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1.
Introduction
The
household returns and ancillary records for the censuses of
Ireland of 1901 and 1911, which are in the custody of the National
Archives of Ireland, represent an extremely valuable part
of the Irish national heritage, and a resource for
genealogists, local historians and other scholars which has
not as yet been developed to its fullest potential. The Irish
diaspora is estimated to amount to 70 million people in all
parts of the globe, and many of these have an interest in
their family and local history. The digitization of the
equivalent records for England, Wales and Scotland has proved
hugely popular with users, as has the digitization of Canadian
and United States census records. The National Archives of
Ireland has established a research partnership with Library
and Archives Canada to facilitate digitization, indexing
and contextualisation of our 1901 and 1911 census records.
2.
The records
The
returns for 1901 and 1911 are arranged by townland (the
smallest division of land) or, in urban areas, by street.
The 1901 census lists, for every member of each
household; name, age, sex, relationship to head of the
household, religion, occupation, marital status and county or
country of birth. The
census also records an individual’s ability to read or write
and ability to speak the Irish language.
All of this information is given on Form A of the
census, which was filled in and signed by the head of each
household. Where the head of the household could not write,
his or her mark, usually an X, was recorded and witnessed by
the enumerator.
The
same information was recorded in the 1911 census, with one
significant addition: married women were required to state the
number of years they had been married, the number of their
children born alive and the number still living.
In
addition to returns for every household in the country, both
censuses contain returns for police and military barracks,
public and private asylums, prisons, hospitals, workhouses,
colleges, boarding schools and industrial schools among other
institutions.
The
returns for both censuses also give details of houses,
recording the number of windows, type of roof and number of
rooms occupied by each family. Each
house is also classified according to its overall condition.
The number of out-offices and farm buildings attached
to each household is also given. This information is recorded
by the enumerator, who provided summaries of the returns for
each townland and street, including the religious denomination
of occupants. These summaries include a list of heads of
household, thus providing a nominal index for each townland or
street.
The
1901 and 1911 censuses are an excellent source both for the
history student and the genealogical researcher.
They are obviously a principal source for Irish social
and economic history in the early twentieth century. They also
provide enormous scope for local study, and can be used with
trade and street directories to provide detailed information
on the composition and development of urban areas in
particular.
3.
The Project
LAC
will digitize the 1901 and 1911 census records to preservation
standards, and two indexes will be created, linked to the
digital images: a topographical index based on townland/street
within District Electoral Division, and a nominal index to
every individual listed in both censuses. A website will be
created of which these images and indexes will form the core,
with contextual material consisting of historical commentary,
photographs, digitized documents from the period from Ireland
and Canada and links to relevant
scholarly and genealogical sites.
Catriona
Crowe
Senior Archivist, Special Projects
National Archives of Ireland
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