Some parts of this may have been posted already
https://picasaweb.google.com/115580149661186384995/TrantMcCarthyTheMccarthysOfMunster
24 Friday Apr 2015
Posted in Uncategorized
Some parts of this may have been posted already
https://picasaweb.google.com/115580149661186384995/TrantMcCarthyTheMccarthysOfMunster
24 Friday Apr 2015
Posted in Uncategorized
Hull
Will of William Hull, 1726, Lemcon, Schull, West Cork, witnesses, Daniel Donovan Gent., Dunmanus, Owen Lander, Seneschal Lemcon Manor Court, Denis Donovan, farmer, Dunmanus. and the Manor Courts of Ballydehob, Bantry and their poor Reputation.
Another area which had the courts was Imokeely in East Cork.
The William Hull whose will abstract appears in this post is not Rev. William Hull, but somebody else!
The Tonson mentioned is a Hull who adopted the name Tonson by deed poll he was illegitimate.
There were various Donovan/O’Donovan families as wee the O’Driscolls in the area middle men and fish merchants. The Hulls were around since at least 1600 and obviously were well integrated into the area.
the Manor Courts at Ballydehob, Lemcon and Bantry were attached to estates and would have been somewhat lower then the present District Court. According to the evidence of John Jago, Bantry c 1830 to a Parliamentary Commission they had a dreadful reputation for bribery and ill justice. Very few of their records have survived Often they were held over pubs or in Gentlemen’s parlours. Many of the leases for the larger holding had a covenant for the tenant to serve in the manor Courts.
The Descendants of Sir William Hull, 1600, Leamcon, Schull, West Cork, From Opulence to Penury.
24 Friday Apr 2015
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Right of Prisage (Levy on Wine Imports) for Ireland, granted to Butlers (Earls of Ormond), 1319 bought out by British Government after Act of Union 1800 for £216,000 (c €20 million)
http://www.galway.net/galwayguide/history/hardiman/chapter4/wine2.html
http://www.kilkennycastle.ie/en/TouroftheCastle/LordsoftheCastle/TheEighteenthCentury/
24 Friday Apr 2015
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1797, Dublin Barristers: ‘Their Faces buried Beneath their Wigs, With Only Their Long Noses Protruding, Reminded him of Hawks Dressed to Pounce on Their Prey’, French Traveller, De La Tocnaye.
From his Walk through Ireland p 16.
23 Thursday Apr 2015
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Some 18th Century Cork Wills from the Registry of Deeds with an Explanation of Registry procedures.
Some Welply Wills copied pre 1922 destruction:
https://plus.google.com/photos/100968344231272482288/albums/6140959251119685969
23 Thursday Apr 2015
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Spanish Knights of Irish Origin, The Count of Berehaven, Brigadier Daniel O’Sullivan, Governor of Coruna, born Bantry, West Cork, sponsor of Dionisio O Calaghan born Madrid 1718, Grandmother Margaret McCarthy, born Cork, Captain Daniel O Sulivan, Spanish Service born Inchiclogh, Bantry, sponsor Juan McKenna born Madrid 1714, Alexandra O’Neill born Madrid 1765. From Micheline Walsh, for the Irish manuscript Commission, 1978. The Irish emigres on the Continent had to prove their noble status to enter the various nobilities. An example is the Genealogy compiled by the O’Neills to be allowed enter the Spanish Aristocracy: https://durrushistory.com/2014/03/27/discovery-of-lost-vellum-manuscript-documenting-oreillys-genealogy-of-breffni-cavan-over-1000-years-in-munich-2008-irish-presence-in-cuba-18th-century-and-irish-named-street-escape-castro-emba/
McMahon, France:











Marshall McMahon, (1808-1893). President of Third Republic, France, ancestor Margaret O’Sullivan married Bantry, West Cork, 1707
22 Wednesday Apr 2015
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Irish in the American Civil War
Every week in the New York Irish-American a series of advertisements were run under the heading ‘Information Wanted.’ For $1 you could place a few carefully chosen lines in three issues of the paper, in the hope of finding a loved one. I find these ads some of the most emotive and powerful records of the impact of conflict. In an age before mass media and the internet, many friends and families searched fruitlessly for years in an effort to restore contact with cousins, sons and brothers. Some were successful; others received the bad news they had been dreading. Having previously explored this topic with the tragic story of Alexander Scarff and others, I wanted to take another look at this unique record of the impact of war on the Irish diaspora.
INFORMATION WANTED Of Patrick Bush, a native of Bennett’s Bridge, County Kilkenny, Ireland. When last heard from, two…
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22 Wednesday Apr 2015
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Irish in the American Civil War
Occasionally, I am asked why any Irish impacted by the American Civil War should be remembered in Ireland. After all, the argument goes, these people left our shores, and they weren’t fighting for ‘Ireland.’ In response, I usually point out that many were Famine-era emigrants, who often felt they had little choice but to leave. There are many other reasons for remembrance, but perhaps one of the most persuasive is that these emigrants tended not to forget those at home. Whether we realise it or not, the ancestors of many in Ireland today benefited greatly from something that Irish emigrants to America sent back- money. One such emigrant was a man named Thomas Bowler from Youghal, Co. Cork. His decision to enlist in the Irish Brigade was almost certainly borne from a desire to help his wife and child, more than 3,000 miles away across the Atlantic.
I have previously
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21 Tuesday Apr 2015
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Forgotten Contributions, John Lodge, (c1710-1774), English Born, Compiler of First Bibliography of Irish History drawing on Gaelic, Latin, French and English. 1751 appointed Deputy-Keeper of Bermingham Tower Records (Dublin Castle). 1754, Peerage of Ireland was published in 4 vols. 8vo. in Dublin. In 1759 he was appointed Deputy-Clerk and Keeper of the Rolls. In 1770 he published anonymously The Usage of Holding Parliaments in Ireland.
Courtesy Francis G. James, ‘Lords of the Ascendency, The Irish House of Lords and its members 1600-1800, Irish Academic Press, 1995.
Bermingham Tower held the Irish Records until they went to the new Public Records Office in the Four Court Complex in the 19th century.
From A Compendium of Irish Biography, 1878
« Bartholomew Lloyd | Index | Archbishop Adam Loftus »
Lodge, John, the distinguished archivist, was born in England early in the 18th century, and was educated at Cambridge University. In 1744 was published at Dublin a Report of the Trial in Ejectment of Campbell Craig, taken in shorthand by him. In 1751 “Mr. John Lodge, of Abbey-street,” was appointed Deputy-Keeper of Bermingham Tower Records. Three years afterwards his Peerage of Ireland was published in 4 vols. 8vo. in Dublin. In 1759 he was appointed Deputy-Clerk and Keeper of the Rolls. In 1770 he published anonymously The Usage of Holding Parliaments in Ireland, and in 1772, also anonymously, a valuable collection of historical tracts entitled Desiderata Curiosa Hibernica, 2 vols. 8vo. Mr. Lodge died at Bath, 22nd February 1774. His wonderful collection of indexes remained in the possession of his family for nine years, until 1783, when they were deposited in the office of the Civil Department of the Chief-Secretary to the Lord-Lieutenant, in return for a life pension of £100 a year to his widow, and £200 a year to his son, the Rev. William Lodge. A transcript of a portion of these manuscripts sold at Sir William Betham’s sale for £155. These documents were largely drawn upon by Mr. Lascelles [See LASCELLES, ROWLEY] in his Liber Munerum Hiberniae.
Mr. Lodge’s first wife is reported to have been a Hamilton of the Abercorn family, his second, Edwarda Galland. He was a great expert in shorthand, and almost all his note-books are full of it. Dr. Reeves writes: “In the department of genealogy he was the most distinguished compiler that Ireland has produced. Archdall is to him what Harris is to Ware. His industry was unbounded, his appetite for compilation insatiable, and his accuracy such as stamps all that he did and all that he has left with unfailing reliability.” Mervyn Archdall, in the preface to his edition of Lodge’s Peerage of Ireland, published in 7 vols. in 1789, writes: “When I reflect on the performance which, though imperfectly, I have attempted to revise, then do I deplore, and I am sure my readers will accompany me, the death of my much valued friend the author. To the desire of improving his Peerage of Ireland, whilst in the various offices, as Deputy-Keeper of the Records in Bermingham Tower, Keeper of the Rolls in the High Court of Chancery, and Registrar of the Court of Prerogative, and to the necessary attendance on the duties of his employments, the public owe his loss.”
It is to be regretted that so little is known concerning the life of this unassuming man — one of the ablest and most painstaking that ever devoted himself to the investigation of Irish history. His son, Rev. William Lodge, born in 1742, the only survivor of nine children, was in 1790 Chancellor of Armagh Cathedral and rector of Kilmore, in the same diocese. Through him several of John Lodge’s books with marginal notes and corrections, came into the Armagh Library; and a further accession was made about 1867 by the purchase from his grandson, son of Rev. William Lodge, rector of Killybegs, of a large collection of his great-grandfather’s papers, with rough draughts of his clerical and other lists. John Lodge must not be confounded with Edmund Lodge (born 1756; died 1839), who edited the Gallery of Portraits.
Sources
128a. Exshaw’s London Magazine, 1732-’93.
233. Manuscript and Special Information, and Current Periodicals.
254. Notes and Queries (2). London, 1850-’78.
O’Callaghan, John C., see No. 186.
21 Tuesday Apr 2015
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Forgotten Contributions, Bishop William Nicolson (1655-1727), English Born, Compiler of First Bibliography of Irish History drawing on Gaelic, Latin, French and English sources,dedicated to William Conolly Irish Born Speaker of Irish House of Commons, ‘A Patriot”, ‘A Zealous Antiquary and a learned Historian and Philologist.” “He fell into many errors in this work, for want of sufficient acquaintance with the Irish manuscripts and language. But notwithstanding that, much thanks are due to him for the extraordinary pains he took to inform himself about the materials which may be had for improving Irish history.” O’Curry speaks of his “valuable Irish Historical Library.”
Conolly was probably, in the early 18th century, the richest man in Ireland. He was from obscure Catholic origins in Donegal, a Protestant and refused all attempts to grant him titles.
Courtesy Francis G. James, ‘Lords of the Ascendency, The Irish House of Lords and its members 1600-1800, Irish Academic Press, 1995.
A significant number of the members of the Irish House of Lords were Protestant Bishops of the State Church, that of the Church of Ireland. Irish Sees were lucrative with an income ranging from £2,000 to £8,000 in the 1770s according to Arthur Young.
Courtesy Library Ireland:
Nicolson, William, Archbishop of Cashel, was born in Cumberland in 1655, was in 1702 consecrated Bishop of Derry, and in 1726 advanced to the archbishopric of Cashel, and died of apoplexy, 15th February 1727. He deserves notice as author of the Irish Historical Library, printed in Dublin in 1724, containing a valuable list of authors and records in print and manuscript on subjects relating to the history of Ireland. Cotton styles him “a zealous antiquary and a learned historian and philologist.” Harris’s Ware says: “He fell into many errors in this work, for want of sufficient acquaintance with the Irish manuscripts and language. But notwithstanding that, much thanks are due to him for the extraordinary pains he took to inform himself about the materials which may be had for improving Irish history.” O’Curry speaks of his “valuable Irish Historical Library.”
Sources
196. Irishmen, Lives of Illustrious and Distinguished, Rev. James Wills, D.D. 6 vols. or 12 parts. Dublin, 1840-‘7.
260. O’Curry, Eugene: Manuscript Materials of Ancient Irish History. Dublin, 1861.
339. Ware, Sir James, Works: Walter Harris. 2 vols. Dublin, 1764.
Forgotten Contributions: