shanew147 wrote:no sign of a death notice for your Margaret in any of those papers unfortunately, I checked from the date of death to about two weeks later after in each, and also tried text search just in case. The Irish Times was considered a Protestant Newspaper at that time so a little unusual for a notice for Catholic described a 'wife of a labourer' on her death cert. It looks like the death notice you located was probably paid for by this Earle family so maybe they also paid for a burial somewhere ?
If this Earle family were some Protestant denomination, e.g. Church of Ireland they could have used Mount Jerome in Harold's Cross. Records for this cemetery are not available online at the moment , but there are microfilm of burial records on Dublin City Library, Pearse Street.
Liamcornes1983 wrote:Shane, managed to find the Earle's at Deans Grange, Evelyn died 1966 (1 year or so after the last memorial notice in the paper, William Earle died in 1978. Thanks for your help anyway.
shanew147 wrote:Liamcornes1983 wrote:Shane, managed to find the Earle's at Deans Grange, Evelyn died 1966 (1 year or so after the last memorial notice in the paper, William Earle died in 1978. Thanks for your help anyway.
I was just about to post that I'd found them in Dean's Grange also, including William who was head of the household from at least the 1940s up to the time of his death. They are noted in the register as Church of Ireland..
Might be worth contacting Dean's Grange to see if they can find anything
Liamcornes1983 wrote:shanew147 wrote:...Had they been at the address all that time?
shanew147 wrote:Liamcornes1983 wrote:shanew147 wrote:...Had they been at the address all that time?
Earliest directory listing I have for them at that address is 1940, William Earle, Journey's End, 153 Strand Road, Dublin 4. Same address is given on his burial in the late 1970s.
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