From the Department of Social Protection:
An additional year of historic Births, Marriages and Deaths, including births in 1923 and deaths in 1973 are now available to view on the website www.irishgenealogy.ie. The records now available online include:
Birth register records – 1864 to 1923
Marriage register records – 1845 to 1948
Death register records – 1864 to 1973
Minister for Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media, Catherine Martin TD, welcomed this latest release:
“This release of an additional year of register data by the Civil Registration Service is part of the ongoing partnership between my Department and the Department of Social Protection.
“The aim of this continuing project is to make all these historic records freely and easily accessible to all members of the public and broader diaspora via the www.irishgeneaology.ie website.
“I’m sure both new and returning visitors to the site, will welcome the addition of these records for continued research.
“I know that this annual update is eagerly anticipated and will be of great benefit to anyone carrying out research on their Irish ancestry.”
Minister for Social Protection, Heather Humphreys TD, added:
“I very much welcome the ongoing partnership between our two Departments, which has allowed us to make this latest tranche of information easily available.
“The civil records of birth, death and marriages published on www.irishgenealogy.ie are critical to helping us understand the identity, lifestyles and experiences of our ancestors.
“Civil registration records give us a really solid sense of our identity and connection and this is why this project is so important to the Irish diaspora at home and abroad.”
Notes:
The records being launched are the Birth register entries for 1923, Marriage Register entries for 1948 and Death Register entries for 1973. These entries show important information that are often vital in helping people to find out about their ancestry.
For Births these include:
Child’s Forename/s
Child’s Surname
Date of Birth
Place of Birth
Father’s Name and Address
Mother’s Name and Maiden Name if Married
Father’s Occupation
Signature of Informant (Person who registered the birth)
Date of Registration of the Birth
For Marriages these include:
Marriage location
Date of Marriage
Forename/s & Surnames of Bride and Groom
Age at time of Marriage
Condition (i.e. Bachelor, Spinster or Widowed)
Occupation of Bride and Groom
Bride’s and Groom’s Fathers’ Names and Addresses
Occupations of Bride’s and Groom’s Fathers
Signature of Bride and Groom
Signature of Witnesses
For Deaths these include:
Date and Place of Death
Name and Surname of Deceased
Male or Female
Condition of deceased (i.e. Bachelor, Spinster or Widowed)
Age at last Birthday
Rank, Profession or Occupation of Deceased
Cause of Death and duration of illness
Signature, qualification and residence of informant
Date of registration
The years covered by the historic records of Births, Marriages and Deaths available on the www.irishgenealogy.ie website are:
Births: 1864 to 1923
Marriages: 1845* to 1948
Deaths: 1871** to 1973
* Civil Registration of Marriages in the Roman Catholic Church only commenced in 1864.
**The Civil Registration Service are currently working on updating the remaining records of Deaths dating back to 1864. These will be included in future updates to the records available on the website.
Every year an additional year of Birth, Marriage and Death entries are added to the website.
The website is free to use and no subscription or registration is required to use it. In 2023 2,224,735 users visited the site and recorded a total number of 4,590,247 visits to the site.
Notable additions to records available with the 2024 refresh:
Birth 1923:
Patrick John Hillery, (02 May 1923 – 12 April 2008).
He was born on 2 May, 1923, in Miltown Malbay, Co. Clare and qualified as a medical doctor. He married Mary Beatrice Finnegan in 1955.
In 1951 Dr. Hillery was elected to Dáil Éireann for the constituency of Clare and he received his first Government appointment as Minister for Education in 1959.
He subsequently served in a number of ministerial posts (Industry and Commerce, Labour and Foreign Affairs) prior to his appointment in 1973 as Vice President of the then Commission of the European Communities, with special responsibility for Social Affairs. He served as Commissioner until 1976, when he was inaugurated as the sixth President of Ireland on 3 December, 1976.
He died on 12th April 2008.
Brendan Behan, (09 Feb 1923 – 20 Mar 1964).
Born on February 9th 1923, Brendan Behan was an Irish poet, short story writer, novelist, playwright, and Irish Republican activist who wrote in both English and Irish. He achieved notoriety and global celebrity owing to his talent and wit as a writer and journalist,
Behan’s uncle Peadar Kearney wrote The Soldier’s Song, which became the Irish national anthem Amhrán na bhFiann when translated into Irish.
Deaths 1973:
Thomas McEllistrim (14 October 1894 – 4 December 1973)
Thomas McEllistrim was an Irish Fianna Fáil politician who served as a TD from 1923 to 1969. He was a military activist in the period from 1916 to 1923.
He rejected the Anglo-Irish Treaty and fought in the Anti-Treaty IRA during the Irish Civil War of 1922 to 1923. He was one of the senior IRA figures in Kerry during this conflict, under the command of Humphrey Murphy. In the war’s early months, he commanded a Kerry column in the fighting in Limerick and at the Battle of Kilmallock, before retreating back into Kerry and pursuing guerrilla warfare. In January 1923, he, along with John Joe Sheehy, led an attack on the National Army barracks at Castlemaine, Co. Kerry.
McEllistrim was elected to the Dáil as a TD for Kerry in August 1923, only months after the end of the civil war, as a republican candidate.