I gave a talk yesterday at South Ayrshire Libraries History and Family History Fair on Irish family history resources online, which had a great audience. Thanks to the organisers, and all the vendors there, for yet another great event.
In my talk I discussed how Irish research can often be more complicated than Scottish research, due to less detail in available Irish resources and in many cases, just a lack of resources - but it can still be done. Nowhere did this lesson hit home more so than last night, when quite unexpectedly I made the biggest discovery in my Irish family history research to date. It transpires that my ancestors, in this case the BILL family from Doagh, were involved in a major murder trial from 1874 - the Templepatrick Murder.
To understand the research process used to find it, I have written up last night's paper trail (website trail!) on my other wee blog at http://walkingineternity.blogspot.co.uk/2013/06/another-irish-eureka-moment-and-another.html.
Last year I had a book written and published about a murder in Perthshire involving my family - now there's another murder, this time in Ireland. I think I'm beginning to feel more like Columbo than a genie...!
Chris
My new book, Tracing Your Irish Family History on the Internet, is now available from Pen and Sword. My next Pharos Scottish course, Scotland 1750-1850: Beyond the Old Parish Registers, starts May 15th - see http://britishgenes.blogspot.co.uk/2013/04/scotland-1750-1850-beyond-oprs-starts.html. Time to smash a few brick walls...!
The GENES Blog (GEnealogy News and EventS) ceased publication on 14 FEB 2020. You will now find all the latest genealogy news and views on Scottish GENES at https://scottishgenes.blogspot.com. The GENES Blog archive will remain live, with a record of the genealogy news for Britain and Ireland from 2013-2020. Thank you!
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