Deed of 1626 for three ploughlands in Durrus, Co. Cork, by Edward and Mary Boyle.


durrushistory's avatarWest Cork History

https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Dromreagh,+Co.+Cork/@51.6143084,-9.5034165,15z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x48459fbf5aa6407b:0x2600c7a7bb4c0162

The Duke of Devonshire commenced an action in 1854 in the Encumbered Estates Court to confirm that lands to be disposed of by Nathaniel Evanson did not include minerals.

The land was originally sold by the Duke’s predecessor on title, Edward Boyle and his wife Mary by way of lease for 500 years from the 21st May 1626.  The property including 3 ploughlands at Drumreagh, Dromelower and Ardgenane in Durrus including Murreagh was acquired by the Earl of Burlington and Cork and Sir William Heathcote who disposed of it to Richard Tonson in 1738 included as part of the Manorial rights to the Lord of the Manor of  Ballydehob including the Durrus lands.  In 1765 the Durrus lands were demised to Richard Tonson Evanson and renewed by Lord Baron Riversdale to Nathaniel Evanson in 1811,

The Duke succeeded in his claim.  The papers are in the National Library, Lismore…

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John J. McCarthy, Tullig, Durrus, Co. Cork and Nebraska, Rancher, Poet US Politician, Near Casper, Wyoming home to many from Muintervara.


durrushistory's avatarWest Cork History

Tullig:
https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Tullig,+Co.+Cork/@51.6105816,-9.6098489,15z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x48459de603bf8261:0x1fa379d50ada8c78

Ohallaha:

https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Ogallala,+NE+69153,+USA/@41.1345755,-101.722333,6z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x8776c28ef518ab49:0x71353a6ab7dd8763

John J. McCarthy was born in 1859 in Tullig, Durrus in the vicinity of O’Donovan’s Cove which is the subject of his poem. His father was Charles and was believed to be a active Parnellite.

The local area was a hive of political activity going back to Timothy O’Donovan, local Landlord and JP a supporter of O’Connell, Tithe Reform and Liberal politics.

John went to the USA in 1880 and his career is documented in an obituary at the back of the enclosed document. He died in Nebraska in 1931.

His home place in Ogallaha, Nebraska is in US terms relative near Casper, Wyoming where a lot of people from Muintervara settled.

John J. McCarthy, Tullig, Durrus, Co. Cork and Nebraska, Rancher, Poet and Politician.

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Ernest Blythe, ‘I could run the country on £20 million a year’.


durrushistory's avatarWest Cork History

Ernest Blythe, The Minister for Finance in the first Free State Government has had a terrible press for cutting the old age pension and trying to balance the budget.  A statement attributed to him in this period was that he could if left run the Free State for £20 million a year.  In the light of the recent past maybe its a pity a little more of his Northern Presbyterian financial ethic wasn’t incorporated into spending public and private.

An interesting aside is that during this period and in the 1930s the Northern Ireland Government under the Unionist Party was divided into two factions, one led by the Prime Minister Craig, Andrews, and Dawson-Bates were populists and spenders, the other comprising the head of the cicil service Sir Wilfed Spender and Minister Milner-Barbour were trying to balance the budget.  In theory most of the expenditure was supposed to be raised…

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Henry Ford, Ballinascarty, west Cork and the Uileann Pipes


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In issue 16 of ‘The Archive’, the Journal of the Cork Northside Fiolklore Project, there is an article about the Crowley Music family and shop in McCurtain Street, Cork.

It relates how in the 1926, Henry Ford (1863-1947) the Motor Magnate, sent a set of uileann pipes, belonging to his father William (1826-1905) for repair.  The pipes are reputedly in the Ford Museum in Detroit on display.

The Fords occupied a 23 acre farm on the Bence Jones estate at Lisellan near Ballinascarty, before emigrating to the US, the rest is history.

The implication in the article was that William was able to play the pipes a matter that might yield further research.

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John Stevens, visit to Bantry, May 1689, ‘Not worth the name of a Town, having not more then seven or eight little houses the rest very mean cottages.


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John Stevens was a Jacobite and landed in Bantry on the 2nd May 1689.  The enclosed piece is from a collection of tales in ‘Diaries of Ireland’,  An Anthology 1590-1987, by Melosine Lenox-Conyngham, The Lilliput Press, 1998.

Thursday 2 May 1689

We landed in Bantry, which is a miserable poor place, not worthy of the name of a town, having not above seven or eight little houses, the rest very mean cottages… Two nights that we continued here I walked two miles out of town to lie upon a little dirty straw in a cot or cabin, no better than a hog-sty among near twenty others.  The houses and cabins in town were so filled that people lay all avor the others.  Some gentlemen took up their lodgings in an old rotten boat that lay near the shore, and there wanted not some who quartered in a saw pit.  Meat…

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Incident Land War, Durrus, west Cork, 7th January 1886


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On the 8th  January 1886 it was reported in the Shields Daily Gazette and Shipping Telegraph that ‘moonlighters’ savagely beat Mr. David Burley, the Petty Session Clerk, in search of arms the previous day and no arrests were made.

At that time the Petty Sesssions were held in Carrigboy (Durrus), the courthouse is still extant next to Ó Suilleabhaín’s pub.  Mr Burley (or Burleigh) lived in the large house between the West Lodge Hotel and the cemetry in Bantry.

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Appointments of Admirals for Co. Cork to fight O’Driscolls, 14th January, 1382. ls, 18th August,1381.


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From Trinity College/Circle.

Patent Roll 5 Richard II

14 Jan. 1382
Cork

APPOINTMENT of William Sygyn and John Galvy1 as admirals in all ports within co. Cork, with power to arrest all ships, boats and vessels, and to arrest all mariners and masters, and other defensible men of that county, to fight with God’s aid the lineage of the Hinderscoles [O’Driscolls], Irish enemies, who constantly remain upon the western ocean; with power to amerce refractory persons and to the spend the amercements on the wars.2

C:

NAI, Lodge MS 21, p. 39; RCH.

N:

Hardiman, Statute of the fortieth year of King Edward III, p. 35 note.

Footnotes:

1 RCH reads ‘Galny’.
2 The record as given by Lodge is reproduced in full in Herbert Wood (ed.), ‘The Public Records…

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Caesar Otway, Skull to Bantry, 1822.


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Caerar Otway 1780-1842 was a Minister and publisher among others of William Carleton  and co-operated with George Petrie in the first edition of  the Dublin Penny Journal.  They published an article about a journey to Durrus:

https://durrushistory.wordpress.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=373&action=edit

This account is from The Grand Tour of Cork by Cornelius Kelly, Cailleach Books, 2003.

I proceeded to take my leave of Skull…on my way to Bantry I passed the dark and lofty Mount Gabriel to the left, and took my dreary way over a comfortless tract of country, the peninsula of Ivaugh, the ancient territory of O’Mahony Fune; princes these O’Mahonys were of bogs and rocks enough: here the tribe of the O’Mahonys has contrived to increase and multiply, and has replenished these wastes with Paddies, pigs, and potatoes.  Let no one say after looking at these moors, studded over with cabins, and those cabins crowded with children, pigs, goats, cocks and…

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William Warner, Butter Merchant, Bantry, 1880s


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William Warner of Bantry owned creameries at Killarney, Enniskeane and Ballinacarriga and developed a brand of butter aimed at the export market. In partnership with James Manders (son-in-law) who later left the partnership he started a factory at William Street.  By 1886 its production was £6,000 in the summer and employed a hundred men including fifty coopers. In 1892 it was producing 800 tons a year.

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