Early British and Irish Census Project

Amy Harris, PhD, AG®
Oct 22, 2025
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Content

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Welcome
1m 22s
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Speakers' Introductions
1m 48s
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Introduction
4m 59s
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English Counties
3m 37s
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Archive Locations
7m 56s
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Recent Improvements
3m 47s
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Research Ramifications
12m 14s
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Live Demonstration
12m 34s
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Announcements / prizes
5m 29s
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Questions / answers
22m 01s

About this webinar

Most British and Irish pre-1841 census records have only statistical information. However, approximately 1400 returns have named individuals. The Early British and Irish Census Project (EBIC) brings all the information from those returns into one searchable, free-to-the-public database (ebc.byu.edu, will soon be ebic.byu.edu). The database covers the period before civil registration and the more comprehensive censuses. It helps researchers find early nineteenth-century and late eighteenth-century people who can be difficult to trace due to increased mobility and increased religious nonconformity.

Discount code: census25 (valid at Familytreewebinars.com)

Valid through: October 28, 2025

About the speakers

About the speakers

Amy Harris, PhD, AG®, FRHistS is the current Family History Program Coordinator at Brigham Young University. She has published in the National Genealogical Society Quarterly, in the Genealogists’ Magazine, and on the history of genealogical practi
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Kyra Bryant is a current student at Brigham Young University majoring in Family History and Genealogy and minoring in Africana Studies and Sociology. She is the Supervisor of the Early British & Irish Census Project at BYU’s Center for Family
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Comments (49)

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  1. DR
    Debra Rhoads
    8 hours ago

    I’m new to this and I am not a member but I am becoming one as soon as I fill out this survey! We are planning a trip to Ireland in sept 2026 and you mentioned the National Archives of Ireland in Dublin. Thank you! We will definitely go there. Even though I could only listen to the Webinar it gave me hope I might be able to find information on my Great Grandmother and Great Grandfather. We have always hit a brick wall because my Great grandfather and his two brothers were orphans.

    Reply
  2. GC
    George Crabb
    8 hours ago

    Absolutely wonderful! The presentation and Q & A were very insightful and helpful. Thank you so much for the work that you and the students are doing to make this information available.

    Reply
  3. PB
    Patricia Briggs
    8 hours ago

    A very interesting webinar. Clearly there is a huge amount of information to be found in the presentation. Thank you both.

    Reply
  4. MH
    Marilynn Havelka
    8 hours ago

    the project is ideal to get students keen on and involved with history and genealogy.

    Reply
  5. GH
    Gloria Hughes
    9 hours ago

    Fantastic webinar, the information in the database is awesome and I can see it helping me in my research

    Reply
  6. GL
    Gloria Lawrie
    9 hours ago

    Brilliant, I can’t wait to try it

    Reply
  7. SM
    Sandy Murray
    9 hours ago

    What a great project! Very helpful and eagerly awaiting a resource I badly need for many projects, including example of Allington, Dorset. Well done.

    Reply
  8. VP
    Virginia Parsons
    9 hours ago

    It was interesting to learn about the project the speakers are working on and about the records they are using.

    Reply

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