• About
  • Customs Report 1821-2 (and Miscellaneous Petitions to Government 1820-5) and some Earlier Customs Data, including staffing, salaries, duties including, Cork, Kinsale, Youghal, Baltimore, with mention of Bantry, Crookhaven, Glandore, Berehaven, Castletownsend, Enniskeane, Passage, Crosshaven, Cove, Clonakilty, Cortmacsherry.
  • Eoghan O’Keeffe 1656-1723, Glenville, Co. Cork later Parish Priest, Doneralie 1723 Lament in old Irish
  • Historic maps from Cork City and County from 1600
  • Horsehair, animal blood an early 18th century Stone House in West Cork and Castles.
  • Interesting Links
  • Jack Dukelow, 1866-1953 Wit and Historian, Rossmore, Durrus, West Cork. Charlie Dennis, Batt The Fiddler.
  • Kilcoe Church, West Cork, built by Father Jimmy O’Sullivan, 1905 with glass by Sarah Purser, A. E. Childs (An Túr Gloine) and Harry Clarke Stained Glass Limited
  • Late 18th/Early 19th century house, Ahagouna (Áth Gamhna: Crossing Place of the Calves/Spriplings) Clashadoo, Durrus, West Cork, Ireland
  • Letter from Lord Carbery, 1826 re Destitution and Emigration in West Cork and Eddy Letters, Tradesmen going to the USA and Labourers to New Brunswick
  • Marriage early 1700s of Cormac McCarthy son of Florence McCarthy Mór, to Dela Welply (family originally from Wales) where he took the name Welply from whom many West Cork Welplys descend.
  • Online Archive New Brunswick, Canada, many Cork connections
  • Origin Dukelow family, including Coughlan, Baker, Kingston and Williamson ancestors
  • Return of Yeomanry, Co. Cork, 1817
  • 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
  • School Folklore Project 1937-8, Durrus, Co. Cork, Schools Church of Ireland, Catholic.
  • Sean Nós Tradition re emerges in Lidl and Aldi
  • Some Cork and Kerry families such as Galwey, Roches, Atkins, O’Connells, McCarthys, St. Ledgers, Orpen, Skiddy, in John Burkes 1833 Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland:
  • Statement of Ted (Ríoch) O’Sullivan (1899-1971), Barytes Miner at Derriganocht, Lough Bofinne with Ned Cotter, later Fianna Fáil T.D. Later Fianna Fáil TD and Senator, Gortycloona, Bantry, Co. Cork, to Bureau of Military History, Alleged Torture by Hammer and Rifle at Castletownbere by Free State Forces, Denied by William T Cosgrave who Alleged ‘He Tried to Escape’.
  • The Rabbit trade in the 1950s before Myxomatosis in the 1950s snaring, ferrets.

West Cork History

~ History of Durrus/Muintervara

West Cork History

Tag Archives: Dunmanway Victoia Bairnsdale Australia Bruthen Station Omea Goldfields

Alexander Clerke (1804-1877), Son of Helena McCarthy and William Clerke, Millowner, Skibbereen, Emigration to Tasmania 1828, Land Owner, Businessman, Magistrate, MP, Extended Family Network of Sweetnam, Jagoe, Mahony, Young, Deasy, Long, Bird, Love.

24 Wednesday Feb 2016

Posted by durrushistory in Uncategorized

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Dunmanway Victoia Bairnsdale Australia Bruthen Station Omea Goldfields, sweetnam, Tasmania


Alexander Clerke (1804-1877), Son of Helena McCarthy and William Clerke, Millowner, Skibbereen, Emigration to Tasmania 1828, Land Owner, Businessman, Magistrate, MP, Extended Family Network of Jagoe, Mahony, Young, Deasy, Long, Bird, Love.

From the early 19th century there was significant emigration of West Cork Landlord families and large farmers and professional people.  Names include Cotter of Bantry, Bernard, Baldwins, Sullivans, Kingstons,  of Bandon, Jennings of Dunmanway, Townsends of Skibbereen among others.

It was common for emigrants to call their ranches after place names in West Cork as for the Townsends ‘Dunbeacon.’

Brother Thomas, Judge,New York.

https://durrushistory.com/2015/12/07/genealogy-of-sweetnam-family-of-clehanecloghane-caheragh-wesr-cork-arising-from-marriage-1812-of-mathew-sweetnam-murrahin-to-elizabeth-connell-with-descendants-usa-canada-australia-england-2/

https://durrushistory.com/2015/09/09/death-of-captain-stephen-sweetnam-70th-regiment-of-foot-of-skibbereen-co-cork-april-1806-in-the-west-indies-involved-in-storming-of-deig-and-bhurtpore-india/

https://durrushistory.com/2015/07/12/13502/

https://durrushistory.com/2014/07/30/calendars-of-wills-and-administration-1858-1922-as-a-genealogical-aid-and-indicator-of-wealth-a-preliminary-snapshotin-of-the-bantry-durrus-caheragh-and-skibbereen-areas-west-cork/

Courtesy Jeffrey Briscoe, Hobart, Tasmania.

Click to access whole_BriscoeJeffreyRoy1996_thesis.pdf

William Jennings (1837-1922), Toughbaun, Dunmanway, West Cork and Bairnsdale, Victoria, Australia, The Flax Mills on the River in Dunmaway.

20 Monday Jan 2014

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Dunmanway Victoia Bairnsdale Australia Bruthen Station Omea Goldfields


William Jennings (1837-1922), Toughbaun, Dunmanway, West Cork and Bairnsdale, Victoria, Australia.

From Family History:

When William Jennings was just 21 years old he married Jane Jennings who was 19 years in Cork, Ireland, and set sail to gather a fortune at the Australian Goldfields and return home in a few years. They brought little more than a trunk of essential clothing. During the 3 month voyage to Melbourne, smallpox broke out and Jane was desperately ill and frantically worried as to her appearance and a possible rejection by her young husband. She lost the sight of one eye as a result.

They travelled by boat from Melbourne to Port Albert and then by bullock dray to the Omeo area.

No tales were told of the goldfield days, which were obviously a fiasco. In 1862, William found a secure position as the resident Mounted Constable in charge of Bruthen Station. Bruthen was a supply centre for the Omeo Goldfields. His record with the Victorian Police (1862-1872) describe him as follows: Mounted Constable, resident in charge of Bruthen Station, a steady well conducted man. Height 5’7″, brown hair, blue eyes, fresh complexion, intelligent appearance, married, Church of England, farmer. Country of origin: Ireland.

He resigned after 10 years and they resided on the land at Broadlands where they stayed and reared their family. Four boys and 3 girls survived out of a family of twelve.

Pre-immigration family history in England and Ireland reveals the family’s appreciation of the privileges and stability attached to land ownership. While in the poorest times they could retreat to virtual subsistence living, the land guaranteed them a social position based on their stability as land holders.

Jane was a neat, quick moving, capable little lady, an excellent mother, housekeeper and gardener. Like other women of those days living in an isolated area she must have spent many anxious hours waiting for the return of her husband from his duties which often took him far from home. She was always busy, she helped in the dairy, sewed for her young family, occasionally for neighbours, by hand at first and then with a hand operated sewing machine. She knitted, mended, and filled pillows and eiderdowns with feathers. In the home there were sheepskin mats and possum skin rugs. Daughters were trained to follow a similar pattern of the practical use of available commodities. Butter, eggs and fruit went regularly to the grocers in exchange for groceries. Trained dressmakers and milliners, they were considered among the best dressed girls to walk the streets of Bairnsdale as they shopped and greeted friends.

In the affluent 1880’s the new home “Estella Park” was built as an addition to the original 4 roomed weatherboard cottage and was connected by a breezeway abutting the fernery. The old English style cottage garden was restricted. Landscaping was not “in” when land was needed for production. Trimmed box hedges grew against white painted gates and picket fences. Roses, carnations and old world annuals grew in small neat beds. Climbing roses, jessamine, and honeysuckle grew on the verandah posts and pergolas with asperdesporas and ferns in pots in shady areas.

The orchard and vegetable garden was more extensive with fruit trees, berries, grapes, passionfruit and a small commercial peach orchard. All varieties of vegetables were grown in abundance. Fruit and vegetables were preserved and meat salted down.

In spite of the rugged conditions a standard was maintained and things improved with constant endeavour. The land provided abundance for the table and hospitality was a feature of entertainment. Food was set out with starched tablecloths and serviettes, hand embroidered doilies and tray cloths on English china dishes.

In her spare time Jane wheeled the youngest children several miles across the paddocks to join the hop pickers on the riverbank. Hop picking was as much a picnic and convivial gathering as anything else. Once on her return she was chased by a bull and just managed to tumble herself and child over the fence in time. Arriving home very upset she sat down to breastfeed the baby who died shortly after.

In her old age Jane was always busy gathering eggs, fruit, vegetables, setting a hen, feeding chickens and guinea fowl. She sat on a straight backed chair while she mended or knitted. On Sundays she read her Prayer Book while Aunt Essie drummed haltingly at hymns on the piano.

William was an affable old gentleman who teased his grandchildren and entertained them yarns of his early life in Ireland, the voyage on the sailing ship, bush rangers, encounters with blacks, riding with the gold escort and visits to the Magistrates Court. Jane warned him constantly to stop filling their heads with all that nonsense!

William died in 1922 at the age of 85 and was remembered as plump and bewhiskered, dressed in a comfortable tweed suit sitting on the east verandah reading, with a wary eye for neighbours and the chance of a chat over the fence.

Slow moving, short of breath in his declining years, he retained his interest in the farm, walking across to the cow shed with hot water for the separator and returning with the household milk. He was up with the chooks, called the boys for milking etc. then lit the fire and set the kettle for breakfast.

He was always well mounted and rode into town looking smart and prosperous. He enjoyed a ‘drop of the doings’ and at times his Irish pals had to assist him to mount for the homeward journey, singing as he rode, bringing a bag of boiled lollies for Jane.

On one occasion the matter of a disputed boundary with his neighbour, John Keyte, was most satisfactorily settled over a bottle of whisky as they sat on a nearby log and debated the matter. He was an avid reader of newspapers, stock journals, local & church news. The bookcase contained encyclopaedia, a large volume of Irish genealogy, the family bible & photo albums. Amongst the tales told there was always some reference to the flax mills on the river at Dunmanway and the Jennings millions in Chancery.

Sons, grandsons and granddaughters settled around William & Jane in neat homes on well formed holdings in the Broadlands area. Grandson John Jennings lived in the original homestead until 1970.

Great Grandma Jane and Great Aunt Essie moved to join George and his family in 1922 after William died. He had, for their benefit extended the sitting room to a comfortable bedsitter with a door opening onto the garden which was Essies pride and joy.
The Jennings family in Australia has now extended to six generations.

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16th Regiment of Foot assisted female emigration australia ballyclough bantry bay caithness legion cavan regiment of militia cheshire fencibles coppinger's court inbhear na mbearc Irish words in use 1930s lord lansdowne's regiment mallow melbourne ned kelly new brunswick O'Dalys Bardic Family. o'regan Personal Memoirs rosscarbery schull sir redmond barry sir walter coppinger st. johns sydney Townlands treaty of limerick Uncategorized university of Melbourne victoria

16th Regiment of Foot assisted female emigration australia ballyclough bantry bay caithness legion cavan regiment of militia cheshire fencibles coppinger's court inbhear na mbearc Irish words in use 1930s lord lansdowne's regiment mallow melbourne ned kelly new brunswick O'Dalys Bardic Family. o'regan Personal Memoirs rosscarbery schull sir redmond barry sir walter coppinger st. johns sydney Townlands treaty of limerick Uncategorized university of Melbourne victoria
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