@DSRGenealogist Tell me what you include. I'd be curious. Even typing it out has made be see gaps. I didn't notice until now that there's a gap between Baptismal records which would be why I only have 4 kids in this family.
Currently I'm working on "Ancestor sheets" that I can use while I'm researching in Dublin. Now realizing how this could be a useful tool to record my research. (I have never liked research logs)
I just found these two records. https://t.co/SVSsrAwijV and https://t.co/uoxQ0y8VRj I'm not too sure what's in them but these may have to do with my 4th great grandfather Edmund Condon. Not sure if there's a way in Ireland I could get these records.
@Ryan_Genealogy@irishhistory I can imagine. You'd think there would be privacy laws and other things that would protect projects that document difficult history like this.
https://t.co/vT6kqc9agF
I have been listening to @irishhistory to better understand my Irish roots. I am currently listening to an episode about this event (more current event than history but crazy). Oral history can't be used as police evidence!
@DSRGenealogist Maybe a still birth that wasnโt recorded? I have that on my Italian lines, my 2nd great grandmother had 2 stillborn sons before her 1st son survived, so she named that son after her dad, which isnโt traditional naming custom.
I will say church records in Ireland are uhm. Interesting. Anyway, I believe the green underline is Thomas Fitzgerald and Ellen Moher. Although my mind is easily changed and I'm curious what others think.