Estate and legal papers comprising of deeds, indentures, tenancy agreements, land titles, correspondence and personal papers relating to the Mulock and Homan-Mulock family of Bellair House, Ballycumber.
Sin títuloBellair or Ballyard
31 Descripción archivística resultados para Bellair or Ballyard
Small notebook containing lists of Bellair estate tenants and yearly rents from 1883. Estates are divided into Bellair; Clonshanny; Curries; Skeanagh/Curraghdown; Knockdomini; Killeenboylegan.
Also includes agriculture stock valuations from September 1883.
Letter from Thomas Molloy, Land Agent, Bellair, to Thomas Greene, 24 Upper Dominick Street, Dublin City regarding an investment in lands at Ballinagore.
Typescript diary entry of William Bury Homan Mulock, reflecting on the surroundings of the Bellair Estate; his childhood on the estate; estate improvements; sale of the estate to tenants under the Land Acts; effects on Irish agriculture and corn production during the first World War.
"The Townland of Bellair or Bally-ard (High Town) stands almost in the centre of Ireland and its hill crowned with a thick grove of beech and fir is a conspicuous object from most of the Counties in Ireland...
I dearly loved and revered the old place with all the tradition it stood for, and for my first day in India I determined to save money and pull it through as my father had always impressed on me the severe strain his large family had been on the estate...
I have now held it for close on 30 years and in the natural course of things must soon relinquish it. I can however fairly claim to have done more than any predecessor for its benefit. I have sold to the tenants, under the Land Acts, and have paid of all charges. I have renovated the house and wing, rebuilt all the farm buildings, and a good part of the stabling...
I have now (1918) had close on ten years experience as an Irish Landlord without tenants, having sold under the Land Acts 1908-9. I can't say that I regret their loss. I live more like an English squire, without anxiety or fear of malicious injuries, cattle drives, or burnings, and I have more leisure to look after my Bellair farm which is now paying me well for all my improvements".
3 duplicate, typescript manuscripts entitled 'Notes of Sale under Land Acts and other Miscellaneous Notes Bellair Estate by William Bury Homan Mulock 1916'.
Chapters in the manuscript include:
Income of the estate before sale to the tenants under the land acts;
Yearly rental 1897-1907;
Recollections of the Great Famine and its effect on the Bellair estate;
Copies of correspondence between William and his sister, Mary;
Condition assessment of Bellair House and farm;
List of tenants of the Bellair estate who purchased their land;
Christopher Guinan, Michael Daly and Paddy Digan's reminiscences of Bellair.
Artificially arranged files of handwritten notes, invoices and correspondence relating to renovations to Bellair House.
Original incoming and copy outgoing letters relating to Ernest H Browne's management of the Bellair Estate. Matters referred to include copies of proposal to purchase tenanted and untenanted Bellair estates of William Bury Homan Mulock by the Estate Commissioners; copy of schedule of tenancies of Bellair, showing the purchase monies paid by respective tenants; copy of OS maps of Bellair.
Bellair tenants referenced include: Anne Daly; Frank Claffy, James Lambe, John Digan, Patrick Galvin, Thomas Williams, Joseph Murray, Kieran Larkin, Farrell Connolly, Thomas Daly, Margaret Larkin, Patrick Digan, Jeremiah Guinan, Stephen Quinn, Patrick Murray and James Reamsbottom.
Lease for parts of lands of Bellair between Thomas Homan Mulock and James Reamsbottom for three lives from 1802, at the yearly rent of £28-8.
Memorial of indented deed between Peter Marsh Esq., of Moyvalley, King's County, William Marsh, Gent, of Carrowkeel, and Arthur Judge Esq., of Moyclare, Ann Judge, otherwise Marsh, and Thomas Mulock of the City of Dublin, of the second part and the Reverend John Mulock of Ballard, of the third part.
The memorial recites that Peter Marsh did devise unto his eldest son, Henry Marsh, all his personal estate, and did thereby bequeath the sum of £5000 to William Marsh, the sum of £1200 to Ann Judge, and reciting that the town of lands of Balliard [Bellair] was become vested, in consideration of the sum of £298-8-3, by deeds of lease and release unto Thomas Mulock.
Signed by Peter Marsh, Jim Fitzpatrick and Peter Ludwith.
Handwritten draft statement of title to Bellair, with reference to the schedule of inheritance.