Edward Davenant (1568-1639), Record of Cambridge University, England Entry 1584 of ‘Whiddy Island’, Bantry, Co. Cork. Later owner fishery.


durrushistory's avatarWest Cork History

Edward Davenant (1568-1639), Record of Cambridge University, England Entry 1584 of ‘Whiddy Island’, Bantry, Co. Cork.  Later owner fishery.

This corroborates the Fishery at the time being financed from London Merchants .

https://wordpress.com/post/durrushistory.com/20050

He is son of John, brothers John 1587, William 1590, George 16o2.

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Death:

1639Edward DavenantWhiddy IslandWill dated Whiddy 29th December 1636. He was brother of Bishop of John Davenant of Salisbury, active in Bantry Fishery since 1608 when he leased Whiddy Island from Sir Owen O’Sullivan’s widow. To son Edward D.D. New Sarum, WiltsHis father-in-law was Simms, London. One daughter marrried John Palmer of Whiddy, another son John of Whiddy married Ann Boyle both drowned crossing to Whiddy 1641. William may have been another son.Paddy O’Keeffe papers, Cork ArchivesHe was born London 1586 son of John, Cambridge 1584. Brothers Cambridge graduation: John 1587, William 1590, George 1602.

Marriage:

Pre 1610Edward…

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1892. Immense Funeral of Mrs Thomas Dillon, nee Roycroft, Husband Thomas Poor Law Guardian (PLG) Bantry, Obituary a Who’s Who of West Cork.

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1892.  Immense Funeral of Mrs Thomas Dillon, nee Roycroft, Bantry, Obituary a Who’s Who of West Cork.

 

The Dillons were very prominent in Durrus and Bantry.  Possibly buried at Moulivard, Durrus East in the large Dillon tomb.

Thomas Dillon, Poor Law Guardian, 1892 election:

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In the 1940s Shawn Dillon of Clashadoo durrus was involved in setting up Clann na Poblachta locally and inherited his aunt’s properties near the railway station

In the late 18th century one of the Dillons possibly the same extended family married one of the Whites (Lord Bantry) set as aside as a ‘Popish Marriage’.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Samuel Vickery (1832-1912) Reminiscences to his Daughter Martha Ellen, Evansville, Indiana, USA, Childhood in Rooska, Parish of Durrus and Reendonegan, Bantry, West Cork, Family Fishery, Girls Hired to Spin Twine for Nets, Catching Sparrows in Thatch of House, Hens Fed Sour Milk and Potatoes, Punished at School at Four Mile Water (Clashadoo, Durrus) For Dipping Spider in Black Ink , Emigration 1850 to New Orleans Upriver to Indiana

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Samuel Vickery (1832-1912) Reminiscences to his Daughter Martha Ellen, Evansville, Indiana, USA, Childhood in Rooska, Parish of Durrus and Reendonegan, Bantry, West Cork, Family Fishery, Girls Hired to Spin Twine for Nets, Catching Sparrows in Thatch of House, Hens Fed Sour Milk and Potatoes, School at Four Mile Water (Clashadoo, Durrus), Emigration 1850 to New Orleans Upriver to Indiana

Then follows notes of Samuel’s reminiscences about his Irish childhood that were jotted down by his daughter Martha Ellen.  Samuel born 1832 was named after his 3 uncles. The family lived at Rooska till Sam was 8 years old, at which time they moved to Reendonegan on Bantry Bay.

Courtesy Mini Nordby, Vancouver.

West Cork weaving including nets:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1u0vIz1nxG34pJua7qC7jtTCKWLjwVY81jSl0usPdojk/edit

Memories of Samuel Vickery (1832-1912), Rooska and Indiana.

He was born in Rooska father William Warner Vickery mother Elizabeth Woulfe, Stouke, Ballydehob. In his later years in Indiana his daughter Martha Ellen took a note of his recollections. He lived in Rooska in a 2 storey two rooms long stone thatched house until the family moved to Reendonegan in 1840.  He used to catch sparrows in the thatch.  The house was enclosed with a thorn hedge close by hill with gooseberries adn bees.  While at Rooska he crossed the hill to go to school at Four Mile Water (Clashadoo), at Reendonegan he went to school on a donkey.  HIs father was involved in fishing and employed girls to spin twine for nets.  The hake was split open dried with salt.  He would mind the cows in the field which had no ditches and feed them wild mustard while milking.  The hens were fed sour milk and potatoes.  Seaweed was gathered and used as fertilizer.  There were bogs and turf at Rooska.  In Reendonegan he had a half day from school on Saturday and would bathe no towel run to dry himself.  The house at Reendonegan was large with large rooms and a slate roof.  The nearly lake teemed with fish.   His father made splinters which were used as torches in the kitchen.  At a table against the wall the servants ate fish, sour milk and potatoes.  The Vickery cousins still had a large kettle used to make soup during the famine.  In 1850 the entire family went to New Orleans sold the Reendonegan property and went upriver to Indiana where descendants still live in Evansville.  The family consisted of eight living children including his older sister Ellen who had married Tom Warner she gave birth on the six week voyage the meagre water supply had to be used to bathe the baby.

Probably a cousin memories in Australia:

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

Copy of Will of Richard Roycroft (Obliterated in the Destruction of the Public Record Office, Dublin, 1922 but copied by William Henry Welply) of Clouney (Clonee, Bog Road), Parish of Durrus, agd 9th May 1801, Proved 1st August 1801, Son-in-law, George Swanton, Grandson Richard Lavers (Levis), granddaughter, Avis Notter, son Thomas Roycroft deceased, daughter Grace O’Sullivan. Executors George Swanton, Richard Lavers (Levis). Witnesses: Robert Lavers. Charles Dalton, John Vickery.

James Swanton Vickery (C1837-1908) from West Cork, to Stockbroking in Australia.

https://wordpress.com/post/durrushistory.com/8176

Notes on Ballycomane, Durrus,  branch of family:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1EEEnXyuqwa3yOlSY3JnO6T1qXejygDmVWqjQWg0G2gM/edit

1870s Memoirs, Bandon:

Memoir of Sam Bird, Bandon and Belding, Michigan, USA, from the 1870s his father’s fondness for a glass of grog at night, The old Irish Church, The King’s James Bible Translated from Irish, Shooting Snipe, Anti Home Rule Politics, the family decimated by TB, Methodist Preachers, writing with the Non de Plume Brian Boru

 

 

 

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‘Tá lampa dFocal do mo mar Choraibh’ Thy words are a lamp unto my feet. Sacred to the memory of Thomas Olden, D.D., M.R.I.A., Historian of Church of Ireland, Gaelic Scholar, for thirty years Vicar of Ballyclough Parish, Co. Cork. Born 1st March, 1823. Died 29th October 1900. An eminent Irish Scholar, Antiquarian and Church Historian. He served God in his generation. Erected by a few friends.


‘Tá lampa dFocal do mo mar Choraibh’ Thy words are a lamp unto my feet. Sacred to the memory of Thomas Olden, D.D., M.R.I.A.,, Historian of Church of Ireland, Gaelic Scholar, for thirty years Vicar of Ballyclough Parish, Co. Cork. Born 1st March, 1823. Died 29th October 1900. An eminent Irish Scholar, Antiquarian and Church Historian. He served God in his generation. Erected by a few friends.

 

 

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From Colonel Grove White:

 

Click to access gw1_141-150.pdf

 

Thomas Olden, son of Robert Olden, of Cork. T.C.D.; B.A., 1846′ M.A. 1888; B.D. 1897; D.D. (Honoris Causa) 1898; M.R.I.A. 1870. Obtained honours in science, gold medal in logic and ethics, and first-class Div. Test. He was ordained deacon, 12th July, 1846, at Down, for the curacy of Cullen, Cork; and priest, 30th May, 1847, at Midleton, by * Laban signifies mud, dirt, or perhaps the meaning may be Leath (Lah), Half-La-bawn, half-bawn. REV. THOMAS OLDEN, D D. » I – • • BALLYCLOUGH (LAVAN ) PARISH AND CASTLE ’47 Bishop of Killaloe. Wa s curate of Tullilease, Cloyne, i860, and vicar of same, 27th August, i860 to 1868 (vide his important work in that parish). He married on 28th July, 1853, Sophie Elizabeth, dau. of the Rev. James Morton, V. Clonfert (Brady), and by her, who died 27th December, 1899, had issue—1. James Morton Ruxton Fitzherbert, b. 25th May, 1854, who was unfortunately drowned, together with his cousin, Robert Aidworth, when at Rossal College, in Lancashire, in 1868; 2. George Gustavus, ob. juv. ; 1st, Olivia; 2nd, Sophia Jane Louisa; and 3rd, Dorothea Emily Morton, wife of Rev. John Harding Cole, B.A., last R.V. of Leighmoney, Cork. Dr. Olden was a scholar of much distinction, a learned antiquarian, and well versed in the Irish language. He published many valuable writings, amongst them being—The Epistles and Hymn of St. Patrick (3rd ed. S.P.C.K., 1894); A History of the Church of Ireland (2nd ed., 1895); ZTre Scriptures in Ireland One Thousand Years Ago, a translation from the Wurtzburg Glosses; sixty-three “Lives of Distinguished Irishmen,” in the Dictionary of National Biography; numerous papers in the Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, the Royal Society ‘of Antiquaries, and the St. Paul’s Ecclesiological Society, etc., etc. In recognition of his merits, his University conferred upon him (Honoris Causa) the Degree of D.D. in 1898. Dr. Olden resigned Ballyclogh, owing to ill-health, in July, 1899, but retained his stipend and glebe; and the parish of Ballyclogh, with Dromdowney was added to Castlemagner union (q.v.) Dr. Olden died at his vicarage, Ballyclough, on the 29th of October, 1900, aged JJ years. Of him, the Bishop of the Diocese said, in his annual pastoral letter, January, 1901 :—”We were proud of him in this diocese. We felt it to be an honour that he was numbered amongst our Clergy. By his learning and ability he has done a great work for the Church. As an Irish scholar, there were not many that could surpass him. But it is as the historian of the Church of Ireland that he will ever be remembered. Although he was so learned, and so distinguished, hse was kind and gentle and unassuming in his manner, and was dearly loved by his family and his friends, and by the people amongst whom hie ministered for thirty-one years. A mural tablet has been erected to his memory in Ballyclough Church by his parishioners and friends.” The late Rev. Dr. Olden also wrote:— St. Patrick and his Mission, Dublin, 1894, an(* a now very scarce and valuable pamphlet: Some Notices of St. Colman of Cloyne, Bishop and Poet. Cork: T. Morgan, 1881. To the Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries he contributed a paper on ” The Voyage of St Brendan,” 4th quarter, 1891. To the Cork Historical and Archceological Journal he contributed a paper on “Kilmaclenine” in No. 39, July-Sept., 1898, besides some interesting notes to the article on St. Beretchert of Tullylease, that appeared in the No. for February, 1895, and he also contributed still more frequently to the Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy, Dublin, of which he was a ember. The wording of his mortuary tablet will be found later on in the portion of the present series relating to Ballyclough Church. . (Lewis, pub. 1837), under “Ballyclogh”

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1824, Evidence of Sir Richard Griffith Esq., Road Engineer, to House of Commons Select Committee, on Harmony in West Cork between Protestant and Catholics, Distress of 1822, Only Part of Ireland he Employed Poor Protestants on Road Building, Evidence of Alexander Nimmo, Scots Road Engineer on Building of 19 miles on the Northern Side of Bantry Bay under Joint Supervision of Captain O’Sullivan Most of His Workers are His Tenants Not Paid in Cash but in Rent Abatement. Elsewhere Nimmo’s evidence of Enormous Economic Benefits of Road Building

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1824,  Evidence of Sir Richard Griffith Esq., Road Engineer, to House of Commons Select Committee, on Harmony in West Cork between Protestant and Catholics, Distress of 1822, Evidence of Alexander Nimmo, Scots Road Engineer on Building of 19 miles on the Northern Side of Bantry Bay under Joint Supervision of Captain O’Sullivan Most of His Workers are His Tenants Not Paid in Cash but in Rent Abatement.

Elsewhere Nimmo’s evidence of Enormous Economic Benefits of Road Building.  He was involved in the 1820s in extensive road works in North Cork and credited the roads with opening up the area to the butter trade and the huge improvements that benefited the local area.

Before Griffith’s road to Crookhaven wheeled carts were unknown in the western end of the Mizen Peninsula. Even today a close look at the cuttings through and bridges re a testament to the thorough work with little modern equipment.

https://books.google.ie/books?id=eClDAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA111&lpg=PA111&dq=Cork+An+Act+For+the+Better+Prevention+of+Crime+and+Outrages+in+Certain+Parts+of+Ireland,&source=bl&ots=QatA7NTV_k&sig=55zGJiqhUj6x4s6DIrlxJC5QGQI&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwic2ITOh6TQAhXNFsAKHe0RACMQ6AEIMjAF#v=snippet&q=bantry&f=false

 

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1848. Licence No 211, for A Double Barrell Shotgun and 20 Rounds of Ammunition issued under An Act For the Better Prevention of Crime and Outrages in Certain Parts of Ireland, to Have Arms in a Dwelling House of James Vickery, Inchingerig, Caheragh West Cork.


1848.  Licence No 211, for A Double Barrell Shotgun and 20 Rounds of Ammunition issued under An Act For the Better Prevention of Crime and Outrages in Certain Parts of Ireland, to Have Arms in a Dwelling House of James Vickery, Inchingerig, Caheragh West Cork.

A broadly similar license is currently in use in Vancouver, Canada,  according to a member of the extended family.

This seems different to the relatively common gane certificate which issued throughout the 19th century from the Customs Office in Bandon.

13th July 1848 Thomas Sweetnam, Catherine Vickery 30 Farmer Lismarrig Matthew and Elizabeth Connell, Murrahin, Kilcoe, (they married 1812), farmer John Vickery, Moses Caffey. Catherine Vickery, daughter of George Vickery and Frances Bryan )amcestor included Micahel Sullivan heart tax collector Bantry reputed direct descendant O’Sullivan bere married Mary Vickery whiddy c 1785), married Thomas Sweetnam in Caheragh parish church on 27 January 1848, she was recorded as living in the townland of Inchingerig. Sweetnam family historyhttp://learysweetnam.com/sweetnamfamilytree/Sweetnam%20Family%20History.pdf. Canadian descendant in Vancouver have a gun certificatre issueed to George Vickery 1848. Matthew Sweetnam came to Caheragh as Land Agent for the Newmans his brother Samuel took over Betsborough, Matthew goes blind at 50 Matthew living at Cloghane from 1845later Shanavala bureied Aughadown. Sweetnam family history

 

 

For one branch of Vickery family, Ballycomane Durrus:

 

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1EEEnXyuqwa3yOlSY3JnO6T1qXejygDmVWqjQWg0G2gM/edit

 

 

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1835, Return of J. Chatterton Clerk of Peace (State Solicitor) Co. Cork. 298 Magistrates, 11 Resident and Non Acting, 29 Non Resident and Non Acting with Deputy Lieutenants, Magistrates in Holy Orders. No Practising Barristers, Solicitors or Attorneys.


1835, Return of J. Chatterton Clerk of Peace (State Solicitor) Co. Cork. 298 Magistrates, 11 Resident and Non Acting, 29 Non Resident and Non Acting with Deputy Lieutenants, Magistrates in Holy Orders.  No Practising Barristers, Solicitors or Attorneys.

 

 

Cork Magistrates:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ZvT84JCKTIhMqqZjJsF_AUJLH8S820ksObykwOty3wg/edit

 

https://books.google.ie/books?id=41USAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA1-PA11&lpg=RA1-PA11&dq=cool+daniel+dunmanway+barter&source=bl&ots=szmC8O6OlF&sig=xddTuk65IFIAl17l2T9NPs_A8iQ&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi8kYuK5qPQAhWLAcAKHfPKDFo4ChDoAQgjMAI#v=onepage&q=cool%20daniel%20dunmanway%20barter&f=false

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Grave of Canon Goodman, Creagh Church of Ireland, Deconscritated 1990, Heading Towards Dereliction, Graveyard by the Banks of the River Illen, West Cork.


Durrus Agricultural Show, 1938, Bantry, Co. Cork 1946 and 1948 with Names Exhibitors and Prizes:


durrushistory's avatarWest Cork History

Durrus Agricultural Show, 1938, Bantry, Co. Cork 1946 and 1948 with Names Exhibitors and Prizes:

Very often the same families even in the 19th century continue to exhibit.

Scroll to locate relevant pages

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1OaTv0viw8AKxaoUtJEym5y0Dp0xAqTqZj5nE7nyitDg/edit

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