Galway County Council digitally maps the heritage of over 25,000 memorials

Pictured at the Athenry Heritage Centre are L-R: Marie Mannion, Heritage Officer, Galway County Council, Alan Burgess, manager Athenry Heritage Centre, Barry Doyle, GIS Manager, Galway County Council and Jack Ffrench, Account Manager, Esri Ireland. Esri Ireland, the market leader in geographic information systems (GIS) is announcing that Galway County Council has digitally mapped over 25,000 memorials, monuments, and gravestones across Galway as part of a community-focused project using Esri’s technology. Photo: Mike Shaughnessy

Pictured at the Athenry Heritage Centre are L-R: Marie Mannion, Heritage Officer, Galway County Council, Alan Burgess, manager Athenry Heritage Centre, Barry Doyle, GIS Manager, Galway County Council and Jack Ffrench, Account Manager, Esri Ireland. Esri Ireland, the market leader in geographic information systems (GIS) is announcing that Galway County Council has digitally mapped over 25,000 memorials, monuments, and gravestones across Galway as part of a community-focused project using Esri’s technology. Photo: Mike Shaughnessy

Esri Ireland, the market leader in geographic information systems (GIS ), has announced that Galway County Council has digitally mapped over 25,000 memorials, monuments, and gravestones using Esri’s ArcGIS system.

As part of a community-focused project across the county of Galway, Esri’s technology is being used to create a fully digitised process for capturing information about graveyard memorials and making it publicly accessible online.

Throughout Galway, there are 235 council-owned graveyards with ancient monuments and gravestones that provide invaluable insight into family ancestry and social history. Previously, community groups in Galway have endeavoured to capture this culturally significant information, using pen and paper to manually note memorial inscriptions.

Galway County Council’s interactive map, accessed through the Graveyard Memorial Search App, enables volunteers and heritage professionals to view and capture data and images in real-time on their mobile devices. It provides aerial photography of each graveyard, allowing users to zoom into pictorial maps of graveyards on their devices, and accurately identify each gravestone and record data pertaining to it. It also allows citizens to search for burial records and ancestors’ graves, and many graveyards can be explored in 3D, giving people an immersive, realistic experience of visiting family memorials.

The online map provides a streamlined, cloud-based process for collecting, validating, managing and sharing memorial data. It has made the process ten times faster and delivers more accurate and consistent data, which will help to preserve Galway’s graveyard heritage for future generations.

This is leading to increased community engagement, and more than 50 local groups are now using the solution. It is also being used by historians, archaeologists, genealogists and health researchers, as well as schools.

Already, data on over 35 graveyards is available via the app, providing citizens with easy, online access to ancestry information. With over 30 further graveyard surveys planned or in progress, Galway County Council, with support from the Heritage Council, is rapidly expanding the amount of information available via the app. The technology can also be replicated by other county councils and used by all kinds of community groups going forward.

Barry Doyle, GIS Manager, Galway County Council, said simplicity is key to all of this.

“Everything is done in one efficient, seamless process where the data is stored and accessed centrally in the cloud. With this ArcGIS process we are enabling community groups to achieve their heritage objectives.”

Marie Mannion, Heritage Officer, Galway County Council, said digitising Galway’s graveyard heritage has been a powerful way to enable people to learn about the local and national heritage that can be found in graveyards.

“People can now search for and find photographs of their family’s memorials online and form a stronger connection with their past. It’s an incredible resource for everyone,” she said.

Jack Ffrench, Account Manager, Esri Ireland, said:“Being able to access local heritage, digitally, for Galway citizens has been a really important project to work on and exemplifies the true power of GIS technology. It is rewarding for us to be able to work with local communities, and bringing this important history to life will ensure that Galway’s past can become part of its present. We are looking forward to continuing to work with Galway County Council and seeing how this use case could be repeated within other councils, as well as a wide variety of community groups, in the future.”

 

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