Stepping Stones CD publication. Contents of The 1900/01 Telephone Book for Liverpool. Birkenhead Isle of Man. Chester and Wales. and Ireland. Hundreds of Names and Addresses in alphabetical order of surnames Area's covered: Liverpool. Birkenhead. Isle of Man; Douglas, Onchan, Castletown, Port St Mary, Port Erin, Ramsey. Chester and North Wales; Mold, Buckley, Connahs Quay, Flint, Wrexham, Ruabon, Llangollen, Oswestry, Shrewsbury, Rhyl, Denbigh, Bangor, Carnarvon, Nantlle, Llandu More Info
Can't find what you're looking for? Try using our filter system to narrow down your search.
Hammers clanging' was the sound that the great nineteenth-century novelist William Makepeace Thackeray associated with Belfast when he visited it in 1842. By then, Belfast's industrial development was well under way. Had Thackeray visited the city in 1900, he would not have been surprised to find that it was by then the fastest-growing city in the British Isles. It had outstripped Dublin as the la...More Info
Transatlantic Lives: The Irish Experience in Colonial America features sixty biographical essays from the Royal Irish Academy’s Dictionary of Irish Biography, detailing the careers of a selection of Irish emigrants to North America in the colonial period (including the British territories that would later become Canada). Those chosen are a representative sample of some of the more notable fig...More Info
Ulster Historical Foundation is a unique organisation. We are the only body on the island of Ireland that combines expertise in family history research with a publication of high quality historical and genealogical books. Much more than that, the Foundation is the only Irish organisation that delivers annual conferences and course in family history and conducts extensive lecture tours in North Ame...More Info
An account of the life of John Richardson, who departed this life near Hutton in the Hole, the 2nd of the fourth month of 1753, in the 87th year of his age, and was buried in the Friends Burying Ground at Kirby-Moorside. ~ "A relation of many of his trials and exercises in his youth, and his services in the work of the Ministry, in England, Ireland and America"
A satisfactory guide-book must not be exclusively architectural, or historic, or legendary, or scientific ; it must aim at being all. In Cornwall such breadth of treatment is particularly needed. Cornwall is like no other English county. Its nearest resemblance in England will be found in Devon ; parts of Ireland are equally or more similar. But there are features in Cornwall not to be found elsew...More Info