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1829 Outrage Reports Search Results
Contents of subcategory '1829 Outrage Reports', 900 records found
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Showing records 171 to 180
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/OR/1829/171 |
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TITLE: |
Private letter from Maj Thomas D’Arcy, Inspector General of Police, Dungannon, relating to investigation recently held there |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
Private letter from Maj Thomas D’Arcy, Inspector General of Police [for Ulster], Dungannon, [County Tyrone], to Francis Leveson Gower, Chief Secretary, reporting the proceedings of an investigation recently held there relating to ‘the late melancholy occurrences in this Vicinity’. |
EXTENT: |
1 item; 3pp |
DATE(S): |
21 Jul 1829 |
DATE EARLY: |
1829 |
DATE LATE: |
1829 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
1829/D53 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/OR/1829/172 |
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TITLE: |
Private letter from chief magistrate George W[?J] Drought, relating to meeting of Ribbonmen in Limerick |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
Private letter from Capt George Mears John Drought, [chief magistrate of police], Limerick, to unnamed recipient, reporting a meeting of several hundred Ribbonmen near Limerick the previous week and observing that ‘the minds of the lower classes appear to me to be very much disturbed’. |
EXTENT: |
1 item; 3pp |
DATE(S): |
7 Jul 1829 |
DATE EARLY: |
1829 |
DATE LATE: |
1829 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
1829/D54 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/OR/1829/173 |
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TITLE: |
Letter from chief magistrate George W[?J] Drought, Limerick, relating to highway robbery |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
Letter from Capt George Mears John Drought, [chief magistrate of police], Limerick, to Francis Leveson Gower, Chief Secretary, informing him that he has committed 4 men to trial at the next assizes for highway robbery. |
EXTENT: |
1 item; 2pp |
DATE(S): |
22 Jul 1829 |
DATE EARLY: |
1829 |
DATE LATE: |
1829 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
1829/D55 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/OR/1829/174 |
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TITLE: |
Letter from Capt George Mears John Drought, [chief magistrate of police], Limerick, forwarding state of outrages in County Limerick for June 1829 |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
Letter from Capt George Mears John Drought, [chief magistrate of police], Limerick, to Francis Leveson Gower, Chief Secretary, forwarding statement of outrages in County Limerick for June 1829. Statement details: the district where the outrage took place; the names of the acting chief constable and constables; the date; extracts from police reports; and observations of chief magistrates. Also contains table outlining a breakdown of different crimes in the county, as well as the rate of increase or decrease from the previous month. [Original reference number incorrectly noted as 1829/D46]. |
EXTENT: |
2 items; 5pp |
DATE(S): |
14 Jul 1829 |
DATE EARLY: |
1829 |
DATE LATE: |
1829 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
1829/D56 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/OR/1829/175 |
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TITLE: |
Letters from Lord Doneraile and Maj William Miller, Inspector General of Police, relating to an alleged murder conspiracy and a number of outrages in Doneraile |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
File of letters from Lord Doneraile [?Hayes St Ledger, 3rd Viscount Doneraile], [Doneraile, County Cork], to William Gregory, Under Secretary, relating to an alleged conspiracy ‘to murder some of the Gentlemen of this neighbourhood’. Also letter from Maj William Miller, Inspector General of Police [in Munster], Fermoy, [County Cork], to Francis Leveson Gower, Chief Secretary, forwarding letter he received from chief constable [Arthur] Crossley, Clogheen, relating to a number of outrages recently committed in Doneraile, observing ‘I have reason to think that the Principal Actors in them are some of the Persons concerned in the Doneraile Conspiracy, who effected their escape from the escort while conducting to Gaol’. |
EXTENT: |
7 items; 25pp |
DATE(S): |
Jun 1829-14 Jul 1829 |
DATE EARLY: |
1829 |
DATE LATE: |
1829 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
1829/D57 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/OR/1829/176 |
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TITLE: |
Letter from the magistrates of County Donegal relating to efforts to preserve the peace in Ballyshannon, Ballintra and Donegal on 12 July 1829 |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
Letter from the magistrates of County Donegal to Francis Leveson Gower, Chief Secretary, forwarding copy of printed notice they distributed prior to 12 July 1829 prohibiting illegal assemblies and party processions in the Barony of Tyrhugh, informing him that 6 armed men were arrested, and concluding that ‘the 12th of July passed in the towns of Ballyshannon, Ballintra and Donegal without any Procession… and the Public Peace was not violated by them on that day’, with 6 signatures. [Contains list of names not given in this description] |
EXTENT: |
3 items; 9pp |
DATE(S): |
[c4] Jul 1829-13 Jul 1829 |
DATE EARLY: |
1829 |
DATE LATE: |
1829 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
1829/D58 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/OR/1829/177 |
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TITLE: |
File of papers relating to ‘dreadful party fight’ at Clonoe on 13 July 1829 |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
File of papers relating to ‘dreadful party fight’ at Clonoe [County Tyrone, incorrectly referred to throughout as ‘Clenoe’ and ‘Glencoe’] on 13 July 1829, during which 2 Orangemen and 3 Roman Catholics were killed, and number of others wounded. Includes letters from: constable James Smyth, Stewartstown, to George Wade, Subinspector for County Tyrone; Wade, Dungannon, to Maj Thomas D’Arcy, Inspector General of Police for Ulster; magistrates of County Tyrone, to Francis Leveson Gower, Chief Secretary, with 8 signatures; ‘the respectable Protestants and Roman Catholics of the Parish of Clonoe’, to the magistrates assembled at Dungannon, with 10 signatures; the magistrates assembled at Dungannon Court House, to unnamed recipient, with 11 signatures; chief magistrate Edward Evans, Dungannon Court House, to Leveson Gower; and General Sir Frederick Stovin, Military Secretary, Royal Hospital Kilmainham, Dublin, to Leveson Gower, forwarding copy of letter he received from Maj Gen William Thornton, Dungannon. |
EXTENT: |
10 items; 32pp |
DATE(S): |
14 Jul 1829-1 Aug 1829 |
DATE EARLY: |
1829 |
DATE LATE: |
1829 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
1829/D59 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/OR/1829/178 |
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TITLE: |
Letter from [Maj] George Warburton, Inspector General of Police, Loughrea, relating to threat made on the life of James Dagg of Shangarry by an illegal assembly in the Parish of Tynagh on 12 July 1829 |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
Letter from [Maj] George Warburton, Inspector General of Police [in Connaught], Loughrea, County Galway, to William Gregory, Under Secretary, forwarding letter he received from chief constable John Lynch, Eyrecourt, enclosing affidavit sworn by James Dagg of Shangarry, a tenant of Lord Clancarty [Richard Trench, 2nd Earl Clancarty], reporting ‘great violence used by an illegal unlawful assembly of Persons on Sunday the 12th of July… at the Chapel of Grawn in [the] Parish of Tynagh’, during which his life and the lives of his family were threatened. Also encloses supporting certificate signed by a number of policemen, namely: Simon Sharpley; George [?Sankler]; and John [?Morgan]. Certificate written on reverse of letter from Daniel Egan, Borrisokane, [County Tipperary], to Rev Rush, Parish Priest of Portumna, [County Galway], referring to Dagg’s injuries. Annotated by Gregory, stating ‘I do not know what more can be done for Dagg… I am informed he is a violent, intemperate man, and very likely from his offensive expressions towards his Roman Catholic neighbours to incur their resentment’. |
EXTENT: |
4 items; 11pp |
DATE(S): |
Jul 1829-21 Jul 1829 |
DATE EARLY: |
1829 |
DATE LATE: |
1829 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
1829/D60 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/OR/1829/179 |
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TITLE: |
Letter from Maj Thomas D’Arcy, Inspector General of Police, Strabane, relating to attack on Orangeman in Ardboe Parish |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
Letter from Maj Thomas D’Arcy, Inspector General of Police [for Ulster], Holly Hill, Strabane, [County Tyrone], to Francis Leveson Gower, Chief Secretary, referring to report by Rev White of Arboe [?Ardboe] Parish relating to attack on an Orangeman by a number of Roman Catholics on 13 July 1829. |
EXTENT: |
1 item; 2pp |
DATE(S): |
31 Jul 1829 |
DATE EARLY: |
1829 |
DATE LATE: |
1829 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
1829/D61 |
NAI REFERENCE: |
CSO/RP/OR/1829/180 |
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TITLE: |
File of papers relating to complaint against chief constable John Hazlett, Swanlinbar |
SCOPE & CONTENT: |
File of papers relating to complaint made against chief constable John Hazlett, Swanlinbar, County Cavan, by Roman Catholic priest Eugene Sheridan, magistrate Alexander Maguire, and other inhabitants of the town. Includes: letter from Maj Thomas D’Arcy, Inspector General of Police [for Ulster], Omagh and Strabane, [County Tyrone], to Francis Leveson Gower, Chief Secretary; memorial of Sheridan, Maguire and 14 other inhabitants of Swanlinbar, to Hugh Percy, Lord Lieutenant, seeking Hazlett’s dismissal for entering their divine service on 12 July 1829 with a number of armed men and ordering them outside, ‘brandishing a drawn sword on pretence of Keeping the peace but as Memorialists are firmly persuaded with a view of commiting [sic] a breach of it’, as well as a number of affidavits sworn by witnesses before magistrate Bartholomew Warburton; letter from Archdeacon Thomas Singleton [private secretary to Hugh Percy, Lord Lieutenant], Phoenix Park, [Dublin], to William Gregory, Under Secretary; and letter from Sheridan to Percy. [Contains list of names not given in this description] |
EXTENT: |
9 items; 23pp |
DATE(S): |
27 Jul 1829-10 Oct 1829 |
DATE EARLY: |
1829 |
DATE LATE: |
1829 |
ORIGINAL REFERENCE: |
1829/D62 |