Irish roots: genealogy for the people, by the people
Volunteers are taking up the challenge of maintaining county records
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Genealogists have long memories, it's almost the job definition. So many Irish researchers of a certain age, myself included, will feel a frisson of horror at the acronym IGP.
For them, it brings back the "Irish Genealogical Project" – an attempt under the Haughey regime to shoehorn everyone involved in genealogy into a single rickety organisation by flinging cute-hoor money at them. Money from the IDA, the Soldiers and Sailors Fund, Fás, the Ireland fund, Bórd Fáilte . . . all with different (and competing) strings attached.
It is no more, thanks be, though it has a kind of afterlife in rootsireland.ie. But the acronym IGP had already existed, and continues to exist as something more benign entirely.
"Ireland Genealogy Projects" (igp-web.com) is the umbrella name for a series of Irish-American volunteer transcription sites, some dating from the 1990s, dedicated to providing gateways to genealogical information about each Irish county. The idea is that an individual takes responsibility for a county and then curates the county webpages, providing a home for volunteer-transcribed records. And the range of these records is huge, including such things as gravestone transcripts, local RIC enlistments, mass cards, directories, school registers and church records.
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