http://landedestates.nuigalway.ie:8080/LandedEstates/jsp/
IRELAND ESTATE DATABASE: The Connacht and Munster Landed Estates project, funded by the Irish Council for Research in the Humanities and Social Sciences and the Programme for Research in Third Level Institutions respectively, undertook the research for, and the publication of, a comprehensive and integrated resource guide to landed estates and historic houses in Connacht and Munster, c. 1700-1914. The aim of the guide is to assist and support researchers working on the social, economic, political and cultural history of these provinces from c.1700 to 1914.
http://www.nationalarchives.ie/genealogy/centres.html
Web addresses of genealogy centers in Ireland by county.
Awesome find for Missouri info... http://www.sos.mo.gov/mdh/
Search page is here: http://ir6b.deepwebtech.com/mdh/search.html?ssid=63878052%3a131435b...
http://www.irish-genealogy-toolkit.com/index.html
Irish Genealogy Toolkit tells where to find Irish records.
A very valuable resource has started offering some of its older material for free. jstor.com collects scholarly journals in collections for libraries, schools etc. Now they are making US journals pre-1920 and other journals pre-1850 available without belonging to a supporting institution.
Here's the links for the announcement and a video for how to take advantage of the free service.
http://about.jstor.org/participate-jstor/individuals/early-journal-...
http://about.jstor.org/support-training/help/free-early-journal-con
Are you researching Cornwall?
http://www.sharons-tree.co.uk/index.htm
This is a beautiful website about Cornwall families from late 1600's to 1800's. Birth records were not kept but baptismal records were. The author arrange the site around the principal churches. If a family switches churches, she links you to that page. Many beautiful photographs of rural Cornwall and centuries-old churches.
Working on your Scotch-Irish ancestry? I am, and found this:
Chronicles of the Scotch-Irish Settlement in Virginia: Extracted from the Original Court Records of Augusta County, 1745-1800 [Hardcover] 3 volumes, $199.00
This monumental work consists of court records pertaining to the Scotch-Irish pioneers who first breached the mountain barrier sealing off the Atlantic seaboard from the country west of the Blue Ridge. In 1738, when Augusta County, Virginia was erected, its domain extended from the Alleghenies to the Mississippi River, and from the northern part of Tennessee to the Great Lakes. Consequently Chalkley's esteemed publication stands as the supreme source of genealogical information for hundreds of thousands who trace their ancestry to Augusta County, and the Great Valley of Virginia.
But ... Here we go ...
Ebook http://www.archive.org/details/chroniclesscotc00lockgoog
Index http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~chalkley/volume_1/vindx.htm
OKAY,, I'LL GIVE YOU A FEW..
idreamof.com
www.mocavo.com
www.grandpafinder.com
www.newspaperarchive.com
kindredtrails.com
access geneology.com
olivetree.com
geneabios.com
geneologytoday
usnationalarchives.com
usgenwebproject
worldgenwebproject
werelate.com
familysearch.com
www.gencircles.com
http:freegenealogytools.blog
funeralhomerecs.com
findagrave.com
http://www.irisharc.org/links.cfm
Links to Ireland genealogy records and countries where Irish immigrated
I"m on Chrome and I have zero trouble opening the link. I am baffled, because it is a great resource. It covers genealogy for Kent, Sussex and Surrey, and follows those families to the New World, especially to Canada. It has wonderful pictures of the people profiled and the towns where they lived. There is a simple tree for each family.