Was your ancestor part of a non-conformist church in Ireland? Discover your ancestor in these burial and burial plot registers.
Was your ancestor part of a non-conformist church in Ireland? Discover your ancestor in these burial and burial plot registers.
This collection is comprised of two separate record sets: Ireland Down Ballyroney Presbyterian burial plots 1895 and Registers of the French non-conformist churches Dublin 1702-1731. Results will provide both transcripts and images. The available information on a transcript will vary depending on where the register originated:
Ireland Down Ballyroney Presbyterian burial plots 1895
Name
Denomination
Year
Plot number
Parish
County
Source
Registers of the French non-conformist churches Dublin 1702-1731
Name
Denomination
Death date
Age at death
Burial year
Parents’ or spouse’s names
Residence
Parish
County
Volume
Source
Please note that the images from Dublin, Registers of the French non-conformist churches Dublin 1702-1731, are in French. However, the relevant genealogical information can still be easily identified.
Non-conformist refers to those Protestant denominations not aligned with the Church of Ireland. There are two collections represented in these records:
Ireland Down Ballyroney Presbyterian burial plots 1895 – A register of burial plot ownership for Ballyroney near Banbridge County Down in Northern Ireland for the year 1895, this useful record set includes the address of those who owned plots in the Presbyterian graveyard. These records relate to burial plot ownership, rather than memorials.
Registers of the French non-conformist churches Dublin 1702-1731 – This 1901 publication, with a print run of 450, was published by the Huguenot Society of Great Britain and Ireland with Thomas Philip Le Fanu as its editor. The introduction for this volume explains the meaning of the title Non-Conformist Church, their relationship with the Conformed Church, and provides some of the history of the Huguenots in Dublin. Two congregations are covered in this publication: Peter Street and Lucy Lane. The original records are in French but the genealogical information can be easily identified.