Quakers Skibbereen and Bandon, 1696


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 held meeting in various Cork towns, including, Bandon, Ross, Castlesaem, Skibbereen and Baltimore.

http://books.google.ie/books?id=gn3SAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA309&lpg=PA309&dq=quakers+skibbereen&source=bl&ots=CRNHT2wLlW&sig=1G2kXA1n9L3m5eD4C24vyZPchhM&hl=en&sa=X&ei=ek1BUq20JIip7Qap8YBo&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=quakers%20skibbereen&f=false

Cost of improvements and description of Glebe House, Inchigeelah and Ballinadee, West Cork1755

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Inchigeela:

https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Inchigeelagh,+Co.+Cork/@51.8424459,-9.1264323,15z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x48451d4de78a27eb:0x0a00c7a997319e20

Ballinadee:

https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Ballinadee,+Co.+Cork/@51.7118405,-8.6268508,17z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m2!3m1!1s0x4844f552187cdeb9:0xa00c7a99731da80

Maziere Brady’s 3 volume history of the Dioceses of Cork, Cloyne and Ross in on the website of Cork Past and Present.

Page 22 contains a description of improvement work carried out by Rev. John Smith:  He obtained a certificate for £201. 10 shillings.

Quarrymen 8d a day, Labourers 6d., a man and a horse 1shilling a day.  Twenty five dozen floor tiles cost £1 0s 10d.  Three tons and one and a half f. balk timber 36. 7s. 6d 3,000 brick, delivered at Ballinadee came to £1. 12s 8d.  Thirty single deals cost £2 12s 6d.  Lime for plastering cost 2s per barrel.  Slate 3s per 1,000.  “Bought a horse for £3 15s and sold him again for £2 5s 6d allowed £1 2s 9d.  Hair for plastering, 8d per barrel.  The total return is £201.10.4d and the house is very fit for the residence of John Smith and his successors

 

P.121 Describes work carried out by the late Rev. Pat Elmley on the 22nd September 1755 and finds£248.18s half penny to be the present value; and when finished; and £218 3s 9d to be the present value; £30 14s 4d being sufficient to put them isn as good repair as they were when first completed.  According to the detailed account the stonework of the house cost 3s8d per perch; roofing 30s per square;  slating and rendering 14s per square, flooring 30s per square; flagging, 2s 8d per perch; roofing, 30s per square; slating 12s a square.

http://www.corkpastandpresent.ie/history/batch2/bradyvol1/#/94/

Island and Coast Society in West Cork 1854-1861.

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https://www.google.ie/maps/place/Ballinadee,+Co.+Cork/@51.6543673,-9.0807235,11z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x4844f552187cdeb9:0xa00c7a99731da80

Google Books have made available the reports of the Coast and Island Society for the period 1854-1861

https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=BXwDAAAAQAAJ&rdid=book-BXwDAAAAQAAJ&rdot=1

The Society was a Protestant Evangelical organisation dedicated to outlining the ‘errors’ of ‘Romanism’ and seeking converts through missionary work and the education of the young.

It operated a mission station of Cape Clear the remains of which are still present. This was headed by the Rev. Daniel Spring also the Professor of Irish at Trinity College Dublin.  There is reference to a publication by him of a journey in the South in 1840.  His brother the Rev. Edward Spring also ministered there.

In Crookhaven then a point of calling for transatlantic sea traffic a mission station was based.  Among the nationalities administered to were English, Italian, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Brazilian, Mexican, Dutch, German, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish and Greek.

The Society also ran schools, in the period of the reports the numbers were under pressure from the famine, emigration, and the opening of national schools. There are also references to parents needing the labour of the children to work on the farms.

http://books.google.ie/books?id=BXwDAAAAQAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=inauthor:%22Island+And+Coast+Society+For+Ireland%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=H9k6UpHtL8-w7AadiIHYAw&ved=0CDQQuwUwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false

Beara: Rossmacowan under 30 pupils, Bere Island, Cappaneel.

Muintervara (Durrus): Doonure (Doonore) numbers falling off,  Roosky (Rooska),  in Gierhies (Gearhies) one school 15, another 33 and the third 20 pupils.

Dunmanus Bay: An Irish Speaking district the teacher to be trained in the language.

Islands: Cape Clear 23 pupils teacher Mr. Kerr , Hare Island, Sherkin

Kilcoe 86 pupils teachers husband and wife..

Travels in West Cork, 1790 of French Consul. Charles Étienne Conquebert De Montbret

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In 1973 Silé Ní Chinnéide took extracts from De Montbret, French Consul, of his journal covering his journey in West Cork in 1790 from papers in the Bibioléque Nãtionale in Paris and published it in two articles in the Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society.

Of interest are the extensive pieces in relation to Michael Kearney an extensive farmer in Garretstown and a listing of the various textiles manufactured in Bandon.

Interestingly the Kearneys collected mid 18th century Cork Newspapers which in the mid-20th century ended up with Mr. Cousins, a Limerick Solicitor. John. T. Collins was given access, from which he compiled genealogical data, which he publishes in the CHA Journal.

Some additional Cork Newspaper Extracts from 1754 of a Genealogical and Historical interest extracted by John T. Collins.

https://plus.google.com/photos/100968344231272482288/albums/5923984015652759761

Bandon Estate Rentals 1854-8, 1874-7, part Durrus, Caheragh, Mizen, West Cork and the Evanson, Dukelow and Jeremy (Jeremiah) Coghlan/Coughlan (Ó Cochláin) family of Carrigmanus Mizen

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

The predecessor of the Cork Archives acquired the papers of the former firm of Wheeler Doherty, Bandon, Solicitors and Land Agents to the estate of the Earl of Bandon in 1971.  It is an enormous collection and part was recently archived the inventory runs to over 70 pages.

The Bandon Estate was somewhat unusual insofar as it was not acquired by conquest but on the earnings of Francis Bernard as a barrister in Dublin in the early 18th century and added to later by judicious marriages and purchase.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Bernard_(lawyer)

Reading the inventory it is possible to look at the estate as a commercial concern, the rents paid by the tenants supported a large organization employing many in Bandon in Castle Bernard.  At its height the estate ran to over 40,000 acres mainly in Co. Cork but  in Dublin and other parts of the country.  It was managed professionally from the late 18th century and was audited by Dublin accountants.  Apart from the Bandon/Bernard family it supported pensioners and endowed various worthy causes.

In the western estate it recovered the lands in Durrus from the Evansons (it seems it have bought the estate off them in the 1720s and leased it back) it demolished the village of Durrus then a collection of miserable mud cabins.  The Archive has rent receipts for the 1730 from the Bernards to Nathaniel Evanson and Jeremy (or Jeremiah) Coughlan, who married his sister around 1700. The Coughlans of Carrigmanus were a little unusual insofar as an old Gaelic family they had become Church of Ireland by 1600 and a long line of clergymen came from the family. It is probable that Jeremy was the grandfather of Frances Coghlan, Upper Clashadoo who married Thomas Dukelow from Cruttees in 1818 and he married in. Thus many of the Durrus Dukelow have a Coghlan descent line and have ancestors who would have ben on the Mizen and Muinter Mhaire Peninsula for perhaps 3,000 years. Jeremy Coughlan was an attorney, the Senescal of Dungarvan and was the Agent of the Devonshire Estates in Wesr Waterford with Andrew ??

The village was lid out with court house, shops, pubs, a hotel dispensary and housing and its present structure dates from this period.  The rental shows rent commencing for the houses from 1858.

The ledgers are sometimes difficult to read and names and townlands are not always clear.  This is a work in progress.

It might be noted that the estate moved tenants around within townlands or for example from Dromnera to Crottees, from Ballyourane in Caheragh to Clashadoo, from Carrigboy to the Mizen Townlands.  There is some evidence that families were moved from the Durrus area to vacant farms in the Bandon part of the estate.

In the 1890s and early 1900s Lord Bandon used Durrus Court as a summer house and enjoyed yachting in the Bay.   In the history of St James Church 200th anniversary edited by Francis Humphries there is a reference to Mrs. Roberts of Bandon recalling Lord Bandon in Durrus when she was a child.

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AqhnQGE3ANjzdDJPRHFMTEZmbjczbUF1b2IxcC1nNlE#gid=0

In the Cork Archives 1854-8, ledger, U137/RL/A/026

1874-1, ledger, U137?Rl?B/005

http://www.corkarchives.ie

1830 Tithe Aplottments from Skib Girl’s site

http://www.corkgen.org/publicgenealogy/cork/titheapplot/durrus/tithe.html

Griffith’s Valuation 1852

http://www.askaboutireland.ie/griffith-valuation/index.xml?action=doPlaceSearch&Submit.x=44&Submit.y=11&Submit=Submit&freetext=durrus&countyname=CORK&baronyname=&unionname=&parishname=

Lord Bandon

The Bernards of Bandon became the Earls of Bandon in 1800.  The first of the line originated in Westmoreland in the reign of Queen Elizabeth and his son was Lord of the Manor in Castle-Mahon, Bandon on the outbreak of the rebellion in 1641.  After 1702 Francis Bernard invested heavily in land forfeit during the Jacobite years which came onto the market.  On 1742 the Durrus lands were purchased from Charles Moore of Tipperary by Stephen Bernard in trust for Frances Bernard.  The lands included a fish palace at the Island/Brahalish. and included here are the Durrus lands.

Sometime in the 1850s they came into possession of estates in Durrus, on the expiration of the Evanson’s lease (this was rented at £540 a year), comprising townlands around the village and west to Ahakista referred to in various deeds as ‘six ploughlands of Coolnalong alias Four Mile Water with the sub-denominations of Dromenea and Brahalish. The current village was laid out replacing a collection of mud cabins and a weavers colony during their tenure and they built a hotel naming it the ‘Bandon Arms’, this later became the property of the Philips family. Lord Bandon is reputed to have built the folly at Droumnea, Kilcrohane as relief work in 1847.  Their efforts were praised in the local paper in November 1867 where it was said that every inducement is given to tenants to improve their holdings and the good results of liberal landlordism as in the case of the Bandons was to be seen in their estates in the west.

Captain Thomas the mining engineer produced a pamphlet in 1865 and said that a few years ago a few mud thatched cabins were the only habitations to be seen in Carrigbui.  In their place neat labourer’s cottages, good shops, police barracks, dispensary, post office and an ornamental and well built hotel under the patronage of the Earl of Bandon can be seen.  The exports weekly are some 40,000 eggs with quantities of butter and cattle

Mary Catherine Henrietta Bernard of Castle Bernard daughter of Lord Bandon married Colonel Aldworth on the 30th July 1863 and an address and copy of ‘God’s Holy Word’ was sent by Rev Freke and the tenantry of Durrus to which she returned thanks.  At Dreenlomane Mine (operating until c1920) owned by Lord Bandon, Captain Thomas set tar barrels alight on Mount Corrin which illuminated the sky all night and the 150 miners and their wives were treated to refreshments and similar celebrations were held in Carrigbui.

Lord Bandon was an enthuastic exponent of flax growing in the 1860s.  On the 22nd February 1864 he addressed a meeting at Carrigbui Courthouse attended by Rev James Freke, Richard Tonson Evanson, and a large assemblage of ‘the yeoman farmers’ of the neighbourhood. He addressed a similar meeting in Bantry a few days before. He mentioned the Munster Flax Society, the imminent coming of the railway, and the establishment of scutching mills to rebut charges of previous failure.  He suggested a reduction in the area devoted to potatoes and a little flax to be added.  Persons were appointed to do an assessment of what would be planted in each townland next season and bring this to a meeting to be held the following week.  Later the Royal Dublin Society appointed a Mr Wilson from the North to provide technical assistance and a flax market was functioning in Ballineen in 1865.  A full flax mill was established outside Bandon by James H Swanton in 1865.  it might be remembered that the American Civil war was raging at the time making cotton scarce, the growing of flax in West Cork had always thrived during was but declines after.  While there are numerous flax ponds in the area the crop never took off like it did in Northern Ireland.

James Francis Bernard (1850-1924) was the 4th earl of Bandon and Lord Lieutenant of County Cork.  May Roberts, Brahalish remembers Lord Bandon arriving in the area with a four wheeled car and the Coachman Timmy Burke on top a going to his hunting lodge at the present Durrus Court.  Lord Bandon was in Durrus in 22nd February 1864 to promote flax growing.  The large farm at Gearamin, Cummer now owned by a German was part of the hunting area.   There was some association between the Philips family and Lord Bandon.  They managed the estate and their home farm was extensive from Ahagouna to Rusheeniska taking in some of Clashadoo and Gearamin.

Much of the land in Durrus was owned by the Bandon Estate and was managed by the Wheeler Doherty Family (their estate papers are in the Cork Archive Institute but some are still  uncatalogued).  The previous managers of the estate Edward Appelby and Colonel Henry Boyle Bernard had left it heavily in debt and R.W. Doherty was appointed in 1877.  Colonel Bernard (of the Cork Light Infantry Militia) acquired an interest by way of family settlement of 1848 and mortgaged lands including those in Durrus in 1878. In July 1882 Richard Wheeler Doherty Jnr. complained that tenants ‘but principally those of Durrus near Bantry had paid no rent since 1880, his father had said in September 1881 ‘The Land Leagues are destroying the country and a lot of Protestants have joined them … the Protestants at Durrus would pay no rent unless allowed 25% off.  More like savages then human beings’.

In 1895 the West of England Insurance Company applied to have the Bandon estate sold to satisfy borrowings of 1814 and further advances in the 1870s.  Presumably this was settled as the Bandon Estate had title to sell to the various Durrus tenants under the Land Acts.

In the 19th Century the great land owning families of Co Cork such as the Bandons controlled the administration of the County with the Grand Jury which met as the time of the legal Assizes and decided on matters of policy.  When the County Council was established under the Local Government Act of 1898 power passed to the elected councillors and public officials.  A family which in 1870 has over 40,000 acres in Co Cork sold the vast bulk of it under the Land Acts to the tenants and now their successors have only a modest bungalow on the once extensive Castle Bernard Estate in Bandon.

District Inspector Samuel Waters RIC, Castletown Bere, Co. Cork 1874-1877.

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Samuel Waters 1844-1936 was an RIC Officer and both his father and grandfather had been policemen. He started on £125 per annum and perpetually in scrapes due to his inadequate income.  He was posted to Castletown in 1874 at the time a quiet district and enjoyed hunting and fishing.

He was interested in amateur dramatics and in the capacity met the then 17 year old Tim Harrington later to become a Home Ruler MP.  Although on opposite sides politically they became friends he was also friendly with Tim’s brother Edward who was a newspaper editor ‘The Sentinel’, in Tralee.

His memoir is in the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland  (Gore-Booth Papers D/4051/14), on Lisaddell House he recounts the pastime of him and fellow officers in the evening of rat catching in the kitchen as a member of the Pig and Whistle Club.

 

The memoir has been edited by Stephen Ball and published under the Irish Narrativve Series 1999 by Cork University Press

 

https://plus.google.com/photos/100968344231272482288/albums/5913736201264135841/5913736265830626626?pid=5913736265830626626&oid=100968344231272482288

‘Down memory Lane’, site by Mr.Gerdie Harrington, Castletown Bere covers some of this ground and the connection with the Armstrong Family.

http://www.gerdie.bhs.ie/diwalters.htm

Jennings Family West Cork to New Zealand, Australia, USA 1800-1985


Gregg N. Jennings compiled a history of the family assisted by other members in the early 1980s.  A copy of the book is available on line:

http://www.familysearch.org/

Bantry Protestant Militia and Volunteers 1779

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Various corps of volunteers were raised in Cork City and County to oppose the United Irishmen.  These are listed in the Rev. Gibson’s History of Cork Vol 2, 1861

BANTRY VOLUNTEERS. Enrolled 1779. Force: 1 company. Uniform: scarlet, faced white. Officers in 1782 – Colonel, Hamilton White; Captain, Richard Blair; Lieutenant, David Melefont; Ensigns, Henry Galway and John Young; Adjutant, Henry Galway; Secretary, Francis Hoskin.

Magistrate:

Hamilton White, 1789, Bantry, probably married Lucinda Heaphy, two sons Kings Inns, 1st son Richard 1823, 2nd son John Hamilton 1826, both TCD.  BANTRY VOLUNTEERS. Enrolled 1779. Force: 1 company. Uniform: scarlet, faced white. Officers in 1782 – Colonel, Hamilton White; Captain, Richard Blair; Lieutenant, David Melefont; Ensigns, Henry Galway and John Young; Adjutant, Henry Galway; Secretary, Francis Hoskin.