Durrus, West Cork, Townlands
21 Wednesday Oct 2015
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21 Wednesday Oct 2015
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20 Tuesday Oct 2015
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The raw red colour of the Gurnard’s head on Saturday evening reminded me of a picture I took perhaps five year ago in the open market in Oporto of a skinned sheep’s head. I was in Oporto with Richard and Pete. The market was one of those places which made you wish there was a small kitchen back at the hotel so we could buy up some of the fish and cook them. I consoled myself by buying a 5 metre length of dried intestine to used for making sausages.
Of course with this blog being called after The Sheep’s Head time has been spent giving thought as to how one go about cooking a sheep’s head.
Buy the head already split lengthways and remove the brains carefully. Place them in cold water to which vinegar may be added. Chop off the nose, and soak the head in tepid water…
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19 Monday Oct 2015
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Durrus Regatta September 1885, and Athletics ‘Under the patronage of The People’
Of those mentioned as sponsors Richard Tobin probably son of ‘King’ Tobin, Kilcrohane prominent local businessman, hotelier, farmer. Glhooley is MP for Bantry his sister had a pub in village lately Paddy Barrys and another relation a teacher in the girls school.
19 Monday Oct 2015
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Funeral Attendances of Mrs. Dillon, Bantry, and Mrs. Hadden, Skibbereen, West Cork.
The Dillons in Bantry were ‘well got’ with Mr. Dillon a Poor Law Guardian and possibly Master of the Workhouse. They may be connected to the Dillons of Clashadoo, Durrus who are buried in an enormous tomb in Moulivard Graveyard, the last of the family, Shaun was buried in the 1980s. he inherited a pub and substantial properties in Bantry from his aunts and was active in the late 1940s in Clann na Poblachta.
There was another prominent Dillon family in Bantry mid 18th century Protestants, whose daughter was married by a ‘Popish Priest’ to one of the Bantry Whites. He sought to marry another and this resulted in her lodging a caveat in the Diocesan Ecclesiastical Court in Cork.
Mrs Hadden may have been an Evans from Lissangle, Caheragh, daughter of William Esquire. She married an apothecary, whose Methodist family originated in Wexford. In the 19th century the Haddens were prominent in Skibbereen in the Methodist Church and as Doctors. Her sister or aunt may have married in 1810 James Crowley apothecary whose brother Jeremiah (Jerry) was also an apothecary and known as Dr. Jerry a founder of the Phoenix Society a precursor of the Fenians. He swore O’Donovan Rossa into the Phoenix Club. The Crowley brothers probably originated in Ballyourane, Caheragh next to Lissangle. There are numerous Hadden relations in California and Australia.
Extended Crowley/Evans/Hadden Family Skibbereen:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/10x-KU_Witor3g7ZUB1tg3PiE0ewRnU45AVXfr-WJFsM/edit
Mrs Hadden, Skibbereen, (1816-1898).
Among the attendance are representatives of the Ardralla Evans family presumably cousins. Musgraves of Cork are represented the same family who own the Supervalu business. On the female line they are descended from the Bantry Warners all Methodists.
19 Monday Oct 2015
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Proposed Sale of Lands at Dromreagh, Mureagh, Ardogeena, Durrus, with a Portion of Tithes of Durrus and Kilcrohane, Title From 1765, West Cork by Owner and Petitioner Richard Tonson Evanson at Landed Estates Court 1854
It is not clear if the sale went ahead.
His house is still occupied.
isitions-of-three-ploughlands-at-dromreagh-murreagh-and-ardogina-durrus-west-cork-in-1765-by-the-evanson-family-from-tonsons-hulls-and-1790s-and-deed-disposing-of-half-tithes-of-durrus-kilcro/
19 Monday Oct 2015
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Updated:
Photograph from National Library of Ireland photographic collection c 1890s.
Courtesy Hazel Vickery:
http://www.irelandxo.com/sites/default/files/history_of_the_vickery_family_of_west_cork.pdf
The legend is that the Vickery family of Co. Cork are reputed to be descended from two brothers from the West Indes who were shipwrecked in Bantry Bay in the mid-18th century. This however is unlikely as there are Vickeries in early 18th century Bantry leases suggesting they were around pre 1700.
Thomas Vickery (1808-1883) was one of this family and married Mary Sullivan.
He established a hotel on the site of an old dye works in Bantry c1850 and it continued in business until late 2006 when it was bought by a development consortium. During the troubles the hotel was burned down and reconstructed with the novelty of a wash hand basin in every room.
In 1850 the hotel had 25 bedrooms and it was also the centre of a coaching establishment…
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19 Monday Oct 2015
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1700, Kinneigh Church of Ireland, Co. Cork, Church Regarded as Very Sacred by the Irish A Sacred Stone in Church Yard which The Irish Swore Upon, Tradition of Holy Well Noted For Medicinal Virtues Closed Up.
From Maziere Brady
19 Monday Oct 2015
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Rev. Fitzgerald Tisdall, Rector of Kilmoe (Goleen), West Cork, Founder and Commandant of Crookhaven Yeomanry Corps, Murdered at Priest’s Leap, 1809.
From Meziere Brady
In the 19th century Tisdalls married into the Murphy family of Bantry who in Newtown were millers, middling landowners, and were auctioneers. family members appear as jurors, and local administrative bodies. The impressive ruins of the mills are about a mile outside Bantry on the Glengariff road.
Léim an tSagairt (Priest’s Leap) 1612 or possibly Earlier from Francis 1589 map


19 Monday Oct 2015
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1700, Dives Downes on Kilmoe (Ballydehob/Schull/Crookhaven), West Cork, Lands Recently Forfeit by Coppinger and O’Mahony now Hull, Bishop of Cork, Colonel Beecher, Earl of Cork, in Crookhaven, Arthur Hyde, Thadeus Coghlan/Coughlan, Rectories College of Youghal control Wrested from Earl of Cork by Lord Strafford, Old Chapel at Kilkanget near Dunmanus Castle, In O’Sullivan Country Universally Observed as Festival St Roan’s Day, Tithes on Fishing, later Rev. Fisher, Teampall na mBocht.
From Maziere Brady.
There are references to the Coughlans, this branch were Protestant from around 1600 associated with Hulls and Boyle. Jeremy/Jeremiah married Susan Evanson of Gearhameen (Durrus Court), Durrus was Attorney, Seneschal, agent with Andrew Crotty for Boyle/Devonshire Estates in East Cork/Waterford. The Carrigmanus Coughlans are probably ancestors of one branch of the Durrus Dukelows, from Clashadoo. They are also probably ancestors of the Carrigaline Coughlans who may have been given a small estate by the Earl of Cork.
The Limricks mentioned in litigation with the Coughlans are prevalent in Co. Cork with Catholic as well as Protestant branches.
19 Monday Oct 2015
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1700, Dives Downes on Bantry, Kilcrohane, West Cork, Each Parish has its Pattern, The Irish Observe St. Macomoge’s Day as Festival, Land Held By Earl of Anglesea, Sir Ellis Layton, Kilcrohane Sir William Hull, Jointure Mrs Peyton Interest of St. Catherine’s Abbey Waterford.
The Waterford connection my be a historical harp back to the limited incursions of the Normans. These land areas as well as Letterlickey in Durrus and Caheragh appear in the ledgers of St. Finbarr’s Cathedral, Cork.