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Loughton Papers
IE OCL P131 · Fonds · 1798 - 1976

The Loughton papers are comprised of the records of the successive owners of Loughton, Moneygall, Co. Offaly and of other properties in the surrounding area including one in Co. Tipperary. The families documented within the fonds are the Bloomfields, the Trenches and the Atkinsons. The fonds mainly consists of documents originating from Benjamin Bloomfield Trench, his wife Dora Trench (neé Turnor) and their daughter Theodora Trench. The material dates from 1798 until the 1970s.

Trench, Henry
IE OCL P131/4/2/1 · File · 6 March 1872
Part of Loughton Papers

File of documents relating to an 1872 attempt to sell Loughton house.
Included in this file are an advertisement for sale of the house and a map of the house division of Loughton dated 6 March 1872.

Loughton water.
IE OCL P131/4/2/3 · File · 1897-8 September 1908
Part of Loughton Papers

File of documents relating to the Loughton water supply.

Examples of documents contained within this file include the results of an analysis of the Loughton water supply carried out by the Royal Dublin Society, Leinster house; a drawing of Loughton Reservoir (Majors hill) 1897 and instructions as to water supply Hot and Cold Loughton.

IE OH OHS85/4/54 · File · 12 June 2003
Part of Papers of Dr James Lyttleton

Research on Lynally Glebe Church, Graveyard and Priest's Residence, Co. Offaly (Parish of Lynally, Barony of Ballycowan). County Inventory Registration: 694.
Contains field sheet with sketches of site plan, interior and exterior elevations and inscriptions of 17th century grave slab. Incl. a written report over 14 pages and 100 photographs.

M, O, P
IE OCL P131/2/2/2/1/4 · File · 22 March 1870- 19 February 1875
Part of Loughton Papers

Letters sent to Benjamin Bloomfield Trench. The letters in the file concern people or topics beginning with the letters M, O or P.

Examples of letters contained within the file include a December 1873 estimate from Musgrave's company, Ann Street Iron Works, Belfast regarding the heating system in Essex Castle, Carrickmacross and seventeen documents from May 1873 relating to the destruction of a monument for S. Trench.

The file also contains letters covering varied topics such as an overdrawn bank account, Pollaky's Private Inquiry Office, and work allotment.

Machinery Book
IE OH OHS3/H/4 · Item · 1957-1968
Part of Geashill Estate Papers

List of machinery recorded in an unused rental volume. Lists begin in the index section under 'A'.

IE OH OHS48 · Fonds · 1870-1920

13 volumes of photograph albums, known to Offaly Historical and Archaeological Society as the Magan-Biddulph Collection. complied by Lt. Col. Middleton Westenra Biddulph, landowner of the Rathrobin estate, near Mountbolus, County Offaly. Biddulph was born in Rathrobin in 1849, the eldest surviving son of Francis Marsh Biddulph and Lucy Bickerstaff. The Biddulph family's landholding was principally in the townlands of Rathrobin and those adjoining of Clonseer, Cormeen, Kilmore and Mullaghcrohy, all near Mountbolus, in the civil parish of Killoughy and the barony of Ballyboy. Middleton Biddulph enlisted with the Northumberland Fusiliers (Fifth Regiment) in 1867, rising to the ranks of Lieutenant Colonel before his retirement in 1896. Following his retirement, Biddulph and his wife, Vera Josephine Flower, returned to Rathrobin and rebuilt the old house over the period 1898 to 1900. Biddulph served as High Sheriff for King's County in 1901, and was appointed Deputy Lieutenant of the county in 1910.

As a keen amateur photographer, Biddulph used a quarter plate camera to document his various areas of interest including; his military career with the Northumberland Fusiliers; visits to country houses across Ireland, England and Scotland; members of the Biddulph and Magan family; visits around Ireland as part of the Royal Society of Antiquarians; interior and exterior photographs of Rathrobin House; agricultural work on the estate. There is also an extent of photographs of tenant families and employees of the Rathrobin estate, featured across the photograph albums.

Biddulph and his wife left for England in June 1921 as the military campaign of the IRA in the locality intensified, and Rathrobin House was destroyed by Republican IRA forces in April 1923. While he seemed to have planned to return to Ireland after this, an attack on his land agent and niece, Violet Magan, and his own declining health delayed plans to do so, and he died in Chelsea in May 1926. The albums were presented to Offaly Historical and Archaeological Society in 1997 by Brigadier William Magan, a nephew of the photographer.

Biddulph, Middleton Westenra, Lt Col
Magnus Pimlico Slate Works
IE OCL P131/10/2/2/1 · File · 1872 - ?
Part of Loughton Papers

Letter from W. Q. {Lagler] forwarding memorandum which will inform him of the history of the Magnus company.
Includes card for Magnus Enamelled Slate Co.

Also includes letter from CJC Bailey, Fulham, England to Benjamin Bloomfield Trench; copy of an inventory of machinery plant and effects on the premises no. 153 Buckingham Palace Road purchased by Mr Stuart with the lease; invoice from Benjamin Bloomfield Trench to Fuller, Horsey, Sons co. for 'attending at Magnus's slate works no. 153 Buckingham Palace Road making survey of same and advising you as to the annual rental value of the property'.