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DTSTART:20251210T200000Z
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SUMMARY:Finding Your Irish Roots: The Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland
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DESCRIPTION:Finding Your Irish Roots: The Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland\n\n12/10/25 03:00 PM EST\n - 12/10/25 04:00 PM EST\Description:\n\n\nFinding Your Irish Roots: The Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland\n10 December 2025\n3:00 PM - 4:00 PM Eastern\nPresenters: Dr. Ciarán Wallace, Co-Director and Dr. Brian Gurrin, Research Lead on Census and Population Records\nThe Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland\nFree webinar open to all\n\nThe Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland (VRTI) is an international research partnership working to virtually reconstruct the records lost in the destruction of the Public Record Office of Ireland in 1922. Based in Trinity College Dublin, the Virtual Treasury contains over 350,000 replacement records shared by partner archives and libraries around the globe. In June 2025 it launched a new Population Portal bringing together extensive genealogical resources into one location.\n\nJoin APG on 10 December 2025 for a webinar featuring Dr. Ciarán Wallace, Co-Director of the VRTI and Dr. Brian Gurrin, Research Lead on Census and Population Records, who will explain archival tragedy and reconstruction, and demonstrate the many genealogical resources available on the free research platform. APG is pleased to be a supporter of the preservation efforts of the VRTI. \n\n\nRegister for the webinar\n\nCaption: The above image is a damaged 1821 census record, a rare survivor retrieved from the rubble in 1922. Photo credit: National Archives, Ireland. Available at https://virtualtreasury.ie/item/NAI-CEN-1821-54-5\n\n\nAbout the Presenters:\nCiarán Wallace is Co-Director of the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland (VRTI), an international partnership working to restore seven centuries of Irish historical records destroyed in the Battle of the Four Courts, Dublin, in 1922. This free online resource has gathered over 350,000 replacement records to date. Ciarán completed his PhD on Dublin's municipal politics at Trinity College Dublin (2010), where he subsequently held a Government of Ireland Post-doctoral Fellowship. Having lectured at universities in Ireland and Britain, he returned to Dublin in 2016 at the start of the Virtual Treasury’s work. Ciarán has published on social history, urban history, archives, and on Irish political cartoons. His book on Meath: the Irish Revolution (1912 – 1923) was launched was launched in October 2025.\n\nBrian Gurrin is the census specialist on the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland project. Brian has written extensively on census taking in Ireland and is interested in the demographics of Ireland, and its regions, in the pre-Famine period, with a particular interest in religious demographics. His research during the Virtual Treasury project has seen the names and details of more than 80,000 individuals, recorded in the lost nineteenth-century censuses of Ireland, being identified and introduced into the Virtual Treasury’s Population Portal. His joint authored (with Kerby Miller and Liam Kennedy) volume, The Irish religious censuses of the 1760s, was published by the Irish Manuscripts Commission in 2022. His joint authored (with Liam Kennedy, Donald MacRaild and Lewis Darwen) volume, The Death Census of Black ’47: eyewitness accounts of Ireland’s Great Famine, was published in 2023.\n\n \Details:\nAbout the Presenters:\n \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nCiarán Wallace is Co-Director of the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland (VRTI), an international partnership working to restore seven centuries of Irish historical records destroyed in the Battle of the Four Courts, Dublin, in 1922. This free online resource has gathered over 350,000 replacement records to date.\nCiarán completed his PhD on Dublin's municipal politics at Trinity College Dublin (2010), where he subsequently held a Government of Ireland Post-doctoral Fellowship. Having lectured at universities in Ireland and Britain, he returned to Dublin in 2016 at the start of the Virtual Treasury’s work.\nCiarán has published on social history, urban history, archives, and on Irish political cartoons. His book on Meath: the Irish Revolution (1912 – 1923) was launched was launched in October 2025..\n\n \n\nBrian Gurrin is the census specialist on the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland project. Brian has written extensively on census taking in Ireland and is interested in the demographics of Ireland, and its regions, in the pre-Famine period, with a particular interest in religious demographics. His research during the Virtual Treasury project has seen the names and details of more than 80,000 individuals, recorded in the lost nineteenth-century censuses of Ireland, being identified and introduced into the Virtual Treasury’s Population Portal. His joint authored (with Kerby Miller and Liam Kennedy) volume, The Irish religious censuses of the 1760s, was published by the Irish Manuscripts Commission in 2022. His joint authored (with Liam Kennedy, Donald MacRaild and Lewis Darwen) volume, The Death Census of Black ’47: eyewitness accounts of Ireland’s Great Famine, was published in 2023.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Finding Your Irish Roots: The Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland<br /><br />12/10/25 03:00 PM EST - 12/10/25 04:00 PM EST<br />Description:<br /><p><img alt="" src="https://apgen.org/photos/2025_Webinars_logo_03132025174546.PNG" style="float:right; width:150px" /></p>

<h2>Finding Your Irish Roots: The Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland</h2>
10 December 2025<br />
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM Eastern<br />
Presenters:&nbsp;Dr. Ciar&aacute;n Wallace, Co-Director and Dr. Brian Gurrin, Research Lead on Census and Population Records<br />
The Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland<br />
<strong>Free webinar open to all</strong><br />
<br />
<a href="https://virtualtreasury.ie/item/NAI-CEN-1821-54-5"><img alt="The above imageÂ is a damaged census record, a rare survivor retrieved from the rubble in 1922. Available at https://virtualtreasury.ie/item/NAI-CEN-1821-54-5" src="https://apgen.org/photos/Ireland_virtual_records_sample_10272025141712.PNG" style="float:left; margin:5px 10px; width:200px" /></a>The Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland (VRTI) is an international research partnership working to virtually reconstruct the records lost in the destruction of the Public Record Office of Ireland in 1922. Based in Trinity College Dublin, the Virtual Treasury contains over 350,000 replacement records shared by partner archives and libraries around the globe. In June 2025 it launched a new Population Portal bringing together extensive genealogical resources into one location.<br />
<br />
Join APG on 10 December 2025 for a webinar featuring Dr. Ciar&aacute;n Wallace, Co-Director of the VRTI and Dr. Brian Gurrin, Research Lead on Census and Population Records, who will explain archival tragedy and reconstruction, and demonstrate the many genealogical resources available on the free research platform. APG is pleased to be a supporter of the preservation efforts of the VRTI.&nbsp;<br />
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<br />
<a class="simple-button-plugin" href="https://members.apgen.org/members/evr/reg_event.php?evid=58870751&amp;orgcode=APG" style="display: inline-block; background-color: rgb(157, 21, 53); border: 1px solid rgb(157, 21, 53); padding: 5px 10px; border-radius: 0px; font-size: 16px; cursor: pointer; color: rgb(255, 255, 255) !important; text-decoration: none !important;" target="_blank">Register for the webinar</a><br />
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<em>Caption: The above image&nbsp;is a damaged 1821 census record, a rare survivor retrieved from the rubble in 1922. Photo credit: National Archives, Ireland. Available at <a href="https://virtualtreasury.ie/item/NAI-CEN-1821-54-5">https://virtualtreasury.ie/item/NAI-CEN-1821-54-5</a></em>

<h3><br />
About the Presenters:</h3>
<strong>Ciar&aacute;n Wallace</strong> is Co-Director of the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland (VRTI), an international partnership working to restore seven centuries of Irish historical records destroyed in the Battle of the Four Courts, Dublin, in 1922. This free online resource has gathered over 350,000 replacement records to date. Ciar&aacute;n completed his PhD on Dublin's municipal politics at Trinity College Dublin (2010), where he subsequently held a Government of Ireland Post-doctoral Fellowship. Having lectured at universities in Ireland and Britain, he returned to Dublin in 2016 at the start of the Virtual Treasury&rsquo;s work. Ciar&aacute;n has published on social history, urban history, archives, and on Irish political cartoons. His book on <em>Meath: the Irish Revolution (1912 &ndash; 1923) </em>was launched was launched in October 2025.<br />
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<strong>Brian Gurrin </strong>is the census specialist on the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland project. Brian has written extensively on census taking in Ireland and is interested in the demographics of Ireland, and its regions, in the pre-Famine period, with a particular interest in religious demographics. His research during the Virtual Treasury project has seen the names and details of more than 80,000 individuals, recorded in the lost nineteenth-century censuses of Ireland, being identified and introduced into the Virtual Treasury&rsquo;s Population Portal. His joint authored (with Kerby Miller and Liam Kennedy) volume, <em>The Irish religious censuses of the 1760s</em>, was published by the Irish Manuscripts Commission in 2022. His joint authored (with Liam Kennedy, Donald MacRaild and Lewis Darwen) volume, <em>The Death Census of Black &rsquo;47: eyewitness accounts of Ireland&rsquo;s Great Famine</em>, was published in 2023.<br />
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<a href="https://virtualtreasury.ie/"><img alt="Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland logo" src="https://apgen.org/photos/VRTI_English-Irish-CMYK_15_10272025141857.PNG" style="width:250px" /></a>&nbsp;<br />Details:<br /><h3>About the Presenters:</h3>
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<div><strong>Ciar&aacute;n Wallace</strong>&nbsp;is Co-Director of the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland (VRTI), an international partnership working to restore seven centuries of Irish historical records destroyed in the Battle of the Four Courts, Dublin, in 1922. This free online resource has gathered over 350,000 replacement records to date.<br />
Ciar&aacute;n completed his PhD on Dublin's municipal politics at Trinity College Dublin (2010), where he subsequently held a Government of Ireland Post-doctoral Fellowship. Having lectured at universities in Ireland and Britain, he returned to Dublin in 2016 at the start of the Virtual&nbsp;Treasury&rsquo;s work.<br />
Ciar&aacute;n has published on social history, urban history, archives, and on Irish political cartoons. His book on&nbsp;<em>Meath: the Irish Revolution (1912 &ndash; 1923)</em>&nbsp;was launched was launched in October 2025..</div>

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<div><strong>Brian Gurrin&nbsp;</strong>is the census specialist on the&nbsp;Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland project. Brian has written extensively on census taking in Ireland and is interested in the demographics of Ireland, and its&nbsp;regions, in the pre-Famine period, with a particular interest in religious&nbsp;demographics. His research during the Virtual Treasury project has seen the&nbsp;names and details of more than 80,000 individuals, recorded in the lost&nbsp;nineteenth-century censuses of Ireland, being identified and introduced into&nbsp;the Virtual Treasury&rsquo;s Population Portal. His joint authored (with Kerby Miller&nbsp;and Liam Kennedy) volume,&nbsp;<em>The Irish religious censuses of the 1760s</em>, was&nbsp;published by the Irish Manuscripts Commission in 2022. His joint authored (with Liam Kennedy, Donald MacRaild and Lewis Darwen) volume,&nbsp;<em>The Death Census of&nbsp;Black &rsquo;47: eyewitness accounts of Ireland&rsquo;s Great Famine</em>, was published in&nbsp;2023.</div>
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