Offaly (King's)

Elements area

Taxonomy

Code

Scope note(s)

  • King's County reverted to County Offaly in 1920.

Source note(s)

    Display note(s)

      Equivalent terms

      Offaly (King's)

      • UF County Offaly
      • UF Co. Offaly
      • UF Uibh Fhaili
      • UF King's County

      Associated terms

      Offaly (King's)

        2713 Archival description results for Offaly (King's)

        39 results directly related Exclude narrower terms
        IE OCCHO DIGBY/A · Series · 1857-1872
        Part of Digby Irish Estates

        Annual reports, rentals and accounts submitted by the Trenches to Lord Digby, 9th Baron Digby of Geashill, beginning with an introductory survey of the estate in 1857, followed by successive annual reports from 1858 until 1872. In 1870, Thomas Weldon Trench resigned his position and W. S, Trench employed Reginald Digby, nephew of Lord Digby, to replace T. W, Trench on the estate. W. S. Trench died in 1872, and Reginald Digby continued thereafter as sole agent for estate.

        Trench, William Steuart
        IE OCL P35/5/3 · Item · 21 January 1915
        Part of Papers of R.H. Moore

        Typewritten letter from Walter Callan, Executive Refugee Committee at Secretary's Office, King's County, regarding arrangements for placement of two families of refugees in Banagher and Ferbane. Letter asks for details from Moore as to how much he Banagher committee had raised in subscriptions 'in order to be able to gauge roughly what charge is likely to fall to central funds'.

        IE OCL P35/2 · Series · 1911-1930
        Part of Papers of R.H. Moore

        Moore was secretary of the King's County Committee of Education. This committee was set up to administer and encourage the provision of technical and vocational education in skills such as cookery, metal work and wood work. Technical classes were established by the provision of capitation grants. These classes would provide young people with vocational and trade skills necessary to gain employment. It was here that young people could be prepared to accredited technical examinations.