RootsChat.Com
Ireland (Historical Counties) => Ireland => Topic started by: Adrian Ballard on Tuesday 15 February 05 13:40 GMT (UK)
-
CROMWELLIAN ADVENTURERS
BALLARD is listed in this book as a"CROMWELLIAN ADVENTURERS"
quote; The name and address of each Adventurer is in Prendergast book; Cromwellian Settlement of Ireland 2nd edition published Dublin, 1922.
where can i find this book and check the information on this person?
can anybody help!
I am in Bristol UK
-
Adrian,
Check out http://www.caliverbooks.com/ecw/cal_ecw_c.htm UK price is £16.95 for a reprint.
Paul
-
Ah.....
its you your the adventurer ive been seeking...... lol
how are you Paul?
thanks for that link some real good stuff there will take me a week to read through the titles
Thanks Paul (lol)
-
Adrian,
I have a transcript of a Ballard will which mentions the Cromwellian scheme, I'll email you a copy, if I can remember which one it is!
Paul
-
Thanks for that Paul, look pretty convincing that he could be the one
(although it would still be good to confirm this) viz the publication!
"The measure was received in England as a triumph over the king and the Irish. The subscribers, or Adventurers as they were called, were to
have estates and manors of one thousand acres given to them in Ireland at the following low rates: In Ulster for 200 pounds, in Connaught
for 300, in Munster, for 100, and in Leinster for 600, and lands proportionately for less sums."
may be going down the wrong route with my William Ballard from galway (quest)
was just considering a search at http://www.ajmorris.com/dig/toc/titlres.htm
did however stumble across info that
(quote)
Hi, Adrian,
Unfortunately, BALLARD is not listed in O'Laughlin's "Families of County Galway."
I did check MacLysaght's "The Surnames of Ireland", which listed Ballard, but said "see Bollard". According to LacLysaght, Bollard is "Of Dutch Origin, this name came to Ireland in the early seventeenth century, and soon became prominent in the commercial life of Dublin. The quite distinct Norman name Ballard (Middle-English bald head) goes back to early mediaeval times."
also a link to Beliard name http://www.celticcousins.net/ireland/huguenotfreemen.htm
i imagine you are aware of these anyway
-
has you may have realized iam trying to rebuid my site at the moment with much simpler structure to manage my docs
http://ballard.rootschat.net/records/places/england/counties/somersetshire/taunton/taunton.htm
is an eg of the way i am doing things because it as all become to much even to search hope this format works better when its finished and place refs can be found under one page instead of list of repository holdings that never link together
-
Prendergast's book is online as a free Ebook: https://books.google.com.au/books/reader?id=RmoBAAAAQAAJ&printsec=frontcover&output=reader&pg=GBS.PA433
The Cromwellian Settlement of Ireland
Has anyone other than me been able to link a Cromwellian Adventurer through to current times? Once I found this link I was able to work it back and now have my family coming from Staffordshire before they invested in the Adventurer scheme.
-
Prendergast's book is online as a free Ebook: https://books.google.com.au/books/reader?id=RmoBAAAAQAAJ&printsec=frontcover&output=reader&pg=GBS.PA433
The Cromwellian Settlement of Ireland
Has anyone other than me been able to link a Cromwellian Adventurer through to current times? Once I found this link I was able to work it back and now have my family coming from Staffordshire before they invested in the Adventurer scheme.
Brilliant link - thank you, suemccall. Unfortunately, none of my lot were Adventurers. I suspect at least some of them were Royalists.