Igrs index

  1. Early Marriage Index
  2. Internal Growth Rate (IGR)
  3. IGRS Wills Card Index
  4. Internal Growth Rate (IGR): Definition, Uses, Formula and Example
  5. IrishGenealogyNews: Coming soon: IGRS Index of Early Irish Marriages
  6. Introduction to the IGRS Marriages Index


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Early Marriage Index

The Irish Genealogical Research Society’s Early 4,000 new entries, it now contains an impressive 62,065 records (from alternative sources for marriages) noting approximately 139,000 names of brides, grooms and their parents. This particular update has drawn new material from the Registry of Deeds and from the surviving manuscript and published indexes to Church of Ireland Marriage Licence Bonds (MLB) from the diocese of Cloyne, Kildare and Elphin among others. MLBs not infrequently include marriage licences issued to Roman Catholic couples who wished to ensure that their union was legal, particularly so in the eighteenth century. This database is still being added to and new records are uploaded every month, so if you haven't yet found any ancestors in it, do please check back regularly. The Early Irish Marriage Index is freely available to all, not just members of the IGRS. As we approach the Christmas period, perhaps it's a suitable time to have a good look at our index, the brainchild of IGRS Fellow, Roz McCutcheon, and see if you can find any ancestors hiding inside!

Internal Growth Rate (IGR)

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IGRS Wills Card Index

The destruction of the Public Record Office of Ireland in 1922 consumed virtually all of Ireland’s pre-1858 testamentary records. During the decades following, efforts were made by various institutions and individuals to locate copies and abstracts of Irish wills. The IGRS wills card index, held at the Society’s Library, was an early and praiseworthy attempt by IGRS members to build a central database of genealogical abstracts from a variety of testamentary sources. The index includes Irish Prerogative Wills from the Betham Collection, as well as from the Prerogative Court of Canterbury; the Welply Wills at the Society of Genealogists, plus the Swanzy Collection at the IGRS Library. Other sources are not only wills deposited at the Library, or quoted in our manuscript collection, but also wills held in private collections quoted in The Irish Genealogist, as well as in other journals. The card index also includes many regional wills & administrations. There are some 3500 to 4000 cards in all and while they stretch from Acheson to Young, those from A to F are slightly better covered than the rest of the alphabet. In each case, the full source for the abstract is quoted, and great pains were taken to show family relationships, making this an essential reference. Abbreviations used: D = date of will, not death; P = date will proved; Ms or MSS = manuscript, J = Journal; ADM = Administration date; Soc of Gen = Society of Genealogists in London; Prerog = prerogative. When clicked...

Internal Growth Rate (IGR): Definition, Uses, Formula and Example

Adam Hayes, Ph.D., CFA, is a financial writer with 15+ years Wall Street experience as a derivatives trader. Besides his extensive derivative trading expertise, Adam is an expert in economics and behavioral finance. Adam received his master's in economics from The New School for Social Research and his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in sociology. He is a CFA charterholder as well as holding FINRA Series 7, 55 & 63 licenses. He currently researches and teaches economic sociology and the social studies of finance at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. • An internal growth rate (IGR) is the highest level of growth achievable for a business without obtaining outside financing. • A firm's maximum internal growth rate is the level of business operations that can continue to fund and grow the company without issuing new equity or debt. • Internal growth can be generating by adding new product lines or expanding existing ones. The Formula for IGR Is IGR = R O A ⋅ b 1 − ( R O A ⋅ b ) where: R O A = Returnonassets b = Theretentionratio (whichisoneminusthedividendpayoutratio) \begin ​ IGR = 1 − ( R O A ⋅ b ) R O A ⋅ b ​ where: R O A = Returnonassets b = Theretentionratio (whichisoneminusthedividendpayoutratio) ​ How to Calculate IGR An internal growth rate for a public company is calculated by first using the return on assets formula (net income divided by average total assets). Then the retention ratio is calculated by dividing retained earnings by net income (or, al...

IrishGenealogyNews: Coming soon: IGRS Index of Early Irish Marriages

Roz started her talk by outlining the reasons for the paucity of church records in Ireland and defining what genealogists should consider an adequate record of marriage. The latter, she concluded, should include the maiden name of the bride and also narrow down the date of the ceremony to the nearest year or two, possibly using a combination of sources. She then suggested a variety of substitute sources for finding these details in records dating from the 1600s to the start of civil registration. In brief, these include: Schulze Marriages, from the German Lutheran Church in Dublin (don't be put off... few German Lutherans are included!) covering 1807 to 1837 can be searched at the GRO research room or on LDS microfilm 101771. Charlton Trust Fund Marriages: Applications for grants for marriages of Protestant couples between 1795 and 1862. Held by the National Archives of Ireland. Newspapers: In addition to the more obvious online newspaper archives, vast holdings are available at the National Library of Ireland, at the British Newspaper Library and at the IGRS Library in London. Legal Documents: Wills, marriage licence bonds, Chancery & Exchequer Bills etc. Roz recommended John Grenham's Tracing Your Irish Ancestors as an excellent source of the whereabouts of these types of documents. Three volumes of Census Records: A Pension Claims: Thousands of names from the lost Irish censuses of 1841 and 1851 can be searched at Military Records: Registry of Deeds: A growing database,...

Introduction to the IGRS Marriages Index

Search the index Background For many years, I have explored the records of the Registry of Deeds in Dublin, a wonderful resource which covers every county in Ireland. One of the major drawbacks is that the Registry is very poorly indexed – just under the townlands mentioned and under the name of one of the first parties (grantors). As I slowly read from page to page in the books of memorials, I was constantly struck by how many marriage details were contained there – and not just in the deeds that were drawn up to record a marriage settlement. Even if the marriages had nothing to do with my own family, they would be most welcome to another researcher, and without an index to all but a few of the vast number of names in the Registry of Deeds, that other researcher might never come across this data. So I resolved to note down the marriages as I read, with the intention of eventually loading them into some sort of database. My researches meanwhile took me in many different directions, and I wondered if the database could be widened, to include some of other collections, – some obvious, like newspaper announcements, and others more obscure, such as the marriages noted in Chancery Bill extracts, family bibles, military records, old age pension claims and many others. Parameters: This resource is designed as an index, pointing the researcher towards the actual record. Only the county or country of the bride and groom is shown, although the original record may provide more addres...