Wednesday, 11 April 2012

An introduction to genealogy in Co Meath

A one-day Introduction to Irish Genealogy course will take place in the beautiful setting of Annesbrook in County Meath on Saturday 28 April.

The charming historic house is to be matched with a team of acclaimed experts: Brian Donovan, Fiona Fitzsimons, both of Eneclann, Eileen O'Duill of Heirs Ireland and her husband, Sean O'Duill, a renowned Irish folklorist.

Tastebuds are also being fully catered for. The €125 fee includes light refreshments and a lunch prepared with fresh ingredients from Annesbrook's garden, and I hear there will be freshly baked scones and other treats during the two breaks. The day will start at 10am and end at 4.30pm.

Here's the programme:

Morning:
  • Introduction: Why do family history research?
  • Introduction to Irish Births, Marriages and Death rcords
  • Census 1901 and 1911 online

Luncheon talk (over dessert):

'Mrs Fancy Tart is coming to tea: making sense of family stories'

Afternoon:
  • Internet sources for Irish genealogy research: things to do at home
  • Matchmaking and marriage customs in 19th-century Ireland
  • Some success stories to inspire you
  • Where do I go from here? Question and Answer session

For more information, phone 353 (0)141 98 232 93 or email.

Tuesday, 10 April 2012

South East Galway reaches out

As part of the Ireland Reaching Out (Ireland XO) project, South East Galway has announced its Week of Welcomes programme. This is an event organised by the parishes for their own Diaspora and an opportunity for those whose ancestors left Ireland to reconnect with their place of origin.

The Week of Welcomes builds on the paper trail and helps those of Irish heritage to reconnect with the people and places of their ancestors. Visitors who take up the invitation get to speak with people from the communities and pick through local knowledge to perhaps finally discover an elusive headstone, to seek out some long-lost cousins, or to stand where the ancestral home once stood.

The Ireland XO project has been described as 'reverse genealogy' because the local community is reaching out to connect with the descendants of those who left, rather than those descendants trying to reconnect with the place.

For those with roots in South East Galway, an interesting programme has been created and organisers promise a unique, personal and intimate experience. The itinerary includes a Shannon River cruise, heritage tours, cultural events, and even a hurling match, in addition to individualised assistance to trace family roots.

The cost is €299 for the full week or €149 for a three-day booking. More information here.

Thursday, 5 April 2012

Database providers take the sea air

With the Titanic centenery making headlines around the world this month, there's a very nautical air about recent releases by the major database providers.

Ancestry was first to set sail with five small collections released a few days ago. These are:
  • Titanic, Outward Passenger List
  • Titanic, Crew Records
  • Titanic, Deaths at Sea
  • Halifax, Canada, Titanic Fatality Records
  • Halifax, Canada, Titanic Graves

Today, Find My Past.co.uk has published two new record sets:
  • Maritime births, marriages and deaths (includes bmds associated with seafaring occupations, not just events that took place at sea, and deaths of Titanic crew and passengers).
  • White Star Line Officers books (1,042 service records 1868-1934, including those crew lost on the Titanic).
As well as these two new collections, the FMP database includes passenger lists (ex-UK), 1880-1960 and Merchant Navy seamen records.


John Grenham's new edition: Worth the weight

The first thing that hit me when my review copy of John Grenham's Tracing Your Irish Ancestors 4th Edition arrived was its weight. I was reminded of that mighty tome 'Ancestral Trails' which, while a perfectly valid and useful book for genealogy research around the world, I've rarely used simply because I find it too heavy to handle. Well, I say 'rarely used'. It's been pressed into doorstop duty on a good few occasions.

Now, Grenham's new book isn't in the same tonnage league but it's certainly noticeably heavier than the well-thumbed 2nd edition that's been holding court on my shelves for around twelve years.

There are two reasons for the added weight. First, the 4th edition has 202 more pages than the 2nd. It's also on much nicer paper: white, bright, finer and heavier.

If you read John's Irish Roots column earlier this week you have pretty much read his preface to the new book, which he's completely revised to accommodate the huge changes in patterns of genealogy research and the greater accessibility of online Irish records in recent years.

As in the previous edition, there's a short chapter dedicated to Internet research which includes the usual sensible advice about not believing everything you find, and to exercise care when searching databases, and gives a brief overview of the main database providers (both free and paying) and listings sites under a number of categories (census, migration, police, property etc). His own creation Irish Ancestors on the Irish Times site, gets a generous number of plugs.

Generally, the book follows the same pattern as previous editions (1st ed published 1992; 2nd ed 1999; 3rd ed 2006). Some sections, for example, deeds, newspapers, directories, have exactly the same sub-headings, even if the content is updated.

Others have been expanded with addtional information. So the Property and Valuation Records chapter, for example, now covers Irish placenames and a guide to using Griffiths Valuation online; India and Mexico have made appearances in the Emigration and Irish Abroad chapter.

The County Source Lists have also been completely revised and expanded with details of relevant websites for each county.

Online Sligo. Why no IGP-web?
I was pleased to see some websites in the listings that I hadn't come across before but I was rather surprised by some inconsistencies.

Why, for example, are the Ireland Genealogy Projects sites for Longford and Meath and Waterford included but not those for Antrim, Cork or Sligo?

I was very, very pleased to see the return of parish maps in the Roman Catholic Registers section. Their omission from the last edition was much criticised. And it's good to, at last, see an index. They're a bore for the author to create but essential to the reader.

Any printed reference publication suffers from one major problem – the speed with which it becomes outdated. This was an issue for reference books long before the Internet was created, but is even more acute now. The truth is that after a six or seven year wait, Tracing your Irish Ancestors 4th edition was out of date even before it was published last Friday. It refers several times to the usefulness of the free index search facility on RootsIreland.ie, which, if you've been reading this blog in the last two weeks, you'll know has been withdrawn, much to the consternation of Irish genealogy researchers. It also advises readers that Wills calendars for the Republic are on the shelves at the NAI... they are, of course, but in the last month a sizeable proportion of them have been made freely available on the NAI's website.

This isn't a criticism of John's work. It's simply a fact of modern day publishing. It may mean, though, that the 4th edition has a shorter shelf life than the earlier editions have enjoyed.

Finely dressed in its new livery, Tracing Your Irish Ancestors will, I am sure, reaffirm the title's status as THE standard reference book for Irish genealogists, both beginners and the more experienced. Never mind that John's writing style is so readable, there is simply nothing else on the market, nor on my shelves, that comes anywhere close to it for its breadth in one volume.

Tracing Your Irish Ancestors, 4th edition, is published by Gill & Macmillan. Price €22.99 but discounts available from the publisher and some other booksellers. ISBN: 9780717150243


What the kitchen scales reveal:
Tracing Your Irish Ancestors, 2nd edition: 600g
Tracing Your Irish Ancestors, 4th edition: 900g, or just a smidgen below
(Not that I'm obsessive, or anything!)

Tuesday, 3 April 2012

Events for April

Until 22 April: Leaving Home: Emigration from Cobh, Circa 1920’s — Photographs from the Mount Brandon Collection. Sirius Arts Centre, Cobh, Co Cork.

Throughout April: 1912 Harland & Woolf Minute Book. On display in Reading Room, PRONI. Free.

Wednesday 4 April: Ireland and the First World War, with Professor Keith Jeffrey. Ulster Museum. 7:00pm to 9:00pm. 

Wednesday 4 April: Lost Voices from the Titanic, with Dr Nick Barratt. 1pm. PRONI Lecture Theatre. Booking essential. Free.

Friday, 6 April to Monday 9 April: 1916: Rebels & Revolutionary Walking Tours, Glasnevin Cemetery 2:30pm and 3:30pm daily. Adults €6, Advance booking advised.

Tuesday, 10 April: Tales from the Tenements: The Urban Folklore Project, with Dr. Cristoir MacCarthaigh. Dublin City Hall lunchtime lecture. The Council Chamber, City Hall, Dublin 2. 1:10pm to 1:50pm. Free. Details: cityarchives@dublincity.ie

Tuesday 10 April:  St Brides Church of Ireland Parish Records, with Ronnie Wallace. Genealogical Society of Ireland. Dun Laoghaire College of FE, Cumberland Street. 8pm.

Friday, 13 April: Destination America: Emigration through Queenstown/Cobh. A free public lecture with Dr. Alicia St Leger. 3:00pm. Sirius Arts Centre, Cobh, Co Cork.

Friday, 13 April to Saturday,14 April:
The London Irish in the Long Eighteenth Century (1680-1830). Multi-disciplinary conference. Warwick University. Details.

Saturday 14 April:
Irish and Scottish Family History Day. Lanarkshire Family History Society. David Livingstone Centre, Blantyre. 10:00am to 4:30pm. Details

Tuesday, 17 April:
Stories from Dublin’s Blitz: The North Strand Bombing, with Ellen Murphy. Dublin City Hall lunchtime lecture. The Council Chamber, City Hall, Dublin 2. 1:10pm to 1:50pm. Free. Details: cityarchives@dublincity.ie

Wednesday 18 April:
Overview of the 1916 Easter Rising, with Dr Fearghal McGarry. Drama Theatre, Stranmillis College, Belfast. 7:00pm to 9:00pm.

Wednesday 18 April: Lost Voices of the Titanic, with Dr Nick Barratt. Society of Genealogists, London. 2:00pm to 3:00pm. £4.80/£6. 

Thursday, 19 April: Titanic, Belfast's Own, with Stephen Cameron. 6.30pm. PRONI Lecture Theatre. Booking essential. Free.

Thursday, 19 April: War of Indepencence: ‘Four glorious years’ or squalid sectarian conflict?. A History Ireland Hedge School at Cavan County Museum, Virginia Rd, Ballyjamesduff. 7.30-9.30pm.

Thursday 19 April: Advanced Irish Genealogy - Delving further into Irish sources. Connectquot Public Library, Bohemia, NY. 6.30pm.

Saturday, 21 April: IGRS Ireland Branch. The Landed Estate Court Rentals: now digitised but still a much underused source, with Aideen Ireland. Dublin City Library & Archive, Pearse Street, Dublin 2. AGM at 2.30pm (members only), Lecture at 3.15pm (all welcome). Free. 

Saturday, 21 April: Organizing Your Genealogical Clutter, with Ronald Moore. Irish Family History Forum, New York. 11:00am. Details.

Saturday, 21 April: Connect with your past. A history roadshow for all the family, with Clogher Historical Society. 10am-5pm.

Tuesday, 24 April: Heirlooms and Hand-Me-Downs: Tales from Dublin’s Liberties, with Chris Reid. Dublin City Hall lunchtime lecture. The Council Chamber, City Hall, Dublin 2. 1:10pm to 1:50pm. Free: Email: cityarchives@dublincity.ie

Tuesday, 24 April: All at Sea: Maritime records at PRONI, with Dr Ann McVeigh. 1pm. PRONI Lecture Theatre. Booking essential. Free.

Wednesday, 25 April: The Women’s Movement in Ireland 1910 – 1922, with Dr Myrtle Hill. Drama Theatre, Stranmillis College, Belfast. 7:00 to 9:00pm.

Thursday, 26 April: Local History — Families. PRONI and The Open University in Ireland (OUI). 6.30pm to 8.00pm at PRONI. Admission is FREE and open to all but booking essential.

Saturday, 28 April: Newry Family History Fair. At City Library. 10.00am—4.00pm. Dr Ann McVeigh will be delivering a talk at 2.00pm on Family History Resources available in PRONI.

Monday, 2 April 2012

Any Dublin police in your tree?

Title page from Watch book register, RCBL P328.3.1
Ireland's oldest surviving police records have gone online today at the Church of Ireland RCB Library, making fascinating reading for those whose ancestors may have worked in the capital's early police system or lived in St John's Parish.

The Parish Watch collection comprises nine volumes – two account books (1724-85) and seven registers (1765-80) – and provide the earliest archival evidence of a parish security system that employed constables and watchmen and was overseen by the Established Church. They chronicle the activities of the parish watch of this particular inner city parish – one of 21 parishes into which the city of Dublin was divided – in the years immediately before the Dublin Police Force was created.

As the pages of each of these volumes are turned in the digital presentation (see link below), local society in 18th–century Dublin and the activities of the parish watch system come to life. You can find the names of the constables and watchmen; their salaries and expenses; when and where they were stationed and when they patrolled within the bounds of the parish (it was always at night).
Watch schedule for the night of 5 March 1767,
showing locations of the watch stands, and the named
watchmen dispatched to each stand, RCBL P328.3.2
Click here for larger view

You can also find details of the crimes committed and the petty justice administered at the watch house, located on Wood Quay, in response.

While St John's church was closed in 1878 and demolished in 1884, its records survive and are held at the RCB Library. These include the earliest register of bmds (dating from 1619) and an even older vestry minute book.

The project to digitise and release these records was a collaboration between the Garda Museum, RCB and the Garda Síochána Historical Society.

View the watch books from St John’s parish.

Hidden Histories of the Northwest 1910-1930

The exhibition Connection & Division – the Hidden Histories of 1910-1930 opened on Friday to explore how the major events of 1910 to 1930 impacted on Ireland's North West region.

Fermanagh County Museum, The Inniskillings Museum and Derry Heritage and Museum Service have come together to tell the previously untold stories of individual people who lived through the upheavals of this period. It covers Irish Nationalism, Unionism, the partition of Ireland and, importantly, the preconceptions we have of these events today.

New acquisitions and artefacts within the museum’s collections form part of this exhibition, highlighting the historical, political, social & economic significant factors of the period 1910 – 1930.

Normal admission rates apply and the exhibition runs until 30 June.

Ireland Genealogy Projects Archives - latest updates

Here's a list of the new records uploaded to Ireland Genealogy Projects Archives in the second half of March:


CLARE Genealogy Archives - Church
Assorted Memorial Cards

DUBLIN
Genealogy Archives - Headstones
Mount Jerome Cemetery, Dublin, parts 39 & 40

FERMANAGH Genealogy Archives - Church
Trory, Deaths recorded at St. Michaels C.of I Trory  1802-1950

CAVAN Genealogy Archives - Photos
Cochrane, Robert and Sarah (nee Strong)

LAOIS (Queens) Genealogy Archives - Headstones
Abbeyleix Church of Ireland Graveyard
Coolbanaher Church of Ireland Graveyard

LEITRIM
Genealogy Archives - Headstones
Carrick on Shannon, St. George's, Church of Ireland (partial)
Drumcong Roman Catholic Church Graveyard (partial)
Kiltubrid (Old) Graveyard (McGOVERN) (old stones - one legible)

MEATH Genealogy Archives - Military & Constabulary
1840-1841 Royal Irish Constabulary

MONAGHAN
Genealogy Archives -  Headstones
Transcription of St Patrick's, Part 2, Monaghan Town

SLIGO Genealogy Archives - Headstones
Ballinakill Burial Ground (partial)
Ballysumaghan Parish Church Graveyard (partial)

TIPPERARY Genealogy Archives - Land
List of Claims - Forfeited Estates - Tipperary 1700 Pt. 2

WESTMEATH Genealogy Archives - Church
Baptisms (CoI) Mullingar 1877-1900
Marriages (CoI) Mullingar 1844-1899

WEXFORD Genealogy Archives - Military & Constabulary
1840 & 1841 Royal Irish Constabulary

Sunday, 1 April 2012

Terrific Titanic

Yesterday I visited the spanking new £77million Titanic Belfast visitor attraction.

Am I showing off? Only a little. You see, I booked my opening day ticket back in January when the press office was still advising, if rather vaguely, that 'searchable genealogical records' would be available.

Although this was clarified back in February, I decided to go along anyway. Out of noseyness and architectural interest more than anything else, because I'm not a huge Titanic fan and I have no family connections with the North, let alone Belfast's shipbuilding industry.

So, wary of the hype, I went along, and I'm not in the slightest unhappy that I did so.

Externally, the aluminium-clad building is fantastically curious and photogenic, especially under a (nearly) cloudless blue sky, as it was from mid-afternoon onwards. After catching the four 'hulls' from just about every conceivable angle, I went to join my '4.20pm' queue, only to discover that entry was running 45 minutes behind schedule.

This wasn't to be the first queue I joined. A similar period was spent waiting for the 'suspended car ride through the shipyard', after a 'technical hitch' brought the cars to a standstill.

Once cranked up again, the six-minute ride was a huge anti-climax and, frankly, I felt a bit embarrassed sitting in the futuristic-looking thing.

I didn't feel this 'journey' added anything (other than more time in a queue) to the experience.

But the rest of the exhibition is outstanding. It's beautifully presented, with enormous screens showing historical film and photographs of early 20th-century Belfast and the shipworkers, and the interior of the ship itself. Touchy-feely interactive distractions abound, although I don't think many kids under seven would be entertained for long. Even with older children, parents would need to indulge their offspring with fairly continuous commentary through at least six of the nine galleries.

No detail seems to have been left out. In the Fit-Out and Maiden Voyage galleries (to me, the most interesting after the Boomtown Belfast exhibition area), there were recreations of the first, second and third class cabins, and touchable samples of the carpets, ropes, linens, furniture finish etc. 

Here I learned that there were 45,000 table napkins on board, 18,000 sheets and six pianos, and there were only two bathrooms for all the third class passengers.

I had a quick play on the so-called genealogical  database just to see what it held. Basically, you can search the details of all passengers and crew under all manner of criteria.

So I was able to find out what became of selected passengers (Jeremiah Burke, aged 19, a farm labourer who joined the ship at Queenstown, died... Patrick Canavan, a 21-year-old general labourer met a similar fate) and could search for statistics (only three of the under-14-year-old Irish girls who boarded at Queenstown survived).

You don't need or want a blow-by-blow report of every gallery so I'll keep this report short and sweet. As I was handed my 'souvenir proof of visit' on leaving, I felt that I'd learned a lot more about the Titanic and especially more about the city that built it.

I heartily recommend it, despite the queues and the silly gimmicky car ride.



Titanic update –
Ancestryhas released the following records:
  • Outward Passenger List
  • Crew Records
  • Deaths at Sea
  • Halifax, Canada, Fatality Records
  • Halifax, Canada, Titanic Graves