When
beginning your search you need to gather together as much
information as you can about your family. Talk to parents,
aunts, uncles. Grandparents, if still alive, may be able to
recount stories going back another two generations. So for
example someone aged 80, born in 1920, would have grandparents
living in Ireland at the time of the famine! Talk to older
people from the locality of interest to you. They can be an
invaluable source of information. Out of all this information
what you are hoping to find are names, places and dates.
Names
If your lucky a name
may be sufficiently unusual within a parish or town land you
are searching to make your task a little easier. If it turns
out to be a little more common, then rather than having just
one name, say a great grandfather, it would be better to know
his wife or children's names if possible, to help identify
beyond doubt that it's the person you are looking for.
Places
The more specific
you can be about location the better, as it makes your search
a little easier. In Ireland, the division is into Counties,
32 in total, then parish, and finally town land (which can
be extremely small), can make your search a lot easier.
Dates
Any type of date
is useful as you start to search records, parish records,
civil or otherwise. The date will probably relate to a birth,
marriage or death. Or perhaps date of immigration. Do not
rely on the exact date given, as the further back you go the
less reliable it becomes. Be particularly suspicious of dates
ending in zero, as there was a habit of rounding up to the
nearest 10, when estimating someone's age at a point in time!
Don't discount any
piece of information no matter how small. An occupation if
known can lead to some excellent records. For example a soldier
or policeman will be recorded with a serial number, where
he was stationed and track his career. If a family fell on
hard times, they made have ended up in a local workhouse.
There are lists of those in workhouses available.
The slightly less
illustrious career of convict, can still lead to a rich array
of records in the library. There are letters of clemency.
If the sentence was transportation then further lists give
the name, age, crime and sometime the ship on which
the person was to be transported. See Deportation
& Convict Ships for more information.
The links below represent
some of the key start points for any research of your Ancestors
in Ireland.
Civil
Records
Consisting of Births,
Marriages and Deaths from the mid 1800's.
Church
Records
Records of births,
marriages and sometimes deaths in a given parish.
Census
Details of state Census
every 10 years from 1821, and others pre-dating this to the
1600's.
Land
Records
Two of the most valuable
genealogy sources in Ireland, Griffith's Valuation and the
Tithe Applotment Books.
Research
locations in Dublin
An interactive map
of Dublin city showing the key locations worth visiting as
part of your research if possible.
Other
sources including Wills, Emigration, School records,
Deportation, Graveyards and the New York Emigrant Savings
Bank.
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