WHAT'S WHAT in IRISH GENEALOGY
| |
Where to Start
Guidance by GORRY RESEARCH |
|
| |
|
If you're new to tracing your ancestry or new to tracing
your Irish ancestry, you may need a few pointers on where to start.
The first thing to remember is that there is no point in attempting
to trace remote
ancestors till you have done the groundwork by checking and verifying the
details on your immediate ancestors. If you live in Ireland you should visit
the National Library's Genealogy Service for free expert
advice on where to start. If you're someone of Irish origin living overseas
there is no point in coming to Ireland to trace an ancestor who may
have emigrated about 1850 and who may have been from Cork. You
need hard facts. That means beginning your search in your home country with:
- family sources (oral tradition, family Bible, certificates, letters,
memorial cards, photographs,etc.).
- documentary evidence (census returns, vital records, church records,
land records, naturalization papers, passenger lists, etc.).
There is no substitute for this preliminary research. You will find a brief
description of the main classes of records available in various countries in
the guidebook Tracing Irish Ancestors by
Máire Mac Conghail and Paul Gorry (HarperCollins, Glasgow, 1997).
If you feel you need professional help at this preliminary stage, there
are researchers throughout the world concentrating on sources in their
specific area. Local libraries often have lists of such researchers.
There are also many overseas genealogists who
specialize in "linking" Irish emigrant ancestors to their place of origin
within Ireland. Once you have got all there is to get out of records in
your own country you will be in one of three situations:
- the information on your emigrant ancestor is INSUFFICIENT TO ALLOW for
worthwhile research in surviving records within Ireland. [Your only option
in this case, if you haven't already tried it, is to contact a genealogist
in your country specializing in linking emigrants. You have to remember
that it's not possible to trace ALL emigrants to a location within Ireland.]
- the information on your emigrant ancestor is SUFFICIENT ONLY TO ALLOW for
research of a general nature (e.g., on the distribution of the surname within
a specific area) in the hope of identifying the ancestor's place of origin.
- the information on your emigrant ancestor is SPECIFIC ENOUGH TO ALLOW for
worthwhile research in records within Ireland.
If you are in the second or third category, you have a number of options.
You could:
Once you have got to this point you'll be much more
familiar with the subject and you may find much of the information contained
in the various pages of WHAT'S WHAT in IRISH GENEALOGY of assistance.
back to Gorry Research Homepage