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- Irish Census Search Forms 1841 & 1851
Records in this collection
- Ireland, Census of Protestant Householders 1740
- 1831 Tithe Defaulters
- Cork, Pobble O'Keefe census 1830-1852
- Dublin City Census 1901: Rotunda Ward
- Dublin electoral rolls
- Estate Commissioners Offices, Applications from Evicted Tenants, 1907
- Griffith's Survey Maps & Plans, 1847-1864
- Griffith's Valuation
- Ireland Census 1821-1851
- Ireland Census 1911
- Ireland Down Ballyroney Presbyterian burial plots, 1895
- Ireland Valuation Office books
- Ireland, 1766 Religious Census
- Ireland, 1775 Dissenters' Petitions
- Ireland, Belfast & Ulster directories list
- Ireland, Clare Electoral Registers
- Ireland, Land Commission Advances, 1891-1920
- Irish Army Census 1922
- Irish Census Search Forms 1841 & 1851
- Landed Estates Court Rentals 1850-1885
- Reports from Committees, Fictitious Votes (Ireland), Select Committee on Fictitious Votes, 1837-1838
- The Census of Elphin 1749
- The Index to the Dublin City Census 1851
- Waterford registers and records
Find your ancestors in Irish Census Search Forms 1841 & 1851
Discover details of your ancestor’s family from the 1841 and 1851 Irish census in their 1909 pension application. These detailed records include details of parents and siblings.
What can these records tell me? While the amount of information recorded varies the Irish Census Search forms 1841 & 1851 will usually contain the following information about your ancestor:
- Name of applicant
- Current address of applicant (often care of a local official or business)
- Name and age of applicant in the 1841 or 1851 census
- Name of applicant’s father
- Name of applicant’s mother (often including maiden name)
- Names and ages of other family members recorded in the 1841 or 1851 census
- Address of the family in 1841/1851: townland, parish and barony
Discover more about the search forms
The old age pension was introduced in Ireland in 1909 for people over the age of 70. However, because civil (government) registration of births did not begin until 1864 those eligible for a pension often had no way to prove their age. Officials searched the 1841 and 1851 census to determine if an applicant was eligible for a pension although not all applications using the census as proof were accepted.
The pension was 5 shillings for a single person and 7 shillings for a married couple.
The records for those living in the following counties at the time of their application are available on microfilm at the Public Records Office on Northern Ireland (PRONI): Antrim, Armagh, Cavan, Derry, Donegal, Down, Fermanagh, Monaghan and Tyrone.
Some certified copies of census returns used in the pension application process are available on microfilm at the National Archives of Ireland.