Why should I commission a
professional researcher?
For many family historians the pleasure is in the search
and though there is a lot that the individual can do towards
building a family tree via the Internet, LDS centres, etc,
there are a number of advantages to commissioning research.
One problem facing the family historian is that access to
sources is relatively restricted unless one actually makes the
journey to Ireland and ven if one does go personally to the
principal libraries and archives the nature of the records
tends to make research long and painstaking.
The Internet is a very useful tool for making enquiries and
getting help but as a practical research tool the web is quite
limited. Online guides and newsgroups are helpful but
searchable databases are the exception rather to the rule and
although this will certainly change in years to come there is
not a lot of actual genealogical research that can be done on
the net at the moment.
Irish records are far less complete than those of countries
such as the US and Australia. Civil registration for most of
the population did not begin until 1864 and most of the Census
records prior to 1901 have not survived. For this reason
research will often be concentrated on less systematic,
unindexed, handwritten records such as church records and
estate records. These records can often be illegible to the
inexperienced eye and much time and wasted effort can be saved
by employing an experienced genealogist who is familiar with
less accessible sources.
The experienced researcher can avoid wasting time looking
for records that are not going to be found. Many family
historians spend hours upon hours trawling through records
without having done prepatory research that could have
eliminated those records form the search. Searching records in
the correct order can be critical if you are to avoid
pointless research. Therefore the professional genealogist can
achieve in a 5 hour block of research what might take the
novice 20-30 hours.
What can I expect to find?
The simple answer is that the likelihood of locating
records and the volume of records available is dictated mainly
by 4 factors:
1. When your ancestor was born
2. Where your ancestor's
family came from
3. What religion your ancestor's family
were
4. Your ancestor's position in society/occupation
There are likely to be more sources available relevant to
your ancester if he/she was Protestant, born after during the
nineteenth century in the North or East of the country and
relatively wealthy/professional. On the other hand if your
ancestor was born c.1720 in the west of Ireland and without
property then the likelihood of finding any information
diminishes greatly. The most significant factor is when your
ancestor was born because there are comprehensive birth and
marriage records after 1864
Where should I begin?
Before you submit the information that you already have
there are a number of sources that should be consulted in
order to maximise the chances of tracing further records:
1. Family records/Bible
2. Naturalization Records
3.
Death/Cemetary Records
4. Passenger Lists
5. Military
Records