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Irish prisoner registry from 1790 to 1920 is launched

Valuable tool for roots research available online


The Irish Prison Registers 1790-1920, now available online
The Irish Prison Registers 1790-1920, now available online

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Today, findmypast.ie launched online for the first time the Irish Prison Registers 1790-1920, one of the greatest untapped resources for those tracing their Irish roots.

The original Prison Registers, held at the National Archives of Ireland, cover all types of custodial institutions, from bridewells, to county prisons, to sanatoriums for alcoholics. They contain over 3.5 million entries, spread over 130,000 pages, with most records giving comprehensive details of the prisoner, including: name, address, place of birth, occupation, religion, education, age, physical description, name and address of next of kin, crime committed, sentence, dates of committal and release/decease.

The registers offer a real insight into 18th-19th century Ireland. They present evidence of a society of rebellion and social confrontation, where rioting and assault of police officers were everyday occurrences, and of rampant poverty and destitution, with the theft of everything from handkerchiefs to turnips.

The reasons for incarceration cover all types of crime but unsurprisingly perhaps the most common offence was drunkenness, which accounted for over 30% of all crimes reported and over 25% of incarcerations. The top five offences recorded in the registers are:

1.    Drunkenness - 25%

2.    Theft - 16%

3.    Assault - 12%

4.    Vagrancy - 8%

5.    Rioting - 4%

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The nature of these crimes was significantly different from those recorded in the UK. The rate of conviction for drunkenness and tax evasion was three times greater, and the rate of both destruction of property and prostitution were double what they were in the UK for the same time period.1

The records are full of individuals who were arrested for very minor offences, for example a record from the Cork City Gaol Court Book lists an arrest for Giles O’Sullivan (26), with no education and no previous convictions, on the 30th of March 1848 for being “a dangerous and suspicious character”. Other examples of the heavy hand of the law can be seen in the case of John Cunningham from Finglas (21) who was arrested for “Washing a car on a thoroughfare” and young Christopher Doyle (14) arrested “for being an idle, disorderly rogue and vagabond”.


Nster.com


6 Comments

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@ Tooreenagrena The information is free to the public. The records are held at the National Archives and can be accessed free of charge. The National Archives does not receive enough funding from the Irish government (and never has), to undertake digitisation projects and so private companies see an opportunity here. Turning down a request from a private company to digitise the records means they would continue to sit, largely unused, in boxes in the NAI. Allowing a private company to access them is the lesser of two evils. I think the private companies availing of these projects should be required to pay for access to the records if they wish to use them for a commercial venture (perhaps they do, I do not know). If the Irish government had spent more time developing worthwhile projects such as arts and heritage instead of becoming embroiled in the materialism bred during the Celtic Tiger we would not be in this mess perhaps there would be money available to allow the National Archives to undertake digitisation projects such as this.
I am almost sure the brideswells were cells in local gardia stations/police stations. These records are not the whole story, I have actual papers, giving names, ages and crimes committed, around 1840-50. Steal a loaf of bread and you were sent by boat to Australia with a sentance of 7-10 years, thing was they never took these people back again after the 7 yrs, thousands of men and women ended thier days in Australia, never being able to buy thier way home again. This was british justice at the time. Most were for stealing food, a lump of coal, a coat, one woman was sentenced to 10years for stealing a jumper. God how my people have suffered for centuries just because they were irish
Would someone please explain what kind of "custodial institution" a brideswell is? Thanks in advance.
Thank God these records stopped in 1920. My ancestors on the creation of the border finding themselves in Leitrim, Donegal, and Fermanagh and all within "ceiliing" distance often when bringing "gifts" especially at Christmas or other holiday times were accosted by H.M. Customs mostly and this on occasion resulted in over night stays in government holdings.
Tooreenagrena. I would like to agree with your first statement in that families and individuals should have the right to opt out of having their family history posted online. However your second statement I do not believe is correct. The information is held with the National Archives of Ireland. I believe you can free of charge go to the Archives and research this information. What I believe you are paying for with findmypast is that they have gone to the Archives for you and entered this information. If you believe they should do this free of charge, well I do not believe it would have been done then. If you believe the government should have set up a website free of charge and offered it to anyone on the net well then that is a different story.
I really object to such records being passed to private companies. This information should be free to the public.
 




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