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Drawing of North view of
Farley/Farliegh Castle, Somerset. (1733) Farleigh Castle was originally the
property of the D'montford family and was sold to
Sir Thomas Hungerford in 1369. Speaker of the
House of Commons in 1377. Died at Farliegh 1398
and is buried in the church he built onto the
castle. His son Sir Walter was also Speaker of
the Commons. In 1426 he was M.P under the title
Baron Hungerford and from that date Farleigh
became known as Farleigh Hungerford.
Captain Thomas Hungerford
settled in Cork where he was married in 1640. The
Census of 1659 shows him as owner of Croaghna and
Gortngrenane (Rathbarry area) with a population
of 2 English and 13 Irish. He purchased
considerable estates in the Rosscarbery area and
on 28th October 1674 purchased Rathbarry Castle
from Edward Williams. Died 1680-81, buried in
Rosscarbery Cathedral where there is a monument
to him. His son Richard left rathbarry in 1691
and occupied the Island of Inchidoney,
Clonakilty.
Photograph of Hungerford tomb (c.1703)
at Castleventry, Clonakilty. Records show that a
Hungerford was buried here in 1790. In 1702 a
Branch of the family from Inchidoney built a
house nearby and established their estate in the
townland of Foxhall and called it Maryville.
Photograph of Cahirmore House,
Rosscarbery. It was outwardly of the style of the
typical landlord house with some of the main
rooms furnished accordingly but the owner never
put a stairs from the basement to the main house
with the result that the parlour maids often
finsihed up in a pile of broken dishes at the
foot of a rickety ladder,. The house was burned
by in 1921 after word was received that it might
be garrissoned by a detachment of the British
Army. (c.1890)
Copy letter, Mary Hungerford, to
Clonakilty Urban District Council. The
Hungerfords were concerned about keeping all
strangers and locals out of the Inchidoney
Estate. Gates were erected and traps placed on
the grounds. Locals felt they had a right to
travel to the beach by an old roadway past
Inchidoney House. Clonakilty U.D.C. mediated but
Miss Hungerford refused all approaches. A group
of locals marched from town, tore down the gates,
and asserted their right to travel to the beach.
This gave rise to a local song "Who broke
the Island Gates", although the words were
never recorded. (1905)
Copy of the will of Henry Jones
Hungerford. He willed the entire estate to his
wife but it was all but bankrupt at that stage.
His eldest son Thomas Henry, was to inherit it
but he had little interest in the estate having
left for Canada in disgust at the manner in which
he was treated when he married against his
father's wishes. By this stage all the other sons
had emigrated, mainly to Australia. (1905)
Typescript of address by Tenants to
Henry Jones Hungerford J.P., Cahermore House. The
original of this document is held by a family
member in London. The tenants named here would be
the more substantial tenant farmers of the
estate. (January 1870)
Photograph of the Armorial Plaque of the
Hungerfords. This appears to be a collage of
coats of arms of various branches of the
Hungerford family. Through marriage each family
particularly in the colonies devised their own
arms. (n.d.)
Drombeg House, Glandore, home of the
Jones family. Alicia Jones married Thomas
Hungerford of Cahirmore in 1814. The house is
still occupied and owned by the descendant of a
worker on the estate. The Jone's were described
as fair landlords and not given to excesses.
(House dates from c. 1750)
Description of the Napoleon /
Wright-Hugerford Family Connection as documented
by Luella Bellman (nee Wright). (1985)
Coat of Arms of Thomas Hungerford,
Cahirmore. A frontispiece from a book in the
Library of Cahirmore House. (c.1850)
Photograph of Silver Soup Tureen. The
original is in Australia with a family member.
Presented to Alice Hungerford (1857-1945),
Cahirmore House, Rosscarbery, on her marriage to
Frank Beamish at Rosscarbery Cathedral on June
19th 1877. On his death she married in 1898 her
cousin Kenneth Stewart Hungerford in Australia.
(1877)
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Head on stained glass of Sir Thomas
Hungerford. This is the man that the Irish
Hungerfords looked to as the father figure of
their family. The drawing is from the original in
a stained glass window at Farley (Farleigh)
Church, Somerset, England. (1389)
Portrait of Thomas Hungerford b. 1745.
Married Mary Cranfield Becher of Skibbereen in
1770. On returning from a hunt in 1790, he was
killed in a fall from a horse near Inchidoney.
(c.1770)
Portrait of Richard Hungerford, who
married another Becher of Skibbereen and in 1797
was commissioned as Captain of Ibane and Barryroe
Infantry of the Yeomanry. He was particularly
noted for his harsh activities during the 1798
uprising. He built the present day Inchidoney
House close to the original house which was
erected by the first Hungerfords in 1696.
(c.1793)
Portrait of Thomas Hungerford
(1789-1861). He established the present day
estate of Cahirmore and married Alicia Jones, the
daughter of a landed family from Glandore. In
1851 the Cahirmore estate covered the townlands
of Cahirmore, Freehanes, Maulyregan,
Maulantanavally and Gounbrack with total acreage
of 2780 acres and a valuation of £962.
Hungerford let the estate at a yearly rent of
£4.0.0 an acre. This was usually increased
depending the quality of the land in some areas.
Despite the huge income the estate was
practically bankrupt by 1900. (c.1850)
Portrait of Alicia Jone Hungerford, Wife
of Thomas Hungerford (1789-1861) whom she married
in 1814. Both are buried in the family vault at
Rosscarbery cathedral. (c.1814)
Photograph of Henry Jones Hungerford,
the last effective owner and resident landlord of
the Cahirmore Estate. He qualified as a Barrister
and had little interest in the Estate. His income
from rental was foolishly spent and on his death
the Land Commission took it over. (1870)
Mary Boone Cowper Hungerford. Wife of
Henry Jones Hungerford. This picture of her was
taken in Antwerp, aged 17. (1853)
Margaret Wolfe Hungerford, (1855-1897).
Daughter of Canon Hamilton, Rector of
Rosscarbery, she married Edward Argles, a Dublin
Solicitor, with whom she had three daughters. He
left and went to America and she then remarried
Thomas Henry Hungerford (1858-1906) of Cahirmore
House. Due to the disaproval of the marriage by
her Hungerford father in law, the family lived at
Bandon where she took up writing to support the
new family of two sons and one daughter. She is
officially credited with the saying "Beauty
is in the eye of the beholder". She died of
typhoid 1897. (c.1880)
Portrait of Emanuel Hungerford
(1785-1872). Grandson of Richard Hungerford,
Inchidoney he married a Catherine Loane. Captain
of South Cork Militia. Due to poor health he left
Cork for Australia in 1827 taking with him his
wife, 8 children, schoolmaster, overseer and
several servants. Based in Sydney, he was the
first Hungerford to settle in Australia. (c.1814)
Picture-Richard Hungerford (1834-1909).
Son of William Hungerford and Jane Toye he was
Deputy Surgeon General of the 53rd Regt. This
family lived at Shannon (Presently Emmet) Square,
Clonakilty and had a number of other properties
in Clonakilty. (c.1900)
Photograph of Family of Henry Jones and
Mary Hungerford. Front : Alice, Geoffrey and
Ethel. Back: Gordon, Launcelot, Guy, Edward,
Thomas Henry and Arthur. The only member of the
family to remain in Ireland was Ethel, who
married Thomas Wright, a Solicitor from Fernhill,
Clonakilty and later Mardyke House, Cork.
(c.1890)
Photograph - Thomas Hungerford. Born
16/01/1795. Died 1870. Buried in the Island.
(1850)
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