Greetings Jeanne, Catholic church records may be requested via a brief, specific letter to the parish church where the event occurred. Identifying the appropriate parish church may require a bit of detective work. A diocesan chancery or archives may be a helpful contact while you are trying to learn which churches may have been in existence at the time. Other helpful resources may include local histories, city directories of the era, and so forth. On Local Catholic Church and Family History and Genealogy Research Guide and Worldwide Directory at http://home.att.net/~Local_Catholic/ , you could select the geographic area of interest, in this case New Hampshire which is on the following webpage http://home.att.net/~Local_Catholic/CatholicUS-BostonMA-NH-VT-ME.htm . Then, click on "Manchester" to go to the information and links to the Catholic Diocese of Manchester....There you will find that the diocese has a diocesan history online. Reading through the online history, it appears the most likely parish in which you may be interested would be St. Anne's. St. Anne's Catholic Church was established in 1848. The address is: 383 Beech Street, Manchester, NH 03103-5397 I wish you the best with your research. Respectfully, --Ann Cahill Watson wrote: > Greetings! > > I am looking for marriage & baptismal records of Irish immigrants (Dennis > O'BRIEN and Julia Ann CAHILL), who lived in Manchester, 3rd Ward in 1860. > They were probably married about 1857-8, their child was born in 1859. > > Does anyone know the names of Catholic Churches where they were likely > parishoners? If so, have the records been filmed by the LDS? Or does one > contact the currect archdiocese? > > Thanks for any information. > > Jeanne Cahill