The present Hughes family comes from rural Remsen, Iowa, in Plymouth County, in northwest
Iowa.
The history of the Hughes family in Remsen began
when Patrick Hughes came to Plymouth County in 1884, walking
there from Clinton County in eastern Iowa, where he grew up. Patrick's father, Richard, was the original immigrant, and he established what became known as the
Hughes Settlement in Clinton County, Iowa.
Patrick was the seventh of ten children born to Richard Hughes
and Esther O'Brien, both of whom emigrated from Ireland, Richard in 1848, and
Esther in 1849. They married each other in 1852, and settled into farming and raising a
family in Clinton County in eastern Iowa.
Patrick married Leonie Kieffer of Remsen,Iowa, and they raised two sons,
Donald
and Richard, in Remsen, Iowa. After the passing of Patrick and Leonie, the farm was divided
between the two boys, and both lived out their lives in Remsen.
Donald, the eldest, married Rosina Ludwig, and they had two children: Patrick
and Nancy.
Richard married Marie McAndrew, and they had six children:
Thomas, Robert, Mary, John, Kathleen, and Timothy. Interestingly, Marie McAndrew
was raised in Lost Nation, Iowa, which is only a short distance from the
original Hughes Settlement, all in Clinton County, Iowa.
Click here for the immediate family of Patrick Hughes and Leonie Kieffer.
Click here for a list of
descendents.

Here is a description about the surname of Hughes, offered at
the GoIreland.com website:
O'Hea, Hayes, Hughes
O'Hea is one of the anglicized forms of the very common Gaelic surname O
hAodha, which has at least a dozen different and distinct origins in Ireland
and is usually anglicized Hayes, except in Ulster where it has become Hughes.
O hAodha simply means descendant of Aodh, anglice Hugh. The sept so named,
which is located in Corca Laoidhe - I.e. the south-western part of Co. Cork -
is the only one which is called O'Hea in English and this form is invariable
in that area. Murrough O'Hea was Bishop of Cork in 1205, and Maurice O'Hea was
Bishop of Ross in 1559. In Co. Cork only is the name found in directories
today (apart from a few migrants to Dublin). John Fergus O'Hea (1850-1912),
artist and cartoonist, was a Cork man, and Captain William O'Hea, an officer
in Nicholas Browne's infantry in King James the Second's army, was of
Aghamilly Castle in Pobble O'Hea, a district retained by the sept under the
overlordship of the Barrys. This name, by the way, was also known as Heas
which is identical in pronunciation with Hayes. Hayes is a very common name in
England. The name Hay (I.e Norman de la Haye) is on record in Co. Wexford
since 1182. It has now become Hayes in most places. Irish Hayses are almost
invariably scions of one of the O hAodha septs. The most considerable of these
was the Dalcassian sept of Thomond, now chiefly associated with Counties
Limerick and Tipperary, whence came Catherine Hayes (1825-1861), singer, and
the two painters Edward Hayes (1797-1864) and Michael Angelo Hayes
(1820-1887). In the seventeenth century the form O'Hea, not Hayes, was used in
Co. Clare as is evidenced by the number of O'Heas in Petty's census of 1659.
Woulfe gives no less than twelve distinct septs of O hAodha, including, as
well as those mentioned above, others located around Ardstraw (Co. Tyrone),
Ballyshannon (Co.. Donegal), Farney (Co. Monaghan), Navan (Co. Meath), Gorey
(Co. Wexford), Ballintobber and Templemurray (Co. Mayo), Dromard (Co. Sligo)
and one of the Ui Maine.
Here's a nice map of Ireland.
