Unidad documental simple 5 - Lease of the dwelling house known as Creg[g] House

Área de identidad

Código de referencia

IE 2135 P43/1/3/1/1/5

Título

Lease of the dwelling house known as Creg[g] House

Fecha(s)

  • 28 December 1918 (Creación)

Nivel de descripción

Unidad documental simple

Volumen y soporte

6 pp.

Área de contexto

Nombre del productor

(1914-1990)

Historia biográfica

Timothy Looney, a native of Cahir, county Tipperary, was born in 1914. A well-known local historian, he could regularly be found exploring local castles, churches, graveyards and sites of archaeological interest. He was known to challenge established beliefs and traditions and to use the evidence of cross-disciplinary elements such as documents and landscapes to offer alternative interpretations. His house on Pearse Street, a treasure trove of maps, books, documents and photographs, was a popular port of call for genealogists tracing their ancestors and for scholars researching historical topics. Looney’s collecting activities culminated in a remarkable salvage operation to recover papers from Shanbally Castle, county Tipperary prior to its destruction by a controlled explosion in March 1960.

In addition to his historical pursuits, Looney was an active member of his local community. He had a lifelong interest in the GAA, and was influential in the development of Gaelic games in Cahir. He was a tireless charity worker and fundraiser. Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, he organised volunteers to travel around the country to collect money for the Central Remedial Clinic, known as the Little Willie Fund, to aid the plight of polio victims. A supporter of the trade union movement, he was also active in the Irish Transport and General Workers Union. He had a great fondness for Cahir, and campaigned prominently to save its historical railway station. Timothy Looney died in his native town in 1990.

Historia archivística

Origen del ingreso o transferencia

Área de contenido y estructura

Alcance y contenido

Lease between Geraldine de Courcy MacCarty of Beechcroft Lancing in the county of Sussex, spinster; John William Richards of 51 Merrion Square in the city of Dublin, Esquire; and William Charles Gage of 51 Merrion Square in the city of Dublin, Esquire of the first part; and Winthropp Benjamin Browning of Creg House, Fermoy in the county of Cork late a Lieutenant-Colonel in the Indian Medical Service of the second part.

Property: The dwelling house known as Creg House and the offices, gardens and gate lodge belonging thereunto and the cottage lately occupied by the head gardener and the two small fields known as the Castle Paddocks and the Castle Inch situate in the barony of Fermoy and county of Cork together with the furniture and effects in or about the said house and premises and free liberty to shoot an fish over the Creg demesne.

Term: Seven years from 1 May 1919.

Conditions: yearly rent of £120 by equal half yearly payments on 1 November and 1 May.

Other: For related correspondence, see P43/1/3/1/2/2.

Valorización, destrucción y programación

Acumulaciones

Sistema de arreglo

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Condiciones

Idioma del material

  • inglés

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    Identificador/es alternativo(os)

    Original number

    P43/442D

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