Ireland Poorhouses, Poor Law, Etc

In 1838, the Poor Law Act divided Ireland into 159 districts called poor law unions. A workhouse was established in each union to house the poor. Each union elected a board of guardians to administer poor law relief. Test

Online Databases
Ask About Ireland, history and information about Poor Laws
 * National Archives of Ireland, guide to the records of the Poor Law
 * National Archives, finding records of workhouse inmates and staff
 * Workhouse Records and Archives
 * Dublin Workhouses ($)
 * Waterford Poor Law Union Board Of Guardians Minute Books, Index and images.
 * 1810-1887 - How to Use this Collection; Index, images available on Findmypast ($)
 * Ireland, Poor Law and Board of Guardian Records, 1839-1920 at Ancestry - index & images ($)

Records of the poor in Ireland are found in board of guardian minutes, in workhouse registers, and in the British Parliamentary Papers (unpublished). Information found in board of guardian minutes and workhouse registers may include names, dates of admission, places of birth or residence, ages, occupations, information about parents, testimony about conditions in the workhouse, and reports of disciplinary actions. Many of the minutes and registers are deposited in county libraries and national archives in Ireland.

The repositories of poor law records in Ireland are identified in chapter six of the following book:


 * Nolan, William. Tracing the Past: Sources for Local Studies in the Republic of Ireland. Dublin, Ireland: Geography Publications, 1982. (FHL book Ref 941.5 A3nw.)

Irish poor law records available at the Family History Library are listed in the Place Search of the catalog under the following headings:

IRELAND - POORHOUSES, POOR LAW, ETC

IRELAND, [COUNTY] - POORHOUSES, POOR LAW, ETC

Webb, R.C. Some Irish Poor in Lambeth. Records of Lambeth Board of Guardians deposited at the Greater London Record Office, volume entitled "Scotch and Irish Esaminations 1834-1846." It records the settlement examinations of those who because they were Scottish or Irish, were not entitled to Poor Relief in the normal way. Gives names, country of origin and length of residence in England. article in The Irish Ancestor, vol X. no.2. 1978, pages 108-115, Family History Library Salt lake City Ref. 941.5 B2i vol. 10-11.