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DIRECTORIES
Dublin Directories.

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Dublin Directories

The Gentleman's and Citizen's Almanack, produced by John Watson, began publication in Dublin in 1736, and continued to 1844. However, the first true trade directories in Ireland were those published by Peter Wilson for Dublin city, starting in 1751 and continuing until 1837, with a break from 1754 - 1759. From the outset, these were considered as supplements to Watson's Almanack, and were regularly bound with it. In 1787, the two publications were put together with the English Court Registry, and, until it ceased publication in 1837, the whole was known as The Treble Almanack.

Initially, the information supplied in Wilson's Directory consisted purely of alphabetical lists of merchants and traders, supplying name, address and occupation. In the early years these were quite scanty, but grew steadily over the decades, from less than a thousand names in the 1752 edition to almost five thousand in 1816. As well as merchants and traders, the last decades of the eighteenth century also saw the inclusion of separate lists of those who might now be termed the Establishment, officers of the city guilds and of Trinity College, state officials, those involved in the administration of medicine and the law, Church of Ireland clergy etc.

The range of people covered expanded markedly, if a little eccentrically, in the early nineteenth century. The most permanent addition was a new section, added in 1815, which covered the nobility and gentry. As well as this, a number of other listings of potential use to readers were added, though some appear only intermittently. Persons covered by these lists include pawnbrokers, bankers, apothecaries, police, dentists, physicians, militia officers, and ships' captains. The most significant difference between The Treble Almanack and Pettigrew and Oultons Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland, which began annual publication in 1834, is the inclusion in the latter of a street by street listing, initially only of the inhabitants of Dublin proper, but enlarged year by year to encompass the suburbs. From 1835, this listing was supplemented by an alphabetical list of the individuals recorded. In theory at least, the combination of the two listings should now make it possible to track the movements of individuals around the city, an important feature, since changes of address were much more frequent in the nineteenth century, when the common practice was to rent rather than purchase. Unfortunately, in practice the alphabetical list is much less comprehensive than the street list.

Thoms' Directory, 1901

[Thoms' Directory, 1901:
Click for larger image]
Pettigrew and Oulton also extended even further the range of persons covered. The officers of virtually every Dublin institution, club and society are recorded, as well as clergy of all denominations, are included. Another significant difference from the earlier Treble Almanack which should be kept in mind is the extension of the coverage outside the Dublin area. Under the rubric Official Authorities of Counties and Towns, Pettigrew and Oulton record the names of many of the rural gentry and more prosperous inhabitants of the large towns in their guise as local administrators. This is particularly useful for areas which were not served by a local directory, or for which none has survived. Similarly, the officials of many of the better known institutions and societies in the larger country towns are also recorded, as well as the more important provincial clergy. The successor to Pettigrew and Oulton was Alexander Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory, which began in 1844 and has continued publication up to the present.


As the name implies, it continued the extension of coverage outside Dublin. To take one year as an example, the 1870 edition includes, as well as the alphabetical and street listings for Dublin, alphabetical lists of the following for the entire country:
  • Army officers;
  • attorneys, solicitors and barristers;
  • bankers;
  • Catholic, Church of Ireland and Presbyterian clergy;
  • coast guard officers;
  • doctors;
  • M.P.s;
  • magistrates;
  • members of the Irish Privy Council;
  • navy and marine officers;
  • officers of counties and towns;
  • peers.
Although Thoms is generally regarded as a Dublin directory, its usefulness goes well beyond Dublin.

As well as these annual directories, Dublin was also included in the country wide publications of Pigot and Slater issued at intervals during the nineteenth century. The only significant difference is the arrangement of the individuals listed under their trades, making it possible to identify all of those engaged in the same occupation, important at a time when many occupations were handed down from one generation to the next. These directories are dealt with more fully below.

Checklist
  • 1751 1837: Wilsons Directory. From 1787, issued as part of The Treble Almanack
  • 1834 1849: Pettigrew and Oultons Dublin Almanac and General Register of Ireland
  • from 1844: Thom's Irish Almanac and Official Directory
  • See also Pigots and Slaters country wide Directories from 1820.


The most comprehensive collections are held by The National Library and The National Archives. Copies can be requested directly at the reading room counter in the Library and are on open access in the Archives.

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