Showing posts with label Burke-Browne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Burke-Browne. Show all posts

Saturday, June 3, 2017

Bessie Reilly's Husband ~ Edmund Burke Browne




In about 1830, after years of solicitations from local businessmen, the Bank of Ireland finally opened a branch in Ennistymon.


Instead of following the lead of other banks, the Bank of Ireland had been slow in expanding to cities and towns far from Dublin.


One of the reasons for their delay was finding qualified bank managers to run these offices.

According to Philip Ollerenshaw in Banking in Nineteenth-century Ireland, the Bank of Ireland demanded that its branch managers deposit at least £10,000, as security, in Government or Bank stock together with an additional £10,000. Sometimes twice this sum was required.


It is hardly surprising that the Bank occasionally had trouble finding men able to meet these stringent requirements.

So, it was a happy day in Ennistymon when the Bank of Ireland finally opened its doors for business on Parliament Street.
Bank of Ireland, Parliament Street

The future son-in-law of our great great grandfather, Edmund Burke-Browne, was one of Ennistymon’s first managers.


We do not know exactly what year he started his position but it was before 1860.


As a prominent businessman in town, P.E. Reilly must have fostered a relationship with the 30-something unmarried gentry Banker……



Edmund Burke-Browne (1823-1891) was the fourth child and second son of Anne (Nancy) O’Grady (1789-1872) and Thomas Burke-Browne (1779-1870) of Castlepark House in Kilmihil.


The Burke-Brownes descend from the Tribes of Galway.


The Tribes were fourteen merchant families who dominated the political, commercial, and social life of the city of Galway up until the 1850s. They include the families of Browne and Blake ~ both of whom are in the Burke-Browne Family Tree.

More than likely, P.E. must have been thrilled with Bessie's choice of husband (if it were her choice) because the Burke-Browne Family was pure gentry class. 

The Browne Family Seat ~ Castlepark House ~ is located in Kilmihil, Tulla. 
Castlepark House, Kilmihil

Castlepark House is described as a 19th century, two story, three bay home. Its front door has side lights and a central fan on top which faces Cahermurphy Lough (lake).


The ground floor corners at the back of the house are rounded so coaches would not get caught as they passed by the rear of the house.

What I love best about this description from Hugh Weir’s Houses of Clare: “The initials E.B.B. are carved on the doors.” 

From Houses of Clare by Hugh Weir

Tragically, in 1850, Edmund’s older brother, Patrick died.

He was struck by lightning while sitting in a friend’s house near the fire and having a smoke.
Newspaper Account of Patrick's Death

There were three other Burke-Browne children in the family: two daughters and another son named William.


Marcella (1818-1846) was the first born and married William O’Brien when she was 17 years old in 1834.


They had four children but when she died suddenly at 30 years of age, William ~ an unsuccessful farmer ~ could not cope.


Leaving his youngest daughter, Attie, with his mother-in-law, he took the older three with him to America.


Attie never saw her family again.


A delicate child, Attie never went to school nor had any sort of systemic education yet she became a published poet and novelist.


She was a regular contributor to a periodical called “Irish Monthly” but had trouble breaking into the English market.


In 1863, Attie moved in with her Aunt Fanny (Edmund's sister) at Kildysart House and rarely left this beautiful spot overlooking the Shannon and Fergus Rivers.

She died in 1863.

In New York, Attie’s brother, William Mahon, joined the 88th Infantry Regiment during the Civil War and served gallantly at the Battle of Bull Run.


He mustered out in 1863 as a Captain at the age of 21.

Settling in the San Francisco area, William became the Manager of the Hibernia & Dime Savings Bank.

Years later, as he lay dying, he told those with him ~ if he could only sit on the bank of the river in the “old land” where he had fished as a boy, he knew he would recover.

Edmund’s second sister was Frances ~ Fanny (1820-1890).

In 1843, she married the manager of the Kilrush branch of the Bank of Ireland, James O’Brien, Esq.

James was the son of the manager of the Ennis branch of the Bank, Terence O’Brien, Esq.

When Terence retired in 1848, guess who succeeded him as Bank Manager in Ennis?


John Harnett Milward

John Harnett Milward ~ our great great grandfather!

Do you see the social circle that had developed with these bankers?

Edmund Burke-Browne married P E’s daughter, Bessie Reilly at the Chapel of Ennistymon on November 23, 1860.

Chapel of Ennistymon

When they wed, Bessie was 27 and Edmund was 37.

The newlyweds moved into Castlepark House and started their family of seven daughters right away.





UPDATE: June 9, 2017

New information has just surfaced which totally negates my charming introduction to this essay.

The Archivist of the Royal Bank of Scotland (which acquired the National Bank of Ireland in 1966) graciously responded to my recent inquiry for the career information of several of our ancestors.

Evidently, the Ennistymon branch of the National Bank did not open in the 1830s but in 1871.

AND ~ Edmund Burke-Browne NEVER worked for the National Bank.... At least, she could locate no records for him.

I am sorry for the misinformation..... I distinctly remember Father Edmund O'Keefe telling me this story in 1999 when we were in Ireland at Tom McCormick's home.

In my research of the newspaper archives, I have not discovered any connection between the Bank and EBB....... or anything indicating that he held a job.

Edmund Burke Browne must have been PURE gentry ~  I have not seen any mention of his having a "land agent", either.....

He obviously lived off his land and did not need an "outside" job.

I still don't know how he and Bessie Reilly met nor how they even knew each other.

Research will continue!


EPILOGUE 

History gives a nation its bearing on what it is and how its people are affected by what has happened in the past. 

Its kings and queens, its wars - with victories and defeats - these all mold a nation’s culture into the way it views itself in the present. 

In the same way, a family history presents how a family has survived and come to terms with the great social and cultural experiences of the ages.

We hope these stories will give each member of our family a foundation and, in some small way, explain how we came to be what we are today.

Hopefully, through these vignettes, our future generations will gain a knowledge of the energy and dynamism, the loves and hates, the errors and mistakes, the victories and failures, the struggles and successes that make us what we are.

Our family history presents a fascinating read - and, hopefully, some lessons to be learned in the process.




Friday, May 5, 2017

Moher Lodge



Patrick Edward Reilly was born in Ireland in 1799. We do not know where in Ireland he was born nor do we know anything about his family.


In 1829, he leased Moher Lodge and its surrounding 72 acres from Col Francis MacNamara for £60 a year.                  



 Located in North Kineilty, Moher Lodge is situated off a minor road, West of St Brigid's Well.                     


There are holy wells all over Ireland, but St. Brigid's Well in Liscannor is one of the most popular.                    

St Brigid’s Well is housed in an open stone house or grotto that is accessible through steep paths and old stairs.        


Inside the entrance to the Well with its running water in the back.

     
The Well attracts visitors year round and does not lock nor close its doors at night. Thousands of mementos, rosaries, prayers and pieces of clothing have been left in the stone grotto of the Well.



                           Close-up of some of the mementos left by previous pilgrims.  


The Holy Well of St Brigid at Liscannor   

 It is tradition for pilgrims to take a sip of the Well's Waters before leaving  




Because it has always been hallowed since time immemorial and because of its proximity to Moher Lodge, I am sure our ancestors visited this Holy Well many many times. 

We thought of them often during our recent visit.    

Here is an entry for Moher Lodge from 1855:




Although he gets some facts wrong, published in 1999, Houses of Clare by Hugh Weir mentions Moher Lodge. Here is his entry:              



 As you can see, Weir has the dates wrong and names P.E. "Patrick J" O'Reilly in his entry.  




In 1864, P.E. Reilly described Moher Lodge in a real estate advert.           




In his own words:       

 “The Dwelling-house contains a Parlour, Drawing-room and Study, FIVE Bedrooms, Dairy, Pantry, Laundry and store-room and a Good Kitchen, with New Cooking Range and a continuous flow of water from the cistern to boiler & kitchen, a water closet, force pump with a never-ending supply of water to cistern, a Coach House, a Stable for two horses, all enclosed in a lock-up yard.”       


Here is the entry for Moher Lodge in Clare County Development Plan 2011 - 2017: Volume 4 - Record Of Protected Structure.  




Built in two phases, Moher Lodge originally (circa 1800) consisted of a single story, 3 Bay, gable-ended cottage with a stone slate roof and an impressive  roof system.

In 1840 ~ while P.E. and Elizabeth were raising their family at Moher Lodge ~  a two-story, gabled-ended extension was added to the original cottage.   

Northwest of the house, a range of roofless outbuildings still survived in 2011 and a single, stone roofed outbuilding stood north of the Lodge.        

 However in 2011, Moher Lodge was described as in “derelict" condition.        

THAT was in 2011.    

But, here it is in 2014!      


Moher Lodge Today       


In 2012, when Michael Moroney and Michelle Riordan first laid eyes on the 5 buildings that make up Moher Lodge, they knew that their lives would be changed forever.       

Many years prior to that moment, they had dreamed of owning their own world class retreat center and to be able to do what they passionately believe in.       

As soon as they saw it, they knew Moher Lodge was perfect to fulfill their dream.   They purchased the property for £218,000.00.     


The Cliffs of Moher Retreat Center was born!                 

Michael & Michelle have done a fantastic job in restoring our ancestral home to its former glory ~ and probably beyond!    

During our recent visit to Ireland, they invited us to spend the night at the Lodge, as their guests!   

What an awesome opportunity to actually wake up in a home that figures so prominently in our family history!

We were thrilled beyond belief and spent every second walking the trails and paths around the Lodge.  

 Misty Morning A Misty Early Morning Walk at Moher Lodge   


Michelle & Michael graciously offered us their "best room" where they had actually stayed during the Lodge's renovations.


A corner room, the views from these windows had not changed much in 200 years.             



Late afternoon mist rolling in from the Cliffs .....outside our window ..               




On our early morning walk along the paths and trails surrounding Moher Lodge          



Those houses in the distance are second homes built during the Celtic Tiger and now stand mostly empty.  Otherwise ~ like that stone wall ~ this landscape remains timeless.    


 As I mentioned, our hosts have done such respectful restoration of Moher Lodge.


Main Lounge at Cliffs of Moher Retreat Center

Installing state-of-the-art bathrooms, kitchens, windows, etc, yet  still incorporating the Lodge's unique features into this modern design.


7

Original Moher Stone   



Where applicable, they have exposed the original Moher Stone Walls ~ keeping the original Arches and Hearths...... just as in our ancestors' time.             




                                        Beautiful Moher Stone Walls Throughout the Lodge        



These Hearths were used by our ancestors!


As our day wore on, the weather on the Cliffs took a turn ~ windy, cold, misty, foggy.......    


Jim down at the Beach of the Cliffs below Moher Lodge     



This mossy stone wall down at the beach has been standing since the 18th century.         



The stream running behind this ancient stone wall had just left the Ennistymon Cascades on its trek to the Sea.     


Channeling my "French Lieutenants' Wife" as we walked the misty "moors".  


It was so easy to feel at home with our hostess, Michelle ~ such a warm gracious person. We have already made arrangements to host her family at the OBO in a few months.


         
Three Neighbors We Met Walking Moher Lodge    



Our great great grandparents, Elizabeth Fleury and Patrick Edward Reilly lived at Moher Lodge for over thirty years from 1829 until about 1864.      

 At the time, Moher Lodge was considered one of the "finest" homes in the area.          


                                                                    Moher Lodge Today  



Set within walking distance of the world famous Cliffs of Moher, the aura surrounding its beauty is still apparent over 150 years since our ancestors lived there.    

As was customary at the time, Patrick Edward farmed its 72 acres and probably raised short-horned cattle there.

P.E. is responsible for bringing these hearty cattle to the Burren.      

His five children were all born and raised at Moher Lodge.      

Bessie (1833-1881)
Hannah "Nannie" (1835-1911)
Edward (1836-1890)
Mary (1837-1894)
Henry Patrick (1838-1894)        

Only Bessie and Henry married.      

Bessie married Edmund Burke-Browne in 1860.  They had seven daughters.          

Henry, our great grandfather, married Mary Frances Julia Milward in 1872.        

They had only one surviving child - a son named Patrick Henry, our grandfather.      

It is such an awesome feeling knowing that this home ~ where our ancestors were born and lived for  over thirty years ~ is in such good hands.      

Michelle & Michael are the perfect stewards of our ancestral home and the Cliffs of Moher Retreat Center is its perfect reincarnation.            






EPILOGUE 

History gives a nation its bearing on what it is and how its people are affected by what has happened in the past. 

Its kings and queens, its wars - with victories and defeats - these all mold a nation’s culture into the way it views itself in the present. 

In the same way, a family history presents how a family has survived and come to terms with the great social and cultural experiences of the ages.

We hope these stories will give each member of our family a foundation and, in some small way, explain how we came to be what we are today.

Hopefully, through these vignettes, our future generations will gain a knowledge of the energy and dynamism, the loves and hates, the errors and mistakes, the victories and failures, the struggles and successes that make us what we are.

Our family history presents a fascinating read - and, hopefully, some lessons to be learned in the process.