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Local History
Clearly there are many ways you can
approach Local History. The excellent book edited by Raymond Gillespie
and Myrtle Hill on Doing Irish Local History: Pursuit and Practice,
published by the Institute of Irish Studies, Queen's University of
Belfast in 1998 is just one of a number of publications which provide
guidance on such matters
When I investigate
the history of a locality (and by locality I mean a group of townlands in the countryside, a village or a town)
I'm looking for evidence on
the people who lived there at various times in the past, what
they did for a living, what the area was like in the past and how it changed over
time. The end product of these studies may be something that is written
up in continuous prose, or it may just be a collection of sources and
databases such as the material I have gathered together on the Ballymoney
district where I was born.
In the past I would have used this material to illustrate particular
themes within my academic work in social and economic history. Now, I
just do it out of curiosity. Below I have outlined the way I go about
gathering the evidence.
In a town I tend to
begin with a street and in the countryside with a
townland, moving out from these focal points to
encompass an area which in some way forms a locality
and community which is of a size that it is
manageable in terms of working with sources.
I use much the same
sources for both town and countryside and, even if I
do not know a street or a townland, I proceed
something like this.
- I find out
which Barony, Civil Parish, Poor Law Union and
District Electoral Division (DED) it belonged
to. I will need this information when I go
looking for historical records.
- I get the
six-inch Ordnance Survey Maps covering the
1830s, c.1860, c1905 and c.1930s. In towns I get
the large-scale maps of the towns for similar
dates
- I get a copy of
the Griffith's Printed Valuation of circa 1860 plus the
Valuation Map that accompanies it. This allows
me to people the townland or street at that time
and have an idea of where each family lives, who
are the farmers and who are the cottiers, etc..in
the countryside. For towns, I also look at the
street directories, particularly for the period
1846 to 1864. I database these, which means that
I can usually match them up with Griffith's
which means that I know where people lived in
the town and their occupation or profession.
I now have a choice -
I can go back from 1860 to say the 1830s or I can go
forward towards the 1900s and the present day. In
most instances I choose the latter.
- I then look at
the Census Enumerators' Returns of 1901 and 1911
which give detailed information on all members
of the family living in each house in those
years, and, the Revisions to the Griffith's
Valuation dating from 1864 and running through
to the 1930s which note changes in the occupiers
of houses and land during that period. I have
mentioned these together because I often move
from one to the other and sometimes I begin with
Griffith's and sometimes with the Census
Returns. I usually create databases from the
surnames which makes it easier for me to find
people and cross-reference them. I also database
more of the street directories c.1900. The fact
that the 1911 census is now online [and the 1901
will follow shortly] makes this whole process
much easier.
- If there are
some families that I want more detail on, I
consult the appropriate church registers of
baptisms, burials and marriages. If necessary, I
consult the civil registers.
- At this point I
will have a good deal of information on the
families who lived in the street or townland
between 1860 and circa 1930. The story from 1930
to the present can usually be filled out by
people living in the town or townland today. A
visit at this point to talk to older inhabitants
is probably better than going at an earlier
time. By this stage I have information on the
place and showing it to people can jog their
memory, and, some of the oral information
relating to the past will make more sense to me.
- I search for
other sources which will allow me to to gain a
better understanding of the social and economic
life of the area and what it looked like during
the period. Clearly, photographs provide the
best evidence of what a place looked like in the
past. Whilst there are plenty of photographs of
the countryside in general, it is often
difficult to get any relating to a specific
townland or group of townlands. Usually more
photographs of particular towns survive. Sources
such as emigrant letters, estate records
containing rental and agent's correspondence
with the landlord, reports of parliamentary
commissions, newspaper, etc. provide me
with some evidence of social and economic life
not only in the relatively small area that I am
studying but also in the wider region of which
it is a part.
I then turn my
attention to the period before 1860. As with family history, going back to the
first half of the nineteenth century, and indeed earlier, is perhaps
more difficult. Nevertheless, I still try to try to find out who was
living there in the first half of the nineteenth
century and what life was like for them.
- Sources such as the Ordnance
Survey Memoirs for the 1830s, parliamentary commissions and reports,
travellers' accounts, etc. provide me with more general information on what life
in the area was like at that time. This was a
period when there was great interest in England
on what was going on in Ireland, so many private
individuals and officials were writing about it.
- It is more difficult to
identify all of the families who lived in an
area at that time. The locality studies will show
you the sources which give lists of
names for this earlier period. Most of
the sources listed in the site will be available
for other areas in the province but there are
some, such as the lists of inhabitants which
accompany the early town maps of Ballymoney,
which are particular to that town.
- However, a word of caution.
I usually find
people in the Tithe Applotment Books whose names
are familiar to me but, without evidence from parish registers,
it is often difficult to be sure about their relationship to others with
the same name, or to persons that I managed to identify in the later years of the
nineteenth century. Church registers are necessary to establish
relationships between people but, unfortunately,
they can be very patchy for this period.
The seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
are very interesting periods but, as in most earlier periods of history,
the sources are not as extensive and are often more difficult to
decipher and interpret, not least because they belong to a very
different historical period. But, where sources are available for a
particular locality, studies of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
can be very rewarding. Again the same word of caution, mentioned above,
regarding the recognition of surnames.
As an exercise, you could apply the above
procedures to the Ballymoney Town, Seacon and Killyramer locality
studies which can be accessed in the top menu of the website.
You can see what I
found out about my townland, Forttown, about two
miles outside the town of Ballymoney, in the book
Townlands in Ulster: Local History Studies edited by W. H.
Crawford & R. H. Foy, published by Ulster Historical Foundation in
association with the Federation of Ulster Local Studies in 1998. There
are also more case studies of localities on the
Researching Derry & Londonderry Ancestors CD.
Copyright 2009 W.Macafee.
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