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1819 Search Results
Contents of subcategory '1819', 1158 records found
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Showing records 1151 to 1158
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/1819/86 |
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TITLE: |
Petition of Dr John Joseph Bourne, requesting compensation for his work as physician to Maynooth College |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
Petition of Dr John Joseph Burke, Dublin, to Earl Talbot, Lord Lieutenant, Dublin Castle, requesting compensation for his 21 years of service as physician and consulting physician to Maynooth College. Also requesting the Lord Lieutenant not to sanction the appointment of Dr Lee to the post of physician to Maynooth college, the appointment being due to the exertions and influence of Lee's uncle, Rev Dr John Thomas Troy, Roman Catholic archbishop of Dublin, rather than his qualifications for the post. Also a letter from Thomas Manners-Sutton, 1st baron Manners, Lord Chancellor of Ireland, to William Gregory, Under Secretary, Dublin Castle, stating that the Lord Lieutenant has no such jurisdiction. |
EXTENT: |
2 items; 10pp |
DATE(S): |
[1819] |
DATE EARLY: |
1819 |
DATE LATE: |
1819 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
CSORP1819/B158 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/1819/87 |
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TITLE: |
Abstract of communications from Irish Boards of Health, concerning details of fever epidemic |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
Abstract of communications from Boards of Health in Arklow, County Wicklow; Bray, County Wicklow; Kanturk, County Cork; Newry, County Down; Portarlington, county Laois; Powerscourt, County Wicklow; Rathdrum, County Wicklow; and Stratford on Slaney and Baltinglas [Baltinglass], County Wicklow, to Dublin Castle. Provides details of statistics relating to the fever epidemic, and the numbers of fever cases recorded and treated weekly within each Board during the period. Most of the boards express concern about the fever epidemic among the poorest in society, and the need for continued exertion, noting the contagious nature of the disease, and the risk of infection from the itinerant poor. They also note steps being taken to eradicate the disease, such as orders to cleanse and whitewash houses in the worst affected areas. Abstract signed by Mathew Tod Byrne, Army Medical Office, Dublin, secretary of Army Medical Department, 15 April 1819. |
EXTENT: |
1 item; 21pp |
DATE(S): |
1 Mar 1818-28 Feb 1819 |
DATE EARLY: |
1818 |
DATE LATE: |
1819 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
CSORP1819/B159 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/1819/88 |
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TITLE: |
Letter from John Macabe, Dublin, butter inspector, concerning protection of Dublin butter trade |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
Letter from John Macabe, 25 Arbour Hill, Dublin, butter inspector, to Charles Grant, Chief Secretary, Dublin Castle, enclosing, as requested, a copy of a letter from Maccabe to the Lord Mayor of Dublin, concerning the Dublin butter trade. Urges Grant to assist in the improvement of Dublin's butter trade, drawing on the success of Cork and Belfast's butter trades as proof of the importance of local 'laws and regulations' to protect the trade. Urges support for the construction of a general butter weigh-house for Dublin, 30 December 1818. Encloses copy of letter from Maccabe to Lord Mayor of Dublin [Sir Thomas McKenny], urging his support for the construction of a butter weigh-house, and lamenting the 'degraded and disgraceful state' of Dublin's butter trade. Condemns the Dublin Corporation's earlier years of neglect of butter trade, 31 October 1818. |
EXTENT: |
2 items; 6pp |
DATE(S): |
31 Oct 1818-30 Dec 1818 |
DATE EARLY: |
1818 |
DATE LATE: |
1818 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
CSORP1819/B161 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/1819/89 |
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TITLE: |
Petition of Hugh Byrne, Dublin, for employment in revenue department |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
Petition of Hugh Byrne, 149 Great Britain [Parnell] Street, Dublin, to Earl Talbot, Lord Lieutenant, Dublin Castle, requesting a government appointment in the revenue department. Outlines the decline of his lace and haberdashery business, and his subsequent experience working in the distillery of Samuel Hartney. Petition signed by Byrne, 18 March 1819. Also identical petition from Byrne to Charles Grant, Chief Secretary, Dublin Castle. Both petitions are verified and signed by Samuel Hartney, Clondalkin, County Dublin, 19 March 1819. |
EXTENT: |
2 items; 7pp |
DATE(S): |
18 Mar 1819-19 Mar 1819 |
DATE EARLY: |
1819 |
DATE LATE: |
1819 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
CSORP1819/B163 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/1819/90 |
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TITLE: |
Petition of James Burgess, Dublin, for government assistance in his dispute with commissioners for paving |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
Petition of James Burgess, 4 Fownes Street, Dublin, to Earl Talbot, Lord Lieutenant, Dublin Castle, requesting Talbot to intervene on his behalf with the commissioners for paving, who have refused Burgess a licence to dig up the street outside his house for the purpose of carrying gas into his house for lighting. Petition signed by Burgess. Notes that gas is cheaper, safer and cleaner than using oil or candles. |
EXTENT: |
1 item; 2pp |
DATE(S): |
4 Apr 1819 |
DATE EARLY: |
1819 |
DATE LATE: |
1819 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
CSORP1819/B164 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/1819/91 |
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TITLE: |
Letter from Reverend Thomas Blakeney, inspector of County Roscommon jail, concerning his inquiry into financial dispute involving gaoler of Roscommon |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
Letter from Reverend Thomas Blakeney, Roscommon, County Roscommon, inspector and chaplain of Roscommon county jail, to William Gregory, Under Secretary, Dublin Castle, concerning Blakeney's inquiry into a financial dispute between Patrick Shaughness, and the gaoler of Roscommon, Mr Healy [Joseph Heily]. |
EXTENT: |
1 item; 3pp |
DATE(S): |
22 May 1819 |
DATE EARLY: |
1819 |
DATE LATE: |
1819 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
CSORP/1819/B165 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/1819/92 |
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TITLE: |
Letter from Thomas Butler, County Wicklow, concerning Mathew Thumpkin, a convict held in Carlow jail |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
Letter from Thomas Butler, Colvinstown, Baltinglass, County Wicklow, to Chief Secretary's Office, Dublin Castle, concerning a prisoner in Carlow jail, Mathew Thumpkin, awaiting transportation. Butler requests that Thumpkin does not accompany the other convicts to Cork, but stays behind, as he has useful information which could assist the 'general good' of the area. In particular, emphasises the number of robberies in the area, 'There is nothing safe here once night falls', and believes this prisoner's information will be significant in combating crime. |
EXTENT: |
1 item; 3pp |
DATE(S): |
29 Apr 1819 |
DATE EARLY: |
1819 |
DATE LATE: |
1819 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
CSORP1819/B166 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/1819/93 |
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TITLE: |
Letter from Sir Jonah Barrington, Admiralty Court Judge, concerning court business |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
Letter from Sir Jonah Barrington, 15 Place Royal, Le Marais, Paris, France, Admiralty Court judge, to William Gregory, Under Secretary, Dublin Castle, enclosing some documents concerning Admiralty Court business [not present]. |
EXTENT: |
1 item; 2pp |
DATE(S): |
2 May 1819 |
DATE EARLY: |
1819 |
DATE LATE: |
1819 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
CSORP1819/B167 |