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- Message-ID: <ROOTS-L%92111520375695@VM1.NODAK.EDU>
- Newsgroups: soc.roots
- Date: Sun, 15 Nov 1992 21:37:00 EST
- Reply-To: JWD@PSUVM.BITNET
- Sender: ROOTS-L Genealogy List <ROOTS-L@NDSUVM1.BITNET>
- From: JWD@PSUVM.BITNET
- Subject: re: Roscommon Heritage Center
- Lines: 54
-
- > "Matt Baney" <mattb@ssc-vax.boeing.com> wrote
-
- >I recently received a form and letter from the Roscommon Co.
- >Heritage Society. They say they will do family history research
- >for a fee of IR L40?? My questions are:
- > How much is IR L40 in US dollars?
- >and
- > What experiences has anyone had as far as getting results from
- > Irish heritage society's?? I have rather limited information,
- > basically only 4-5 names, a vague time period when they left
- > Ireland, and family lore that they came from "Roscommon"??
-
- Rather than responding directly to Matt, I am putting this on the net because
- it is of broader interest. An Irish pound is worth $ 1.67.
- I paid 30 pounds to the Sligo Heritage Center to look into my family and
- they found nothing. They looked in the church records for every parish in
- the county in the relevent period and checked the census and Griffiths
- Valuation. All in all a lot of effort to do yourself, especially since
- some of the Sligo parishes are in dioceses that require a letter from the
- parish priest or the bishop to look at the microfilms of the parish in
- the National Library. The Heritage Centers are computerizing the records
- which will make the search much easier for them than it would be for you.
- A big problem is that Irish parish records rarely predate 1850 by very
- much so it is easy to get stopped for Catholic Famine immigrants.
- In my instance, only about half of the parishes had records that went
- to 1833, my gg grandfather's birth year. The heritage center did tell
- me how many Dunn's lived in each parish so it gave me a probabilistic
- view of where they might have lived.
- Roscommon is a big county and also quite populous so for a common name
- without a year of birth or several names in a single household it may
- be hard to know if you have the right family. Most Irish names are
- fairly local so a single town might have 10 or 15 Michael Baneys in it.
- Identification is further compounded by the small number of first names
- in common use in former times. More than half the male population has
- one of these names - John, Michael, Patrick, James, Thomas, Dennis, Brian,
- Edward, and Anthony. The women are similarly named - Mary, Catherine,
- Bridget, Margaret, Susan, Ann, and a few more abound. Naming conventions
- have children named after grandparents, parents, and then aunts and uncles
- so one family name may have lots of Anthonys while another has hardly any.
-
- All in all, I thought the Sligo Heritage Center did as well as they could
- for me. In my case there was nothing to find.
- If you decide to hire the Roscommon Heritage Center, I still have my Irish
- checking account if you need a check in pounds. I'll charge you the
- exchange rate from the Wall Street Journal plus 29 cents for a stamp.
-
- Jim Dunn
- BITNET: JWD at PSUVM
- INTERNET:JWD@PSUVM.PSU.EDU
- Researching DUNN, PARKER, MCNELIS, BYRNE, BURNS, WALSH, CAVANAUGH
- LAVIN, CARNEY, PETTIGROVE, HORINE, PELHAM, MEARS, FRESHNEY,
- CANNON, DONOVAN, MONARCH, MEEHAN, DUNLEAVY, AND CARR.
- also LAME, PERKINS, COMSTOCK, FISKE, ADAMS, ROBINSON, PENROSE,
- and MASSEY but less actively.
-