Tuesday, 30 January 2024

Deansgrange and Shanganagh: the missing burial register images

While headstone photos, inscriptions and maps from both Deansgrange and Shanganagh cemeteries in South Dublin are freely online via the EverAfter website, images of the burial register entries for each deceased resident have 'disappeared'. I'm not quite sure when this happened but they've been on the missing list for at least a couple of months.

Fortunately, the reason has nothing to do with the recent 'Glasnevin / FindAGrave hokey-cokey', which saw offline burial records uploaded without the agreement of the Trust responsible for the nation's necropolis, and then removed pronto when they found out. The lack of access to the two South Dublin registers is not a repeat of that particular incident, so let out a sigh of relief.

I've contacted EverAfter, who provide the PlotBox technology that runs the specialist cemetery database, and been told that the Deansgrange and Shanganagh burial register images disappeared from the public view when an update was made to the overall plotbox site. It wasn't intended. They are still held on the site, but not on the publicly viewable parts of the site.

The tech team will correct this is due course, but there's currently no ETA for when that will happen.

While this is frustrating for researchers in the short term, at least it's not a permanent removal of the registers. They'll be back.

Monday, 29 January 2024

MyHeritage uploads Northern Ireland telephone directory collection

MyHeritage has added a new record-set that might be of interest to researchers with connections to Northern Ireland. It's a sizeable collection, too, holding 492,777 records of NI Telephone Directory entries for the years 2001 and 2003.

As I don't have a subscription to the MyHeritage database I can't check what information is provided – MyHeritage says only that a person's name and residence is given – nor if this collection holds details only of individuals or includes business accounts. If the former, the number of records covers about 77% of households across Northern Ireland in 2002 (based on a total NI population of 1.693million people living in an average household size of 2.65 people).

Similar telephone directory collections have also been released for England, Scotland and Wales in the last few days.

Ancestry adds topographical map of Ireland from 1855

New to the Ancestry Irish collection is an island-wide topographical map published in 1855. The cover page of the map describes itself as 'A General Map of Ireland to accompany the report of the Railway Commissioner shewing (sic) the Principal Physical Features and Geological Structure of the Country. Constructed in 1838 and engraved in 1837-38', adding 'The Geology was revised and improved in 1855.'

The images are beautiful. What a labour of artistry and skill they must have required.

The original report by the Irish Railway Commission was aimed at providing information to allow the planning of efficient railway lines. This 'quarter inch' map shows many of the earliest train routes to become operational:

Click image to explore the map
  • Dublin and Kingstown Railway (1834)
  • Ulster Railway(1839)
  • Dublin & Drogheda Railway (1844)
  • Dublin & Belfast Junction Railway (1845)
  • Belfast & County Down Railway (1848)
  • Cork, Blackrock & Passage Railway (1850)
  • Dublin to Galway (1851)
  • Cork, Bandon & Sth Coast Railway (1851)
  • Waterford & Tramore Railway(1853)

The first train journeys started in 1834, and this new form of transport continued to expand until 1920, by which time there were 5,600 km (3,480 miles) of tracks across the island. Only about half of this remains.

Friday, 26 January 2024

National Archives of Ireland website offline on Saturday 27 January

The National Archives of Ireland has advised that its website will be offline tomorrow, Saturday 27 January.

This downtime will facilitate essential maintenance and updates to the main site and all sub-sites.

Researchers will not be able to use the Genealogy site, which provides free access to the Irish Censuses, Census Search Forms, Tithe Applotment Books, Will Registers and other important collections for genealogical research, nor the Chief Secretary Office's of Registered Papers site.

Two small Irish parcels delivered in this week's FindMyPast Friday

This week's FindMyPast Friday delivery included two small parcels of Irish records. Brief details of each are below.

Sample listings of Belfast businessmen

Britain, Jewish Commercial Directory 1894

This Commerical Directory was a one-off publication that listed the names of Irish, English, Scottish and Welsh Jewish businessmen, together with their occupation and residence.

Of the 4,200 entries in the directory, there are 142 related to Ireland. These include individuals trading in the cities of Cork, Belfast, Dublin, Limerick, Londonderry and Waterford.

Ireland Memorial Inscriptions

FindMyPast describe this as a new and improved record set. It holds 682 images and transcriptions spanning 1711 to 2019.

The memorials are from four cemeteries in Dublin: Arbour Hill – the burial place of the executed 14 leaders of the 1916 Rising (the names on their memorials are in Gaelic, but have been transcribed in English for searching); Christ Church Cathedral, a Viking church founded more than 1,000 years ago; the Huguenot Cemetery, near St Stephen's Green; and St Patrick's Catherdral, with a celebrity line up of some of Ireland's most renowned poets and writers.

The 'find out more' information for this collection advises that FindMyPast will be adding more memorial inscriptions from a wide range of publications.



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New & updated collections for English, Scottish & Welsh genealogy

Below is a 10-day summary of newly-released and updated genealogy collections for England, Scotland and Wales from the major family history database providers. (For previous list, see 15 January blogpost.)

My regular summary of releases and updates relating to British collections is designed to help researchers whose Irish ancestors migrated, temporarily or permanently, to England, Scotland or Wales.

By default, it will also be useful to anyone carrying out research in those three nations, regardless of the origin of their ancestors.

The figures in parentheses in the New Collections section are the numbers of records (or images, if browse-only) in the new record set.

Unless otherwise stated, the figures in parentheses in the Updated Collections section reflect the number of records added to the collection in the recent update. In some instances, the supplier has not made this figure available so the figure is the new total. Where two figures are given, the first is the number of additions, the second is the new total.

Please note that I don't usually include updates of fewer than 1,000 records.


NEW COLLECTIONS


Ancestry

BritishNewspaperArchive and FindMyPast

FindMyPast

MyHeritage


UPDATED COLLECTIONS


Ancestry

FamilySearch
FindMyPast

FreeBMD

Scotland's People


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Free access to MyHeritage's Australian collection this weekend

Australians observe their official (and controversial) national day today, marking the anniversary of the First Fleet's landing in Port Jackson on 26 January 1788. Cue smoking ceremonies, solemn processions, choirs, bands and performance art, barbecues, parties and protest marches.

Plus a generous hug from MyHeritage in the form of a free access weekend for its entire database of Australian records.

This database holds more than 108 million Australian records from 299 collections, including electoral rolls, historical newspapers, registers, birth and death indexes, marriage records, burials, and school records.

A highlight in the Australian collection is the New South Wales Gaol Inmates & Photos collection which offers a unique glimpse into Australia’s penal history. This fascinating archive, added last year to MyHeritage, holds prison records, and features photographs of prisoners from several jails in New South Wales between 1870–1930.

If you haven't already registered for a free MyHeritage account, you'll need to set one up to gain access to the free records. This is a quick and easy process and doesn't require you to part with anything other than your name and email address.

The free access period will end on Sunday 28 January.

Thursday, 25 January 2024

Ulster Historical Foundation launches new website

The Ulster Historical Foundation's website has had a pretty radical overhaul. It's a lot brighter and less cramped, and as a result, it's easier to find what you're looking for.

The home page draws attention to the organisation's database of more than 2million records, some pay-to-view, some free; its genealogical educational tools such as online and offline courses and conferences; its highly regarded publications and book store; its research services; and its Guild Membership package which offers savings on all these items.

An important change to note is that the old AncestryIreland url has been retired.

Instead, you'll need to add the new address – https://ulsterhistoricalfoundation.com – to your favourites and bookmarks. (For the present, if you use the old url, your browser should automatically redirect you to the new one.)

Wednesday, 24 January 2024

Gentle history: TG4's Sloinne tells the stories of Irish surnames

Sloinne, a seven-part series on the origin and heritage of specific Irish surnames (one per episode), launched on TG4 on Sunday evening.

I didn't get to watch it live thanks to Storm Isha and her disruptive blow through, so I was pleased to find it on catch up. As far as I can tell, the series will be freely available to view worldwide; each episode will be released online after its broadcast.

The series will not only explore the surnames themselves but also the history of the areas and locations closely linked to their origins. This will include visits to ancient strongholds connected to the surname, reliving battles and feuds over land possessions, and recalling stories of more recent surname bearers.

Other surnames in the first series will be Murphy (Ó Murchú), Kelly (Ó Ceallaigh), Joyce (Seoighe) and O’Connor (Ó Conchubhair).

Episode One followed Mazz O'Flaherty, a Dingle Record Shop owner, on visits to Loch Hackett and Oughterard in County Galway with historian Adrian Martyn to learn the early history of the O'Flahertys. She then travelled to the Aran Islands with historian Gerry Hanberry, who explained the clan's seafaring and piracy connections and the surname's link with Oscar Wilde. Still on Inis Mór, Mazz's next stop was Kilmurvey House, a fine stone house built by an O'Flaherty in the mid-1800s and now the home of Treasa Hernon Joyce who showed her guest some old O'Flaherty family letters that she'd discovered during lockdown in a trunk under the stairs.

The two women also enjoyed the story of James O'Flaherty whose portrait hangs in the House; he was a friend of Oscar Wilde's father but was known locally as the White Billy Goat, such was his reputation as a gallivanter.

The second half of the programme was set in County Kerry. In Killarny, Mazz learned the story of Monsignor Hugh O'Flaherty and how he earned the soubriquet of Scarlet Pimpernel by setting up an escape organisation in Rome during WW2 to helping people fleeing Nazi Germany, and then, through Dr Conor Brosnan she discovered more about her own great great grandfather, John Joe O'Flaherty, a local hero. Finally, she met up with Dingle Druid Juilí Ní Mhaoileoin whose recent research has identified John Joe's grave for the first time.

The episode ran for 50 minutes and it was a slow 50 minutes. I don't mean that as a criticism. Far from it. Unlike certain other genealogical shows that leave the audience exhausted from the stress, rush and perfectly framed moments of emotion along the chosen celebrity's 'journey', Sloinne's more gentle formula of local historians putting the past into a wider context, and pulling out stories of individuals, as well as having a soft genealogical tie-in, was much more relaxing.

I particularly enjoyed listening in to the oral telling of these lives while Mazz and the historians sat at a homely table, on a quay-side wall, or a street bench, rather than gawping at old documents in a climate controlled archive or learned institution and having to race from place to place to force the tale into chronological order. The programme wasn't as slick in presentation as the 'bigger' shows, but it felt much more real... more personal.

I have no O'Flaherty connections and of the other six surnames scheduled to feature in the series, only O'Sullivan appears in my direct ancestral line (as it stands so far). I'll be watching more Sloinne episodes, though.

Sloinne is presented in Irish (Gaeilge) and English. Subtitles can be turned on via a widget below the progress (timer) bar.


Tuesday, 23 January 2024

FindMyPast commits to growth of BritishNewspaperArchive holding

Earlier this week, FindMyPast released a press release about its successful partnership with the British Library which, since it was set up in 2011, has seen the digitisation of more than 73 million pages of British and Irish historical newspapers dating from the 1700s.

This resulting online newspaper archive is the largest collection of British and Irish newspapers in the world and includes the Daily Mirror, Liverpool Echo, Belfast Telegraph and Dundee Courier, as well as a trove of other regional publications that are now out of print.

The initial aim of the partnership was to digitise 40 million pages by 2021. This was achieved well within the time frame and the online pagination numbers has continued to grow to the 70m milestone during 2023.

FindMyPast has now announced a commitment to digitise a further 19 million pages over the coming years, all available to explore on any device.

How many additional papers from the island of Ireland will join the database remains to be seen. However, an increase of digitised news pages published in the 20th century has been noted of late, in both British and Irish titles. Examples in the last few weeks include the Ballymena Weekly Telegraph (1997 & 1999); Derry Journal (1991 & 1999); Larne Times (1930), Portadown Times (1998); and both the Galway Observer and Dublin Leader (1964).

It seems likely that more recent editions, particularly those filling gaps of existing holdings, will be the main growth factor. But let's hope there will be some more new titles in the mix, too.

* The BritishNewspaperArchive.co.uk is owned by FindMyPast Newspaper Archive Ltd.