Legislation

2 Archival description results for Legislation

IE OH OHS87/D/3 · File · 1916
Part of Bellair Estate Papers

3 duplicate, typescript manuscripts entitled 'Notes of Sale under Land Acts and other Miscellaneous Notes Bellair Estate by William Bury Homan Mulock 1916'.

Chapters in the manuscript include:
Income of the estate before sale to the tenants under the land acts;
Yearly rental 1897-1907;
Recollections of the Great Famine and its effect on the Bellair estate;
Copies of correspondence between William and his sister, Mary;
Condition assessment of Bellair House and farm;
List of tenants of the Bellair estate who purchased their land;
Christopher Guinan, Michael Daly and Paddy Digan's reminiscences of Bellair.

IE OH OHS87/D/2 · Item · [1918]
Part of Bellair Estate Papers

Typescript diary entry of William Bury Homan Mulock, reflecting on the surroundings of the Bellair Estate; his childhood on the estate; estate improvements; sale of the estate to tenants under the Land Acts; effects on Irish agriculture and corn production during the first World War.

"The Townland of Bellair or Bally-ard (High Town) stands almost in the centre of Ireland and its hill crowned with a thick grove of beech and fir is a conspicuous object from most of the Counties in Ireland...

I dearly loved and revered the old place with all the tradition it stood for, and for my first day in India I determined to save money and pull it through as my father had always impressed on me the severe strain his large family had been on the estate...

I have now held it for close on 30 years and in the natural course of things must soon relinquish it. I can however fairly claim to have done more than any predecessor for its benefit. I have sold to the tenants, under the Land Acts, and have paid of all charges. I have renovated the house and wing, rebuilt all the farm buildings, and a good part of the stabling...

I have now (1918) had close on ten years experience as an Irish Landlord without tenants, having sold under the Land Acts 1908-9. I can't say that I regret their loss. I live more like an English squire, without anxiety or fear of malicious injuries, cattle drives, or burnings, and I have more leisure to look after my Bellair farm which is now paying me well for all my improvements".