Endnotes: The Life and Times of a South Demesne 1650-1960 by Turtle Bunbury Number Note

#1 McNeill, Charles (ed). Calendar of Archbishop Alen’s register c. 1172-1534 (Dublin: Royal Society of Antiquaries of , 1950.)

#2 Ball, F Elrington, ‘A History of the County Dublin: The People, Parishes and Antiquities from the Earliest Times to the Close of the 18th Century’, p. 118.

#3 John D’Alton, ‘The History of the County of Dublin’, p. 731.

#4 "Photostat" copy of a map of severall parcells of land in and near the towne of Clondalkin, Barrony of Uppercross, Co. Dublin. Surveyed by order of Mr Browne by Peter Duffy, May, 1703.

#5 Ball, F Elrington, ‘A History of the County Dublin’, p. 118.

#6 Tessa Violet Murdoch, ‘The Quiet Conquest: the Huguenots 1685-1985’ (Museum of London, 1985), p. 103.

#7 Another account says the Chaigneau family were originally from St. Sairenne or St Savinien in the Charante. [Elizabeth Caldwell Hirschman, Donald N. Yates, ‘Jews and Muslims in British Colonial America: A Genealogical History’ (McFarland, 2012), p. 151

#8 Rev. Samuel Hayman, ‘The French Settlers in Ireland No 4 - The Settlement at Youghal County Cork’, Ulster Journal of Archaeology, Volume 2, p. 223-224.

#9 Samuel Smiles, ‘The Huguenots: Their Settlements, Churches, and Industries in England and Ireland’ (J. Murray, 1867), p. 203.

#10 Agnew, David Carnegie, ‘Protestant Exiles from France, Chiefly in the Reign of Louis XIV: Or, The Huguenot Refugees and Their Descendants in Great Britain and Ireland’, Volume 2 (A. Turnbull & Spears, 1886), p. 513.

#11 Hubert Butler, ‘In The Land of Nod’, Dublin 1966, p. 18.

#12 Ibid.

#13 Agnew, David Carnegie, ‘Protestant Exiles from France,’ p. 419, claims Elizabeth, daughter of Colonel Renouward (sic), was the wife of David Chauigneau but Grace Lawless Lee holds firm that David’s wife was Elizabeth Maquarrel.

#14 The will of Lewis Chaigneau, dated 16 July 1723, Reg. of Deeds.

#15 Ball, F Elrington, ‘A History of the County Dublin,’ p. 119.

#16 Registry of Deeds Index Project - Memorial No: 76327.

#17 Usually the earlier deed would be recorded in the Registry too, but not if it predated the Registry. There is no cross reference here, so maybe the earlier deed is not recorded separately in the Registry in this case, just referred to in the current deed.

#18 Ball, F Elrington, ‘A History of the County Dublin’, p. 119.

#19 Michael McGinley, ‘The La Touche Family in Ireland’ (The La Touche Legacy Committee, 2004), p. 49- 51.

#20 Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland (1944), Volume 74, Part 4, p. 217.

#21 Agnew, David Carnegie, ‘Protestant Exiles from France,’ p. 419.

#22 Ibid, p. 37.

#23 Dictionary of National Biography; Faversham Gunpowder Personnel Register 1573¬1840 (Faversham Society’s Faversham Papers).

#24 Crocker, A. G., ‘Gunpowder Mills: Documents of the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries’, Surrey Record Society, 2000, p. 81-82.

#25 Dictionary of National Biography; Faversham Gunpowder Personnel Register 1573¬1840 (Faversham Society’s Faversham Papers).

Page 1 of 19 Number Note

#26 Crocker (2000), p. 81-82.

#27 Ibid.

#28 Christine Casey, ‘Dublin: The City Within the Grand and Royal Canals and the Circular Road with the Phoenix Park’ (Yale University Press, 2005), p. 111.

#29 The boy was thirteen-year-old Francis Greuber whose father and namesake would later be buried alongside him in Faversham. Dictionary of National Biography; Faversham Gunpowder Personnel Register 1573-1840 (Faversham Society’s Faversham Papers).

#30 ‘The Political State of Great Britain’, Volume 14, (London, Sept 1717), p. 267.

#31 The Post Man & the Historical Account, Oct 19-22, 1717.

#32 Gillian Wagner, ‘Thomas Coram, Gent., 1668-1751’ (Boydell & Brewer, 2004), p. 69.

#33 Crocker (2000), p. 81-82.

#34 The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, Volumes 86-87 (1956), p. 47.

#35 His name is spelled as Nicholas Gruther in The Historical Register, Volume 9, p. 135.

#36 ‘There is said to have been up to seven mills operating along the river at its peak.’ (C. Rynne, ‘Industrial Ireland 1750-1930’ (Cork: Collins Press, 2006), p. 290. However John D’Alton suggests there were actually nine mills in ‘The History of the County of Dublin’, p. 719.

#37 Ball, F Elrington, ‘A History of the County Dublin’, p. 119; Dublin Evening Post, Nov. 24-27, 1733.

#38 Crocker (2000), p. 81-82.

#39 Gillian Wagner, ‘Thomas Coram, Gent., 1668-1751’ (Boydell & Brewer, 2004), p. 69.

#40 David C. A. Agnew, ‘Protestant Exiles from France’, p. 360,

#41 Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of Great Britain and Ireland, Volume 29, Issue 1, p.68, edited by Dorothy North. (Huguenot Society of Great Britain and Ireland, London, 2011).

#42 Charles Dalton, ‘English Army Lists and Commission Registers, 1661-1714’ (Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1896), Volume 3, p. 19.

#43 ‘Allegations for Marriage Licences Issued by the Vicar-general of the Archbishop of Canterbury’, Volume 31, Harleian Society, 1890, p. 273.

#44 Manuscripts of the House of Lords, H.M. Stationery Office, 1697.

#45 Also spelled as ‘Windham’s Horse’, the later became the 6th Guards, before evolving into the 3rd (Prince of Wales’s ). Journals of the House of Commons, Volume 13, p. 440.

#46 Born in 1649, Wyndham was the second son of Colonel Francis Wyndham and Anne Gerard. He distinguished himself at the Boyne, and at the siege of Limerick. He died a bachelor in 1706, at Valencia in Spain, possibly from wounds.

#47 Stephen Wood, ‘Those Terrible Grey Horses: An Illustrated History of the Royal Scots Dragoon Guards’ (Osprey Publishing, 2015), p. 20.

#48 Ibid, p. 21.

#49 David C. A. Agnew, ‘Protestant exiles from France’.

#50 Charles Dalton, ‘The Blenheim Roll, 1704’ (Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1899).

#51 Samuel Shellabarger, ‘Lord Chesterfield and His World’ (Biblo & Tannen, 1951), p. 122.

#52 Melesina Chenevix St. George Trench, ‘The Remains of the Late Mrs. Richard Trench’, (Parker, Son, and Bourn, 1862).

#53 The concept that Paul Daniel Chenevix was a brother is pitched in The Yale edition of Horace Walpole’s correspondence, Volumes 13-14 (Yale University Press, 1948), p. 103.

Page 2 of 19 Number Note

#54 Cathy Hartley, ‘A Historical Dictionary of British Women’ (Routledge, 2013), p. 97.

#55 A List of the Colonels, Lieutenant Colonels, Majors, Captains, Lieutenants, and Ensigns of His Majesty’s Forces on the British Establishment (T. Cox, 1740), p. 64.

#56 Stephen Wood, ‘Those Terrible Grey Horses.’

#57 A List of the Colonels, Lieutenant Colonels, Majors, Captains, Lieutenants, and Ensigns of His Majesty’s Forces on the British Establishment (T. Cox, 1740), p. 64.

#58 Registry of Deeds Index, Memorial No: 76327).

#59 ‘Miscellaneous Works of the Late Philip Dormer Stanhope, Earl of Chesterfield’ (E. and C. Dilly, 1779), p. 354.

#60 Stephen Wood, ‘Those Terrible Grey Horses.’

#61 Pue’s Occurrences, 20-23 November 1756.

#62 Owen Weekly Chronicle Or Universal Journal, 5 August, 1758.

#63 Dejean died in Dublin on 29th September 1764.

#64 The Gentleman’s Magazine, Vol. 28, p. 611.

#65 Miscellaneous Works of the Late Philip Dormer Stanhope, Earl of Chesterfield’ (E. and C. Dilly, 1779), p. 354.

#66 Stephen Wood, ‘Those Terrible Grey Horses.’

#67 Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of Great Britain and Ireland, Volume 29, Issue 1, p. 68.

#68 Registers of the French Conformed Churches of St. Patrick and St. Mary, Dublin, Huguenot Society of London, 1893, p. 55.

#69 The Quarters of the Army in Ireland in 1749, to which is added, An exact list of the general and field officers, as they take rank in His Majesty’s army (1752).

#70 The Gentleman’s and London Magazine: Or Monthly Chronologer, 1751.

#71 Lepper and Crossle’s records of the Grand Lodge Officers in Dublin suggest he was appointed a captain in the 14th Light where Louis Dejean was commander but I am pretty sure he would have been a until his transfer to the new Royal Irish Artillery.

#72 Chenevix-Farnham Papers (National Library of Ireland, Collection List No. 95).

#73 London magazine or Gentleman’s Monthly Intelligencer, Volume 29, p. 164.

#74 Dublin Courier, 12 March 1762.

#75 John Heron Lepper and Philip Crossle, ‘History of the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of Ireland’, vol. I (Dublin: Lodge of Research, 1925), p. 211.

#76 Lepper and Crossle, p. 211.

#77 The Scots Magazine, Volume 38, April 1776.

#78 Saunders Newsletter, Monday 29 April 1776.

#79 Saunders Newsletter, 26 April 1787.

#80 Jacques René de Brisay (1637-1710), Marquis de Dennonville, was a devout Catholic who served as Louis XIV’s viceroy of New France (ie: French ) from 1685 to 1689. His governorship is remembered for the brutality with which the French suppressed rebellions the Iroquois Confederacy, not least when he organized the capture of fifty Iroquois chiefs in the midst of a parlay whom he subsequentlyhad shipped in chains to Marseilles, France, to be used as galley slaves. The Iroquois responded with an equally violent campaign of slaughter against New France’s fledgling settler community. His successor as governor wisely returned thirteen of the surviving Iroquois chiefs and returned them to their homeland.

Page 3 of 19 Number Note

#81 Recollections of John O’Keefe, 1826.

#82 BUNBURY to DESBRISAY, 22 July 1743: Lease btw Thomas BUNBURY of City of Dublin Esq eldest son and heir of Thomas BUNBURY late of same City dec’d Rose BUNBURY otherwise JACKSON mother of said Thomas & widow & relict of Thomas BUNBURY dec’s Henry BUNBURY of Johnstown in Co. Carlow Esq. & Edward FOLEY of City of Dublin Gent. Of 1 pt & Theophilus DEBRISAY of said City of other part... lease & release in consid of 608 pounds...to DEBRISAY town and lands of Moygany otherwise Morgany otherwise Moygna cont. By est 140 acres in Barony of Kilkea and Moone in Co. Kildare... In presence of William BUNBURY of Lisnevagh in Co Carlow Esq. & Charles MEARES of Dublin Gent (Jackson Memorials and Deeds Mentioning Dublin, Book 110, pg. 363, * 77934.

#83 List of General and Field Officers as They Rank in the Army, 1754.

#84 Mosley, Charles, editor. ‘Burke’s Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage’, 107th edition, Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.A., 3 volumes: Burke’s Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd, 2003, volume 1, page 414.

#85 Simeon Boileau was a son of Charles de Boileau, Seigneur de Castelnau and Mary Magdalen Collot d’Escury

#86 Bill Number 2534 (1767).

#87 His death is recorded in the Londonderry Journal, Wed. July 15, 1772.

#88 The particulars of the Dublin Journal advertisement in 1749 and 1750 noted that ‘the Mansion House’ plus seventeen acres of gardens and meadows were leased to ‘the Hon. Major Gen. Henry De Grangues’ for £64 a year.

#89 Anne de Grangues, widow of Henry Daniell de Grangues, died in 1723. See: ‘Huguenot Archives: A Further Catalogue of Material Held in the Huguenot Library - Margaret Harcourt Williams, p. 28.

#90 He is named as John Henry "de Grangne" in the Huguenot Society of London’s Quarto series (1911), Volume 18, p.307.

#91 Matthew Glozier, author of ‘Marshal Schomberg 1615-1690, "the Ablest Soldier of His Age"’ ( Sussex Academic Press, 2005 ), refers to three of the Duke’s aides-de-camp, namely Henri Foubert, Isaac Monceau de Meloniere and the Duke’s own grandson Charles de Sibourg (the natural son of Charles von Schomberg who succeeded as 2nd Duke). The suggestion that Henry De Grangues’ was the Duke’s ADC was printed in John Marshall’s ‘Royal Naval Biography’ ( Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1831 ), p. 69. Henry Daniel de Grangues, marquis de Martragny, served under the Duke of Schomberg at one point. Adding to the confusion, it is sometimes said that the Duke’s ADC at the Boyne was John Arabin. Whoever the ADC was, he did not do very well because the elderly Duke was killed in the battle.

#92 Manuscripts of the House of Lords, H.M. Stationery Office, p. 88, p. 90.

#93 Calendar of Treasury Papers, Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer, 1974, p. 287.

#94 William A Shaw, ed. (1901). "Treasury Books and Papers: February 1741", pp. 441–448.

#95 In October 1742, he took command of the 30th (Cambridgeshire) Regiment of Foot, but on 1 April 1743 he took command of the 9th Dragoons.

#96 Reynard, Frank H., ‘Ninth (Queen’s Royal) Lancers 1715–1903’ (William Blackwood, 1904), p. 1. In 1717, the 9th Dragoons embarked for Ballinrobe, in Ireland, and were placed on the Irish establishment

#97 The Monthly Review (Hurst, Robinson, 1842), p. 77.

#98 On 1 November 1749 he obtained the colonelcy of the 4th Irish Horse (later 7th Dragoon Guards), from Morduant, which he retained until his decease in June 1754. The London Magazine, Or, Gentleman’s Monthly Intelligencer, 1749, Volume 18, p. 529.

#99 Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of London - Volume 14 (1933), p. 230.

#100 Huguenot Archives: A Further Catalogue of Material Held in the Huguenot Library (Huguenot Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 2008), p. 29.

#101 Notes and Queries, 12th Series Volume II. London. 1916. pp. 152, 313; Carter, Thomas (1871). Curiosities of war and military studies: anecdotal, descriptive, and statistical. London: Groombridge & Sons.

Page 4 of 19 Number Note

#102 Letter from Thomas Waites to Lord George Sackville, 22 June 1754, Report on the Manuscripts of Mrs. Stopford-Sackville, of Drayton House, Northhamptonshire (Ardent Media,1904), p. 214.

#103 Ibid, p. 215.

#104 Letter from to Col. John Arabin to Lord George Sackville, 25 June 1754, Report on theManuscripts of Mrs. Stopford-Sackville, of Drayton House, Northhamptonshire (Ardent Media,1904), p.215. General de Grangues will of 12 August 1754 is held by the National Archives in the UK.

#105 Letter from to Col. Philip Chenevix to Lord George Sackville, 25 June 1754, Report on the Manuscripts of Mrs. Stopford-Sackville, of Drayton House, (Ardent Media,1904), p. 215.

#106 Letter from to Major Pepys to Lord George Sackville, 1 August 1754, Report on the Manuscripts of Mrs. Stopford-Sackville, of Drayton House, Northhamptonshire (Ardent Media,1904), p. 221.

#107 Burke’s ‘Landed Gentry of Ireland’ (1904), 81, and Maurice Craig, ‘The account book of William Caldbeck, architect’ in Design and Practice in British Architecture: Studies in architectural history presented to Howard Colvin, Architectural History 27 (1984

#108 William Caldbeck worked for Trinity College from 1686; the last payment to him while he was still alive was made on 3 January 1718. He had died by 1722 when his executors were paid £141.2s.10d. For his work on the last part of the long wall in Patrick’s Well Lane. The following year ‘Caldbeck & Quinn’ - Thomas and Joseph Caldbeck and Francis Quinn - were paid for brick and stonework on the new library. References: The Dictionary of Irish Architects, Irish Architectural Archive. All information in this entry is from TCD muniments, MUN P/2/2, 3, 7, 8, 11, 12, 13, 16, 18-20, 22-7, 30, 32, 33, 36, 47, 48.

#109 William Caldbeck was proposed as a Friendly Brother on 4 Jan 1765, balloted for 5 July and joined on the same date. The pre-1770 minute books for the Mary’s Abbey Knot do not survive.

#110 As well as his lands at Moyle Park, Caldbeck appears to have owned Larch Hill, Whitechurch, Co. Dublin, and further lands at Kilmashogue and Thomas Street.

#111 The Hibernian Magazine, Or, Compendium of Entertaining Knowledge, James Potts, May 1782, p. 280.

#112 In June 1783 Caldbeck united with the other leading members of the south Dublin community to offer substantial rewards for anyone willing to come forward and testify about illicit activity in the area.

#113 "Ball, F Elrington, ‘A History of the County Dublin’, p. 119-120.

#114 Ibid, p. 120.

#115 The Hibernian Magazine, Or, Compendium of Entertaining Knowledge, James Potts, May 1782, p. 280.

#116 Ibid, p. 280.

#117 John D’Alton,’ The History of the County of Dublin’, p. 719. Lennox Barrow, in ‘The Round Towers of Ireland: A Study and Gazetteer’ (Academy Press, 1979), p. 82, thought the collapse of the church as claimed by Beranger was ‘unlikely’ but I am not so sure

#118 Ball, F Elrington, p. 119-120. As the Freeman’s Journal observed: ‘The wind being at N.N.W. when the above incident happened, all the damage that was done was between Clondalkin and the city.’

#119 Rev. C. T. McCready, ‘Clondalkin Parish - Extracts from Parish Registers’ (Ireland Genealogy Project Archives, 2007).

#120 He was elected a member of the Dublin Society on 28 April 1791, his proposers being Thomas Braughall and Christmas Weekes. The Dublin Society awarded him a £40 premium for planting 10 acres under timber, 3 July 1800. He was appointed a member of the fine arts committee on 24 July 1800. He was appointed a member of the fine arts committee on 24 July 1800.

#121 Saunders Newsletter, Monday 29 April 1776.

#122 Much of this detail was obtained from the Upton Collection held by the Royal Irish Academy and catalogued by Martin Fagan in April 2012.

#123 ‘History of the Fifty-seventh (West Middlesex) Regiment of Foot 1755-1881’ (R. Bentley and Son, 1893) p. 364.

#124 ‘A List of the Colonels, Lieutenant Colonels, Majors, Captains, Lieutenants, and Ensigns of His Majesty’s Forces on the British Establishment (T. Cox, 1740), p. 64.

Page 5 of 19 Number Note

#125 John Heron Lepper and Philip Crossle, History of the Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of Ireland, vol. I (Dublin: Lodge of Research, 1925), p. 211. See also: Ric Berman, Schism: The Battle That Forged Freemasonry, p. 37, p. 179.

#126 Proceedings of the Huguenot Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 2008, p. 68-70.

#127 ‘History of the Fifty-seventh (West Middlesex) Regiment of Foot 1755-1881’ (R. Bentley and Son, 1893) p. 364.

#128 The Scots Magazine, Volume 4, p. 439.

#129 ‘History of the Fifty-seventh (West Middlesex) Regiment of Foot 1755-1881’ (R. Bentley and Son, 1893) p. 364.

#130 Shirley Arabin, ‘No Petty People The Arabin Family’ (Moyglare, 2012), p. 33-34.

#131 John Arabin succeeded as lieutenant-colonel from the late Daniel Paul. The Scots Magazine, Volume 11, p. 207.

#132 Transactions of the Bristol and Gloucestershire Archaeological Society, Volumes 96-99, 1979, p. 60-61.

#133 Her death was announced St James Chronicle 1 February 1780 / 1781.

#134 The General Index as to Twenty-seven Volumes of the London, Volume 19, p. 429.

#135 ‘History of the Grand Lodge of Ireland’, Vol. I, p. 161. Huguenot Archives: A Further Catalogue of Material Held in the Huguenot Library, Huguenot Society of Great Britain and Ireland, 2008, p. 28.

#136 This marriage was relevant to the Bomford lands in Meath and Westmeath. The Arabin family also had land at Kilmacud in Dublin

#137 Saunders Newsletter, 9 March 1802. See also ‘1536-1810: Index Prerogative Wills of Ireland’ by Sir Arthur Vicars, contributed by Vynette Sage.

#138 The Royal Military Calendar, Or Army Service and Commission Book, Volume 2 edited by John Philippart, p. 11.

#139 John Venn, ‘Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students’, Volume 2, p. 65.

#140 Pues Occurrences, Tues 4 July 1758. For reasons as yet unclear, the Bomford lands in Meath and Westmeath that Henry’s mother Judith acquired upon her marriage in 1750 appear to have been handed on to the Sibthorpe family in 1764.

#141 Shirley Arabin, ‘No Petty People,’ p. 44.

#142 The Ballindalloch connection is given by John Marshall in ‘Royal Naval Biography’ (Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1831).

#143 Thanks to Shirley Arabin.

#144 Máire Kennedy, French books in eighteenth-century Ireland (Voltaire Foundation, 2001), p. 61.

#145 The 57th Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records, Ireland, Parts 1929-1930 (Stationery Office, 1936), p. 176.

#146 Septimus Arabin’s story is told in detail in John Marshall, Royal Naval Biography (Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1831). Could Henry have been sending gunpowder to the navy via his brothers? He married a daughter of the late Sir George Berriman Rumbold, Bart, formerly British Consul General at Hamburgh, whose widow was afterwards united to Sir W Sidney Smith. Septimus died at Paris in May 1826.

#147 A branch of the Arabin family were still at Moyvoughly in the Parish of Ballymore in 1838 when ‘C. Arabin’ was living there.

#148 Weston St. John Joyce, ‘"The Neighbourhood of Dublin: its topography, antiquities and historical associations’, (M. H. Gill & Son, 1921), p. 221.

#149 John Daniell Arabin (1755-1838) became a lieutenant-general in the Royal Irish Artillery in 1814. His will is held by the National Archives in London.

#150 The Charter of the Royal Canal Company, to which is prefixed a list of the subscribers. (Dublin, 1789).

Page 6 of 19 Number Note

#151 ‘Peninsular - Preparation the Reform of the ’, p. 64.

#152 Shirley Arabin, ‘No Petty People’, p. 48.

#153 Ibid.

#154 Ibid, p. 44.

#155 Sir Thomas Tobin renovated and expanded the Ballincollig mills, employing some 500 people in 1856. The factory supplied the market in Ireland and also had a large business in export powder for Africa, which was shipped from Liverpool. From: ‘Rise and progress of the British explosives industry’, edited by E A B Hodgetts (Whittaker, 1909), p. 363-4.

#156 Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland (1944), Volume 74, Part 4, p. 206.

#157 John D’Alton, The History of the County of Dublin, p. 719.

#158 CSO/RP/SC/1821/77 - Letter from Henry Arabin, Dublin, concerning fears for fate of his gunpowder manufactory. Also draft copy of letter of reply from Gregory to Arabin, January 1822.

#159 Shirley Arabin, ‘No Petty People’, p. 50.

#160 Kelleher, B, 1996 The Royal Gunpowder Mills, Ballincollig, County Cork, in Buchanan (ed) 1996, 359-75; Kelleher, G, 1993 Gunpowder to guided missiles: Ireland’s war industries (Inniscarra, J F Kelleher).

#161 Dublin Weekly Register, 26 January 1850, p. 1.

#162 Dublin Evening Mail, 1 March 1850, p. 4.

#163 Lyons, Mary C. ‘’Illustrated Incumbered Estates, Ireland, 1850-1905.’’ Whitegate, county Clare: Ballinakella Press, 1993.

#164 Edward MacLysaght, ‘The Surnames of Ireland’, 6th edition, (Irish Academic Press, 1991), p109; George F Black, ‘The Surnames of Scotland, Their Origins Meaning and History’ (New York Public Library 1946, 4th reprinting 1974).

#165 ‘History of the Clan Finley’ by Timothy John Kessler.

#166 ‘Index to Burke’s dictionary of the landed gentry of Great Britain & Ireland’ (1849).

#167 The Hamilton stronghold of Innerwick would have been a relatively short journey by sea south across the Firth of Forth.

#168 Way, George and Squire, Romily. (1994), ‘Collins Scottish Clan & Family Encyclopaedia’, pp. 134 - 135.

#169 Andrew Finley died at Aughenlyth, Forfarshire, in 1547. His wife Janet was a daughter of John Hay of Erroll, Perthshire, and Janet Douglass, a lineal descendant of William De Haya, Cup Bearer to King Malcolm IV ‘History of the Clan Finley’ by T. J. Kessle

#170 McKeague, Leslie (2010). Bailieborough: A Pictorial Past. Bailieborough: Bailie Publications. ISBN 978- 0-9565196-0-3, p. 12.

#171 William Bailie’s son, another William Bailie, was Church of Ireland Bishop of Clonfert and Kilmacduagh from 1644 until his death in 1664. Cotton, Henry, ‘The Province of Connaught -Fasti Ecclesiae Hiberniae: The Succession of the Prelates and Members of t

#172 For instance, Leslie McLaughlin refers to another Alexander Finley who was baptized at Incharvie, Fife, in 1667 - which is near Balchristle - and who was sent to Ireland ‘possibly to live with his Uncle John Finley’. He later served in William III’s army

#173 "The Manuscripts of the Marquis of Ormonde, Preserved at the Castle, Kilkenny", John Thomas Gilbert (1895, H. M . Stationary off., by Eyre and Spottiswoode, Vol. 1), p. 160.

#174 Josiah V. Thompson of Uniontown, Pennsylvania, kept a genealogical family record book, circa 1922, that contains diary entries of the author, as well as records of his conversations with family members and friends about ancestry, descendants and relatives

#175 A curious link between the Finlay family and Killeshandra was recorded in 1848 following the death on May 21st at Killeshandra of forty- three-year-old James Alexander Finlay, Esq., A.B., F.H.C.S.I., Medical Attendant of the Killeshandra Dispensary. (The Lancet, Vol. 1, p. 624; The Anglo-Celt. 26 May 1848).

Page 7 of 19 Number Note

#176 Freeman’s Journal, May 22, 1764: ‘ANDREW FINLAY, Mercer, in Parliament-street, has this Day landed out of the King of Prussia, a large Assortment of the most fashionable Lutestrings. Note, an Apprentice is wanted.’ Elsewhere I read that Andrew ‘had a range of ‘flowered silks, flowered and plain negligee sattins, armageens [plain silk], bombazines [usually a cotton fabric], ruffles and callimancoes [woollen fabric]’

#177 David Dickson, Jan Parmentier, Jane H. Ohlmeyer, ‘Irish and Scottish Mercantile Networks in Europe and Overseas in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century (Academia Press, 2007), p. 165-167.

#178 Josiah V. Thompson, Uniontown, p. 440-441. In August 1732, The Gentleman’s Magazine reported: ‘Mr. Robert Finley, a merchant of great capacity and expertise, is appointed to go to Carolina, as agent to the trustees for the colony of Georgia. [Gentleman’s Magazine, 1732, p. 929).

#179 Josiah V. Thompson, p. 440-441.

#180 ‘The Clan Finley, Volume 1’ by Herald Franklin Stout (Eagle Press, 1956), p. 22.

#181 Amadeus Jonson, ‘Swedish Contributions to American Freedom, 1776-1783’, Swedish Colonial Foundation, 1953, p. 11, p. 32.

#182 Burke, ‘History of the Landed Gentry of Ireland’, 1899. Deputy Keeper of Ireland index to the Act or Grants Book and of Original Wills in the Diocese of Dublin, 1272-1858, 26th-30th-31st report 1894-1899, p993, https://www.findmypast.ie/.NLI, Richard Hayes Manuscript for the History of Irish Civilisation, Subject and Places, vol.2, Ussher Papers, short pedigree, MS no. 11/116, p118. Courtesy of Brida Mulligan, ‘Finlay Assignment’.

#183 The Gentleman’s and London Magazine, 25 June 1761.

#184 The Dublin Historic Trust’s Project 18ORMOND commenced a complete renovation and conservation of 18 Upper Ormond Quay in 2017.

#185 Jonathan Swift, ‘The Hibernian patriot: a collection of the Drapier’s letters to the people of Ireland concerning [W.] Wood’s brass half-pence, together with considerations on the attempts made to pass that coin, and reasons for the people, of Ireland’s refusing it’, p. 39.

#186 Louis M. Cullen, ‘Anglo-Irish Trade, 1660-1800’ (Manchester University Press, 1968), p. 200.

#187 G. L. Barlow MA, PhD, ‘Some Dublin Private Banks’, Dublin Historical Record, p. 38, read to Old Dublin Society 11/11/1970, RDS Library. Thom’s Irish Almanac and Official Directory, 1846, Alexander Thom, Dublin. Courtesy of Brida Mulligan, Finlay Assignmen

#188 Dublin Assembly Rolls, 1742. ‘The Calendar of the Assembly Rolls of the Corporation of the City of Dublin, is continued, in this ninth volume from October 1740 to October 1751 inclusive.’

#189 Charles Lucas, ‘The political constitutions of Great Britain and Ireland: asserted and vindicated; the connection, and common interest of both Kingdoms demonstrated; and the grievances which each, and more especially the later, has suffered, set forth in several addresses and letters to the freecitizens of Dublin’ (p. 429).

#190 Gilbert, John T. A History of the City of Dublin, 3 vols, Dublin, reprinted 1978.

#191 Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland (1944), Volume 74, Part 4, p. 217. A photostat copy of ‘a map of sundry parcels of land in the parish of Clondalkin, belonging to the archiepiscopal see of Dublin, in lease to T. Finlay. Surveyed by R. Kendrick, Oct., 1759’ is in the National Library of lreland, 16.G. 16(59). http://sources.nli.ie/Record/MS_UR_031879

#192 ‘The Bomford Family & Allied Families’ by C. P. Bamford, p. 131.

#193 Irish Genealogical Abstracts from the "Londonderry Journal," 1772-1784 by Donald M. Schlegel 29 October 1776.

#194 ‘GULIELMUS HENRICUS FINLAY filius natu minimus Thomae de Corkagh in Comitatu Dubliniensi in Hibernia. Father-in-law of the third Baron Dufferin.’ The Matriculation Albums of the University of Glasgow, 1728 -1858. Transcribed and Annotated by the late W. Innes Addison (Glasgow: James Maclehose & Sons, 1913).

#195 He is not to be confused with another William Henry Finlay (1771-1842), a hosier who became MP from 1824-1831 and the swordbearer in Dublin (1831-40).

#196 Appendix (p. 139), ‘Miscellaneous Works of the Right Honourable Henry Grattan’ (Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1822)

Page 8 of 19 Number Note

#197 William Stear’s wife is named as Eleanor in ‘The Bomford Family & Allied Families’ by C. P. Bamford, p. 103. In 1746, Mrs Stears was named by Thomas Prior on page 39 of ‘An Authentic Narrative of the Success of Tar-water in Curing a Great Number of Distempers Etc. To which are Subjoined 2 Letters from the Author of Siris (George Berkeley) Shewing the Medicinal Properties of Tar-water Etc. A New Ed. - London, Innys 1746’ Mrs. Stear of Ginnets in the county of Meath near Trim, had the worst symptoms of the most violent scurvey [sic], her hands and arms black in some parts, so that a mortification was sometime apprehended. She drank Tar-water for several months; it struck the most virulent humour out on her face and arms so that no one could know her: She was not discouraged, but continued to drink Tar water, and in a few months her skin was entirely clean. Before she drank Tar- water, she was often sick and low spirited; while she drank it, she was hearty and well every way, and has continued well many months.

#198 ‘The Georgian Society Records of Eighteenth Century Domestic Architecture and Decoration in Dublin’, Volume 3, Irish Georgian Society at the Dublin University Press, 1969.

#199 ‘Memoirs of the Different Rebellions in Ireland’, Richard Musgrave, Appendix no. IX, p. 21.

#200 ‘Papers relating to the estates in Co. Meath of the Blackwood family with references to the families of Hamilton, Finlay, Stear and Dufferin 1712-1893’ are held at Dublin: Public Record Office, D. 16,852-937; M. 2038-55; T. 7061-74.

#201 The New Monthly Magazine 1817 (Vol. 8): ‘At, Mrs. Finlay, of Bath, relict of Wm. Hen. F. esq. of Ginnetts, Ireland.’

#202 The European Magazine, and London Review, Volume 55, p. 160.

#203 David Hackett Fischer, ‘Paul Revere’s Ride’, p. 68.

#204 Miss H. M. Walker, A History of the Northumberland Fusiliers, 1674-1902, John Murray,1919, p. 144- 145.

#205 The memorial stone and an obituary state his age at 73, thus making 1750 his year of birth. Brida Mulligan rightly believes this ‘seems highly unlikely as his career started in 1764’ although he could feasibly have staretd at the age of 14 or 15. Brida proposes that: ‘Evidence from existing records indicate he may be the second child dating his birth possibly in 1740.’ It is possible the inscription on the memorial stone is incorrect. This research is ongoing. See: Farrar’s index to Irish Marriages 1771-1812, p308. RCB library, St Peter’s and St Mary’s church baptismal records which incorporates Granby Row showed no entry for John for the years 1737-1750

#206 ‘JOANNES FINLAY, Thomae filius natu major de Corkagh, Armigeri, in Parochia de Clondalkin in Comitatu de Dublin. Hibernia. Of Corkagh. Held the rank of Colonel. Sometime M P for County Dublin. Died in 1823.’ The Matriculation Albums of the University of Glasgow, 1728 -1858. Transcribed and Annotated by the late W. Innes Addison (Glasgow: James Maclehose & Sons, 1913).

#207 Louis M. Cullen, ‘Anglo-Irish Trade, 1660-1800’ (Manchester University Press, 1968), p. 202.

#208 ‘Some remarks on Dr Jebb’s Considerations on the expediency of a National Circulation Bank in Ireland’ (James Hunter, Sycamore Alley, 1780), p. 19.

#209 Mary Anne is generally described as the eldest daughter and co-heiress of William and Eleanor Stear, of Ginnets, but she is also listed as a daughter of John.

#210 Richard Barton, p. 173-175.

#211 One wonders if he was related to Mr James Finlay (sometimes spelled Findlay in error), Notary Public, who had an address at 11 Eustace Street from at least 1799 - 1802 (and perhaps for a decade or so later). In late 1815 Mr Finlay was implicated in a scandal when Samuel Clayton, a respected engraver and Freemason, was convicted of supplying forged revenue stamps amounting to between £40 and £50 to Messrs Dickinson and Finlay, notaries public, as well as to the Anchor Brewery on Usher Street. Clayton was sentenced to seven years’ penal servitude in New South Wales where he managed to reinvent himself

#212 As the Clondalkin parish registers record, the future Mr. Justice Richard Jebb married Jane-Louisa, eldest daughter of John Finlay, MP, of Corkagh by special license on 23 January 1802. Following her death on 8 November 1823, both Saunders News-letter and the Dublin Correspondent published an obituary to her.

#213 E. M. Johnston-Liik, ‘MPs in Dublin: Companion to History of the Irish Parliament, 1692-1800’, p. 39.

#214 Robert O’Byrne, A Gentle Evolution, 26 May 2014.

Page 9 of 19 Number Note

#215 On Tuesday 3 August 1779 John Finlay convened a meeting of ‘the Freeholders of the Barony of Newcastle in the County of Dublin’ at Kilmainham. The following day he wrote a letter at Corkagh to the Freeholders, published in Saunders Newsletter on Friday 6

#216 Ian MacBride, ‘Eighteenth Century Ireland New Gill History of Ireland’ (Gill & Macmillan, 2009).

#217 Representative Church Body Library, The Vestry Minutes of St Johns Parish Church, Clondalkin, 1729- 1820. Rev James B Leslie, Canon of St Patricks Cathedral, with foreword by His Grace the Lord Primate, Irish Churchwarden’s Handbook, 4th Ed revised, Dundal

#218 Freemans Journal, 4/3/1790, p2, at Irish Newspaper Archives Ltd. His parliamentary colleague for Dublin was the charismatic Sir Edward Newenham of Belcamp Hall, Balgriffin, County Dublin, whose wife Grace-Anna was from the Carlow banking family. As well a

#219 Edith M Johnston, History of the Irish Parliament, 1692-1800, vol. 4, Belfast 2002 p138-9. Royal Dublin Society Library, Eugene A Coyle, ‘County Dublin Elections 1790’, Dublin Historical Record, pp18-23, read to the Old Dublin Society 5/12/1990. Ainnie O’

#220 Gentleman’s Magazine, and Historical Chronicle, Volume 63, Part 1, p. 574.

#221 A map of a lot of ground lying on the west side of Christ Church Lane whereon are several houses and tenements belonging to the Dean & Chapter of Christ Church Dublin. Surveyed by John Brownrigg, 7 May 1796. John Finlay’s name on holding.

#222 Charles MacCarthy Collins, ‘The History, Law, and Practice of Banking’, p. 97.

#223 Report from the Committee of Secrecy, of the House of Lords in Ireland (J. Debrett and J. Wright, 1798), page 52-54.

#224 Freemans Journal 12/11/1806, p2, at Irish Newspaper Archives Ltd, David Cotter and Jennifer Wann, ‘Corcagh Park-Pairc Chorcai’, p. 21, Park and Landscape Service Dept. South Dublin County Council.

#225 ‘Memoirs of the Different Rebellions in Ireland’ by Richard Musgrave, p. 223-224.

#226 Edward Hay, ‘History of the Irish Insurrection of 1798: Giving an Authentic Army: and a Genuine History of Transactions Preceding that Event: with a Valuable Appendix’ (1803), p. 287. ‘The county of Dublin militia, who had distinguished themselves so much at the battle of Ross, under thecommand of Major Vesey, whose gallantry on that day afterward procured him the command of the regiment, were sent to Wexford; but a wound which the colonel received at the battle of Enniscorthy prevented his coming with them, and the command, as well as that of the town, necessarily devolved upon Lieutenant colonel Finlay.’

#227 The War in Wexford; an account of the rebellion in the south of Ireland in 1798 told from original documents by H.F.B. Wheeler & A.M. Broadley" (London: John Lane, 1910).

#228 Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland (1944), Volume 74, Part 4, p. 217.

#229 Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society, Cork Historical and Archaeological Society, 1895, p. 36.

#230 Letter from RW to Soane, 18 Nov 1799, Sir John Soane’s Museum archive: Private correspondence XV.A.2.5., via Dictionary of Irish Architects.

#231 Richard Robert Madden, ‘The United Irishmen: Their Lives and Times, with Several Additional Memoirs, and Authentic Documents, Heretofore Unpublished, the Whole Matter Newly Arranged and Revised’, Volume 3 (James Duffy,1860), p. 422. See also William John Fitzpatrick, 'The Sham Squire': And the Informers of 1798. (W. B. Kelly, 1866), p. 297.

#232 Memoirs and Correspondence of Viscount Castlereagh, (H. Colburn, 1849) p. 320.

#233 Finlay and Arthur Wolfe, Viscount Kilwarden, then residing at Newlands, were considered Clondalkin’s most prominent parishioners. Ball, F Elrington, ‘A History of the County Dublin’, p. 120-121.

#234 Another version has it that Kilwarden was visiting Colonel Finlay at Corkagh when an express rider called him back into the city. Ruan O’Donnell, ‘ and the Rising of 1803’ (Irish Academic Press, 2003), p. 90; William John Fitzpatrick, 'The Sham Squire': And the Informers of 1798. (W. B. Kelly, 1866), p. 297.

#235 Connaught Journal (Volume 69), Monday, Feb 3, 1823: ‘At his seat near Rathcool, in the 73rd year of his age, John FINLAY, Esq. late M.P. for the County Dublin, and Lieutenant-Colonel of the County Dublin Militia.’ The Clondalkin Parish Records add the detail about the rupture.

Page 10 of 19 Number Note

#236 The memorial stone and an obituary state his age at 73, thus making 1750 his year of birth. Brida Mulligan rightly believes this ‘seems highly unlikely as his career started in 1764’ although he could feasibly have started at the age of 14 or 15. Brida proposes that: ‘Evidence from an existing record may indicate that he was the second child dating his birth possibly in 1740.’ It is possible the inscription on the memorial stone is incorrect. This research is ongoing. See: Farrar’s index to Irish Marriages 1771-1812, p308. RCB library, St Peter’s and St Mary’s church baptismal records which incorporates Granby Row showed no entry for John for the years 1737-1750.

#237 Death of Henrietta, 2nd wife of John Finlay, London Star-20 June 1831.

#238 George Newenham Wright, ‘An Historical Guide to ancient and modern Dublin’ (Baldwin, Craddock & Joy, 1821), p. 60.

#239 Farrar’s Index to Irish Marriages – Hibernain magazine, 1812, p. 153.

#240 Rev. A. S. Cromie, ‘The Cromies of Portstewart’, North Irish Roots, Journal of North of Ireland Family History Society, Vol. 71996 (1).

#241 EXTRACTS FROM CLONDALKIN PARISH REGISTERS. 1810, May 12. — James Finlay, an infant, Clondalkin (buried). 1816, Dec. 12. — Henry Nassau, son of Thomas and Ursula Finlay (bapd). 1820, March 5. — Henry Nassau Finlay, a child from Dublin (buried). 1829, Jany.

#242 Dublin Evening Mail, Fri 26 April, 1844.

#243 Freeman’s Journal, March 1st 1824; Asiatic Journal, Volume 17, p. 477 (1824).

#244 Edward Walford, ‘The County Families of the ’, p. 359.

#245 In 2014, Adam’s Auctioneers in Dublin sold a promissory note issued by ‘Messrs. Thomas Finlay, Robert Law & Michael Law’ Dublin.

#246 Dublin Evening Mail,15 October 1828: ‘TO BE LET, from the 1st of November next, with or without a Fine, for such term as may be agreed on, the House and Demesne of CORKAGH, situated near the five- mile stone, on the Naas road from Dublin. The Demesne contains about 140 Acres, late Irish plantation measure. Application to be made to Messrs. CORNWALL and ALLEN, 24 Eden-quay, Dublin.’

#247 Charles MacCarthy Collins. ‘The History, Law, and Practice of Banking’, p. 98.

#248 Dublin Historical Record, Volumes 23-26, The Old Dublin Society, 1969, pp. 44.

#249 Freemans Journal 15/2/1817. Padraig McGowan, ‘Money and Banking in Ireland’ Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland, vol. xxvi, p51-2, 1989; G.L. Barlow, MA, PhD, Dublin Historical Record, ‘Some Dublin Private Banks’, p. 44. Deed

#250 Death of Lt Col Thomas Finlay, Freemans Journal, 29 Dec, 1837.

#251 Death of Ursula, widow of Lt Col Finlay, Dublin Evening Post, 8 Aug 1868.

#252 Saunders’s News-Letter, 19 June 1837, p. 4.

#253 Dublin Evening Mail, 7 March 1838, p. 1.

#254 Saunders’s News-Letter, 17 February 1837, p. 4.

#255 George D Burtchaell and Thomas U Sadlier, ‘Alumni Dublinenses’, 1924 edition, p280, London

#256 ‘Cole and Co.’ in Lesley Richmond, Alison Turton, ‘The Brewing Industry: A Guide to Historical Records’ (Manchester University Press, 1990), p. 110-111.

#257 ‘Cole and Co.’ in Lesley Richmond, Alison Turton, ‘The Brewing Industry: A Guide to Historical Records’ (Manchester University Press, 1990), p. 110-111.

#258 Gentleman’s Magazine and Historical Chronicle, Part 1, 1815, p. 568.

#259 Burke, ‘Landed Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland’ (1847) – Cole of Twickenham.

#260 Gentleman’s Magazine and Historical Chronicle, Part 1, 1815, p. 568.

Page 11 of 19 Number Note

#261 ‘Cole and Co.’ in Lesley Richmond & Alison Turton, ‘The Brewing Industry: A Guide to Historical Records’ (Manchester University Press, 1990), p. 110-111.

#262 Alice was the only daughter of Isabella’s uncle Samuel Ibbetson of Denton Park in Yorkshire, once the seat of the Cromwellian General Fairfax.

#263 In 1846 Mrs Cole, Henrietta’s mother, donated £1 to the Protestant (or Pietist) colony of Wilhelmsdorf in Bavaria. The Continental Echo, and Protestant Witnes (1846), p. 224.

#264 Leinster Express, 12 March 1842, p. 1; Dublin Evening Packet & Correspondent; 26 March 1842, p. 1.

#265 Freeman’s Journal, 20 July 1838.

#266 Registry of Deeds, deed between Finlay, Blayney Cole and Gladstone, 1834, vol.4, no.49. By 1855 Owen was living at Hillside House, Portishead, Somerset. Courtesy of Brida Mulligan, Finlay Assignment.

#267 ‘Cole and Co.’ in Lesley Richmond, Alison Turton, ‘The Brewing Industry: A Guide to Historical Records’ (Manchester University Press, 1990), p. 110-111.

#268 In Dublin, the lady of the Rev. J. W. Finlay, of a daughter. Limerick Reporter, 8 Oct 1839.

#269 On the 17th inst, in Merrion Square, the lady of the Rev. John W. FINLAY, of a daughter. Freemans Journal, 22 Jan 1842.

#270 Canon J.B. Leslie, revised, edited and updated by Canon D.W.T Crooks, ‘Clergy of Kilmore, Elphin and Ardagh’, p4 & 47.

#271 In 1847, a John Finlay was recorded as incumbent of the Gothic Revival church of Altadesert on The Square, Pomeroy, Co. Tyrone, to be replaced by Alexander Patrick Hanlon in 1849. The church was connected to the Lowry family. In 1849 a John Finlay, BA, st

#272 Appendix D, p. 17 – ‘The Archaeological Impact Assessment Reports’ by Valerie J. Keeley Archaeologists.

#273 The Gentleman’s Magazine, 1846.

#274 Bertram Mitford married Frances Vernon at Clontarf in September 1806. Monthly Magazine, Or, British Register, Volume 22, 1806.

#275 Nineteenth Century New Zealand Artists: A Guide & Handbook.

#276 FINLAY.—Feb. 15, at 32, Merrion-square North, Dublin, the lady of the Rev. J. W. Finlay, of a son. London Daily News, 18 Feb 1847.

#277 Armagh Guardian, 16 February 1847, p. 1.

#278 Mount Jerome, No.3672.

#279 Nenagh Guardian, Wed 21 Feb 1849. Marriage of Rev J W Finlay and Mrs Trevor Stanus (nee Hamilton). Letters written from France by Caroline Hamilton in 1853 to her daughter Caroline Finaly of Corkagh House.

#280 Weekly Freeman’s Journal, 10 November 1860, p. 8.

#281 David Cotter and Jennifer Wann, Corcagh Park-Pairc Chorcai, p13, Park and Landscape Service Dept. South Dublin County Council.

#282 The Athenaeum, J. Lection, 1872, p. 402.

#283 The Publishers’ Circular and General Record of British and Foreign Literature, Volume 34 (Sampson Low, 1871), p. 679.

#284 Falconer’s railway, coach, car and steam navigation guide for Ireland, 1865.

#285 The full title of the book was ‘The Birds of Ireland - An account of the distribution, migrations and habits of birds as observed in Ireland, with all additions to the Irish list’ (Gurney and Jackson, London, 1900). R. J. Ussher was one of the first autho

#286 William Ball Wright, ‘The Ussher Memoirs; or, Genealogical Memoirs of the Ussher families in Ireland’, compiled from public and private sources online, p. 229.

Page 12 of 19 Number Note

#287 Timothy C. F. Stunt, ‘The Elusive Quest of the Spiritual Malcontent’.

#288 ‘Lieutenant Ernest Edward Foley to be Instructor of Musketry, vice Lieutenant A. G. Schuyler.’ London Gazette, 12 September 1879.

#289 They may have had a son children Reginald Ernest Ion Foley, born in 1881.

#290 Richard Vernon (1925-1997), a great-nephew of Colonel H. T. Finlay of Corkagh, was an actor who, amongst other roles, played the voice of Slartibartfast in the cult BBC radio series "The Hitch-Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy".

#291 Dublin Daily Express, 25 June 1913.

#292 Western Morning News, 6 March 1917.

#293 Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette, 3 June 1909.

#294 Return of Number of Gentlemen appointed to Commission of Peace in Ireland, 1874-76.

#295 RCB Library, Vestry Minutes for St. John’s Church Clondalkin, 1929-33. P12&16.

#296 The London Gazette, 10 September 1875.

#297 The Monthly Army List, May 1883, p. 791.

#298 John Kay, ‘A series of original portraits and caricature etchings’, Volume 2, Part 2, H. Paton, Carver & Gilder, 1838), p. 350. The Pembroke Fencible has Muster Books and Pay Lists for 1794¬1798 at WO 13/3767 and for 1799-1800 at WO 13/3768.

#299 Michael Comerford, ‘Collections Relating to the Dioceses of Kildare and Leighlin’, Volume 2 (J. Duffy, 1883), p. 117. See also ‘An Irishman’s Diary’ by Jim Dunne in The Irish Times, Sat, Dec 28, 1996.

#300 Freeman’s Journal, 25 March 1879, p. 8.

#301 Morning Post, 16 March 1896, p. 1.

#302 Whitaker’s Almanac, 1897, p. 200; Hart’s Annual Army List, Militia List, and Imperial Yeomanry List (J. Murray, 1898), p. 874.

#303 London Gazette, Part 4 (T. Neuman, 1896), p. 1833.

#304 Cheltenham College has his birthday listed as 8th January 1879, as taken from his application form to College.

#305 Barlow Jill, Cheltenham College, Cheltenham, Gloucestershire.

#306 The Bristol Mercury and Daily Post, 22/5/1899.

#307 He was also to command under 44 Militia Regulations. Dated. 17th August, 1901.

#308 Peter Goulding, The Hero, the Widow and the Army Pensions Board’ (Lulu.com), p. 40.

#309 Ibid.

#310 Deaths -The Times, Mar 13, 1902; pg. 1; Issue 36714; col A. Finlay – On the 9th March, at Bushy Park, near Dublin, Helen Lucy, wife of Colonel Henry T Finlay, of Corkagh, Co Dublin, and Commanding 5th Royal Dublin Fusiliers.

#311 Edward Walford, ‘The county families of the United Kingdom; or, Royal manual of the titled and untitled aristocracy of England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland’. (Volume ed. 59, 1919)

#312 The Illustrated London News (1870), Volume 56, p. 539.

#313 Edward Walford, ‘The county families of the United Kingdom.’

#314 Belfast Morning News, 21 March 1881.

#315 Dublin Daily Express, 13 September 1883.

Page 13 of 19 Number Note

#316 While serving on the North-west Frontier with the Royal Artillery in September 1935, Roderick Esmond Thomas Keelan was badly injured in an ambush in which two British officers were killed. Portsmouth Evening News, 1 October 1935, p. 4.

#317 In April 2015, my parents visited 100-year-old Margaret Grant at her daughter Annie Coulson’s home near Crief in Scotland.

#318 Land Purchase - Colonel Henry T. Finlay, Corkagh. Clondalkin, has sold a portion of his Clondalkin estate and over 1000 acres of his County Kildare property at an average price of 23 years’ purchase. New Zealand Tablet, Volume XXXII, Issue 3, 21 January 1904, Page 9.

#319 The 1911-1912 Motor Directory for County Kildare.

#320 Dudley Colley, ‘Wheel Patter’ (Loft Publications, 2003), reprint, p. 2.

#321 The Irish Times, 16 November 1907.

#322 Irish Times, 22 Feb 1902.

#323 Dublin Daily Express, 26 November 1913.

#324 Bainton E. St. Columba’s College Rathfarnham.

#325 Deaths -The Times, Saturday, May 22, 1915; pg. 6; Issue 40861; col A.

#326 Fallen Officers - Deaths -The Times, Thursday, Jul 20, 1916; pg. 6; Issue 41224; col B.

#327 Katharine Tynan is said to have been a paramour of W. B. Yeats in her youth, rejecting his offer of marriage. The comedian, Dave Allen (née David Tynan O’Mahony) was her nephew.

#328 The Times, Wednesday, Sep 29, 1915; pg. 1; Issue 40972; col A. ‘Finlay, On the 24th inst, at Dublin, Emily Octavia Finlay, wife of Colonel Henry T Finlay, DL, of Corkagh, Clondalkin.’

#329 The Ó Ciardha sept of the Southern Uí Néill (anglicized as Carey and Keary), Lords of Carbury,

#330 Elizabeth Bowen, ‘Bowen’s Court’ (1942), p. 283.

#331 The Wellesley-Colley family descend from John Colley of Lee, Sussex. His eldest son Philip Wellesley Colley, BA (1847-1926) was educated at Stonyhurst, London University and the Inner Temple. Called to the bar in 1872, Philip later lived on the site of Thoby Priory, Brentwood, Essex, as well as having an address at 80, Gloucester Place, London. He was a J.P. for Essex and Suffolk and married (1871) Lucy Agnes, eldest daughter of the Hon. Henry William Petre of Springfield Lawn, Essex.

#332 Robert Downes, ‘A Sermon Preached at Christ-Church, Dublin, on the 25th Day of March, 1750’, Volume 12 (S. Powell, 1752), p. 35-36.

#333 As well as John Pomeroy, the committee who acquired Leinster House for the RDS comprised of John Claudius Beresford, Jeremiah D’Olier, P. Digges La Touche, John L Foster, Henry Arabin, Nicholas P Leader, and Richard Verschoyle. See: Henry Fitz-Patrick Berry (1847-1932), ‘A History of the Royal Dublin Society. (Longman’s, Green & Co., 1915), p. 104.

#334 Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 5, 1819, p. 117.

#335 Dublin Evening Post, Thursday 26 July 1821.

#336 Drogheda Journal, or Meath & Louth Advertiser, 27 July 1825.

#337 Sir William Francis Butler, ‘The life of Sir George Pomeroy-Colley’.

#338 Elizabeth Bowen, ‘Bowen’s Court’ (Longman’s, 1942), p. 284.

#339 Ibid.

#340 Sir William Francis Butler, ‘The life of Sir George Pomeroy-Colley’.

#341 Northern Whig,19 August 1854; Irish Times, 11 September 1861; Dublin Daily Express, 10 September 1862.

#342 Anglo-Celt, November 21, 1857. Leopardstown House was later home to the Talbot-Powers.

Page 14 of 19 Number Note

#343 Freeman’s Journal, 13 November 1866.

#344 Wexford Constitution, 8 March 1871.

#345 Belfast News-Letter, 16 May 1879.

#346 Anglo-Celt, November 21, 1857. The Anglo-Celt noted that she was ‘the eldest daughter of the Hon. George Colley, of in the county of Dublin.’

#347 John O’Hart, ‘The Irish & Anglo-Irish Landed Gentry’, 1884.

#348 Dublin Daily Express, 15 July 1909.

#349 Dublin Daily Express, 1 October 1910; Notice to Creditors -Dublin Daily Express, 11 November 1910.

#350 Dublin Evening Packet and Correspondent, 2 August 1828.

#351 Sir William Francis Butler, ‘The life of Sir George Pomeroy-Colley, K. C. S. I., C. B.,C. M. G., 1835- 1881; including services in Kaffraria--in China--in Ashanti--in and in Natal’ (1889).

#352 Ibid.

#353 Ian Beckett, ‘Victorians at War’ (A&C Black, 2006), p. 26-28

#354 Belfast Commercial Chronicle, 7 July 18.

#355 Trinity Calendar, October 1850.

#356 Richard Wingfield, ‘Faces from the Past: The Rev William Wingfield (1799-1880)’ via the Wingfield Family Society newsletter.

#357 Limerick Reporter, Tuesday 17 August 1858.

#358 Elizabeth Bowen, ‘Bowen’s Court’ (Longman’s, 1942), p. 282.

#359 Exeter and Plymouth Gazette, 5 May 1909.

#360 Cheltenham Looker-On, 8 July 1911.

#361 The engagement notice appeared in the Dublin Daily Express on 30th June 1911.

#362 Lucan Lodge was described in 1804 as being ‘within five miles of town, near the Spa, and oppofite Colonel Vesey’s beautiful demefne. There are nine acres of excellent land, partly inclosed with a wall and ornamented with shrubbery and plantation, on which

#363 Cork Constitution, 15 May 1885. With thanks to Jennifer Byrne.

#364 Saunders’s News-Letter, 12 June 1868.

#365 Dublin Evening Mail, 22 November 1871.

#366 Dublin Daily Express, 16 April 1861.

#367 ‘Mount Temple, Clontarf’, Bernardine Ruddy. (Read to the Old Dublin Society 13th February 2008). In 1880 John Calvert Stronge sold Mount Temple and ‘all that part of the Hollybrooks called Mount Temple by estimation 22 acres five perches Irish Plantation

#368 Elizabeth Bowen, ‘Bowen’s Court’ (Longman’s, 1942), p. 284.

#369 Dublin Historical Record, Vol. LXI, No. 2 (March 1988).

#370 Elizabeth Bowen, Bowen’s Court (London, 1942) p 285-287.

#371 Ibid, p. 287.

#372 Ibid, p. 287.

Page 15 of 19 Number Note

#373 ‘Mount Temple, Clontarf’, Bernardine Ruddy. (Read to the Old Dublin Society, 13 February 2008) . GRO Death certificate 24 November 1886.

#374 Obituary to F. S. Copleston, Taunton Courier, and Western Advertiser, 30 October 1935.

#375 Folkestone, Hythe, Sandgate & Cheriton Herald, 23 November 1912, p. 4.

#376 Dublin Daily Express, 29 June 1893.

#377 Cork Constitution, 28 September 1896.

#378 Edinburgh Evening News, 20 July 1905.

#379 The Scotsman, 25 July 1906.

#380 ‘The Lady Named Thunder: The Biography of Dr. Ethel Margaret Phillips (1876-1951)’, Clifford H. Phillips (University of Alberta, 2003), p. 175.

#381 Constance Colley, ‘The Psychology of the Consumptive’, British Medical Journal, Vol. 2, No. 2585 (pp. 174-175).

#382 Dublin Daily Express, 20 February 1912.

#383 Calendars of Wills and Administrations 1912.

#384 The ‘Fiennes’ surname had actually died out in the late eighteenth century, by which time the descendants of William Fiennes (1582-1662) had become known as ‘Twisleton’ through the marriage of his eldest surviving granddaughter to a parliamentary colonel.

#385 The Vereker’s children were John, Jeffrey, Margaret and Brenda (Mills).

#386 Belfast News-Letter, 18 November 1893.

#387 Dublin Daily Express, 13 February 1895.

#388 ‘Selections from the Smuts Papers’, Volume 2, June 1902-May 1910, by W. K. Hancock, Jean van der Poel, p. 371.

#389 Freeman’s Journal, 7 August 1897.

#390 Magazine, June 7, 1902, "Domestic Announcements".

#391 Dublin Daily Express, 22 March 1907.

#392 Dublin Daily Express, 28 January 1911. He made his home at Kingswell House in Sadlierswells Townland in the South Riding of the county.

#393 ‘Iceberg Encountered’, Dundee Courier, 20 July 1912, p. 5.

#394 Birmingham Daily Post, 21 September 1914.

#395 Dublin Daily Express, 14 April 1916.

#396 Dublin Daily Express, 5 April 1916, Larne Times, 15 April 1916.

#397 PRO MEPO 2/10670. Casement’s Mauser now forms one of the exhibits in the Royal Ulster Constabulary Museum in Belfast. With thanks to Jeremiah Hurley, Edward Cooper, Paul Conroy, Stephen Mather and Paul Horan.

#398 Dublin Daily Express, 20 December 1916.

#399 The Catholic Press (Sydney), Thu 20 Nov 1919, p. 18.

#400 Weekly Freeman’s Journal, 24 November 1923.

#401 Belfast News-Letter, 6 May 1897.

Page 16 of 19 Number Note

#402 Letter from C. H. Dickinson, 4 Dec 1899, quoted in Records of the Old Haileyburians who fought in the War in South Africa, ‘The South African War Supplement’, p. 18. Information on ‘James Rogers (1873–1961)’ by Anthony Staunton, Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 11, (MUP), 1988.

#403 British Columbia, Surveyor General; Plan 5T30 "Sketch Map to show position of Trail from Bella Coola to Ootsa Lake with alternative routes." 1907. E.P. Colley, B.C.L.S. With thanks to Susan M. Hughes (American Pomeroy Historic Genealogical Association).

#404 Daily Colonist, 14 May 1905, p. 16.

#405 This line continued in service, latterly under B.C. Telephone Co., until the early l960s.

#406 Jay Sherwood, ‘The Ootsa Lake Odyssey - George and Else Seel - a Pioneer Life on the Headwaters of the Nechako Watershed (2017).

#407 June Wood, ‘Home to the Nechako: The River and the Land’ (Heritage House Publishing Co, 2013), p. 22.

#408 A copy of Gillepsie’s book is in the Library at the University of British Columbia.

#409 Historical and Biographical Committee, B.C.L.S. Proceedings, 1940. Arthur Weldon Harvey, PLS (1878–1905).

#410 The Daily Colonist (British Columbia), August 6, 1908, p. 7.

#411 ‘The other bereaved resident is Mrs. Cole Bowen, (Edward’s sister Florence), of Clyne House, North Road (Hythe) whose brother, Mr. (Edward) Colley, was a passenger in the unfortunate liner. Mr. Colley did not live at Hythe but three weeks ago today (Satur

#412 He prepaid £19, 11s, 9d for first class ticket number 17387, and then had to pay a final of £6 for his contract ticket number 5727. Presumably, because of season-changing.

#413 Helen C Candee, Sealed Orders, Colliers Magazine, May 1912.

#414 Ibid.

#415 Ibid.

#416 "Mr. V. Schjelderup, in Ranges 3 and 4 Coast District, continued the surveys made in this district during the past few years by the late Mr. E.P. Colley, who lost his life in the Titanic disaster." Detail courtesy of Jay Sherwood.

#417 Dublin Daily Express, 19 December 1887, p. 5.

#418 Dudley Colley, ‘Wheel Patter’ (Loft Publications, 2003), reprint, p. 2.

#419 Belfast Morning News, 21 March 1881.

#420 It was thought she trained at St Bartholomew’s Hospital, London, but they did not take probationer nurses under the age of 23. The hospital checked their records in June 2017 just in case she had slipped through.

#421 Dublin Daily Express, 27 February 1915, p. 9.

#422 ‘The first a series of meetings in connection with the distribution of certificates of honour, was held in the Carnegie Library, Clondalkin, on Friday evening. Col. Finlay, D.L., presided. During the evening the certificates of honour were distributed by Col. Finlay, assisted by his daughter, Mrs Colley, who has been untiring in her efforts in the interests of all those in her widely spread districts.’ (Weekly Freeman’s Journal, 1 April 1916, p. 5)

#423 xxxxx means something crossed out; (?) means the word was illegible.

#424 The Redemptorists renamed Faunagh ‘Marianella’ after the Neapolitan residence of Saint Alphonsus Maria de’ Liguori, the order’s founder. The house was demolished in the 1960s to make was for Marianella, a new Redemptorist seminary, which opened in 1969. I

#425 Adolf Angst may have inherited the business from an earlier generation. Bradshaw’s lists a M. Angst operating a hotel in Bordighera as early as 1863 when Adolf would have only been 16.

#426 Dudley Colley, ‘Wheel Patter’ (Loft Publications, 2003), reprint, p. 111.

Page 17 of 19 Number Note

#427 On his retirement from the Select Vestry of St. Johns in April 1929 the committee expressed ‘much regret on his retiring and thanked him for his help and generosity to Clondalkin parish’.

#428 Peamount Hospital was founded in 1912 by the Women’s National Health Association as a Tuberculosis (TB) Sanatorium. With the decline in the incidence of TB in later years, more accommodation became available for other services.

#429 Details courtesy of Downe House School magazine, 1925-1927.

#430 Details courtesy of Downe House School magazine, 1937.

#431 BARUMITE’S STYLISH WEDDING IRELAND Lefroy-Colley. Mr. Jeffery Ardern (Pat) Lefroy, elder son of Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Lefroy, of Orchard House, Pilton, Barnstaple, was married in Ireland on Wednesday in last week. Mr. G. F. Lefroy is, as is well-known, the principal of Messrs. Seldon and Lefroy (solicitors), of Bridge Chambers, Barnstaple, and is Clerk of the Lynton Urban District Council and the Georgeham Parish Council. He is a prominent Churchman. The Archbishop of Dublin officiated at the ceremony, which was observed in St. John’s Church, Clondalkin. There were many prominent Irish guests, and the wedding was very stylish. The bride was Miss Veronica Pomeroy Colley, second daughter of the late Mr. George Colley and of Mrs. Colley, and a grand-daughter of Colonel Finlay, of Corkagh House, Clondalkin, Co. Dublin. The Archbishop was assisted in the ceremony by Canon G. A. Chamberlain and the Rev. C. B. Price, of Clondalkin. The bride, who was given away by her brother, Mr. Dudley Colley, was charmingly attired in a gown of white satin, with long sleeves of tulle, embroidered in silver to match a silver halter collar. Her tulle veil was draped over a halo of white satin, and she carried a choice bouquet of white roses. She was attended by five bridesmaids, the Misses Noreen, Valerie and Rosemary Colley, her sisters, and Misses Phoebe Colley, cousin of the bridegroom, and Margaret Birdwood, cousin of the bride. Their dresses were of ice-blue lisse, and their halos were of blue and silver. [Mr. Timothy Lefroy, the bridegroom’s brother, was best man.] A wonderful touch of colour was added by their bouquets of delphiniums. The reception was held at Corkagh House, Clondalkin, among the guests being Mr and Mrs. G. F. Lefroy, Mrs. Dewar, Mr. and Mrs. B. St. G. Lefroy, Col. H. Lefroy, Mrs. Upton, Col. and Mrs. Birdwood, Mrs. Cameron, Mrs. Collingham, Mr. Webber, Col. and Mrs. Norris. Lord and Lady Holmpatrick, Miss Ainsworth, Lady and Miss Shaw, Gen. Sir George and Lady Franks, Mrs. and Miss Gaisford, Mr. and Mrs. Verschoyle, Mr. and Mrs. Cowper, Sir Haldane. and Lady Porter, Dr., Mrs., and Mr. E. Lennox, Capt. and Mrs. Daly, Mr. Everard, Provost of, Trinity College and Mrs. E. J. Gwynn, Mrs and Miss B. Gregg, Mrs. Synnott. Mrs. and the Misses’ Clarke, the Misses Hamilton, Mr., Mrs., and the Misses Hamilton. Subsequently the bride and bridegroom left for West Ireland, where the honeymoon is being spent, the bride travelling in a frock of dusty pink marocain, a brown marocain coat and a brown hat, trimmed with pink. North Devon Journal - Thursday 18 July 1935, p. 2

#432 Pat Lefroy also married again, his second wife being Christine May Smale, daughter of Frederick Charles Smale, MA, of Okehampton, Devon. After Christine’s death, he was married thirdly to Jean Armitage.

#433 Tessa White was at Downe House from 1954 to 1959.

#434 Leland Bardwell was the mother of the Donegal-based composer John McLachlan.

#435 Dublin Daily Express, 6 October 1916, p. 1.

#436 Details courtesy of Downe House School magazine, 1933, 1937.

#437 Bowen, Elizabeth, "Sunday Afternoon" (1942). The Bell Index. Paper 463.

#438 John Betjeman Letters: 1951-1984, edited by Candida Lycett Green (Methuen, 1995), p. 569.

#439 Northern Whig, 17 April 1939, p. 14.

#440 Charles Ritchie, ‘The Siren Years: A Canadian Diplomat Abroad 1937-1945’ (McClelland & Stewart, 2011).

#441 Dudley Colley, ‘Wheel Patter’ (Loft Publications, 2003), reprint, p. 2.

#442 Ibid, p. 37.

#443 ‘Thrills and Spills’ by Councillor Kieran McCarthy http://kieranmccarthy.ie/p=6575

Page 18 of 19 Number Note

#444 Northern Whig, 23 April 1938. The single seater Adler, which came third, was a well-known car but, for a number of years, it languished in the open on a Wicklow hillside until rescued by Christopher Hone with the late Tony Colley’s help. It subsequently changed hands a number of times and has now been fully restored. Barry Manders (Charlie’s son) told Christopher that his father achieved considerable success racing Adlers both here and abroad.

#445 The race was for less powerful cars, running parallel to the Irish Motor Derby, an international 1500 cc race, which was also held in County Cork that year.

#446 Northern Whig, 17 April 1939, p. 14.

#447 Glendenning, Victoria, ‘Love’s Civil War’, (Simon & Schuster, 2008), p. 79.

#448 Dudley appears at .39 at http://www.britishpathe.com/video/kelly-wins-enniskerry-hill-climb Joe Kelly is the man on the right as-you-look-at-it.

#449 Letter from Winifred Verscholye (Letts) to Alex Findlater’s aunt Doris, dated Jan 25. Beech Cottage, Killiney.

#450 Ken Besson married Delphine Peard and they bought a large house ‘Castlesize’ in Sallins, County Kildare. They had one daughter, Caroline. See ‘Kenneth George Besson’ by Mairtin Mac Con Iomaire, School of Hospitality Management and Tourism, Dublin Institute of Technology (2009).

#451 May Sarton, ‘A World of Light: Portraits and Celebrations’ (Open Road Media, 2014).

#452 On 15 May 1956, Elizabeth Bowen wrote to Charles Ritchie from Bowen’s Court, as quoted by Victoria Glendenning in ‘Love’s Civil War’, (Simon & Schuster, 2008), p. 234.

#453 Dudley’s executors were his son Finlay and his brother-in-law Gilbert Butler. In view of Finlay’s age, he was represented by William Fry, solicitor, while his cousin John Trench Croasdaile of Portrush, Co. Antrim, offered advice.

#454 Bairbre O’Hogan, who has done some research on Winnifred Letts, is the niece of Jeffry Lefroy’s former nanny, Maureen Daly (née Lynch), who was in turn recommended to the then Veronica Lefroy by Winnie herself. As Laetitia Lefroy recalls: ‘We grew up with Winnie Letts poems, with drawings on our bedroom walls in Yorkshire. ‘The dandelion lights its spark’, ‘To a May Baby’ (Jeffry was a May baby; the poem is dedicated to Peter John Dobbs) ‘Tim, an Irish Terrier’ etc.’ The illustrations were by Kathleen Verschoyle, Winnie’s stepdaughter. It is notable that her Kent home at The Old Vicarage, Ospringe, Faversham, was near the old Grueber gunpowder mills. Thanks also to Winifred’s great-niece Oriana Conner (Manch House, Ballineen, Co. Cork) for granting permission to include two Winifred Letts poems here.

#455 Although he is often described as ‘Sir John Galvin’, his title was, in fact, Tan Sri, the second-most senior federal title in Malyasia, which was awarded to him by the new independent state of Malaysia in circa 1963.

#456 Details kindly provided by David Cotter.

#457 Glendenning, Victoria, ‘Love’s Civil War’, (Simon & Schuster, 2008), p. 386. Letter dated 7 May 1962. Elizabeth refers to Kilmatead as the ‘former dower house of Corkagh’ but Laetitia Lefroy states that people were always corrected when they referred to it as the dower house. It was, advises Laetitia, Little Corkagh.

#458 During the 1990s, John Jackson, a professional geologist, led a campaign to have the National Museum of Ireland’s Folklife and Geology Collections transferred to Corkagh Demesne. Initially in storage at the Royal Hospital Kilmainham, the two collections were then being kept at St Conleth’s Reformatory School in Daingean, County Offaly. In due course, the Irish government invited presentations from a range of bodies, such as Shannon Heritage and Mayo County Council, to form a partnership to house the Folklife Collections. Ultimately Mayo won and, in 2001, the Folklife division moved to its present home in the Museum of Country Life at Turlough Park House outside Castlebar. Beggars Bush Barracks now houses the stored geology and the wider Natural History collections.

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