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Louth
County, Ireland
There
are over 2000 pages on this web site, created over the last six years,
new pages are added constantly. It is not possible to link all these
pages to any one section of the site. Please use the search
engines provided to see if there are any other pages of interest
to you on this site, or elsewhere on the internet.
Louth
Genealogy
- Louth (History & people etc)

Paintings
by Lydia Lynagh
Laois Artist
I
don't like 'pure' genealogy per se, that is, the putting of names on
a family tree, instead I like to know about the people, how they lived
and the places they lived in. There are lots of people who are not like
me, who do like to know just the names and where they came from. The
pages linked to below are pretty much to do with pure genealogy (but
a little bit of the other thrown in!).
To my
mind, the Lewis Topographical Dictionary is one of the most valuable
and ignored tools for genealogists or family historians because it
gives us alternative names and spellings of parish names, also, most
importantly it names the religious parishes which cover any civil
parish.
There
is more to do with Louth Genealogy on the History & people tables
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County
Louth, history, geography, genealogy, people
Every
time I have seen someone ask if anyone knows anything about education
or emigration on any of the mail lists I have been subscribed to I
always think of the 1931 descriptions of the counties in Ireland which
I have on line. At the end of every county description there are tables
listing the figures for emigration from the county, education in the
county, whether or not the people speak Irish, and a breakdown of
the religious denominations in the county taken from various census
returns from 1821 through 1926. So, these descriptions are of historical
and genealogical importance.
The
Official Authority listings for the counties listed below include
the addresses of the people named, some of whom were lviing in County
Louth. The Diocescan listings were one of the first sets of pages
I created for this web site, because sometime way back then I had
read that when a man qualified as a priest he was usually put back
into his own parish, originally I had considered these tables of
importance because they told us the names of the Roman Catholic
parishes in a Diocese in 1836 (which sometimes changed over the
years) and they also told us the name of the closest post town -
this never changed. So, to me, these lists help if I am looking
for a Roman Catholic parish which no longer exists. I find the name
of the closest post town to where-ever it is I am loking for information
about and then I find the records which co exist for that area,
regardless of the name.
Lists
such as the 1832 Military list, the Revenue Officers, the Admiralty
Examinations, the General Synod, the Presbyterian Synod - these can
apply to any county - they are of genealogical & historical value.
Discovery Series Map 35: parts of Co's Cavan, Louth, Meath &
Monaghan. (General area: Shercock, Carrickmacross, Kingscourt,
Balieborough, Virginia)
Discovery Series Map 36: parts of Co's Armagh, Louth, Down, Meath
and Monaghan
Discovery
Series Map 43 : parts of Dublin, Louth, Meath & Westmeath.
(General area: Drogheda, Slane, Duleek, Balbriggan, Skerries,
Rush, Ashbourne)
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Saunders
Newsletter & Daily Advertiser 1816
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