Ann DrumAge: 65 years1835–1900
- Name
- Ann Drum
- Given names
- Ann
- Surname
- Drum
Birth | about 1835 |
Emigration | Arrival in Australia February 27, 1850 (Age 15 years)Note: On board the "Derwent"
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Marriage | Thomas Haley — View this family September 15, 1852 (Age 17 years) Shared note: Married by the Rev. T. Hart Davies
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Birth of a daughter #1 | Mary Haley 1853 (Age 18 years) |
Birth of a daughter #2 | Susannah Haley 1856 (Age 21 years) |
Birth of a daughter #3 | Annie Haley 1856 (Age 21 years) |
Birth of a daughter #4 | Elizabeth Haley 1860 (Age 25 years) |
Birth of a son #5 | James Haley 1864 (Age 29 years) |
Birth of a daughter #6 | Lucy Haley 1865 (Age 30 years) |
Birth of a daughter #7 | Rachel Haley 1868 (Age 33 years) |
Death of a husband | Thomas Haley August 11, 1868 (Age 33 years) |
Burial of a husband | Thomas Haley August 14, 1868 (Age 33 years) |
Birth of a daughter #8 | Hamey Haley after 1868 (Age 33 years) |
Marriage of a child | Thomas Woods — Mary Haley — View this family 1871 (Age 36 years) |
Marriage of a child | William Irving — Annie Haley — View this family 1878 (Age 43 years) Shared note: 3678
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Marriage of a child | Arthur Bromley Smith — Elizabeth Haley — View this family May 16, 1878 (Age 43 years) |
Marriage of a child | Thomas Reynolds — Susannah Haley — View this family 1879 (Age 44 years) |
Marriage of a child | Charles Clover — Lucy Haley — View this family September 21, 1884 (Age 49 years) |
Death of a daughter | Rachel Haley May 24, 1887 (Age 52 years) |
Death of a daughter | Lucy Haley 1896 (Age 61 years) |
Death of a daughter | Hamey Haley before 1900 (Age 65 years) |
Death | July 17, 1900 (Age 65 years) |
Burial |
Family with parents |
father |
James Drum Death: |
mother |
Ann Hazeldean Death: |
Marriage: — |
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herself |
Ann Drum Birth: about 1835 — Enniskillen, Fermanagh, Ireland Emigration: Arrival in Australia — February 27, 1850 — Melbourne Death: July 17, 1900 — Benalla, Vic |
Family with Thomas Haley |
husband |
Thomas Haley Birth: 1821 40 35 — Harrow On The Hill, near Sudbury, Middlesex, England Emigration: February 21, 1842 — Travelled on the Thetis to Australia Death: August 11, 1868 — Broken Creek, Benalla, Vic |
herself |
Ann Drum Birth: about 1835 — Enniskillen, Fermanagh, Ireland Emigration: Arrival in Australia — February 27, 1850 — Melbourne Death: July 17, 1900 — Benalla, Vic |
Marriage: September 15, 1852 — Parish Of St. Peters, Melbourne |
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16 months daughter |
Mary Haley Birth: 1853 32 18 — Melbourne, Australia Death: March 7, 1938 — Hamilton, Nsw |
4 years daughter |
Susannah Haley Birth: 1856 35 21 — Plenty River, Morang, Vic Death: 1906 — Tungamah, Vic |
1 year daughter |
Annie Haley Birth: 1856 35 21 — Morang, Vic Death: 1921 — Fitzroy, Melbourne, Australia |
5 years daughter |
Elizabeth Haley Birth: 1860 39 25 — Plenty River, Morang, Vic Death: 1931 |
5 years son |
James Haley Birth: 1864 43 29 Death: |
2 years daughter |
Lucy Haley Birth: 1865 44 30 — Devenish Death: 1896 — Benalla, Vic |
4 years daughter |
Rachel Haley Birth: 1868 47 33 Death: May 24, 1887 — Benalla |
1 year daughter |
Hamey Haley Birth: after 1868 47 33 Death: before 1900 |
Thomas Haley + Jane Ware |
husband |
Thomas Haley Birth: 1821 40 35 — Harrow On The Hill, near Sudbury, Middlesex, England Emigration: February 21, 1842 — Travelled on the Thetis to Australia Death: August 11, 1868 — Broken Creek, Benalla, Vic |
husband’s wife |
Jane Ware Birth: 1822 — Fermanagh, Ireland Emigration: Arrived as an orphan on the Thetis with Thomas Haley in 1842 Death: March 1, 1852 — River Plemty, Morang, Victoria, Australia |
Marriage: December 19, 1842 — St. James, Richmond, Victoria |
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2 years step-son |
Samuel Haley Birth: 1844 23 22 — Melbourne, Vic Death: 1867 — Richmond |
3 years step-daughter |
William Haley Birth: 1846 25 24 — Richmond, Melbourne, Australia Death: June 8, 1930 — Moree, Nsw |
3 years step-son |
Thomas (Thos) Haley Birth: 1848 27 26 — Born In Belfast, Victoria (Port Fairy) Death: 1930 — Benalla, Vic |
- Generation 1
Ann Drum, daughter of James Drum and Ann Hazeldean, was born about 1835 in Enniskillen, Fermanagh, Ireland and died on July 17, 1900 in Benalla, Vic. She married Thomas Haley, son of Samuel Haley and Susannah (ann) White, on September 15, 1852 in Parish Of St. Peters, Melbourne. He was born in 1821 in Harrow On The Hill, near Sudbury, Middlesex, England and died on August 11, 1868 in Broken Creek, Benalla, Vic at the age of 47.
Children of Ann Drum and Thomas Haley:
- Mary Haley (1853–1938)
- Susannah Haley (1856–1906)
- Annie Haley (1856–1921)
- Elizabeth Haley (1860–1931)
- James Haley (1864–)
- Lucy Haley (1865–1896)
- Rachel Haley (1868–1887)
- Hamey Haley (1868–1900)
- Generation 2back to top
Mary Haley, daughter of Thomas Haley and Ann Drum, was born in 1853 in Melbourne, Australia and died on March 7, 1938 in Hamilton, Nsw at the age of 85. She married Thomas Woods in 1871. He was born in Ireland.
Children of Mary Haley and Thomas Woods:
- David Woods (1872–)
- Anne Woods (1874–)
Susannah Haley, daughter of Thomas Haley and Ann Drum, was born in 1856 in Plenty River, Morang, Vic and died in 1906 in Tungamah, Vic at the age of 50. She married Thomas Reynolds, son of Stephen Reynolds and Ann Carmodes, in 1879. He was born about 1844 and died in 1903.
Children of Susannah Haley and Thomas Reynolds:
- Stephen Reynolds (1880–1881)
- John Reynolds (1881–1914)
- James Reynolds (1882–)
- Thomas Reynolds (1885–1892)
- Mary Reynolds (1887–1897)
- Patrick Reynolds (1888–1889)
- Laurence Reynolds (1889–)
- Susan Elizabeth Reynolds (1891–)
- Ann Reynolds (1893–)
- Stephen Reynolds (1895–1906)
Annie Haley, daughter of Thomas Haley and Ann Drum, was born in 1856 in Morang, Vic and died in 1921 in Fitzroy, Melbourne, Australia at the age of 65. She married William Irving in 1878 in Plenty River, Morand, Vic.
Children of Annie Haley and William Irving:
- William Irving (1879–)
- James Jamieson Irving (1880–)
- Annie May Irving (1880–1883)
- Henrietta Irving (1884–1920)
- Robert Francis Irving (1887–1905)
- Herbert Leslie Irving (1889–1889)
- Donald David Irving (1890–1941)
- Irene Florence Irving (1893–1960)
- Edward George Irving (1901–)
Elizabeth Haley, daughter of Thomas Haley and Ann Drum, was born in 1860 in Plenty River, Morang, Vic and died in 1931 at the age of 71. She married 2 times. The first time she married Arthur Bromley Smith on May 16, 1878 in Benalla. The second time she married Wiliam Hughes.
Children of Elizabeth Haley and Arthur Bromley Smith:
- George Henry Smith (1879–1880)
- Olivia Maria Smith (1881–)
- Arthur Harry Smith (1883–)
- Lilian Smith (1886–)
- Valerie Smith (1893–1977)
Children of Elizabeth Haley and Wiliam Hughes:
- Rowland Hughes (1895–1982)
- John Haley Hughes (1900–1979)
- Raymond Claudius Hughes (1903–)
Lucy Haley, daughter of Thomas Haley and Ann Drum, was born in 1865 in Devenish and died in 1896 in Benalla, Vic at the age of 31. She married Charles Clover, son of James Clover and Bridget Ellen Barfoot Hockey, on September 21, 1884. He was born in Seymour, Victoria and died on September 26, 1932 in Tocumwal, Nsw.
Children of Lucy Haley and Charles Clover:
- Lucy Clover (1885–1953)
- Charles Henry James Clover (1888–1888)
- Herbert James Clover (1889–1942)
- Ethel May Clover (1892–1922)
- Hector Albert Clover (1894–1915)
- Generation 3back to top
Laurence Reynolds, son of Thomas Reynolds and Susannah Haley, was born in 1889. He married Florance McGARY in 1912. She was born in Violet Town Cemetery, Victoria, Australia.
James Jamieson Irving, son of William Irving and Annie Haley, was born in 1880 in Benalla.
James Jamieson Irving had 2 children.
Donald David Irving, son of William Irving and Annie Haley, was born in 1890 in Benalla and died in February 1941 in Albert Park, Vic, Aus at the age of 51.
Donald David Irving had 2 children.
Olivia Maria Smith, daughter of Arthur Bromley Smith and Elizabeth Haley, was born in 1881 in Benalla. She married William Del La Rue, son of William Del La Rue and Louisa Augusta Borchers, in 1902. He was born in 1872 in Eldorado.
Valerie Smith, daughter of Arthur Bromley Smith and Elizabeth Haley, was born in 1893 in Wahgunyah and died in 1977 in Benalla at the age of 84.
Rowland Hughes, son of Wiliam Hughes and Elizabeth Haley, was born in 1895 in Wangaratta and died in 1982 in Bendigo at the age of 87. He married Dorothea Turner, daughter of George Turner and Dorothea Carter, in 1933. She was born about 1913 and died in 1977 in Geelong.
John Haley Hughes, son of Wiliam Hughes and Elizabeth Haley, was born in 1900 and died in 1979 at the age of 79.
Raymond Claudius Hughes, son of Wiliam Hughes and Elizabeth Haley, was born in 1903 in Wangaratta. He married Gladys Muriel Ivey. She was born about 1893 and died in 1956.
Lucy Clover, daughter of Charles Clover and Lucy Haley, was born on April 30, 1885 in Benalla and died on December 4, 1953 at the age of 68. She married John Thomas Reynolds on April 24, 1904.
Children of Lucy Clover and John Thomas Reynolds:
- Mary Reynolds (1904–)
- Ellen Reynolds (1906–)
- Eileen Mary Reynolds (1909–)
- Rachael Elizabeth Reynolds (1911–)
Ethel May Clover, daughter of Charles Clover and Lucy Haley, was born on February 29, 1892 in Black Range, Vic and died on August 20, 1922 in Levin, Nz at the age of 30. She married Alfred James Mark, son of William Mark and Jane Elizabeth Bateman.
Children of Ethel May Clover and Alfred James Mark:
- Rupert Alfred Mark (1914–1987)
- Private
Emigration | On board the "Derwent" |
Marriage | Married by the Rev. T. Hart Davies |
Shared note | Born the same county,Fermanagh, as Jane Ware, Thomas Haley's first wife. Ann was an Irish Orphan. Between 1848 and 1850, about 4,000 female 'orphans' from workhouses in Britain were dispatched to Sydney, Port Phillip (now Melbourne) and Adelaide. Sydney received the lion's share, more than 2,000 of them. The girls ranged in age from 14 to 20, with most of them between 16 and 18. The lucky ones found good jobs, married, and made a success of their lives. Though they were called 'orphans', some of these Irish girls had parents. However, most of these parents had been driven off their farms by the potato famine, and their families broken up. Often these girls' parents had already emigrated to America or Australia. The girls had no choice but to follow. There were two main reasons why the colonial governments in Australia accepted the Irish girls. First, Caroline Chisholm, the reformer, was worried that the shortage of women in New South Wales would create social problems and lobbied for an increase in female migration. Secondly, because English and Scottish women did not want to come to Australia as domestic servants, there was a shortage of household workers. Whatever the reasons for bringing in the Irish girls, the campaign backfired. The Melbourne Argus called them 'the most stupid, the most ignorant, the most useless and the most unmanageable set of beings that ever cursed a country by their presence'. Public opinion turned against them in the end, and the British Government was forced to stop sending them. Were the charges against them true? Partly. Many of the girls were too young, poor and untrained to fit into middle-class homes, and lacked social graces. Others misbehaved. But there was also quite a bit of prejudice involved in the condemnation of the Irish girls. They certainly weren't all ignorant: 39 per cent of the girls on the Thomas Arbuthnot could read and write, and another 24 per cent could read only. But in the mid-nineteenth century, Australian society then was dominated by English and Scottish Protestants. These girls had two strikes against them; they were Irish and Catholic. This conflict between the Irish Catholics and the English/Scottish Protestantssectarian strifewas a feature of life in this country, and did not break down till the 1960s, when the arrival of immigrants from dozens of other countries and cultures made the old hostilities seem irrelevant. ENNISKILLEN, a borough and market town, and a parish, partly in the barony of MAGHERABOY, but chiefly in that of TYRKENNEDY, county of FERMANAGH, (of which it is the chief town) and province of ULSTER, 21½ miles (S.E.) from Ballyshannon (County Donegal), and 80½ (N.N.W.) from Dublin city; containing 14,563 inhabitants, of which number 13,777 are in the parish of Enniskillen, and the remainder in that part of the town which extends into the parish of Rossory; the borough and the town contain 6796 inhabitants. This place, which takes its name from the island in Lough Erne, in which it is situated, was formerly called Inniskillen, and was, previously to the time of James I., merely a stronghold of Maguire, chieftain of Fermanagh, who had a castle heer, which was taken by the English forces under Sir Richard Bingham in 1594; but no sooner had that leaving in it a royal garrison, than it was besieged by the forces of ODonnel and his confederates. A detachment sent to its assistance by the lord-deputy was totally defeated, and the garrison, after holding out to the last extremity, being compelled to surrender, were inhumanly slaughtered by the assailants, who pleaded the like cruelty on the part of Bingham, when he took the town as a justification for their revenge. The town, though it holds a conspicuous place in Irish history and is now the capital of the county, is of no great antiquity. The island being considered an important spot for the establishment of a military force, a royal fort was erected there about the commencement of the 17th century; and the advantage of its situation for a town induced James I., in 1612, to make a grant of one-third of it to William Cole, Esq., ancestor of the Earl of Enniskillen, on condition of his building a town upon it, settling in it twenty British families to be incorporated as burgesses, some of whose descendants still hold burgage tenements: and assigning convenient places for a church and churchyard, a market house, public school, 30 acres for a common, and a site for a prison to be built for the custody of prisoners and malefactors within the limits of the county of Fermanagh. This last condition seems to imply that it was intended to make this the assize town and capital of the county from the very date of its foundation. On the breaking out of the war in 1641, the town was defended by its founder and governor, then Sir William Cole, who despatched the first intelligence to that event to the English government: and so active were the inhabitants in opposing the enemy, that they not only repulsed the insurgents with great loss, but also made themselves masters of he castle of Maguire. While the Earl of Ormonde acted in concert with the Royalists, this town opposed the parliamentarian interest and firmly resisted every attack made upon it by the forces of that party; but it was finally compelled to surrender to Sir Charles Coote. During the war of the resolution the inhabitants firmly adhered to the cause of William III., whom they proclaimed King ; they chose Gustavus Hamilton as their governor, and bravely defended the town, which became a refuge for Protestants of the north-west, from all assaults of the adverse party; and from the embarrassment they caused to James forces during the reign of Londonderry, the Protestants assembled in the town soon became celebrated as the Enniskillen men. Lord Galmoy was sent with a detachment of James army to reduce them, and for this purpose invested Crom Castle, their frontier garrison, situated on Lough Erne; after an unsuccessful stratagem to produce intimidation, by ordering two painted tin cannons to be drawn by eight horses towards the fort, the garrison, being reinforced from Enniskillen, made a vigorous sally upon the besiegers, drove them from the trenches, and returned in triumph with considerable booty and the mock cannon which had with so much apparent difficulty been drawn up and planted against them. So successful and formidable were the frequent excursions of this band, that the ruling party in Dublin actually expected them speedily at their gates; and a length a plan was formed for attacking the town at once by three different armies. For this purpose, Macarthy, an experienced officer, who had been recently created a peer, encamped at Belturbet with 7000 men; Sarsfield, another general equally distinguished, led an army from Connaught; while Fitz-James, Duke of Berwick, prepared to attack it from the north. The Enniskilleners, aware of the movements of the Connaught army only, marched out of the town with great rapidity, surprised the camp and routed the forces with much slaughter. On the approach of the Duke of Berwick, some companies sent from the town to seize a post which they might have defended against his numbers, ventured beyond the prescribed bounds and were cut to pieces ; but on the approach of Hamilton, the governor of the town, the Duke of Berwick retired with his forces. Macarthy, at the head of an army which had already defeated Lord Inchiquin in Munster, marched towards Enniskillen and invested Crom castle; a detachment under an officer named Berry was sent to the relief of the castle, but finding it necessary to retreat before a very superior force, which had been detached by the enemy to intercept him, he was pursued and a skirmish followed, in which the townsmen were victorious. The arrival of the main bodies respectively under the command of Macarthy and Wolsley, the latter, one of Col. Kirk's officers, brought on a general engagement near Newtown-Butler and Lisnaskea, from both which places the battle has taken its name. The inferiority of the Enniskilleners in numbers was counterbalanced by superior resolution and energy ; they defeated and pursued the assailants, granting quarter to none but officers ; about 2000 were killed in the engagement, and of 500, who plunged into the lake, only one escaped drowning ; about the same number of officers were taken prisoners, among whom was their general Macarthy. The town is situated on an island in the narrowest part of Lough Erne, or rather in a strait several miles in length, which connects the great northern and southern expanses of the lake, and in which are numerous inlets. It is remarkable for its respectable and thriving appearance, and for the advantages it possesses in the navigation of the lake and the facility afforded for excursions among the rich and beautiful scenery for which it is distinguished; it has increased considerably of late, and is still improving. The principal street takes an irregular course across the island, from the bridge which connects it with the main land, on the east, to that which crosses the opposite channel on the west, which two bridges form the only outlets. Several smaller streets diverge from the main street ; and contiguous to the eastern bridge, in the townland of Toneystick and parish of Enniskillen, is a suburb in which is an old redoubt, called the East Fort; and beyond the western bridge is another suburb, in the parish of Rossory in which is the West Fort. The total number of house, is 1036, of which 875 are slated and the remainder thatched. Here are barracks for artillery and infantry and a constabulary police station. Among the buildings that have recently been erected, is a range of respectable houses, called Brook-place, built by Mr. Richard Kirkpatrick, on the mail coach road to Ballyshannon ; a very neat house, called Brook View Lodge, pleasantly situated on the side of a hill commanding au extensive view Lough Erne and the surrounding country; and a number of respectable houses, called Willoughby-place, which when completed, will add much to the beauty of the town The chief trade is in timber, coal, arid slates, imported from Ballyshannon to Belleek, at the lower extremity of the lough, 18 miles distant, and brought by water to the town. The manufacture of leather is carried on upon a limited scale, and there are two distilleries and a brewery A considerable trade is also carried on in corn, of which great quantities are sold, partly for the supply of the town and of the distilleries here and at Belturbet, and partly for exportation to Sligo and Strabane; this is also the chief retail market for a very large surrounding district. The patent granted to William Cole, in 1612, authorised the holding of a market on Thursdays, and a fair on Lammas-day, with tolls; and in 1813 a patent was granted to the Earl of Enniskillen for holding fairs on the 10th of each month, except March, May, and August. Besides the general market on Thursdays, a butter market is held on Tuesdays. A butter and grain market have been built on land belonging to the Earl, at an expense of upwards of £900 ; there is another market-house under the town-hall, also a pig market ; and convenient shambles have been erected at an expense of £750, which was advanced by the Earl to the corporation. A linen-hall was built a few years since at an expense exceeding £400, but has never been used as a hall, and is lent gratuitously to the conductor of a private school. By the charter of Jas. I., granted in 1613, the corporation consists of a provost, 14 burgesses, and all the inhabitants of the island as a commonalty. The provost is elected by the free burgesses on Midsummer-day, and is sworn into office on the 29th of Sept. ; he is a justice of the peace for the borough, and also usually for the county; The government is vested in the provost and free burgesses, who elect members of their own body, admit freemen, appoint officers, and manage the property of the corporation. The borough court, held every Thursday, has jurisdiction to the amount of £3.6s.8d., late currency, and proceeds by attachment. The same charter conferred upon the entire corporation the privilege of sending two members to the Irish parliament, which they continued to do till the Union, since which time they have returned one to the Imperial parliament. By the act of the 2nd of Wm. IV., cap. 88, the right of election is vested in the resident burgesses and £10 householders, amounting, in 1836, to a constituency of 220, of whom 211 were £10 householders, and nine resident burgesses; the provost is the returning officer. The electoral boundaries comprehend an area of 156 statute acres, and are described in the Appendix. The assizes for the county and quarter sessions of the peace are held in the county court-house which is a plain building near the eastern bridge. The county gaol, built about 20 years since, is near the town, on the Dublin road: it is on the radiating plan, with the governor's house in the centre, and will contain 120 prisoners; the number of cells is 36, of which four are for females; and there are five day-rooms, seven airing-yards, a treadmill, hospital, and school. The prisoners are regularly employed in breaking stones for repairing the roads: the expense of maintenance, &c., for 1835, was £1334. 8s. 1d. The parish comprises, according to the Ordnance survey (including islands), 26,440½ statute acres, of which 26,387 are in the barony of Tyrkennedy, and 681¾ are water. The residences of the nobility and gentry are numerous, among which are Ely Lodge, that of the Marquess of Ely; Florence Court, of the Earl of Enniskillen; Castle Cool, of the Earl of Belmore ; Rosfad, of J. Richardson, Esq. ; Rockfield, of J. Irvine, Esq., D. L. ; Castle Archdall, of Gen Mervyn Archdall; Riverstown, of C. Archdall, Esq. ; Prospect, of J. Nixon, Esq., Gran, of A. Nixon, Esq. ; Levaghy, of Jason Hassard, Esq. ; Dunbar, of T. Nixon, Esq. ; Crocknacrieve, of Col. T. Stewart; Cork Hill, of the Rev. A. H. Irvine; and Bellview, of G. Knox, Esq. On the border of Lough Erne stands Bellisle, the beautiful and romantic seat of the late Earl of Rosse, now in the possession of the Rev. J. Grey Porter; it is in a dilapidated state, but is about to be rebuilt, together with the bridge leading to its extensive demesne. The living is a rectory and vicarage, in the diocese of Clogher, forming the corps of the precentorship of the cathedral, in the patronage of the Provost and Fellows of Trinity College, Dublin : the tithes amount to £550; and the glebe, consisting of 315 acres, with the glebe-house, is valued at £293. 4s. 6d., per annum, making the income of the precentor £843. 4s. 6d. The church is a plain building, erected in 1637 ; and there is a chapel of ease at Tempo. Divine service is also performed in the school at Derryhean. In the R. C. divisions the parish is the head of a union or district, including the town of Enniskillen, the parish of Rossory , and parts of Derryvullen, Cleenish, and Derrybrusk; there is a very large chapel in the town, in which are also a meeting-house for Presbyterians in connection with the Synod of Ulster, of the third class, and places of worship for Wesleyan and Primitive Methodists. About 670 children are educated in nine public schools, and about 900 in 25 private schools, exclusive, of those taught in eight Sunday schools. The royal school of Enniskillen was founded by Chas. I., in 1626, and endowed with lands near the town, which, according to a survey made in 1795, comprise 3360 statute acres. The school-house in the town being too small, about 1777, the Rev. Mark Noble, who was then head-master, and had the absolute disposal of the school funds, built a spacious house for it at Portora, in the vicinity, capable of accommodating 70 boarders. The school contains about 65 children; the head-master has a salary of £500 per annum, late currency, besides the payments from the pupils and the house and grounds, which include 33 acres; the first classical assistant has £250, and the second £100 per annum. Four scholarships of £20 per annum each are conferred by the Commissioners of Education on those scholars who are most distinguished for proficiency in study and propriety of conduct, and are held during their stay at the school; and the Rev. ?? Burke bequeathed three sums of £110, late currency, for the use of three of the pupils on their entering Trinity College, Dublin. The Commissioners of Education appropriate £400 per annum of the funds of this school to the endowment of five king's scholarships of £50 each, and five of £30 each in Trinity College, Dublin, to be held for five years by scholars elected by the board of Trinity College, out of those who have been three years at least in either of the royal schools of Enniskillen, Armagh, or Dungannon. The charitable institutions are a mendicity society, a dispensary, and a county infirmary, which is a large building on an eminence outside the town, on the Dublin road. Enniskillen is the birthplace of Lord Plunket, and gives the titles of Earl and Viscount to the family of Cole, by which it was founded. |
Shared note | (Research):Death cert # 7939 |