Tony McCarthy & Tim Cadogan in 'Tracing Your Cork Ancestors' gives some excellent RC and CI parish register bdm date availability tables, excellent civil parish maps and a useful comparator table showing the Civil, RC and CI parishes side by side. In the comparator table the CI Dromtarriff parish is shown alongside Dromtarriff Civil and Dromtarriff RC parishes on one line. On another Dromtarriff CI is shown with Drishane Civil and Drishane RC parishes. And on a third line Dromtarriff CI parish is shown with Cullen (Duhallow) Civil parish and Drishane RC parish again.. Each of these are respecting a separate Civil area in the Civil parish maps in NW Cork, to show how they overlap. It looks as if the CI parish of Dromtarriff covers the civil parishes of Cullen, Drishane and Dromtarriff, and also the RC parishes of Drishane and Dromtarriff, get it! Just to confuse matters Drishane Rc parish is now known as Millstreet! It would be nice to hear where the RC parish church is located in the RC Dromtarriff parish please. I have traced the church name as St Johns, and the home of the RC parish priest in Dromagh. Would the church be there and if so where is Dromagh with relation to say Millstreet please. Alfred Gabb on 12/2/02 3:23 pm, PeteScherm@aol.com at PeteScherm@aol.com wrote: > It appears that the R.C. parish of Dromtarriff is the same as the combined > civil parishes of Dromtarriff and Cullen. Don't have a clue about the C of I > parishes. > > Pete Schermerhorn, in the glorious Berkshire hills of western Massachusetts > > > ==== CountyCork Mailing List ==== > ** CountyCork Mailing List homepage > http://community.webtv.net/shamrockroots/countycork ** >