Parsonstown Genealogical Records
Parsonstown Birth & Baptism Records
An index to births, marriages and deaths registered with the Irish government. Provides the child's name, date of registration, place of registration, mother's maiden name and a reference to order a certificate with further details.
A collection of almost 4 million birth and baptisms records from civil, Catholic and Church of Ireland registers.
Digital images of registers recording the birth and baptism of Catholic families' children. They record around 550,000 births and baptisms, which can be searched by a name index.
An index to evidences provided to the British Civil Service Commission to establish the age of prospective and current civil servants. The index includes date & place of birth and provides a reference to surviving documents.
An index to over 5 million births and baptisms recorded in Ireland. These are predominantly from the 19th century.
Parsonstown Marriage & Divorce Records
Digital images of documents from civil divorce cases. The cases cover both the cause of the case and the outcome, such as division of property and visitation rights. These records also contain details of illegitimate children. Cases can be searched by a name index.
An index to births, marriages and deaths registered with the Irish government. Provides the child's name, date of registration, place of registration, mother's maiden name and a reference to order a certificate with further details.
Transcripts of more than 850,000 marriage records, including parents' names when listed in the original document.
Digital images of registers recording the marriages of Catholics in Ireland. They record around 150,000 marriages, which can be searched by a name index.
An index to over 210,000 licenses giving permission to marry.
Parsonstown Death & Burial Records
An index to births, marriages and deaths registered with the Irish government. Provides the child's name, date of registration, place of registration, mother's maiden name and a reference to order a certificate with further details.
Details of crew and passengers who died aboard RMS Titanic. Information given includes date, place & cause of death; gender; age; nationality; profession; and residence.
An index to around 13,000 marriages of the upper class of Ireland recorded in a magazine.
Registers compiled from the logs of ships registered in Britain & her colonies. These records are indexed by named and are connected to original images of the registers. They list the name of the deceased, the date they died, their gender, age, cause of death and the name of the ship they died on.
Transcriptions of over 35,000 death notices of Irish who died in America and other parts of the world.
Parsonstown Census & Population Lists
An index to several million names in records delineating families and including important personal details, such as religion, occupation and place of birth.
An index to and digital images of registers recording people eligible to vote. The records list name, residence, qualification to vote, ratable value of property and sometimes a description of their property.
Directories containing over 275,000,000 entries. As well as name, address and phone number, occupations are often recorded. A useful census substitute.
Over 135,000 surviving extracts from the 1841 and 1851 censuses of Ireland.
An index to almost half a million surviving extracts from largely lost Irish censuses. These records show families, with relations and important genealogical information.
Newspapers Covering Parsonstown
A London newspaper that later became The Sun.
Originally founded as a chartist organ, the newspaper became a liberal platform.
Digital images of a newspaper that circulated through Ireland, promoting agriculture, gardening, commerce and manufacturing. It is fully text searchable.
A popular illustrated, liberal newspaper; one of the most popular in Britain.
Digital images of a liberal, unionist newspaper published in Ireland. Pages can be searched by article text.
Parsonstown Wills & Probate Records
An index to over 100,000 Irish wills.
Transcripts of over 9,000 wills penned by Irish privates and non-commissioned officers during World War I.
A name index connected to images of Ireland's civil probate registers. It lists the name of the deceased, residence, status or occupation, type of probate, date of probate and names of the executors or administrators.
An index to around 365,000 documents relating to the distribution of deceased person's real and personal estate.
An index to almost 78,000 wills that were disputed. The index can lead you to documents that may shed a great deal of genealogical information as disputes often arose between siblings and cousins.
Parsonstown Immigration & Travel Records
A name index connected to original images of passenger lists recording people travelling from Britain to destinations outside Europe. Records may detail a passenger's age or date of birth, residence, occupation, destination and more.
A record of over 600,000 immigrants arriving in the United States; being predominantly those escaping the Irish famine. Records may contain numerous useful details, such as age or year of birth, native county and intended destination.
A list of over 40,000 passengers traveling from North America to the British Isles. Details of passengers may include: occupation, nationality, gender, age, martial status, class, destination, and details of the vessel they sailed on.
Details of over 700 poor Irish settlers in the Newcastle district of Canada. Contains details of the land they occupy, family and live stock.
Registers recording those who by their criminal deeds were sentenced to be transported to Australia. Records include name, date & place of conviction, term of sentence, ship sailed on, departure date and the name of the colony they were to be sent to.
Parsonstown Military Records
A variety military service, medical, award and general documents detailing WWI army soldiers who claimed a pension for disability. Contains a great deal of biographical and genealogical details, including physical description and disabilities. Digital images, searchable by a name and place index.
A history of the town during WWI, with a list of men and women who served and notes of those who lost their lives.
A list of over 1.3 million British and Commonwealth servicemen who were injured during World War One.
Detailed records of 858,171 Royal Artillery personnel. The records contain genealogical, biographical and military details.
Digital images, searchable by a name index, of 88,096 records detailing biographical, genealogical and service details of the men of the Royal Tank Corps.
Parsonstown Court & Legal Records
An index to and digital images of registers recording people eligible to vote. The records list name, residence, qualification to vote, ratable value of property and sometimes a description of their property.
An index to millions of names occurring in minor Irish legal records. The index is linked to images of the original registers.
An index to and images to various records, including loan application forms. These may list name, residence, names of relatives, loan particulars and more.
A index to over 3.5 million names occurring in Irish prison registers. Details provide vary, but may include: name, age, place of birth, abode, religion, occupation, education, physical description, next of kin and details of crimes and sentences Contains images of the original registers.
Digital images of thousands of letters and documents detailing the state of Ireland during the famine. The documents can be searched by a name index of over 10,000 people.
Parsonstown Taxation Records
An assessment of property in Ireland for taxation purposes. Provides descriptions of properties.
Records detailing occupiers of land in pre-famine Ireland. Contains a description of lands and other details. Original images of the records can be searched by name and place.
Lists of occupiers of Irish land and tithes to support the established church; arranged by parish.
A list of people who refused to pay an annual tax to the Anglican church in Scotland.
Parsonstown Land & Property Records
Records detailing tenancies of over 500,000 Irish people. In some cases details may be provided back to the 18th century.
The name and address of people who owned two or more acres of land in Ireland.
An assessment of property in Ireland for taxation purposes. Provides descriptions of properties.
Essentially an electoral roll, listing those who were eligible to vote, their occupation, residence and entitlement.
Records detailing occupiers of land in pre-famine Ireland. Contains a description of lands and other details. Original images of the records can be searched by name and place.
Parsonstown Directories & Gazetteers
Histories of the country and its settlements and lists of their residents. Also contains an almanac, calendar and other details.
A directory of the court, parliament, aristocracy, mayors, civil service, military, militia and banks in the British Empire.
A directory containing all manner of facts and descriptions of public and other important institutions. Contains various lists of the nobility, gentry and other Irish citizens. Searchable by an index of over 130,000 people.
A directory of the Church of England, its institutions and ministers.
A directory listing over 345,000 people in Ireland. Also contains details of public institutions, public houses, churches etc. as well as descriptions of settlements.
Parsonstown Cemeteries
Photographs and transcriptions of millions of gravestones from cemeteries around the world.
Profiles of several hundred mausolea found in the British Isles.
Several thousand transcribed memorials remembering those connected with the nautical occupations.
An index to around 100,000 various births, marriages, deaths, burials, cemeteries, wills, immigration, census extracted from Irish sources.
Parsonstown Obituaries
A growing collection currently containing over 425,000 abstracts of obituaries with reference to the location of the full obituary.
A collection of 364 obituaries of Quakers from the British Isles. The volume was published in 1849 and includes obituaries of those who died in late 1847 through 1848.
A text index and digital images of all editions of a journal containing medical articles and obituaries of medical practitioners.
This database contains extracted genealogical information from the obituaries of the Irish Independent newspaper.
Parsonstown Histories & Books
Photographs and images of churches in County Offaly.
A growing database including millions of photographs of the United Kingdom, Isle of Man and Ireland catalogued by latitude & longitude and OS grid reference.
A history of the town during WWI, with a list of men and women who served and notes of those who lost their lives.
An indexed collection of 21,000 photographs covering all of Ireland.
A collection of 220,000 professional photos covering most towns and villages in Britain, and parts of Ireland.
Parsonstown School & Education Records
An index to and images of registers recording 100,000s of Irish schoolchildren. Registers may list name, year of birth, year of registration, age, religion, address, occupation of parent or guardian, name of current and previous school, parish, number of days attendance, class enrolled into, results of exams and date of leaving.
A register of faculty and students educated at Trinity College Dublin. Entries include the individual’s full name, date of entering the college, age of entering, father’s name and address, the degree they received and their graduation date.
A searchable database containing over 90,000 note-form biographies for students of Cambridge University.
Registers recording students who attended a series of non-denominational schools throughout Ireland.
Transcripts of over 27,000 entries from admissions, apprentice, and schoolmaster ledgers of the Royal Military Asylum in Chelsea and Royal Hibernian Military School in Dublin.
Parsonstown Occupation & Business Records
This collection gives brief details on the appointment of over 1.4 million people who worked for the Post Office. Includes references to corresponding data in the Postmaster General’s minute books and is a starting point for research in the rich archive of the British Postal Museum.
A database containing names extracted from Kelly's Directory of the Leather Trade. Contains name, occupation and residence.
A book containing details of the medical establishment in Ireland, with a list of over 2,700 medical practitioners in Ireland.
Records relating to merchant seamen of the British Isles. They may record, date and place of birth, address and details of their maritime career.
An index to those who were awarded spinning wheels and looms for growing flax.
Pedigrees & Family Trees Covering Parsonstown
The first edition of an exclusively Irish directory of the landed gentry printed by Burke's. This publication provides heraldic, genealogical and biographical details on Ireland's foremost untitled landowners. Searchable by an index of over 80,000 names.
A searchable database of linked genealogies compiled from thousands of reputable and not-so-reputable sources. Contains many details on European gentry & nobility, but covers many countries outside Europe and people from all walks of life.
A book containing genealogies and biographies of Britain's titled families.
A book containing genealogies and biographies of Britain's titled families.
Genealogies of notable Irish families, with biographical details and notes on Irish clans and surnames.
Parsonstown Royalty, Nobility & Heraldry Records
The first edition of an exclusively Irish directory of the landed gentry printed by Burke's. This publication provides heraldic, genealogical and biographical details on Ireland's foremost untitled landowners. Searchable by an index of over 80,000 names.
A searchable database of linked genealogies compiled from thousands of reputable and not-so-reputable sources. Contains many details on European gentry & nobility, but covers many countries outside Europe and people from all walks of life.
Genealogies of notable Irish families, with biographical details and notes on Irish clans and surnames.
Genealogies of notable Irish families, with biographical details and notes on Irish clans and surnames.
A dictionary of families elevated to the peerage of Great Britain & Ireland. It includes genealogies and biographical details.
Parsonstown Church Records
A directory listing all the members of the clergy and parishes in Ireland. Also includes details on clergy in the Empire.
Biographical details of around 32,000 Congregationalist ministers in the British Isles and further afield.
A directory listing Anglican parishes and other divisions of the Church or England hierarchy and their various religious officers. The directory covers the UK and Anglican churches throughout the world.
Brief biographical details on all Anglican clergy in Britain & the Episcopal Church in Scotland.
Brief biographical details on all Anglican clergy in Britain & the Episcopal Church in Scotland.
Biographical Directories Covering Parsonstown
A book containing genealogies and biographies of Britain's titled families.
A book containing genealogies and biographies of Britain's titled families.
Detailed biographies of thousands of notable Europeans with details on ancestry.
An index of names connected to over 60,000 biographies of notable British and Irish people from arguably the world's most respected biographical compendium. Gives details on ancestry, careers and personal wealth.
Brief biographical notes on around 10,000 of Britain's foremost nobles, landowners and professionals.
Parsonstown Maps
Digitalised copies of detailed maps covering around 99% of the country.
289 maps depicting routes through Ireland.
A sprawling website setting out and describing the historical divisions of Britain. Also contains countless maps of various sorts. Covers the UK, Ireland, Isle of Man & has fleeting details of other localities.
County and national maps covering the British Isles, extracted from John Speed's landmark work, Theatre of the Empire of Great Britain.
An interactive index to thousands of maps covering the world, continents, countries and regions. The majority of maps cover Britain and Ireland.
Parsonstown Reference Works
A comprehensive guide to researching the history of buildings in the British Isles.
A service that provides advanced and custom surname maps for the British Isles and the US.
A growing collection of heraldic and related clip art that can be used to reconstruct a families' arms. Includes packs for British, German, Austrian, Spanish, Italian, Danish, Polish, Portuguese, French, Swiss and Dutch arms. Images are available in a variety of formats including vectors.
A sprawling site that lists British trade unions, histories of some unions and outlines how to locate records relating to trade union ancestors.
A calculator measuring the changing value of the British Pound using two price indices.
Historical Description
PARSONSTOWN, or BIRR, a market-town and post-town, and a parish, in the barony of BALLYBRIT, KING'S county, and province of LEINSTER, 18 miles (S. W.) from Tullamore, and 60 (W. S. W.) from Dublin, on the road from Tullamore to Roscrea; containing, with the village of Crinkle, 9457 inhabitants. The place derived its name of Birr from the abbey of Biorra, founded here by St. Brendan Luaigneus; or from Bior, the Irish term for the bank or margin of a river. It formerly constituted part of the ancient district of Ely O'Carrol in Ormond, in Munster, and did not form any portion of the King's county as at first erected into shire ground in the reign of Philip and Mary, being annexed to it under an inquisition of the 2nd of Jas. I. The castle of Birr was considered to be the chief seat of the O'Carrols, chieftains of the sept. A great battle was fought near it, in 241, between Cormac, son of Conn of the Hundred Battles, and the people of Munster: the place suffered much from the ravages of the Danes in 841 and 842, and in 1154 O'Hedersgool, king of Cathluighe, was killed at the church door. Soon after the English invasion, Hen. II. granted this district to Philip de Worcester and Theobald Fitzwalter, after which he sold it to William de Braosa and others. It was afterwards transferred to Hugh de Hose or Hussey, in which family it continued till the time of Jas. I. In 1533, Gerald, Earl of Kildare, then lord-deputy, laid siege to the castle in support of Ferganainim O'Carrol, his son in-law, but soon raised the siege, in consequence of a wound received from one of the garrison. Lord Grey, when lord-deputy, took the castle in 1537, and one of the charges against him, which led to his execution, was that he had sanctioned the outrages committed by Ferganainim O'Carrol. This chieftain afterwards surrendered his territory to Edw. VI., who restored it to him with the addition of the dignity of Baron of Ely during life. In the proceedings under the commission for the plantation of Ely O'Carrol, in the reign of James I., Birr and its appendages were assigned to Lawrence Parsons, brother of Sir Wm. Parsons, the surveyor-general, in 1620; and, as in the grant the place is described as the castle, fort, village, and lands of Birr, it must have been of some importance.
In the same year the new proprietor obtained a licence to hold a market on Tuesday and two fairs, and seven years after, a further licence for a Saturday market and two additional fairs. The assizes for the county used to be held here at that period. On the breaking out of the war of 1641, William Parsons was made governor of Ely O'Carrol and Birr castle, which he garrisoned with his own tenantry. The next year an engagement took place between the garrison and the sept of the O'Carrols; and in the same year the castle was besieged by the Irish, but was relieved by Sir Chas. Coote, who threw into it a supply of ammunition and proviPAR sions. This action was deemed so important that it procured for Sir Charles the dignity of Earl of Mountrath.
But the next year the place fell into the hands of Gen. Preston, the commander of the forces of the confederate Catholics in Leinster, who kept possession of it until it was taken by Ireton in 1650; and a subsequent attempt by the Marquess of Clanricarde, to recover it for the king was baffled by the approach of Col. Axtell. At the time of the Restoration, it seems that the place was of some commercial importance, from the number of brass tokens then coined for the convenience of trade. In the war of 1688 the castle was again besieged by Cols. Grace and Oxburgh, and surrendered on terms which afterwards were made grounds of accusation against Sir Laurence Parsons, the governor, on which he was found guilty of high treason, but received a pardon after several reprieves.
At this period Birr is mentioned by Sir Wm. Petty as sending two members to parliament. In 1689, the R. C. clergymen took possession of the church, tithes, and glebe, which they held till the battle of the Boyne. In. 1690, the castle was again besieged by Gen. Sarsfield, the Duke of Berwick, and Lord Galway, but the siege was raised by Sir John Lanier for King William. A meeting of delegates from several volunteer corps was held here in 1781, and again in 1782, at which strong resolutions were passed relative to the great questions which then absorbed public attention. In 1799, a meeting of magistrates, convened to petition against the legislative union, was dispersed by the high sheriff and a body of artillery with three pieces of cannon, for which that functionary and the commander of the military were brought to the bar of the house of commons on the motion of Sir Laurence Parsons, when, instead of punishment, they received a vote of thanks for their conduct.
Parsonstown, the name by which the place was called so early as the reign of Chas. L, on the Birr river, formerly called Comcor, a branch of the Lesser Brosna, is pleasantly situated, well built, and inhabited by some wealthy and many respectable families It is also the centre of a fertile and extensive district, whence it draws large quantities of agricultural produce to be distributed in other parts, and sends into it in return the foreign articles required by the inhabitants.
Archbishop Ussher says, that Birr was considered the centre of Ireland; and Sir Wm. Petty, in his survey, marks the church with the words "Umbilicus Hiberniæ:" it is in 53° 6' 16" (N. Lat.), and 7° 38' 23" (W, Lon.); its geocentric latitude is 52° 55' 30" (North). It is the largest town in the county, and has risen to the highly improved state in which it now is chiefly during the period in which the present proprietor, the Earl of Rosse, has superintended its progress.
The principal streets, which are formed of modern houses and laid out in straight lines, terminate in Duke-square, in which there is a statue of the Duke of Cumberland, on a Doric pillar, 55 feet high, set up in 1747, in commemoration of his victory at Culloden.
The castle, situated at one side of the town, may be said to have been rebuilt by the Parsons family: the centre of the building, which was consumed by an accidental fire in 1832, has been restored and improved.
About 50 years since a brisk trade was carried on here in woollens, which gave employment to several hundred weavers and combers. At present the trade is principally confined to two distilleries, each of which produces about 95,000 gallons of spirits annually; but a great variety of minor manufactures is carried on.
There was also formerly an extensive manufacture of glass, of which the only remains are the ruins of the glass-house. The market is well supplied with provisions of good quality: the fairs are held on Feb. 11th, May 5th, Aug. 25th, and Dec. 10th. Large quantities of corn, flour, spirits, butter, cattle, sheep, and pigs are sold here; and in return, timber, iron, drapery, groceries, coal, and most other articles for domestic consumption are brought in. The want of water carriage to facilitate the conveyance of commercial commodities is severely felt; a plan has consequently been proposed to form a navigation along the valley of the Brosna from Croghan bridge, about half a mile below the town, to the Shannon, from which river the Brosna is navigable for two miles for the largest barges; thence the line is proposed to be carried by a still water navigation until the channel of the river can be again made available, at about 2½ miles below the town. The sessions-house consists of a hall, a court, and offices for transacting business: at one end of it is the bridewell, the only one in the county; it has two day-rooms, eight cells, and two airing-yards. General sessions for the county are held here in rotation with Tullamore and Philipstown four times in the year; and petty sessions occasionally. A manor court, under a seneschal appointed by the Earl of Rosse, is also held here. The town is a chief constabulary police station.
There are a fever hospital, a dispensary, and a mendicity institution. A reading-room is well supplied with newspapers and periodicals. In the centre of the town is an observatory, belonging to Thos. L. Cooke, Esq. The barracks, which are about an English mile distant, have accommodations for 48 officers of infantry, 1110 privates, and 15 horses, with an hospital for 100 patients: the building consists of two large squares, attached to which is an area for exercise.
The parish, which comprises 4018 statute acres, does not present any striking features of fertility or improvement.
The principal seats are Ballyegan, the splendid residence of Bernard Mullins, Esq.; Tinnakilly, of Arth. Robinson, Esq.; Oakley Park, of the late Mr. Stoney; and Elm Hall, of Joseph Burke, Esq. The living is a rectory and vicarage, in the diocese of Killaloe, and in the patronage of the Bishop: the tithes amount to £276. 18. 5½. The glebe-house, in the town, was an old building in very indifferent repair, but a new one has lately been erected: the glebe comprises 25 acres. The church, erected in 1815, by aid of a loan from the late Board of First Fruits, is a stone edifice in the pointed style of architecture, with a steeple 100 feet high. In the R. C. divisions the parish, which is still called Birr, is part of the bishop's mensal, and the head of a union or district, comprising also the parish of Loughkeen. Each of the parishes has a chapel: that at Birr is a splendid edifice, in the later English style, having two minarets and a steeple, 150 feet high, with a fine bell; it is the cathedral of the diocese: and adjoining it is the neat and retired residence of the Rt. Rev. Dr. Kennedy, R. C. Bishop of Killaloe. There are six other places of worship; three for Independents, one for the Society of Friends, and two for Wesleyan and Whitfield Methodists; that of the Wesleyans, erected in 1820, is a handsome building with a well-executed pediment of hewn stone. The walls and steeple of the old church are still standing; on the latter is a sculpture in stone of the arms of Sir L. Parsons, to whom the town was granted in 1620, and who died in 1628, impaled with those of his lady, Anne Malham. There are about 20 schools in the town and parish, four of which are free schools. The parochial school for boys is aided by an annual donation from the rector, as is also an infants' school; a male and female school is aided by an annual donation from E. Synge, Esq., and a female parochial school is supported by subscription: in all these there are about 400 children; and 15 private schools give instruction to 350 boys and 250 girls: there is also a Sunday school, Many curious relics of antiquity have been found in the neighbourhood of this parish, a collection of which, consisting of swords, spears, skeins, celts, and the Barnaan Cuilawn, found at Glankeen, are in the possession of Mr. Cooke, who has also a number of the brass tokens already noticed. Some instances of extraordinary longevity have been recorded; one person is named who lived to the age of 114 years. At Clonbela, about 2½ miles from the town, is a mineral spring.
Lord Oxmantown, who devotes much time and thought to studies connected with astronomy and other branches of science, has a laboratory in which he has constructed machinery for polishing the largest specula for telescopes, by means of which he constructed a 25-feet reflector, the great speculum of which is 3½ feet in diameter.
It stands on the lawn in front of Birr castle, and is moved by machinery somewhat similar in principle to that of Herschel's celebrated telescope, but simpler in construction, which also is the invention of his lordship.
Mr. Cooke has here a seven-feet reflector, which is equatorially mounted on a cast-metal pillar in a very simple manner. Some documents and MS. accounts relative to the wars of 1641 and 1688 are in the possession of the Earl of Rosse. A history and description of Parsonstown was published in 1826: the work is anonymous, but is supposed to have been written by Tho. L. Cooke, Esq.
Most Common Surnames in Parsonstown
| Rank | Surname | Incidence | Frequency | Percent of Parent | Rank in Offaly |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Carroll | 88 | 1:69 | 12.29% | 5 |
| 1 | Kennedy | 88 | 1:69 | 22.68% | 16 |
| 3 | Hogan | 75 | 1:81 | 28.30% | 30 |
| 4 | Kelly | 72 | 1:84 | 6.30% | 1 |
| 5 | Cleary | 66 | 1:92 | 28.57% | 35 |
| 6 | Ryan | 59 | 1:103 | 11.07% | 7 |
| 7 | Horan | 51 | 1:119 | 12.06% | 11 |
| 8 | Egan | 47 | 1:129 | 5.14% | 3 |
| 9 | Murphy | 46 | 1:132 | 12.01% | 17 |
| 10 | Dunne | 45 | 1:135 | 3.97% | 2 |
| 11 | Dooley | 43 | 1:141 | 16.10% | 28 |
| 12 | FitzGerald | 42 | 1:145 | 29.17% | 72 |
| 13 | Molloy | 41 | 1:148 | 6.19% | 6 |
| 14 | Guinan | 40 | 1:152 | 10.10% | 14 |
| 15 | Meara | 39 | 1:156 | 25.83% | 67 |
| 16 | Gleeson | 36 | 1:169 | 21.43% | 55 |
| 17 | Walsh | 35 | 1:174 | 7.83% | 10 |
| 18 | Brien | 34 | 1:179 | 11.76% | 23 |
| 18 | Maher | 34 | 1:179 | 9.47% | 19 |
| 18 | Nolan | 34 | 1:179 | 17.26% | 47 |
| 21 | Burke | 31 | 1:196 | 17.13% | 52 |
| 22 | Brennan | 30 | 1:203 | 19.74% | 66 |
| 22 | Delaney | 30 | 1:203 | 14.08% | 40 |
| 24 | Byrne | 29 | 1:210 | 5.78% | 8 |
| 24 | Harte | 29 | 1:210 | 53.70% | 240 |
| 24 | McNamara | 29 | 1:210 | 27.88% | 108 |
| 27 | Browne | 28 | 1:217 | 25.45% | 102 |
| 27 | Mitchell | 28 | 1:217 | 20.90% | 79 |
| 27 | Sullivan | 28 | 1:217 | 23.93% | 91 |
| 30 | Connors | 27 | 1:225 | 38.57% | 181 |
| 31 | Dooly | 26 | 1:234 | 26.53% | 118 |
| 32 | Mahon | 25 | 1:243 | 9.09% | 27 |
| 32 | Scully | 25 | 1:243 | 9.36% | 28 |
| 34 | Daly | 24 | 1:253 | 3.34% | 4 |
| 34 | Eades | 24 | 1:253 | 100.00% | 464 |
| 34 | FitzPatrick | 24 | 1:253 | 15.09% | 61 |
| 34 | Hernon | 24 | 1:253 | 37.50% | 202 |
| 34 | White | 24 | 1:253 | 11.54% | 42 |
| 39 | Cahill | 23 | 1:264 | 26.44% | 141 |
| 39 | Davis | 23 | 1:264 | 24.21% | 125 |
| 39 | Melsopp | 23 | 1:264 | 100.00% | 482 |
| 42 | Downey | 22 | 1:276 | 34.92% | 209 |
| 42 | Hickey | 22 | 1:276 | 15.28% | 72 |
| 42 | Moran | 22 | 1:276 | 10.43% | 41 |
| 45 | Clarke | 21 | 1:289 | 16.94% | 84 |
| 45 | Flanagan | 21 | 1:289 | 5.13% | 12 |
| 45 | Kenny | 21 | 1:289 | 4.39% | 9 |
| 45 | McDonald | 21 | 1:289 | 17.50% | 87 |
| 45 | Murray | 21 | 1:289 | 5.93% | 20 |
| 50 | Cordial | 20 | 1:304 | 50.00% | 321 |
| 50 | Donnelly | 20 | 1:304 | 17.86% | 99 |
| 50 | Eggleton | 20 | 1:304 | 100.00% | 538 |
| 50 | McCormack | 20 | 1:304 | 9.71% | 43 |
| 50 | Power | 20 | 1:304 | 19.42% | 110 |
| 55 | Cole | 19 | 1:320 | 48.72% | 332 |
| 55 | Farrell | 19 | 1:320 | 7.85% | 34 |
| 55 | Griffin | 19 | 1:320 | 82.61% | 482 |
| 55 | Powell | 19 | 1:320 | 41.30% | 278 |
| 55 | Robbins | 19 | 1:320 | 26.03% | 171 |
| 60 | Barry | 18 | 1:338 | 28.13% | 202 |
| 60 | Loughnane | 18 | 1:338 | 38.30% | 274 |
| 60 | Williams | 18 | 1:338 | 16.67% | 105 |
| 63 | Heaton | 17 | 1:358 | 60.71% | 421 |
| 63 | Hennessy | 17 | 1:358 | 19.77% | 144 |
| 63 | Madden | 17 | 1:358 | 13.71% | 84 |
| 63 | Morris | 17 | 1:358 | 12.78% | 80 |
| 63 | Robinson | 17 | 1:358 | 20.99% | 154 |
| 63 | Sharkey | 17 | 1:358 | 94.44% | 588 |
| 69 | Bergin | 16 | 1:380 | 7.27% | 38 |
| 69 | Callaghan | 16 | 1:380 | 30.19% | 245 |
| 69 | Doolan | 16 | 1:380 | 13.56% | 90 |
| 69 | Gallagher | 16 | 1:380 | 12.80% | 82 |
| 69 | Hart | 16 | 1:380 | 53.33% | 392 |
| 69 | Morrison | 16 | 1:380 | 80.00% | 538 |
| 69 | O'Brien | 16 | 1:380 | 9.82% | 57 |
| 69 | Sheehan | 16 | 1:380 | 47.06% | 366 |
| 69 | Sylvester | 16 | 1:380 | 94.12% | 612 |
| 69 | Tooher | 16 | 1:380 | 14.16% | 97 |
| 79 | Conway | 15 | 1:405 | 11.72% | 81 |
| 79 | Deane | 15 | 1:405 | 37.50% | 321 |
| 79 | Fanneran | 15 | 1:405 | 83.33% | 588 |
| 79 | Mannion | 15 | 1:405 | 15.79% | 125 |
| 79 | Naylor | 15 | 1:405 | 75.00% | 538 |
| 79 | Oakley | 15 | 1:405 | 78.95% | 562 |
| 79 | Reid | 15 | 1:405 | 21.74% | 183 |
| 79 | Stapleton | 15 | 1:405 | 34.88% | 296 |
| 87 | Clements | 14 | 1:434 | 28.57% | 263 |
| 87 | Coughlan | 14 | 1:434 | 6.33% | 37 |
| 87 | Curran | 14 | 1:434 | 31.82% | 291 |
| 87 | Dwane | 14 | 1:434 | 36.84% | 343 |
| 87 | Long | 14 | 1:434 | 37.84% | 349 |
| 87 | Mooney | 14 | 1:434 | 3.57% | 15 |
| 87 | Scally | 14 | 1:434 | 15.05% | 128 |
| 87 | Shortt | 14 | 1:434 | 73.68% | 562 |
| 87 | Spencer | 14 | 1:434 | 48.28% | 405 |
| 96 | Brereton | 13 | 1:468 | 32.50% | 321 |
| 96 | Connor | 13 | 1:468 | 3.22% | 13 |
| 96 | Fahey | 13 | 1:468 | 46.43% | 421 |
| 96 | Hamilton | 13 | 1:468 | 54.17% | 464 |
| 96 | Lynch | 13 | 1:468 | 9.49% | 78 |
| 96 | McCann | 13 | 1:468 | 28.89% | 283 |
| 96 | Sweeney | 13 | 1:468 | 52.00% | 450 |
| 96 | Ward | 13 | 1:468 | 16.88% | 160 |
| 96 | Watson | 13 | 1:468 | 25.00% | 248 |
| 96 | Woods | 13 | 1:468 | 30.23% | 296 |
| 106 | Barnwell | 12 | 1:507 | 100.00% | 784 |
| 106 | Cannon | 12 | 1:507 | 21.05% | 228 |
| 106 | Colborne | 12 | 1:507 | 100.00% | 784 |
| 106 | Cox | 12 | 1:507 | 14.63% | 150 |
| 106 | Fayle | 12 | 1:507 | 100.00% | 784 |
| 106 | Gill | 12 | 1:507 | 26.09% | 278 |
| 106 | Hall | 12 | 1:507 | 30.00% | 321 |
| 106 | Hensey | 12 | 1:507 | 42.86% | 421 |
| 106 | Keefe | 12 | 1:507 | 46.15% | 442 |
| 106 | Maloney | 12 | 1:507 | 23.53% | 254 |
| 106 | Munay | 12 | 1:507 | 100.00% | 784 |
| 106 | Nevin | 12 | 1:507 | 23.53% | 254 |
| 106 | O'Connor | 12 | 1:507 | 16.67% | 177 |
| 106 | Quigley | 12 | 1:507 | 57.14% | 524 |
| 106 | Quinlan | 12 | 1:507 | 11.88% | 113 |
| 106 | Reilly | 12 | 1:507 | 12.37% | 122 |
| 106 | Sammon | 12 | 1:507 | 54.55% | 500 |
| 106 | Shanahan | 12 | 1:507 | 19.35% | 213 |
| 124 | Ashton | 11 | 1:553 | 73.33% | 661 |
| 124 | Blake | 11 | 1:553 | 27.50% | 321 |
| 124 | Hackett | 11 | 1:553 | 11.00% | 114 |
| 124 | Hinchy | 11 | 1:553 | 100.00% | 819 |
| 124 | Langley | 11 | 1:553 | 91.67% | 784 |
| 124 | Lucas | 11 | 1:553 | 45.83% | 464 |
| 124 | Norris | 11 | 1:553 | 61.11% | 588 |
| 124 | Smyth | 11 | 1:553 | 7.38% | 70 |
| 124 | Treacy | 11 | 1:553 | 12.36% | 137 |
| 124 | Whelan | 11 | 1:553 | 6.96% | 63 |
| 124 | Wright | 11 | 1:553 | 29.73% | 349 |
| 124 | Wyth | 11 | 1:553 | 100.00% | 819 |
| 124 | Young | 11 | 1:553 | 17.19% | 202 |
| 137 | Corcoran | 10 | 1:608 | 3.98% | 32 |
| 137 | Finnegan | 10 | 1:608 | 41.67% | 464 |
| 137 | Fox | 10 | 1:608 | 6.25% | 59 |
| 137 | Hanlon | 10 | 1:608 | 7.14% | 75 |
| 137 | Hynes | 10 | 1:608 | 6.29% | 61 |
| 137 | Leahy | 10 | 1:608 | 34.48% | 405 |
| 137 | Mahoney | 10 | 1:608 | 100.00% | 876 |
| 137 | McCourt | 10 | 1:608 | 100.00% | 876 |
| 137 | Mulhare | 10 | 1:608 | 32.26% | 384 |
| 137 | Noone | 10 | 1:608 | 100.00% | 876 |
| 137 | Perkinson | 10 | 1:608 | 52.63% | 562 |
| 137 | Russell | 10 | 1:608 | 14.71% | 188 |
| 137 | Slattery | 10 | 1:608 | 43.48% | 482 |
| 137 | Telford | 10 | 1:608 | 34.48% | 405 |
| 137 | Wall | 10 | 1:608 | 55.56% | 588 |
| 137 | Wallace | 10 | 1:608 | 21.28% | 274 |
| 137 | Watkins | 10 | 1:608 | 19.23% | 248 |
| 154 | Breen | 9 | 1:675 | 32.14% | 421 |
| 154 | Carry | 9 | 1:675 | 16.36% | 234 |
| 154 | Coghlan | 9 | 1:675 | 5.08% | 53 |
| 154 | Cuddy | 9 | 1:675 | 75.00% | 784 |
| 154 | Ferns | 9 | 1:675 | 100.00% | 951 |
| 154 | Flynn | 9 | 1:675 | 2.49% | 18 |
| 154 | Hegarty | 9 | 1:675 | 90.00% | 876 |
| 154 | Higgins | 9 | 1:675 | 12.00% | 165 |
| 154 | Hill | 9 | 1:675 | 13.85% | 198 |
| 154 | Hogben | 9 | 1:675 | 100.00% | 951 |
| 154 | Jones | 9 | 1:675 | 15.52% | 224 |
| 154 | Keane | 9 | 1:675 | 52.94% | 612 |
| 154 | Kearns | 9 | 1:675 | 13.64% | 193 |
| 154 | Lawlor | 9 | 1:675 | 7.83% | 94 |
| 154 | McDermott | 9 | 1:675 | 15.00% | 218 |
| 154 | Meagher | 9 | 1:675 | 39.13% | 482 |
| 154 | Mulcahy | 9 | 1:675 | 69.23% | 732 |
| 154 | Murdy | 9 | 1:675 | 90.00% | 876 |
| 154 | O'Neill | 9 | 1:675 | 8.18% | 102 |
| 154 | Odlum | 9 | 1:675 | 13.04% | 183 |
| 154 | Parsons | 9 | 1:675 | 52.94% | 612 |
| 154 | Pennefather | 9 | 1:675 | 100.00% | 951 |
| 154 | Wellwood | 9 | 1:675 | 56.25% | 638 |
| 177 | Bennett | 8 | 1:760 | 10.26% | 157 |
| 177 | Bowes | 8 | 1:760 | 100.00% | 1,018 |
| 177 | Cody | 8 | 1:760 | 61.54% | 732 |
| 177 | Connolly | 8 | 1:760 | 4.10% | 48 |
| 177 | Coolahan | 8 | 1:760 | 47.06% | 612 |
| 177 | Costello | 8 | 1:760 | 7.62% | 107 |
| 177 | Dolan | 8 | 1:760 | 2.80% | 25 |
| 177 | Fawcett | 8 | 1:760 | 44.44% | 588 |
| 177 | Fennell | 8 | 1:760 | 53.33% | 661 |
| 177 | Ferus | 8 | 1:760 | 100.00% | 1,018 |
| 177 | Flaherty | 8 | 1:760 | 16.67% | 267 |
| 177 | Gilmore | 8 | 1:760 | 47.06% | 612 |
| 177 | Greene | 8 | 1:760 | 8.16% | 118 |
| 177 | Hemsworth | 8 | 1:760 | 100.00% | 1,018 |
| 177 | Henry | 8 | 1:760 | 19.05% | 305 |
| 177 | Hoolihan | 8 | 1:760 | 88.89% | 951 |
| 177 | Hostings | 8 | 1:760 | 100.00% | 1,018 |
| 177 | Kilmartin | 8 | 1:760 | 6.67% | 87 |
| 177 | Kinirone | 8 | 1:760 | 100.00% | 1,018 |
| 177 | Lougherane | 8 | 1:760 | 100.00% | 1,018 |
| 177 | Malone | 8 | 1:760 | 5.10% | 64 |
| 177 | McDonnell | 8 | 1:760 | 13.33% | 218 |
| 177 | McEvoy | 8 | 1:760 | 6.84% | 91 |
| 177 | Mulrooney | 8 | 1:760 | 14.04% | 228 |
| 177 | Murdon | 8 | 1:760 | 100.00% | 1,018 |
| 177 | Noonan | 8 | 1:760 | 61.54% | 732 |
| 177 | Palmer | 8 | 1:760 | 42.11% | 562 |
| 177 | Price | 8 | 1:760 | 57.14% | 699 |
| 177 | Renison | 8 | 1:760 | 100.00% | 1,018 |
| 177 | Roe | 8 | 1:760 | 16.67% | 267 |
| 177 | Skerritt | 8 | 1:760 | 66.67% | 784 |
| 177 | Talbot | 8 | 1:760 | 17.78% | 283 |