3a.
From the Freeman’s Journal, Sat., July 1st 1876 –
IN CHANCERY. IN THE MATTER OF The Great Southern and Western Railway Act, 1872, and in the matter of the Lands Clauses Consolidation Act 1845, ex parte the Great Southern and Western Railway Company, and to the credit of William Oswald Halpin and John Hone, Trustees of George Halpin, deceased, and all other persons interested in respect of all those pieces or Portions of land situate in the North Lots, in the Parish of Saint Thomas.[...I think the Great S & W Railway Co expanded Amiens Street station onto lands it didn’t own...]. Take notice that upon the application of William Oswald Halpin, of Laurel Lodge, Foxrock, Esq., and John Hone, of Ashton Park, Esq., to His Honour the Master of the Rolls, His Honour, by an order dated the 3rd day of June 1876, ordered that the Accountant General of this Honourable Court should draw on the Govenor and the Company of the Bank of Ireland, in favour of the said William Oswald Halpin and John Hone, for the sum of £1,252 cash, lodged by the said Railway Company in the Bank of Ireland to the credit of the matter mentioned in the title of this notice. .[...a good deal of legalese follows, before finishing thus...].Dated this 22nd day of June, 1876, William Griffin, Secretary to the Master of the Rolls.
Bill, there is a poignant series of dates recorded in the Irish Times that seemed to me to plot the decline of this line of George’s descendents. It began with the announcement of Oswald jnr’s death, killed in action during the Great War, and passed through the death of Oswald snr, an IRA raid on the Laurels during the war of independence, the sale of the Halpin Trust Estate and, finally I think, the sale of the Foxrock Lodge itself. I’m only going on memory here, so the precise sequence of events may not be exactly accurate, but it’s near enough for our purposes. What we see in that sad dateline - determined to a great extent by large historical events - is the eventual parting of a native family and its homeland. The incidents I’m referring to occur between about 1915 – 25, and one incident in particular, the Republican raid on the Laurels (I’ll send you the exact date) may bring our respective families into very uncomfortable proximity indeed. But to understand what I’m driving at, you must understand a little of the historical context in which the raid occurred.
Firstly, take a look at this, advertised in the Irish Times, Saturday, June 12 1920:
SALE TUESDAY, 6th JULY. HALPIN TRUST ESTATE. SEVILLE PLACE AND ADJACENT STREETS NEAR AMIENS ST. STATION AND THE DOCKS. [What follows then is a series of Lot descriptions, 10 in all, too many to include here, so I’ll give you a typical example]: LOT 1 – The 9 Dwellinghouses Nos., 102 – 110 Seville Place. Eight are occupied by monthly and quarterly tenants at rents varying from £44 12s 0d to £51 10s 3d a year, and no. 107 is held by a leasehold tenant at the small rent of £12 (less 10s 6d standard rate). The entire premises comprised in this Lot are held by the owner under a lease for 489 years, from 29th Sept. 1818, at the yearly rent of £46 less deductions. The gross rental received out of all these houses is £390, less the Head Rent and Rates and Taxes, and a Port and Docks rent or charge of £3 7s 11d. These houses (except no. 107) will, if desired, be offered separately, the first 7 subject to £6 each rent, and the 8th to £4 3s 3d, to be reserved by subleases made to the purchasers; otherwise the whole will be sold in one Lot.[...and so it goes in a similar vein all the way down to the 7th Lot...]. The Following Lots, Nos. 8, 9 and 10 Belong to Mrs. Anna M. Halpin, And Not To The Trust Estate. [Lot 8 is typical of the others] – The 4 Dwellinghouses, Nos. 12, 13, 14 and 15 Oswald Terrace, Lower Oriel Street, producing a gross annual rental of £97 7/4, less rates and taxes. Held under lease for 900 years from 1st May 1867, at yearly rent of £9. These houses are very attractive and well built, and are in good order. For further particulars and conditions of sale apply to HONE and FAULKNER, Solicitors, 9 Suffolk Street, Dublin.