| Gaelic form | Mac Gafraidh |
| Meaning | Son of Gafraidh — from the Old Norse personal name Godfrey (Guðfríðr), meaning 'God's peace' |
| Origin type | Gaelic Mac prefix — Fermanagh sept of Norse-influenced origin |
| Primary county | County Fermanagh |
| Variants | See below |
The McCaffrey surname comes from Mac Gafraidh, "son of Gafraidh" — Gafraidh being the Gaelic form of the Norse-origin name Godfrey (Guðfríðr, "God's peace"). The personal name Godfrey entered the Gaelic world through centuries of Viking contact and settlement along Ireland's coasts and rivers. By the early medieval period, it was fully absorbed into Irish naming culture.
The Mac Gafraidh family was one of the principal septs of County Fermanagh, their heartland centred around Lisnaskea in the south of the county. Fermanagh — the lake county, dominated by the great expanse of Lough Erne — was rich in fish and fowl, and the McCaffreys controlled significant territory in this well-watered landscape.
The family were tenants-in-chief under the dominant Maguire dynasty, who were the great lords of Fermanagh in the medieval and early modern period. Like many Ulster families, the McCaffreys were drawn into the upheavals of the Nine Years War (1593–1603) and the subsequent Plantation of Ulster, which transformed the land ownership of the province entirely.
The McCaffrey family has produced notable figures in Ulster public life. In the Gaelic Athletic Association, Fermanagh footballers with the McCaffrey surname have appeared at county level across the 20th and 21st centuries. In literature, several Ulster-born writers of the McCaffrey name contributed to the distinctive voice of northern Irish writing.
In modern sport, Karl McCaffrey is one of several Fermanagh-county footballers to carry the name. The McCaffrey presence in Ulster GAA reflects the family's deep roots in Fermanagh.
McCaffrey families emigrated from Fermanagh in significant numbers during the 19th century. Ulster's proximity to Scotland meant some McCaffreys crossed to Glasgow and the Scottish lowlands rather than emigrating further west, and significant McCaffrey communities established themselves in Glasgow and its satellite towns.
In the United States, Fermanagh McCaffrey families settled primarily in New York and the Hudson Valley, with a further movement into the Midwest coal-mining communities of Pennsylvania and Ohio. Australian McCaffrey families trace back to Fermanagh emigrants of the 1840s–1870s.
County Fermanagh records are held primarily at the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland in Belfast. PRONI holds Catholic registers for the Diocese of Clogher (which covers most of County Fermanagh), Tithe Applotment Books, and estate records relevant to the McCaffrey territory around Lisnaskea.
Civil records from 1864 are searchable at IrishGenealogy.ie. Search under McCaffrey and McCaffery.
The Ulster Historical Foundation specialises in Ulster genealogy and holds McCaffrey family research files.
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