West Cork Railway Map 1940, Comic Postcard Schull/Skibbereen Tramway, Timoleague Line with Ardageen, last Train out of Macroom 1953, 1956 Diesel Railcar


durrushistory's avatarWest Cork History

https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Durrus,+Co.+Cork/@51.5975876,-9.3417834,10z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x48459fe7ccd270df:0x231e3744ac95441a

West Cork Railway Map 1940, Comic Postcard Schull/Skibbereen Tramway, Timoleague Line with Ardageen, last Train out of Macroom 1953, 1956 Diesel Railcar

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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.


durrushistory's avatarWest Cork History

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Ann Maria Curtis, Dungourney, a granddaughter of Rev. John Madras who married Miss Evanson of Durrus, married a grandson of The Liberator, Daniel O’Connell,  1867, he was son of Charles O’Connell, Resident Magistrate, Bantry.

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).

John T. Collins, Newspaper Extracts, Died 2nd March 1754 Mrs. Madras, w (wife or widow?) of Rev. M Madras.

Updated:

Genealogy of Cork Huguenot Madras family post 1750 from Amsterdam by letter from India Office 1939, interconnected families Longfield Connor Fort Robert, Evanson Durrus, Travers Butlerstown, Baldwin Curravody, Alleyn.

The Rev John Madras referred to was a curate in Durrus c 1800 when he married Miss Evanson.

From Meziere Brady:

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Graveyard inscription courtesy Richard henchion.

https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Durrus,+Co.+Cork/@51.6217107,-9.521993,11z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x48459fe7ccd270df:0x231e3744ac95441a

Youngest Son of Madras family mentioned as life also Evansons, Whites of Bantry:

http://members.pcug.org.au/~nickred/deeds/memorial_extract.cgi?my_memorial=436594&my_indexer=Roz%20McC1-IMG_7737

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Durrus 1800 John…

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1869, Durrus born, Doctor Henry Baldwin Evanson (1795-1867), Qualified Rome, Medical Author, Member Royal Irish Academy.


1869, Durrus born, Doctor Henry Baldwin Evanson (1795-1867), Qualified Rome, Medical Author, Member Royal Irish Academy.

 

His entitlement to vote from , £20 rent charge, 1835 given by brother Rev. Alleyn Evanson over lands at Brahalish, Durrus.

 

 

Marriage:

 

 

13th August 1828, St. Marys, Shandon, Cork Henry Baldwin Evanson (1795-1867) Martha Murphy He Durrus then Cork possibly Camden Quay Friendly Cove (formerly Ballydivane) she Newtown, Bantry, milling middle man family. He is brother of Rev. Alleyn Evanson and on his death 1857, the guardian with other bother Hungerford Baldwin Evanson of minor children Member of Royal Irish Academy. He died Kinsale and Camden Quay 1867 probate under £600 to Elizabeth Evanson, spinster MLB In the records of St. Annes Shandon, Cork, there is a marriage on the 13th August 1828 between Henry Baldwin Evanson MD and Mary Murphy performed by John Murphy. It is probable that this is the Murphy family of Newtown, Bantry as her brother John was a Rector at the time

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Emigration from the Bandon/Rathclaren area, Co Cork from c 1815 to Bathurst, New Brunswick, Canada


durrushistory's avatarWest Cork History

Rathclaren:

https://www.google.ie/maps/search/Rathlaren+Cork/@51.656201,-8.7002135,14z

Bathurst, New Brunswick:

https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Bathurst,+NB,+Canada/@47.6259605,-65.6281926,8z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x4c98941b3ad5d61d:0x505c13c653ce030
The ending of the Napoleonic Wars withe Battle of waterloo caused a huge collapse of farm prices and triggered a widespread depression. In the greater Bandon area this was worsened by the dependance of the textile industry much home based which could not withstand competition from England.

There are many accounts of widespread distress among Bandon weavers.

Emigration from the Bandon/Rathclaren area, Co Cork from c 1815 to Bathurst, New Brunswick, Canada

Sharon Haggerty, in Vancouver, British Columbia, has set up a focus e mail for those interested.

An account of the Kilgariff, Clonakilty, West Cork, Eedy family to Clifton and Bathurst, New Brunswick, Canada some of the names mentioned Knowles, Bateman, Beamish, French, Morris, Stanley, Woulfe, Crowley, O’Donovan, Cahalane, Donoghue, A Glass of Whiskey Ballygurteen Fair prior to Emigrating.

can-chaleur-bay-irish@rootsweb.com.

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Aibidial Gaoidheilge Agus Caiticiosma, First Book Published in 1571, in Irish, in Ireland Acquired by Trinity College Dublin, 1995, TCD Hurling Team Photo, 1880. One Time Member Sir Edward Carson (Lord Carson).


durrushistory's avatarWest Cork History

Aibidial Gaoidheilge Agus Caiticiosma, First Book Published in 1571, in Irish, in Ireland Acquired by Trinity College Dublin, 1995, TCD Hurling Team Photo, 1880. One Time Member Sir Edward Carson (Lord Carson).

Courtesy Four Courts Press.

The hurling photo has sticks probably home made called ‘hurls’, the form played by the club was that common in the North of Ireland ‘Camánanacht’ more like modern shinty.  When the GAA was established in 1884 the southern version Iomán was adopted.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Carson

During the Home Rule Crisis in the early 20th century a ditty ran as follows ‘Sir Edward Carson had a cat and every time it caught a mouse it cried ‘No Home Rule’.

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1828. Formation of Bandon Co. Cork Brunswick Constitutional Club, Orangemen Chiefly Cotton Weavers, Attack Catholics at the Meeting, and References to Ibane/Barryroe and Macroom Brunswick Clubs.


1828.  Formation of Bandon Co. Cork  Brunswick Constitutional Club, Orangemen Chiefly Cotton Weavers, Attack Catholics at the Meeting,  and References to Ibane/Barryroe and Macroom Brunswick Clubs.

Ian d’Alton, has written extensively about this period, the various religious and political tensions in Cork.   The author of Protestant Society and Politics in Cork, he has written extensively on southern Irish Protestantism in its political, social and cultural manifestations.

 

Doneraile Brunswick Club:

1828. Doneraile, Co. Cork, Brunswick Club.

1834 Bandon Meeting:

1834. Erin Mavourneen-Erin go Bragh, Protestant Meeting in Bandon, Co. Cork.

Many Cork Magistrates appear:

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

Australian Academic covers the topic:

https://www.academia.edu/12538697/_Irish_Conservatives_the_Patriot_Tradition_and_the_Act_of_Union_c._1829-69_in_Niall_%C3%93_Cios%C3%A1in_and_John_Cunningham_eds._Culture_and_Society_in_Ireland_Since_1750_Essays_in_honour_of_Gear%C3%B3id_O_Tuathaigh_Dublin_Lilliput_Press_May_2015_pp._130-144

The backdrop is the heightened tensions political and religious with the advent of Catholic emancipation.  The balance of economic advantage had probably moved to the Catholics.   The landed families had commenced a spiral of decline. However given the emergence of two sectarian states in Ireland in the 20th century the triumph call of the danger to civil and religious liberty can be entirely dismissed.

From Colonel John Townsend’s family history:

 

This is Henry Owen Becher Townsend (223) and the ‘Thomas Townsend’ is Thomas Townsend (319).

http://www.astro.wisc.edu/~townsend/tree/record.php?ref=333

As explained in the ‘Background History’ page, the Act of Union in 1801 and successive reforming measures in the early years of the century drove the Anglo-Irish Protestant community into a position of permanent political minority. Seeking to affirm and uphold the integrity of the ‘Protestant Constitution and State’ they held several meetings during the first three decades of the century. According to newspaper reports of the time certain members of the family attended some or all of these meetings but it is difficult to pinpoint all of them (7a).

The Southern Reporter & Cork Commercial Courier of 23 December 1828 carries a report of a meeting in Bandon on Monday 22 December 1828 for the purpose of forming a Bandon Brunswick Constitutional Club (7b) “in defence of our liberties and the safety of the Glorious Constitution under which we live”. The Meeting was chaired by the Hon William Smith Bernard and ‘John Townsend Esq son of the Recorder of Clonakilty’, ‘Samuel Townsend junior’ and Thomas Somerville are recorded as attending. A copy of the newspaper article is included in John’s ‘Scrapbook’.

At the meeting of the Protestant Conservative Society of Cork held at the Imperial Clarence Rooms, Cork in August 1832, and reported in the Dublin Weekly Mail of 11 August 1832, ‘Samuel Townshend’, ‘Samuel Townsend’ and ‘Thomas Townsend’ were elected to a committee to carry out the resolutions agreed at the meeting “to preserve the remnants of the constitution and maintain the integrity of the United Kingdom”.

The Southern Reporter & Cork Commercial Courier of 11 October 1834 carries a report of the Protestant Meeting in Bandon on Tuesday 7 October. About 5,000 attended and the purpose of the meeting seems to be an affirmation of Protestant superiority; again ‘Samuel Townshend’, ‘Samuel Townsend’ and ‘Thomas Townsend’ are shown in the list of those attending. Included in the article is a very eloquent statement by John in support of the cause but proclaiming “Would to God that we could live on terms of political as well as private and personal friendship with our Roman Catholic countrymen!” (This is included in his ‘Scrapbook’.)

One of the prime movers the Rev. Somers Payne.

Rev. Somers Payne, Pre 1815, Upton, Grand Master Orange Order, Co. Cork.  Bandon Brunswick Constitutional Club 1828, sitting Bantry and Bandon, 1835, Provost of Bandon. Agent to Lord Berehaven since 1820 son Augustus agent to Lord Bantry.  Parliamentary Commission sitting Bantry 1845 showed sympathy for labourers and cottiers.  The Rev. Somers Payne’s mother was sister of John and Henry Shears, Barristers in the City of Cork, who perished on the scaffold for alleged ‘high treason’ at the opening of the present century. 1835 Subscriber Lewis Topographical Dictionary of Ireland  1837. Land record, 1870, 653 acres.  Head of the orange Order in Cork he felt the order would divert the lower orders of Protestant from drunkenness.

 

 

 

 

 

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Slightly different Version of proceedings:

 

 

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1845. Transcription of Various Letters from John Henry Townsend , Ireland’s Oldest Magistrate, Durrus, West Cork, to Donald McLean Esq, Protector of Aborigines, Taranaki, New Zealand, together with Will, he Died 1912.


1845.  Transcription of Various Letters from John Henry Townsend , Ireland’s Oldest Magistrate, Durrus, West Cork,  to Donald McLean Esq, Protector of Aborigines, Taranaki, New Zealand, together with Will, he Died 1912.

His solicitor and executor Francis Fitzmaurice, Dunmanway was one of the West Cork Protestants killed by the IRA in April 1921.

 

Courtesy Colonel John Townsend, Australia, Historian of Townsend Family.

 

 

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

 

Townsend Will Mccarthy_Allen

 

 

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1eQW71dmcsmi_6e7gY-Iq0O8JjerhHeGfKgaZ0pLJ9Zw/edit

Boulder Burials: a Misnamed Monument?


Finola's avatarRoaringwater Journal

Rathruane Boulder Burial

The term boulder burialwas coined in the 1970s by Sean O’Nualláin, an archaeologist with the Ordnance Survey, to describe a class of monument that was quite prevalent in the south west, consisting of a single large boulder sitting on three or four support stones. The support stones lift the boulder off the ground and provide a small chamber-like area under the stone. Previously, this type of monument was known as a dolmen, a boulder dolmen or a cromlech, but O’Nualláin was convinced that the main purpose of these boulders was to mark a burial.

Lisheen Cromlechs by Jack Roberts

Illustrations from Jack Robert’s book Exploring West Cork

He based this belief partly on his extensive experience with other megalithic monuments, but also on the findings of the excavation of the Bohonagh complex, where Fahy found fragments of cremated bone in a pit under the boulder.

Bohonagh Boulder Burial
The Bohonagh complex includes a multiple-stone circle, a…

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1791. Meeting at Kings Arms Tavern Cork of Members of Hanover Association (Landlowners/Magistrates) re Whiteboys.


1791. Meeting at Kings Arms Tavern Cork of Members of Hanover Association (Landlowners/Magistrates) re Whiteboys.

 

August 1786, 1,500 Whiteboys Assemble in Skibbereen, Co. Cork, at Bridewell and Liberate All Their Companions Imprisoned Therein Further Tiding From west Carbery August 1786 , 800 Whiteboys March on Magistrate, Archdeacon Tisdall, Later under Captain Right (O’Driscoll) Break into Jail With Sledge Hammers, Release prisoners Reinforced from Bantry.

 

Raparees, Tories, Whiteboys, Anti-Tithers of Muskerry, The Mellifonts, First Boycott, Wife of the Bold Tenant Farmer, his cottage at Ballinascarty and Michael O’Riordan’s (Communist Party of Ireland) tribute to the Keohane Sisters Clonakilty, Co Cork.

 

Meeting at the Kings Arms Tavern, Cork, on 15th November 1791 of Named (Listed) Gentlemen of the City and County of Cork with Lord Mayor and Sheriffs forming as Hanover Association to Combat Whiteboys

 

 

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