c.1900____________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________
Youghal-born Soldiers discharged prior to 1853 - From The National Archives (PRO), London; Doc. Ref. TNA(PRO) Indexed by surname and place of birth from the National Archives online catalogues.
Name Served in…/Discharged Covering Dates Ahearn, Bartholomew 94th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 36 1824-1838 Ahearn, John 82nd Foot Regt. Discharged aged 39 1812-1824 Ahern, John 3rd Foot Regt. Discharged aged 23 1845-1850 Aherne, Michael 57th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 39 1824-1845 Alders, John Dublin Militia. Discharged aged 54 1797-1835 Allen, John 66th Foot Regt.; 99th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 32 after 8 years service 1802 Allen, Richard Waterford Militia. Discharged aged 56 1793-1822 Astin, Henry 65th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 28 1833-1846 Baggs, James Waterford Militia. Discharged aged 45. Covering date year of discharge 1802 Belcher, Edward 56th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 41 1803-1826 Boyle, Thomas 89th Foot Regt.; 3rd Garrison Battalion. Discharged aged 22 1811-1816 Brooks, James 46th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 35 1801-1814 Brown, John 83rd Foot Regt. Discharged aged 41 1818-1841 Cahill, Daniel 94th Foot Regt.; 96th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 40 1824-1845 Callag(h)an, Dennis Or Callaughan. 28th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 36 after 5 years service 1802 Carey, John 46th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 41 1825-1846 Carey, Patrick See MORGAN, WILLIAM Carroll, Richard 27th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 39 1830-1851 Carty, James 49th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 41 1798-1815 Closey, Bartholomew 5th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 29 1822-1833 Collins, William 13th Foot Regt.; 23rd Foot Regt.; 66th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 52 after 28 years service 1802 Connelly, Patrick 10th Dragoons. Discharged aged 35 1823-1840 Connor, John 100th Foot Regt.; 80th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 34 1811-1825 Connor, John 31st Foot Regt. Discharged aged 40 after 3 years 4 months service. Covering dates year of enlistment to year of discharge 1810-1813 Conroy, Michael 67th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 24 1846-1853 Conway, Daniel 127th Foot Regt.; 80th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 38 1791-1814 Corcoran, William 69th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 19 1813-1816 Cotter, John 28th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 29 1843-1853 Coughlan, John 70th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 19 1847-1849 Crean, Daniel Or Crane. 4th Foot Regt.; Leitrim Militia. Discharged aged 34 after 13 years 1 month service 1800 Crean, Daniel 4th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 21 after 10 years (sic) service 1796 Cronican, William Or Cronacane. Born ‘Younghall.’ 20th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 22 1812-1813 Cullonane, Peter Born ‘Youghell.’ 16th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 28 1817-1827 Doyle, Denis 71st Foot Regt.; 67th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 33 1836-1851 Doyle, Richard 19th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 23 1844-1851 Drady, Richard 59th Foot Regt.; 6th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 47 1827-1848 Dwyer, Edward Or Dwyre. 7th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 38 after 14 years 10 months service 1807 Farrell, Richard 84th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 33 1822-1836 Flockhart, Peter 2nd Foot Regt. Discharged aged 38 1808-1829 Foley, Colman 98th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 32 1826-1841 Foley, Edward 50th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 22 1845-1847 Foley, Michael 89th Foot Regt.; 16th Garrison Battalion. Discharged aged 47 1803-1827 Freeman, John 57th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 32 after 12 years 9 months service. Covering dates year of enlistment to year of discharge 1798-1811 Fuller, John 40th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 40 after 20 years service 1787 Gambleton, James Or Gum(m)elton. 44th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 34 1803-1816 Gardner, Yelverton 56th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 38 1806-1818 Geary, Patrick 85th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 27 1812-1816 Geary, Robert 85th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 27 1812-1813 Geoghegan, Edward 58th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 34 1825-1841 Gibson, John 99th Foot Regt.; 49th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 37 1790-1818 Glanville, Thomas Born ‘Youghale.’ 23rd Dragoons (Light); 10th Dragoons. Discharged aged 40 1805-1828 Gorman, Richard 49th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 43 1818-1840 Hamilton, John 16th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 40 1816-1839 Harris, Benjamin Tipperary Militia. Discharged aged 48. Covering date year of discharge 1828 Hartnell, Michael 58th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 42 1825-1848 Hartnett, Joseph 12th Foot Regt.; 96th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 33 1809-1823 Harty, Michael 19th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 20 1840-1842 Haskett, John 4th Dragoon Guards; 6th Foot Regt.; 47th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 41 1816-1839 Hill, Richard Born ‘Youghall, Waterford.’ 27th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 30 1810-1821 Hinds, John 71st Foot Regt.; 101st Foot Regt. Discharged aged 30 after 10 years service 1791 Hurton, John 88th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 40 1826-1848 Hurton, Thomas Or Hurtin. 67th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 20 1846-1850 Jackson, John 37th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 39 1832-1854 Jones, John 76th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 43 1819-1841 Joyce, Patrick 47th Foot Regt.; 4th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 25 1827-1834 Keane, Daniel 16th Dragoons (Light); 14th Dragoons; 12th Dragoons. Discharged aged 45 1825-1847 Kearns, Patrick 10th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 33 1825-1842 Kellaher, Mathew 96th Foot Regt.; 3rd Royal Veteran Battalion. Discharged aged 39 1808-1826 Kelly, Thomas 6th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 26 1849-1853 Landers, Richard 85th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 29 1807-1815 Leahy, William 68th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 18 1839-1840 Leary, Arthur Ancient Irish Fencibles. Discharged aged 58 after 2 years 6 months service 1802 Leonard, David 87th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 31 1806-1816 Leonard, John 75th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 38 1825-1846 Leonard, Richard 16th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 37 1839-1854 Lo(n)e(r)gan, Michael 67th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 32 1812-1831 Lynch, Charles 96th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 34 1807-1818 Magnor, Robert 17th Dragoons (Light); 88th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 35 1815-1831 Mahony, Michael 58th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 43 1825-1848 Mc Carthy, Dennis 44th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 28 1805-1814 Mc Carthy, James 100th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 28 1812-1818 Mc Culloch, James Royal Artillery. Discharged aged 34 1794-1810 Mc Donald, William 17th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 21 1821-1824 Mc Gennis ‘Ncgennis.’ 22nd Foot Regt. Discharged aged 40 1827-1848 Mc Grath, James Born ‘Goughall’? – Youghal. 46th Foot Regt.; 59th Foot Regt.; 77th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 50 after 25 years service. 1788 Mc Guire, Michael Or Maguire. 70th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 23 1843-1846 Mc Veaty, William Or McVeety. 27th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 31 1805-1820 Morgan, William Alias Patrick Carey. 32nd Foot Regt. Discharged aged 30 1845-1853 Murphy, John 17th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 38 1819-1841 Murrey, Thomas 68th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 48 1807-1833 Murtagh, William 50th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 32 1822-1833 Nason, Henry Royal Artillery; St. Helena Regt.; Discharged aged 39 1824-1846 Neville, Thomas 46th Foot Regt.; 34th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 36 1815-1836 Newman, William Royal Artillery. Discharged aged 27 1812-1818 Norris, Martin 52nd Foot Regt. Discharged aged 38 1805-1817 O Brien, John 47th Foot Regt.; 77th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 41 1831-1852 O Connell, William 8th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 33 1837-1851 O Keefe, John 31st Foot Regt. Discharged aged [Not Known] 1843-1857 O Neal, John 82nd Foot Regt. Discharged aged 44 1826-1849 Paton, Thomas 82nd Foot Regt. Discharged aged 40 1832-1853 Power, Michael 84th Foot Regt.; Royal African Colonian Corps. Discharged aged 30 1822-1830 Power, Thomas 70th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 24 1842-1849 Ro(a)ch(e), Michael 4th Royal Veteran Battalion; 23rd Foot Regt. Discharged aged 23 after 3 years 11 months service 1805 Ro(a)che, James 68th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 46 1817-1839 Roach, Michael 23rd Foot Regt.; 62nd Foot Regt. Discharged aged 20 after 11 years service 1800 Roache, Thomas 68th Foot Regt.; Cork Militia. Discharged aged 38 1808-1827 Roche, Michael 68th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 25 1827-1833 Ronayne, Robert Cork Militia. Discharged aged 45. Covering date year of discharge 1829 Ronayne, William Or Roonan. Born ‘Younghal.’ 88th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 47 1813-1835 Ryan, Patrick 97th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 22 1839-1841 Shaw, Michael 28th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 34 1837-1851 Smiddy, John Cork Militia. Discharged aged 51 1800-1833 Smith, James 4th Royal Veteran Battalion; 8th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 28 1804-1817 Smith, Robert 62nd Foot Regt. Discharged aged 40 1800-1830 Stack, Thomas Or Slack. 15th Foot Regt.; 80th Foot Regt.; 3rd Royal Veteran Battalion; 10th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 47 1809-1842 Sullivan, Michael 8th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 27 1845-1853 Sullivan, Timothy 94th Foot Regt.; 96th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 32 1824-1838 Sullivan, William 57th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 28 1824-1832 Sweeney, Patrick 3rd Royal Veteran Battalion; 49th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 24 1818-1826 Thornbury, Thomas 60th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 39 1826-1851 Tighe, Patrick 46th Foot Regt.; 5th Foot Regt.; 23rd Foot Regt. Discharged aged 31 1808-1824 Tonkinson, Edward Rifle Brigade. Discharged aged 43 1805-1824 Toohy, Bartholomew Or Tewhey. 61st Foot Regt. Discharged aged 20 1825-1827 Walker, Daniel 44th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 42 1815-1839 Walker, William 29th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 38 1831-1852 Walsh, Anthony 3rd Foot Regt. Discharged aged 22 1845-1850 Walsh, John 16th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 46 1816-1840 Walsh, John 34th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 28 1838-1847 Walsh, John 57th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 43 1816-1841 Walsh, Thomas 50th Foot Regt.; 96th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 41 1826-1851 Williams, Robert 14th Dragoons. Discharged aged 23. Covering date year of discharge 1780 Worrall, John 24th Foot Regt.; 5th Foot Regt. Discharged aged 40 1795-1819 ____________________________________________________________________________
SOME YOUGHAL VOTERS 1835
In the election of 1832 the Liberal candidate, John O Connell, son of Daniel, ‘The Liberator’, was elected M.P. for Youghal defeating the local Conservative candidate by 137 votes to 130. By 1835, a group calling itself the ‘Youghal Election Committee’ published a list of voters, in the Cork Constitution, (CC), of 26/5/1835, whose qualification to vote they questioned. The object seemed to be to reduce the number of Liberal voters in the borough and subsquently, some 28 voters were struck off the register though not all of them had appeared on the lists, (A – L), below. 12 classes of voters and objections were listed, also included are the names of those subsequently struck off.
(A) 1st Class Voters – Objection – Not occupying as tenant or owner the premises in respect of which he requested and voted at the Late Election etc.
(B) 2nd Class Voters – Objection – Objected to because the premises in respect of which he registered and voted were not of the clear yearly value of £10.
(C) 3rd Class Voters – Objection – Objected to for not occupying as tenant or owner etc and also because the premises in respect of which he voted were not of the yearly value of £10
(D) 4th Class Voters – Objection – Objected to for not having duly registered his affidavitt of registration being informal, insufficient, defective and void.
(E) 5th Class Voters – Objection – Objected to for not occupying as tenant or owner the premises in respect of which he requested and voted at the Late Election etc.
(F) 6th Class Voters – Objection - Objected to for not having duly registered his affidavitt of registration being informal, insufficient, defective and void.
(G) 7th Class Voters – Objection – For not occupying premises within the legal limit of the Borough etc.
(H) 8th Class Voters - Objection – Objected to for not occupying as tenant or owner the premises in respect of which he requested and voted at the Late Election etc.
(I) 9th Class Voters – Objection – Objected to for that, being an R. C., he did not produce any certificate of having taken the oath prescribed by Law.
(J) 10th Class Voters – Objection – For non-payment of municipal cesses, rates and taxes.
(K) 11th Class Voters – Objection – For having made a wager on the event of the election.
(L) 12th Class Voters – Objection – For non-residence within the Borough not having duly registered his affidavitt of registration, etc.
(M) (CC 10/6/1845) –Subsequently struck off as not having any right to vote.
N/L – No location
Name Residence Note Name Residence Note Barry, John Knockaveny G Barry, William South Main St. C Blackburne, Mathew William St. E Blackburne, Matthew N/L M Bowler, Edward Friar St B Brien, Thomas South Main St. C Brien, Thomas N/L M Brown, Thomas North Main St. K Campbell, James N/L M Cashman, Patrick South Main St. A Cashman, Patrick N/L M Clark, James N/L M Coleman, Michael North Main St. A Connery, Patrick Doulter’s Mill B Conway, James House, Strand St. B Coppinger, James North Main St. A Coppinger, James N/L M Denehy, Philip Browne St. A Denehy, Philip N/L M Donovan, Stephen South Main St. A Donovan, Stephen N/L M Dukes, William, Nailor Youghal D Fitzgerald, J. Market St. C Flanagan, William North Main St. J Flanagan, William N/L M Fudge, John South Main St. A Gibson, Joseph N/L M Giles, Edward Croker N/L M Ginevan, Thomas North Main St. B Green, Thomas Murdock N/L M Hallahan, James Meat Shamble Lane B Hayes, William N/L M Healy, Thomas Hannover St. B Heasly, George Baines N/L M Hennessy, Maurice Island View L Horrigan, Cors. North Main St. C Keating, Henry Harrey’s Quay B Keleher, Michael Greene, Cloyne A Kelleher, Michael N/L M Keneary, Richard Copper Alley A Kinneary, Richard N/L M Kennealy, James Cross Lane C Kinnealy, James N/L M Kennedy, Pat South Main St. C Kenure, John Cork Lane B Kilmartin, Wm. Dickson’s Folly B Leahy, Michael Bean St. A Leahy, Michael N/L M Lee, Thomas Cork St. F Lincoln, Pierce Fishamble Lane B Lynch, James Meeting House Lane A Lynch, James N/L M Lynch, James Windmill Lane C M’Grath, Darby Windmill Lane C M’Guire, John Knockaveny, House & Lands at G Moore, Richard South Main St. B Morgan, James North Main St. D Murphy, John Fishamble Lane C Murphy, John N/L M Murphy, Michael Mouse St. A Murphy, Michael N/L M O Brien, Ed. Market Sq. A O Lomasney, Jeremiah South Main St. H O Lomasney, Jeremiah N/L M O Neill, John South Main St. E Power, John N/L M Quinlan, Daniel Nile St. A Roderick, Henry Elas N/L M Spellisy, O. E. Friar St. A Spallacy, Owen Eugene N/L M Stout, Nicholas Purdon N/L M Sullivan, James Market Sq. A Sullivan, James N/L M Thomas, Henry N/L M Vernon, Joseph South Main St. B Walsh, Edmund North Main St. I Walsh, William North Main St. A Whelan, Patrick Grafton St. B ____________________________________________________________________________
BOROUGH OF YOUGHAL
TRANSCRIPTIONS FROM THE PARLIAMENTARY PAPERS 1837/8 - REPORTS FROM COMMITTEES - FICTITIOUS VOTES (IRELAND) Session 15 November 1837 – 16 August 1838 - VOL. XIII – Part II
MARKSMEN (Illiterate Voters) 1837
NAME, RESIDENCE, OCCUPATION
Ahern, William, North Main-street, Labourer
Barry, John, Knockavirry, Farmer
Bowler, Edmond, Friar-street, Labourer
Buckley, Daniel, North Main-street, Shopkeeper
Coleman, Michael, North Main-street, Tailor
Connor, John, South Main-street, Shopkeeper
Conway, William, North Main-street, Skinner
Frihey, John, Shambles-lane, Publican
Hallahan, James, Meat Shamble-lane, Shopkeeper
Hallahan, Michael, North Main-street, Baker
Hurley, Cornelius, North Main-street, Victualler
Kenealy, Denis, Cross-lane, Gardener
Kinneary, James, Copper-alley, FarmerM’Grath, Darby, Windmill-lane, Carman
M’Guire, James, North Main-street, Wheelwright
M’Guire, John, Knockavirry, Farmer
Meade, Garrett, North Main-street, Victualler
Moore, Richard, South Main-street, Shoemaker
Murphy, John, Fishamble-lane, Corn-dealer
Nagle, Maurice, North Main-street, Baker
Power, Robert, Cork-lane, Weaver
Prendergast, John, sen., North Main-street, Publican
Quinlan, Daniel, Nile-street, Shoemaker
Ronayne, John, Nile-street, Tailor
Seward, Edmond, South Main-street, Fisherman
Sullivan, John, Mall-lane, TailorFREEMEN ADMITTED SINCE 1831
NAME/RESIDENCE/DESCRIPTION, STATEMENT OF RIGHT UNDER WHICH ADMITTED
Adams, Wallis, Youghal, esquire, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Allen, John, Youghal, ship-carpenter, By marriage
Andrews, Henry, esquire, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Armour, John, Youghal, housebuilder, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Bagge, Simon, Ardmore, esquire, Birthright
Blackall, James, Youghal, cabinet-maker, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Boles, Robert, Birthright
Browne, Francis Robert, Youghal, accountant, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Campbell, John,Youghal, cabinet-maker, By marriage
Clarke, John, Youghal gent., Birthright
Cooke, Thomas, jun., Youghal, medical student, Birthright
Cotter, George Sackville, esquire, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Cox, Richard, jun., Youghal, cooper, Birthright
Dartnell, Edward, Youghal, cabinet-maker, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Drury, Jasper, Youghal, merchant, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Elmore, Christopher, Youghal, esquire, Birthright
Elmore, John Gillett, Youghal, gent., Birthright
Faunt, Henry Phoenix, Birthright
Feuge, Thomas, Youghal, esquire, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Fisher, Peter Moor, Youghal, merchant, Birthright
Garde, Edward, Garryduff, esquire, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Garde, John, Rev., Killeagh, clerk, Marriage
Garde, Thomas, jun. Garryduff, esquire, Birthright
Gardner, Thomas Browning, Youghal, attorney at law, By marriage
Gardner, William, Youghal, attorney at law, Birthright
Giles, Henry, esquire, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Giles, Joha., esquire, By courtesy, special grade & favour
Gimlett, John, Youghal, mariner, Birthright
Green, Murdock, Youghal, attorney at law, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Green, Tanner, Youghal, gunmaker, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Greene, George Washington, Youghal, merchant, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Hingston, James Beecher, Youghal esquire, Birthright
Howard, Luke, jun., Youghal, cabinet-maker, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Howard, Luke, Youghal, vintner, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Irwin, John, Youghal, doctor of medicine, By marriage
Jervois, Samuel, Youghal esquire, Birthright
Johnson, James Boles,Killeagh, miller, By marriage with a freeman’s eldest daughter
Johnson, James, Killeagh, gent., Birthright
Kildahl, Sobieski, Youghal, merchant, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Lamb, Percy, Youghal, merchant, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Lamb, Robert Gumbleton, Youghal, merchant, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Long, Jeremiah, Youghal, coachbuilder, By courtesy, special grace & favour
M’Carthy, Florence, Birthright
M’Mahon, John, Youghal, grocer, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Merrick, Jeremiah, Youghal, Birthright
Merry, John, Youghal, innkeeper, By courtesy, special grace & favour
O Grady, Standish, Youghal, gent., By marriage
Pollock, John, jun., Youghal, attorney at law, Birthright
Pollock, John, sen., Youghal, attorney at law, By marriage
Poole, Walter Croker, esquire, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Poole, Walter Croker, jun., Youghal, esquire, Birthright
Power, Pierse, Youghal, esquire, Birthright
Power, Robert, esquire, By courtesy, special grade & favour
Purdon, Edward, Youghal, linen-draper, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Reay, Joseph, esquire, By courtesy, special grade & favour
Richardson, Thomas, Youghal, gunmaker, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Rogers, Richard Henry, Killeagh, esquire, Birthright
Rogers, Robert, esquire, By courtesy, special grade & favour
Rooke, John, Youghal, shipbroker, By marriage
Sangster, Robert, Youghal, medical student, Birthright
Sims, William, Youghal, medical student, Birthright
Smyth, Carew Williams, esquire, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Smyth, Grice B., Rev., clerk, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Smyth, Piercy Scott, Rev., Monatra, clerk, Birthright
Smyth, Richard, Ballinatray, esquire, Birthright
Studdy, John, gent., By courtesy, special grace & favour
Swanzy, Henry, Rev., clerk, By courtesy, special grade & favour
Taylor, Thomas Robert, Youghal, tobacconist, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Taylor, William, Youghal, merchant’s clerk, By marriage
Torbuck, George, Youghal, gent., By marriage with a freeman’s eldest daughter
Torbuck, Graham, Youghal, apothecary, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Uniacke, Crofton, Ballyre, esquire, Birthright
Wakeham, Wm., Rev., Youghal, clerk, Birthright
Wallis, James, Youghal, esquire, Birthright
Walsh, Henry Pierse, attorney at law, By courtesy, special grace & favour
White, James Garde, Youghal, gent., By marriage
Wigmore, Arthur Wilkins, Youghal, painter, By courtesy, special grace & favour
Wigmore, Thomas, Youghal, cabinet-maker, By courtesy, special grace & favour____________________________________________________________________________
Applications for Excise and Spirit Licences 1832 – 38 from Premises under £10 in value
Combining the following two lists:- [addtional information in brackets and italics]
(A) APPLICATIONS FOR EXCISE LICENCES [1832 - 1838 from Premises under the Annual Value of £10]
(S) FURTHER RETURN of the Names and Residences, specifying the Streets and Numbers of the Houses of all Individuals in the Towns in Ireland which return Members to serve in Parliament, who have made Application or received EXCISE LICENCES for the Sale of Spirits in Premises under the Annual Value of £10, since 1st October 1832 [to 1838]
*Date of Registry as a Householder - Date of Registry as a £10 Householder, a voting qualification of the time which also seems to have been needed in order to apply for a Licence. It is worth noting that the Reform Act of 1831 extended the franchise.
Name, Residence, Note, Date of Registry as a Householder*
Ahern, Daniel, Mall, A
Ahern, David, North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Ahern, Edmund, Browne Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Ahern, John, North Main Street, A
Allen, Thomas, Windmill Lane, A, £10 householder 1832
Barry, Maurice, North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1833 & 1837
Blair, William, North Main Street, A
Bowen, William, Hanover Street, A, £10 householder 1836
Bransfield, William, Cock Lane, A, £10 householder 1836
Browne, James M., North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1836
Bullen, George, Water Lane, AS
Cashman, James, North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Cashman, Michael, Market Square, A
Cashman, Patrick, Market Square, A, £10 householder 1832
Clerk, George, North Main Street, A
Coffee, James, Quay, AS
Coffee, John, Quay Lane, A, £10 householder 1832
Colbert, Edmund, Browne Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Colbert, James, South Main Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Cornel, Jacob, Browne Street, A
Cotter, James, Mall, A, £10 householder 1832
Coughlan, John, Meatshambles Lane, A, £10 householder 1835
Cunningham, Patrick, South Main Street, A, £10 householder 1835
Cunningham, Roger, Market Square, A, £10 householder 1833
Cunningham, William, Market Square, A, £10 householder 1836
Curreen, Edward, North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1836
Dee, Thomas, South Main Street, A, £10 householder 1836
Denchy, Michael, North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1836
Donovan, John, North Main Street, A
Doran, William, Fishambles Lane, A, £10 householder 1834
Erwin, Thomas, Mall Lane, A
Evans, George, South Main Street, A, £10 householder 1835
Fitzgerald, John, Market Square, A, £10 householder 1832
Flanagan, William, North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Foley, Edmond, Meatshambles Lane, A, £10 householder 1832
Foley, Thomas, Hanover Street, A, £10 householder 1836
Fudge, John, South Main Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Green, G. Washington, Grattan Street, A, £10 householder North Main St. 1832
Guinan, Michael, South Main Street, A, £10 householder North Main St. 1832
Hartigan, John, North Main Street, AS
Henley, Timothy, Market Square, A, £10 householder 1835
Higgins, Michael, Mall, A, £10 householder 1832
Hogan, Patrick, Browne Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Howard, Luke, Hanover Street, A, £10 householder 1833
Keams, Patrick, North Main Street, A
Keefe, David, Market Square, A, £10 householder 1835
Keefe, John, South Main Street, A, £10 householder 1837
Keilly, James, Mall Square, AS
Kierney, John, Mall Square, AS
Kinnure, John, Cork Lane, A, £10 householder 1833
Lauders, Garrett, Browne Street, A, £10 householder 1836
Lawton, John, Hanover Street, A, £10 householder Fishamble Lane, 1836Lawton, Richard, North Main Street, A
Lincoln, Pierce, Fishamble Lane, A, £10 householder 1832
Lynch, Nicholas, Nile Street, A, £10 householder 1833
M’Carthy, John, North Main Street, AS
Markham, Cornelius D., North Main Street, A
Marks, James, North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1834
Maume, Matthew, North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1834
Maume, William, South Main Street, AS
Meade, Jeremiah, North Main Street, A, £10 householder Tallow St., 1834
Meara, William, Meatshambles Lane, A, £10 householder Meetinghouse Lane, 1834
Merry, John, South Abbey, A
Mulcahy, Thomas, Hanover Street, A, £10 householder 1833
Mullany, Patrick, Market Square, A, £10 householder, Query Mullowny, 1835
Murray, James, North Main Street, A
Murray, Michael, North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Murray, Norah, North Main Street, AS
Murray, Patrick, Harvey’s Quay, A, £10 householder 1832
Murray, Richard, Hanover Street, A, £10 householder 1835 & 1836
O Brien, Morgan, North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1836
O Brien, Thomas, Market Square, A, £10 householder 1836
O Bryan, Edmond, South Main Street, A, £10 householder Market Sq., 1832
O Loemoesny, Jeremiah, South Main Street, A, £10 householder 1832 & 1834
O Neil, John, Water Lane, A, £10 householder 1832
Osborne, William, North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Pickley, David, Canteen, A
Pilkington, Richard, North Main Street, A, As a freeman, 1832
Power, Johanna, Mall Lane, AS
Power, John, North Main Street, A, £10 householder Shop, 1835
Power, Pierce, North Main Street, A
Prendergast, John, North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1837
Reardon, William, North Main Street, AS
Roache, David, North Main Street, AS
Ronarpee, Tobias, North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Ronayne, Denis James, North Main Street, A
Ronayne, John, Nile Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Roper, Robert, Mall, A, £10 householder 1834
Ryan, John, North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Slattery, John, Market Square, A
Spratt, Andrew, Market Square, A, £10 householder 1832
Sweeney, Michael, South Main Street, A, £10 householder, MacSweeney 1834
Thomas, George, Harvey’s Quay, A, £10 householder,Catherine St., 1832
Tracy, John, Hanover Street, A
Tyrrell, Thomas, North Main Street, AS
Walsh, Edward, South Main Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Walsh, Francis, Barrack Gate, A
Walsh, James, Market Square, A, £10 householder, Quay, 1832
Walsh, Patrick, Harvey’s Quay, A, £10 householder, Catherine St., 1833
Walsh, Richard, South Main Street, A, £10 householder 1836
Walsh, William, North Main Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Wheelan, Patrick, Grattan Street, A, £10 householder 1832
Wigmore, John, South Main Street, A, £10 householder 1832____________________________________________________________________________
YOUGHAL - Lewis’ Topographical Dictionary 1837 - YOUGHAL, a sea-port, borough, and market-town, and a parish, in the barony of IMOKILLY, county of CORK, and province of MUNSTER, 29 miles (E.) from Cork, and 124 ½ miles (S.W.) from Dublin; containing 11,327 inhabitants, of which number, 9608 are in the town. The place derived its’ name signifying ‘a wooded place,’ from its situation at the base of a range of hills, which, at the period of its erection, was a dense forest.The town is of very remote antiquity, having so early as the year 1209 received from King John a charter of incorporation which is still preserved among the archives of Lismore Castle. In 1224, Maurice Fitz-Gerald founded a Franciscan monastery on the south side of the town, which was the first religious foundation of the order in Ireland. It is recorded that he originally intended the building for a castle, but that, in consequence of some harsh treatment which the workmen received from his eldest son, he changed his design and determined to devote it to religious uses: but, dying in 1257, it was completed in 1260 by his second son, Thomas, whose son, in 1268 or 1271 founded a Dominican monastery, called the Friary of St. Mary of Thanks. At this time the town had attained some commercial eminence, for in 1267 the amount of customs paid was £103. In 1317, Sir Roger Mortimer, who had been appointed Lord-Justice, landed here in Easter week with 38 knights, and in a short time compelled Edward Bruce to retreat from the neighbouring country and take refuge in Ulster; and in the year following, Alexander Bicknor, Archbishop of Dublin and Lord-Deputy of Ireland, also landed at this port. In 1579, the Earl of Desmond, on being proclaimed a traitor, led his forces to this place, plundered the town, and carried off the property of the inhabitants to his castles of Strancally and Lisfinry, in the county of Waterford, at that time occupied by the Spaniards. The Earl of Ormonde, receiving intelligence of this attack, sent a ship from Waterford with troops which entered the town, but, being overpowered by the forces of the seneschal of Imokilly, most of them were killed and the remainder escaped with difficulty to their ships. The mayor [Patrick Coppinger] had before this perfidiously refused to receive an English garrison, promising to defend the place to the last extremity; but, having made no effort for that purpose, he was tried by court martial, found guilty, and hanged before his own house. The devastation to which the town was subjected during this rebellion compelled the inhabitants to abandon it; but on the retreat of the insurgents in 1580, they were invited to return, and in order to inspire them with confidence a garrison of 300 foot was left for their defence. In 1582 the seneschal of Imokilly, with all the forces he could muster, came suddenly to Youghal and scaled the walls; the alarm being given, he was repulsed by a portion of the garrison, with the loss of 50 of his men.
In the war of 1641 the town again became an important military station, and was defended against the insurgents by the Earl of Cork, at his own expense, with 1000 foot and 60 horse, in addition to which the townsmen maintained 15 companies without any other supply than what the earl might furnish Sir Chas.Vavasour, with his regiment of 1000 men, came to their assistance in February 1642, and landed with some difficulty; soon after the earl held a session in the town, at which the principal insurgent leaders were indicted for high treason; this powerful nobleman died in the following year. In 1644 the native Irish were expelled from the town and their property was seized. In 1645 the place was besieged by Lord Castlehaven: although the town was in a very weak state of defence and the garrison small, the besiegers were several times repulsed and on the arrival of Lord Broghill with assistance, were compelled to abandon the enterprise. On the approach of Cromwell in 1649, the inhabitants embraced the cause of the parliament, and that general made Youghal his head-quarters till the spring; after the siege of Clonmel he returned and embarked here for England. By letters patent under the privy seal, dated Feb. 14th, 1660, their estates and franchises were restored to the inhabitants, being ‘innocent Papists,’ who had been deprived of them during Cromwell’s usurpation. On the 2nd August, 1690, after the reduction of Waterford, Youghal surrendered to a few dragoons of King William’s army; and on the 9th the governor marched at the head of a small army to Castlemartyr, where he defeated a large number of the Irish, and seized the castle for the Kings’ use. In 1696 the inhabitants manned a boat with 40 seamen and soldiers, and captured a French privateer which had put into the harbour to obtain supplies, and lay at anchor under Cable Island. His late Majesty William IV, when Prince William Henry, visited Youghal as commander of the ship Pegasus, in 1887; and honoured the corporation with his company to dinner, on which occasion he was presented with the freedom of the borough.
The town is pleasantly situated on the western shore of the harbour to which it give names, and which is enclosed between two bold eminences called Blackball Head and Knockvarry, leaving a channel of about half a mile in breadth for the confluent streams of the Toragh [Tourig] and the Blackwater, which discharge themselves into the bay. The Toragh [Tourig] is a boundary between Cork and Waterford for about two miles before it falls into the Blackwater, and then makes a bold sweep to the east and south, forming in appearance a fine lake, environed by an amphitheatre of verdant and gently sloping hills, which terminate abruptly on the south in the two bold eminences previously noticed. Knockvarry, rising immediately over the town, is in many places well planted. The principal street, from which diverge several smaller streets, is nearly a mile in length, and is divided by the clock gate into the north and south man-streets: the houses are irregularly built, but generally of respectable appearance, though occasionally intermixed with a few of the more ancient, which are in a ruinous and dilapidated state; the total number, in 1831, was 1249. The streets are pitched, but neither paved nor flagged; they are lighted with gas, and cleansed under the provisions of the act of the 9th of Geo. IV. The inhabitants are supplied with water from pumps erected in various parts; but the supply in dry seasons being deficient, and the water, from an admixture of sea water, being rendered unpalatable, it is in contemplation to bring water of a better quality to the houses by pipes from the extremities of the town, where there is an abundant supply. Within the last half century the town has extended itself in all directions; the ancient walls have been entirely removed, and a valuable piece of slab [?slob] having been reclaimed by the corporation and their tenantry, Catherine-street, the Mall, and numerous extensive warehouses have been built on it. At the southern extent of the town, near the old abbey, two ranges of spacious and handsome houses have been erected and an elegant and commodious hotel built by the Duke of Devonshire; on the west side of the town is Nelson-place [now Emmet Place]; and a neat row of houses has been built on the east side. Most of the houses in the principal streets are either new or have been modernised; many of the ancient houses have been newly fronted, but many still be distinguished by their gable ends fronting the street, and their pointed doorways of stone. The town is much frequented during the summer months for sea-bathing, for which it is well-adapted, having a fine, smooth, and level strand extending nearly three miles along the western shore of the bay; but as a watering-place it is deficient in the accommodation of good lodgings, which might be easily supplied by the erection of marine villas and lodging-houses at the Cork entrance to the town, along the declivity of the hill, which would command a pleasing prospect of the bay, the strand, and Capell island. This would not only increase the number of visitors during the season, but induce many persons to take up their permanent abode in the town, which, among other advantages, enjoys the benefit of cheap and well supplied markets, salubrity of atmosphere, central situation, and excellent society.
The bridge over the Blackwater, a mile and a half north-east from the town, was erected in 1830, after a design of the late Alex. Nimmo, by George Nimmo, Esq., under the provisions of an act passed in 1828, which empowered certain commissioners to take ground and to erect a bridge from Foxhole, in the parish of St. Mary, Youghal, to the opposite shore, in the parish of Clashmore, county of Waterford. The expense of its erection, exclusively of £8509 paid to the corporation for the ferry, was £22,000 towards which Government advanced £10,000 as a loan: it was carried into execution by proprietary shareholders of £100 each, but the speculation has not remunerated them. The structure is built of Memel fir and is remarkably light and elegant: it is 1787 feet in length, including a drawbridge 40 feet long; its uniform breadth is 22 feet within the railings which are 4 ½ feet in height; and the whole is supported on 57 sets of piers of five pillars each. The gas-works, on the strand adjoining the northern entrance to the town, were built in 1830 under the provisions of the act of the 9th of Geo. IV; the establishment is managed by 21 commissioners.
A public library was established in 1825 by a proprietary of 30 shareholders of 5 guineas, who also annually subscribe half a guinea each; the subscription for non-proprietors is a guinea, and it is open to strangers on introduction by a proprietor, on payment of half a crown monthly; the number of volumes is about 800, exclusive of a copy of Ree’s Cyclopoedia, presented by the Duke of Devonshire. There are two public reading-rooms, one in the Mall-house and the other in the national school-rooms both well-furnished with English and Irish newspapers, periodicals, and works of reference. The Youghal Literary and Scientific Institution, for the diffusion of knowledge by lectures on subjects capable of practical illustration, was founded in 1833, and is supported by annual subscriptions of half a guinea each, which entitle the subscriber and his family to admission to the lectures: a library and museum are in course of formation. Balls and concerts are held during the summer season at the Mall-house. A savings bank has been established, and a large and handsome building, in which the business is now conducted, was erected in 1831, the expense of which was defrayed from the accumulated surplus fund: the management is remarkably good and the deposits numerous. On an eminence north of the town are infantry barracks for the accommodation of 6 officers and 180 men.
The woollen manufacture was formerly carried on here to a considerable extent, but has long since been discontinued; that of porcelain and fine delf was likewise carried on for a time: but the only manufactures at present are those of bricks, of which some of a very fine quality are sent coastwise to Cork; a coarse kind of pottery made for the use of the neighbourhood, and an extensive rope-manufacture. A large porter and ale brewery was established at the northern end of the town by Messrs. Deaves and Eustace, the machinery of which is of the most improved kind; a malting concern is connected with it. Messrs. Keays and Messrs. Ronayne have each establishments for the purchase and export of salmon in ice; the annual amount of export is valued at about £2500. At the north end of the town is a quarry of good clay-slate, used as building stone, which produces an abundant supply; it is the property of the corporation, who generously give it to the quarry men working it, by whom the produce is disposed of to great advantage. The trade of the port is very considerable, especially the coasting trade; it consists chiefly of the export of agricultural produce and the import of coal, culm, timber, Staffordshire ware, porter, and groceries for the supply of the neighbourhood. In 1835 there were sent from this port 156,653 barrels of oats, 12,827 of wheat, and 16,973 of barley, 13,123 sacks of flour, 832 barrels of rye, 8593 firkins and 419 kegs of butter, 641 sacks of biscuit, 2190 bales of bacon, 6429 live pigs, 866 head of cattle, 434 sheep, 40 hogsheads of lard, 613 gallons of whiskey, and a large quantity of dried salmon. The number of vessels that cleared outwards was 420 with cargoes and 46 in ballast. The number of vessels registered as belonging to the port was 28, of the aggregate burden of 2998 tons, of which two were engaged in the foreign trade: the duties paid at the custom-house amounted to £561.15.2
The harbour is safe and commodious, and at spring tides is accessible to vessels of 500 tons’ burthen; ships not drawing more than 12 feet of water may ride afloat off the town; but there is a bar across the entrance, extending about a mile to the south, on which are only five feet at low water, and thirteen feet at high water of neap tides; the sea is consequently rough when the wind blows on the shore or against the tide. The quays are extensive and commodious, and on one of them is the custom-house, a building well adapted to its purpose; but Youghal being only a creek to Cork, most of the large vessels discharge at the latter port. Here is a coast-guard station, consisting of one officer and nine men under a resident inspecting commander, forming the head of the district of Youghal, which comprises the subordinate stations of Helvick Head, Ardmore, Knockadoon, and Ballycotton. The market is daily, but the principal market is on Saturday, which is large and well supplied, particularly with fish, meat, and vegetables; and a fair is held on Ascension-day. There is a convenient market-place for butchers’ meat and another for fish. A mail coach from Cork to Waterford passes through the town every evening, and another to the latter city is dispatched every morning; besides which, there are several stage coaches every day to Cork.
The earliest charter to Youghal on record, exclusively of those of a temporary nature, is that of the 49th of Edw. III, directing that the dues hitherto paid at Cork for certain staple articles should henceforth be paid in the port of Youghal. Another charter of the 2nd of Edw. IV granted to the sovereign and provosts the cognizance of pleas to any amount, both real and personal, and appointed the sovereign clerk of the market, with power to regulate the weights and measures and the assize of bread, also escheator and admiral of the port, which was made a petty limb of the cinque ports of Ireland. A charter of the 2nd of Rich. III changed the titles of Sovereign and Provosts into those of Mayor and Bailiffs, and incorporated the town by the name of ‘the Mayor, Bailiffs, Burgesses and Commonalty of the Town of Youghal,’ with cognizance of all pleas real and personal, and a court of record every Friday, the freemen to be free of tolls throughout England and Ireland, and the corporation to have the customs and cocquet from the headland of Ardmore and Capell Island to the island of Toureen. The charter of the 12th of Henry VII granted the corporation a ferry at Youghal and a mease of herrings from every fishing boat. That of the 7th of Jas. I, which is considered to be the governing charter, after confirming all the privileges in former grants, and licensing two weekly markets and two fairs, granted a corporation of the staple, as in Dublin, the retiring mayor, recorder and bailiffs to be justices of the peace and of oyer and terminer for the borough, and for the county of Cork; and licensed the mayor to have a sword borne before him. The charter granted by Jas. II, in the fourth year of his reign, is not considered valid. The borough appears to have exercised the elective franchise by prescription, as, though no notice of the privilege appears in any of its charters, it continued to send two members to the Irish parliament from the year 1374 till the Union, since which period it has returned one member to the imperial parliament; the right of election was vested solely in the members of the corporation and the freemen, whether resident or not; but by the act of the 2nd of Wm. IV, cap. 88, it has been granted to the £10 householders, and the non-resident freemen have been disfranchised. A new boundary has been drawn round the town, including an area of 21 statute acres, the limits of which are minutely detailed in the Appendix. The numbers of electors registered up to the beginning of 1836 was 333: the mayor is the returning officer. The mayor is elected from among the burgesses annually; the bailiffs are elected annually at the same court out of the freemen; the aldermen are those burgesses who have been mayors; the burgesses, those freemen who have been bailiffs: the number of each class is unlimited: the freemen are chosen at the court of D’Oyer Hundred, but must be proposed by the mayor; no qualification on the part of the candidate is required. The court of D’Oyer Hundred is an assemblage of all the members of the corporation, and exercises the right of admitting freemen, disposing of the corporation property, and performing all other corporate acts except the election of officers. There is a class of freemen, called freemen of trade, arising from a power given to the corporation to license foreigners to trade in the town, but they exercise no political functions. The recorder is elected for life at a special meeting of the corporate body, called a court of election. The court of quarter sessions, held by the mayor, bailiffs and recorder, has jurisdiction in all cases, but confines its’ proceedings to larcenies and misdemeanours punishable by fine and imprisonment. The court of pleas or record, held before the mayor and bailiffs, or one of them, assisted in special cases by the recorder, takes cognisance of pleas to any amount. The police consist of a chief constable (who is also sword-bearer), and 8 constables: a party of the county police is stationed in the town, under the control of the mayor. The property of the corporation consists of lands and tenements, yielding about £900 per ann.; of tolls and customs, producing an uncertain amount; and of an annuity from the commissioners of the Blackwater bridge, being the interest on £8500, the purchase money of the ferry. The Mall-house, in which the borough courts are held and the public business of the corporation is transacted, is a handsome structure, built by the corporation in 1779, on a site reclaimed from the slab [?slob]: it contains, besides the court-rooms, an assembly-room, a reading-room, and the Mayor’s offices: adjoining it is an agreeable promenade. The borough gaol is a lofty square building of four stories, called the Dockgate, surmounted by a lantern and cupola containing the town clock; it was rebuilt in 1777, but is defective in several of the accommodations essential to the health of the prisoners and the proper regulation of the place.
The parish comprises 9000 acres, as applotted under the tithe act: the surface is exceedingly undulating, and the lands are mostly under cultivation or planted; the substratum is clay-slate, the soil light but productive, and the system of agriculture is rapidly improving: there is a small portion of waste land, which is chiefly composed of marsh and turbary, comprising about 400 acres; it is being reclaimed and brought into cultivation. The surrounding scenery is varied, bold, and interesting, and is embellished with numerous gentlemen’s seats and flourishing plantations. Among these are Myrtle Grove, built in 1586 by Sir Walter Raleigh, and for some time the residence of that distinguished person, since whose death it has experienced but little alteration: it is the property of the representatives of the late Walter Hayman, Esq., and is now inhabited by Col. Faunt. The house is situated in a secluded spot near the church, and, with the exception of some of the windows which have been modernised, preserves its antique character of pointed gables and spacious chimneys, and is considered a perfect specimen of the Elizabethan style of architecture. The drawing-room is panelled with polished oak superbly carved; the mantel piece is an elaborate and exquisite specimen of carved work in the richest designs, the lower cornice resting upon three beautiful figures representing Faith, Hope, and Charity, and the whole embellished with a profusion of richly carved figures, and emblematical devices. In removing the panelling of one of the rooms, some years since, an aperture in the all was discovered in which were found several old books; one bound in oak, and printed in Mantua in 1479, consisted of two parts, one in black leather, a history of the Bible, with coloured initials, the other an ecclesiastical history by John Schallus, professor of physic at Hernfield, dedicated to Prince Gonzales; it is now in the possession of Mathew Hayman, Esq., of this town. The demesne of Myrtle Grove was remarkable for the luxuriant growth of myrtles, bays, arbutus and other exotics in the open air, but all the largest myrtles have been cut down by the present tenant. On a hill above the town, the potatoe, brought by Sir W. Raleigh from America, was planted; but from an erroneous opinion that the apple which grew on the stalk was the sole product of the plant, it was gathered and rejected; and it was not till some time after, when the ground was dug for another crop, that the potatoes were discovered and the value of the plant appreciated: from these few plants the whole country was in due course of time stocked. College House, the property of the Duke of Devonshire, is a handsome modern edifice, the ancient house built in 1464, having been taken down; it is a quadrilateral building with a circular tower at each angle; in the great hall is preserved one of the ancient mantel-pieces of the old house, of the same character but not of such elaborate workmanship as that at Myrtle Grove; the ground are ornamented with myrtles, bay-trees, and the arbutus. The other gentlemen’s residences are Green Park, that of Capt. H. Parker, RN; Clifton, of Sir Wm. Homan, Bart.; Bellevue, of J. Power, Esq.; Nelson Hill, of Mrs. Green; Muckridge, of Wm. Fitzgerald, Esq.; Brooklodge, of Mrs. Marsden; Heathfield, of Capt. Cotter; Rockville, of Thos. Fuge, Esq.; and the Cottage, of Thos. Seward, Esq.; besides numerous large and handsome houses in the town.
The living is a rectory, formerly annexed to the Wardenship of the College of St. Mary, Youghal, as united in perpetuity to the see of Cloyne, by an act of council in 1639, but separated from it by an act obtained by the late Dr. Brinkley; it now forms a distinct living, but the wardenship is still annexed to the bishoprick, and the Bishop is patron of the rectory. The tithes amount to £521.3.3 The collegiate establishment was founded in 1464, by Thomas, Earl of Desmond, and consisted of a warden, eight fellows, and eight singing men: it was endowed with the parsonages of Aghem, Moyallow, Newtown, and Oletion, to which were subsequently added those of Ardagh, Clonpriest, Garrivoe, Ightermurragh, Kilcredan, and Killeagh, and the vicarage of Kilmacdonough, in the diocese of Cloyne, and four others in that of Ardfert, of all which the duties were performed by the warden and fellows. The collegiate church was a magnificent structure in the enriched Gothic style of architecture, with a lofty tower on the north side: it consisted of a nave, choir, transepts, and north and south aisles; the nave and aisles have been fitted up for the parish church: the chancel of choir is a splendid ruin, the north transept is used as a vestry, and the south contains some ancient monuments of the founder, and also of the Earls of Cork and other branches of that family; the latter transept is considered the private property of the Duke of Devonshire; it is much neglected and fast going to decay. The edifice is remarkably handsome and contains a throne for the bishop, as Warden of Youghal, and a state pew for the corporation. Near the south end of the town is a chapel of ease, a neat plain building, erected in 1817 on the cemetery of the ancient Dominican friary, at an expense of £1200, of which £900 was a gift from the late Board of First Fruits and £300 was raised by subscription. The R. C. district comprises the whole of the parishes of St. Mary Youghal and Clonpriest: the chapel is a handsome structure, 100 feet in length and 50 in breadth, built by subscription, aided by donation of £700 from Dr. Coppinger, late R. C. Bishop of Cloyne, under whose patronage it was erected, towards the expense of which £2000 was received from Miss Gould of Doneraile; attached to it are a small chapel and the female national schools. There are also places of worship for the Society of Friends, Independents, and Primitive and Wesleyan Methodists. There are 19 schools in the parish, affording instruction to 1785 children. Of these, the male and female general free schools are supported by subscription and collections after annual sermons in the churches; the master and mistress have each a residence. The Youghal united schools are upon a novel but very interesting plan; they are self-supporting institutions, managed by a committee, and the children obtain a good English education. The national school is supported by an annual grant of £30 from the Board of Education and collections at the R. C. chapel; it is attended by 527 boys, who are instructed in reading, writing, arithmetic, book-keeping, and the mathematics by four monks of the Augustine order, being a filiation of the parent house (the Presentation monastery, Cork), and one lay brother. The convent school, in which are 600 girls, is conducted by the ladies of the convent; and an infants’ school is supported by subscription among Protestants. The ancient school, founded by the Earl of Cork in 1634, has an endowment of £30 per annum, paid by the Duke of Devonshire, and affords instruction to 18 boys; the master has a house and some excellent land. The remainder are private boarding and day schools, and are wholly supported by the pupils. The Earls of Cork’s almshouses for poor widows, founded in 1634, adjoin the free school; they have recently been rebuilt in their original style, with the arms of the founder in front; they contain apartments for six poor widows, who are supplied with fuel and receive £5 per annum from the Duke of Devonshire. The alms-houses founded by Mr. Ronayane have fallen into decay, there being no endowment for their maintenance. A Protestant almshouse was established in 1834 by subscription, in which are maintained 22 aged persons, who receive religious instruction every day from a minister of the Established Church; and there is a parochial poor establishment, in which 40 poor persons are supported chiefly by collections made in the church. The infirmary, fever-hospital, and dispensary are situated in a healthy and retired spot just without the town, and have the benefit of a resident medical attendant; they are under the direction of a committee of management, and are conducted with the strictest attention to economy and usefulness in every department. The lying-in hospital, established in 1824, is supported by donations and subscriptions, and affords relief also to patients at their own houses. A Ladies’ Association for improving the condition of poor females, by affording employment in spinning, weaving, dyeing, and hackling, was established in 1823, and is supported by subscription. The Tuscan plat institution, which grew out of the former, was commenced in 1829, under the patronage and personal direction of the lady of the Rev. H. Swanzy, who established a platting school for the instruction and subsequent employment of destitute females, whose moral improvement was to be promoted by a perusal of the Scriptures. This establishment affords employment to more than 30 females, and since its commencement has paid upwards of £800 to the most destitute class of society. John Perry, Esq., bequeathed a sum now producing £22 per annum; Dr. Hayes left £100, which has accumulated to £217, and now produces £13.0.4 ¾ per annum; John Spenser, in 1690, gave a rent-charge of £1; Mr. Cozens bequeathed a house, in 1783, which is now let for £18 per annum; Mr. John Rea, in 1795, bequeathed £100; Mr. W. Mannix, a rent-charge of £6 6. 10 ¾ per annum for distribution among the poor. Thomas Croker, in 1718, left a rent-charge of £4, the payment of which has been latterly discontinued.
The western gable and some of the eastern portions of the Dominican friary, at the north end of the town, still remain. The chancel of the collegiate church of St. Mary, now in ruins, affords a good specimen of its former magnificence; the east window of six lights is richly embellished with flowing tracery; on the north side of the altar is a canopied niche with crocheted finials of elegant design, in which was formerly a tomb, now removed, but there is still remaining the inscription, ‘Hic jacet Thomas Fleming:’ on the south side of the altar is another ancient tomb. On the south side is a chapel formerly called the chantry of Our Blessed Saviour, which was purchased from the corporation by the first Earl of Cork, and contains the remains of that nobleman and of several of his family, to whose memory is a handsome altar-tomb, bearing his effigy recumbent under a splendid arch, with those of his two wives kneeling; on either side, and around, are the effigies of his children: over the monument is a large mural tablet of black marble, with the genealogy of the family; there is also the monument of the founder of the chapel, which having been defaced in the Desmond rebellion was restored by the Earl; and a splendid monument of white marble to the memory of Lord Broghill. The south transept or chapel, now used as a vestry, contains some ancient monuments, among which is one to the Uniacke family, with a cross fleury and inscription, both in relief, but much injured by exposure to the damp; it bears the date 1557. At the west entrance into the church are two monuments found, a few years since, in digging the foundation of the new buildings on the site of the ancient Franciscan monastery at the south-end of the town, one bearing a male and the other a female effigy, supposed to be husband and wife, with an inscription in Norman French nearly obliterated: on the north side of the altar is a very chaste and beautifully monument of white marble, to the family of Smith, of Ballinatra. In the churchyard, which is one of the most spacious in the kingdom, are also many curious ancient monuments deserving of notice. Of the ancient walls little remains excepting on the western side of the town, where they are tolerably perfect, and one of the old round towers is remaining. The gates have all been removed, except the Water-gate leading out to the quay, which is extremely dilapidated; and the Dock-gate, which has been recently rebuilt. In the North main-street is Tynte’s castle, which is in the style of those erected in the reign of Elizabeth; it was built by a powerful family of that name, from one of whom Smith relates that the Lord-President was obliged to seize £4000 for the supply of his army. At the north-eastern extremity of the parish, near the river Toragh [Tourig], are the remains of the castle of Kilnatoragh, a noble structure formerly belonging to the great Earl of Desmond. Several of the ancient houses are still remaining in the town, some of them having the staircases in the walls, which are of extraordinary thickness: among them is one said to have been that of Coppinger, the mayor who was hanged before his own door, and also one in which Cromwell took up his residence during his stay here. A great quantity of silver coins was found here in 1830; the number could not be ascertained, but more than 400 oz. were sold as old silver in Cork; they were mostly pence and half groats of Edw. I, and also some half-pennies of the same reign. In 1818, several pieces of stamped pewter of the size of half-crowns and shillings were found near the walls, which had evidently been made and passed as money. Many remains of crosses, croziers, and other ornaments worn by the monks and friars have been found. On the old Cork road, near Mary Ville, the residence of Mr. Taylor, are the remains of an ancient Danish fort, which runs under ground nearly a mile. There are two chalybeate springs, one on the Spa road near the fever hospital, and the other at the quarry near the Waterford road, which are but seldom used. The Earl of Cork, and Orrery, among his inferior titles in the peerage of Ireland, enjoys that of Baron Boyle, of Youghal
TOWNLANDS
Taken from 'General Alphabetical Index to the Townlands and Towns, Parishes and Baronies of Ireland,' 1851 - all in the barony of Imokilly
Ballyclamasy
Ballyhobert
Ballymacask
Ballynacarriga
Ballyvergan E.
Ballyvergan W.
Banshy
Barnageehy E.
Barnageehy W.
Bawnmore
BrooklodgeClashadunna E.
Clashadunna W.
Claycastle
Cock-&-The-Bull
Copperalley
Curraghboy
Dysart
Foxhole
Glanaradotia
GreencloyneKennel
Kilmagner
Kilnatoora
Knockattigan
Knockaverry
Knocknacally
Magnershill
Muckridge
Muckridge Demesne
ParkmountainPipersbog
Propoge
Seafield
Springfield
Summerfield
Sweetfields
Whitebarn
Williamstown
Youghal T.
Youghal-LandsNEXT - Youghalmisc3.htm
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