Along with the privately collected/published family histories also included in our Research Library are a number of family histories that were published by Ulster Historical Foundation or published by the Foundation in association with our Guild members.

Never to be Heard From Again

By the author

The backbone of this history is on a comment of my father’s many years ago. He was speaking about some cousins of his own father’s who had left Ireland in the 1870s and 80s “and they were never heard from again”. It stuck in my mind as a child, and became a bigger question as I got older. How could three grown men just disappear like that and no one know what happened to them? It would be many years before I understood the dynamics of the time - difficulties with travel, communication, literacy, lifespan, and the kind of daily struggle immigrants had to contend with in a new country. My curiosity would not be appeased, however, and as Fate would have it, elements in my life allowed me to discover not only what happened to the three cousins, but to many other branches of our enormous extended family as well. Since my own immediate family had also emigrated to North America (and I knew what happened to them), I wondered if any of the others were nearby. Join me on my journey. Meet some of those long-lost cousins and discover their stories. Perhaps you will find some of your own ‘lost ones’ among them.

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The Waddells of Ireland

The Waddells of Ireland is a personal odyssey into her family history undertaken by Freda Bingley. As stated in the preface to the book, for some people ‘Finding one’s roots in Ireland is devilish hard’, but this did not deter the author from devoting her retirement years to researching the complex, dynamic and always interesting Irish family, the Waddells. Every researcher into family history sets off down a familiar path which soon branches off, becomes fragmentary and is finally lost. The family records of the Waddell’s of Islanderry in County Down which name events back to the early 17th century, provided an incentive for research into other Waddell families in Ireland who were ‘incomers’ from Scotland. The extraordinary discovery of a Lanarkshire land record in Edinburgh naming Islanderry, provided the Scottish link-up. Alas the documentary trail soon disappeared but fortunately heraldic evidence carried the research back to 13th century England and the Domesday Survey of 1086. That in turn led to research into the Flemish and French origins. An open-minded approach to over 100 spelling variations of surnames encountered across the British Isles and Europe, as well as research into land records and medieval heraldry, has led to the inclusion of the Dillon (de Lens), Dowdall (de Udall), Odell, Uvadale, and Preston families of Ireland as they share a common ancestry with the ‘Waddells’. All are descendants of Count Eustace I of Boulogne. The inclusion of unrelated Waddell families provides a challenge to other researchers and may offer an unknown link-up for those families that emigrated elsewhere. While the author makes no claim to be an historian, her disentangling of the extensive Waddell roots helps to provide a valuable link to our European past, and will undoubtedly be of interest to those researching Waddells and variant names at home and abroad and act as an encouragement to other family historians to continue the work.

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Researching MacAteer Ancestors

This guide aims to help people who are starting to search for information about individuals with the surname McAteer (in all spellings) living in Ireland in the last three centuries. It is a study of a family name and includes a guide to sources for research.

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Fallona - Kelly 1750-1900

This guide aims to help people who are starting to search for information about individuals with the surname Fallona (in all spellings) living in Ireland in the last three centuries. It is a study of two Irish families and includes a guide to sources for research.

Click the image to read in our digital library