Over 250,000 names added to an online database of Irish births, marriages, and deaths.

In 2017, over 250,000 names were added to an online database of Irish births, marriages, and deaths. The Irish Genealogical Research Society (IGRS) first established a marriage database in 2014 when it put 40,000 marriage certificates online, subsequently adding entries for births and deaths too.

The work was particularly arduous as many public records were destroyed during the Irish Civil War in 1922 when the newly composed Free State Army attacked and destroyed the Four Courts where the records were housed. But despite this, three years after their initial launch, the organization made a quarter of a million entries.

To do so, the IGRS regularly trawled through newspaper articles, obituaries, gravestones, military and church records all to expand their own records. In a statement on their website Chairman Steven Smyrl said, “It is surprising that newspapers are still a much-underutilized source for biographical information. In particular, notices of death become more common from the 1830s onwards as the middle classes begin to grow in strength and numbers.”

Read more: What are the top 100 Irish last names?

Irish Genealogical Research Society’s Birth Database Doubles in Size to 20,000 https://t.co/vG79VvMVGx pic.twitter.com/TYrVKmUtsb

— Dick Eastman (@dickeastman) October 5, 2016

They also made significant progress thanks to the British Civil Service Evidence of Age Index, which helped them add 1,400 births and 1,200 marriages to their database.

As the records date back centuries, occasionally people themselves lacked formal documentation for their own births and had to rely on the sworn testimony of their friends and families.

One such person was James Carey who was born just a year before the first year of the Great Famine in Clonoulty, County Tipperary. 22 years later his neighbor Patrick Tierney provided sworn testimony as to his birth on 7th January 1844, commenting: “I can declare to same from the fact that my father died on said day.”

The Early Irish Marriage Index is completely free to all who wish to use it, those wishing to browse the Early Irish Birth and Death Indexes are required to take out membership of the IGRS.

* Originally published in 2017.