stillorgan to adelaide and back - part i michael fitzgerald
TRANSCRIPT
© M. J. Fitzgerald 2017
Stillorgan to Adelaide and Back - Part I
Michael Fitzgerald
Morning Song1
A tapestry is distinct in space and time in that it is constructed by weaving separate
individual “horizontal” warp threads into continuous “vertical” weft threads. In the
following, the “horizontal” threads are three, initially distinct, well known 19th
Century Dublin families, while the vertical threads represent time.
The Darley and Guinness Families
The Guinness dynasty had its genesis when Richard Guinness, an Anglo-Irish rent
collector, was born in 1690.2 Within two generations connections to the dynastic
Darley, Hoare and Newenham families had been established by marriages.
From at least the 1660s the Darley family were connected with the building trade,
particularly with stone-cutting. The family which flourished in Dublin in the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries descended from Henry Darley, Co. Down,
who, with his sons Moses, Arthur and Hugh held extensive leases of quarries in
and near Newtownards.
Moses was the first of the family to settle in Dublin. By the 1750s the family had
quarrying interests further south - granite and limestone from their quarries at
Golden Hill, Co. Wicklow, and Ardbraccan, Co. Meath, were used for the West
Front of Trinity College built under Hugh’s supervision.3
George Darley, Arthur’s son, who had been born in 1731 in Newtownards, married
Jane Johnstone, probably in Dublin, in 1755 and reputedly had 17 children.4 Jane
and George’s children included Mary Catherine, Arthur, Hill and Henry. There are
at least six persons named Henry Darley mentioned below, which can cause
considerable confusion.
A common practice among many families of the time was to encourage the
marriage of cousins in order to safeguard the family. In 1771, Hugh’s daughter,
Sarah Darley, married Henry Darley, the son of Moses. Another such link was
forged when Hugh’s granddaughter, Mary Darley, married Arthur’s grandson,
Arthur Darley, in about 1794. “Circa 1795 Ireland” covers many events including
this marriage and the birth of seven children belonging to the newly linked
branches, together with that of a spouse. The family members consisted of three
siblings, a boy and twin girls, together with four cousins from four other families.
© M. J. Fitzgerald 2017
Repetitive marriages between families were also encouraged for similar reasons.
The 1817 marriage between Henry Darley and Sarah Guinness, for example,
illustrates the complex relationships between the Darley and Guinness families –
Mary Catharine née Darley Guinness was both Henry Darley’s aunt and his
mother-in-law. In the 84 year period between 1763 and 1857 there were at least 6
similar marriages.
In 1793, prior to his 1794 marriage to his second cousin, Mary Darley, Arthur
Darley was living in Cavendish Row about 1km north east of Trinity College.. He
has been described as a grocer who, after about 1815, enjoyed independent means
while Mary’s father, John, was noted as a collector of customs.5
© M. J. Fitzgerald 2017
Mary Darley painted by her son William Henry Darley– presumably brought to Adelaide by
her daughter, Mary Louisa Newenham.
Mary and Arthur had three children in Dublin, George early in 1795 and twin
sisters, Mary Louisa and Anna Maria, later in the same year, prior to leaving for
America. While Mary and Arthur were away, the children lived with their paternal
grandparents, George and Jane, at Springfield in The Scalp, a valley north of
Kilternan.6 Although not mentioned further, their step-cousin, Henry George
Darley, was also born in 1796.7 His younger sister, Maria Margaret, married the Rt.
Hon. Lord Charles Allanson-Winn, 3rd Baron Headley, in 1841.8
Springfield, Kilternan, embedded in a new building, 2013
9
While Mary and Arthur were in America, John (1797), William Henry (1798) and
Charles (1800) were born. On their return, Henry Bruyster (1802) and Eleanor
Frances followed. Various dates have been suggested for when Anna, Mary and
George left Springfield with one author suggesting that George, at least, remained
there until he was ten i.e. 1805. In 1807 the family were living in Johnston’s Place,
Dublin, NW of St. Stephen’s Green.10
In February 1806, when Jane died, she was described as being of Stillorgan,
suggesting that by then she and George were living with their son Henry. By May,
Springfield was advertised for lease and had certainly been sold by July 1808.11 At
one stage young George described Springfield as “the unforgettable home of my
childhood”. In 1839 he noted that the brightest sun that ever shone upon me broke
© M. J. Fitzgerald 2017
over Ballybetagh mountains.12 In later years he often returned to visit his relatives
in Stillorgan.
George entered Trinity College in 1815. He was listed as having been born in
Dublin, the son of Arthur, who was described as a Gentleman of Blackrock, co.
Dublin, Esquire. The same year, his mother benefitted under her mother’s will.
George graduated B.A. in 1820.13
Henry Darley (1770 – 1856) as painted by his nephew, William Henry14
By 1794 Arthur’s brother, Henry, was living in Stillorgan, where he was elected
Churchwarden for 1794-5 and 1795-6.15 Henry’s son, also Henry, was born in
1795. The family lived in The Grange from an uncertain date. A Henry Darley was
also a Churchwarden in 1828 and 1833.
The Grange – facing south west.
In February 1802 Henry advertised
Stillorgan Brewery.
The Public are hereby respectfully informed they can be supplied with Ale and
Table Beer of very superior quality, made from Malt manufactured by the
Proprietor, and the best Hops.
Orders to H. Darley, at the Brewery.
In 1805 he noted that he had, at considerable expense, rebuilt the brewery on an
improved and extended plan – the brewery had been in existence since at least
© M. J. Fitzgerald 2017
1780 when it was owned by Mr. Metcalf.16 In 1807 he advertised that, for a fee, he
was not only able to deliver various products from the brewery including cider, but
also grocery goods from Arthur’s shop in Johnson Street in Dublin.17
When Jane died in 1806, she was buried in St. Brigid’s Churchyard. Her son, Hill,
died the next year and was buried with her, while his father joined them in 1813.
Henry’s sister, Mary Catherine, had married Richard Guinness in 1783. Their
daughter Olivia was born in c. 1795 and so was one c.1795 group. Henry’s son,
Henry, entered Trinity on 7 June 1813 - two years before his cousin George, his
father was described as a Brewer.
Olivia died in 1797 and by 1816 the family had moved to Stillorgan when her
brother, Robert, was appointed churchwarden at St. Brigid’s for 1816-17. Her
sister, Mary, married George Hill in St. Brigid’s - their son was named Richard
Guinness Hill. In 1817, the year before he graduated, Olivia’s sister, Sarah,
married young Henry, in St. Peter’s Church, Dublin with Robert Guinness and
George Hill as witnesses.18
When Richard Guinness died in 1829 he was buried with Jane, Hill and George
Darley, as was Robert’s wife, Mary Anne née Seymour Guinness, in 1837. In 1846
Richard’s daughter, Mary, who had married George Hill, was also buried there.
Two years later, Richard’s granddaughter, Mary Catherine, married the barrister
and poet, Samuel Ferguson, who was knighted in 1878.19
The Darley Grave, St. Brigid’s Churchyard, 201620
The Newenham and Other Families
The other c. 1795 person came onto the scene in 1815 when Arthur and Mary’s
daughter, Mary Louisa Darley, married Charles Burton Newenham, the grandson
of Sir Edward Worth and Lady Grace Anna née Burton Newenham. Sir Edward
was a well known Irish Politician – his son, William Thomas, Charles’s father, had
graduated B.A. from Trinity College in 1789 and was admitted to the Irish Bar in
1790.21
© M. J. Fitzgerald 2017
Sir Charles Burton, an Alderman and Lord Mayor of Dublin, was knighted in 1749.
He married Margaret, eldest daughter of Richard Meredyth, Esq., of Shrowland,
County Kildare - they had a son and five daughters, one of whom, Grace Anna,
married Sir Edward Worth Newenham. Burton was used as a given name for at
least six generations in the Newenham family.
Samuel, the brother of Sir Charles, was elected MP for the Sligo Borough in 1713
and for Dublin Borough in 1727. His wife, Anne Campbell of Dublin died in
October 1714 when she fell from a scaffold near Westminster Abbey during the
coronation of King George I.22
Sir Charles’s sister, Grace, married Edward Hoare, and their son, Edward, married
Sarah Worth, aunt to Sir Edward Newenham. Another of Sir Charles’s sisters,
Elizabeth, married Richard Hoare; his brother, Robert and wife, Jane née
Newenham, Sir Edward’s aunt, were the grandparents of Rev William Deane
Hoare who successively married Louisa Guinness and Elizabeth Darley, Mary
Louisa’s third cousin.23 Louisa, the daughter of Sir Arthur and Olivia née
Whitmore Guinness, was the cousin of Richard Guinness, the husband of George
and Jane Darley’s daughter, Mary Catherine.
Benjamin Burton, the father of Sir Charles and his siblings, and sometime Lord
Mayor of Dublin, bought the ancestral family home, near Palatine in co. Carlow in
1712 and named it Burton Hall - it was demolished in 1930. Burton Hall in
Stillorgan was built for Samuel in 1731, presumably for him to be closer to Dublin.
On leaving school, Robert Rundell Guinness, the son of Richard and Mary
Catherine, was apprenticed to Henry Darley. In 1822 he married Mary Anne
Seymour in Dublin. When their daughter Mary Catherine, was baptised in St.
Brigid’s Church in 1823, they were living in Waltersland, across Brewery Road
from The Grange.24 Robert purchased the leasehold of The Farm across the Bray
© M. J. Fitzgerald 2017
Road from The Grange in 1825.25 Their first son, Richard Seymour Guinness, was
born in 1826 and Henry in 1829 - both were baptised in St. Brigid’s.
Belmont School 1850
When Dr. Smyth’s Select Boarding and Day School was transferred from Lower
Dominick Street, north of the river in Dublin, to Belmont House on the Bray Road
in Stillorgan in August 1833, Richard Seymour Guinness was among the new
students.26 From then until the school closed in 1854, at least twelve ‘Darley-
Guinness cousins’ were pupils at the school. Robert was soon followed by his
brother Henry, Richard Dixon and John Ball.27 Richard and Henry’s mother died
just six months after Henry enrolled. Of the other ‘cousins’, George Cobbe
Newenham was later to be an ordained Clerk in Holy Orders in South Australia.
Henry Darley, his wife, Maria Louisa, and their children, Frederick and Olivia, had
moved from Dublin to Beaufield, Stillorgan, by January 1834 when Olivia was
baptized in St. Brigid’s; George Newenham’s brother, Edward, was baptised there
3 months later. Frederick, who was later to be the Chief Justice and Lieutenant
Governor of New South Wales, entered the school in 184028
All of the ‘cousins’ gained highly commendable results but Henry Guinness’s
stood out from the rest. At the end of 1842 he was awarded an Academic
Exhibition29 and in October 1844 the following appeared:
Henry Guinness obtained the first Hebrew premium in entrance examinations at
Trinity College, Dublin on Friday. There were 120 candidates under examination
in the hall.30
Henry and his second cousin, Arthur Hart Guinness, entered Trinity College in
1844 and in the Examinations in 1845 they both gained Honours in Classics.31
They graduated B.A. in 1849.32 In 1850 Henry became a partner in the banking
firm founded by his father and John Ross Mahon.33
© M. J. Fitzgerald 2017
Approximate Locations
A Abilene (Dixon), B Belmont (Newenham), BH Burton Hall, BS Belmont School,
SB St. Brigid’s Church and Beaufield (Henry Darley/Maria West),
TF The Farm (Robert Guinness), TB The Brewery,
TG The Grange (Henry Darley)
Robert Rundell married Mary Anne Moore, in Leskinfare Church County Wexford
in 184034 and they had 7 children. Henry’s elder brother, Richard, married their
third cousin, Elizabeth Jane Susanna Darley, in July 1857, four months after his
father died, while Henry married Emmelina Brown, in February1858. Like their
parents, both the sons married in St. Peter’s Church. Their father was buried in St.
Brigid’s churchyard as was their mother, step-mother and sister.
Burton Hall was unsuccessfully offered for sale in 1857 and 1858.35 Henry and
Emmelina’s son, Henry Seymour, was born in The Hall in November 1858. His
father leased Burton Hall from Anthony Blagrave in 1859 and purchased it in
1863. The next year The Farm was renamed Farmleigh - it was demolished in
1971.36 Henry and Emmelina lived their whole lives in Burton Hall – Henry dying
in 1893 and Emmelina in 1906.37
Henry Seymour Guinness, after working in India for many years, was appointed
High Sheriff of County Dublin in 1899 and married Mary Middleton Bainbridge in
London in 1900. 38 Between 1901 and 1911 he had a second section and a new
entrance added to the Hall. In 1915 he was the Rector’s Churchwarden for St.
Brigid’s.39
On 24 March 1923, anti-Treaty republicans tried unsuccessfully to burn down the
Hall.40 Some time later, Mary and their four daughters left for England. The Hall
was subsequently sold and when he retired, Henry joined his wife in England. He
© M. J. Fitzgerald 2017
died in 1945 and his body was brought back to Stillorgan to be buried with his
parents in St. Bridgid’s Churchyard.41 The Hall is now owned by The St John of
God Hospitaller Group.
Burton Hall – south eastern view -2016
42
Between 1818 and 1830, 13 Darley “cousins”, including Mary Louisa’s four
brothers - George, William Henry, Charles Frederick M.A., and Henry Bruyster
graduated from Trinity College. Other “cousins” included future brothers-in-law
Rev. John Darley, subsequent Rector of Arboe, and Rt. Rev. John Richard Darley,
sometime Bishop of Kilmore, whose father was also noted as a Brewer.
Mary and Charles Newenham married in 1815, Charles having been an assistant
clerk in the Ordnance Department since at least 1812.43 They had nine children;
two of them, daughters, died as young children. At this time the family lived in the
Pigeon Fort while the Department was in the Lower-Yard of Dublin Castle.44
In November 1818, a number of gentlemen formed a company to supply the
Dublin Market with fresh fish. Subscribers to the scheme included Charles and
Leonard Thornhill, both clerks in the Ordnance Department. Other subscribers
included uncle and nephew, Henry Darley and Robert Guinness45 who, until 1831,
were partners in the Stillorgan Brewery.
When Charles and Mary’s daughter Henrietta was baptized in the Church of St.
Matthew on 29 April 1827, the family address was listed as the Pigeon House. The
Treble Almanac of 1829 placed Charles in the Lower Castle Yard. Mary’s parents
were living in Cumberland Street South, by at least 182846.
In 1827 Charles’s parents, his sister Ann, and brother John, moved to two cottages
in Monkstown which had been leased for 100 years. When Sir Edward
Newenham was buried in the Newenham vault in St. Peter’s churchyard, Dublin,
in 1814, he was described as being of Blackrock.47
© M. J. Fitzgerald 2017
In March 1829 Charles leased 49 Westland Row, for a term of 999 years.48
Westland Row is parallel to, and just west of, Cumberland Street South. The
property had been advertised for sale some twelve months earlier:
Westland row, Merrion square, to be let in perpetuity, the whole, or in such lots as
may suit, …… on the east side of Westland row ….49
Westland Row looking south, post April 1833
The pair of doors to the east of the horses and carriage are Numbers 50 and 49, with 49 to
the south.
Westland Row September 201750
Noon in the Forrest51
Charles’s mother died in Monkstown in February 1830.52 In the same month when
Mary Louisa’s sister, Eleanor Frances [Fanny], wrote to their brother George, she
and their parents had moved around the corner from Cumberland Street South and
Westland Row to live with their cousin, the barrister Richard Samuel Guinness, at
No. 5 Kildare Street.53 Fanny and her mother, Mary, were both semi-invalids at the
time.54 Richard, together with his brother Robert, had set up a small land agency
and banking business at that address.55
© M. J. Fitzgerald 2017
Fanny’s cousin, Henry Darley, graduated B.A. from Trinity in 1818 and M.A.,
M.B. in 182556 - he was described as Henry Darley M.D. by at least 1829.
57 From
at least 1835 to 1837 he was attached to the Richmond Hospital School of
Medicine as Consulting Accoucheur.58 He and his wife, Sarah née Guinness,
Richard’s sister, were living next door in No. 7 illustrative of the close relationship
between the Darley and Guinness families.59
The following notice appeared in the press on 18 December 1830: In Westland
row, on the 15th instant, Henrietta Elisabeth, aged four years, fourth daughter of
C. B. Newenham. Esq.60
In early to mid 1831 news of a proposed railway between Kingstown and Dublin,
to commence from Westland Row and extend to the foot of the Kingstown-hill, or
the Little Harbour was current. Royal assent for the project was granted in
September 1831.61 From February 1832, notices also appeared noting the
construction of a new Chapel in Westland Row to serve the united Catholic
Parishes of St. Andrew, St. Peter, St. Mark, and St. Ann. The foundation stone was
laid on April 30. The following month, tenders were called for the supply of
stones, lime and sand.62
Fanny died in Torquay, England, in December 183263 and the next year the
following appeared: October 23, in Kildare-street, aged 65 years, Mary, the wife of
Arthur Darley, deeply regretted by all who knew her.64 Some time after this, Arthur
moved to Movilla House, Co. Wexford to property owned by Richard Guinness,
where he died in 1845 aged 78.65
The failure of the potato crops, together with the cholera, which wrecked havoc in
Dublin in the early years of the decade, and may have been the cause of Henrietta’s
death, no doubt led to fear for the safety of Anna (nearly 5), and Frances (about 2).
On May 1 1832, one newspaper reported that this fatal visitation continues its
ravages amongst us.66 Added to this, the prospect of the construction of the railway
© M. J. Fitzgerald 2017
station ‘up against’ their southern wall and a church just some 50m further away,
with the attendant demolition, noise, dust and pollution, must have seemed
overwhelming. A decision to move seemed inevitable – the only thing remaining
was when and where. As the summer of 1832 approached the choice of their new
home had fallen on Stillorgan, some eight miles to the south.
Part two of this article will set out how these families continued to weave their
tapestry as they progresses to Australia and back.
Many thanks are due to Karen D’Alton for extensive help with data.
MICHAEL FITZGERALD LIVES in Adelaide, South Australia. He worked for
thirty years at Mercedes College which is located on one third of the property
originally owned by Charles Burton Newenham. The suburb is named
‘Springfield’ from the Newenham home. Charles had honoured Mary Louisa née
Darley’s childhood home by calling their home Springfield House. Michael is a
graduate of the Universities of Sydney and Adelaide.
References
Abbott, C. C., 1967. The Life and Letters of George Darley Poet and Critic.
Clarendon Press, Oxford. 285pp.
Burtchaell, G.D. and Ulick, T., 1935. Alumni Dublinenses A register of the
Students, graduates, Professors and Provosts of Trinity College in the University of
Dublin (1593 – 1860). Alex, Thom & Co., Ltd., Dublin, 904pp.
Hoare, E., 1883. Some account of the Early History and Genealogy With Pedigrees
From 1330, Unbroken To The Present Time, of the Families of Hore and Hoare
with all their Branches interspersed throughout with anecdotes, and incidents in the
lives of many of the principal persons mentioned. Alfred Russell Smith, Soho
Square, London, England. 70pp.
Guinness, M., The Guinness Spirit Brewers and Bankers Miisters and Missionaries
Hodder and Stoughton London 525pp.
Mullally, F., 1981. The Silver Salver. The Story of the Guinness Family. Granada
Publishing Limited, Frogmore, St. Albans, Heerts AL2 2NF, England. 255pp.
Ingamells, John, 1997. A dictionary of British and Irish travellers in Italy, 1701-
1800. Yale University Press, 1200pp.
Refaussé, R. (ed.) 1994. The Register of the parish of St. Thomas, Dublin 1750 to
1791. Colour Books Ltd., Dublin, Ireland. 162 pp.
© M. J. Fitzgerald 2017
Streatfeild, R. A. 1904, Selections from the Poems of George Darley, London,
Methuen and Co, Essex Street, London. 180 pp.
1 Some of the Headings are the titles of Poems by George Darley - Streatfeild pg.
80 2 Mullally pg. vii
3 http://www.dia.ie/architects/view/1391/DARLEYFAMILY%2A
4 https://www.ria.ie/sites/default/files/darley_collection_descriptive_catalogue.pdf
5 http://oxfordindex.oup.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/7151 Oxford Dictionary of
National Biography, Abbott pg. 4 6 http://www.blennerhassettfamilytree.com/pages/BH45_BH_Boucicault_BOU.pdf
7 https://churchrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/display-
pdf.jsp?pdfName=d-298-1-1-094 8 Dublin Morning Register, 5 July 1841
9 Joyce Tunstead 23 May 2013
10 Abbott pg. 4
11 Saunders News-Letter Dublin 10 May 1806, 14 May 1806, 16 July 1808, 19 July
1808, 21 July 1808, St. Brigid’s Records 12 Abbott pgs. 5, 215, Streatfeild pg. ix
13 Abbott pg. 4, Burtchaell and Ulick pg. 211
14 Abbott facing pg. 214
15 St. Brigid’s Records.
16 Saunders's News-Letter 4 April 1780 pg. 2, 2 Feb 1802 pg. 2, 23 Feb 1805 pg. 1
17 Saunders's News-Letter 20 May 1807 pg. 1, 29 May 1807 pg. 1
18 https://churchrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/details/c5cfdc0567672
19 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Ferguson
20 Author 24 August 2016
21 Burtchaell and Ulick pg. 617
22 Ingamells 1997
23 Hoare pg. 30
24 St. Brigid’s Records
25 Guinness pg. 122
26 Dublin Evening Mail 14 August 1833 pg. 1, Dublin Evening Packet and
Correspondent 22 August 1833 pg. 1, 24 August 1833 pg. 1, 29 August 1833 pg. 2,
31 August 1833 pg. 1, 3 September 1833 pg. 1 27 Dublin Evening Packet and Correspondent 7 July 1836 pg. 1
28 Dublin Evening Mail 22 April 1840 pg. 1, Dublin Evening Packet and
Correspondent 25 April 1840 pg. 1 29 Dublin Evening Mail 7 January 1846 pg. 1, Dublin Evening Packet and
Correspondent 1 January 1846 pg. 1, 6 January 1846 pg. 1, 13 January 1846 pg. 1,
17 January 1846 pg. 1, Saunders's News-Letter 5 January 1846
© M. J. Fitzgerald 2017
30 Tipperary Free Press 19 October 1844 pg. 1, Tipperary Vindicator19 October
1844 pg. 1 31 Armagh Guardian 11 February 1845 pg. 1 Dublin Evening Mail 10 February
1845 pg. 3, Dublin Evening Packet and Correspondent 13 February 1845 pg. 3,
Statesman and Dublin Christian Record 7 February 1845 pg. 3 32 Burtchaell and Ulick pg. 351
33 Mullally pg. 71
34 Dublin Evening Post 30 June 1840 pg. 3, Dublin Morning Register 30 June 1840
pg. 2 35 Saunders's News-Letter 26 October 1857 pg. 4, 14 January 1858 pg. 4
36 http://www.youwho.ie/farmleigh.html
37 https://churchrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/display-
pdf.jsp?pdfName=d-45-3-12-078 38 Dublin Daily Express 13 November 1897
39 Wicklow News-Letter and County Advertiser 17 April 1915
40 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Guinness, Freeman's Journal, 28 March
1923, 5 may 1923 41 Belfast News-Letter 6 April 1945, Larne Times - Northern Ireland 12 April 1945,
The Irish Times 5 April 1945 pg 3 42 Author 24 August 2016
43 The Treble Almanac 1812
44 The South Australian Advertiser 29 November 1887 pg. 5, South Australian
Register 30 November 1887 pg. 5, 12 December 1887 Supplement pg. 2 45 Hughes, J. L. J., 1951. The Dublin Fishery Company 1818-1830 Dublin
Historical Record Vol: XII, No. 3, The Gentleman’s and Citizen’s Almanack 1824
pg. 91, 1825 pg. 109, http://www.from-ireland.net/tag/1820s/, John Watson
Stewart, The Gentleman's and Citizen's Almanack for the Year 1814, The Treble
Almanac 1812, The Treble Almanac 1822, http://www.from-ireland.net/history-
dublin-fishery-company-1818 46 Dublin Morning Register 8 October 1828, Saunders's News-Letter – Dublin 4
October 1828, Southern Reporter and Cork Commercial Courier 1 November 1828 47
https://churchrecords.irishgenealogy.ie/churchrecords/details/e14af70496697?b=
https%3A%2F%2Fchurchrecords.irishgenealogy.ie%2Fchurchrecords%2Fsearch.
jsp%3Fnamefm%3Dedward%26namel%3Dnewenham%26location%3D%26yyfro
m%3D%26yyto%3D%26submit%3DSearch 48 Landed Estates Court Rentals 1850-1885
49 Saunders's News-Letter - Dublin 19 March 1828, 2 April 1828
50 Author 14 September 2017
51 George Darley - Streatfeild pg. 81
52 Saunders's News-Letter - Dublin 19 February 1830
© M. J. Fitzgerald 2017
53 Dublin Evening Packet and Correspondent, 19 February 1831, 3 December
1833, Dublin Evening Post 7 February 1833, Saunders's News-Letter – Dublin 5
February 1830, 25 February 1832 54 Abbott pg. 81
55 Mullally pg. 69
56 Burtchaell and Ulick pg. 211
57 Newry Telegraph 22 May 1829, 29 May 1829
58 Saunders's News-Letter – Dublin 24 October 1835, 8 November 1837
59 Freeman's Journal - Dublin 20 February 1839, The Pilot - Dublin 20 February
1839 60 Saunders's News-Letter - Dublin 18 December 1830
61 Dublin Evening Packet and Correspondent 30 June 1831, 27 September 1831, 1
December 1831, Dublin Morning Register 26 November 1831, 1 December 1831,
Freeman's Journal - Dublin 1 December 1831, The Pilot – Dublin 1 July 1831 62 Freeman's Journal – Dublin 3 February 1832, 27 April 1832, 1 May 1832, 3
May 1832, Dublin Morning Register 3 May 1832, Dublin Observer 29 April 1832 63 Abbott pg, 81, Dublin Evening Mail 25 October 1833, Dublin Evening Packet
and Correspondent 26 October 1833, Freeman's Journal – Dublin 26 October
1833, Warder and Dublin Weekly Mail 26 December 1832 pg. 1, 29 December
1832 pg. 5 64 Dublin Evening Mail 25 October 1833 pg. 3, Dublin Evening Packet and
Correspondent 26 October 1833 pg. 3, Freeman's Journal 26 October 1833 pg. 4 65 Abbott pg. 82, Clare Journal, and Ennis Advertiser 10 January 1845,16 January
1845 pg. 2, Dublin Evening Packet and Correspondent 9 January 1845, Freeman's
Journal – Dublin 11 January 1845 pg. 4, Limerick Reporter 10 January 1845 pg. 3,
Statesman and Dublin Christian Record 10 January 1845 pg 2. 66 Dublin Evening Packet and Correspondent 1 May 1832 pg. 1
This Article should be referenced as:
Fitzgerald, M. J., 2017. Stillorgan to Adelaide and Back. Obelisk Journal of
Kilmacud Stillorgan Local history Society 12, 56 – 72.