Dear Ray, Brian, Ken and Julia
I have been oblivious to the rounds of the past 3 weeks or so. I have not received the usual email advising of new contributions. It may have something to do with having (necessarily!) a new computer. Ray was kind enough today to advise me that he had contributed to the chat and I went in search of it and glad I did.
May I firstly pick up on one of the many intriguing connections being explored – namely road-building? As Ray knows, I have a particular interest in finding anything at all about the family of George Halpin junior’s wife, JULIA VILLIERS. [Love that name, Julia, as it was my grandmother’s and my great grandmother’s.] As it is, I have been able to find nothing. She is a complete mystery woman and yet, by all reports, she lorded it over the Halpins.
For some time in his later mature years, around 1865 [Thom’s Directory], George junior lived in “Elm View”, Highfield Road, Rathgar. Within a stone’s throw of that residence was Rathgar Mansion, occupied by members of the Villiers Tuthill family. It was not beyond the realms of possibility that this family had “developed” the row of villas where George lived on part of their Rathgar Mansion estate and that, as family, he came to live there.
Kathleen Villiers Tuthill is a historian/author and was easy to find, so I thought to ask her. She most kindly replied immediately but needless to say she knew of no connection to Julia Villiers. However, Kathleen was kind enough to write the following, which I quote from her email to me:
Now to George Halpin. Oddly enough, I have come across this man before! In 2006 I published a book on a Scottish engineer, Alexander Nimmo, who worked in the West of Ireland in 1820s. One of his junior surveyors was none other than George Halpin jnr. The following is an extract from the book relating to George:
'George Halpin Junior surveyed and mapped the central Connemara road and the road from Kilkieran Bay to Killary. Halpin was later appointed engineer to the commissioners for improving the port of Dublin and was responsible for seeing Nimmo's work on sailing directions for St George's Channel and the Coast of Ireland through to publication after his death in 1832.' p74-75. Alexander Nimmo & The Western District.
George wrote the introduction to Nimmo's book published in Dublin 1832: New Piloting Directions for St George’s Channel and the Coast of Ireland: Written to accompany the chart of St George’s Channel and the coasts of Ireland, Drawn for the Corporation for Improving the Port of Dublin. By Alexander Nimmo, F.R.S.E. This book can be found in the National Library of Ireland, Dublin.
It must be possible to trace George jnr, given his job and profession. Try contacting the National Library of Ireland, and the National Archives of Ireland, websites and ask them for help. They have researchers that deal with genealogy and should be able to advise you.
Small world isn't it!
Regards and good luck with your search.
Kathleen
Kathleen Villiers-Tuthill
www.connemaragirlpublications.com I personally believe that this must have been George Halpin senior due to the facts that George junior became accredited as a civil engineer 20 years later, in 1847, and for the baptisms of 4 of his children between 1840 and 1846 his stated occupation went from army sergeant to writer.
I will post separately on other matters.
All best
Bill