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Ireland (Historical Counties) => Ireland => Armagh => Topic started by: hall and walsh on Thursday 11 April 13 12:24 BST (UK)

Title: A distillery in Lurgan 1804
Post by: hall and walsh on Thursday 11 April 13 12:24 BST (UK)
I have just found an 1804 newspaper advert for the sale of a distillery outside of Lurgan, owned by a Joseph Hall. The advert indicated that the distillery produced large quantities of whisky.
Is there a source I could use to find out more about  the distillery?

Thanks,
Title: Re: A distillery in Lurgan 1804
Post by: scotmum on Thursday 11 April 13 12:48 BST (UK)
Maybe an earlier Joseph Hall, but apparently the following is held at PRONI:

Quote
HALL  Joseph    Distiller    Lurgan / Arm    Copy Will & probate    c1793    D 3517
Title: Re: A distillery in Lurgan 1804
Post by: KGarrad on Thursday 11 April 13 13:20 BST (UK)
Another forum (Lurgan Ancestry) says it was owned by the Greer family?
And destroyed by fire in 1837.

The first Catholic Church in Lurgan, St Peters, was built on Distillery Hill - now known as Lower North Street.

And a previous topic! ;D
http://www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php?topic=568151.0

And a previous topic of yours!
http://www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php?topic=614949.0
Title: Re: A distillery in Lurgan 1804
Post by: AndyMcElroy on Thursday 11 April 13 20:08 BST (UK)
Leigh's New Pocket Road-Book of Ireland 1835 states the following about Lurgan;

Image removed- please see online edition of book-
http://archive.org/stream/leighsnewpocket01leiggoog#page/n538/mode/2up
Title: Re: A distillery in Lurgan 1804
Post by: AndyMcElroy on Thursday 11 April 13 20:15 BST (UK)
The Vintner's Guide for 1825 :


Image removed- please see online edition of book-
http://www.docstoc.com/docs/81078128/Phipps---1825---The-Vintners-Guide
Title: Re: A distillery in Lurgan 1804
Post by: hall and walsh on Saturday 13 April 13 08:07 BST (UK)
Thanks for your responses. perhaps  Hall sold the distillery to Greer as a result of the advertisements appearing in the newspapers in 1804.
Title: Re: A distillery in Lurgan 1804
Post by: Hall and MacCormac on Monday 22 December 14 19:56 GMT (UK)
I have just found an 1804 newspaper advert for the sale of a distillery outside of Lurgan, owned by a Joseph Hall. The advert indicated that the distillery produced large quantities of whisky.
Is there a source I could use to find out more about  the distillery?

Thanks,
I am descended from Colonel Joseph Hall of 'Hall Place' in Lurgan, County Armagh, who was said to have been a prosperous distiller with additional farmland. He invested in property with his son in law, John MacCormac (d. 1811), and was the grandfather of Dr Henry MacCormac (1800-1886), whose mother was a Hall-Mary Ann Hall (1766-1846). I read in the Belfast Journal that Joseph Hall may have fallen on hard times and this may explain why the Halls were not associated with a distillery later on.

If anyone can provide direct information on the origins of this Hall family (or indeed the MacCormac family) in the eighteenth and seventeenth century, that would be helpful. The origins of the Hall family and MacCormacs are unclear-but both, particularly the Halls, were quite well-to-do- seemingly
Title: Re: A distillery in Lurgan 1804
Post by: Hall and MacCormac on Monday 22 December 14 19:57 GMT (UK)
Maybe an earlier Joseph Hall, but apparently the following is held at PRONI:

Quote
HALL  Joseph    Distiller    Lurgan / Arm    Copy Will & probate    c1793    D 3517
I am descended from Colonel Joseph Hall of 'Hall Place' in Lurgan, County Armagh, who was said to have been a prosperous distiller with additional farmland. He invested in property with his son in law, John MacCormac (d. 1811), and was the grandfather of Dr Henry MacCormac (1800-1886), whose mother was a Hall-Mary Ann Hall (1766-1846). I read in the Belfast Journal that Joseph Hall may have fallen on hard times and this may explain why the Halls were not associated with a distillery later on.

If anyone can provide direct information on the origins of this Hall family (or indeed the MacCormac family) in the eighteenth and seventeenth century, that would be helpful. The origins of the Hall family and MacCormacs are unclear-but both, particularly the Halls, were quite well-to-do- seemingly