About Londonderry Corporation records
PRONI and Derry City Council Archive have worked together to digitise historic records from the Londonderry Corporation from 1673 to 1901.
Derry City and Strabane District Council Archive
The Archive and Genealogical Service, located at the Tower Museum, is the access point for the Council’s archive and genealogical collections. The collections include records such as minute volumes and correspondence, plus a wide range of architectural drawings, art work on paper and private collections on the railway industry, the shirt factories and civil rights.
For further details about the collection or to make an appointment to access the collection contact:
Bernadette Walsh, archivist
028 7125 3253
bernadette.walsh@derrystrabane.com
Derry City & Strabane - Home (derrystrabane.com)
Search Londonderry Corporation records
What PRONI has
PRONI holds several of the early corporation minute books, plus records on finance, education, health, housing, transport, water, welfare and town planning and development.
Visit the eCatalogue, and select PRONI Ref: LA/79, for more details on PRONI's Londonderry Corporation records.
Corporation minute books
The earliest minute volume dates from 1673. The original hard-copy corporation minute books are housed in two locations – volumes covering the period 1673 to 1841 are at PRONI in Belfast, while the later volumes from 1841 to 1969 are kept in the Foyle Valley Railway Museum.
To increase access to the 1673-1901 part of the early minute book collection, a partnership was established in December 2009 between PRONI and the Derry City Council Archive to produce digital copies which could be accessed online. This online resource is the product of the partnership.
Each minute book begins with the date of the meeting of the common council and a list of those members in attendance.
Freemen records
Registers and extracts from the minute books which relate to freemen of the city have been digitised.
War Memorial records
War Memorial records on soldiers who fell during WW1 and whose names appear on the War Memorial in the Diamond, Londonderry, have also been digitised.