William Martin Murphy, Bantry and the Noel Brown connection.


durrushistory's avatarWest Cork History

A talk was held in the Maritime Hotel Bantry on Saturday evening the 14th July 2013 to explore the legacy of William Martin Murphy.  The speakers were Jim O’Keeffe former Junior Minister, TD, and Chairman of Murphy O’Connor & Co of Bantry a building providing firm founded ny William Martin Murphy and now entering its second hundred years.  Also present was local historian Hazel Vickery and Padraig Yeates former Irish Times journalist and historian of the 1913 lockout.

Mr O’Keeffe outlined Murphy’s early life birth in Castletown Bere and moving to Bantry as an infant where is father operated as a builder.  He was sent to Dublin as a day boy at Belvedere College and lodged with the Sullivan brothers (of “The Nation’) off the South Circular Road. His father was anxious that he train as an architect and he attended appropriate lectures at the Catholic University as well as…

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Quakers Skibbereen and Bandon, 1696


durrushistory's avatarWest Cork History

In Mazier Brady’s history of the Diocese of Cork Cloyne and Ross he quotes from Dives Downes journey of 1700 when he visited Skibbereen.   He says that the Quakers about 8 families meet on Sundays and Thursdays a silent meeting.  On Thursday the 30th May 1700 a meeting was held attended by about 40.  He says that two Yorkshire Women visit from time to time.

http://www.corkpastandpresent.ie/history/batch2/bradyvol2/#/458/

He also mentions Fontaine a French Huguenot based in a Maritime enterprise in Berehaven he preached and most of the Protestants attended out of curiosity.   Among the Berehaven colony of about 13 families was the ancestor of Davy Crockett.

In the Bandon Genealogy site there is a reference to  Quaker families from Skibbereen with the Massey and Houlden families mentioned.

http://www.bandon-genealogy.com/bandon_quaker_records.htm

Bennet’s History of Bandon refers to the Quakers in Skibbereen having a meeting house in 1996.

http://www.paulturner.ca/Ireland/Cork/HOB/hob-19.htm

In 1724 Benjamin Holme…

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Irish in the American Civil War Needs Your Votes!


Damian Shiels PhD's avatarIrish in the American Civil War

I am pleased to say that the Irish in the American Civil War has been shortlisted in two categories for the Blog Awards Ireland. Many thanks to those who nominated the blog for the long-list initially, and to all of who you have taken the time to read my posts over the last five years. The next phase of judging will select the finalists for the awards, and includes a public vote element which accounts for 30% of the overall mark. Although perhaps not quite as vital a vote as that 1864 example illustrated below, I would still be very appreciative of your support! If you are so inclined, you can vote for the site in the Education & Science category by clicking here and in the Art & Culture Category by clicking here. I have also added links to the voting areas in the blog’s sidebar.

Pennsylvania soldiers of the Army of the James voting in the 1864 Presidential election (Library of Congress) Pennsylvania…

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Further Eedy (Kilgariff, Clonakilty,Co. Cork) Letters from James Huston, Bandon, to his uncle Robert Eedy, Nova Scotia, 1826-35 dealing with family matters and local decline in trade, Catholic Emancipation, Liberal and Brunswick Clubs. Also list of names & places mentioned in the letters and the Will of James Morgan, Newcestown, (Bandon), Clothier, 1814. Copies of account Robert Eady Bathhurst 1838 and Sermon by Mr. Dood. Oxford, 1836.


Eedy family history:

http://studylib.net/doc/6811055/excerpt-from-2001-eedy-history

 

Further Eedy (Kilgariff, Clonakilty,Co. Cork) Letters from James Huston, Bandon, to his uncle Robert Eedy, Nova Scotia, 1826-35 dealing with family matters and
local decline in trade, Catholic Emancipation, Liberal and Brunswick Clubs. Also list of names & places mentioned in the letters and the Will of James Morgan, Newcestown, (Bandon), Clothier, 1814. Copies of account Robert Eady Bathhurst 1838 and Sermon by Mr. Dood. Oxford, 1836.

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.

The letters are available by appointment at the Cork Archives.

Eedy Letters U009

Copies of 7 letters from James Huston, Bandon, to his uncle

Robert Eedy, Nova Scotia, 1826-35 dealing with family matters and

local decline in trade, Catholic Emancipation, Liberal and

Brunswick Clubs. Also list of names & places mentioned in the

letters and the Will of James Morgan, Newcestown, Clothier, 1814.

Copies of account Robert Eady Bathhurst 1838 and Sermon by Mr.

Dood. Oxford, 1836.

1814-1838 12 items

Courtesy Cork Archive:

5-IMG_7556

Dipping into the Magill archives.


Donal's avatarCome Here To Me!

Though Magill is no more today, the magazine was hugely important in its day and remains a very useful tool for those researching the Ireland of the past.

Founded by Vincent Browne in 1977, the magazine included frequent contributions from some of Ireland’s most relevant journalists, including Eamonn McCann and Gene Kerrigan. It also included the photography of Derek Spiers, who captured great images of social movements in the Dublin of the 1970s and 80s. The magazine frequently found itself making headlines in other publications. A 1982 edition, exposing criminal activity on the part of the Official IRA, caused serious headaches for Sinn Féin The Workers’ Party (SFWP), while the magazine also interviewed many controversial individuals, including Provisional IRA spokesmen and criminal elements.

Today, the archive of the magazine is online and free to browse, thanks to the people at politico.ie, and it’s something I want to highlight here. From

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The Hollow Blade Company of London and Land in Reendonegan, Bantry, Co. Cork 1710


durrushistory's avatarWest Cork History

https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Reenydonagan,+Co.+Cork/@51.7093811,-9.4486432,16z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x48450b99e737ec9d:0xc95402708f3b2e25

The Hollow Blade Company (they had funded Parliament’s 1680s campaign against the English King and these lands were part of their reward)

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

Pre Hollow Blade tenure

http://eppi.dippam.ac.uk/documents/9809/eppi_pages/214817
http://eppi.dippam.ac.uk/documents/9809/eppi_pages/214820

was originally set up to manufacture swords in the 1690s but shortly afterwards was used as a shell to engage in banking.  It would have been the Anglo-Irish Bank of the early 18th century and failed in a spectacular fashion with its involvement with the South Sea Bubble .

It acquired various Irish properties in 1703

http://landedestates.nuigalway.ie/LandedEstates/jsp/estate-show.jsp?id=1129  including property at Reendonegan, Bantry.  This townland has land which is very fertile and much sought after abutting theBay, atthe time access to seaweed and sea sand would be a contributor to value.

This was leased to Henry Hutchinson of Bantry and is recorded in the Registry of Deeds  1714 Vol 13 page 185 Memorial Number 5543 to Hutchinson a “Protestant’ for £266.

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Royal Commission of Inquiry into the Fishing Industry, sitting in Bantry April 1836


durrushistory's avatarWest Cork History

The Commission was investigating the state of the fishing industry on the south west coast.  One of the Commissioners was Redmond Barry, an inspector of fisheries.  He was a small landlord, a Catholic  from Glandore who worked tirelessly to improve agricultural and general condition in the area.

Among those who gave evidence was John Young then 87 whose family had been extensively involved in the industry.  There were a number of seine owners and owners of a hooker. The Youngs had been involved in fishing in Bantry for generations and Richard Young gave evidence that his great grandfather had lost £2,000 when a Finance House in Bilbao had collapsed. This may have been the Consulado de Bilbao in 1651

Click to access catalogo_diputacion.pdf

Timothy O’Donovan, a small landlord and Magistrate of O’Donovan’s Cove, Durrus, gave a written submission on the futility of certain controls as not being effective and only…

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Letter from Florence McCarthy 1609 re building of Castles at Donemark, Bantry, Co.Cork 1215


Evidence of John Jagoe, (Grandfather of Mother Benigna, Australia and Father of John Jagoe BL, author of Law of Irish Fisheries) Bantry, Co. Cork, 1837 re Manor Courts to Parliamentary Commission.


durrushistory's avatarWest Cork History

In 1837 a Parliamentary Commission took evidence on the operation of Manor Courts.  It heard evidence from John Jagoe.  He was from Bantry a Fish Merchant, had sat on a Fisheries Commission had engaged in correspondence with Dublin Castle on fisheries and non-denominatinal education.  His only son John became a barrister. He was admitted to Grey’s Inns London in 1835 aged 34.

In his evidence he said that there were Manor Courts in Bantry  and Leamcon (Schull).  They were generally held in public houses wiht a jury drawn from a low class.  The seneshal was drawn from  a drunken class and paid £50-£80 per annum.  His evidence suggested that the jury demanded cash or whiskey from the successful party.  This was referred to as a ‘cob’.  The jury did not retire but openly debated the verdict and onlookers could hear and influence.  The more respectable class of…

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