Irish Places and Irish History
Where Was That and What Happened Then?
The Key to Your Success Understanding the Civil Structure and History
To know where to look for records, you first need to understand
- civil divisions of Ireland therefore where to look for records
- overview of Irish history what was going on that made your ancestors want to leave home
- Civil divisions - http://www.rootsweb.com/~fianna/guide/land-div.html
- Components (each category divides into the increasingly smaller subdivisions below it)
- Provinces (4)
- Counties (32)
- Civil Parishes not church parishes
- Townlands (a surveyed piece of land - not a Town)
- Townland sub-denominations
- Administrative Units (often cross boundaries)
- Poor Law Unions, contain Superintendent Registrar's Districts
- Baronies
- Estates
- Finding Them in Maps & Gazetteers & Online
- Print
- A New Genealogical Atlas of Ireland, 2nd Edition, Brian Mitchell
- General Alphabetical Index to the Townlands and Towns, Parishes and Baronies of Ireland. 1851 (also online below)
- Topographical Dictionary of Ireland: 1837 FTM CD 270
- Ordnance Survey Maps Discovery series (IGSI Bookstore)
- Online
- Irish History
- These things you need to understand:
- Ireland at the time your ancestors left because history affects the records
- what was recorded
- who recorded it
- why it was recorded
- what survives, and
- where it can be found;
- Different groups emigrated at different times - History tells us who and why;
- Being Irish means being from the island of Ireland; with Celtic-Irish, Scotch-Irish, and Anglo-Irish heritage; and different people with Protestant and Catholic religious beliefs (with some crossover).
- Migration from Ireland to America 18th Century
- 1717 Scottish settlers leave Ulster poor harvest and rackrents
- 1740-1741 Potato Famine - all Ireland except Connacht
- 1760s Agrarian violence Ulster
- 1771-1775 Decline in Belfast linen trade 10,000 left each year, 1/3 to 1/2 of them Ulster Protestants
- By 1790 1/6 of 3 million U.S. were of Irish birth or descent.
- 280,000 were Ulster Protestants, 106,000 native Irish Catholics, 61,000 Descendants of Irish Catholics from Ulster and English settlers from Ulster and the South
- Migration from Ireland to America 19th Century
- 1815 Immigration and trade resume
- 1815-1845 Many more Catholics & from South (could be double considering those who went to Canada first.)
- 1815-1825: 28,600
- 1826-1835: 118,4000
- 1836-1845: 289,700
- 1846-1855 1,442,000 (300,000 to Canada)
- 1856-1865 582,400
- 1866-1875 645,700
- 500,000 left Ireland every 10 years until WWI