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County of
Tipperary, by Samuel Lewis
(Topographical Dictionary of Ireland,
1837)
TIPPERARY, (County of), an inland county of the
province of MUNSTER, bounded on the east by the King's and Queen's
counties, and that of Kilkenny; on the south, by that of Waterford;
on the west, by those of Cork, Limerick, and Clare, from which
latter it is separated by the Shannon and Lough Derg; and on the
north, by that of Galway and King's county. It extends from 52° 12'
to 53° 9' N. Lat., and from 7° 20' to 8° 26' W. Lon.; comprising an
area, according to the Ordnance survey, of 1,013,173 statute acres,
of which 819,698 consist of cultivated land, 182,147 of bog,
mountain, and unimproved waste, and 11,328 are covered with water.
The population, in 1821, was 346,896; and in 1831, 402,363.
The inhabitants of this portion of the island are designated by
Ptolemy the Coriondi. Aengus McNafrach, King of Munster in the fifth
century, is said to have enlarged the territory of the powerful
tribe of the Desii, occupying the present county of Waterford, by
the addition of the southern part of Tipperary, then forming a
district called Magh Femin, but afterwards designated Desie
Thuasgeart or North Desie, to distinguish it from the more southern
lands of the same sept. According to Vallancey, the chiefs of Magh
Femin, whose principal residence was on the rock of Cashel, obtained
the name of Hy dun na moi, or "the chiefs of the hill of the plain,"
rendered by corruption O'Donnohue, and from them descended the Mac
Carthies. The Desii maintained a separate sovereignty until
overpowered by the first English invaders, against whom, however,
they carried on a sanguinary and protracted struggle. The families
then holding superior rank were those of O'Fogarty, occupying the
territory about Thurles, anciently called Hy Fogarta; O'Brien,
possessing the tract bordering on the Shannon, below Lough Derg,
called Aradh Cliach, and forming the present barony of Owney and
Arra; and O'Kennedy, who held Muscraighe Thire, now the baronies of
Upper and Lower Ormond. The names of several other small districts
have also been preserved, such as Corca Eathrach, including the
country around Holy Cross and Cashel, forming a considerable part of
Goulin, or the Golden Vale; Eoganacht, a territory and sept to the
north of this, around Thurles; and Hy-Kerrin still further north.
Ormond, the name of the northern part of the county, signifies East
Munster.
The first English army that penetrated into this part of the island
was led in person by Hen. II., who, in 1172, advanced from
Waterford, and on the banks of the Suir received the submissions of
the surrounding chieftains of the south; but on his return these
submissions were for the most part retracted, and hostilities with
the English commenced by the inarch of Earl Strongbow with an army
to Cashel, where he reviewed his troops, and having received
information of the strength and posture of the enemy, sent to
Dublin, for the aid of the Ostmen forces enlisted in the English
service there. When this auxiliary force had advanced as far as
Thurles, it was suddenly attacked by O'Brien of Thomond so
successfully, that their four principal leaders and 400 men were
slain; upon which Strongbow made a precipitate retreat to Waterford.
Afterwards Prince John, to secure the southern part of the county in
subjection to the English authority, ordered the erection of castles
at Ardfinnan and Tipperary. The next great struggle originated in an
attempt made by Daniel O'Brien, of Thomond, to dispossess the
English of this tract of country, for which purpose he levied a
considerable force, and the contending parties having met at Thurles,
a battle ensued in which the English were discomfited. But this did
not put an end to the contest; the English still continued to ravage
the territories of O'Brien, and to increase the number of their
castles, which they gradually extended towards the Shannon.
When the territory had been in a great measure reduced, Hen. II.
granted the whole of its lay possessions to Theobald Walter, who
accompanied prince John to Ireland, in 1185, and was constituted
"Chief Butler" of Ireland, a dignity made hereditary in his family,
and from which it derives its name. Tipperary was one of the
counties erected into shire ground by King John, in 1210. In 1315,
Edmund, the fifth chief Butler of Ireland, received a grant of the
return of all writs in his cantreds of Ormon, Hyogarty, and
Hyocaroyl; and his son and successor, James, was created Earl of
Ormonde in 1328. Edw. III. granted to this nobleman's son, James,
who had married Eleanor Bohun, grand-daughter of Edw. I., for the
better support of the name and honour of Earl of Ormonde, and in
consideration of his valuable services, and of the consanguinity
existing between him and his majesty, the regality, fees, and all
other liberties in the county of Tipperary, and also the prisage of
wines in Ireland. The royal liberty thus established in the county
continued until the commencement of the last century, having,
through the power, talents and loyalty of the family, been preserved
long after the other royal liberties in Ireland had ceased to exist.
The lands of the church being exempt from the palatine jurisdiction,
formed considerable tracts within the limits of the county, in which
the king's writs and ordinary jurisdiction had free course; these
lands, in contradistinction to the county palatine, were designated
the Cross of Tipperary, had their own sheriffs, and sent separate
members to the Irish parliament. From a representation of this
parliament, in 1430, it appears, that the greater part of the county
was then subject to "Irish enemies, or English rebels," meaning by
the latter name such as, under the loose authority of the age, lived
in the old native fashion, in contempt of the King's authority or
the English law; but the Butler family and the archbishops of Cashel
were at a subsequent period firm in their allegiance to Hen. VII.,
in opposition to the attempts of Lambert Simnel. In the reign of Hen
VIII., ordinances for the government of this and other western
counties, in which English law had been long disregarded, were
committed for execution to the Earl of Ormonde. In the 28th of the
same reign, much of the possessions and privileges of the earldom
vested in the king, by his marriage with Anne Boleyn, while such
portions as were settled in tail male, including the prisage of
wines, passed to the eldest heir male of the family, Sir Pierce
Butler, created Earl of Ossory, and commonly styled Lord Ormonde,
and in 1537, the same king confirmed to this nobleman all the
lordships and manors anciently belonging to the family, in this and
other counties.
In 1632, James, commonly styled "the great Duke of Ormonde,"
succeeded to the possessions of his family; and in the subsequent
civil commotions, in which he acted so important a part, this county
suffered very severely. In 1642, almost every fort and castle was
captured by the Irish, and nearly all the relations of the earl were
at once involved in the insurrection. In l647, it suffered from the
military ravages of Lord Inchiquin, who took Cahir and Cashel, and
ravaged the whole county. After the fall of Clonmel in 1650, a great
portion of the forfeited lands of the rebels was divided amongst the
parliamentarian adventurers, and subsequently confirmed to them by
the act of settlement after the Restoration. James, Duke of Ormonde,
obtained confirmation of all his ancient paternal property by
several patents and statutes of Chas. II., and the royalties and
liberties thereby granted were extended over the county at large,
including the Cross of Tipperary, and were confirmed by act of
parliament in the 14th and 15th of the same king. James, grandson of
the Great Duke, was impeached on the accession of Geo. I., and,
fleeing to France, was attainted of high treason by an act of' the
British parliament, and his estates confiscated; and by an act of
the Irish parliament, in the 2nd of Geo. I., all the liberties,
regalities, franchises, courts of law and equity, jurisdictions,
rights, power and authorities, granted by the letters patent and
acts of parliament above mentioned, were for ever extinguished, and
the rolls and records thereof, consisting of the pleadings in the
court palatine of Tipperary from 1662 to 1714 and leases of lands
from the Duke during the same period, were deposited chiefly in the
Rolls Office of Chancery in Ireland, and a few in the office of the
Chirographer of the Common Pleas. However, by an English statute in
1721, his brother, the Earl of Arran, was enabled to purchase the
estates, and after his Grace's death without issue, succeeded as
heir and representative of the Butlers of Ireland. From this
nobleman's time until the year 1791, the ancient honours of the
house of Ormonde remained dormant; but in that year John Butler,
Esq., of the castle of Kilkenny, was restored to the earldoms of
Ormond and Ossory, Viscounty of Thurles, &c.; no statute of
restoration being deemed necessary on the occasion, as the title had
not been attainted by an act of the Irish parliament. The present
Marquess of Ormonde still retains the honorary office of Chief
Butler, but the profits of the butlerage and prisage were purchased
from the family for £216,000, under the 46th, 50th, and 51st of Geo.
III., and vested in the Crown for the benefit of the public.
The county is partly in the dioceses of Lismore, Emly, and Killaloe,
but chiefly in that of Cashel: for purposes of civil jurisdiction it
is divided into the baronies of Clanwilliam, Eliogarty, Iffa and
Offa East, Iffa and Offa West, Ikerrin, Kilnemanagh, Middlethird,
Lower Orrnond, Upper Ormond, Owney and Arra, and Slievardagh. It
contains the borough, assize and market-town of Clonmel; the city
and borough of Cashel; the corporate, market, and post-town of
Fethard, formerly a parliamentary borough; the market and post-towns
of Nenagh, Thurles, Carrick-on-Suir, Tipperary, Roscrea, Clogheen,
Killenaule, Cahir, and Templemore; and the post-towns of Burris-o'-Leagh,
Burris-o'-Kane, Cloghjordan, Newport, Golden, Littleton, and New
Birmingham: the largest villages are Bansha, (which has a penny
post) Emly, Toomavara, Silvermines, Ballina, Ballingarry, and
Mullinahone. It sent eight members to the Irish parliament, two for
the county, and two for each of the boroughs of Clonmel, Cashel, and
Fethard; but since the Union its representatives in the Imperial
parliament have been two for the county and one for each of the
boroughs of Clonmel and Cashel. The county members are elected at
Clonmel: the constituency, as registered up to Jan. 1st, 1837,
consisted of 837 £50, 379 £20, and 1600 £10 freeholders; 62 £20 and
228 £10 leaseholders; and 16 £50 and 15 £20 rent chargers; making a
total of 3137 voters. The county is included in the Leinster
Circuit. The local government is vested in a lieutenant, 30
deputy-lieutenants, and 153 other magistrates, with the usual county
officers, including 4 coroners. There are 99 constabulary police
stations, comprising altogether a force of 2 magistrates, 10 chief
officers, 77 constables, 464 men and 21 horses. The county gaol is
at Clonmel, and there are bridewells at Cahir, Clogheen, Tipperary,
Cashel, New Birmingham, Thurles, Templemore, Roscrea, Nenagh,
Burris-o'-Kane and Newport. The lunatic asylum for the county is at
Clonmel; where also is the county House of Industry, with a lunatic
asylum attached to it, principally for cases of idiotcy: the county
infirmary is at Cashel: there are Fever hospitals at Clonmel,
Tipperary, Cahir, Burris-o'-Kane, Clogheen, Cloghjordan, Cashel,
Carrick-on-Suir, Nenagh, Roscrea, and Templemore; and dispensaries
at Ballingarry, Bird Hill, Burris-o'-Leagh, Burris-o'-Kane,
Ballyporeen, Clonmel, Drangan, Golden, Kilsheelan, Newcastle,
Portroe, Poulmucka, Lorrha, Carrick-on-Suir, Cahir, Clogheen,
Cappagh-white, Cloghjordan, Dundrum, Fethard, Killenaule,
Mullinahone, Nenagh, Newport, Ballynonty, Roscrea, Silvermines,
Tipperary, Thurles, Templemore, Toomavarra, Littleton and Ballymacky,
each maintained by equal Grand Jury presentments and private
subscriptions. The Grand Jury presentments for 1835 amounted to
£56,795. 16. 0., of which £442. 6. 6. was for new roads and bridges,
&c.; £21,629. 2. 10. for repairs of roads and bridges; £20,065. 16.
1. for public buildings, charities, officers' salaries and
incidents; £11,811. 7. 10. for the police; and £2847. 2. 9. for
repayments of advances made by Government. In the military
arrangements the county is partly in the western, but chiefly in the
south-western, district; and within its limits are nine barracks, or
military stations: four for cavalry, at Cahir, Carrick-on-Suir,
Clogheen, and Fethard; four for infantry, at Cashel, Nenagh, Roscrea,
and Templemore; and one for cavalry, artillery and infantry at
Clonmel; the whole capable of accommodating 139 officers and 2938
men.
The surface of the county is composed of several extensive and
fertile tracts of champaign country, separated from each other by
ranges of hills. The greatest tract of level country is that watered
by the Suir, from its source near Roscrea to Ardfinnan, extending in
length about 50 miles, and in breadth averaging 15. Although it
presents a nearly level appearance, when viewed from the surrounding
heights, owing to the general equality of its successive swells, it
is found to be diversified with slightly depressed valleys and
gentle elevations, which, combined with an exuberant fertility,
present a pleasing though by no means a picturesque succession of
scenery. The part of this plain between the Kilnamanagh and Galtee
ranges, in the centre of which the town of Tipperary is situated,
and which is bounded by a line drawn from Bansha and Thomastown near
Golden on the east, and by another from Galbally through
Pallasgreine to the Bilboa mountains on the west, has been
designated the "Golden Vale," on account of the surpassing richness
of its soil. The general elevation of its surface is about 400 feet
above the level of the sea, though in some parts it does not exceed
250: from Cashel upwards it varies from 326 to 474 feet. On the cast
it is bounded at first by a large tract of bog, a branch of that of
Allen, extending into the contiguous county of Kilkenny; farther
south it is enclosed by the low range of the Slievardagh hills,
forming the Killenaule coal district, extending from the vicinity of
Freshford, in the county of Kilkenny, a distance of eighteen miles
south-westward, to a point five miles beyond Killenaule: the breadth
of this range is about six miles; it is most elevated and abrupt
towards the north-western side, where the height of the hills above
the subjacent plain varies from 300 to 600 feet, while towards the
south-east the surface gradually declines, and in that direction
flow all the principal streams. Farther south the boundary of the
plain is terminated on this side by the elevated group of
Slieve-na-man, to the south-east of Fethard, from which several
ranges of hills extend into the county of Kilkenny. On the south the
vale is immediately overlooked by the steep and towering heights of
the Monevullagh and Knockmeledown mountains, which form the county
boundary towards Waterford; and along the base of the latter, a
branch of the plain extends westward from Cahir and Ardfinnan, by
Clogheen and Ballyporeen, into the vale of the Blackwater, which
forms the northeastern part of the county of Cork. On the north of
this portion of the plain stands the noble range of the Galtees,
which on this side rise for the most part with a gentle ascent,
while on the north-west they are in many parts extremely
precipitous. The length of this range is twenty miles to its
termination at the river Funcheon near Mitchelstown, which river
forms part of the boundary between Tipperary and Cork, and its
breadth from five to seven. The highest summit is Galtymore, which
attains an elevation of about 2500 feet. The wild magnificence of
this chain is, from its sudden elevation in the midst of a fertile
plain, very striking; and its vast groupings present an assemblage
of the most interesting features in boldness, freedom of outline,
and variety of aspect. There are three curious circular lakes of
small extent on these mountains, and the glens diverging from them
present many natural beauties, particularly the western glen, in
which is a fine cascade. North of these is a subordinate and lower
parallel ridge, called Slieve-na-muck, near the base of which stands
the town of Tipperary. From this vicinity a second branch of the
great plain, through which a road runs from Clonmel to Limerick,
extends to the western confines of the county, where it is met by
the more elevated district in the vicinity of Pallasgreine, in the
county of Limerick; and to the north of this vale rises the grand
group of the Bilboa, Keeper, and Slieve-Phelim mountains, presenting
a grand and varied outline. Among these, which occupy a wide
district, is pre-eminently distinguished the Keeper mountain,
between Newport and Silvermines, to the north-west of which lies
another mountain group on the borders of the Shannon at Lough Derg,
appearing to form part of a range extending by Killaloe to the
vicinity of Six-mile-bridge, in the county of Clare, though here
intersected by this grand watercourse. The Bilboa mountains separate
the baronies of Ormond from the other baronies; and from them the
western boundary of the grand vale of Tipperary is continued by a
narrow range of heights, called the Kilnamanagh hills, which
stretches hence north-eastward above Thurles and Templemore, forming
the Devil's Bit mountains; and from these, again, a lower series of
hills extends by Roscrea to the more elevated Slievebloom mountains,
separating the King's from the Queen's county, and which makes the
length of the entire range not less than 40 miles. The Keeper
mountains and their northern dependencies within the county of
Tipperary form a wild tract of country, extending in length about 24
miles, and in breadth about 20, and comprehending an extent of about
480 square miles, throughout the whole of which there was, until
lately, scarcely any road passable for wheel carriages; but two
excellent lines have recently been constructed by Government. From
these mountains to the banks of the Shannon, and its expansion Lough
Derg, extends the fertile plain of the Ormonds, of similar character
to the Golden Vale, like it highly cultivated and adorned with many
rich demesnes. The common elevation of this plain varies from 114 to
274 feet, gradually declining towards Lough Derg.
The soil of the great plains and vales consists of calcareous loams
of various quality, but for the most part exuberantly fertile, and
forming, in parts of the southern and south-western baronies of
Clanwilliam, Middlethird, and Iffa and Offa, the most productive
portion of the county; these baronies contributing more to the
county cess than all the other seven, and comprising a greater
number of highly cultivated farms. The rest of the low country is
similar in character, forming extensive agricultural tracts; the
hills are occupied by poorer soils on substrata of slate and
sandstone, and are often very shallow. Great progress, however, has
been made in their improvement, by means of the facilities which the
construction of new roads has afforded for the introduction of lime
as a manure, which is procured in abundance in the low country. The
soil of the Slievardagh hills is of a cold and wet nature, abounding
in many places with yellow clay. Contiguous to the bog of Allen lies
a great extent of flat marshy ground, producing little but sedges
and aquatic grasses, used for thatching and litter. The diversified
nature of its surface renders the county equally noted for its good
sheepwalks, its rich corn-fields, and its fertile grazing pastures.
In describing the husbandry of the county it may be classed into
five districts, three agricultural, occupying the plains, and two of
pasturage, comprising the mountain tracts. The principal of the
former is the plain from Carrick to Tipperary, the superior quality
of the soil of which, and its contiguity to Clonmel, the great mart
for export, have caused it to be occupied by the more wealthy class
of landholders, in farms averaging about 50 or 60 acres, though
sometimes considerably more: here the lands under tillage exceed the
quantity of pasture in the proportion of five to three. Of the other
two agricultural districts, one occupies the upper part of the same
plain, extending to Roscrea, Burris-o'-leagh, Dundrum and
Cappaghwhite, while the third forms the plain country extending from
the northwestern mountains to the Shannon and Lough Derg.
The mountain districts are the coal tract of Slievardagh and
Killenaule, and the mountains of Upper Ormond and Kilnemanagh. By
much the greater part of the hills of Slievardagh are under tillage;
the farms, which were of considerable size, averaging from 80 to 100
acres, have been in many instances so subdivided among the
descendants of the original lessees, that they do not now average
more than 10. The mountain district of Upper Ormond, including the
Keeper and Kilnamanagh mountains, though elevated, affords good
pasturage to the summit; the bases of these mountains, particularly
on the north, are fertile and under excellent cultivation, which is
extending a considerable way up their sides. In the low lands the
general course of crops is potatoes, wheat, and oats, sometimes for
two years, after which the same course is resumed, after liming or
manuring. On light and shallow soils barley sometimes succeeds the
potatoes. Bere is usually taken off rich deep soils that have
remained long under pasturage.
In the mountain districts, wheat is cultivated only in a few
peculiarly favourable valleys, except where the increased use of
lime has extended its growth on the Slievardagh hills. Sometimes the
corn crops are repeated until the soil is entirely exhausted, and
then it is left to regain its natural sward, and remains untilled
for a few years. The common mode of planting the potatoes is in lazy
beds, but in many parts they are now drilled. The artificial grasses
are red and white clover, rye-grass, and hay-seeds, which last are
now almost invariably sown whenever land is laid down for grass. The
grass lands are good and sound, and though not in general clothed
with the luxuriant herbage that adorns the county of Limerick, the
butter is of superior quality. The most productive lands are the
abundant tracts of low meadow along the banks of the larger rivers
descending from the mountains, and constantly enriched by their
alluvial deposits. These lands are here designated Inches,
signifying "islands." A considerable portion of fertile land is
devoted to the purposes of the dairy; and there are some extensive
grazing farms, on which large herds of cattle are fattened. The
butter, which is made in large quantities in the dairies, is mostly
packed in firkins and sent to Clonmel, Waterford, or Limerick, for
the English market, or by the canal to Dublin: the demand for it is
annually increasing.
The principal manure is lime, which is extensively used on the rich
lands of the vale, and in reclaiming and improving the colder soils
of the high lands. A compost of turf mould mixed with the refuse of
the farm-yard is also used, particularly for top-dressing. Limestone
gravel is likewise in demand: that taken from the escars in the coal
district between Killenaule and New Park, which form fertile and
picturesque hills chiefly composed of this material, was formerly in
great repute as manure, and was always spread on the ground without
being calcined. Agricultural implements and carriages of improved
construction are every year coming more into use; a light car with a
wicker body is common. The fences are generally large mounds of
earth from six to eight feet at the base, thrown up from the trench,
frequently topped with white thorn or furze. In some districts stone
walls are the general fence: a few resident gentlemen have set the
example of an improved English system of fencing. Notwithstanding
the undulatory character of the plain country, which renders the
land less retentive of moisture than the contiguous county of
Kilkenny, large tracts of the tillage land require draining. In many
parts, a mode of drawing the water off pasture lands, called
pipe-draining, has been introduced from Limerick: it consists of a
narrow drain, covered with a thick surface sod, resting on an offset
on each side. In some parts of the Ormonds, and on the lands of the
principal gentry, the most approved systems of green-cropping are
practised: the raising of clover has become general among the
farmers, by whom rape, flax, vetches, and hemp are occasionally
sown, though not to any great extent. Flax is cultivated in small
plots, on the headlands or in a corner of the field, for domestic
use only. The fields are generally very small, even in the dairy
districts seldom exceeding five or six acres, and in tillage land
being from two to four. The number and width of the ditches in such
a mode of arrangement must throw much land out of cultivation. Great
improvements have taken place latterly in the breeds of every kind
of cattle: the breed most esteemed for the dairy is the Irish cow
crossed by the Holderness or Durham, the latter of which seems to
thrive best on every soil but the limestone, where the cross between
the Devon and Limerick answers better: the Kerry cow crossed by the
Old Leicester is small, but fattens rapidly in the lowland pastures.
Sheep are seldom seen except with the gentry and large farmers: the
defective system of fencing, the small holdings and subsequent
minute subdivisions of the fields tend to exclude them from the
management of the small farmer: in the mountain districts the small
old hairy country breed is still to be found. Pigs are very
numerous, forming part of the stock from the highest to the lowest
landholder: they grow rapidly, are easily fattened, and much care is
bestowed on them: great numbers are shipped for England both alive
and dead. The breeding and improvement of horses is also much
attended to, although the number is now less than what it formerly
was, the farmers having brought into use a greater number of asses
and mules to perform the drudgery. Some of the asses are of a large
Spanish breed; they are almost everywhere used by the poorer
classes.
There are very few woods, and these are mostly mere copses,
consisting of underwood, or stunted oak, whitethorn and birch. The
defect is in course of being remedied by the numerous plantations
around the mansions of the gentry, in some of the glens and on the
sides of the hills; the most extensive wood of this description is
that in the western Galtees, round the mountain lodge of the Earl of
Kingston. Several good nurseries for forest trees have been
established, particularly in the neighbourhood of Clonmel, and great
encouragement to plant is held out by many of the landed
proprietors. The greatest extent of bog is that formed originally by
the obstructed waters of the Nore, which constitutes a tract of
36,025 statute acres, between Roscrea, Urlingford, and Killenaule,
forming part of the bog of Allen: its general elevation is about 400
feet above the level of the sea. This vast tract, now wholly
unprofitable except for fuel, is, according to a computation made by
the surveyors in 1811, capable of being reclaimed at the moderate
expense of 5s. per acre, and of being converted into land of the
best quality; but with the exception of petty encroachments and
improvements on the borders, no attempt has hitherto been made to
carry into execution the plans then deemed practicable. The great
object is the removal of obstructions in the bed of the Nore, which
flows through these morasses, and must form their main drain. There
are several other detached bogs, all capable of being reclaimed,
because they command a fall towards some one of the great rivers of
the county. Yet, notwithstanding these extended tracts of turbary,
the bog is so unequally distributed that the peasantry in many parts
suffer much from the want of fuel; in the neighbourhood of Cahir,
the women and children are chiefly employed in collecting every
thing of a combustible nature from the ditches and roads. In 1786,
one of the smaller bogs of the county overflowed, and submerged some
lands in its progress to the Suir at Ballygriffin.
The mineral productions are various and important. The plain country
forms part of the great limestone field of Ireland. The Roscrea and
Devil's Bit mountains, which are a continuation of the Slievebloom
range, consist of sandstone in mass, whose covering everywhere
assumes the form of conglomerate: the Keeper and Bilboa mountains,
in which this range terminates, consist of a nucleus of clay-slate
surrounded by sandstone, except on the north, near the village of
Silvermines, where the clay-slate comes immediately in contact with
the limestone of the flat district, extending nearly to Lough Derg:
the surrounding sandstone in some parts forms a red coarse
conglomerate, similar to that of Lyons and Donabate, near Dublin,
and is quarried for mill-stones. The Galtees, with the subordinate
ridge of Slieve-na-muck, consist wholly of sandstone, the upper part
of which forms strata from "one to two feet thick, gradually curving
in the form of the summit: the sandstone of Slieve-na-muck is
arranged in horizontal strata, which yield excellent flags. The
Knockmeledown and Monavullagh mountains, ranging along the southern
boundary of the county, are likewise composed of clay-slate, with
sandstone at the base and horizontal strata of the same formation on
their summits: the Slieve-na-man group is of analogous structure,
consisting of a nucleus of clay-slate surrounded and surmounted by
sandstone, which is connected with the sandstone hills stretching by
Nine-mile-house towards Carrick-on-Suir and Thomastown. The
clay-slate to the east of Slieve-na-man, extending towards Kilmagany,
yields good slates, particularly in the quarries of Inchinagloch, or
the Ormond quarries. The Killenaule coal district chiefly occupies a
low range of heights extending to Coalbrook, on the north-east, a
distance of about 5 miles. The strata constituting this formation
are shale and sandstone, the principal bed of the latter forming the
main body of the elevated part of the coal hills; the whole occupy a
depression in the limestone strata, from the borders of which they
dip to a common centre, those declining from the northwest having a
descent about twice as rapid as those from the south-eastern margin.
This bed of sandstone forms narrow troughs or basins lying
north-east and south-west, in which are beds of fire-clay, forming
the immediate floor of the coal and covered next it by two beds of
shale and one of iron rock. In some instances this series appears to
be repeated, two or more seams of coal lying one above the other in
the same trough, which are generally from 40 to 43 yards from the
surface to the upper bed of coal, with a breadth of from 500 to 700
yards. The fire-clay under the coal varies in thickness from four to
nine feet, and is everywhere interspersed with vegetable
impressions, apparently of grasses, which, when fresh, have a glossy
surface. The roof also exhibits vegetable impressions of a similar
kind, chiefly of ferns, reeds and grasses, but occasionally of
shells. The coal of the whole district is of the kind called stone
or blind coal, similar to that of Kilkenny and Queen's county. The
value of the quantity annually raised, previously to 1825, amounted
to about £12,000, but has since nearly doubled. The increase is
attributable in a great measure to the exertions of the Mining
Company of Ireland, who took several of the mines on lease, among
which were those of Glangoole, Ballygalavan, and Boulintlea, the
last-named of which is said to be the most extensive coalfield in
Ireland, and opened that of Mardyke in 1827. The principal colliery
worked by an individual is that of Coalbrook, the property of Mr.
Langley, in which the beds of coal are not only more extended but
nearer the surface and more regularly stratified than any others in
the same . neighbourhood: a singular feature in the strata of these
collieries is their occasional interruption by what are technically
called "hags" or "faults," which consist of substitutions of firm
shale in lieu of coal, commonly from three to five yards broad,
ranging across the troughs in a north-western and south-eastern
direction. The Coalbrook colliery has been worked for more than a
century by the family of the present proprietor, and was the only
mine of any importance kept open previously to the Mining Company's
undertaking: the first steam-engine in this part of the country was
erected in it. There are now extensive collieries in full operation
at Ballinastick and Earl's Hill, belonging to Mr. Going. The troughs
generally contain two or three seams of coal from one to two feet
thick, covering a space varying from 50 to 600 acres. The undulating
surface being favourable to the construction of adit levels, most of
the seams were worked to the depth at which this mode was available
before much use was made of steam power. One fourth of the produce
of the seam is pure coal and the remainder culm: the former is
peculiarly adapted to every purpose where a strong regular heat is
required; it possesses about 87 per cent, of pure carbon, and,
therefore, without any preliminary preparation, it is fit for the
use of the maltster, and is carried to great distances for brewers,
distillers, millers, and smiths: the culm is in great demand for
burning lime, and is likewise made up into balls with a mixture of
clay, and used in the kitchen: the charge for the coal at the pit's
mouth varies from 20s. to 40s. per ton, according to the quality;
that of the culm from 16s. to 18s. The collieries in which
steam-engines are employed are worked on the most approved
principles, the engine pits being sunk in the lowest part of the
field whence the coal is raised: eight engines are now erected in
the district, in which 34 pits are at work, giving employment to
upwards of 1000 persons. In the Coalbrook pits several valuable
seams of iron stone, yielding about 30 per cent, of metal, have been
found, which have not yet been turned to profitable account. The
Mining Company likewise possesses extensive slate quarries in the
hilly tract adjoining the lower extremity of Lough Derg. Until a
late period the produce of these quarries had to be conveyed by a
land carriage of six miles to Killaloe, whence it was taken by boats
along the Shannon or canal, although they lie within two miles of
the Shannon navigation; but a new line of road thither, and the
erection of a small quay in a bay in Lough Derg, allow it now to be
conveyed at a greatly reduced scale of carriage to every part of the
country with which the Shannon or the canals communicate. The
produce of the mine has been about 7000 tons annually. The same
company had the slate quarries at Derry, close to the shipping quay
on the Shannon, but these are, now held by John Salmon, of
Derryville, near Killaloe, Esq.; and also those at Glenpatrick, east
of Clonmel, of great magnitude and returning a good profit. But the
mineral works of earliest celebrity are the copper and lead mines
near Silvermines. They were first worked by an English company who
extracted a considerable proportion of silver from the ore; when
their lease expired about a century ago, new veins were opened and
the works extended in different directions by successive companies.
Mr. Hudson, the last lessee, sold his interest to the Mining
Company, who, after sinking some expensive shafts, relinquished the
attempt. The works were opened in four places called the Old Works,
Knockeen, and Kevestown, on Lord Dunally's estate, and Garryard, on
that of Lord Norbury. The Old Works were carried on in a space
between the clay-slate and limestone rock, which here approach each
other, being several fathoms wide at the surface, but contracting
until it closes at the depth of about 25 fathoms. This was filled
with clay, sand, decomposed slate, and scattered blocks of
limestone, lydian stone, and hornstone; the whole mass being
penetrated and cemented by metallic deposits, consisting of iron
ochre in various stages of induration, iron pyrites, white lead ore,
galena, malachite (the value of which was unknown and it was
therefore thrown away), copper pyrites, with calcareous spar and
heavy spar. In Knockenroe is a powerful vein, consisting at the
surface principally of quartz and iron pyrites, with some heavy
spar, galena, blende, and copper pyrites. In Knockeen are various
others, comprising the same substances. About five miles to the east
of Newport is the old copper mine of Lackamore, the workings of
which were very extensive, and an attempt was made to renew them at
the beginning of the present century, but was abandoned on account
of the insufficiency of the machinery to draw off the water. It was
subsequently worked by the Mining Company, and yielded ores worth
from £20 to £30 per ton, but has again been abandoned as
unprofitable. Here are two veins running through clay-slate, and
composed of brown spar, calcareous spar, clay, and iron ochre, more
or less indurated, a few inches in width; and a third vein of the
same material, but of greater thickness, and comprising rich copper
ore in bunches at Cappaghwhite, Ballysinode, and Gurtdrum, in this
county: these were also held on lease by the Mining Company, who
seem, however, to have made no attempt to work the two first, but on
the last they made an outlay, in 1826, of £300, apparently without
any return. Ores of zinc and manganese are common in various places,
but no efforts are now being made to work them.
With the exception of an extensive cotton-manufactory at Clonmel, of
recent establishment, the county may be considered to be wholly
devoid of manufactures. The ancient staple manufacture of wool, of
which Clonmel and Carrick-on-Suir formed the centre, was suppressed
by the parliamentary regulations made shortly after the Revolution
for the avowed purpose of confining the woollen manufacture to
England and substituting that of linen in its place in Ireland; yet,
notwithstanding this discouragement, stuffs and ratteens were made
in large quantities until the close of the last century; and
blankets and flannels, much prized for their warmth and durability,
are still manufactured in various places. Flax and linen had been
manufactured on a small scale, chiefly for domestic consumption, for
many years, and a few grants towards the erection of scutching mills
were made by the Linen Board from 1817 to 1823. In 1822, the London
Society for the relief of the western counties in Ireland, during
the famine occasioned by the failure of the crops, besides supplying
nearly £6000 to purchase food for the poor of this county, remitted
£2500 for the employment of the peasantry in the linen manufacture;
in addition to which grant, other sums were contributed by various
charitable societies and by the Linen Board. Societies were
consequently formed in seventeen of the most important places by
ladies of rank and respectability, (among whom was the Countess of
Glengall, who allotted 50 acres of land at Cahir for the growth of
flax) to form and superintend establishments for carrying on the
manufacture; but notwithstanding these exertions, the linen trade,
after languishing a few years, may be said to be nearly extinct in
the county. Flour is now the staple manufacture; there being 61
large mills for grinding it on the several rivers throughout the
county; and this branch of industry is deemed to be of such
importance that some of the wealthiest individuals in the country
have embarked their property in it. The commerce of the county
consists in the extensive exportation of its agricultural produce,
the chief mart being Clonmel, from which the export trade is so
great that the farmer is here always certain of a favourable market.
The market of Thurles is the second in importance, and the others
for agricultural produce are those of Carrick-on-Suir, Cahir,
Tipperary, Cashel, Templemore, Roscrea, and Nenagh. Carrick-on-Suir,
like Clonmel, exports by Waterford to the English markets; Nenagh
sends to Limerick, by the Shannon navigation, and to Dublin by the
Grand Canal; Roscrea, to Dublin, by the Grand Canal; and Templemore,
Thurles, Cashel, Tipperary, and Cahir generally send their products
by land carriage to Clonmel or Waterford. The rich southern and
eastern plains contribute, perhaps, one-half to the vast exports
from Waterford of flour, oatmeal, barley, horned cattle, sheep, and
pigs.
The principal rivers are the Shannon, the Suir, and the Nore. The
Shannon, with its noble expansion, Lough Derg, forms the western
boundary of the county from the mouth of the lesser Brosna to within
a few miles of Limerick, a distance of about 40 statute miles,
throughout the whole of which it is navigable, and displays a grand
succession of striking and beautiful scenery: it receives several
streams from the Kilnamanagh hills, of which the most important is
that from Nenagh. The Suir, in consequence of the great length of
its course throughout the entire county from north to south, forms
the grand outlet for the superfluous waters of by far the greater
portion of it. The principal tributaries from the baronies to the
east of its course are the Derryhogan, the Littleton, and the Anner;
from the hills of Kilnamanagh, three considerable streams, which
discharge their waters into it near Golden; from the Galtee
mountains, the Dunbeg, through the beautiful glen of Aherlow; and
from the Cummeragh mountains in Waterford, the copious waters of the
Nier. The Nore, from its source in the Slievebloom mountains, flows
eastward for about ten miles through this county, in its way towards
Burros-in-Ossory and Kilkenny; and though it has a fall of 71 feet
in this distance, the various interruptions to its current have
chiefly caused the formation of the vast tracts of bog extending
along that part of the county.
With the exception of the Shannon and the Suir, the rivers present
greater facilities for irrigation and mill-sites than for inland
navigation. An extension of the Grand Canal by Mountmellick, Roscrea
and Cashel, to Carrick-on-Suir, was at one period proposed. Another
extension was designed to proceed along the western side of the
Slievebloom and Keeper range: and in the report of the Board of
Works, in 1831, it is recommended to form a still-water
communication between Parsonstown and the river Shannon, by a canal,
nearly parallel with the lesser Brosna. In 1825, the late Mr. Nimmo,
by desire of the resident proprietors, made a survey and estimate
for the construction of a railway, to connect the towns of Cahir,
Clonmel, and Carrick-on-Suir, with an extension in one direction to
Limerick and in the other to Waterford, and with a branch to the
Killenaule coal district. It was proposed to extend this line from
Cahir to Tipperary, with a branch to Thurles, but no steps have yet
been taken to execute this plan. A proposed line of railway from
Dublin to Cork is intended to enter this county near Callen, and to
proceed through Fethard, Cahir, and Clogheen to Ballyporeen, near
which it is to enter the county of Cork. The roads of common
construction are generally in good order, more especially the mail
coach roads. Two lines of cross road deserve especial notice: they
are called Anglesey's roads, from having been commenced in 1828
under the immediate order of the Marquess of Anglesey, then
Lord-Lieutenant: one, connecting the towns of Newport and Thurles,
was completed in 1830, at an expense of £9857: the other, from
Nenagh to Tipperary, has been more recently finished, at an expense
of about £17,200. The great object of their construction was to open
a communication into the mountains through which they extend, which
had been for many years the asylum of outlaws and of robbers: they
also afford the means of agricultural improvement to the whole
district, by the introduction of lime from the surrounding quarries.
A new line has been opened from Mitchelstown to Tipperary; another
from Lismore to Mitchelstown through the Knockmeledown range; and a
third is also in course of formation, being an extension of the
Mitchelstown line, from Tipperary by Dundrum, in the direction of
Thurles, thence to be continued toward Durrow, and to form part of
the grand mail line between Dublin and Cork, by which the distance
between these cities will be shortened 33 miles. Great facilities of
intercourse throughout the country are afforded by the exertions of
Mr. Bianconi, an intelligent Italian settled at Clonmel, who first
established a communication between Clonmel and Cahir by a jaunting
car in 1815, and now has depots of cars and horses in every
post-town in the county, and in all the counties of Munster except
Clare, and of Connaught except Sligo, and in the counties of Carlow,
Kilkenny, King's, Queen's, Longford, Westmeath, and Wexford in
Leinster, in which 84 cars, 816 horses, and 469 men are constantly
engaged; some of them carry the cross mails.
The most numerous remains of antiquity are the raths or earthworks
of various kinds, scattered over the surface of the county. There
are also many little mounds, called Clogh Breagh, or "Stones of
Sorrow," said to have been formed by passengers casting a stone each
on a spot where any person had met with a violent death. There are
yet standing within the limits of the county two ancient round
towers, in good preservation, one on the rock of Cashel, and the
other at Roscrea. In a small bog near Cullen have been found an
amazing number of valuable relics of a very remote period of
antiquity: they include utensils of brass; ingots, plates, plain
pieces, and numerous ornaments of gold; a quantity of arrow and
spear heads; gold cups, tubes, rings, and chains; brass spears of
very extraordinary form, and other articles of a similar kind. The
number of religious houses is stated to have been 40, and there are
still remains of those of Ardfinnan, Athassel, the Dominican and
Franciscan houses at Cashel, Clonmel, Corbally, Fethard, Holy Cross,
Hore Abbey, Lorragh (where there are the remains of three religious
edifices), Monaincha, Roscrea, Thurles, and Kilcooly. There is also
an old decayed ecclesiastical building at Mullinahone, and numerous
decayed parish churches. But the ruins that claim pre-eminent notice
are those on the rock of Cashel, described in the account of that
city, which see. Remains of ancient castles are to be met with in
every part. The most remarkable of the castles are those of Nenagh
Round, Ardfinnan, Cahir, Lismalin, Grestown, Gralla near Killenaule,
Mealiffe, Drumban in the parish of Mealiffe, two at Roscrea, and two
at Thurles; besides which may be particularly noticed the old
castellated mansion in the town of Carrick-on-Suir; Carrick Castle,
formerly the seat of the Earl of Carrick; and Killaghy Castle, that
of F. Despard, Esq. Burnt Court is a very fine specimen of an
ancient fortified mansion, and there are some remains of another at
Thurles. The modern mansions of the nobility and gentry are noticed
in their respective parishes. The celebrated natural caves near
Mitchelstown, lately discovered, are in the parish of Templetenny,
in this county, under which head a detailed description of them is
given. The title of Earl of Tipperary is enjoyed by His Royal
Highness Prince Adolphus Frederick, Duke of Cambridge.
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