Goleen, 1844, A Gneeve, one twelfth part of a Ploughland.
Old land measurements.
28 Sunday Jun 2015
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Goleen, 1844, A Gneeve, one twelfth part of a Ploughland.
Old land measurements.
28 Sunday Jun 2015
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John O’Connor, Esq., Landlord, Middleman, Merchant, Bantry came into an estate of 700 acres in 1825, 4 years of arrears by Tenants of Lord Riversdale, Prize Fighters, Head of a Faction, He forgave 3 years and a More Industrious Tenantry, Instead of Being in the Public House at Fairs and Market Fighting, you have Slated Houses and Barns, where there was nothing but Poverty and Indigence 13 £10 Freeholders and one £20.
Evidence on the possibilities of prudent estate management as is evident from the Commission generally lacking in the area.
O’Connor may be the brother-in;law of John Jago, whose wife was O’Connor.
28 Sunday Jun 2015
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Evidence of Richard White Esq., Bantry, that the Cork Grand Jury need to raise £90-100,000 to run County Cork in 1844.
28 Sunday Jun 2015
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Lord Kenmare:
http://historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1820-1832/member/browne-hon-william-1791-1876
1840 Evictions by Lord Kenmare and his Middleman David Mellifont, at Ahil, Bantry and other areas, Distress, Typhus, Borrowing from Butter Merchants.
Mellifont lived at Carriganass Castle (Ballylickey/Kealkil) and this was bought by William O’Sullivan Esq.
The Mellifonts may have been rapparees in the Ballingeary area in the 17th century, conformed to the Church of Ireland and became land owners in the Bantry and Dunmanway areas, lawyers and military officers with property on Grafton St., Dublin. Is it possible that Mellifont is an agnomen for a local name such as O’Leary.
28 Sunday Jun 2015
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Dereliction on Trinity College Dublin, Estates, in Co. Kerry, 1844, Sub let to Middleman Orpen.
Evidence to Parliamentary Enquiry in contrast to Lord Lansdowne Estate.
28 Sunday Jun 2015
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https://www.google.ie/maps/@51.6808918,-9.4486028,11z
Michael Murphy, Donemark, Farmer and Miller, 200 years under Lord Kenmare, William O’Sullivan Esq., his son training to be Barrister, Dublin, Carriganass Castle has 500-600 acres in youth put out of family lands by Lord Kenmare, John Collins, Oldcourt, Skibbereen, Labourers Wages 6d to 8d a day, Patrick Tobin, Gortavallig, No Oppression on Estate of Lord Bantry, Allegations of Bribery against Denis Sullivan, Driver to Christopher Gallwey, Agent to Lord Kenmare, James McCarthy, Middleman , Goleen, Difficulty of Eliminating Middle men due to Complex Marriage settlements, Large Middleman Rev AlLeyn Evanson Durrus, Timothy O’Donovan, O’Donovan’s Cove holding from Mr. Congreve, Waterford and Lord Riversdale.
28 Sunday Jun 2015
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Gearhameen, originally McCarthy Castle then Durrus Court c 1740:
Ardgoeena from c 1740 still there in ownership of Gallagher family:
Friendly Cove/Murreagh probably from c1790:
Evansons
Dive Downe’s was the bishop of Cork and Ross and in 1700 toured the dioceses he says ‘Mount Gabriel is the haunt of wolves and there are no trees or shelter except rocks and bogs. The patron saint of Durrus is St Faughan in the parish of Durrus i.e. about Four Mile Water and at Blackrock near Bantry are about 30 Protestant families and in that part of the parish which is in Bantry are two English Schools kept by women. All the inhabitants of Kilcrohane are Papists and the land very coarse except for that of the Bishop of Cork’s lands’. He refers to Vicar Thomas Holmes of Kilmacomoge preaching every fourth Sunday at Captain Evanson’s house at Four Mile…
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28 Sunday Jun 2015
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Inventory Gill Abbey (Cork) 1541
Against the background of the Tudor appropriation of religious property an inventory of property belonging to Gill Abbey was conducted in 1541. A panel of Cork jurors were appointed and numbered, Walter Gallwey, John and Richard Skiddy, Patrick and William Coppinger, William Meade and Richard Gould (these were representative of old Cork Merchant families some of possible Viking decent). They included under ‘Durruske’ the vicarage of Durrus which also belonged to St. Catherines in Waterford. In the 1580s the parsonage and vicarage had a valuation of 40s. A further list was compiled in 1588 and the valuation of Durrus vicarage was £1. 6s. 8d. and ‘Kylcroghan’ was £2. 10s. 0d. in 1591.
It might be noted that the Coppinger family at one stage owned the Durrus town land of Ballycommane
27 Saturday Jun 2015
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| NAI REFERENCE: | CSO/RP/SC/1821/299 |
|---|---|
| TITLE: | Letter from 6th baron Carbery, County Cork, reporting his efforts to maintain law and order in area |
| SCOPE & CONTENT: | Letter from John Evans-Freke, 6th baron Carbery, Castle Freke, Rosscarbery, County Cork, to Chief Secretary’s Office, Dublin Castle, concerning the state of his neighbourhood and emphasising his own vigilance in keeping the peace. Urges government to adopt ‘vigorous’ measures to prevent the ‘contagion’ from spreading to all parts of Ireland. Comments that, ‘Until the Irish are taught to obey the Laws by a due sense of religious and moral Obligation they must be made to obey them by coercive means – This is a most difficult Country to govern’. |
| EXTENT: | 1 item; 4pp |
| DATE(S): | 30 Nov 1821 |
| DATE EARLY: | 1821 |
| DATE LATE: | 1821 |
https://durrushistory.wordpress.com/2012/08/17/ballycomane/
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27 Saturday Jun 2015
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The pre-famine period was one of extreme poverty for those at the bottom. Father Mathew said “if you wish to seek out the poor, go to Bantry”…
This is shown in the following extract from the journal of Asenath Nicholson an American Missionary who visited Bantry in 1845 and found a wild dirty sea-port with cabins built upon the rocks and hills, the people going about, not with sackcloth upon their heads, for this they could not purchase, but in rags and tatters such as no country but Ireland could hang out. I found some deplorable cabins and looking into one, the sight was appalling………I saw a pile of dirty broken straw, which served as a bed for family and pigs; not a chair, table, or pane of glass, and no spot to sit except upon the straw in the corner, without sitting in mud and manure’.