Eileen
O'Byrne, B.A., B.L., F.A.P.G.I., F.I.G.R.S.
[Unavailable for commissions]
SPECIALIST AREAS: Eighteenth Century
Eileen O'Byrne is one of Ireland's most distinguished
professional genealogists and is very highly regarded
by her peers. She has been working in the field for
almost four decades but most of her time has been
devoted to research for individual clients and consultancy;
comparatively little of her work has been published.
Eileen practised for some time at the Irish Bar before
raising a family. She came to genealogy in the 1960s
when she joined the Genealogical Office's freelance
research panel.
She was an active member of the Dublin Historical
Association in its heyday, serving on its committee.
She is a longstanding member of the Irish Genealogical
Research Society (IGRS), the only membership organisation
that existed in Irish ancestral research prior to
the mid-1980s. Eileen O'Byrne, along with Eilish
Ellis, was one of the senior figures behind the development
of a framework for Irish professional genealogy.
In 1980, along with other GO researchers, she was
a founder of Hibernian Research, the first private
sector genealogical company in Irish genealogy. She
was also a founder member of APGI and served as its
representative on the Taoiseach's Task Force on Genealogy,
one of the early precursors of IGL. Eileen was on
the organising committee of the 1st Irish Genealogical
Congress, which was held at Trinity College, Dublin,
in 1991. She was the second President of APGI, serving
in that capacity in 1998-2000.
Eileen
O'Byrne was a contributor to Irish Genealogy:
A Record Finder (1981), a landmark book which
influenced later writing on the subject, and she
edited the Convert Rolls (1981) for the
Irish Manuscripts Commission. In the late 1980s
APGI started to provide an advisory service on research
in conjunction with the Genealogical Office. It
evolved into the present Genealogy Advisory Service,
provided at the National Library and the National
Archives. Eileen was one of the initial consultants,
and she still works in the service. In 2005 she
was elected a Fellow of the IGRS and at the end
of the year became the second recipient of APGI's
Fellowship.
Back to Members