MY GREAT GREAT GRANDFATHER PATRICK BURNS AND HIS SIBLINGS BRIDGET JOHN AND MARGARET... CAME TO PRESTON, LANCASHIRE, ENGLAND.. IN THE 1860S FROM ACHILL CO MAYO WHERE THEIR FATHER JOHN SENIOR HAD BEEN A LAY PREACHER AT THE PROTESTANT ACHILL MISSION... HE WAS BACK HOWEVER TO BEING A CATHOLIC AT HIS 1885 BURIAL... AND HIS 1845 ACHILL C OF I MARRIAGE GIVES HIS FATHER'S NAME AS PATRICK BURNS....
FROM RECORDS IN THE U K I KNOW THE FAMILY ARE ORIGINALLY NOT FROM MAYO BUT CO LIMERICK, INDEED RECENTLY RELEASED RECORDS HAVE PROVED FAMILY TRADITION RE THIS... I ALSO KNOW JOHN SENIOR'S FIRST WIFE AND MY 3 X GREAT GRANDMOTHER WAS CALLED MARY ANN O'SHAUGHNESSY..
A COMMISSIONED GENEALOGIACL RESEARCH FOUND THE ONLY RELEVANT RECORD TO QUOTE THEM WAS THE BAPTISM OF MARGARET IN 1838 IN RATHKEALE CO LIMERICK AS D. OF JOHN BURNS AND MARY ANN SHAUGHNESSY....
ANY HELP IN THIS MATTER WOULD BE WELCOMED..
REGARDS
PETE BURNS
PRESTON, LANCS, ENGLAND.
peteburns1964
Saturday 23rd Mar 2013, 01:06PMMessage Board Replies
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Births/Baptisms/Marriages/Deaths ? pre1790-1800 ? The reality of finding documentationpertaining to births/baptisms/marriages/deaths in Ireland prior to 1800 ? particularly in rural areas? is that they simply may not exist. Some registers for urban areas pre-dating 1800 may exist ?though often these can be fragmented- as there was an increased need in cities or larger towns todocument the population. Please also note that the Church of Ireland was the official church of thecountry and therefore the bulk of information that does survive for earlier periods is often fromthese registers. ROMAN CATHOLIC: Most Catholic records are held locally - One site which might be of use is -http://www.irishtimes.com/ancestor/browse/ - where you can ?browse? an overview of availablerecords per county. If you have any difficulty, you could try writing to the parish priest for possibleassistance. CHURCH OF IRELAND: Church of Ireland parish registers for the period up to 1870-are publicrecords. Registers are available for about one third of the parishes, however many were destroyedin the Public Records Office in Dublin in 1922. Most are still held by the local clergy, althoughsome are in the National Archives of Ireland and others are in the Representative Church BodyLibrary in Dublin. A list of all surviving registers is available in the National Archives. http://ireland.anglican.org/about/42 and http://www.nationalarchives.ie/. The Anglican Record Projectis has created an index to their records: http://ireland.anglican.org/cmsfiles/pdf/AboutUs/library/AngRecord/bunclodyunionindex.pdf PRESBYTERIAN: Presbyterian registers are held in three main locations: in local custody, in the PublicRecords of Northern Ireland (PRONI) http://www.proni.gov.uk/index/family_history.htm and atthe Presbyterian Historical Society http://www.presbyterianhistoryireland.com in Belfast. PRONIhas microfilm copies of almost all registers in Northern Ireland and also lists of records held by thePresbyterian Historical Society. For the rest of Ireland, almost all records are in local custody. It candifficult to locate these as many congregations in the South have moved, amalgamated, or simplydisappeared over the last sixty years. The next thing you could do is find the counties and places in Ireland your family names are mostprevalent. Look at the website http://www.irishtimes.com/ancestor/surname/ and perhapssomething will match some other clue you may have found elsewhere? If nothing turnsup ? it is advisable to try different variations of the spellings of the names. If you have a possiblefirst name you could try the Irish Census 1901, 1911 at www.census.nationalarchives.ie/ or the landvaluation record called Griffiths Valuationhttp://askaboutireland.ie/griffith-valuation/index.xml