Cemeteries
Links to cemeteries throughout all the counties of Ireland. Most links will features images of graves as well as gravestone transcriptions and exact addresses and locations.
Transcriptions of several Irish cemeteries: Barnane, Borrisoleigh, Dovea, Drom, Glendermott, Glenkeen, Ileigh, Inch, Kilfithmone, Kylanna, Leckpatrick, Loughmore, Lurganboy, Manorhamilton, Powerstown, Old Powerstown, and Templemore.
Transcriptions of many Irish cemeteries from Leitrim, Mayo, Roscommon, Sligo, and Waterford.
Ancestry.co.uk message boarding discussing Irish cemeteries and tombstones.
400,00 + gravestone records from 850 + cemeteries in Antrim, Armagh, Derry, Donegal, Down, Fermanagh, Louth, Monaghan, and Tyrone.
A database of christenings, marriages and cemeteries searchable by county. Building an online database of Irish records. Join the community and share information.
Glasnevin Cemetery, Co. Dublin. Established in 1832, Glasnevin Trust is of great historical significance ... it is a true national treasure.
The cemetery is close to the Shelbourne Hotel on Stephen's Green, Dublin but is normally locked. You can look through the railings and see the gravestones clearly. The Huguenots were French Protestants expelled from France in the seventeenth century and encouraged to locate in Ireland due to an Act passed by the (then) Irish Parliament.
A community focused grass roots heritage project which digitally records and publishes historic graveyard surveys and related multimedia stories.
Take the R 700 road from Kilkenny to Thomastown. The cemetery is beside the Catholic Church in the village of Bennettsbridge. This is not a complete listing of burials! The records below were provided by contributors to Cemetery Records Online. Total of 135 records.
he following Brosna cemetery transcriptions were taken from "Brosna Snippets of the Past" compiled by Josie McCreesh for the Brosna Heritage Company Ltd in 1999. Listed with the assistance of the Student Summer Scheme 1998.
This cemetery is on the Dublin, Kilkenny Road about 4 miles from Kilkenny City. It is signposted from the main road. Clara Church was build in 1870. The cemetery developed shortily after that. These are all of the readable stones in Clara Cemetery. There are many without information buried here.
This cemetery is in the townland of Clontubbrid in Freshford, Co Kilkenny Ireland. This is not a complete listing of burials! The records below were provided by contributors to Cemetery Records Online. Total of 11 records.
Take a right turn at the traffic lights at St. John the Evangelist Church Turn into Hebron Rd and pass Nolan Park on the right side. You can see the gate of the graveyard at a T junction further along this road on the right hand side. St. Kieran's was opened in 1933. Total of 103 records.
Includes the cemeteries/graveyards of Bennettsbridge, Clara, Clontubrid, Paulstown, Saint John, Saint Kieran, Saint Mary, Thomastown Old, and Tullaherin.
Includes records for Baltinglass, Davistown, Dunlavin, Heighington, Kilranalagh, Leitrim, Manor Kilbride, Rathbran, Saint Kevin, Saint Mary, Saint Nicholas, Saint Patrick, and Tyneclash Old cemeteries.
While some people have a mortal fear of cemeteries, others confess to a morbid fascination with them. However, they are part of the cultural heritage and history.
There are a million people living in Dublin today and from 1828 for Goldenbridge as well as Glasnevin Cemetery from 1832, there are about 1.5 million records available for Glasnevin Trust cemeteries and crematoria.
A number of old graveyards in Kilkenny have been reccommended for funding by Kilkenny County Council.
The homepage of Irish Graveyard Surveyors. This site provides the facility to search a number of Irish graveyards to locate a specific grave or simply to browse through a graveyard or number of graveyards. You can use our search engine or our graveyard locator to find what you are looking for.
The databases cover counties Antrim, Armagh, Down, Fermanagh, Londonderry and Tyrone. There is a free surname search but there is a fee to view inscriptions.
This cemetery is just behind the Ramos Theatre in the town of Virginia. There is a walkway and steps down to the cemetery beside the theatre.
Survey conducted May 1880 by Randal McCollum complete with map to scale. This is not to be confused with a map of headstone locations; rather this is a survey of family burial plots wether or not they have a headstone. The original survey survives and is in local custody.
This cemetery is situated halfway on the R.394 Finea to Kilcogy Rd in County Cavan Ireland. This was an old Church of Ireland graveyard, now both Church of Ireland and Catholics are buried here. Many of the headstones are worn and hard to read but the graveyard is still active.
There has been a church and a cemetery on this site in Church Street since medieval times. Originally the site of a Catholic Church, it became Crown property and was given over to Protestant worship.
This cemetery is situated on the Main Road that runs from Kells to Virginia in the Civil Parish of Lurgan, Virginia, Co Cavan Ireland.
From Oldcastle, Co Meath, head toward Mountnugent, Co Cavan & bear right at Ballinacree Junction. It is on Cavan/Meath border near to lough Sheelin.
This church and cemetery is situated at the Y in the road at the top of the town.
This is an old graveyard where most of the stones are worn and hard to read. It may have been the graveyard which was used before Meaghera was opened. It is in the Parish of Lurgan.
To reach the cemetery, take the Virginia to Bailieborough Road.
Turn left at the signpost for Mullagh on the Virginia to Kells Road. This is on the Cavan-Meath County border.
This is a Church of Ireland Churchyard Cemetery. This graveyard is in the parish of Mullagh and is signposted from the road. There is a famine stone at the back of this cemetery.
Glasnevin Cemetery is the final resting place for over 1.1 million people. At Glasnevin Trust we act as guardian to the stories of these ordinary and extraordinary people who have shaped the Ireland we live in today.
To reach the cemetery, take the Virginia to Bailieborough Road. You will find it signposted.
Genealogy Laois is dedicated to helping anyone researching their Irish roots to obtain tangible evidence of their ancestors from Co Laois from headstone records, that surpass written records that were destroyed in the great fire in Dublin in 1922.
Much work has been done in transcribing and publishing gravestone inscriptions. Many of the largest collections of indexed transcripts of gravestone inscriptions are now held by local Heritage Centres.
Turn left at the signpost for Mullagh on the Virginia to Kells Road. This is on the Cavan-Meath County border.
This is a Church of Ireland Churchyard Cemetery. This graveyard is in the parish of Mullagh and is signposted from the road. There is a famine stone at the back of this cemetery.
This church and cemetery is situated at the Y in the road at the top of the town.
This is an old graveyard where most of the stones are worn and hard to read. It may have been the graveyard which was used before Meaghera was opened. It is in the Parish of Lurgan.
There are two burial grounds at Lavey Chapel known as the old graveyard and the new graveyard.
Dublinheritage.ie is a resource from Dublin City Public Libraries focusing primarily on databases derived from printed and other historic records related to Dublin city and surrounding administrative areas.