Civil Registration

Civil registration is a double edged sword. We are always delighted when our searches fall in to the time when we might find a birth, marriage or death for our ancestors. These records can often lead us to new learnings about our ancestors.

Finding the correct civil record for ‘our’ ancestors can often be a frustrating, time consuming, costly but, ultimately, worthwhile experience. We might confirm our ancestor’s occupation as say, a soldier, at a given point in time. If we find a birth, say in the early 1900s, and the father’s occupation is other than a soldier, we might know that our ancestor may only have enlisted after that time.

If we have ‘clustering ‘of families of the same name in the one area, then identifying the likely record from online indexes can present considerable challenges. Until the mother’s maiden name appears on the General Register Office indexes, we cannot know if a particular birth is the one we seek. This may involve purchasing multiple records at the General Register Office, making our pursuit an expensive one.

Finding marriages is less of a roll of the dice, as we have two parties to match up, in the same time and place, increasing our chances of getting the correct record. Using the marriage matcher on findmypast, we should see the two known parties to the marriage before we purchase. It can happen that the two parties on an index did not in fact marry each other, and we have to rethink our search. This can lead us down very interesting byways, leading us to consider the possibility that our ancestors did not in fact marry each other. Which gives us an entirely different perspective on our family’s history.

Expert Researcher

Carmel Gilbride

carmel gilbride


By Laura Carroll

Comments

8 years ago

As a overseas Irish male, having left Dublin in 1958 and never had a desire to return. My English wife started me on family history, researching her family in England, we researched back on her family Addleton, back to 1620? Then we started on my Irish family, back in 1992. That is when brick walls, and one obstacle after obstacle, raised the frustration levels, due to the total lack of on line information. Even now, when you can check the UK indexes of B.M.Ds up to 2005+ For some unknown reason, known only to the Irish, the cutoff dates for Births of 100 Marriages 75 & deaths up to 50 years. Leads me to ask just what has the Irish State to hide? At least BMD indexes should match the rest of the countries that make up the British Isles.

8 years ago

I believe that the Irish GRO are now out to milk the overseas Plastic Paddy's to help the Irish Government finances, why else would the GRO double the cost of a BMD certificate. Just sheer greed

8 years ago

I know the frustrations! There is a 100 year ban on records in case someone alive does not want their information accessed - the Freedom of Information Act and the Data Protection Act cover it - there is a Commissioner for the latter, let them know your feelings! Since 1820 for Catholics there is BDM, as before then they were not recorded citizens, but Anglicans were, due to the Penal Laws enforced. Parish records were scant, and are online for free on nationalarchive.ie but you have to make out the handwriting and the records are often in Latin, not English, or worse still, a combination of the two, if not three languages of Latin, English and Irish!


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