APG committee The second APG Open-day in 2017 was in Limerick City, this writer’s home city. Limerick Civic Trust hosted our group, who travelled by car, bus and train to attend. After a tasty lunch at the Curraghower Bar, we strolled across to the Bishop’s Palace. This 500 year...
I had a decidedly odd experience with a client at the Irish Family History Centre (CHQ Building, Dublin) in late August 2017. Something not of this world … but the next. I was helping a really friendly and open middle-aged US lady [I’ll call her ‘Mary’] with her family tree and...
A lady from Pennsylvania, Kathy, arrived into the Irish Family History Centre (IFHC), located in the CHQ Building in Dublin, in early October. She had no idea where her family came from in Ireland but she had done some previous research and had found her family on the US censuses....
Last month we sent out a survey in our newsletter to better understand and meet your needs, and find out how we are tracking in terms of providing you real value. To all of you who completed the survey – thank you. Your feedback is really important to us, as...
“I get it, no really I do, I completely understand where you’re coming from, but here’s the thing…”. This sentence, or words to this effect, I’ve uttered as an opening gambit far too often when helping people tracing their ancestors. As someone “blessed” with a somewhat unusual spelling variant of...
Fiona Fitzsimons, our co-founder and Director, gives us a quick update on what she’s been up to (on both sides of the Atlantic) in the last month. It’s been a busy couple of weeks for me, during which I’ve spent most of my time in America, doing some incredible things,...
A late middle-age daughter, Susan, and her elderly, but sharp as a tack, father, both from Dublin, came in to the Irish Family History Centre (Dublin) in April on the hunt for her dad’s father (her grandfather), who they thought was an only child, as well as her grandfather’s parents....
Lar Joye’s well-attended talk on Weapons in Irish History at the Members Room in the Royal Irish Academy kicked off with a bang, and a screening of the famous Omaha Beach Scene from Stephen Spielberg’s Saving Private Ryan. Bullets whizzed, their impact almost tangible. But Mr. Joye, curator of the...
If I had a few spare hours in the National Archives I know how I would spend my time – looking at the ‘M’ series indexes. The ‘M’ refers to ‘Miscellaneous’ and the title is apt as there is a wealth of diverse material. There are many rentals and estate...
A gentleman arrived in the Irish Family History Centre (CHQ Building, Dublin) to look up his wife’s Dublin-based family. He had very little information with him, so most of the detail he gave me was coming from memory. We found the marriage of the wife’s ancestors but had difficulty finding...
We meet many interesting people in the Irish Family History Centre (CHQ Building, Dublin) and some with very interesting ancestors. A gentleman visited us in early September 2017 whose ancestor, George Galphin/Galpin, had been part of the (mostly Presbyterian) Scots Irish who had emigrated to South Carolina during the 1700s....
Family history searches involve the who, the when, the where and the why of our ancestor’s lives. In assisting people with their searches, we tease out the names and approximate years for the events in their lives, be it births, marriages or deaths. In order to successfully find the family...