The resulting maps of the parishes, all drawn by Petty himself, were preserved in the Surveyor General's office and in the
Public Record Office in Dublin. The original Down Survey parish maps were lost in a fire in the Surveyor General's office in 1711, and the authenticated copies of the parish maps were lost in fires at the Public Record Office in the
Four Courts during the
Irish Civil War of 1922. Petty also edited the parish maps into
barony maps. The details listed in terriers beside the maps include the names of previous owners of the lands, religious affiliation, land valuation, and area. The maps themselves include townland boundaries, and sometimes houses/castles, roads and fields. It listed the owners of land in 1640, and the new owners. Considering the time and circumstances in which these maps were executed, their accuracy is surprising, and they continue to be referred to as trustworthy evidence in courts of law even at the present day.
Parish maps Copies of a number of the parish maps survive in various institutions. The
National Library of Ireland holds a set of Down Survey parish maps copied by Daniel O'Brien in the 1780s and purchased in the 1960s from a firm of Dublin solicitors. These maps cover land in counties
Cork, Dublin, East Meath (
Meath), King's County (
Offaly),
Leitrim,
Limerick,
Longford, Queen's County (
Laois),
Kilkenny,
Tipperary,
Waterford,
Westmeath,
Wexford and
Wicklow. In some cases, summary barony maps have been included, though these barony maps are not necessarily fully comprehensive.
Barony maps Some copies of the original Down Survey barony maps survive. The Public Record Office of
Northern Ireland (PRONI) has a set in the Annesley Collection. The
British Library acquired another set in recent years. The best set, a personal set of Sir William Petty's, is in the
Bibliothèque Nationale de France. It seems that set was en route by sea to London in 1707, when a French vessel captured the ship. The Bibliothèque Nationale subsequently received the maps. The
Ordnance Survey Office, Dublin, published a facsimile set of these maps in 1908. ==Related publications==