• About
  • Customs Report 1821-2 (and Miscellaneous Petitions to Government 1820-5) and some Earlier Customs Data, including staffing, salaries, duties including, Cork, Kinsale, Youghal, Baltimore, with mention of Bantry, Crookhaven, Glandore, Berehaven, Castletownsend, Enniskeane, Passage, Crosshaven, Cove, Clonakilty, Cortmacsherry.
  • Eoghan O’Keeffe 1656-1723, Glenville, Co. Cork later Parish Priest, Doneralie 1723 Lament in old Irish
  • Historic maps from Cork City and County from 1600
  • Horsehair, animal blood an early 18th century Stone House in West Cork and Castles.
  • Interesting Links
  • Jack Dukelow, 1866-1953 Wit and Historian, Rossmore, Durrus, West Cork. Charlie Dennis, Batt The Fiddler.
  • Kilcoe Church, West Cork, built by Father Jimmy O’Sullivan, 1905 with glass by Sarah Purser, A. E. Childs (An Túr Gloine) and Harry Clarke Stained Glass Limited
  • Late 18th/Early 19th century house, Ahagouna (Áth Gamhna: Crossing Place of the Calves/Spriplings) Clashadoo, Durrus, West Cork, Ireland
  • Letter from Lord Carbery, 1826 re Destitution and Emigration in West Cork and Eddy Letters, Tradesmen going to the USA and Labourers to New Brunswick
  • Marriage early 1700s of Cormac McCarthy son of Florence McCarthy Mór, to Dela Welply (family originally from Wales) where he took the name Welply from whom many West Cork Welplys descend.
  • Online Archive New Brunswick, Canada, many Cork connections
  • Origin Dukelow family, including Coughlan, Baker, Kingston and Williamson ancestors
  • Return of Yeomanry, Co. Cork, 1817
  • Richard Townsend, Durrus, 1829-1912, Ireland’s oldest Magistrate and Timothy O’Donovan, Catholic Magistrate from 1818 as were his two brothers Dr. Daniel and Richard, Rev Arminger Sealy, Bandon, Magistrate died Bandon aged 95, 1855
  • School Folklore Project 1937-8, Durrus, Co. Cork, Schools Church of Ireland, Catholic.
  • Sean Nós Tradition re emerges in Lidl and Aldi
  • Some Cork and Kerry families such as Galwey, Roches, Atkins, O’Connells, McCarthys, St. Ledgers, Orpen, Skiddy, in John Burkes 1833 Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland:
  • Statement of Ted (Ríoch) O’Sullivan (1899-1971), Barytes Miner at Derriganocht, Lough Bofinne with Ned Cotter, later Fianna Fáil T.D. Later Fianna Fáil TD and Senator, Gortycloona, Bantry, Co. Cork, to Bureau of Military History, Alleged Torture by Hammer and Rifle at Castletownbere by Free State Forces, Denied by William T Cosgrave who Alleged ‘He Tried to Escape’.
  • The Rabbit trade in the 1950s before Myxomatosis in the 1950s snaring, ferrets.

West Cork History

~ History of Durrus/Muintervara

West Cork History

Monthly Archives: January 2016

Ann Maria Curtis, Dungourney, granddaughter, of Martha Evanson, Ballydivane/Friendly Cove, Durrus, married 1867, The Liberator’s (Daniel O’Connell) grandson (Son of Charles Resident Magistrate, Bantry).

09 Saturday Jan 2016

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Ann Maria Curtis, Dungourney, granddaughter, of Martha Evanson, Ballydivane/Friendly Cove, Durrus, married 1867, The Liberator’s (Daniel O’Connell)  grandson (Son of Charles Resident Magistrate, Bantry).

Martha married Rev. John Madras, their genealogy is here:

Genealogy of Cork Huguenot Madras family post 1750 from Amsterdam to Cork 1735 by letter from India Office 1939, interconnected families Longfield Connor Fort Robert, Evanson Durrus, Travers Butlerstown, Baldwin Curravody, Alleyn, Daniel O’Connell, Catholic Descendants.

 

 

 

Magistrate:  Rev. John Henry Madras (1804-1852), Pre 1831, 1835 sitting Dripsey, Of Huguenot extraction via Amsterdam married 1800 Martha Evanson, Ballydivane/Friendly Cove, Durrus, 3 sons 4 daughters.  Died at residence Rathard, Aherla.  His granddaughter Ann Maria Curtis, Dungourney, married 1867, Daniel O’Connell’s grandson (Son of Charles RM, Bantry),

Richard S. Harrison Article 1994, re Friends (Quakers) in Bandon, 1655-1807, Reference to Spat with Swanton Member?, in Skibbereen, 1696.

09 Saturday Jan 2016

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Richard S. Harrison Article 1994, re Friends (Quakers) in Bandon, 1655-1807, Reference to Spat with Swanton Member?, in Skibbereen, 1696.

Courtesy Cumann Seanchais na Bandain/ Bandon Historical Society and Richard S Harrison.  Richard Harrison has done excellent histories of Drimoleague and Bantry.

The Swanton reference is interesting there are two contrasting views on the family origin.  One is that they come from Scotland part of a small plantation in Castlehaven  late 17th century.  In the mid 18th century many of the family in Ballydehob converted fro the Church of Ireland to Methodism.

Some of the Shipseys were Quakers at one stage.

 

Quakers Skibbereen and Bandon, 1696

 

The Registers of the Cork City Meeting of the Quakers (Births Marriages and Deaths) 1653-1859 and other records from Dr. Albert Casey’s Collection.

 

A Journal of a Voyage from Philadelphia to Cork in the year of our lord 1809 together with a Description of a Sojourn in Ireland, Margaret B.Harvey

 

William Penn:

 

My Irish Journal, William Penn includes his sojourns in Cork 1669-70.

 

Original signature William Penn

 

1711, William Penn, Founder of Pennsylvania, USA, Properties near Clonakilty, Co. Cork

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Dr. Jerry Crowley, Apothecary, North St., Skibbereen possibly originally from Ballyourane, Caheragh, West Cork, Famine Relief, Phoenix Club Swore O’Donovan Rossa in As Member, Extended Family Evans, Haddens

09 Saturday Jan 2016

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Dr. Jerry Crowley, Apothecary, North St., Skibbereen possibly originally from Ballyourane, Caheragh, West Cork, Famine Relief, Phoenix Club Swore O’Donovan Rossa in As Member, Extended Family Evans, Haddens

In the early 19th century the demarcation between a doctor and apothecary (chemist) was not clear cut.  There are many references to Doctors who in fact were apothecaries.

Recent DNA evidence may suggest two separate lines of Protestant ancestors.  Firstly the West Cork Landlord families, Cox, Evans,  Jervois, Hull, Robinson and secondly the Armagh weaver families who settled in the triangle Clonakilty/Skibbereen/Dunmanway, Johnson, Williamson, Young among others.,

He may also be of the same extended family as father Crowley from Caheragh who was jailed in the late 1880s during the Land War during a controversial criminal defamation action initiated by the Protestant Minister in Goleen.  Fr. Crowley later went to the USA and became a controversial Catholic bible hall preacher.

For family relationships:

 

https://docs.google.com/document/d/10x-KU_Witor3g7ZUB1tg3PiE0ewRnU45AVXfr-WJFsM/edit#heading=h.xt3xcbjg5hja

 

1-Scan

 

Skibbereen Apothecaries:

 

Skibbereen
1833 …Carey Son aged 2 James William died
1817 Francis Clerke
1824 Jonathan Clarke
1800, 1824 James Crowley North-st Pigot’s directory 1824 Married Sarah Evans, Lissangle, 1810. Probably of Ballyourane, Caheragh family major farmers.
1827 Jermiah Crowley North St Slater’s Directory 1846. Brother James d 1843 of TB. Phoenix Society later Fenains founded in his house, now Cahalane’s hairdressing saloon North St, present were Jeremiah O’Donovan Rossa, Mortimer Downing, Jeremiah Crowley, Morty Moynihann, Daniel McCartie
1826 Daniel Donovan
1837, 1845 David Hadden Apothecary, Pysician and Surgeon Born 1817, leading Methodist Probably born in wexford as was his brother William Henry who trained as an apothecary and later practised medicine in Walhalla, Australia He married one of the Evan sisters, Lissangle, Caheragh,  James Crowley married Rebecca Evans
B 1828 William Henry Hadden Apothecary, later Doctor in Walhalla, Australia Brother of David, father John, a Methodist missionary, mother Eleanor Evans one of 11 children, born Wexford but appliied to Apothecary’s Hall at age 15 from Skibbereen
1808 Alexander McCarthy 1808 set up own shop 1829 return transcribed by Kae Lewis
1816 John McCarthy
1824 Cornelius O’Driscoll Hollybrook 1829 return transcribed by Kae Lewis May be related to Crowley and Evans apothecaries by marriage
1828 G.A.Rountree
1824 Stephen Sweetnam
1827 Denny Taylor

 

 

 

 

1852, Emigration Direct from Cork to New York, Philadelphia, New Orleans, British North America with Free Steam Passage to Liverpool, Free Weekly Food Allowance of Over 2 Lb, Bread, 5 Lb. Oatmeal, 2 Lb. Rice, I Lb. Flour, I Lb. Sugar and Molasses, 2 Oz. Tea, 21 Quarts of Water

08 Friday Jan 2016

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1852, Emigration Direct from Cork to New York, Philadelphia, New Orleans,  British North America with Free Steam Passage to Liverpool, Free Weekly Food Allowance of Over 2 Lb, Bread, 5 Lb. Oatmeal, 2 Lb.  Rice, I Lb. Flour, I Lb. Sugar and Molasses, 2 Oz. Tea, 21 Quarts  of Water

Screen Shot 2016-01-08 at 18.12.03

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Oillscoilan t-Sleigh, The Academy of Master Madden late 19th century, Ardfield, Clonakilty to Prepare Boys for British Civil Service Exams, Pupils included Michael Collins and Sam Maguire.

08 Friday Jan 2016

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Oillscoilan t-Sleigh, The Academy of Master Madden late 19th century, Ardfield, Clonakilty to Prepare Boys for the British Civil Service Exams. Pupils included Michael Collins and Sam Maguire.

Up to the mid 1960s the opportunities for second level education even for families with a degree of comfort was limited.  In the 19th century as an alternative to home farming or going to America the prospect of the Imperial Civil Service was attractive.

One of Master Madden’s great grand sons taught at second level in Dunmanway in the 1960s.

Apart from Sam Maguire and Michael Collins another pupil was Séan Hurley from Durrus.  He went to work in the Chinese Customs in Shanghai and assisted Chinese Revolutionaries. The first Irishman to be given an honorary Chinese passport.

Seán (John Joseph) Hurley (1883-1961), Durrus, West Cork, China and Dublin, First Irishman to have a Chinese Passport and early founder of Aer Lingus. Obituary 1961.

‘Keep your Water Boys’, Exhortation from Woman of The House at Ardfield, Clonakilty, West Cork, 1890s to use Urine for Clothes Washing in Lodging House Attached to Cramming School where Boys, including Michael Collins, prepared for British Civil Service Examinations and collection of Urine by Donkey and Cart in Kilcrohane 1810s.

 

Courtesy Sharon Hosford, History of Dunmanway Model School, (1849-1999)

 

 

full_history

Sam Maguire

Among the most noteworthy past pupils of The Model School, Dunmanway is Sam Maguire. Born to John and Jane Maguire in the townland of Maulabracka, Sam came from farming people. They were large tenant farmers on the Shouldham Estate. Sam was one of a family of seven children. ( Mary, Elizabeth, Paul, John, Richard, Willie and Sam).They had the reputation of being kind, generous and hard working people.

Sam attended both Junior and Senior departments in the Model School where he learned such subjects as algebra, mensuration, geometry, agriculture, line-drawing and music. Sam was an excellent student and it was decided that he’d make a good candidate for the British Civil Service. After finishing at the Model he was sent to the renowned Oillscoil an tSleibh at Ardfield to study under Master Madden for the entrance exams.

He graduated into the civil service in London, and far from home, began to feelt he importance of his identity as an Irish man. The Land War (1879-1881) was of major concern to the family, being tenant farmers themselves. The founding of the Gaelic League (1887) and the development of the G.A.A. (1884 onwards) was enthusiastically supported by Sam. He began playing Gaelic football in London and from 1900 onwards his name appeared on many team records. Although Sam played in several finals, he never won an All-Ireland medal. He did however become very involved in the legislative and organisational affairs of the G.A.A., particularly in London.

Later Sam came in prominence in the I.R.B. and has said to have introduced Michael Collins into the movement. His activities within that movement are a matter of much speculation. He certainly had great organisational talent and leadership skills to bring to whatever operations to which his convictions as a Nationalist guided him.

He was the man of principles. After the treaty Sam returned to Dublin and joined the Irish Civil Service. However he frequently clashed with his superiors and was eventually dismissed from the public service. He returned home to Maulabracka in 1924, discouraged, disillusioned and in poor health. He died there and is buried in St. Mary’s Church  of Ireland Cemetery in Dunmanway.

The people of Dunmanway wanted to perpetuate the memory of this remarkable man. In May 1949 a Celtic cross was erected at his grave and in April 1974 the “Sam Maguire Memorial Park” was opened in Dunmanway.

The Sam Maguire Cup was commissioned by comrades and friends and wrought to the design of the Ardagh Chalice. It is awarded each year to the winners of the All-Ireland Gaelic Football Championship and seems a fitting way to remember a man who did much to spread G.A.A. in England and for whom our heritage was so important.

It might be noted that a recent Grand Master of the Orange Order in Ireland Robert Saulter,  grandfather Salter, is buried next to Sam Maguire at St. Mary’s, Dunmanway.

..

..

Eliza (Dizzie) Townsend (Mrs. Lionel Fleming), in Ballydevlin, Goleen, West Cork 1819, no roads, rooms lit by smokey candles made of mutton fat, a diet of cabbage, sea weed, mutton, salt ling, salted pork, pigs head and crubeens, playing Handel and Mozart with the Rev O’Grady.

07 Thursday Jan 2016

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https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Ballydevlin,+Co.+Cork/@51.5003125,-9.7062148,15z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x484584ddb9322ff3:0xa040db9d10cf70d0

Eliza (Dizzie) Townsend (Mrs. Lionel Fleming), in Ballydevlin, Goleen, West Cork c 1820s, no roads, rooms lit by smokey candles made of mutton fat, a diet of cabbage, sea weed, mutton, salt ling, salted pork, pigs head and crubeens, playing Handel and Mozart with the Rev O’Grady.

Rev. O’Grady: Re the Coghlans and Dowes of Carrigmanus through the Simpson family. Daughter of Susanna Goodwin Bishop Simpson and Joshua Dowe (father of Dr. of Joshua Isaac Dowe), was: Susanna Dowe 1803–1873 BIRTH ABT. 1803 Schull, Cork, Ireland DEATH 10 MAY 1873 • Kilmoe, Goleen, Co Cork, Ireland 1st cousin 4x removed She married Rev. Thomas O’Grady of Carrigmannus. Henry Baldwin Long farmed on Carrigmanus lands (as did Richard Long ) until the family moved for a short while (abt. 1915 – 1929) to Moneens, near Bantry which was also owned by Thomas, thus confirming family connection. The Christian names of “Simpson and Goodwin” carry on through the O’Grady family.

Until Richard Griffith completed the road from Skibbereen to Crookhaven in 1824 there was only a saddle path. When the road opened, for the first time, wheeled vehicles came to the western area.

Her Father:

Rev. Horace/Horatio Townsend, pre 1824, Derry, Rosscarbery, noted agriculturalist, 13 children of whom Dizzie married Lionel Fleming JP, Ballydevlin later Newcourt. Managed estates of Lord Shannon in Timoleague until his death. 1835 Subscriber Lewis Topographical Dictionary of Ireland 1837.

From excellent Townsend family history site:

http://www.astro.wisc.edu/~townsend/tree/record.php?ref=5D05

Notes for Eliza Townsend (Dizzie)

Married 10 January 1819. Lionel John Fleming (1) of Newcourt (2) was the son of Becher Fleming (1760-1837) of Newcourt (3), Co Cork and a barrister. Lionel’s grandmother was Mary Townsend [506] who married Thomas Somerville of Castlehaven. Lionel’s sister, Martha Fleming, married John Sealy Townsend [333]. See 1958 Edn Burke’s Irish Family Records – Fleming.

Dizzie attended school at Clifton, Bristol ca 1807 with her sister Katherine Townsend [5D06].

According to the book “The Irish Country House” by Peter Somerville-Large, Lionel’s father sent the couple after their marriage to Ballydevlin House, near Goleen on the north side of Roaring Water Bay, in order to keep Lionel occupied until he inherited the Newcourt estate. The entry for the parish of Kilmoe in Samuel Lewis’ Topographical Dictionary of Ireland 1837 reflects this. Life at Ballydevlin was very basic and all supplies had to come from Skibbereen, thirty miles away, and the couple found themselves very isolated. Although she ran a school and helped the poor, Dizzie found life at Ballydevlin very lonely compared with the hustle and bustle of Derry and implored her father to persuade her father-in-law to relinquish the Newcourt estate in favour of Lionel. This cut no ice and it was not until 1837 that Lionel inherited the estate.

Notes for Eliza Townsend (Dizzie) Married 10 January 1819. Lionel John Fleming (1) of Newcourt (2) was the son of Becher Fleming (1760-1837) of Newcourt (3), Co Cork and a barrister. Lionel’s grandmother was Mary Townsend [506] who married Thomas Somerville of Castlehaven. Lionel’s sister, Martha Fleming, married John Sealy Townsend [333]. See 1958 Edn Burke’s Irish Family Records – Fleming. Dizzie attended school at Clifton, Bristol ca 1807 with her sister Katherine Townsend [5D06]. According to the book “The Irish Country House” by Peter Somerville-Large, Lionel’s father sent the couple after their marriage to Ballydevlin House, near Goleen on the north side of Roaring Water Bay, in order to keep Lionel occupied until he inherited the Newcourt estate. The entry for the parish of Kilmoe in Samuel Lewis’ Topographical Dictionary of Ireland 1837 reflects this. Life at Ballydevlin was very basic and all supplies had to come from Skibbereen, thirty miles away, and the couple found themselves very isolated. Although she ran a school and helped the poor, Dizzie found life at Ballydevlin very lonely compared with the hustle and bustle of Derry and implored her father to persuade her father-in-law to relinquish the Newcourt estate in favour of Lionel. This cut no ice and it was not until 1837 that Lionel inherited the estate.

Fleming Family History:

http://nycnuts.net/ancestors/fleming/contents/index.html

Godwin Swift letters Crookhaven 1757

1824 Sir Richard Griffith, Road Engineer, Progress Report, Skibbereen to Crookhaven, Wheeled Carts now Appear, where heretofore Loads were carried on the Backs of Horses, New Entrance to Town Of Bandon, Road From Courtmacsherry to Timoleague, Road from Clonakilty to New Fishery Pier At Ring, New Road Skibbereen to Bantry, Macroom to Killarney, with a Note on The System of Labour Organisation Used.

Courtesy Peter Somerville Large.

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Recollections of James Stanley Vickery as a grandchild in Molloch, Durrus, Bantry (1829-1911).Parents Died of Cholera in Skibbereen.

07 Thursday Jan 2016

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durrushistory's avatarWest Cork History

Mulloch:

https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Mullagh,+Co.+Cork/@51.6504792,-9.4962155,15z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x48450ab2f9eae951:0xa9a194383c31d874

In Australia:

Screen Shot 2015-09-09 at 14.22.18

Entire Recollections:

https://plus.google.com/photos/100968344231272482288/albums/5884047429692369217?banner=pwa

In Frank Callanan’s biography of Tim Healy (Politician, barrister, Governor General of Irish Free State) he states that his grandfather Healy was a classical teacher in Bantry.  In the recollections James relates how he was taught by a master called Healy it may be the same man.

The above house may have been the residence of James Stanley Vickery.  It is owned by Mr Jimmy Swanton, Moloch, Durrus and was lived in until around 25 years ago.

These are an extract of the early memories of James Stanley Vickery who later went to Australia.  He founded a business in Ballarat dealing in chemicals, food products etc.  This successful business remained in the Vickery family until World War 2.

He was born in Skibbereen and after his parent died of Asiatic cholera in 1832 he and his two sisters went to live with…

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West Cork Civil Parishes

07 Thursday Jan 2016

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Great War Window Memorial by A.E. Childs (1875-1930) of An Túr Gloinne, Dublin at Christ Church, Innishannon, Co. Cork.

07 Thursday Jan 2016

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https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Inishannon,+Co.+Cork/@51.7646279,-8.6652905,15z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x4844f4b80e9b51a3:0x0a00c7a997319490

 

Great War Window Memorial by A.E. Childs (1875-1930) of An Túr Gloinne, Dublin at Christ Church, Innishannon, Co. Cork.

 

 

Stained glass including Tower of Glass (An Túr Gloinne) 1908 designed by A. E. Childs managed by Sarah Purser and Harry Clarke Studios commissioned by Father Jimmy O’Sullivan, Pastor of Kilcoe and Lisheen Parish, West Cork, born Shannonvale, Clonakilty 1841, ordained Louvain Belgium 1870 died 1926.

St. Ann’s Church, Dawson Street, Dublin, some windows by Wilhelmina Geddes of An Túr Gloinne (Tower of Glass) Studios some commemorating Ernest Lawrence Julian and Robert Hornidge Cullinan both killed at Suvla Bay 1915 erected by their friends at the Irish Bar and War Dead of WW1 and WW2 of the parish.

 

The Roman Catholic Cathedral in Perth, Western Australia

 

http://www.bandonunion.ie/christ-church-innishannon/

 

 

Thomas ‘The Industrialist’ Adderly, (1721-1791) Innishannon, Co. Cork, Industrialist, MP Armagh, Wide Street Commissioner Dublin, Developed flour mill, carpet, linen, silk, salt, corduroy, cotton, industry in Innishannon, involved in setting up Charter School. Collapse of Silk Industry may have Propelled Huguenot Workers Westwards.

07 Thursday Jan 2016

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https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Inishannon,+Co.+Cork/@51.7646279,-8.6652905,15z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x4844f4b80e9b51a3:0x0a00c7a997319490

Thomas Adderly, (1721-1791) Innishannon, Co. Cork, Industrialist, MP Armagh, Wide Street Commissioner Dublin, Developed flour mill, carpet, linen, silk, salt, corduroy, cotton, industry in Innishannon, involved in setting up Charter School. Collapse of Silk Industry may have Propelled Huguenot Workers Westwards.

Thomas Adderly , Innishannon, Co. Cork, Industrialist, MP Armagh, Collapse of Silk Industry may have Propelled Huguenot Workers Westwards.  After the silk industry collapsed apparently the damp climate did not suit mulberries on whom the silk worms depend the workforce dispersed.   He had introduced Huguenot craftsmen.  The Dukelow name appears in the area early 18th century and it may be that the family later settled in Durrus.  Other Huguenots such as Camier my have been involved.

 

Screen Shot 2018-07-18 at 09.15.08

Magistrates:

Matthew Adderley, 1728, Dromkeene, Bandon.

Thomas Adderly (1712-1791), 1761, Innishannon,   Son Francis and Elizabeth Fowkes, family originate in Alderly, Gloucestershire.  Developed flour mill, carpet, linen, silk, salt, corduroy, cotton, industry in Innishannon,  involved in setting up Charter School, m 1. widow 3rd Earl Charlemont, 2. Margaret Bourke, Oory, Co. Mayo.  MP Armagh.

 

 

Courtesy Scoil Eoin, Innishannon/Inis Eonáin:

 

http://innishannonschool.com/our-school/local-history/thomas-adderly

 

M.P. and landowner, for whom see Edith Mary Johnston Liik, History of the Irish Parliament 1692-1800 (Ulster Historical Foundation, 1992), III, 56-59, and Dictionary of Irish Biography (2009).   While there is no evidence that Thomas Adderley was an architectural amateur, he was involved with several building projects in his various capacities.  When he was still a child, he inherited the estate of his father, Francis Adderley, in Co. Cork. As proprietor of the land, he built the town of Innishannon, Co. Cork, to which he brought sixty Huguenot families in 1747 to establish a linen manufactory. A charter school was built there in 1752.  In 1753 he built Marino House on property he had acquired at Donnycarney, Dublin, presenting it in the following year to his stepson, James, fourth Viscount Charlemont, who was then on his travels.  While Charlemont was away – abroad and in London – Adderley developed and managed the Marino estate on his behalf.(1)  In 1757 he was appointed one of the Dublin Wide Streets Commissioners and two years later Commissioner and Overseer of the Barracks and Public Works, a position which he held until 1769.  He was appointed treasurer to the Barrack Board in 1772 but was dismissed in 1782 after a clerk was convicted for embezzzlement.  A hospital and stables erected by the Board at Navan, Co. Meath, in 1776, were described as ‘lately built under the direction of Mr Adderley’.(2)

References

(1) See Ruth Musielak (ed. Rose Anne White), Charlemont’s Marino: portrait of a landscape (Dublin: Office of Public Works, 2014), 17-30.
(2) F. Elrington Ball, ‘Thomas Adderley of Innishannon, M.P.’ in Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society, III, 50-?; JIHC 8, appendix p.lxxx.

http://sources.nli.ie/Record/MS_UR_004230
http://www.valleyrovers.com/contentPage/157719/the_bleach
https://books.google.ie/books?id=bmYNAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA484&lpg=PA484&dq=thomas+adderley+innishannon&source=bl&ots=mzoNWlWF4G&sig=DnHBmT8vp6wYGousCwxUShe6n_0&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjr5oznuJfKAhWFqw4KHSL4Apw4ChDoAQgnMAI#v=onepage&q=thomas%20adderley%20innishannon&f=false

 

 

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16th Regiment of Foot assisted female emigration australia ballyclough bantry bay caithness legion cavan regiment of militia cheshire fencibles coppinger's court inbhear na mbearc Irish words in use 1930s lord lansdowne's regiment mallow melbourne ned kelly new brunswick O'Dalys Bardic Family. o'regan Personal Memoirs rosscarbery schull sir redmond barry sir walter coppinger st. johns sydney Townlands treaty of limerick Uncategorized university of Melbourne victoria
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