Tuesday, February 12, 2019

The Development of the Centre for Migration Studies Irish Emigration Da

The reading of the Centre for Migration Studies Irish Emigration DatabaseIn 1988 the Ulster American Folk place (UAFP) near Omagh in Co Tyrone, Northern Ireland began to fall up a computerised Irish Emigration Database (IED) in its library. This was a ground-breaking project at that metre and was immediately beset by problems of all kinds, the details of which will be explained later. By 1997 the Folk Parks library had expanded to manufacture the Centre for Emigration Studies and eventually the Centre for Migration Studies (CMS). The latter is now funded together with by the Scotch-Irish Trust of Ulster in partnership with DCAL (Department of Culture, Arts & Leisure) and the five reproduction and Library Boards of Northern Ireland. In this paper I recount the experiences we had and the overconfident results that arose from them in the hope that this will help others who argon planning to set up similar databases (1).EARLY HISTORYThe concept of a computerised IED had been disc ussed in the early 1980s at the UAFP. In 1987, Graham Kirkham, of the new University of Ulster in Coleraine, had completed a feasibility study in various narration which held worldly on Irish emigration. These were the Linenhall, Central & Queens University libraries in Belfast, the Public translate Office, N. Ireland (PRONI) and the Public Record Office (now the National Archives), in Kew in London. This feasibility study covered only a small percentage of the material available as time allotted to do this research was particular(a) to three months. Initially, the project was funded by a company named Digital and nonionised by the Department of gentility. Digital donated hardware and provided software solutions for the project. John Gilmour, the Education Officer at the UA... ...Human error is unendingly possible in the agreement of our documents. Therefore to have both copies available whether in PRONI or the Database is important. If quotes are to be used it is always b est to consult the original. However the many advantages of using a Historical Database far outweigh any invalidating issues and this is what has kept the project moving forward over the past sixteen years. In future there should be easier methods of collecting information. We have always tried to be innovative over the years and will wait to be so in the future. Notes (1) Tennant, Lorraine, The Irish Emigration Database, Journal of Scotch-Irish Studies, Vol 1, No 1 (Spring 2000) pp120-124(2) Des McMorrow Former ICT Manager at the Centre for Migration Studies(3) Ibid(4) Patrick Morgan of Morgan Software. (5) Bryan A Follis, PRONI, June 1988

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