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Banbridge,
home to the Star of the County Down, is, relatively
speaking, quite a young town. The town grew up around
the site where the main road from Belfast to Dublin
crossed the Bann over an Old Bridge which was situated
where the present bridge now stands.
The town owed its success
to flax and the linen industry, becoming by 1772 the
principal linen producing district in Ireland with a
total of 26 bleachgreens along the Bann.
Banbridge
Genealogy Services was set up about twelve years
ago by Banbridge & District Historical Society
to index old "Banbridge Chronicles" between
the periods 1870 - 1890.
It was soon decided
to begin indexing birth, marriage and death records
for the South Down area (Banbridge, Newry &
Mourne, Downpatrick) as it was noticed that visitors
to the area were coming specifically to trace their
ancestors. |
Banbridge
Genealogy Services
Premises in Banbridge
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Records
were obtained from the Registrar General's Office and
from various churches in the locality, the majority
dating from the mid-1800s, though some going back to
the late 1700s.
In total there were some
750 000 records indexed involving hundreds of man hours,
each record having to be entered manually on the computer.
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