora V Sweeny of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma County, OK was born on April 15, 1895, and died at age 97 years old in April 1992.
96 years
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This is a link to a Video of Charles Sweeny discussing the RAF Eagle Squadron. Sweeny recruited pilots for the Squadron in America before America entered World War II, Recruitment before the War in America broke National Neutraility Laws and Sweeny was hounded be the FBI and other Federal Agencies. The government threatened to strip him of his citizenship.
I - STORY OF AN AMERICAN WEST-POINTER
told by Private John Joseph Casey of the Foreign Legion Lieut.

Charles Sweeny, of the French Foreign Legion, West Point graduate, and a native of Spokane, Wash returned to New York to recover from a wound received during the war. After his graduation from West Point he married a Belgian girl and settled down in Paris. His wife and two children are living in that vicinity at the present time.
When the war broke out Sweeny enlisted in the French Foreign Legion. He was promoted for gallantry in action; and last September, after leading us into the Boche lines during the Champagne offensive, he was decorated with the Legion of Honor. Lieut. Sweeny is the first American in fifty years who has held a commission in the French army.
But how Sweeny won his "hot dogs` is a different story.
One day when we were in the front trenches Sweeny handed me a cigarette. It looked like a Turkish cigarette and I duly remarked it.
"No," said he, and he indicated a large tin box filled with the same sort, which he had with him, "these are a present from our friends, the enemy. They were given to me by the Germans."
"Must have been sent over to you inside a 'Jack Johnson' shell," said I.
"I can see you don't believe me," Sweeny replied, "but it's a fact. They came in a hamper, together with two bottles of real Munich beer, an assortment of West-phalian ham, cheese, honey, sandwiches of roast veal and white bread, a few slabs of K bread, some pipe tobacco, and some - what do you think? - hot dogs! As sure as you're born, Casey, and if you'll believe me, I went for those frankfurters first! Oh, how many nights I have sat out here and thought how good one of those hot dogs, with a big gob of mustard on it, would be ! But I never thought I'd ever taste any in the trenches. Yet only just now I have demolished four of them."
II - "LET SWEENY TELL IT”
Here was the way of it, as Sweeny told it to me:
"I started out about midnight with a patrol to have a look at a new German bayou between two fortlets beyond our lines. I strung my men out so as to give warning of any German patrol, and then led them past our sentries and the barbed wire. I was some distance ahead of my men, and had got well within the German lines without seeing or hearing anything of the Germans.
"Now this was not the first time that I had ever penetrated that far into the German lines, but it was the first time on such a mission that I had not had to dodge a German patrol; and very often their bullets. These things ran in my head continually and made me think that I had fallen into a very neat trap which the Germans had laid for me. I expected to see them rise from anywhere any minute, and hear the banging of their guns and the whistling of their bullets (if I was lucky enough to hear them, that is), and I began to wish myself well out of my predicament and back again in the comparative safety of our trench.
"This made me more cautious than ever, and presently I began to retreat. As I did so a round German helmet bobbed up out of a ravine not a dozen yards away. An instant later, at the other end of the ravine, another appeared. I squirmed away like a snake and got behind the only shelter in sight, a scrubbly little tree about tree yards away.
“As I lay there quaking, wondering why the Germans did not shoot - for they must have seen me - I happened to look up and there hanging to a branch of the tree was a fat, clean-looking basket. I reached up, the limb on which it hung being only a few feet from the ground, and lifted the basket down.
"Then in a flash the explanation of the puzzle was clear to me. The Germans had left that basket there and meant me to have it.
"With the basket on my arm 1 got up, bowed low to the round hats, and walked back to our trench without ever being fired on.
"Inside the basket was the assortment I have described to you. There was also a note something after this wise:
`We have been in front of you for over a year, and it is not against our comrades, the French, that we are fighting, but against our enemy, the English. Let us join forces against our common enemy. We are not starving, as you may well see from the little present we send you herewith.'
"Here was something that set me thinking pretty hard. I had escaped death or capture by a miracle so far as I could see, and all in order that I might enjoy a hearty meal at the expense of the Germans.
"I set the basket down in the trench, and fell to with a will; and I give you my word, Casey, of all the good things I have eaten, I never enjoyed anything more than I did that Dutch treat - especially the frankfurters.
"They took me back to the States immediately - hot dogs, the brightness of the sea, the yawping of barkers, crowds passing, the noise of thousands of shuffling feet - not the sort of shuffling we hear now, Casey, when a bugle call or the heavy sound of guns seems the chief attraction. It was a great shame I couldn't save you one.
"The meaning of all this was a puzzle to me until I found out that our boys had left a bundle of American and English newspapers in the spot where I had found the basket, with the paragraphs plainly marked in which it was said the Germans were starving. And the basket was the Germans' reply.
"Now you know how I came to get my hot dogs."
I - STORY OF AN AMERICAN WEST-POINTER
told by Private John Joseph Casey of the Foreign Legion.

Lieut. Charles Sweeny, of the French Foreign Legion, West Point graduate, and a native of Spokane, Wash returned to New York to recover from a wound received during the war. After his graduation from West Point he married a Belgian girl and settled down in Paris. His wife and two children are living in that vicinity at the present time.
When the war broke out Sweeny enlisted in the French Foreign Legion. He was promoted for gallantry in action; and last September, after leading us into the Boche lines during the Champagne offensive, he was decorated with the Legion of Honor. Lieut. Sweeny is the first American in fifty years who has held a commission in the French army.
But how Sweeny won his "hot dogs` is a different story.
One day when we were in the front trenches Sweeny handed me a cigarette. It looked like a Turkish cigarette and I duly remarked it.
"No," said he, and he indicated a large tin box filled with the same sort, which he had with him, "these are a present from our friends, the enemy. They were given to me by the Germans."
"Must have been sent over to you inside a 'Jack Johnson' shell," said I.
"I can see you don't believe me," Sweeny replied, "but it's a fact. They came in a hamper, together with two bottles of real Munich beer, an assortment of West-phalian ham, cheese, honey, sandwiches of roast veal and white bread, a few slabs of K bread, some pipe tobacco, and some - what do you think? - hot dogs! As sure as you're born, Casey, and if you'll believe me, I went for those frankfurters first! Oh, how many nights I have sat out here and thought how good one of those hot dogs, with a big gob of mustard on it, would be ! But I never thought I'd ever taste any in the trenches. Yet only just now I have demolished four of them."

II - "LET SWEENY TELL IT”
Here was the way of it, as Sweeny told it to me:
"I started out about midnight with a patrol to have a look at a new German bayou between two fortlets beyond our lines. I strung my men out so as to give warning of any German patrol, and then led them past our sentries and the barbed wire. I was some distance ahead of my men, and had got well within the German lines without seeing or hearing anything of the Germans.
"Now this was not the first time that I had ever penetrated that far into the German lines, but it was the first time on such a mission that I had not had to dodge a German patrol; and very often their bullets. These things ran in my head continually and made me think that I had fallen into a very neat trap which the Germans had laid for me. I expected to see them rise from anywhere any minute, and hear the banging of their guns and the whistling of their bullets (if I was lucky enough to hear them, that is), and I began to wish myself well out of my predicament and back again in the comparative safety of our trench.
"This made me more cautious than ever, and presently I began to retreat. As I did so a round German helmet bobbed up out of a ravine not a dozen yards away. An instant later, at the other end of the ravine, another appeared. I squirmed away like a snake and got behind the only shelter in sight, a scrubbly little tree about tree yards away.
“As I lay there quaking, wondering why the Germans did not shoot - for they must have seen me - I happened to look up and there hanging to a branch of the tree was a fat, clean-looking basket. I reached up, the limb on which it hung being only a few feet from the ground, and lifted the basket down.
"Then in a flash the explanation of the puzzle was clear to me. The Germans had left that basket there and meant me to have it.
"With the basket on my arm 1 got up, bowed low to the round hats, and walked back to our trench without ever being fired on.
"Inside the basket was the assortment I have described to you. There was also a note something after this wise:
`We have been in front of you for over a year, and it is not against our comrades, the French, that we are fighting, but against our enemy, the English. Let us join forces against our common enemy. We are not starving, as you may well see from the little present we send you herewith.'
"Here was something that set me thinking pretty hard. I had escaped death or capture by a miracle so far as I could see, and all in order that I might enjoy a hearty meal at the expense of the Germans.
"I set the basket down in the trench, and fell to with a will; and I give you my word, Casey, of all the good things I have eaten, I never enjoyed anything more than I did that Dutch treat - especially the frankfurters.
"They took me back to the States immediately - hot dogs, the brightness of the sea, the yawping of barkers, crowds passing, the noise of thousands of shuffling feet - not the sort of shuffling we hear now, Casey, when a bugle call or the heavy sound of guns seems the chief attraction. It was a great shame I couldn't save you one.
"The meaning of all this was a puzzle to me until I found out that our boys had left a bundle of American and English newspapers in the spot where I had found the basket, with the paragraphs plainly marked in which it was said the Germans were starving. And the basket was the Germans' reply.
"Now you know how I came to get my hot dogs."

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