McNulty is an Irish surname. It is derived from the GaelicMac an Ultaigh meaning "son of the Ulsterman".[1][2] Usually considered a branch of the Ulaid ruling dynasty of Mac Duinnshléibhe (MacDonlevy), a branch of Dál Fiatach, who fled Ulaid to Ailech after the former's conquest in 1177 by the Normans. DNA analysis points to descent from other Ulaid families as well.[3] After the Battle of Kinsale in 1602, some McDonlevys and McNultys migrated to the province of Connacht where their name is now also common.[4]
Origin
The name is said to have arisen from a branch of the ruling Ulaid dynasty of Mac Duinnshléibhe (MacDonlevy) who had migrated to what is now County Donegal in the Republic of Ireland after John de Courcy's conquest of Ulaid in 1177. Here some of the MacDonlevys were nicknamed Ultagh/Ultach.[3] However, historical records such as the 1659 "Census" as well as Griffith's Valuation (1848-1864) show that concentrations of McNultys were found in parts of Ireland where the MacDonlevys had little presence, coupled with DNA analysis showing that the McNultys may actually derive from other Gaelic families that migrated from Ulaid and not just the MacDonlevy's.[3] The names Ultagh/Ultach and Mac an Ultaigh applied to only those that fled Ulaid and was not used for those that remained.[3]
Regardless of their actual origin, the first McNulty to be recorded is found in the Annals of the Four Masters under the year 1281, where an "Murtough Macan-Ulty" is listed as a distinguished fatality at the battle of Desertcreagh in present-day County Tyrone, Northern Ireland.[3]
The probable transition of the name Mac an Ultaigh from the Ultagh MacDonlevy's can be seen around 1601 where one "Morris Ultagh" is recorded as "Morris m'Nich Ultagh".[3] The surname prefix "m'Nich" appears to be an English confusion of the female prefix Nic with the male prefix Mac.[3]
Other variant spellings of McNulty include McNaulty,[5] McNalty,[5] and rarely as O'Nalty,[6] Nolty,[6] McNult,[7] McEnulty and McKnulty.[6][8] and others.
By 1980, there were 19,469 persons surnamed McNulty in the United States Social Security Administration data base. The surname McNulty was, then, the 2332 most frequently occurring surname in that database.[7] Some of the first McNulty immigrants to North America arrived in Philadelphia and New York City in the very early 19th century[9][10][11] and, later, more numerously, in both Philadelphia and New York City between 1840 and 1860, during which period the Great Famine of Ireland occurred.[12][13]
There are an estimated 421 persons surnamed McNulty in Australia.[14] Denis McInulty, one of the first McNulty to arrive in Australia, arrived there from Scotland on 16 May 1846 on the prisoner transport the China under a 10-year sentence of the Glasgow Justiciary Court.[15]
In the United Kingdom the surname McNulty is shared by an estimated 7,318 people and is approximately the 1,472th most popular surname in the country.[14]
Elena McNulty (Jimmy's estranged wife), Sean James McNulty (Jimmy's and Elena's eldest son) and Michael Barnes McNulty (Jimmy's and Elena's youngest son) also appear as characters on The Wire.
There are 7 McNulty characters in the Emmy nominated animated TV series.
5 McNulty brother Rugrats (Timothy, Todd, Ty, Teddy and Terry)
The brothers' grandfather Conan
The brothers' mother Colleen
Lt. Ray McNulty and his son Van McNulty are characters in the U.S. TV series Smallville
Meet Mr. McNutley was a successful CBS television network series that ran 44 episodes from 1953 to 1955. The show's title and the last name of its main character were changed to "McNulty" in the second episode. The show was, later, again, retitled the Ray Milland Show. Milland played the show's main character Prof. Ray McNulty. The U.S. television actress Phyllis Avery played the professor's wife Peggy McNulty.
The eye patched rogue and heel Red McNulty "of Dublin, Ireland" and the outright villain Ivan Koloff "The Russian Bear" were ring personas of Canadian wrestler Oreal Perras (Oreal James Perras), a former WWE World Heavyweight Champion who fought 3,962 documented career bouts.[16]
Stephen Graham (actor) played the character Peter McNulty in 2 episodes of the TV series Jump.
Thelma Ritter won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her portrayal of Ellen McNulty in the 1951 film the Mating Season.
Actress Gene Tierney played Maggie Carleton McNulty in the Mating Season (1951).
There is a McNulty character in both the movie Trancers and its sequel Trancers II. In both movies the McNulty character is portrayed by actor Art LaFleur.
Maggie Cline became famous in Vaudeville singing popular Irish songs, including How McNulty Carved His Duck.[17]
There is a Moshi Monsters moshling character in the puppies set named McNulty.
In 23 episodes of the NBC television drama E-Ring, Dennis Hopper played the character Colonel Eli McNulty, who in story is a combat decorated former POW and Vietnam War veteran and principal staff officer of a “Special Operations Division”.[18]
McNulty Hall, a residence hall at Johnson and Wales University in Providence, Rhode Island, is named after Lieutenant Colonel John F. McNulty, Jr., who was the University's Dean of Students for near 3 decades and its Athletic Director.
McNulty Hall, which is Seton Hall University's Technology and Research Center is named after Monsignor John L. McNulty, the University's 13th President.
The community of McNulty, Oregon is named after Oregon pioneer John McNulty, as are the Warren, Oregon headquartered McNulty Water Association, which serves some 700 families in Columbia County, Oregon west of St. Helens, Oregon and McNulty Way in St. Helens, Oregon.
McNulty Reservoir Dam in Eagle County, Colorado, named after Colorado's McNulty family cattle ranchers, who settled in Eagle County, Colorado, in the 1880s, eventually, operating a 2500-acre cattle ranch there near Leadville, Colorado
Downtown McNulty Station in St. Petersburg, Florida is named after John T. McNulty, who became Chief of the St. Petersburg Fire Department in the year 1913.[20]
Found in a single location on the earth's surface, that is McNulty Gulch near Leadville Colorado, McNulty rhyolite is a comparatively rare gem rock quality variety of rhyolite rock. McNulty rhyolite appears in the official U.S. Department of Interior, United States Geological Survey Lexicon of Geological Names of the United States.[21]
Nulty
This is a variant of McNulty. Notable bearers of the name are:
^ abcdefgPaul B. McNulty, Emeritus Professor, University College Dublin. Origin of the Surname, McNulty, and its Association with the McDonlevys/Dunleavys of County Down. Vol. Appendix 1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Robert Bell (2003). The book of Ulster Surnames. The Blackstaff Press. p. 60. ISBN0-85640-602-3.
^ abP. Hanks and F. Hodges (1988). A Dictionary of Surnames. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 366–7. ISBN0-19-211592-8.
^ abcRev. Patrick Woulfe, Priest of the Diocese of Limerick, Member of the Council, National Academy of Ireland (1967). Irish Names and Surnames. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company, in Irish and English. pp. 125, 141, 319 and 356.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) (anglicized from Irish "Ónultaċáin", at Mac Duinnshléibhe)
^ abH. Robb; A. Chesler (1995). Encyclopedia of American Family Names. New England Publishing Associates, Inc. (Harper Collins). p. 488. ISBN978-0-06-270075-9.
^P. Hanks and F. Hodges (1988). A Dictionary of Surnames. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 361. ISBN0-19-211592-8.
^P. William Filby; Mary K. Meyer, eds. (1981). Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, in 3 volumes with subsequent annual bound supplements. Vol. 2 (H-N). Detroit: Gale Research Company., p. 1412 McNulty, Dan'l (Philadelphia 1802), McNulty, James (Philadelphia 1813), McNulty, Sarah (New York 1823 with 3 children), p. 1539 Naulty, James (Philadelphia 1832), p. 1568 Nulty, Eugenius (Philadelphia 1834)
^Michael Tepper, ed. (1979). New World Immigrants, in 2 volumes. Vol. II, Passenger Lists Published in the Shamrock or Irish Chronicle, for arrivals in New York, New York (before time of first official government compilations of arrival lists for port of New York). Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., (1811) p. 339, Mac annulty, James, noted arriving in New York, New York and (1815–1816) p. 359, MacAnalty, Patrick of Sligo, noted arriving in New York, New York, p. 362, MacNulty, Wm. of Tauley, noted arriving in New York, New York and from British Museum Transcripts, p. 313, McNalty, Hugh of Bangor, County Down, noted in 1806 departing Ulster for U.S. port unspecified
^Carl Boyer, ed. (1977). Ship Passenger Lists, National and New England (1600–1825). Newhall, California. p. 121. ISBN0-936124-00-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link), again, McNalty, Hugh, of Bangor, County Down, noted in 1806 departing Ulster for U.S. port
^Ira A. Glazier, ed. (1983). The Famine Immigrants - Lists of Irish Immigrants Arriving at the Port of New York, 1846–1851, in multiple volumes. Vol. 1 (January 1846 – June 1847). Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. ISBN0-8063-1024-3., Mcanulty pp. 27, 372, 424, 559, Mcnalty pp. 259, 410, 461, 501, Mcnulty pp. 49, 63, 67, 68, 74, 93, 94, 110, 139, 148, 151, 187, 211, 230, 250, 255, 292, 308, 332, 343, 363, 388, 403, 411, 423, 461, 468, 489, 516, 537, 544, 554, 576, 604, 617, Nulty pp. 14, 67, 101, 146, 150, 173, 185, 188, 200, 231, 455, 498, 533, 605, Vol. 2 (July 1847-June 1848) Mcanulty pp 252, 382, Mcnalty p. 256, Mcnaulty pp. 16, 138, Mcnultay p. 521, Mcnulty pp. 12, 18, 21, 94, 114, 120, 172, 201, 278, 282, 292, 451, 468, 507, 508, Nulty pp. 10, 45, 53, 89, 137, 293, 373, 375, 414, 450, 459
^P. William Filby; Mary K. Meyer, eds. (1981). Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, in 3 volumes with subsequent annual bound supplements. Vol. 2 (H-N). Detroit: Gale Research Company. pp. 1412, 1539, and 1568.
^A.H. Koschmann and M.H. Bergendahl Principal Gold Producing Districts of the United States (Geological Survey Professional Paper 610) Washington: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402 (1968) (Library of Congress catalog-card no. GS 68-341) p 117
^Lexicon of Geological Names of the United States (Including Alaska) Part 2 M-Z (Geological Survey Bulletin 896) Mary Grace Wilmarth, compiler, p. 1260, United States Dept. of Interior, Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office (1938) (Univ. of Mich., Digitized 18 February 2010)
Barney McNulty Emmy TV Legends, Television Academy Foundation, Archive of American Television interview with Barney McNulty with video and audio
Bill Conoulty - 1938 - MotorMarques.com | Classic Car Revival Here courtesy of Motor Marques is a 1938 photograph of Australian automotive manufacturer, racer, engineer and designer William "Bill" Conoulty racing his "Conoulty Special Austin Comet".
Sir Arthur MacNalty (1880–1969) | Art UK Here for view courtesy of BBC is Clare Collas' oil on canvas portrait of Dr. Sir Arthur Salusbury MacNalty in elder life, hanging in the collection of the Royal College of Physicians, London
The history of the NHS Here is the UK National Health Service official site's photograph portrait of Dr. Sir Arthur Salusbury MacNalty (there listed as Arthur McNalty #8) along with portraits of all of the other of the UK's Chief Medical Officers since Victorian times.
Destroyer Escort Photo Index DE 581 USS Mc NULTY Here are several photographs of the USS McNulty (DE 581) and a photograph in naval uniform of that ship's namesake Lt. (j.g.) John Thomas McNulty, from navsource.org.
Surname list
This page lists people with the surnameMcNulty. If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding the person's given name(s) to the link.