(aka Lawrenson, Laurison), in 1851 census, was age 65y, born in Queen's County. His parents, according to his son's death notice, were Patrick and Margaret Laurenson.
I have found the births of the following Laurenson sons in Laois:
Robert 1748 Durrow parents William and Mary
Edmond 1750 Durrow, William and Mary
Crofton 1754 Durrow William and Mary
Richard 1753 Durrow John and Ann
Robert 1826 Abbeyleix, Rathmoil no parents shown
However I cannot find births of Patrick or Edward in the records to which I have access.
Can anyone help with pointers of how and where to search?
I'd also be interested in something of the history of the English (as I assume the Laurensons were; they are not Catholic.) in Laois. (A Robert Laurenson was recorded in the Tithe rolls as having land in Timahoe, Rathmoyle) Where do I look?
patm
Wednesday 15th Mar 2023, 03:50AMMessage Board Replies
-
patm,
John Grenham says that Lawrenson and variants is rare in Ireland, but was found in Belfast and is of Scottish or English origins. Given this background and the fact that the family were apparently Church of Ireland, the normal inference is that they moved to Ireland in the 1600s, perhaps as part of the Plantation or perhaps following Cromwell’s rather notorious visit when some of his troops were awarded land in return for their services. There are few records of individual Plantation settlers save for a few major landowners.
https://www.johngrenham.com/surnames/
One place where the surname is very common today is the Shetland Islands, though that would be an unusual part of Britain for a conventional Plantation family to have originated. Lawrenson, in Shetland, is a Norse name. The Norse occupied Shetland & Orkney in the 8th & 9th centuries and many surnames there are consequently of Norse patronymic origin. Shetland & Orkney were annexed to Scotland, from Denmark & Norway (at that time one country) in the 1400s, as part of a Royal dowry.
My guide to Church of Ireland records says that the baptism and burial records for Durrow start in 1706/7 and marriages in 1797. It also says that rootsireland has coverage of some years (it doesn’t say which). The original records are now held in the RCB Library in Dublin. (Personal visit required to access them). There is a slow project to put all the records on-line in due course.
https://www.ireland.anglican.org/news/rcb-library-notes
It is rare with Irish research to get back much earlier than 1800. Most research comes to a stop at that point due to the general lack of records.
If Robert Laurenson was in the tithes then that indicates he was almost certainly a farmer. It’s possible that he might be in the Registry of Deeds records (on Familysearch) which start in 1709. You might find a lease or two there for the family.
Elwyn, IrelandXO Volunteer ☘
-
Thank you very much indeed, Elwyn, for your detailed response. I shall check out the websites you mentioned - maybe something will come up. My Edward Laurenson was initially a lighthouse keeper and then a "castle servant" in Renfrew, Scotland, a very short hop from Belfast and Dublin, so it's easy to see how he may have arrived there from Ireland. So I shall have to pay attention to both Eire and Northern Ireland records. Many thanks for the breadcrumbs to follow.
patm
patm