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On the 5th Ang.,1892, at The Deanery, Mulliogar. the VERY REV. Ft<ANCIS SYi)l•'T, D.D., Doon of Clonmncnois, and Rector of All
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DE.rn OP CLo:Slll.\CNOISE-A.t the ltlst m,ee~m~ of the select vestry in the vestry room of A.LI 8ilomt~ Church, Mullinga.r, a. resolution was passed un11mmousl giving cordial thanks to th~ Deau for his gr~a.t liberality to the church during the pa.s! r and expressing a hope that he might be .lonn J ;;:r~d to occupy his present distinguished position. I
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ALL SAhV1S,' 11iULLINGATl, PARISII J/AGAZ!NE.
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The Archbishop of Dublin acted on tbis CONSECRATION OF THE MOST occasion in the place of the Lord: Primate, REVEREND THE LORD BISHOP in whose pro~nce the See of Meath is inOF MEATH. duded, and who was unable to be preselllt thro'age and infirmity. The com-Provincial Bishops named in the commission were th' This event, so interesting to the readers Bishops of Down and Kilmorc. The Archof our Magazine, took place in the National bishop intoned the ante Communion Rervi<.:e. Cathedral Church of Saint Patrick, Dublin, The epistle C Timothy iii. l),was read.by tlw on Tuesday, September 29th, being the Bishop of Kilmore, and the gospel (St . Johu Tlw Feast of St. Michael and All Angels. The xxi. 15), by the Bishop of Down. Nicene Creed was then sung, then the sermon. Very Reverend Charles Parsons Reichel, a8 prescribed by the ritual, preached by the D.D., having been Vicar of Mullingar, in Prebendary of Swords-the Rev. Thom::t& succession to the much esteemed Reverend Twigg, M.A., the friend, schoolfellow ancl John Hopbns, from November, 1864, until college companion of the Bishop Elect, wht, his promotion to the Incumbency of Trim, took as his text the Saviour's charge to ~t Peter, which a few minutes before had beeu in June, 1875. Morning Prayer wa.s said read in the gospel, "Feed my sheep." at ten o'clock, and at a quarter before noon Boyce's well-known anthem, "0 where shaE the joy bells of the cathedral announced the wisdom be found ?" followed, and then th .. approaching hour for the solemn service. bisho1¥assistant advancing from the chanThere was a large congregation m atten- cel, proceeded to the stall where the Bishop Elect sat and conducted him to the rails . Clance, and as the clock sounded the hour of They presented him, vested in his rochet (to t.welve, the long procession commenced its which were attached the lawn sleeves) to ]lrogress up the great nave. It was thus the Archbishop in the accustomed formula_ The certificate of the R ench of Bishops-was marshalled : _, , then read by W. W oocls, Registrar of The Assistant S'eftton. ~J I Armagh. t recited the various circumi , Choir Ilors, two au<! two. ~ffior Canon Ormsby.~f I stances connected with the election, and its 1 final result. The De11n's Vicar, the Succmor. The Archbishop then caused About thirty of the CINgy o01cath. the declaration of due obedience to the See The C:.n rn's Yerger. of Armagh to be made and signed by the The Prehendaries of T11ssagert, Clonmitham, Bishop Elect, and next moved the congregati on to pray. His Grace afterwa1·ds ~nSt. Auut on's, Swords (the Preacher). The Prece11tor lYery llev·. ll. II. Dickenson, D.D.) toning the litany. This ended, the Bishop The Ilishop Elect, Prebendary of Tipper. Elect reSTJOnded in a most audible and firm 'fhc Bishopf Assistant. " lJhe Bishops of Down anil Connor," Kilooorc, voice to each of the prescribed "certain Elphin and Ar1lagh; and Kill~loe aud Clonfcrt ~J articles" put to him by the Archbishop, and The Dean's Verger. after the hymn" Veni Creator Spiritus" had 'l'he Very llevereud the Dcau of Saint Patrick's. been sung. and the rest of the episcopal His Grace Loni Plunket.,Archhish~ip of Dublin, 1 habit had been assumed by the Bishop Elect, r attended by lus Chaplarn,. · he, after solemn prayer by the Archbishop, ( Tue' enfrablc Archtleacon of _Dublrn, D.D., was consecrat.:Jd Ninety-third Bishop of P'.·cbentlary of H~thmirhael. J Meath. The Archbishop and the assistant The .Archb1shvp, the BishoJ_Js, Dean of ~t. Bishops with the Bishop~of Killaloe faying Pat~·ick's, and tl.10 Archde~co.n of Dublin ~heir hauds upon his head as he knelt before hn:vrng t~ken then places ';1thrn the .chancel them, the Archbishop saying-" Receive mil, the Canons present, with a cons1~erab]e the Holy Ghost for thJ office and work number of the clergJ'. of Meath, oc~upiecl the of a Bishop in the Church of God, now chancel stalls, th~ Bishop Elect bemg seatecl committed uuto thee by the imposition of on the left hand m the Prnbendal Stall of our hands in the name of the Father and Cuafam7, that annexed from the fo~ndation of the So~, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen. of the cathedral to the See of Dubhn. I Auel remember that thou stir up the grace
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A LL SA l1\ 7 S'. i1l UL LING AR, PARI81l JI AG..1ZIN 8. of God which is given unto thee by this im- the wise and statesmanlike Dopping, the position of our hands, for God hath not generous Tennison, the munificent Evans, given us the spirit of fear, but of power and the celebrated Pococke, the active O'Beirne. love and soberness." To quote the names of recent prelates of the The Bible was next gi>en to the newly See equally distinguished. I do not venture consecrated prelate. He then took his place \ but I will express the earnest prayer that inside tlie chancel rails, anrl the Communion the present occupant of the episcopal throne Service was proceeded with, the Arch- \ of Meath will prove himself in every respect bishop being tho celebrant, The communi- a true Shepherd! As on the Festival of cants numbered upwards of one hundred. the Angels, he has been consecrated as The service concluded shortly before three I angel of the Church of Meath, as he has p.m. It must be long remembered by all risen thro' every grade of the Church's who were present-and wa.s carried out with ministry and dignity to the highest post of precision and the utmost regularity, while honor and of responsibility. So may he be the venerable fane, the sweet music, the in his office " So merciful that he be not too numerous clergy, in their canonicals ; the remiss ; so may he minister discipline that presence of five prelates and the large and he forget not mercy, that when the Chief most attentive congregation, gathered to Shepherd shall appear ho may receive at His join in the solemn service, formed a junction hands the never fading crown of glory." at once majestic and awe-jnsp:U·;ng to the The parishioners of :M:ullingar, over whom utmost degree. It was most interesting to he for more than ten years presided as vicar, notice amongst those present in the chanrel will, I doubt not, re-echo this earnest prayer. Bishop Reichel's talented son-principal of To be strictly accurate, I should add that '> the newly founded college in North Wales of the 93 recorded bishops of Meath Arch· ~ -with his only sister and their ...re, Rev. deacon Cotton styles 37 in his Fasti Eccl. Oswald Reichel, The Archdeacon of Meath. Hib. as Bishops of Clonard, Duleek, &c. the Rev. Joseph Bell, LL.D., Rector of These S es, A. D. 1174, being merged into Kqlls ; the Rev. Francis Swift, Vic.'tr of that of Meath. B. Mullingar; the Rev. James Keene, Rector I of Navan; bishop\,-chaplains, and the Rev. Graham Craig, Registrar of Meath, PA.RISH NOTES. were amongst the clergy who were present. The new bishop is (I believe) the first vicar of Mullingar who has attained to the highest The Most Reverend the Lord Bishop of dignity in the Church of Ireland. He has to follow in the footsteps of many prelates Meath will hold a Confirmation in distinguished by brilliant gifts, whether of Saints' Church, Mullin.gar, on M0 Jeep scholarship or statesmanship (the October 12th. Divine Service will comn Bishop of Meath being of right, before the at 12 o'clock. disestablishment of the Church of Ireland. a member of the Privy Council), or of eminent piety, but he has alrcad.Y proved The Rev. John H. Burke has been aphimself a valiant champion in defence of pointed to the Curacy of All Saints' Church "the Faith once for all delivered," an.cl we doubt not that the prayers of his former Mullingar. flock at Mullingar and of his numerous friends in Westmeath will supplicate the W.11111115 Divine Majesty that he may execute the episcopal office w hereunto he has been called, to the edifying of Gocl's church, an.cl to the Oct. Evening. Morning. honour, praise and glory of His holy name. 4th, 34, 277, 314. 141, 258, 20. We find amongst the Bishops of Meath, 342, 388, 21. 3, 318, 333. since the Refomation, the names of the illus- llth, 319, 343, 23. 37, 312, 335. \._>. \..>.r trious James ~. the conrageons and 18th, 393, 407, . 24. 34, 137, 35!). I~aruecl Anthony :Martin, another Anthony ; 25th,
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SOME ACCOUNT OF THE PARISH OF I church,_ who was so bold as to re9.uire him MOLYNGAR: RODIE MULLINGAR. (the sa:1d A~kers) to depart until_ he ha:d done his busmess". The other particular is concerning the friei:s, who not content to CHAPTER VI. possess the house of Multifernan alone~ In Bishop Ussher's Report of the Diocese whence your Lordship had dislodged them,. of Meath, referred to in the last chapter, we went about to make collections for the rehave direct evidence of its sad con dition. eclify iug of n.nother abbey near l\lullingar. The Churches in many cases were in ruins, for tho entertaining of another swarm ¡of the parochial revenues were either insuffi- locusts. These things I touched upon in cient or impropriate, the clergy were often general, not mentioning any circumstances 11on-resident. We need not therefore feel of persons or plar,es." So wrote Bishop surprise that little remains on record from Ussher to Lord Grandison. which we can deduce facts. The Eccle.siasThat Prelate's translation t.o the Primacy tical duties were doubtless discharged under was almost the last Ecclesiastical act of great difficulties. Bishop Ussher's constancy King James I. in Ireland. It took place on in preaching is . indeed to be remembered. March 21, 1624-5. The King died on SunHe placed upon his Epis~opal Seal this clay, March 27, 1625, six days afterwards. legend-" Voo mi.hi si non Evangelizavero," John Conner succeeded William Sibthorp as " Woe is me if I will not preach the Gospel." Vicar of Mullingar, namely, on June 14, Dr. Bernard tells us bow the anagram 1624, Gerald Pettit, of Irishtown, Esq, beformed from the letters of his name, "James ing Patron. It is not improbable that Mr. Meath," "I am the Same", was sent to the Conner was connected with the neigbbourBishop as a testimony to his consistency of J hood. The family of O'Conn-0r wa~ the leadpurpose. When be could not address those in()' sept in the King's County, formerly who refused his ministry as they hesitated hown <1.s Offa.lia, and the name is still of about going into the Churches, he preached / frequent occurrence in Westmeath. I give to them in the Sessions-house. His sermons the elate of his appointment from Dr. further were so successful, that the Roman Lodge's M.S.S. now in the Public Library, clergy prohibited the members of their flocks Armagh. This M.S. gives also the name of "from going to hear him. Mr Conner's suecessor, Mr James Nugent. Sir Oliver St. John, afterwards Viscount A gentleman of this name is mentioned by Grandison, was re-called from his Govern- Archbishop Ussher as having lately been a ment of Ireland, and Lord Falkland was ap- Franciscan Frier, " at whose revolt from pointed as his successor. Bishop Ussber Popery his friends are so highly offended." preached before him in Christ Church Ca- The Primate wished in the event of Dr. tbedral, Dublin, on Sept. 8, 1622, on this Richardson's appointment to the Bishoptext--" He beareth not the sword in vain." rick of Raphoe that Mr Nugent should This excited much remark. In a letter to succeed him in the Vicarage of G1¡anard, Lord Grandison, the Bishop explains him- Diocese of Ardagh. Dr. John Richardson's self, and instanced two facts which had lately promotion did not then take place (1629), taken pla.ce in his own Diocese. These illus- and even if I be correct in my surmise, that tratethediffi.cultieswhicb besettheparochial Mr .Ja111es Nugent is the same penson thus clergy. "The one, writes Ussher, is certifyed referred to=. his sojurn at Mullin~ar W~B unto me by Mr John Ankers, preacher, of very short mdeed ; be was appomted m Athlone, a man well known to your Lord- March, 1633, and in the following January. ship-' that on going to read prayers at Mr Joseph Ware is returned as his successor. Kilkenny, in Westmeath, he found an old Mr James Nugent was son of Mr Walter priest and about forty with him, in the Nugent, of Portloman. This last gentleman
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ALL SAIN1S'. MULLINGAR. PARl8H JfAGAZIN!?. thus writes to Archbishop Ussher, on Dec. at Galway, dated from Mullingar, Octob. 11th, 1629 : the fifth, 1632. This m'.ist have been about "MY REv. AND GnAcrnus LonD.-Neither th~ the close of Mr John Conner's tenure of the detraction of the malignani nor the aspersion or vicarage. ce.Jumniation of the Vulgar or popular, hath ever Joseph Ware, B.A., 1622, became in the yet beeu of force to ia t ense me against my ~ on same year a Fellow of Trirut.v College, DubJames; but his disregard and disobedience practiced and continued from his infancy toward me, lin; he was third son of Sir James Ware, running Into the friery without my coll!ent, and M.P., for Mallow, Auditor-General of tho taking upon him lloly Orders of Priesthood agnin•t Exchequer in Ireland, brother to Sir James my will to my no small grief and in , upportable de- Ware, the antiquary and to Lady Piers, ef triment and los~. And now, if by virtue of the all- Tristerna"'h, v.ho was the second wife of 0 seeing eyes of your know! Ldge :rnd wisdom, he be of another profess ion, the praise and merit thereof Bishop Anthony Martin. Gerald Pettit was may be registered in the large volume of your at at this time in possession of the advowbounteou• fame. and is not to be a•cribed to any de- son, and died seized of it on or about 27th, aervingsofhis;towhicb,andtothejndl(emeotofThe February, 1634. Mr Ware must thus have Omnipotent, I, for my particnlar, do refer it. And i n observa Lee of my duty, and in accompli>hm ent been nominated by him; but we may fairly of your Grace's pleasure, whenenr he maketh me suppose that his relationship to the Piers ~atisf&ct!on counterpoising bis trao sgressions. I family may have in some measure influenced shall be more than willing, instead of my deserved his appointment. Mr Joseph Ware became <:urse, to give both mine and i\braham's ben edic- in 1640, Precentor of Killalla, in 1635, Pretion, and in the mean ftime] craving your Lord· ehip's pard on, I humbly take my leave, and rest centor of Elpbin, and in 1642, Dean of your Lordship's servant, ever to be commanded, Elphin; he was also a Prebendary of St. "WALT&R ~uG11:NT." Patrick's, Dublin, and together with William Doctor Anthony Martin, a native of Gal- Golborne, afterwards Bishop of Kildare, ha.cl way, born in Dublin, educated partly in charge of 1he Parish of St. Bride's, Dublin, France and partly at Uambridge ; became in from 1644. He married the daughter of 1810, a Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin. Gilbert Domvile, lived in St. Bride's Alley, He held several Ecclesiastical preferments, Dublin, and died s.p. 26 February, 1648. ,and. was Bishop Ussher's successor in the Mullingar is thus noticed in the Royal VisiSee of Meath. He was consecrated in St. tation Book of 1633 :Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, on July 25th, "Decanatus de Mullengar, Mullengar, 1625. Bishop Martin was a learned man, Vic., Mr Joseph Ware, Vic. val. XL lister., a.nd was connected by marriage with many Mr Pettet de Irishtowne, Pa.tr." I have no families of rank and influence. The learned evidence for the statement, but it is most antiqua:-y, Sir James Ware, to whose inde- probable that DeaLL Ware retained Mullingar fatigable industry and research Irish History with his other preferments, until his death owes so much, was his pupil in Trillity Col- in 1648. The prosperity in Ireland during lege. By his first marriage with Katharine, the rule of Thomas W eutworth Earl of 4thdaughterof Sir RobtNewcomen,ofMoss- Strafford, K.G., came to a disastrous tennitown, Co. Longford, Bishop Martin wa,,; rela- nation. On October 23rd, 1641, the great ted to the Forbes family, and by his second Irish Rebellion commenced. The siege of marriage with Martha, widow of Sir William Athlone soon followed, and in the immediate Piers, of Tristernagh, and daughter of Sir neighbourhood of Mullingar, on February J'ames Ware, he had another conn9xion with 7, 164~, the famous battle between the Irish Westmeath. The Bishop much increased under General Thomas Preston, and the the revenues of his See, and acted as Provost British under Sir Richard Grenville, eventuof Trinity College from 1645 until his death ating in the utter defeat of the former, was on July 9, 1650. Bishop Ma~-tin died of the fought at the Pass of Rathconnell. In a plague, and was buried in the old College tract preserved. in the King's Inns Library, Chapel. He still ma.de ~se of the Litur.gy, Dublin-London, 1641, I find the statement when it had been proscnbed by authority, that on the outbreak of the disturbances, and thus showed himself a true churchman William Sibthorp, parish clerk of Mullingar, and a Prelate of inflexible courage. He oc- was hanged by the Irish, and Edmond Dalton casionally visited Mullingar, and I have seer. and Mr Morehead's son were " murthered." a letter from him addressed to his "cozin" but with these exceptions I can find no men-
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ALL SAINTS', MULLINGAR, PARISH MAGAZINE.
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tion of Mullingar during the stormy period ANSWERS TO SCRIPTURE QUESwhich then ensued of civil war both in Great TIONS. Britain and Ireland, followed as it was by the usurpation of Oliver Cromwell as 1'.ord 1 Stephen and James. Protector, and the death of the Martyr Kmg, 2 Lystra, Acts, xiv. 19. Charles I., 30th January, 1648-9. The restoration of King Charle:i II., took 3 Antioch, (in Syria), Seleucia,l}'Cyprus place on May 29, 1660. The See of Mtiath (Salamis Paphos), Perga, Antioch in Pisihad been ten years vacant since the death dia, Iconium, Lystra, Derbe (return), Lystra, of Dr. Anthony Martin. Bishop Henry Iconium, Antioch, Pamphilia, Perga, Attalia. I..eslie, of Down and Connor, was translated 4 Acts, xiii, and xiv. to Meath. He was then in the 26th year of 5 Acts xxiv, 27 ; xxv, 9. his Episcopate and of an advanced age. His 6 Luke, xxiii, 2 ; Acts, xxiv, 5. patent bears date Janu:uy 18th: and he ~ied in Dublin on the 7th of Apnl followmg. 7 Ex. xxii, 28. Doctor Henry Jones, Bishop of Clogher, 8 "These were more noble," &c. succeeded Doctor Remy Lesley. He was a 9 Acts, xvii, 6 ; Rom. xvi, 21. man of learning, hospitable, and a great 10 The Macedonian vision. preacher. During the rebellion he had been employed in several public transactions, and 11 Joppa. for :fifteen years was Vice-Chancellor of the 12 Ephesus and Philippi. University of Dublin. He died on January 13 Acts vii, 60; ix, 40 ; xx, 36 ; xxi, 5 ; 5, 1681. Sir Henry Piers, of Tristernagh, Stephen, Peter, Paul, and others. created a Baronet in 1660, who wrot@ the 14 Cresarea, where his daughters are " Chorographical History of the County of mentioned in St. Paul's last visit to JerusaWestmeath in 1682, was Bishop Henry lem. Joaes' son-in-law; having married his daughte1'Mary. The Triennial Visitation held by 15 Acts, xxviii, 3, 4, 8. Primate Bramhall in 1661, gives the following Return :-" Mullengar Vicarage and Rectory both are vacant. The Most ReveQUESTIONS. rend [PrimateJ determined that they should be sequestrated, and appointed Doctor I Where do we read "the Church in the Reresby as sequestrator". Thomas Belfeild was then Parish Clerk. The Church was wilderness." probably in ruin. This return which I have 2 What was the pt.rport of Stephen'sspeech? quoted is in the original in Latin . W. REYNELL, B.D., M.R.I.A. 3 Where do we read the Churches had (To be continiied). rest? The list of the Bishops of Meath will be 4 Who accorovanied St. Paul to Asia. given in the next number. after writing Romans at close of second journey to Greece? ~~mns for tfJt ~tontrJ. 5 The name Jesus of Nazareth occurs six times in Acts? Evening. June. Morning. 6 An instance where a Pharisee saved As, Day, 204, 208, 209 Paul? 6th, 446. 205. 260. 210. 214. 13. 7 Is Ashdod mentioned in Acts ? Whit Sun. 219, 222, 14 215, 216, 217 8 What did St. Paul do that caused the Trin. Sun. people to worship him at Lystra ? 228, 229, 15. 224, 225, 226. 9 Give a passage in. the Acts which 27th, 9, 285, 359. 113, 70, 17. prove the personality of Holy Ghost. Chauts-223, 245, 97. 10 A river-side where prayer was wont to Kyrie-36. Dox.-5. be made.
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Vicai·-Very Rev. DEAN SWIFT, M.A., All Saints' Vicarage, Mullingar.
Curate-Rev. JOHN H. BOURKE, B.A.
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Synodsmen-JOHN SWIFT, H. W. LLOYD, W. A. GREEN, M. F. BARNES.
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Parochial Nominators-JOHN SWIFT, W. A. GREEN, M. F. BARNES.
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Churcliwardens-ROBERT GORE ANNESLEY and WM. HARRISON.
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Select Vestry-The Parochial Clergy and Church Wanlens ex-officio-J. WATSON MURRAl W. E. GILL, W. A. GREEN, JOUN W. GORDON, W. J. THOMA::, M. F. BARNES, R. LARKE, C. DILLON, J. io:WIFT, H. W. LLOYD. R. G. LARKE, W. J. ROBINSON. Parocliial 1Teasurer-JOHN SWIFT, J.P., Keoltown, Mullingar. Se:ztoness-Mrs CAIN, Church Avenue, Mullingar.
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CHURCH SERVICES-Sundays, 12 noon; Fridays-?.30 p.m.
7 p.m. Week days-Wednesdays, 10 a.m.
HOLY COMMUNION-Secrmd Sunday in the month, a 8 s.m. and last Sunday in the month. at 12 noon •
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HOLY BAPTISM-Every Wednesday, at 10 a.m.
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SUNDAY SCHOOL-In the Church, at 10.30 a.m.
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CHOIR PRACTICE-On Friday Evenings, at 8 p.m. LENDING LIBRARY-Open at the Schoolhouse on Saturdays, from 1 to 2 p.m.
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THE DAILY SCIIOOl::i-Open at 10 a.m.
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'1ELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION-Daily from 2.30 to 3 o'clock•
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All Saints' Church Parish Magazine
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(PUBLISHED
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MONTHLY) • 2s· Od. per annum} payable in advance ,, 2s. 6d.
Sabsciiben can have copies forwarded by leaving their Names and Addresses \\'.ith the Sex.tone11 ~ o.m application to the Parochial Clergy, or to the Hon, Teasurer, M. F. ~arnea.
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ALL 8AIN1S,' MULLllVGAR, PARIS!i MAGAZINE. -----
SOME ACCOUNT OF THE PARISH OF "MoLLINGARE PA.RISH MOLYNGARHOD1E' "~GAR." Is bounded on the Northwth. part af the Barony of Moygoish and part of the Barony of Corkeery ; on the East partly :with ye CHAP. III. Pal"ish· of Rathconnell parish and with part The Down Survey constitutes an import- of the Barony of Ferbill. On the South ant a.nd peculiar document. Of its imrort- with the Barony of Furtullagh and the f · 1 l ·d d t Barony of Moycashell ; and on the Southance, as ormmg ega evi ence, we nee no west and West with the Barony of Rathconspeak. Of its peculiarity it may be observed rath. 'fhe Quallity of the Soyle is Arable, that it would well deserve the epithet, even Medowe, and pasture, with some Bog and though many other surveys, both before and Logh, and contains these denominations, after it, had not only been madP. but existed. viz. :-Pettitswood, Rathgowen, FarenfalThe Ordnance Survey of our own days liott, als. Reynard, Cloonemore, Balligh1ss, shows us the present state of the country. Killingegert,Spittlefield, Brottonstown, GLi.sThe Down Survey-completed and attested kerne, Grange, Ballina, Hopestowne, Curoy Sir William P etty, on April 2nd, 1659, setstown, Farren-maganr..an, Ledestowne, describes the face of Ireland at a very sin- Kyalstowne, Slanestown, Tolchan, Logh gular period, natnely, during the Cromwel- Hoyle, W elshestown.e, Ballagh, rLD.d Clonislian usurpation. The maps which consti- sell, Belladirie, Boardstowne, Marlingstowne, tuted this survey, were formerly preserved Cloonegawn.ey, Baltrasney, Irishtowne, Sarin Essex-street, Dnblin, where the Surveyor- sanstowne, Ardivoghan, Rathcolmq,n, KilpaGeneral had his office. A disastrous fire trick, Menemed, Cullanmore, Cullanbegg, broke out in the year 1711, bv which these Brooskagh, Robinstowne, Balgarrett, Drum1llaps suffered severely. The maps of loose, Strattenstowne, Windtowne, TuitesW estmeath county were contained in two I towne, Stoakestowne, Brottonstown.e, Ballin-volumes and escaped the flames, with one I clyn, part of Slainemore, Mollingarr, Balexception, the parochial map of Mullin.gar. ' leagny." " The Totall of the Parish . is The l u rning of this ma1) (very slightly in I 12299a. lr. 24p. Such was the survey which the centre), as it thus stands a lone, arose was taken in 1656-9. The Towne of Mol(as has been remarked), probably from some lingare occupied 40a. 2r. Op., while the Uor. other cause than the general fire. It is, poration lands thereto appertaining, comprishowever, most carefully repaired, anc1. now ing three separate portions of ' Commons,' r ema,ins in the Public Record Office, Four included 425a. 2r. 32p, and lay on the North. Courts, Dublin. Th<' Barony map of Moy- west and South-west sides of the Town. The ashel and Maghercdernon and those of its Town was then enclosed by a wall. The constituent parishes-the Parishes of Mul- Total of "Corporation L and," was thuslingar, of Rathconnell, and of Dvsart-can 466:1, Or. 32p The government of the Town there be inspected. These ronps ·record not seems to have been confided to the Portrieve only the acreable contPnts of the lands in Ju rates and Constable of the Gaol, or Castle, several parishes-they give also the names for the time being. The Corporation reof tlrn various landowners. In the very in- turned two members to the I1-ish House of teresting volume, " The Book of Survevs and Commons, under the title of Burgesses. Distribution of the EshLtes in the County This arrangement continued until. ait ~r. the Westmf\ath Forfeited in the year 1641- Restoration, when the town anu various · Ladiston, Printed by J. C. Lyons, 1852"- other lands were constituted a ma.nor, on these pn.rticulars are fully set out. They March 9, 1674.· Power was then given to are doub~ lern familiar to mauy of our readers. hold a market on Thursday in each week, to T~e landowners in Mullin.gar Parish com - hold four fairs annually, and to return two pnse the following names :-" Fitzgerald, Burgesses to P arliament. The Manor con.P ettit, Hope, Nugent, Tuite, Plunket, and tinued to elect its two Burgesses until -the Rus_sell." rhe Parochial map of M.ullingar privilege was abolished by the Act of Union Pansh, (Down Survey), was made by Pat in 1800. . Allen. The geographical position of the The names of tho Members of Parliament Parish is thus given : for Mullin.gar Borough and Manor, from 1559
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ALL Sdl1V1S'. llf(JLLINGAR, PAR!Sll ,1/AGAZlNT?. t,o 1800, tdkeu from the "Return" ordered
to be printed by the House of Commons,
1783-14 Oct. Franeis Hardy, Esq. Major John Doyle. 1790-20th May, Francis Hardy, Esq, Major John Doyle. 1798-9th .January, Francis Hardy, Esq, Luke Fox, Esq.
March, 1878, are given as follows:1559-January. Nicholas Casy, Mullingar. James Belyng, do 1585-April. Redmond Pettite, Mullmgar, Richard Casey. do 1613-April 10. 168!>-7th May (·Tames II's Parliament), Nicholas Casey, gent., Mnllingar, Gan-et Dillou, E q, Prirr.e Serjeant. John Hamonne, gent., do Edmond Nugent, of Carlanstown, Esq. 1634-July. No return remains in the Hanaper Office. Note-In chapter [,for Curates rea1l Jurates. 1639-March 7. Portrieve or Portgreve, compounded of Alexander Hope, C'lonmore, Port and greve, that is Prefect, signifies the Edward Pettite, Irishtowne. Chief Magistrate in certain Port Towns. 1647-July 3. j., Camden says that the Chief Magistrate of / Oliver Wheeler, Grenan, Kilkenny, London was for~ v termed by this name. , ff»-~ v -I' Richard Kenned.ye, Dublin Jurats were the~heri.ffs or Baili.ffs.-See 1661-April 25. Blount's Dictionary. Sir Arthur Forbes, Castle Forbes, WILLIAM REYNELL. James Leigh, Esq, Pierstown. (To be continued). 1661-May. Sir Robt. Newcomen, Mosstown,Longford. NOTICES. 1692-Sept. 27. Subscribers will kindly mention any irreRoger Moore, Johnstown, Dublin, gularity in the receipt of the Magazine. Patrick Dunne, M.D., Dublin. The Scripture question in last issue-1692-0ct. 13. Sir Thos. Domvile, Loughlinstowu, Dublin, "The intimation of Christ's Crucifixion" ? should be " The first intimation of Christ's 1695 -27th August. Sir Patrick Dunne (Knt.), M.D.,Dublin Crucifixion in the Gospels" ? Colonel Roger Moore, do ST. PATRICK'S CATHIWIUL, DUBLIN. 1703-2lst Sept. Sir Patrick Dun. What solemn strain, presaging public woe Henry Edgeworth, Esq, Lissard, Longford. Steals on the ear with mournful note and. 1715-12th Nov. slow? Eustace Budgell, Esq, Our.Christmas Anthems have not died away; Thomas Bellew, Esq. What sorrow hushes them in tears to-day? 1727-28th Nov, Through the wide arches of the sacred fane Sir Arthur Acheson, Bart, The thrilling march reverberates again John Rochfort, Esq. What Saul anew hath fallen? what great 1749-2nd Nov. George Lord Viet. Forbes. head 1761-22nd Oct. Has sunk in quiet slumber with the deacl ? George Viscount Forbes, The question leaps into a thou's and eyes, Hon. Admiral John Forbes. Uplifted suddenly in mute surprise. 1765. Richard Steele. Esq, Not all her sons have learned the Church's 1769-17th Oct. grief; Sir Richard Steele, Bart., Their loss and hers-her father and her chief. Ralph Fetherston, Esq. 1769. John Scott, Esq. Down the long aisle the wailing music swells, 1776-18th June, Burdened and trembling with the tale it tells. John Scott, Esq. . Aye, bow the head! It is not shame to weep; Richard Underwood, Esq. The good old Primate sleeps his last, long 1779. Sir Skeffington Smyth, Bart,, "B. B." sleep.
ALL SAINTS', JIULLJ,rG 1R, PARISH MAGAZINE. ANSWERS TO BIBLE QUESTIONS IN FEBRUARY NO. l-They agree from Abraham to David. 2-Joseph, Matt. i. 19; Christ, Matt. xi::vii. 19; Simeon, L uke ii. 25; Joseph, Luke xxiii. 50; and Cornelius, Acts, x. 22. 3-Jnatt. ii. 15. 4 -At Purification of Mary. 5-Marv, Elizabeth, and Anna. 6-Ahaziah, .Amaziah, J oash , J ehoiakim. 7-John iii. 8. "The wind bloweth where it. listeth." J ohn xx. 22, "And when He had said this, H e breathed on them." 8-" As Moses lifted up the serpent," &c. 9-The Slaughter of the Innocents.
WESTMEATH INFIRMARY.
At a meeting of the Board of Governors
held on Thursday, 11th Februarv, the accounts for past year were submitted as at foot. It is very pleasant to find that the large debt that was un this admirable institution on beginning of year, £204 lls 5d, has b~en reduced to £62 13s 9d. This is owing mainly to the kind exertions of Lady Greville, Mrs Hamilton Rochfort-Boyd, and Miss E. T. Reynell, who got up Theatricals, Swimming Galas, and Concerts for the benefit of I nfirmary. We woulJ be glad to see more people taking an interest in this institution, and feel sure that a personal visit to the house would induce to this. ACCOUNTS -RECEIPTS . .£ S d County Presentment, 700 0 0 Governors' Subscriptions, 107 2 0 Donations, ... 20 0 0 Proceeds of Concert, 45 0 0 Theatricals, 26 12 0 Swimming Gala, 20 0 0 Hospital Sunday collections, 17 10 1 Sundries, 10 14 5 Balance due, 62 13 9
CfilPTURE QUESTIONS FOR SUNDAY SCHOOL CHILDREN. I -Who was J oshua? 2-What time of year was it when the Itta.elites crossed the J ordan ? 3--Describe the order and .manner of their aussing? 4-What memorial did they leave of their age? 5-Where in the N ew Testament a.re these Ireferred to ? £1,009 12 3 6-What r emarkable person did Joshua .£ s d meet before he ca.me to J ericho ? EXPENDITURE. 204 11 5 7-Who is described as the" troubler of Ba.la~ce due from la.st year, 235 6 4 Isreal" ? Sa.lJ.1:~s, 8-How many Israelites were slain in their Pi:ovlBlons, . · ·· · ·· 323 10 1 defeat before Ai? · St1m.u~ts and Mmeral Waters, 40 0 6 64 n !J 9-Who were the Gibeonites, and what Medicmes, . M 15 0 great lessons do their deceit teach us ? Fuel .and Light, 2111 7 IO-Where was Rahab's house situated, Repa:irs, . 75 5 7 ~how was it distinguished from the others? Contingencies, - ·-~ · £1,009 12 3 The answers to Bible Questions should be Number of beds, 28; the average number ment to the Vicar or Cumte 011 or before the 2:0th of each month, as.ther e will be uo credit of patientis in house during year was 21 ; daily average cost of patient, 2s Oid; do. ;given for answers received after this date. per bed, ls 6;d; cost of bed per annum, OORFSSEO TO A YOU~G A\1ER!CAN £27 19s 7!d; number of patients iu house WllO TllOUGIIT 19 "YERY OLD. on Board-day, 26. •u;eet seventeen two years has passed P.S.-Subscription~~ and donations will be And charming nineteen come, thankfully received by the Treasurer, JOHN The .routhful hours now slow now fast SWIFT, Esq, Kcoltown, Mullingar. So speed by stern time guided. a.t may they be I cannot tell, 1i))]mll5 furtl)t ;fl-1ontJJ. Hope breathes i11 all my wishes ; , March. Morning. Evening. Eat weal and woe, I know it well 7th, 336, 312, 216. 274, 304, 24. Cling hand in hand together Ash W. 126, 152. Pa.in would I wish, that you might see 14th, 127, 130, 134. 137, 141, 26. Bright years still dancing 011wards, 1 21st, 4; 139, 14.3. 128, 140, 27. And. that thy path in life should be I 28th, 136, 138, 370. 31, 148, 28. Flowei·-strewn, by angel guarded. j BA ~TISM.-Feb. 3, John James, son of Jolt'J h
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C.
BRINSLEY
MA.RL.AY an<l Ehzab. th Arkleas, Northumberland Fusiliers.
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~nxntff MULLING AR, MAY, 1886.
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.ALL SAINTS' CHURCH, MULLINGAR. An Ordination was held in this Church by the Lord Bishop of Meath, on Sunday, the 2nd inst., at the 12 o'clock Service, when Mr. Gerard Sanders Atkins and Mr. Frederick John Grierson, B.A., were ordained Deacons. The candidates werP. presented by the Very :Rev. the Dean of Clonmacnois immediately after the sermon, which ho. preached, taking for his text, 1 Timothy iii.-13. The Genen.l Vestry Meeting of this Church was held on Tuesday, 27th ult. The -Vicar in the chair. Robert Gore Annesley, Esq., and Mr. William Hanison were elected Churchwardens. The following were elected as membel"S of the Select -Vestry :-Messrs J. Watson Murray, W. E. Gill, W. A. Green, J. W, Gordon, W. J. Thomas, M. F. Barnes, R. Larke, C. Dillon, J. Swift, H. W. Lloyd, .R. G. Larke, and W. J. Robinson.
given among men whereby we must be saved.-Acts iv., 12 . 12 Pollution vf idols, fornication, things strangled, blood. 13 Acts xi., 28, xxi., 10. 14 St. Paul; Antioch in Pisidia., Acts, xiii, 41 . 15 Acts xvi., 37; xxii., 25, and xxv., 11. 16 Dionysius and Damaris. 17 "To feed the Church of God, which He hath purchased with His own blood." - -SCRIPTURE QUESTIONS, 1 What martyrs in the Acts ? 2 Once Paul was stoned ? 3 Give Paul's first missionary journey. 4 What h::tppened at Paphos and Lystra? 5 Acts performed by Roman governors to please the Jews ? 6 A charge · brought against St. Paul similar to one brought against Christ ? 7 To what passage did St. Paul refer" Thou shalt not speak evil of the ruler of thy people ?" 8 What do you know of the people of Berea? 9 Where do we read of Jason, and what was the charge against him ? 10 What lei to the preaching of the Gospel in Europe ? 11 Where was Peter wl1en Cornelius sent for him? · 12 At two places Gentiles attacked Christians without being urged on by Jews ? 13 Give instances of kneeling ai prayer in the Acts? 14 Where did Philip reside, and where is he last mentioned ? 15 What happened a.t Melita?
The Treasurer to the Parochial Magazine will be much pleased if those who havn't paid in thl ·r subscriptions,£<1 this year,. will kindly forward same to him at their earliest conven:ience, as funds are much needed at -present to defray the expenses of the Magazine. ANSWERS TO SCRIPTURE QUESTIONS IN APRIL NO. 1 "After this I will," &c., Amos ix, 11; Acts, xv., 16-17. 2 Acts xv., 22. 3 " Rep. toward God and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ." 4 Forty years old, Ex. ji., 11; Acts, vii, 23. MARRIAGE. 5 Genesis, xii, 3 ; Acts, iii., 25. JOHNSON A.ND BRAllAZON.-April 28th, hy 6 Grecian-Greek spealring Jews; Greeks licence, Robert Johnson, to Anna Maria were Gentiles. Brabazon, daughter of Mr. James Braba'l Isaiah vi., 8; A cts xxviii, 25. zon, Jamestown, Mullingar. 8 Acts x., 44. DEATH. . 9 Philippi. TRYDELL.-April 12th, at the residence of. 10 Amos ix., 11, 12. hAr brother-in-law, W. J. Robinson, 11 "Neither is there salvation in a.ny other, Greville-street, Mullingar, Eliza. Anne ;for there is none other name under heaven Trydell, aged 50 years.
.ALL Stf.IN1 S, L11 UL LING AR, PARI8H JL · 1G..JZIN T!J. SOME ACCOUNT OF THE PARISH OF It was to him "a sea of troubles." The clergy were "ragged and stubborn and MOLYNGAR: RODIE MULLINGAR. ignorantly blind" ; yet the Bishop seems to CHAPTER v. have gone to his work courageously and with Hugh Brady, M.A., a native of Duuboyne, some apparent success. A Regal Visitation County Meath, was appointed Bishop of was held about thirty years after his death, Meath by patent, dated October 21st, 1563. namely, in 1615. The record of this proOn the 14th of March following he thus ceedi ng remains in manuscript in the library writes to Sir William Cecil, Secretary of of the Royal Irish Academy, and has never State-" Right Honorable, I now by expe- been printed, so far as I l'Ilow. At page 300 rience find 'that a Bishoprick is a greater of this record the following summary is burden than any honor'. If I shoulu respect given as to the state of the united Diocese quietness of life and contentment of mind of Meath and Clonmacnois :-"The number I had rather be a Stipendiary Priest in Eng- of preachers in this Diocese is thirty-five, -land than Bishop of Meath in Ireland. O, resident, three. The numbP,r of reading what a sea of troubles have I entered into! ministers is forty. There is a publique Storms rising on every side. The ungodly school kept in this diocese at Trym, by 'Lawyers are not only sworn enemies to the Thomas Whiteby, Minister and Preacher at truth, but also; for lack of due execution of Trym, and appointed by the Bishop of law, the overthrowers of the country; the Meath to teach the publique school there." ragged clergy are stubborn and ignorantly It is curious to note that now, in the sixl>lind, so as there is little hope of their teenth year from the Disestablishment of the Lmendment; the simple multitude is thro' Church of Ireland, the number of distinct continual ignorance hardly to be won. So cures in the Diocese should be seventy, just I find on all sides difficulty."-[Shirley's five less in number than the total of the.clergy Original Letters and Papers in illustration of Meath in 1615. There is, assuredly, this of the Histo1·y of The Church in Irelaud- vast improvement, that all of these seventy London; 1854, p. 135, L etter liii. I have Incumbents are, I believe, resident in or modernised the words]. This letter is dated near to their parish0s. At the conclusion of my last chapter I March 14th, 1563, About five years labr, by an Act of Parliament passed on F ebruary 23, gave a list of tho Vicars of Mullingar 1568 [xi Elizabeth J the Diocese of Cloumac- from the year 1615. The advowson or nois was united to that of :Meath. Bishop right of presentation to the Vicarage of Brady pl'Csided over the united Dioceses :::,n Incumbent, rested formerly with the . until his death on the 13th of F ebruary, Lord of the :Manor. An Inquisition heltl 1585. He was interred in the Church of (17 Henry VIII), 1525, declares that Dunboyne. Thomas Jones was Bishop Symon Petit of Irishtown, wits ·seized in his Brady's successor in the See of Meath. On L<ndship, in fee, of the advowson of this November 8, 1605, he was translated to Chureh, The a•lvowson of the Vicarage Dublin. Dr. Roger Dod succeeded Arch- and right of presentation to tho Parish bishop Jones. He died at Ardbraccan on Church of Mollingal', called the Uhurch of July 27, 1608, and was there burie<l. Dr. All Saints', were (10 James I), July 20, George Montgomery, a Scotsman, of the no- 1612, together with tho entire 111ano1· of l'lfulble House of Eglint0n, Dean of Norwich, in lingar, granted by Patent to Thomas Pettyt, En lawl; was, in 1605, appointed Bishop of of Irishtowne, County Westmeath, Esquire: Derry nd Raphoe and Clogher. On his the a.dvowson being thus vested in the Pettyt obtain ng, in 1610, the Bishoprick of Meath, family. The Bishop of the Diocese had, in he re gned Derry and Raphoe, but retained consequence of such right, no influence in Clogher. Bishop Montgomery died in Lon- the appointment of the Vicar; he could only don en 22nd January, 1620. His body was take care that the Patron should present to brought to Ardbraccan and was interred in the Benefice a clerk duly qualifieu by law, a. tomb which still remains in the church- a,nd, moreover, willing to undertake the yard of that parish. duties of the charge. I regret that I have We may learn from the letter of Bishop hitherto been unable to discover the names Hugh Brady some information concern- of the Vicars immediately subsequent to the ing the state of the Diocese of Meath 1 Refonnation. The Visitation Book of 1615, 1t the commencement of his Episcopate. I is my earliest u.uthority on this subject
ALL SAINTS', MULLINGdR, PARIH llAGAZINE. 1
xxth (part) 9s 9J, Irish, valew 30li. ster. " Molinghar" was then, as it is still, the mo- he resideth there. The church is reasonably therOhurch of a Rural Deanery in the Diocese, well repayred, the chaunc-ell is ruyuous. which bears that name. The pari~h is thus Bn.ildings- A fayre castle and hou ses of mentioned in this document--" Molinghar, office, a garden, an haggard, and a qmtrter Vicar resident. The Rertory is impropriate, of an acre of land." Such is Bishop U ssher's Thomas Kirkby, Vicar. I'he annual value of Report of the State of Molinghar Parish in the Vicarage is thirty pounds. T11e Church 1622. Mr William Sibthorp, M.A., its and Chancel are in r epair." Thomas Kirkby Vicar, does not appear to have held with it had graduated Ba.chelor of Arts, but at what any other parish in the Diocese. He thus University I have not found. He was R ec- affords a wholesome contrast in this retor of Olon:fadforan, of the value of twenty spect to Mr Thomas Kirkby, B.A., who was, pounds per .annum; Incumbent of Kilbride most probably, his predecessor. Pilate, of the value of seven pounds per anAmongst the " P entions" b elonging to num, and was aJso Curate of Multifernan, the Bpricke. of Meat h, of whirh the Kilbride-\Veston, Enescoffey, Portloman, total was LVli ster., (£55) Bishop Ussher Lakyn, Leine [now Leney J. He is described appends this note-" Besides, I finde in as "Minister and Preacher." We may, I Bp. Bradye's rentall I finde Vzli, viijs think, conclude that his time must have Irish, paid as a pention out of the ( been fully occupied in performing the duties viijd. This was the priorye of Molengar." of so extensive a charge. I do not find the Priory of St. Mary, " 'rhe House of God date of his death or resignation. of Molengar," to which I have referred in The successor of George Montgomery in. chapter I. of this " account." This Priory See of Meath was that "famous, learned, was founded for Canons Regular of St. and studious Ingrosser of Learning"-the Augustine, A.D. 1227, by Ralph '1e Petyt, illustrious James Ussher. King Jan:es VI then Bishop of Meath. It was dissolved, used to say of him, " that he was a Bishop 32 Henry VIII, 1540, and it would thus arof his own making,"-so much did that pear that this "Pention" was reserved from Monarch admire Usshcr's vast erudition its former revenues towards the income of and eloquence. U ssher was consecrated at the Diocesan. • Drogheda on December 2nd, 1620, a,nd in Besi<l.e the parish church of All Saints', 1624-5 was translated to the Primacy, as ;>uc- the Parish of Mullingar contained formerly cessor to Doctor Christopher Hampton, who four other Churches, or as they are called died on Jauuary 3rd, 1624-5. During Bishop in modern terms " Chapels of Ease." Ussher's short Incurub3ncy a most remark- The names of these other Churches able R sport was compiled. This remains in were Balarlyn or Balliclin, Kinneh, now manuscript in the Library of Trinity College, I Kenny; Hopestown, and the "capella archiDublin. It is entitled "The State of the deorum," or " the Anchorite's Church," Diocesses in the Province of Ulster, Anno built on "Inismore," "The Island," or Domini, 1622, certified u nde1· the hands of " Chu'rch Island", in Lough Owel. I hope the then Bishops of each Diocese." The to give some "account' of the history of Province of Ulster means hero the Province these chapels in a future chapter of this of Armagh, as it then existed. That portion " account" of this R epJrt, which Pm braces the Diocess W. REYNELL, B.D., :M...R.LA. of Meath, has been printed as an appendix (To be continued). to the late Doctor Elrington's "Life of Archfor tbf ;tlflontfJ. bishop Ussher, 8vo., Dublin, 1848." It includes the following account of "Molengar" Morning. Evening-. in the Deanery of the same name, No. 156 ~n May. 438, 415, 453. the Diocesan Roll. "No. 156-Molingar, in 2nd, 43,335, Anthem-, 285. 238. 472. theCountieofWestmeath, a Vicarage, Presen- 9th, 318. , 332. 265. tative, Garrett Pettit, of frishtowne, Esq., 16th, 306, 225, 343-Pt.3. 208, 97, 10. 46, 341, 276. 228, 245, 11. patron. The Lo : Viscount of Drogheda, 23rd, 73, 327, 358. 291, 325, 12. farm.or of the impropriate -Rectory. Mr. 30th, Chants-Venite, 121 Ta Deum, 267 ; William Sibthorp, a Master of Artcs, Incumbent, a good preacher, and very payn- Jubilate, 6; Doxology, 5; Magnificat, 181 ; full in his ministry. Valuacion, 5li. 15s Ir: Nunc Dimmitis, 38; Kyrie, 3.
2111
~ai11t£1' al:{lurc!J, -a!lulliltf ~~
Vicar-Very Rev. DEAK SWIFT, M.A., All Saints' Curate-Rev. JOUN 11. BOURKE, B.A. Synodsmen-JOHN SWIFT, H. W. LLOYD, W. A. Parochial Nominators-JOHN SWIFT, W. A. GRJ Churchwardens-ROBERT GORE ANNESLEY an<l Select Vestry-The Parochial Clergy an<l Church W: W. E. GILL, W. A. GREEN, . .M. F. BARNES, R. LARKE, R. G. LAR1'.E, W. J, ROBI'. Parochial '.lreasurer-JOIIN SWIFT, J.P., Keoltow11 SeJJtoness-Mrs CAIN, Church .Avenue, Mullingnr.
SER VIC ES CHURCH SERVICES- Sunuays, 12 noon ; Fridays-?.::JO p.m.
HOLY COMUUNlON-Secrmu Sunuay at 12 noon.
i11
7 p.1
the montl
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HOLY BAPTISM-Every Weunesday, at 10 a.m. SUNDAY SCHOOL-In the Church, at 10.30 a.m. CHOlk PRACTICE-On Friuay Evenings, at 8 p.1 LENDING LIBRARY-Open at the Schoolhouse ot THE DAILY SCIIOOl::i-Open at 10 a.m. ELIGIOUB INSTRUCTION-Daily from 2.30 to 3 1
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J Ji ..: Q. t1 ~ ~ ,~c,,· /, ... If ~ ;.,Jv-rv--/- ~f# Vw ~
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All Saints' Church
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C. LEVINGE., lRKE, W. J _ uLON, M. F~ Parochial 7re.;;;;-.JOHNSWIFr, J.P., Keoltown, Mullingar.
Se.xtoness-Mrs CAIN, Church Avenue, Mullingar.
S E R VI C E S, &c. CHURCH SERVICES-Sundays, 12 noon; Fridays-?.30 p.m.
7 p.m.
Week days-Wednesdays, 10 a.m.
IlOLY CO:\iMUNlO:S--Secl}nd Sunday in the mouth, a 8 a.m. and last Sunday in the at 1:? noon.
month~
HOLY BAPTISM-Every Wednesday, at 10 a.m. SU~DAY SCHOOL-In the Church, at 10.30 a.m.
CHOIR PRACTICE-On Friday Evenings, at 8 p.m. LENDING LIBRARY-Open at the Schoolhouse on Saturdays, from 1 to 2 p.m. THE DAILY SCIIOOLS-Open at 10 a.m. "RELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION-Daily from :?.30 to 3 o'clock.
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MONTHLY). 2s. Godel. per annum} payable in advance 28. J • II
Suber,iben can bave copies forwarded by leaving their Names and Addresses with the Sextoneu• oc applirauon to the Parochial Clergy, or to the Hon. Teasurer, M. F. Barnea.
ALL SliIN18', MULLINGAR, PARISH llfliG/JZIN8. SOME ACCOUNT OF THE PARISH only the week before, re-sold it to a traveller from Birmingham, for seven shillings and OF MOLYNGAR RODIE, "MULLIN- sixpence. He very obligingly gave me the GAR." gentleman's name and address, who, upon getting my letter, at once sent me the seal. CHAPTER II. I had thus the good fortune to secure this The name Molyngar has received varioU$ hitherto unpubJished matrix, which may be described as a circular bronze seal, 2t inches interpretations, amongst them are the fol- in diameter. The central object in the seal owi ng :-1, "The Mill on the left side of is a water-wheel, beneath an archway, under lthe stream." 2, " The Dumb Mill ;" or 3, which the water is flowing. Immediately " The Red Mill ; or 4, (according to Sir above this is an implement resembling the square beetle, with a diapered pattern, which Henry Piers), "The Short Mill." "Indeed washer-women use, but equally resembles in my time," this writer tells us, " here hath a heckle for teasing or tearing flax or carding been an over-shMt- mill of the least wheel blankets. On the sinister side of the arch that ever I saw, which with buckets and all is an embattled tower, out of which issues was not eight feet in diameter; but now it a demi-griffen t¡ampant, while on the dexter side is wha.t may be called a church spire, is converted into a breast mill. There are with a bird resting on its cross, and beneath also in this town, on th~ same water, two is a tented field, with pennants flying. other mills." This water, so mentioned,was Aroun!il. is the legend " Sigillum ccmune de formely called " The Golden Arm," now Mollingar." I have searched in vain for the meaning of the word Mullingar in Joyce's "The Brosna." It was a river which issued "Irish Names of Places" and elsewhere, as from Lough Owel, and in consequence was I hoped to have got some light upon the of considerable force. The Supply, however, meaning of the central emblem of the seal. which feeds the Royal Canal, has diverted I am however informed that the word the waters. "The Golden Arm" has thus be- "Mullin" is the shaft of a mill-wheel, and that "gar," forming the fin<Ll syllable, is come so feeble that the mill formerly worked literally to cut, or to reft or tear, If correct by its p3wer has in our day been changed in this derivation of the name, we have upon into one worked by steam. the " Sigil," the symbol of the town in the Whichever of the foregoing interpre- water-wheel and heckle, which probably tations of the name Mullingar be adopted, were typical of the staple trade of the place in the 16th or 17th centuries,from which the they all refer to this "mill," and seal dates. The .flange-like handle upon the the town seal, bore as its chief device, back of the seal is partly perfect, in other a. " mill wheel." This seal turned up respects it has been well preserved. "This some years ago, and the Proceedings of the theory was however discredited, and the Royal Historical and Arch:::eological Society true meaning is said to be one of those four of Ireland, vol. V., 4th series, thus refer to which I have already mentioned. it :-" At the Quarterly meeting held at Thomas Petit,lord of the manor of Mollinthe Royal Institution, Cork, on October 16, gar, resident at Irishtown, was alive in 1611. 1880, Alderman Day, of that city, exhibited An Inquisition into his estate was held on a. bronze seal, and sa,id ' During a recent the 19th of December in that year. In this visit to Mullingar I heard from a jeweller C.ocument there is mention made of two there that a curious old bronze seal had mills possessed by him as Chief Lord of the â&#x20AC;˘ been found by a peasant, and offered for Manor. One of these was called " The sale; but he placing no value upon it de- Moate .}\fill," and the other " The Tuck clined to purchase. A jewell~r from Long- Mill." Re had also an annual rent from one ford, however, who was present, became its water mill in Mullingar, which consisted of possessor by giving eighteen pence to the nine measurel5 of corn and twenty-four good finder. Getting this clue, I followed it up eels, and besides these, two pairs of gloves and found that the Longford purchaser had, from each shop in the Town. All these pos-
LtLL SAINTS', llfULLING.JR, PARISH MAGAZINE. sessions, ~ith extensive lands, were held under the King, "in capite," by military service. Many names of inhabitants of Mullingar occur in this " Inquisition " last referred to, 19th Dec., 1611, 10 Jas. I. Several of these names may still be found in the town or its immediate neighbourhoodN ugent, Tuite, Burges, O'Mulridie, O'Multully, Chamberlyn, Lacy, Sherer, M'Cormuck, O'Linshy, M'Gave, O'Gocnry, M'Kelly, Hope, Reelinge, Casey, Gristle, Wise, O'Carbrye, O'Cashellye, Moore, Mortimer, otherwise Mortell, O'Daly, Hamond, Tyrrell, Kyran, Stafford, Ronowe, Cusake, Keygan, Moony, Nelan, Hues, or Hughes, Fox and Dalton. The premises these persons held under ' the Lord of the Manor as payers of yea,rly rents by co=on socage. Socage was a tenure by which the tenants held their lands, to plough the lands of their landlords with their own ploughs, and to perform other services of husbandry at their charge. This was afterwards changed into a yearly payment, called "Free or Common Socage." The term "in capite," was a tenure held immediately from the King. It was abolished with other ancient tenures by statute 14, Chas. II., c. 24. While knights 1 or military service,' was a tenlll'e, by which the tenant holding direct from the King, rendered service to him in time of war.
I.
SCRIPTURE
QUESTIONS.
1. In what part of the genealogy of our Lord do Matthew and Luke agree ? 2. The word " just" is applied to each. of five individuals in Gospels and Acts. 3. Quote the prophecy regarding Christ's change of re11idence. 4.
When may it be said that our Lord.
first came in contact with sin ( 5. Name three illustrious women wh() adorned the era of our Lord's Incarnation, and whoae privilege it was to witness tile commencing brightness of the Evangelical day. 6. What four kings are omitted m the genealogy by St. Matthew?
7. In the history of our Lord, wind is twice a symbol of the Holy Spirit. Quote passages,
8.
The intimation of Christ's crucifixion?
NoTE-The town seal of Mulliu~ar is figure<\ in the tran~actions of the H.oyal Histoiic~I and Archra 9. The first persecution against Chrisological Society of Ircloind, vol. V., 4th st:rics, as tianity ? also in the very interesting sheet of her.t!dic bear¡ â&#x20AC;˘Rf!S of the chief corporate towns of Treland, pub. i&hed by Messrs. Marcus Ward and Co. of Bdfast. N.B.-Answers to the above, and toques-
MAL LEUS DOMINI. JEREMIAH
xxiii-29.
Sledge of the Lord, beneath whose stroke Tb.e rocks are ~ent-the heart is broke1 hear the ponderous echoes ring, And fall, a crushed and crumbled thing, Meekly these mercies I implore, 'fhrough Him whose cross our sorr0w bore; On earth, Thy new-creating grace ; In heaven, the very lowest place. Oh! might I be a living stone Set in the pavement of Thy throne For sinners saved, what place so meet .A.s at the Saviour's bleeding feet?
D.W.G.
tions in succeeding issues, may be sent to the clergy of the parish, and after careful investigation a prize will be awarded to the best at end of year.
for tfJt Feb. 7th, 14th, 21st, 28th,
Morning. 117, 226, 227. 50, 166, 284. 2, 299, 219. 47, 343-1, 302.
Evening. 441, 252, 18. 293, 400, 20. 289, 337, 21 . 258, 390, ,23,
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ALL SAIN78,' MULLING.AR, PARISH MAGAZINE. PA.RISH
NEW YEARS' HYMN.
NOTES.
The Very Rev. the Dean and Mrs Swift gave their annual Chrismas Party to the -children attending the parochial school, Mullingar, on Friday evening, January 7th. The school-room was filled in all parts by the children, their parents, and a number of lhe parishioners, and other visitors. After J present had been regaled with a plentiiul supply 0£ tea and cake, a magic lantern, from Messrs. Mason, Dublin, was exhibited, to the great enjoyment of the young folk, whose applause was most enthusiastic. Mter which a grand display of fireworks took place in the play-ground, which seemed to afford much amusement to all, and made a bright ending to a very happy evening.
Ce.rtainly I will be with Thee ! Father, I have found it true; To Thy faithfulness and mercy I would set my sPal aaew. .All the year Thy r.race hath kept me-Thou my help indeed hast heen ; Marvellous the loving-kindness, every day and hour hath seen.
Certainly I will be with Thee ! Let me feel it, Saviour dear, Let me know that Thou art with me; very precious, very near, On this day of solemn pausing, with Thyself all longing still; Let Thy pardon, let Thy presence, let Thy peace my spirit fill. Certainly I will be with Thee I Blessed SpirW come to me, Rest upon me, dwell within me, let my hea1 t Thy temple be; Through the trackless year before me, Hqly One, with me •abide, Teach me, comfort me, and calm me, be my ever• present Guide. • M.A.RRI.A.G E. Certainly I will be with Thee ! Starry promise in the night! STANGER .A.ND DILLON-On 6th Jan., 1886, Ali uncertainties, like shadows, 1lee away before Mr Henry Stanger, of Leicester, England, its light. to Elizabeth Kate Dillon, daughter of Mr Certainly I will be with Thee ! He hath spoken; I have heard! :M'icllael Dillon, M.ullingar. True of old, and true thia moment, I will trust Jehovah's word. F. R. B. A.
TO
·here is a Children's Bible Class held on • trday, at 12 o'clock, in the parochial 1 •ol, under the supervision of the Curate the Parish. The subjects for consideracion are the Acts of the Apostle3, the Government of Israel under Joshua, and the :Kings. We hope to receive a large addition to our list of subscribers, iri order that the Magazine may pay its own expenses. Contributions on 'Subjects 0£ local church interst will always be thankfu1lj received, and all information concerning the Magazine supplied by M.. F. Barnes, Esq., Hon1 Treasurer.
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CHRYSANTHEMUM CULTURE. To quote from Mr Bowbide;~'s excellent little book on this flower, " the Chrysanthemum is, of all flowers, one of the most effective, · robust, hardy, easily increased, and it blooms r naturally at a season when other flowers are proverbially scarce, It is as well fitted for the cotta.ge garden, for a sunny corner beside the porch, as for the marble-floored consel'Vatory. Every artisan ma.y grow it to perfection with but little trouble or expe'ltse. '' With all this to recommend it, is it any wonder that. it is so .much soug-h t after ? .And with a view to help readers who .are interested in this flower; we propose to publish some remarks on its cultivation in some of our. succeeding issues,,which must but necessarily touch the outline of thei subject, and we woul\]. refer, all who wish tom> deeper ;in.to it, to the,book from which we quote above, viz:-" The Chrysanthemum," by F. W. Bowbidw. 37 Southarmpton Street, London.
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followed its foundation, several chapters of the order were held within its walls. In 1425, Henry Dalton (perhaps one of the family of that name in Westmeath), a Knight of the Garter, was here inteITed. The Rev. Mervyn Archdall, Rector of Slane, This house had also possessions in the parish Di_ocese of Meath, published his famous of Dunboyne. In 1499, Richard Duke of work " The Monasticon Hibernicum," that York and Earl of Ulster, Lord Lieutenant is, "An History of the Abbies, Priories, and of Ireland, granted to it 30 acres of land in other religious houses in Ireland," in the Kilbride, near Mullingar, but it tool shared the fate of its sister establishment. On year 1786, and died, aged 68 years, on August 31, 1566,~ ElizabethJ this friary, August 6th, 1791. At page 722 of that "with the church, cemetery, and appurtenwork we read thus: "Mullingar was for- ances, also the rectories of Vastina and merly the seat of Three Conventual Estab- Churchtown, in this county, were granted to lishments, the most ancient of which was Walter Hope, at the annual rent of ten pounds. the Priory of St. Mary." This priory, comThe third Religious House in Mullingar monly known as " The House of God of was that of the Order of St. Francis. :Mullingar," was founded in .A..D. 1227, for Archdall says that in the year 1622 this Canons Regular of St. Augustine, by Ralph House was commenced by the Friars of ~le Petyt, Bishop of Meath. Bishop le Petyt Multifermam, but was never completed. was doubtless a member of the Norman As to the sites of the two before mentioned family of that name : feudal Barons of Houses, Sir Henry Piers, who wrote in 1680, Dunboyne and Mullingar,' which came to thus remarks :-" One of these stood in the Ireland in 1172 1 with Sir Hugh de Lacy. east end of the town ; the other on the west 'He had been Archdeacon of Meath for nearly end of the town, the ruins of which are at forty years before he was appointed to the this day scarcely visible." They have now bishopric in 1227, the date of the founda- wholly disappeared, but Dr. Burke states tion of this establishment ; and he died two that in 1756 a fragment of the bell tower of years afterwards, namely in 1229, and is de- the Dominican Friary with a few crumbfuig ' scribed by the annalists as " a select ruler walls still existed. When the grant of the House of the and soldier of Christ," Several members of the Petyt family presided over this monas- Friars Preachers was made to Walter Hope, tery from time to time. John Petyt, its last "of Dublin, merchant," it was covenanted by Prior, was elected in 1534. On May 7, Queen Elizabeth that the said Walter Hope '32 Hen. VIII(1540,lhe had a pension of £20 should build a gaol in the 'l'own of Mullingranted to him, as Iate Prior of the Monas- gar, County Westmeath, with stocks, locks, tery of the B Mary of Molyngar, payable bolts, chains, handlocks, and other things out of the possessions in Slewyn and Grange, necessary for the safe custody of prisoners, and out of the rectories "of Dunboyne and at his own expense. He was himself to hold 'Yastina. On Jan. 26, 1591, 34 EliZabeth, the office of Constable of the said gaol and this prio:i:.y, with its appurtenances, within was to pay for the site of the friary a rent the site thereof, 59 acres of arable land and of 40s, and to hold it for ever in fee farm. 4 of mea,dow, and 300 acres in and near the Hope and his heirs further covenanted to town of Slewin and Ballycloner, in the Co. reside in the gaol and to keep it in repair, Westmeath, were granted to Richard Tuyte, or forfeit £10, after due notice. Previous with several remainders, in default of heirs to the reign of King Henry VIII., the male, "in Capite," by knights service, and at County of Meath included the modern "a.D. annual rent of £16 5s lOd, Irish money. Counties of Meath and Westmeath, wit)l The second monastic establishment in portions of Loni:;f'ord or The Annaly ;and of \o Mullingar, was the Dominican Friary, the King's County. At a Parliament held founded ten years later than the Augus- in Dublin, inthe 34 Hen. VIII., 1543, und,er tinian House, namely in .A..D. 1237, by the the Lord Deputy, Sir Anthony Seynt Leger, '\ Nugent family. Within the century which an Act was passed for "the division of Meath SOME ACCOUNT OF THE PA RISH OF MOLYNGAR RODIE, "MULLIN, GAR."
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ALL SdlN1S\ MULLINGAR, PARIS/I JJAGAZIN 8. into two shires." This Act, in its second section, defines the extent of the newly dedefined county and what baronies it should include. Its third section thus runs-" Molinger to be the Shire Town of Westmeath. The prison to be within the precints of the county. That the said common gaol or prison shall be within the precincts of the said House [late Friars of Molynger], and in such place ·thereof, where the Lord Deputy, the Lord Chanccllour, the three Chief Judges, and the Master of the Rolls, shall assign and appoint.'' In an Indenture made between the Lord Dl?puty on behalf of Queen Eliza.beth and Walter Hope, Constable of Mullingar, on December 6, 1570, it is provided that the Lord Deputy, or any other Chief Governor, should have all the rooms ir the Castle of Molyngar to lodge iu, as often as they sho1:1-ld. travel in those parts, and that the Comnnssioners and Justices should have two or three chambers during the Assizes. Her M~jesty will fin?the irons for the safe keeprng of the prisoners, and which Hope is instructed to keep safely for that purpose.'' This document would i;ihow that the Castle of Molyngar meant the county gaol, while from King Henry VIII Act of Parliament, we find that the said gaol was ordered to be erected on the premises of the former "House of God," or Priory of St. Mary, founded in 1227, by Bishop le Petyt. This Priory of St. Mary was richly endowed. I will only mention two singular portions of its privileges. One of these of the annual value of £6 13s 4d, was termed "The Door ef St. Peter's Church in Dunboyne," which was doubtless an Ecclesiastical Tax, while the other was a local privilege . It was found in the 33rd Elizabeth, 1590, " that the late Prior and his predecessors, had from ti~e. immem?rial i·eceived from every house withm the liberties of Mullingar, and out of every brewing, one measure of ale, commonly called " The Mary gallon." ~h~s was val~1ed yearly at the sum of six shillings and eight pence. ~ On July 23, 1583, Queen Elizabeth wrote to the Lords Justices from her manor of Greenwich, authorising two fairs to be held at the Town of Mullingar-one on the Feast of All Saints', being the first of November, and the other on the 24th of June, commonly called Midsummer Day, to continue for 3 days, at the solicitation of Walter Hope,
Constable of the castle and gaol, and of the inhabitants of the town. These state that they were disposed to bestow their' travayles and carriages to strengthen the town lying open to all att1?mpts.' The tolls then levied. were to be employed "in enclosing and fortifying the Town," and the Queen thus cop.eludes her letter : -" A.s their request doth import for our honour and for their own safety, we will take in very good part, and shall think this our favour to be bestowed upon persons of good deserte, and will be further mindful of them to their comforts, )~ as occasion may serve." The Portriove, ~ urates, and Constable for the time being .,/U/J are named as the officers who were to levy the tolls at these fairs and at the weekly markets, and who were to lodge them in a Treasury for the purpose of being employed for the Public Good of the Town.
COURSE FOR SPECIAL SUNDAY SCHOOL PRIZES FOR 1886. The Lord Bishop of Meath has been pleased to appoint the following Course for the Special Sunday School Examination in July, 1886. Old Testament-1st and 2nd Kings, compared with Chronicles. New l'estammt-Acts. Church Formularies-Catechism, with Scripture Proofs. C'omm union Service. Dr. Littledale's " Plain Reasons against joining the Church of Rome," to end of sec. 39.
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Jan. Moming. New Y'rs Day, 93, 95, 97 3rd 88, 438, 94. Epiph. 100, 101, 102. 10th, 107, 217, 113. 17th, 109, 290, 104. 24th, 111, 158, 302. 31st, 335, 106, 369, Chants, 236, 165,
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ALL SAINTS', MULLINL STA.'fK.MENT OF PAROCHIAL FOR. YJ<JAR 1885. MONEY
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Offertory - 0 rd i nary, Special Collections, ... BenG Burial Fees
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THE SPELL OF THE SIREN. YTHICAL ages !Jave told of the singing Wafted by sirens across the dark sea; Harps of to-day to the same notes ar e ringing, Alluring and sweet as the old m elody. The scrains of the sirens are silem:ed fur ever ; It was but· a l<'gend-a thing of the past; Yet we list as the strin gs of the violin quiver, And own th ~ t the Epell of tlJe siren io castCa>t o'er the spirit with life all btfore it, That hear• the glad mu-ic fl iat 110 to ils close, A.ad the @pell ot the Firen C•Jm es pleas9.ntly o'er it, A.ad the future is eull)Jed, th~ hue of the r oseCa.,t ~l!.r tlte heart with itd lrnppinLS5 present. A bliss that illuminate:i tile worlu with its beam, Aml the @pel l of thu sirl'n, un• peakRbly pl""sRnt, ¥.oats ti.trough the bright h alo tll.L~ circlts tllll dn:uwC&it o'er the Epirit 1hAt pai • fotlly poi111en On [llearnre once hr;ked "ith th" m:igicJl strain; Ariel memory i• "akc• eJ Rtld w i•tfnlly wanoll u Vo.rn the b:o n.! ti.le or illuoic tv fio lit agai ·" Uuic can waken old f.tncil'e long sl~epinir, Music cqn Lrini; O:'C:l old though t• tlu1t h•u fl~J. Cao remind u• of j oy, or 1 eminll us of weeping, Of m erunrh-s livrnµ am! mcmuri s ll~all. '!he m~giclll •trnin that ru!'g ovrr the oceau [• sil~DCLU fvr 'l'Vtr-the •pir I L't! ~ ll1ul i•m ..,•aw wakes to the toucl, of Lh1: musical hand. U. II. J.
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The change \I ill eome-the eltanl( A11d IJeart-sick thoughts will fly, With de.iperate louging to the home lie left s;, willingly.
It is not griet, it is not p iio, .6ut memory wakes a t last Some chord whose half-forfiotten strain Still vibrates in the put. A word me.y burst the barrier out 'Twixt now llnd long ag.J, A• erstwhile fell at Israel's shout The walls of Jericho. Or mll!ic loved in the olJ land MAy bridge the 1oterval, As Oq1heus' wi1chny well uigh spanned 'fhe gulf '"1·ixt earth am! hell. For memory has subtle p)wers 'fo bring paot pleRs11re liack, Aud like the suuligl>t gild the. flower; '!'hat deck li!c's 10urniug track.
He may present a Lethe cun,
A <1rnu11h L from the H , r~afcer
'Il1\l pMt like mu, ic ripples up With uutoq;o: ten laughter. The future lies a 1<orlu unknown 13cfvre the ·l~rkest presc1 t The p1.st has m m rrics all its own lmm ~asumuly plcarnnt.
The presen t may be bright and gay, Ile still the p 1st re:uembers, A11u t11rns from the fre•h fiJwer" away To rake awitl i ts embers .
G. II. J.
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Vica1'-Very Rev. DEAK SWIFT, M.A., All Saints' Vicarage, Mullingar.
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Czirate-Rev. JOHN H. BOURKE, B.A.
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Synodsmen-JOHN SWIFT, H. W. LLOYD, W. A. GREEN, M. F. BARNES.
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Parochial Nominators-JOHN SWIFT, W. A. GREEN, M. F. BARNES.
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Clmrcltwardens-J. WATSON MURRAY, W. E. GILL.
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S elect Vestry-The Parochial Clergy and Church Wardens ex-officio-R. W. C. LEVINGE,. ~ JOHN W. GORDON, W. A. GREEN, J. FIWIFT, R. LARKE, W. J . ') THOMAS, H. W. LLOYD, W. J. ROBINSON, C. DILLON, M. F. 1I BARNES, P. J. BLAKE, C. DAY.
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Parocltial Treasurer-JOHN SWIFT, J.P., Keoltown, Mullingar.
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Sextoness-Mrs CAIN, Church Avenue, Mullingar.
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SERVICES, CHURCH SERYICES-Sunilays, 12 noon ; Fridays-?.30 p.m.
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&c. Week days-Wednesdays, 10 a.m.
HOLY COMMUNlON-Secrrnd Sunday in the month, a 8 o.m. and last Sunday in the nt 12 noon.
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HOLY BAPTISM-Every Weilnesday, at 10 a.m.
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SUNDAY SCTIOOL-Io the Church, at 10.30 a.m.
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CHOIR PRACTICE-On Friday Evenings, at 8 p.m.
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LENDING LIBRARY-Open at the Schoolhouse on Saturilays, from 1 to 2 p.m. THE DAILY SCHOOLS-Open at 10 a.m. RELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION-Daily from 2.30 to 3 o'clor.k.
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All Saints' Church Parish Magazine (PUBLISHED Subscriptions, by Post ..
MONTHLY). 2s. 60dd. per annum} payable in advance 2 s. • "
Sntisc1ibers ell.D have copies forwariled by leaving their Names and Addresses with the Sextsne"'° ()r on applimtion to the Parochial Clergy, or to the Hon. Teasurer, J. A. Parker.
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ALL S!ll1\7S'. t1/ULLINGAR, PARl8!l ,1fAG./IZINI?. SOME ACCOUNT OF THE PARISH excepted, being parcel of the estate of the OF MOLYNGAR: RODIE MULLIN- late Priory of Llanthony in England." Rent, £44 12s. 8cl., Irish. 'l'hese tithes had preGAR. viously been demised for 41 years, 8th July, CHAPTER IV. rr 21 Elizab0th · (1571), to Sir Eclwarcl Moore, In its Ecclesiastical status the Parish of father of Sir Garrett Moore, at a like rent, Molynfar consisted of a Re/tory and Vi.ca- Before that timr, namely, on 17th Septcmrage. The ]:{.ectory was a,(Jpropriate to the ber, 1575, 17 Elizabeth, they bad been leased Priory of St. Kie~au's, Duleek, in Meath. to Edwn,rd Brn,bazon for 30 years. And This was au Abbey founded 1y St. again before this last lease, they had been Patrick, who pla.cC'd St. Kienan to preside held by Francis Agard, Esq., on a lease of over it. H e Lael baptised him in the year 21 years, elated 14th De~ember-12 Eliza450, and Arehdall (Monastiron Hibernicum, beth, 1570. The term of each of these p. 833), tells us tha.t "after residillg a conside- thrC'e lear>es was to commence upon the rahle time in France, :::t. Kienan returued to expiration of that of its predecessor. Ireland and erected a Church of stone and Sir Garrett '.\Joore was, on July 20, 1616, lime at Duleek." St. Patrick is sa.id to have elevated to the Peerage of Ireland as given him his own Book of the Holy Evan- Baron Moore of Melli.font, and on Feb. gelists. There are many notices of this 7, 1621, was aclvn,nced to the Viscouuty of Abbey in the early Irish Records. Its Abbot Moore of Drogheda. He died on Nov. 9, was generally a Bishop. Hugh de Lacy, 1621, and was succeeded in his titles and Lord of Meath, in the year 1182, built a cell est&.tes by his elclest sou Charles, second here, dedic11ted also to St. Kienan, and sub- Viscount Moore. This nobleman was slain at jcct to the Priory of Llanthony, near Glou- Portlesler, Co. Mea.th, 7th A.ugust, 1643, by cester. This cell was occupied by Canons re- a callllon shot, wlgle giving directions for an. gula.r following the Rule ofStA.ugustine, a~d assault upon th~ Castle, in the service of it possessed the rectorial titles of various King Charles I. parishes in the Diocese of Meath. Amongst By a lease, bearing dated 20th April, -0thers those of Delvin, Rathcounell, and 1640, Charle:s, 2nd Viscouui Moore, granted Mullingar, besicle other extensive posses - unto George Nettleton and Thomas Litsious. These were granted by patent in 160l.I tell in consideration of the sum of £5, (3 Jae. I) to Sir Garrett (or Gerald) Moore, the Rectory anu Parsonage of Mullingar, ancestor of the present Marquis of Dro- in the County Westmeath, and the adgheda. The portion of the patent re- vowson, donation, nomination, and right of lative to Mu~lingar, runs a,s follows : - patronage of the Vicarage of M ullingar "Grant from the King [James I.] to Sir aforesaid, for two years from l\fan:h then.. <Janett Moore, of Drogheda" .-"The tithes last past. -0f the Towns of Dallcnebrennaghe, BallinB.v deed of release and conveyance the clun.e and •rollcan, the to'."1'11 of Glaskine, said Yiscouut Moore of Drogheda, in conpa.rcels of the Rectory of Molling.1r, a sideration of the sum of one thousand m"ssuag,3 in 1,folliugar, in a pin,ce lead- pounds, did give, grant, release, and confirm ing from the bridge 'to the ChurchyarJ. to the said George Nettleton and Thomas ~ * * * The Rectory, Mhe coru, and Litten, their heirs and assigns, for ever, tbe ~rain of ~ollir~gar. extending wit~1iu Mol- saiJ R ce:tor}' a~cl Plti'S?mtge of ~ull~ngar, lingar, Kllpatnck, the Grange, Inshtowne, and the mid tit.hrs, v.'1th all thell' ngbts, Stoiestownc, Tnitestowne, Ballcnoy, Bttlli- members, a.nd appurtenances . nora, Balli.luikh, Ballicouiu, Ballinambrin, A deed of trust, release, and conveyance, Ballin -lur.~, and Balli11ssli11e-to hold fvr 60 hearing da.te Feb, 20, 1661, recites that yea.rs after th expiration oE his .forrn. r th<.3 lease nf 20th April and conveyance of leases rC'spectively, to pay all synodals, \ 24th April, 1640, were taken in the name of J>roxie,;;, and stipends of CuratC's, to keep \ George Nettleton and Thomas Littell in trust up all ch<tncels. castles, honscs, cottages, for Sir George Radcliffe, then deceased, itnd frnces, and dite:hes ; the a lvowsons of the 1 that Tholllas Littell survived him. It Vica,rn~es of .Julianstown and Mullingar, the further recites that George Nettleton was tithes and alterages due to t1e Vicars only : dead, and that Tlo;nas Littell survived him
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ALL SAINTS', JtULLING4R, PARIH MAGAZINE. - that Thomas Littell was also since dead, to h eld these tithes by lease dated 8th June, whom Fra.ncis Littell was brother and heir. 1688, for seven years from the previous first It further recites that the said Francis Lit- of May. He paid for the first two years tell by deed dated the 15th day of the said £70 per an., £75 for the two next years, month of February [1661 J sold all and sin- and £80 for the remaining three. I do not Q'Ular the said premises to Thomas Radcliff11, find who succeeded Sir James Leigh as ten~ou and heir of the sltid Sir George Radcliffe, ant, probably a Mr Lestrange; but on 21st who was by virtue thereof in actual posses- June, 1706, Hugh Bowen had a lease of the .sion of the said premises. By the said deed Rectory and Tithes of Mullingar, at a rent of conveyance dated 20th Feb., 1661. Fran- of £30 per an . for a term of twenty-one years. cis Litteil did confirm unto the said Thomas This Lease was surrendered before its expiRadcliffe, his heirs and assigns for ever, the ration, and on 6th July, 1716, the said said Rectory and Parsonage, ancl the Tithes Hugh Bowen had another Lease for a term of Mullingar, with a.11 their rights, members, of forty years, at a rent of £65 . This Lease and ltppurtenances. By lease bearing date expired in Feb., 1755. -26th November, 1679, Margaret Trappes and John Wilson granted unto the Governors of VICARS OF MULLINGA.R-DIOCESE OF MEATH. ~.., the H0spital and Free School of King Charles 1615 Thoma.s Kirkby (in possession). ~t'- rf" the Second, Oxmantown, in the City of Dub- . If:l~illiam Sibthorp (do.) /C lin, for and in consideration of the sum of 16...4 June, 14-John Conner.,., /,,J1Ji"'l{,ut five shillings, the said Rectory and Tithes 1633 March-James Nugent. ~ yof Mulliugar, for one year. l 1633 January-.TOli1eph Ware.J Further, by Deed of Conveyance bearing 1664 July 10-Ralph Adams. ~ ~ date the 27th of November, 1679, the said 1675 Dec. 21-James Hierome. lf l:.IJ~ Margaret Trappes and John Wilson, assigned 1679 May 16-John Forbes. / .etl1tt-11 and conveyed for ever unto the Governo1·s, 169t Nov. 18-Joshua Warren. JI '>iH1 and their successors aforesaid, the a.Lsolute 1700 Nov. 11-Thomas Dobson. Estate and Inheritance of the sa,id Premises 171 t March 13-Lewis West. and all their Rights, Title, and Interest 1724 May 7-Edward Thompson. thereto, or any pa:rt thereof, under the Will 172~ Sept. I-Arthur Champagn~. of Thomas Radcliffe, or by virtue of any 1800 Oct. 7-Henry Dundas. deed or conveyance made thereto to them by 1813 July 21-Francis Lambert. the said Thomas Radcliffe in his lifetime. 1814- Api·il 6-Thomas Robinson. By these deeds, the Rectorial Tithes of 1828 March 31-Honble. Henry Montct.Muilingar passed from Cha,rles, 2nd Viscount gue Browne. Moore of Drogheda., to Sir George Radcliff0, 1850 January-Thomas Woodward. the friend and relative of the great but ill1856 January-John Hopkins, st11,rred Earl of Strafford, Lord Deputy of 1864 August-Charles Parsons Reichel. o Ireland. Sir George died shortly after T,ord 1875 July 30-Francis Swift. l.:J. S~ / C11Btrafford's execution; his son, Thomas RadW. REYNELL, B.D., M.R.l,A. cliffe, succeeded to his estates,amongst which w.s,.,~ ib was the possession of the Rectorial Tithes of 69 Mullingar. By Thomas Radcliffe these J&pmns for tlJt .:!lr'lontf).~'1(itjl• "' ·'J. 13~ Tithes were giveu to the Hospital and Free School of King Charles II., Oxmantown, in Evening. -ni. 4.. Morning. the City of Dublin, commonly known as April. 165, 273, 35f'lt~ . 4th, 152, 310, 154. "The Blue Coat School," and in the posses171. 336. 58. sion of that useful Institution they still con- 11th, 146. 47. 1. 8. 160, 161, 59. 18th, 159, 162, 164. tinue. Good FridayThese Tithes were leased on 26th 181. 177. 182. 174. 166. 179. June, 1680, for seven vears from the first of Easter SundayMay of that year to Maurice Hammond at 186. 190, 62. a rent of £90 for the first year, of £95 for 187. Anthem. 194. 185. Chantsthe following two years, and of £100 for 20(1, 29. 146. 128. 18. the remainder of the term. Sir James Leigh
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d.LL 8AhV1S,' MULLINGAR, PARISH Jld.GAZINE. ~ari5tJ GIBLS'
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FRIENDLY
SOCIETY.
8- Give instance of gift of Holy Ghost preceding Baptism? 9-" These men do exceedingly trouble our city." Where, and explain ? 10.-What prophet was quoted by the President of the first apostolic Council ? 11-" No man cometh unto the Father but by me ;" Peter used similar words in the Acts? 12-In the Decree of first Apostolic Council, abstinence ÂŁrem four things was urged? 13-0n what occasions do we read of Agabus? 14-" Behold, ye despisers," &c.; quoted by whom and where? ~5-St. Paul claimed the privilege of bemg a Roman citizen on three occasions ? 16-What converts did 8t. Paul make at Athens? 17-In St. Paul's address to the Elders at Ephesus, there is a proof of the divinity of Christ?
On Monday, March 22nd, there was a llleeting of the hon. and worl--ing associates -of the Mullingar Branch of the " Girls' Friendly Society " in the Parochial Schoolhouse, Mullingar. The chair was taken at 3.30 p.m. by t.he ¡Very Rev. the Dean of Clonmacnois, who opened the meeting with prayer. The Branch Secretary (Mrs Swift) i-ead a short report of the working of the 'B:ranch for the year 1885, from which it appears that 13 parishes have joined the Mullingar Branch, and that there are 14 w. associates, 30 hon. associates, and about 127 members belonging to the Branch. The associates present then proceeded to elect a ~ranch Secretary for the present year and six members for the Diocesan Council. Mrs Swift was re-elected Branch Secretary, and the following ladies were elected members of the Diocesan Council :-Mrs Dowse, Tyrrn!-J.spass _; Miss Reynell, Killynon ; Mrs lill'~patrick, Castlepollard ; Miss Wade, MEATH DIOCESAN CHORAL UNION. Belvidere Lodge ; Mrs Craig, Tullamore ; WESTERN DIVISION . .Mrs O'Donoghue, Castlerickard. The Dean then closed the meeting with prayer. The Annual Choral Festival will be held (D.V.) in St. Mary's Church, .A.thlone, on During Holy Week, there will be service Wednesday afternoon, June 30tli, 1886. every evening in All Saints' Church MulThe following is the programme of the lingar, and different Preachers each e~ening. music : Service to commence at 8 o'clock, p.m. Opening Hymn 236. Psalms . . . 147, 148, 149, 150. To the Chants . . . No. 28, 43, 50, 61. SCRIPTURE QUESTIONS. (Chants, A.Jicient and Modern. Old Edition). 1-James in his speech at Jerusalem Magnificat and Nun0 Dimittisquotes a prophecy from the Old Testament ? Stainer in E flat. 2-Do we, subsequent to their nominaAnthem--" W orth.y is the Lamb,'' tion, e"er read of either of the candidates . Handel's Messiah. for the vacant Apostleship ? Hymn before Sermon 235. 3-Two great principles of Christian beHymn after Sermon 356 (1st tune). lief given to the Elders of Ephesus ? The Anthem (price ltd) and the Services 4-.A. date in life of Moses in New Testament not in Old ? (price 4d) may be had from Novello & Co. 5-In quoting a promise made to 1 Berner's-street, London, W. Abraham, Peter, by substitution of one word for another, suggested to the Jews that DIED. the Gentiles were their brothers ? 6- Distinguish Grecian from Greek ? GoRDON.-April 2, at her residence, Grove 7-.A. passage in Isaiah compared with one Avenue, Blackrock, Martha, relict of the in Acts proves Divinity of Holy Ghost? ~ate William Gordon, of Mullingar.
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~~R\"IC~S-Sundays,
1.:2 noon;
7 p.m. ' · .
days-Wedne3days, 10 a.m.
Fridays-?.30 p.m. HOLY COM:MUNION-Sec'lnil Sunday in the month, a 8 a.m. and last i:;nnday in at 12 noon.
th~
month,
HOLY BAPTISM-Every Wednesday, at 10 a.m. SUNDAY SCHOOL-In the Church, at 10.30 a.m.
CHOIR PRACTICE-On Friday Evenings, at 8 p.m. LENDING LIBRARY-Open at the Schoolhouse on Saturdays, from l to 2 p.m. THE DAILY SCIIOOlci-Open at 10 a.m. qELIGIOUS rnSTRUCTlON-Daily from 2.30 to 3 o'clock.
All Saints' Church Parish Magazine (PUBLISHED Suhsrriptions, by Post ..
MONTHLY). 2s. Od. per annum} bl . G·' paya em a ..1 vanC'e
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Subscribers ca11 have roµies forwarded by leaving their Names and Ad1lresses with the Sextoneh' or oa application to the Parochial Clergy, or tot.he Hon. Teasurer, M. F. Barnes .
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'!'he followinir rrp •rt ''"" req1J from the Com 111ittee npn'i 1tP<l t11 inquire into the matter of WfltPrW1l•kR for the town : " Thr CJomm;t•Pe bP!r to Rtde for th,. inform'ltion "f the Rnllril of Gnar•lisrn• thl\t llfter m'ltUrA delihPl"llion thPv hllve r.i•olve<t on rPnommendin2 thP the R•l•ril to lily t!1<> pipP.'1 throu 1h the to ·.. n, Rn.'! ontPrimt' into I\ cnntr•ct with the Most ReY. Dr Nulty for A•tpnlvin'! the Wl\t~r. ··The c.. mmlttee Wl\ite(l nn hi• Loril•hip. whn At•t<>il thn~ he WI\~ in I\ pos tion tn eunnlv th" tnwn with 61:000 11flllhn1 1l•ilv. llt fl C"-•t or 81perl000 2dlons. thllt iR. if the Board contracte<l to take it for n nu'llh~r of ve'l••. . "Signed on beb ..lf',,r t.h A ll'm"'ittPe, ' "J AM"E8 1'111KNY, Chllirmlln, ".hJllES ltt1'G, llon. RPc." "Note- ~r Nnlfln o'1j~t• rn the recomrnenrl•t.inn cn'1t toie.t •bov<>. b11t. l'PC'l'Tlrn~n·h the p•oposition rp1otP I from hill Lord~hip to the C'>nslderation of the Boarl. " R:>BEltT NOLAN.
"n•t e•l 1•' July, IOS!l."
'l'hA rh .. irman flskeJ. wh!\t wfl• the meaning of thP MtP ? M· .J. Kinl? Rlliol the committPR Ter.t'mmenilect " cert•ln co11r•<' to he ll'1optP<1: \'Ir N •ll•n w ·~of nni• nion th 1t thP. wh lie of hi• L >rilohi n'~ prnon•itlon •h.,111 be submitte•l to the Bo1rd f'Jr their conside· r11ti11n. The Ch11.irm'ln 1tRked Mr A.lien wou1'1 he f(ive a nntice of m itil}n th'\t the matter be coo9idered on th•1t •}l\V fortni~ht. ~r A 11m-T h1ve reshmed 1\11 s11ch work,, ChRlrm'\n-Whl\t W'4Y ito you pronn•e to stRt th 0 mone'I' to lqy the nipP~, whi&t •lesct'iption nf pi pee >in v011 pr11'Jltl'e to 11\V, Rn>l wh"t eiz\!d mains i• h ~ · Lnrrl·h;p ~ble to ~upnly? Mr .J. Kln'l-1n c•~e the Bll\M of Gu•r•lillns ul. tim11.lPIV R l•mt1>1l the ~che'TII', th•t would then he 11 que•tion 11f' cletllil. !11 the c linmittee Mtc vou 11t the p•e•ent I• to 11d•1pr. the pri11cinle. My idell i• thl\t it i9 1t schem" that can be upheld In the face of any opnn•iti •n. \fr ,John Co•mell propi•ed and \fr .hme~ ShAerin sec mtl~rt n n<ltice of 'Iln' ion to thA ptfect th•tt tbP 1 prnp ••iti"n or the c,mmi·tee ba oosiderPd aml a1lopt~~on thnt d><~ f•>rt.ni.rht. '
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stune uie wheaLs have come very rapidly into , and all tbe 1tronger p -ant1 are now having ir best chance. But tor the backwa.d wbeata. l the miMerably 11tunttd Lemen cum-which y be found on tbe poorer soils coming iuto ear rally ciose to the ground-there ii now :ea•on11ble hop• ; they arit pre u1nably past all 1ibi1ity of 1ecov11ry. It ie probably the latest .on within the recollection of the l r"1ent geneon. Some of the later-aown pea oropa are in som on a.bout six inuhee. uf haulm, i.nd the re outlook, excepting for the beet of the at1, ii exceedinl!'ly d111Conra~ing. Yet the trade 1 wordo, and the position in lLa entirery ill made >f iactora which are as disq_u1eti11g ae they are 11. Ev11r1oooud111u,t have a llilver iiuing, but bright frmge of \hie one ie not yet in '"!!'ht. oourse 1 f the trade during the past week ha11 1 didtinotly downward; where delinriea have 1 praclicully nil in provincial marketa wl·ut naturally been qu 1ted 1teady, but where th~re aotu11lly been any appreciable qu.1nr.ity offering 1e• have been lower where bulimea• was tran•d. In L nd{Jn the trade has favoured bnyl!n, sales of Eng·ieh ·wheat noted la1t week w. re 6 quarter.a at Sll. ld., against a•, H6 ,era at 32a. Sd. in the correaponding W9ek of ear. 'l'he London average for the week ended Tueaday was 3l1. 2d. on 712 ~-8 qulll'ters. and all other ar!iioloa have been a.oeedmgly
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MULTJINGAR,
OCTOBER,
1886.
t:!OME ACCOUNT OF 'fHEl PARISH OF separnted. from ye body of the Church by a MOLINGAR RODIE MULLINGAR. partition against wch ye Communion Table is fixt. Y~ Chtlrch•yard is Well enclosed CHAPTER x with a stone wall, and planted with trees. Edwarcl Thompson--styled D.D. in Mr The Incumbent resides in his Vic'Lric1 gJ J", C. Lyons' "History of the Grand Juries house and performs ye duty himE>elf. There of Westmeitth'·'-(but where orda.ined and is Divine Service and preachiug every :::lunat what University thus dignified, I find day morning, and prayers every holyday. not), became Vicar of Mul1ingar on May 7, Wendsday & Fryday. There are 100 fa1724, by Royal PresenttLtion, on the cession milies of the Established Church in ye ot' Mr I,ewis West. Dr. Thompson, as I Prsh. & 460 Popish. There is likowi;;e a C<tll him-trusting to the above-mentioned Popish Priest anJ. a mass house. The remrnLlly excellent authority-held tho parish motest part or tho parish is 5 miles distant uut1l 1746, during the reigns of the first two from .Y" Church." Gr'orges, anJ. seems to have constantly reSuch is Bishop Ellis's account of the s·ded on his benefice. He was-a Justice of .Pa.rish-a vast improvement had taken the Peace for the County of Westmeath, place. The Vicar was resident-a comfort1111d appears to have been active in the ex- able "Vicaridge" had been built-Divine crcise of that function. There remains in Service was regularly celebrated on all the Public Record Office, Four Courts, Lord's Days-holydays-" Wendsdays" and Dublin, a document probably drawn up by l<'rydays. The parishioners attached to the Doctor '\'.Velbore Ellis, when Bishop of Established Church must have numbered Meath. This document contains a minute at the computation of five to each familyaccount of each Parish in the Diocese, and five hundred souls. The parish hacl been its compilation wat>, probably, a very laucla- severed from those joined to it in 1679. The ble imifation of Bishop Anthony Dopping's remotest part was only five miles distant •Report,'' already referred to. 'Ihe .Parish from the parish Church. The duty seems to of .Mullingar is therein noticed in the follow- have been regularly performed. The church ing terms. This last Report may have been was in order and furniished with all things compiled in the year 1733 : necessary for The Divine Functions. El'en No. 92.-Molingar Vicarage. the chancel was in repair, but not being Edward Thompson, Vicar. used, the church being probably a large one, Ye King, Patron. was separated from the body (or nave) of "The Parish contains 9148 acres. ye the church by a. partition or screen. Vicar has only ye tithe of hay and other Rev. Edward Thompson n;ade his will on small tithes worth about £90 per an. The July 14, 1746. Probate was granted by the Rectory consisting of the tithe of corn, be- Diocesan Court, on July 14, 1746. The date longs to the Blue Coat Hospital, and Mr of Mr Thompson's death is not mentioned. Bowen is lessee. ye Vicar claims ye tithe This event probably took place in Jttne or of corn growing in crofts, but it has been July, 1746. In his will he mentions his detained from him by the Lessee. The wife Elenor, his son Glasgow, and his whole glehe belonging to this Parish, which younger son Smyth Thompson. The followis dispersed in little gardens about ye church ing sentences refer to his burial :-" I leave does not amount to an acre. However, ye my body to be buried as priva.teiy as may Vicar has built a pretty Vicarage-house of be, in the church-yard of Mullingar, on the stone and lime, which is thatched, and made j north side of the church. with my feet to a good garden. The Church is situated in ! Addam's tomb, close by the wall, in a pla.m the Town of Mollingar. and is in very good coffin." Glasgow Thompson, eldest son of order, and furnished with every thing ne- 'Rev. Edward Thompson, 1Iiarri&d EEzaheth, cessary for the celebration of Divine Service. ! eighth child and fourth youngest daughter of The Chancel is in repair, but not used, 'tis John Lyons, of Ledistown, and his wife-
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~1AGAZTNE.
Eliza.beth, relict of Lieutenant. Colonel learned "'History of the Protestant ExileH,'' Richard .A.she, and qaµghter of Heury stn.tes that the bean wa,s Uha1 lain to the Williams, Deputy-Governor of Antigua, in English Church at Portarlington. He held the West Indies. Mr Glasgow Thornpsou bis preferments unt.il his death, whir·h took h:W. issue two sons who both died without place on August 20, 1800, aurl he was iuissue, and one daughter who mu.rried Mr tcrred in the cemetery at Portarlington. Fa•mt, of Hanstown, nea.r Mullingar. I The Dean married Maryanne, daughter of understand that the Adams burial place ColQu(:ll Isaac Hammond, and P.ad three is under the north transept of the pr-esent sons and three daughters. I. J_,ieutenant, parish church. There are some tombstones General Forbes Champagne. II. Geneml near this phce, none of which, however, Sir I qsia:i> Champagne," ~qd III. Reverend marks Mr Thompson's grave. Mr · Bowen George Champagne, Rectqr of T'Yickenham1 who is mentioned in Bishop Ellis's 1' Report" Middlesex, EuglaJ:!d, and C;:i.noI\ of Windsor was representative of a family descendeq His <laug4ters were Henrietta, married tq from the House of Upton in Pembroke- Sil' Edward Borrowe~. 6tl} Baronet, of Gilli;hire, South Wales. His father, Hugh town, Co. Kildare; Jf!.ne1 Co~ntess of Ux, Bowen, was also Lessee of bhe Rectorial bridge, mother of the firiit Marquis of Tithes of the parish. He died aged 69, on Ang1esea, anq Marya,nue, wife o~ Sir Charle11 May 22nd, 1724, aµd his monument still des Vceu~, of Portf1.rli~gton1 ~r13t Baronet! l'emains in the south transept of the Parish D:an Obampagne1s a:ppointment to t~e Church, Mr John Bowen continued as Vicarage was duubtle~s i1 consequeuc-:. -" h111 Lessee of the RectoFial Tithes until 1756. con.q.exioi:+ with the Earl of Granard ; but it Some account of the Bowen Family may be is strange tha,t in his person, and in that of 1•ead in the l!Lte Mr J. C. Lyons' 1' Graµd Dr. Hieroroe;the Huguenot Persecution anq Juries of Westmeath." · Emigration, should 4ave qeei+ the cause~ On the death of Mr Thompson, Mr Arthur which directly brought about their appoint~ Champagne was appointed by the Crown as ll!-ents. fo my notice of Dr: Hierome i!l his successor in the Vicarage of this Paris4. c4apter vii. of this "apcount," I shoul4 His n,~pointment is d!1ted September 1st, have mentioned that his name appears as a 1746Mr Champagne was d~scenj].eJl PrebeJ'.!.dp.r;r of f?t, f!=!-tricJ.s's Cathedral! from noble French family, who!~~~. Dubliµ. count of their Huguenot tenets, had ieft · W. REYNE~L, B.D., M.R.I.A: native land. He was the only son of Major (Tq be continued). Josias Champagne by Lady Jane Forbes, daughter of Arthur 2nd Ea1'l of Granard, and his Countess, Mary Rawdon. Born in ANSWER~ TO SCRIPTURE Q UES~ TIO.~rn IN S~P'"f. NO. . 1714, he entered Trinity College, Dublin, when he obtained a Scholarship in 1734, and 1.-He was well educated, and was by gratuated B.A, V ernis 1736, and M.A. <Estivis, 1739. In H'41, he was made a prpfession a :fhysician. He accompanied Prebendary of Kildare, and on his appoint- st: Paul in son:i.e of his missionary journey~ ment to Mullingar, Mr Champagne obt;:i.ined ings. He retired afterwards to Achaia, a faculty to ]lold with this parish the Rectory where it is said ~e wrote his Gospel and the and Vicarage of Cro11-ghail, the Rectory of Acts pf the Apostles! about 63 A."D. 2.-Col. iv-14; 2 'fim, iv-11 ;. Phil. v. 24. Kilclonfert, and the liectory and Vicarage 8.-Matthew, writing for the Jews traces of Monaster01;s, Diocese of Kildare. On the death of Dean Owen·, he was appo!nted by Christ from Abri:i,ham ; Luke, writing for Bishop Carmicha.el as his successor in the the Gentiles, traces Christ from Adam. 4.-1Ie expfains Jewish rites, names, &c. Deanery of Clonmacnois, and was collated 5. - Luke, · i.-2. · to that dignity on l\Iarch 13, 1761. Dean 6.-1 Uhron., xxiv-10, 19. . Champagne was also a Prebendary of St. 7.-Dan., ix-21 ; viii-6; Luke i-19, 26. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin. He held by 8.-Col. iv-11, 14. · faculty the Rectory of Cloncha, Diocese of 9.-" Bowels of mercy," "Sumerisi~g Of Derry, from 17th March, 1786, to 1791. ' ~r J\.15µe1v1 ill ]li!l very inte:restiq€! and branch:'!
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OCTOBE1R1- 1886.
Sb'.ME ACCOUN'I1 OF THE PAlUSH OF' separated from y6 body of the Church h,1' a
partition against wch ye Communion Ta.ble is fixt. ye Church·yard is weil cnrlo~ed dHAPTER x with a stone wall, and planted with trees. EJ\rnrc1 Tboatp.son--stylcd D.D. in Mr The Incumbent resides in his Vic"ti';' ge J. C. Lyons' "History of the Grand Juries house and performs y 0 duty himi:.elf. There of Wt>stmc;1th"-(btlt where ordained and is Divine Service and preaching every 8unat what University thus · 'cti.cd, I find day morning, and prayers every holyday, not). hecame Vicar. of Mullingar on May 7, Wendsday & Fryday. There are 100 fa172-1,, by Royal Presentation, on the cession milies of the Established Church in ye of 'Mr J,ewis West. Dr. Thompson, as I Prsh. &. 460 Popish. There is likewise a call him-trusting to the above-mentioned Popish Priest and a mass bonse. The re- • usually excellent ;rnthority-hcld the parish motest part oi t.he I>a1'ish is 5 miles distant until 1746, during the reigns of the first two from ye Cburch.1' Georges, ancl seems to have constantly reSuch is Bishop Ellis's account of the sidt!d on his benefice. He wa.s a Justice of Parish-a vast impravement hacl ta.keLJ. the Peace for the Ccrunty of Westmeath, place. The Vicar was resident-a comfort. ancl appears to Have l:teen active in the ex- able "Viea.riclge" bad been b uilt-Divine ercise of that function. There remains in Service was re;F lF,rly celebrated on all the Public Record Office, Fo~r Courts, Lord's Days-b01yi: _vs-" Wendsdaysh and Dublin, a document probabl; drawn up by l!'rydays. The par:shioners atta.cbed to the D ctor W elbore Ellis; When Bishop of Established Church must have numbereJ Meath. This ddcurriSitt Mntains a minute at the computation of five to each familyaccount of each Parish iil the ~iocese, and five hundred souls. The parish had been its compilation wa.t;, propahly; a very laud.a- severed from those joined to it in 1679. The ble imitation of Bish9p Anthcmy Dopping's remotest part was only fae miles distant 1 Report," already referred to. 'Ihe Parish from the parish Church. The duty seems to of Mullingar is therein noticed in the follow- have been regularly perlorme.i. The church ing terms. This last Report may have been was in order and furniished with all tliings necessary for The Divine Functions, l!lven com.piled in the year 1733 : the chancel was in repair, but not being No. 92.-Molingar Vicarage. Edwa.rd Thompson, Vicar. used, the church being probably a large one, Ye King, Patron. was separated from the body (or nave) of ~. ·•The Parish contains 9148 acres. ye the church by a. partition or screen. 1 Vicar has only ye tithe of hay and other Rev. Edward Thompson rr..ade his will on small tithes worth about .£90 per an. The July 14, 1746. Probate was grauteel by the Rectory consistin5 of ihe tithe of com, be- Diocesan Court, on J ulv 14, 1746. The date longs to the Blue Coat H ospital, and Mr of Mr Thompson's death is not mentioned. Bowen is lessee. ye Vica claims ye tithe This event probably took place in June or av -0f corn growing in crofts, but it has been July, 1746. In his will he mentioLs bis detained from him by the Lessee. The wife Elenor, his son Glasgow, an'l his 01 -whole glebe belonging to this Parish, which younger son Smyth Thompson. The followis dispersed in little gardens about y-e church ing sentences refer to his burial :- " I leave e· does not amount to an acre. How:ever, ye my body to be buried as privJ.teiy as may Vicar has built a pretty Vicarage-house of be, in the church. yard of Mullingar, on the stone and lime, which is thatched, and made 1· north side of the church, with my feet to a good gafden. The Church is situated in Addam's tomb, close by the wall, in a plain the Town o:l Mollingar. and is in very good 'l coffin." Glasgow Thompson, eldest son of order, and furnished with every thing ne- Rev. Edward Thompson, married EEzalieth, cessary for the celebration of Divine Service. eighth child and fourth youngest i!augbter of The Chancel is in repair, but not used, 'tis John Lyons, of L edistown, and hit1 wif-0 MOT.INGAR RODIE MULLINGAR.
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ALL SAINTS', MULLING.1R; PARISH ilfAGAZINE. Eliza.beth, relict of Lieutenant- Colonel Richard, Ashe, ;tnq daught!')r of Heµry Williams, Deputy-Gpvernor of Antigua, in the West Indies. Mr Glasgow Thompsou had issue two sons who both died without issue, and one daughter who married Mr Fa'.m t, of Hanstown, near Mullingar. I understand that the Adams burial place is under the n~rth transept of the })resent parish church. There are some tombstones near this place, none of which, however, marks Mr Thompson's grave. Mr Bowen who is mentioned in Bishop Ellis's ''Report" was representative of a family descended from the House of Upton in Pembrokeshire, South Wales. His father, Hugh. Bowen, was also Lessee of the Rectorial Tithes of the pal'i.sh. He died aged 69, on May 22nd, 1724, and his monument still remains in the south transept of the Parish Church, Mr John Bowen continued as :J:,essee of the Recto rial Tithes until 1756. Some account of the Bowen Family may be 1·ead in the late Mr J. C. L;rons' " Grand Juries of Westmeath." On the death of Mr Thompson, Mr Arthur Champagne was appointed by the Crown as his successor in the Vicarage of this Parish. His appointment is dated September 1st, 1746-7, Mr Champagne was descended from a noble French family, who, on account of their Huguenot tenets, had left its native land. He was the only son of Major Josias Champagne by Lady Jane Forbes, daughter of Arthµr 2nd Earl of Granard, and his Countess, Mary Rawdon. Born in 1714, he entered Trinity College, Dublin, when he obtained a Scholarship in 1734, and gratuated B ,A, Vernis 1736, and M.A. illstivis, 1739. In ] 74'1, he wa,s made a Prebendary of Kildare, and on his appointment to Mullingar, Mr Champagne obtained a faculty to hold with this parish the Rectory and Vicarage of Croaghan, the Rectory of Rilclonfort, and the Rectory and Vicarage tif Monasteroris, Dioceee of Kildare. On the peath of Dean Owen, he was appointed by J3ishop Carmicha.el as his successor in the Deanery of Clonmacnois, · and was collated to that dignity on March 13, 1761. Dean Champagne was al:;;o a Preb dar o . f"".Mrick's Cathedral. Dub n. eld b faculty the Rectory of Cloncha, io esti o Derry, froµi 17th March, 1786. to 1791.
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learned ·' Historv of the Protestant ExileR '' states that the bean was C)1f1.plain to the English Church at Portarlington. H e held his preferments until his death, whir·h took place on August 20, 1800, and he was in, terred in the cemetery at Portarlington. The Dean married Maryanne, daughter of ,. Colonel ~ita~IHammond, and had' ~~1 II sons and three daughters. ~. Lieutenant, T f General :F1orbes Champagne. IIt Gcnernl c ~UL Sir l osias Champagne, and Iill Reverend ....., .. r Ge!ft'ge Champagne, Rector of Twickenham, Middlesex, Englall.d, all.4 Canoll qf Windsor• His daughters were Henrietta, ma;1,ried t.o /'1 , , Sir ~l Borrowes, 6th Baronet, of Gill- ~ town, Co. Kildare; Jane, Countes11 of Ux. bridge, mother of the first Marquis of Anglesea, and Maryanne, wife of Sir Charles des V reux, of Port;trlington, first Baronet 1 Dean Champagne's appoilftment to tlte Vicarage was' doubtless a consequenc~ of hif! connexion with the Earl of Grn.nard ; but it is strange that in his person, and in that of Dr. Hierome, the Huguenot Persecution an(!. Emigration, should have been the cause51 which directly brought about their appoint~ ments~ I~ my notice of Dr. Hier9me ill chapter vii. 6£ this "account,'' I should have mentioned that his' name appe~rs as~ Prebendary of St, Patrick's Cathedral, 1 Dublin. W. REYNELL, B.D., M.R.I.A, (To be conti~ued). ANSWERS TO SCRIPTURE QUESTIONS IN SEPT. NO. 1.-He was well educated, and was by profession a Physician. He accompanied St. Paul in some of his missionary j<?urney, ings. He retired afterwards to- Achaia, where it is said he wrote his Gospel and the Acts of the Apostles, about 63 A.D. 2.-Col. iv-14; 2 Tim. iv-11; Phil. v. 24. 3.-Matthew, writing for the Jews traces Christ from Abraham ; Luke, writing for the Gentiles, traces Christ from Adam. 4.-He explains Jewish rites, names, &c: 5.- uke, i.-2. • ' . Uhron., xxiv-10, 19. . Dan., ix-21; viii-6; Luke i-19, 26. 8.-Col. iv-11, 14. 9.-" Bowels of mercy," "Sumerising oi:
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SCRI PTURE QUESTIONS FOR OCT. 1. -·w hat reason does L uke assign for bis writing his Go<spel ? 2. - W ly1t is t}le ID• ·aning of Theophilus, and wlrn.t writings were addrcs~ed to him ? 3.·-·what was the Song of Zach aria ; wh ere fo und in the Prayer B9nl~ r . 4.-It seems to ha,ve been Jewish custom to name children after t heir relations. ~b ow t his ? · · ' .. · 5.- What incident i.n connection . wit h t he preaching of John does Luke alone ie}ate r 6.-0ompaFe tb c Gospel of Matt.hew and J,uke as to the order ~£the temptatjop.? 7.-Wbo in the Gospels applied th e t erm Saviour to Christ? · 8.-What is the fi rst mlracle performed J esus which Luke recorils? ' 9.- What answer did J ol1n gLve to the 1ldiers wh,en t hey asked "whiLtshall we do" ? 10. -H ow was it brought about t hat 'SU S was born in Bet.hlehem, and what rophec1 was fulfilled thereby ? ~ AL'l"n1N TUO UGlJTS. one lmth the l"priu g, "ith all its fl.i wers, An<l ~one the Su1nme1 · ~ pomp an<l show, 1111 Autumn, io bis lea ft ~ss bowers Is \\ aiting fur the Winter!s'sn.ow.' said to t:art.h, so cold !lnd pray, •
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'l'HE FEAST OF HARVEST. The fair Earth smiled and turned herself and woke, And to the Sun with nuptial feeling said : " I had a dream, whnein it seemed men broke A sovran league, and long years fought and bled, 'Till down my sweet sidea ran my children's gore~ And all my beautiful garments werll made red, Ami all IPY fertile P,elds were thicket grow)l, Nor could thy dear light reach me through the air. At laat a voice.cried• Let them shine no more I'·~ T hen music breathed, and lo I from my despair I wake to joy-yet would not joy alone I " For hark I I hear a murmur on the mead1WheTe aa of old my children seek my face 'fhe low of kine, the peaceful tramp of steeds Blithe shouts- of men in many a pastoral place, The nojse of tilth throughout all my goodliest land> 411d happy laughter of a dusky race, Whose brethren lift them from their ancient toil Sa.}ing: 1 The yl!ar of jubillee has come; Gather the gifts of l<:arth with equal hand ; Henceforth ye too may share the birthright 1oil. Tbs: corn, the wine, and all the harvest-home."
"0, piy dear lord, my radiant bridegroom, look! Rebold their joy who sorrowed in my dreamsTbe sword a share, the ~pear ~ pJ'UDi -hqok,
Al l SA l \ 7S' . MUlLTN GAR, PARI8H 1l1AGAZINT!i.
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SCR1PTUHE QUESTIONS FOR OCT.
1.-·w hat reason does L uke assign for his writing his Go<spel ? 2,- Wlip,t is tli.e 1ni·aning of Theophilus, and what writings were aJcl res«cd to him P 3.--'iVhat was the Song of Zacharia ; where found in the Prayer Bq~il; )"' 4.-It seems to ha.ve been J ewish eustom to name ·hil<lreu ,after t4eir relations . ~how this 5. - What ineidcnt in connection · with the preaching of John does Luke alone ie-
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6.-CompaFe the Gospel of Matt.hew and J,uke as to t~e order pf the t emptatjop.? ?.- Who m_th; Gospels applied the term Saviour to Chnst? · 8.-What is the first mlracle performed · y J esul:l whieh Luke records? 9.-Wbat answer did J ohn gtve to t he 13.oldiers wh,entbeyai;ked "wb"'tshall wedo"? 10.-How wa.s it brought about that J esus was born iu Bethlehem, and wl:!,at prophecy was fulfilled therebt,..?
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'l'RE FEAST OF HARVEST. The fair Earth smiled and turned herself and woke, And to the Sun with nuptial feeling aaid: " I had a dream, whtrein it seemed men broke A sovran league, and long years fought and bled, 'Till down my sweet sidea ran my children's gore, And all my beautiful garments wert1 made red, Ami all lj'.ly fertile fields were thicket grow,n, Nor could thy dear light reach me through the air. At laat a voice.cried• Let them shine no more!'·~ Then music breathed, and lo l from my despair I wake to joy-yet would not joy alone I " For hark I I hear a murmur on the mead1Where a1 of old my children seek my face 'fhe low of kine, the peaceful tramp of steeds Blithe shouts. of men in many a pastoral p)ace. The nojae of tilth throughout all my goodliest land; 4nd happy laughter of a dusky race, Whose brethren lift them from their ancient toil Sa} ing : 1 The year of jubillee baa come;
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'URE QUESTIONS F OR OCT.
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all S A l . 'l S' iJ!UlLTN GAR, P ARISH .MAGAZJN!t;.
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l on his ml?agw 1ar1sh t. , the :n...,~ )ry and Vii E Kildare. ( was appoint successor i and was cc 13, 1761.
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The fair E arth SJlliled and turned herself and woke, And to the Sun with nuptial feeling said: " l had a dream, whrrein it seemed men broke A sovran Jeague, and long years fought and bled, 'Till down my sweet sidea ran my children's gore, A•ul all my beautiful garments werti made red, •.\nil 1111 my fertile fields were thicket grown, Curate-Rev. JOHN H. BOURKE, B.A. · 1.t inc:idmt in connection with Nor could thy dear light reach me through the air. '!g of John does L u k e alone ie- At last a voice cried ' Let them shine no more !' ". SynoclYmen-JOHN SWIFT, H. W. LLOYD, W. A. GREEN, .M. F. TlA'R~I 'fben music br1111thed, and lo ! f.rom my despaif . nnpare the Gospel of Mati.hew and I wake to joy-yet would not joy alone I Parochial Nominators-JOHN SWIFT, W. A. GREEN, l\f. F. n.-illNES. o the order of t l}e temptation r110 in the Go~pels applied the term " For hark I I hear a murmur on the meadsChurchwardens-ROBERT GORE ANNESLEY and WM. HARR!SO:S-. :> Clnist r •. W here as of old my children seek my face . . rhat is the first miracle performed The low of kine, the peaceful traiµp of steeds Select Vestry-The Parochial Clerj?y and Church War1lens ex-offi1·in-.r. W.-\.'~whieh Luk~ records p ' Illithe shouts .of men in many a pastoral place, W. E. GILL, W. A. GREEN, JOHN W. GUIWO~ \rb d"d J h · t th M. F. BARNES, R. LARKE, C. OlLLO~ . J. l'>Wlh at aJ?.s"er 1" o n give o .. ~ The noi1e of tilth throughout all my goodliest land; R. G. LARKE, W. J. ROBI~SUN. •benth eyl.~;Jrrcl wb<:ttshall we d o ( ow was it brought abo ut t hat And happy laughter of a dusky race, Parochial Treasurer-JOHN SWIFT, J,P,, Kcoltown, Mullingnr. r. born iu B ethlehem . anij. wl:].at Whose brethren lift them from their ancient toµ Sa) ing : ' The year of jubillee has come; :l!l f~1lf!llec1 thereby ? Seztoness-Mrs CAIN, Church Avenue, Mullingar. Gather the gifts of.Efarth with equal hand; A L.. ! P I N TH O l' GHTS. Henceforth ye too may share the birthright soil, th .- ~p1i1J g , "llh all its f!Jwerg, The corn, the wine, and all the harvest-home." e the Su11 m e•·~ pump and shuw, SERVICES, &c. in , in his !f'R fl ,· ss bower~, "O, my dear lord, my radiant bridegroom, look ! g lur the Wiuter's snow. Ilehold their joy who sorrowed in my dreams~ ' CHURCH SERVICES-Sundays, 12 noon ; 7 p.m, Week days-Wedne• r1•ib, so colcl and J?ray, Fridays-7.30 p.m. The sword a share, the spear a pruning·hook, ble111 of n. I thou art." So I awake, and turn me towards thy beams the Earth. d1c1 st em to say, HOLY COMMUNION-Second Sunday in the month, a 8 ii.m. and last Sun\rin~ shall "arm my frozen heart. Even as a bride again ! oh shed thy light at 12 noon, Upon my fruitful places in full stream11 I my wintry sleep with dreams HOLY BAPTISM-Every Wednesday, at 10 a.m. J..et there be y~ld for every ).ivin~ thing; ter sun an1l salter rain, o hlar the sound of streams The land is fallow-let there be rncrease SUNDAY SCHOOL-In the Cbur~h. at 10.30 a.m. gs of many birds again." After the darkness of the sterile night J CHOIR PRACTICE-On Friday Evenings, at 8 J'•ltt• from whr m the Spring hath !?One, Ay, let in twain a fe~tival of Peace ~om the flowers no longtr blow, ?repare, 11nd hither all my nations bring I" L~NDING LIBRARY-Open at . the Schoolhouoe on Saturdays, from I to 2 pJest b)ighted and forlorn, ., · :t'HE DAILY SCHOOli:i-Open at 10 a.m. tnmn waiting for the snow. The fair Eart4 spake ; the glad Sun speeded forth,
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·' ULIGIOUS INSTRUCTION-Daily from 2.30 to i$ o'clock.
All Saints' Church Parish
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Hearing her matron words, and backwards drove l 'o frozen caves the icy winds of the NorthAnd ba1le the 8outh wind from the tropic wave Bring watery vapours over rivers and plainsJ\nd bade the East J.!oµnd cross her path, and leave The lowlands, emptying there her laden mist, ;f)t19ntb. And bade the wind of the West the best wind blow Evening. 274, 289, 453 After the early and latter rain126, 2 2~, 472 And beamed himself, and oft the 11weat E arth kis~e d, 34, 293, 10 While her swei:t se~vilors sped to and fro, 252, 148, 11 ~o ~, ~3 7, :ig
· th ine of sunnier hours, ter shall no more depart, revive thv wasted flowers I erij warm thy frozen heart." us.
1~~laga~ ::::=.==.:========= ut~ for tbc (PUBLISHED M - NT '.1 t. Y) .
Sub scr1ptions; . ..
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THE FEAST OF HARVEST.
"hat reason does L i+ke assign for o· h is Gospel ? jlb;i,t !.s t4e m ·apipg of Theopi).il us, writings wer e addres-ed t.o him 'hat was t he Song of Zach aria ; nd in t he Prayer Bol•k r seems to have b een J ewish c:11stom c:4ildren after t geir relations. Vicar-Very Rev. DEAN SWIFT, M.A., All Saints' Vicarage, Mn!lingar. ,[
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M orning. 2s. Od • per aunum } payablt, ~343-p , t 1. , 216.. 106 400 2s. 6d, " 336, 146, 219
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Subscribers cau have copies forwnrd4d by leaving theil' Names and Addresses wit 50, 140. 279, OA application to the Parochial Clergy, or to the Hon. Treasurer, M. F. Bar11ei414, 312, ?65,
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Parochial Nominators-JOHN SWIFT, W. A. GREEN, M. F. OAR!\f.8. Churchwardena-ROBERT GORE ANNESLEY and WM.
HAR!USO~.
Select Veatry-The Parochial Clergy and Church War<lens ell-offiC'io-.J. IV\'l'~O~ M Va •i \ Y, W. E. GILL, W. A. GREE~, JOJIN W. 1;QRLJO \, \\' . J . THU 1t.\ .-;, M. F. BARNES, R. LARKE', C. DILLO.S, J. :-'\\ 11'' l', U. W. L LO Yu R. G. LARKE, W. J. ROBI~SON. ' Parochial 7reasurer-JOHN SWIFT, J.P., Keoltown, Mullingar. Se:doness-Mrs CAIN, Church Avenue, Mullingar.
S E R V I C E S, &c. CHURCH SERVICES-Sundays, 12 noon; Fridays-7.30 p.m.
7 p.m. Week days-Weilnesilays, 10 a.m.
HOLY COMMUNION-Second Sunday in the month, a 8 e.m. and last Runday in the month, at 12 noon. HOLY BAPTISM-Every Wednesday, at 10 a.m. SUNDAY SCHOOL-In the Church, at 10.30 a.m. CHOIR. PRACTICE-On Friday Evenings, at 8 p.m. LENDING LIBRARY-Open at the Schoolhou;;e on Saturdays, from 1 to 2 p.m.
THE DAILY SCHOOl::!-Open at IO a.m. &ELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION-Daily from 2.30 to ::S o'clo~k.
All Saints' Church Parish Magazine (PUBLISHED MONTH LY). Subscriptions, •• ,, by Poat ••
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Subscribers cau have copies forward.1d by leaving their Names and AdclressPs with the Se:1tone11 or oa application to the Parochial Clel'gy, or to the Hon. Treasurer, M. F. Barnes.
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Parochial Nominators-JOHN SWIFT, W. A.. GREEN, M. F. llAR:'ffS. Churchwarden.Y-ROBERT GORE ANNESLEY and WM. HARIUSO.:-J. Select Vestry-The Parochial Clergy and Church War1lens e11-offil'io-J. IV\T~O~ MUil'l \Y , W. E. GILL, W. A. GREE~, JOJIN W. liORUO \. W. J . THU ' l.\:i, M. F. BARNES, R. LARKE', C. DlLLO~, J. :-'\\in, U. \V, L LOY u, R. G. LARKE, W. J. ROBI~SON. Parochial Treasurer-JOHN SWIFT, J.P., Keoltown, Mullingar.
Se:etoness-Mrs CAIN, Church Avenue, Mullingar.
S E R V I C E S, &c. CHURCH SERVICES-Sundays, l:.? noon ; Fridaya-7.30 p.m.
7 p.m. Week days-Wednesdays, 10 a.m,
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~II MULT,INGAR,
NOVEMBER,
1886.
SOME ACCOUNT OF THE PARISH OF successively. thro' every gradation of the MOLYNGAR: RODIE MULLINGAR. ministry." His memory is not held in esteem at Cashel. He caused the ancient Cathedral on the Rock, the Chancel of which was CHAPTER XI. Doctor Heury nownes, Bishop of Meath, then used for Divine Service, to be unroofed was translated to the See of Derry on April and dismantled, having obtained for this 9, 1724. During the remainder of the purpose an Act of the Irish Parliament. in eighteenth century, no fewer than nine the year 1748. Doctor H enry Maule, Bishop of Dromore, .Prelates presided over the Diocese. Doctor Ralph Lambert, Bishop of Dro- of the family of the Earls of Panmure in more, a native of the County of Louth, was Scotland, was on May 24th, 1744, tranlilâ&#x20AC;˘ translated to Meath on February 10, 1726. lated to Meath, This Bishop was an early He died on February 6th, 1731, and was and zealous supporter of the Charter Schools. buried in the Chancel vault of St. Michan's He died at Ardbraccan on April 13th 1753, and was buried there, in the Churchyaru, Church, Dublin. Doctor W elbore Ellis, Bishop of Kildare, in the tomb of Bishop Montgomery. The Hon. William Carmichael, second was translated to Meath on March 13, 1731. I have already mentioned this Bishop as the son of the second Ea.rl of Hyndforu, in probable compiler of the " account" of his Scotland, previously Bishop of Clonfert, and diocese, quoted in the last chapter. Bishop of Ferns and Leighlin, was promoted to Ellis was a native of York.hire and was Meath on June 8th, 1758. In the year brother and heir to Sir William Ellis, who 1765, he was further advanced to the Archcame to Ireland as Secretary to James bishopric of Dublin. On July 16, 1765. Bishop Richard Pococke Talbot, Earl (afterwards 1Duke) of Tyrconnell, in the reign of King James II. W el- of Ossory, succeeded to the See of Meath. bore Ellis, son of the Bishop of Meath, was This Prelate had been a great traveller in in 1794, created a Peer, by the title of Baron the East. He was struck down by apoplexy Mendip. The Bishop's only daughter mar- on the 15th of September in the same year, ried in May, 1733, Henry Agar, of Gowran, and was buried at Ardbraccan. Doctor Arthur Smyth, Bishop of Down Co. Kilkenny, from whom descends Viscount Clifden and the Ear1 of N ormanton. It is and Connor, was on October 8th, translated a curious fact that while Bishop Ellis occu- to Meath as Bishop Pococke's successor. In pied this See, his brother Philip Ellis was April of the following year, 1766, he was .Bishop of Segui, in Southern Italy. Philip advanced to the Archi-Episcopal See of Ellis while a boy at Westminster School, Dublin. The Hon. Henry Maxwell, Bishop of liavinf, been kidnapped ; was brought up at Rome by the Jesuits. Bishop W elbore Dromore, youngest son of John first Baron Ellis died on January 1st, 1733-4, and was and brother of Robert first Earl of Farnham, buried with great solemnity in Christ succeeded Arch bishop Smyth. This Prelate Church Cathedral, Dublin, of which church built the present Palace of Ardbraccau. he had been Dean. A handsome monu- He also liberally contributed to the erection ment to his memory and that of several of the Parish Church there. His sons be. members of his family still rema.ins there, came successively the fifth and sixth Barons but it is now placed in the Cathedral Crypt. of Farnham, the Earldom having expired on Doctor Arthur Price, Bishop of Ferns and the death of .Robert Maxwell, the first Earl, Leighlin, was translated to Meath on Fe- in 1777. Bishop Maxwell died, aged 75, bruary 2nd, 1733-4. He sat here for ten in the month of October, 1798, and waa years, and in 1744, WJ.S advanced to the buried in the chancel vault of Ardbracca.n Archbishopric of Cashel. Harris, the Editor church. Doctor Thomas Lewis O'Beirne, Bishop of the illustrious Sir James Ware's works, .remarks that Archbishop P . ice "passed, of Ossory, on December 18th, 1798, sueâ&#x20AC;˘
ALL SAINTS', MULLINGAR 1 PARISH UAGAZINE. ceeded Bishop Henry Maxwell. Bisnop which event took place in either the months O'Beirne was thus the twelfth successor to of June or July, 1813. Bishop Anthony Dopping, in a period of a His successor, Mr Fra.ncis Lambert, was century and about eighteen months. Of seconfl son of Joseph Lambert, of Brookhill, these helve Prelates, four were English- county of Mayo, by his :first wife, Barbara, men, two were Scotch descent, one was a da.ughter of Thomas Rutledge, of Bloomfield, Welshman, while the remaining five were in tha same county. Mr Francis Lambert, of Irish birth. Three of these twelve was born in 1788. He waa educated by the Bishops became Archbish0ps. One was Rev. William Whiteside, and (together with translated hence to the richer See of Derry. his eldest brother Thomas Lambert) entered Not one of t.he twelve was consecrated as 1frinity College, Dublin, as a Fellow ComBishop of Meath, the vacancy being always moner, on May 13, 1806, his College Tutor filled by Translation from other Sees. 'l'he being Di¡. Usher. Mr Lambert graduated period of nine years and about two months B.A., CEstivis, 1810. He was presented by formed the average tenure of the Bishopric the Crown to the Vicarage of Mullingar, on ¡by Bishop O'Beirne's eleven predecessors. June 29th, 1813, being then only twentyAs to the tenure of these eleven, Bishop :five years of age. On November 25th of the Maxwell's Episcopate included thirty-two same year, Mr Lambert was colla.ted by Lord years, and Bishop Pococke's only two Pecies, Archbishop of Tuam, to the Prebend months. Only three of these Bishop11, of Kilmainmore, in the Cathedral of St. namely-Bishops Maule, Pococke, and .Max- Mary's Tuam, and he seems to have, very well-were buried at .A.rdbraccan ; but, as shortly after this date, resigned Mullingar. I have mentioned, four had been trans~ InApril, 1819,heassumed his ma.ternal name to other Sees. '~ of Rutledge by Royal Licence, and on June D ring about the same period, namely, 9th of the same year, married Margaret, from 1700 to 1800, there were only four daughter of Colonel Bruen, M.P, @fOak Park, Vicars of Mullingar, one of these, namely- county of Carlow. He had a family of four Dean Arthur de Robilla,rd de Champagne, sons and four daughters. Mr Lambert or having been Vicar fifty-three years and Rutledge inherited the estates of his uncle, Robert Rutledge, of Bloomfield, county of eleven months ! Ma:,io, who was High-Sheriff of that county Mr Henry Dundas, Dean Champagne's in 1f' 88, and for many years M.P. for the successor as Vicar of Mullingar, entered Borough of Duleek, county of Meath, in Trinity College, Dublin, as a Pensioner, the Irish House of Commons. Rev. Francis on July 9, 1766. The Matriculation Book Lambei't-Rutledge died in the year 1854. does not give either his father's name or W. REYNELL, B.D., M.R.I.A. his birth-place. He was educated by (To be continued). Doctor Dunkin, who was (I OMiih:) Master of the Royal School of Enni~killen. His NoTE to chapter x. for Hammond read college tutor was Mr Henry Dabzac. Mr. Hamon. Dundas gra\uated B.A. at the Summer comDean Champagne's family consisted of mencements of the Universitv, 1771. He four sons and six daughters.-!. Arthur entered Holy Orders and beca:ri'ie Incumbent Philip II. Lieutenant-General Forbes. of Corcomohide, Diocese of Limerick. This IIT. General Sir Josias. IV. Rev. George. Benefice was in the patronage of the Vicars I. Jane Countess of Uxbridge. 2. Letitia, Choral of the Cathedral of St. Mary, Lime- Mrs Stepney. 3. Marianne, Lady Des V reux. rick. On October 7th, 1800, Mr Dundas was 4. Deborah, Mrs. Close, 5. Charlotte, Mrs. presented by the Crown to the Vica,rage of Armstrong. 6. Henrietta, Lady Borrowes, Mullingar, and on October the 22nd, of wife of Sir Erasmus Borrowes, 6th Baronet. the s~Lme ye:i.r he obtained a faculty from The male line of this very noble House is, the Coart of Prerogative in Ireland, to I believe, now extinct in this country, tho' retain with Mullingar his previous Parish. many descendants in the female line still I have entirely failed in obtaining any other flourish. particulars about Mr Remy Dundas. He held l\Iullingar Vicarage until his death,
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SOME ACCOUNT OF THE PARISH OF .MO 7t JAR : HO DIE MULLINGAR.
tor of Portshangan, Portloman, Multi fernan, and Curate of Leney L" -' v a11 d Staffarnam, D10eese · ' """'"-il~ of Meath. Tho U,O'• re0 - '-PTER XI. _"P., !J>. gate value -0f thAse unitHl p r ' J b~i>.n 'Mr 'Forh~s <>ld the Vi<::--, """"l'ag-e of ll £57 per annum ; but m lo:.J:J · 1·• . " not thni , ~· vear!l . SQ muc h" ' <; • '"~ Sat·-- ·;11c>-. ,r, f<. about . .cm1 . . Tho l hurd\'"7' apr. f I hall• ui.... 1,, ' discov . Clon .. ny ·parti- those [XU ia<l bt>eu m rum smc!e t u ~ cula.rs Ii§ 11lace of Ed.uca.t , ...J ;, .. , nr Ordi R ebellion of 1641 , · J, the ext· ...pti1ou of nation, or t.i: he vacat~ , by 1' n.otion .c 'ha1" ..:1 vf t11•.- churc 1s st..i.ted or <l.eath. H e '{!.!Ce~d.,d by Mr Joshua o be •· tn rt>pair, but tha.tchc>cl". 'l'lle Curate Warre~, who was preiscuted by the Crown, reb. es 'lt Portshangan, within two miles according to TLL· Liber. Munerum Hiber- [of it], and preach s here constantlv." On nioo, on November 18th, 1692-3. Joshua November 22, 1699, Thoma Dohsou, of Warren, acconliu~ to the Matriculu.tion Port~eshangan, Co. of Westmeath, Cler'i:, B?ok of Trinity College, Dublin, wa. tion had licence from the Court of Prero()'ative of Edward Warren, and was born in Irc>lftnd Dublin, for ma~·riage with Elizabeth Dfngley: in 1656. He was fourteen years of age of D0nore, wid.ow. Mr Dobson was prewh he entered Trimty College, Dubliu. as 8 •.JUV •.o the Vicarage of All Saints' Mulsioner, on July 13, 1670, and Imel been liuga., ' successor to Mr Joshua Warren, , a e 1cated by Mr Scott, of Dublin, his College whose fellow-student he had been in Dublin Tutor being Mr George Walker. Mr War- University; on ~ovember the 11th, 1700. ren obtained sc~olarship in 1673, auJ. grad.u- On March 9th, 1709, he was granted a. ated.1?.A, Verms, 1675, and proceeded M.A, faculty fro~ the Court of Prerogative, to CE~tmi>, 1678 He was prob.tblv a native of hold the Vicarages of 1\1.ullingar and Rath. the u,rnuty Donegal. I ti:.id th.a~ tht> Rev. Connell, with the paritihes of Portneshangan Wm . ~arren ~as instituted to th.! Rt>ctory of a~d M.ultyfernanL He is dei:;cribed as ChapD11nag-Hmore, m that Couutv au<l. Dioeese of hi.m to Laurence [Hyde] Earl of Rochester, 1J1·1·1y on April 23, 16~6. H':l may pruhablv who w1:1,s second son oi' Sir Edward Hvde h:w1:1 lieen the gra11dfathet· of .Mr J oshu;, Lot·d Chancellor of Englan•l, and E>trl of Warren , for I lea.rn from Mr Darcvthat there Clarendon, and brother to Hemy 2nd Earl is l.ti:l a traJition at Galtrim, ·co. Meath, of Clarendon, and to Anne Duch~~s of York wht're we know t~1at the Vicar of Molyngar the first wife of James II. King of Eu laud'. resided, and which estate he was himself Laurence, Earl of R~chester, in 'the yea r seized of ; that the Warren famil v ca.me from 1700, became Lord Lieutenant 0£ Ireland. Dont>gal. A large tombstone at the east end Mr DoLson held his. be~efices u11til 1717, of Galt,rim l'hun:h, bears the name ()f Joshua and very probably died m that ear a •ed Warren, Esq, of Galtriru, who died Nov. 68. Another Thomas Dobson a.ls .~tp1·ed 17, 17/;, in the 43rd year of his a,!.(e, while Trinity Uollege, DuLlin, al:! a siza.r tbt• Cli a.l1e» •lf th:1t Church w11s "The O'ift of 12, lti78. He w<LS t>ou of Georg l\1r,; W11rren, senior, to the Church ofGaltrim of Dublin, and was born in 1660. 11 65." Th :i two persons 1hus lo ·allv com~ duated B.A. in 1683, but I conside memouted e_re very probably the grau<l.son former Thomas was the Vicar of 3t d daughtA -111-law of our Vit:ar. I Jo not I have not found any record.of Mr a ow where '.\Ir \Yarren wa.s onhtineJ. we death or of his place of burial. fin him in 685, Pt·ebendarv of Killa.nully On March 13th, 1717. Lewis · t l' ..:R •dur ofK -.:kavilly, au l VJ.car of Briuney'. ceeded as Vicar of Mullinga1· on : :UobD10eesd • ork. On Nov. 18 16\J2-3, he son's decease, by Presentat~ >n of tqe 'rown s ceeeded r J o~n Forbes, at Mulliu 5 a,r, He held the Benefice until 1724, when he and 011 .'.\fa.Y 12, 16 , had a faculty to hold be<',ame Prebendary of Inver, Diocese of K11cwh<u illy with Mullingar. On Septem- Raphoc. According to Archdeacon Uotton, r 2~, 1697 he became by exchange with who styles him M.A., Mr Lewis held Inver Mr Rwh1:1,rd Goodman, Prebendary of Rath until 1746; but I have entirely failed in i the Cathedral Church of St. Flannau's'. obtaining any further particulars about him. K1ll.'1loe, and died, aged 44. before the At this time there would seem to have been mouth of November, 1700, on the eleventh no Vicarage or clergyman's residence at Mul d;i,y of which month The.mas Dobson was lingar; Mr West may, thtrefore, have been presented to Mullingar as Mr Warren's non-resident. I do not find that he hel<l., success~r [ ~ib. Mun : Heb.]. Dr. Maziere,. by faculty, any other pari~h with 1ulliugar. Brady m h1i:; learned work on the Dioceses On ~ay 7th, 1724, agam by Royal Preof Cork, Cloyne, and Ross gives many other sentat10n, Edward Thompson succeeded p1:1,rticulars as to Mr Wa~ren's family and Mr West in this pre~erment. . •..i.-_~dlant , but they do not throw any 'Ye must now no.t1ce the l31sh?V~ "."h furtller light upon the history of his In- cup1e?- the See of Meath until th1s l.i. tcmni.H•ncy ~+. Mulling1:1,r. He married Ellenor mentw~ed date. . . daugh r of Stafford Lightburn, Esq., of Dr .R1~hard 'l'enmson was Btsl1up Anthouy Adamstown, Co. Meath. Doppmg s successor. H e was uuru at C11r· Ow, of his sons, the Rev. Stafford war- ric~f~rgus, Co. Antr~m, anJ eJui·11tc~ at r e.u, was admitted Vicar of Donaghmoine, Trnnty Coll~ge, Dublin, wh~n· he obfa1~C'd D i eese of Clogher, in 1715, and proba- a Scholarship, and was att.<1:wards. Vice. hly held that parish until 1751, in which Chancellor. He was ai one t~LJIP D101·.-~au }'Par John Brown succeeded him. His S~hoolmaste~ of Meath, an<l r1.. ,.;1dt'd ~t Trmi. ot er sons were named Thomas and. Light- B~shop Tenruson was eonsecrntecl Bishop of burn· and he had also five dauvhters K1llala, 25th Feb., J6Rl-:! . n,--d '\\::ts trn.n~ :M ~a,ne~ 's f?•:andson Joshua, :.t\.Ja<l.y ~ate~ to Clo.;'.:i;ir ( wh~re he had bt>en J lrau), m utmuetl, uHtrned on Novf'mber 19, 17il4, m 1690. lt shoulci. also lw statt"{l .that he ilau!?htC'r and coheirPsri of Dixie had been R»l-iur of Larn"111' a111l or Ag-lwr, 0 duington, Es,]., <Lucl had issiLP olX da.ngh- ar_id Vi<·ar ?" l>o°:aghmo~"'· i~1 tlw D.i'"''"''~ ters,'~wl10 all rn<trried. The n..1,1-eseutation of Meath._ fhe Bishop <11cJ 1u. Dnl1l111. un of th~ W <trrcu family lli the male liue wvn l<l J :tl.v 29. 1 r05. 1:1,nd. ~rn~ I 1urn:d rn till' Ya.ult seem to be extinct.. ur the ohl Chap •l of rnu 1ty Uoll 'gt>. Thomas D JU$Oll a"'ed 18 son uf John In 170,5. Dr. Willi1:1,m l\1or1't,1u. Bish11p ol' D·1bson, burn tt~ 'w~etuu in T,a,iu.:a.:shir•', KihJ.tu·e, and ~ea.u uf <'hri,.;f:s C rnrd1 Ca.. Jm:ated hv Mr William WbitPheaJ at tlwclral, Dublin, wa~ lr<Lnslatcd to ~Ieath. ·l.'kham 8 chJol, Co. Lancaster, his eoilege ~e W<LB ~tn Euglishmau. The ~ishop died being Mr John Christia-:i; entered rn pn~lm, o~ Nov. ~4th, 171.), auJ was Colle~c>. Dublin <Li:l a, si~ u-, 011 July buried ill Cl.inst Church Cathedml. Five _vears la.ter, uamely, iu 1072, In 1715,..Dr. John Evans, Bishop of Ban1)bt<tiued a, Sd10lar.'.:hip, and gvr, in Wales, was translated to Meath. He . Vernis, 1673, <tt.:d M.A. proved a very munitil'ent Prelate, and Mstivis, Weeton, hiti birthpla.1'<'. is a founded the residenees and endowments township in i,,. parish of Kirkham, which which form the Clergy Widows' Uharity in contains the ma1 ket town of the samt: name this Diocese. Bishop Evans died suddenly in and lies 9 miles 'WN.W. from Preston'. Dublin, on March 2nd, 1723-4. He was Where or hy whom 'Mr Dobson was ordained buried in the churchyard of St. George's I find not. On February 21st, 1681-2, he Chapel, Dublin, beneath a very handsome was collated to the Prebend of Inver (to tomb, whlch.has now become much delapiwhich was attached the parish of the same dated. name,) in the Cathedral of St. Eunan Dr. Henry Downes, Bishop of Elphin from Dioces~ ~f Rapho, and County of Donegal: l '7-20;. formerly Bishop of Killala from Dr. :William S~th, anc~stor of the Smyth 1716-7, and who, in 172~, was again transfamily of Ga ook, bemg at that time lated to Derry, became, m 1724, Bishop of B ishop of Rap be. .Mr Dobson in 1688 be- Meath. He was an Englishman, and the · ~aMinor Canon of St. Patrick's Cathe- author of sundry sermons " preacht 011 a; ublin. In 1693, Bishop Anthony various Public Anniversa,ries." .?.P mg'~ Report, referred to in chapter W. REYNELL, B.D., M.R.I.A. -vm. of this "Account", returns him as Rec(To be continued.)
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ALL SAIN1S', MULLINGdR, PARI8H JfAGAZINT!i. At a meeting of the Select Vestry, held in 3.-Who used the words-" Lord now let1est," &c. Wha.t is recorded of the the Infant School-room, Tyrrellspass, on person, and where are the words in Monday, 27th Sept., 1886, the following the Prayer Book? resolution, proposed by 4.-Through what son of David does MatJOHN HoRNIDGE, Esq, J.P., and seconded thew trace Christ ? How does Luke by S. HA.NDY SOMERS, Flsq., was passed act in this case ? una.nimously : 5.-~ukc omits one, and mentions another We, the Select Vestry of Clonfadforan of two remarkable incidents which Parish, assembled to-day for the purpose of took place at the birth of Christ ? expressing our sincere gratitude for, and 6.-" Yea, a. sword shall pierce through appreciation of, the mllllificence and libethine own soul also" when used and rality of George A. Rochfort-Boyd, Esq., what did it bf'ar reference tor D.L., of Middleton Park, in re-roofing and 7.-With what words does Luke pass ove1¡ repairing our Parish Church. that period which lapsed between the twelfth year of the life of Jesus In the present times-it being rare to and the begining of his ministry ? find a.nyone with either ability or inclination 8.-There is an apparent difficulty cont.o underta.ke such an outlay-his acts are cerning the " taxing" mentioned in the more to be appreciated, his liberal exthe 2nd chap. of St. Luke's Gospel. penditure being in itself a further memorial What is the difficulty and explain it ? of the zeal of his family for the promotion 9.-" You will surely say to me this proof the glory of God in this Parish. verb " Physician heal thyself" RICHARD DOWSE, A.M., when used by Christ ? Chairman. 10.-Where in the Gospels, and for what John Horriidge, J. Newburn purpose is there reference made to S. Handy Somers, Robert Napier, Naaman the Syrian- What other Samuel Austin, ~. R. Raynell, Old Testament ~ncidents are coupled .To1iii Cantrell, John Austin. with it? William J essop, 11.-What female convert from Herod's household is mentioned by name? ANSWERS TO ; SCRIPTURE Q UES12.-What gave rise to the parable of the TIONS IN OCT. NO. two debtors ? 13.-" Even the devils a.re subject unto us.'' }.-Luke i. 1-4. who used these words ? 2.-Lover of God. Luke's Gospel and the 14.-What Wall Christ's answer to him who Acts of the Apostles. said, " Lord, suffer me first to go and 3.-Luke, i.-68. bury my father"? 4.-Luke, i.-59. :>.-Luke, iii.-10, 14. 15 -With what peculiarity does Luke re7.- Luke, ii.-11. cord the miracle of healing the Cen8-Luke, iv.-33. turion's servant ? 9.-Do violence to no man, neither accuse 16.-Three miracles of raising from the any falsely, and be content with 1hy dead? wages. 10.-Luke, ii.-4; Micah, v.-2.
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SCRIPTURE QUESTIONS FOR NOV. 1.-Luke mentions an event in the early Nov. childhood of Christ, which the other 7th, writers omit: how old was Jesus at 14th, the time. 2.-Relate what is known of Anna the 21st, prophetess ? ~8th, .
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Morning. 225, 162. 314, 245. 265, 324 136. 364,
Evening. 273, 173, 172, 238, 97, 137, 65, 342,
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W. E. GILL, W. A. REEN, JOHN W. GORDON, W. J. THOMAS" M. F. BARNES, R. LARKE, C. DILLON, J. ~WIFT, H. W. LLOYD,.. R. G. LARh..E, W. J. ROBINSON.
Parochial Treasurer-JOHN SWIFT, J.P., Keoltown, Mullingar.
&ztoness-Mrs CAIN, Church Avenue, Mulliugar.
S E R V I C E S, &c. CHUll.CII SERVICES-Sundays, 12 noon ; Fridays-?.30 p.m.
7 p.m. Week days-Wednesdays, 10 a,m.
HOLY COliMUNION-Secrmil Sunday in the month, a 8 a.m. and last Sunday in the at 12 noon.
month~
HOLY BAPTISM-Every Wednesday, al 10 a.m. S\JNDAY SCHOOL-In the Church, at 10.30 e.m. -CHOIR PRACTICE-On Friday Evenings, at 8 p.m. LENDING LIBRARY-Open at the Schoolhou.e on Saturdays, from 1to2 p.m. THE DAILY
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at 10 a.m.
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Subscribers can have copies forwnro .. ll by leavin!? th <'ir Nnroes 11nd A•ltlresses with the Sextonen· e1r oa application to the Parochial C.:lei-gy, or to tbt: 1l1.1h ' l' rt:a.~ rt:t, M:. F. Barnes.
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~aints' MULT,ING-AR,
DECl!lMBER,
1RS6.
SOME ACCOUNT OF THE PARISH OF : thence, in the same year, to Down and ConM.OLYNGAR: RODIE MULLINGAR. J nor: became, in 1823, Bishop O'Beirne'a ___ l successor in the See of Meath. Bishop CHAPTER xn. j AlP.xander was a nativ~ of Londonderry, and Bishop Thomas Lewis O'Beirne died on , a member of the family, ennobled as Ea.rls February 17th, 1823, aged '16 years. He ! of Caledon. .He presided over M~a.th for 17 had proved an active Prelate. " During the years, an~ dylllg on Oct ..21, 1840, m the Slsf; twenty-five years~t he presided over this I year 0 f his age, wail, b:iin~d at Ardbra.?can. See [of Meath], there were erected in it 72 1 Doctor Cha~les D1ckm~on, a native of glebe houses and 57 Churches." This sen- Cork, 1'ali nommated as Bishop Alexander's tence, taken from the inscription on the successor.. He was educate~ at Trinity Col. Bishop's Memorial tablet, in the parish lege, Dublin, and was Chapla.m to t~e Female church of Ard1raccan,thus records a portion Orph~~ House! and aftei:wa~·ds Vicar of St. of his work. Bishop O'Beirne's career was a Anne sm that city. Dr. Dickmson was consesingular one. Born of Roman Catholic paren- crated in Christ Church Cath~dral, Dublin, on tage, and of the farming class; he .was edu- Dec. 27, 18~0, a11 the 87th Bishop of Me:i-th. cated at the College ?f St. Omer'1:1. in Ffan- j For th€' perio~ of 21? yea,rs, namely, si~ca ders'. or, at the Tnsh College m Paris. , ~he consecration of B111hop Anthony Martm, Ilavma conformed to the Established i m 1623-4 ; the See of Meath had always Church, at Northampton, in England, he I bee!1 fil~ed by translation. Bishop Dickinwas ordained by the Ilishop of Peterboro', 1 son s sixteen predecessors had ~hus been and served as Chaplain to the British Fleet \ consecra~ed for other See~. He himself had under the command of AdmiTal Lord Howe. ! but a bnef c:i-reer as a Bishop. He died at Next he came to Ireland as Private Secre- Ardbraccan m the fifteeth year of his age, tary to the Duke of Portland, when Lord of ~yphus fever, ~n Jul~ 12, 1842, and was Lieutena_nt. Subsequently, he obtained pre- bu;ned ther~. H1~ "Life and SermoI:s," ferment m the north of England, and in the edited by . hi~-son-m~law, the present Drnn year 1791, returned to Ireland as First . of ~t. Pi:tnck s, Dublm, have been published; Chapla.in to Earl Fitzwilliam then Lord I while h.is son, the Dean of the Chapel Roya,l, Lieutenant. In this last mem.tioned year he j and Vicar of St, ~nne's, Dublin, .is well was presented by the Crown to the Rectories . known as a. leading advocate m tho of Temple-Michael [Longford], and Mohill, ! temper~nce cause. Bishop Dickinson was both in the Diocese of Ardagh. He held , :n:uch m the confidence of the late Arch. these benefices by faculty, dated 29th June, bi~hop Whately (of Dublin), whose intimate 1 1791. It is, I believe, a fact that the future · friend be was. Edward Stopford, L.L.D., Archdca,con of Bishop's brother, Rev. Denis O'Beirne, was at the same time Roman Catholic Clergy- Armagh, was consecrated at Armagh m~n .of Longford. On Feb. 1, 1795, Dr. as Bishop Dickenson's successor, on NoV: 0 Beirne was consecrated as the 85th Bishop 6th, 1842, by the Prima.te (Lorcl John of ~ssory, and in 1798, was translated from Georg:e Beresford),. assisted by the Bishops ther.ce to the See of Meath. He was author of K1lmore (Leslie), and Down (Mant) of many pamph!ets and sermons, and as a. He ~ifd on Sept<mber 17th, 1850, and wa; Preacher was highly esteemed. He was in buned at Ardbraccan. The Bishop's son fact a very rEmar:kabl~ man and one, who, Edward Adderley Stopford, L.L.D., wa; fro~ VHY humbl.e circumstances, rose to A:chdeac?n of Mrnth frum 11?!4, until tlii • {IDmence. 'The Bishop di£d at Ardbraccan Disestablishment of the Church of Irelan ~ on the 1_7th February, 1823, aged 76, and Dr. 'Ihcmas Etnrnrt Townsend had been -was buned there. nominatedasD~anofWaterfor<l in A ' Doctor Nathana~lAlexander,who, in 1801 1850, but was further p1cmofrd, to t~~S~ consecrated Bishop of. Clonfert, and in as Bishop Stopford's rncc£ssor. He Wal 1804, was translated to Killaloe, and from also consecrated in .Airragh Cathedral... on
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Li.LL SAINTS', MULLINGLLR, PARISH
~fAGAZINE.
Nov. l, and was enthrol'.!.ed in St, Patrick's dom, was electeil by the Synod of the Diocese Church, Trim, on November 13th. Finding in Oct. as Bishop But.cher's successor,and was himself in failing hea,lth, the .Bishop concecrated in Arm!tgh Cathedral on Dec. repaired to Malaga in Spain, to try the ad- 10th, 1816. Lord Plunket having been vantages of a warme1· climate. This however elected by the Synod of the United Dioceses proved ineffect.ua.l, for he died there, in Nov. of Dublin, Glendelough, and Kildare, as ' 1852. His remains were laid in the English Archbishop Chenevix-Trench'a successor: cemetery of that city. The Bishop had was translated to Dublin, and was enthroned been an earnes~ advocale for the system of in the Cathedral Church of the Holy Ti·inity, Education, known as " The National Board." otherwise Christ Church Dublin, on January Doctor JosephHendersonSinger,formerly l, 1885. While Bishop of Meath, Lord Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin, Reguis Plunket generally resided at .Ardbraccan, a Professor of Divinity in the University of mansion now considered too large, unoer the Dublin, A.rchdeac•n of R'lphoe, and Rector alt.ered circumstances of the Church 0f Ire. of Rahymoghy in that Diocese, was ap- land, for an Episcopal Residence. pointed by patent, dated November 16th, Doctor Charles Parsons Reichel, Vicar of 18&2, as Bishop Townsend's successor. He Trim and Dean of Clonmacnois, and for. was consecrated in the Chapel of Trinity merly Archdeacon of Meath, was consecrated College, Dublin, on November 28th, 1852. as Lord Plunket's successor, on the feast of l'he Bishop presided here until his death. St. Micha.el a.nd all .Angels, in St. Patrick's This event took place near Dublin when he Cathedral, Dublin. The officiating Prela.te was in his eighty-first year, on July 16, was .Archbishop Plunket, acting under com1866. He w<J,s in1oerred in Mount Jerome mission from the Primate of all Ireland, cemetery, at Harold's Cross, near Dublin. An account of the ceremony has ?Jready a.pDoctor Samuel Butcher, like his prede- pen.red in thepages of this Magazine. Bishop ceasor Bishop Singer, Wii.S a Fellow of Reichel is the only Vicar of All Saints', Trinity College, Dublin ; and Wd.s Regius Mullingar, who has attained to the :lLlpiscoProfessor of Divinity inthe University, He date, of hi!!! l1ordship's varied ta.lenis and was a native of the County Kerry, and, in lea.m ing, I need make no remark. Hi::i :::.bi1854, became Rector of Ballymoney in the lity 88 a Preacher is widely known aD.d no Diocese of Cork. His Pa1ent is da•,ed less widely appreciuf.ed. He is t.he !.l3rd August 21st, anU. he w<ts consecrated on Bishop of Meath. . October 14th, in tbs Chapel of Trinity ColIn om 1Jomm0ll Pra_ver "for the Clergy and leg£>, by the Prima.t a [M. G. Beresford], as- People," TTf> pray for" our Bishops a•1d Cu,. sisted by the Bishops of Cork [Greg1~] and rates." Any "a.,;count" of a Parjsh m'1st of Limerick [Graves J. Bishop Butcher was thUR i'lvolve some account of the Bishops of a profound Theologian a.nd an impressive the Diorese in whir.h it is included, whose Preacher. The Disestablishment of the " 011,rate" from time to time, as his Bi3hop's Church of Ireland," as by law Established," locuru-tenens, took charge of a.n d w.red for took place during Bishop Butcher's Epis- its varie<l needs. This ".account" hn.s therecopate. While the question of the Revision fore i.Dvolved, 1mch brief mfmtion as I ha.ve . of" the Book of Common Prayer" was before made c.f tbe successive Bishops of ~foath. the Genera1 Synod of the Church of Ireland : CHAPTER XIII. The Bishop proved on all occasions an able R.e>. Thomas Robinson was a na.tive of advocate for Catholicity and .Antiquity, and Westmeath, aud was pTOprietor of Anneville, his useful labours in this respect d'.lserve due in the pariilh of Moylisker. He was (I have recognition. Afll.ict.ed from sunstroke and been informed) educated at Trinity College, from fever, which grave causes produced an Dublin, and during his university C'areer obberration of his usually calm intellect. tained several prizes. I have not found the . ishop Butcher died, by his own hand, cm date of his graduation. Having taken Holy uly 29th, 1876, and was buried at Ard- Orders,Mr Robinson became curate of Moy.lliraccan. lisker, Dipcese of Meath. He c~mtinued in .-1 William Conyngham Plunket, 4th Baron that parish for the long period of thirty:fiv.e 1 ' Plunket in the Peerage of the United King- 1 years, and was, on May 27, 1809, presented
.ALL SAI1\'1S', MUllT1VGdR. P.dRISII JfAGAZINh.
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by the Crown t.o the Rectory of CastJe~own- : Haulkener, of S. Ma1-y's parish jp tb.1t ci'"Y; Vastiua, Diocese of Meath, in rnccession 1 this wa.2 probably the Vicar. Ile Wc.t.S also to Rev. J &roes Clewlow. [a the i'ollowiu.g' a, IJ1agi3trate for the County Westmea,i;h, Janua.ry, t1.te parishioners oi 1foyliskct _.Jre- II :Mr Uob1osou left issue. Anaeville was ills senied him witr. a piece oi' ~hte, iit grateful private esta.te. It was sold by his son, M1· ret.:oguiti.on of his zealous services. Mr : Williu.m ::1obiuson, and is now the property Robinsou, on April 6th, 1814, was further I of He:ury 3rd l3a1:on Congletc•n, who, as the promoted by t.he Crown io the Vicarge of \ Hon. Henry Par'l.ell, served a.s High Sheriff .A.11 Saints, Mullingar, iu. succession to Rev. 1 for Westmeath, in the year 1861. Francis Lambert.. He o'ut!•,inetl a faculty \ The Hon. Henry Montague Browne, from The Court of Prerogri.:ive, on January born on October 3rrl, 179D, WJ.S 2nd son of 4, 1815, and was t.hereby H.uthorized to hold, I Ja,mes Ca.ulfeild, 2nd Baron Kilma.ine, by wi!;h the Vicarage of Mullingftr, his previous I Anne yc.ungest daughter of the Right Hou. beuefice of Castletown-Va.stina.. \Sir Henry Cavendi&h, Bart., of Doveridge' A meeting of ·~he Vestry was held in Oct., Ra.ll, T•erbyshire, Engla.nd. Mr Browne 1813, and was prflsided over by Rev. Francis , w:.ts educated a~ Trinity College, Dublin. Ha ]~amb ert, the then Vicar of Mnllingar. It I graduated B.A. 1Estivis, 18~1. and M.A., wa.s there and J.hen resolved. tL.a1. the pa.rish lE3tivis, 1828. Ile married, iu 1822, the Hon. ehurch sh;mld be repaired, and that. a spire Catherine Penelope de Montmbren·~y. eldest should be added to thfl tower. These works da,ughter of the 1st Viscount Frankfort, by were carried ou':. in the followinb yeu, dur- whom he had two sons and two daughters. ing Mr Robinson's incumbency. The sum The youngest of his daughters was in 1880 of .£1.000 was borrowed from 'l'he Board of created a peeress of the Uui1.ed Kingdom, as First l!'nuts for these purpo<;cs, and was re- Baroness .Bolsover. Mr Drowne was prepaid by annual instalments, raised by p:tro- sented to the vicarage of M ullingai.· L'Y the chial assessment. 'l'he lr.te Mr John Ch.."..rles I Urown on March :31st, 1~28, in succl!ssio:1 to I.yous, of La.diston, was i.n that yea~ one of I l\Ir. Thomas Ro!Jinson. He helu the benet.he church wardens. Ilfr Robinson's ! fit.:e for twenty-two years. In Septe121hcr, armorial 11:.l/!;Oll is, I believe, carved ou r, I 185'), he was P"OMoted by the Crown to i;D.ielcl, fix:fld on the south side of the church I the Deanery of Limnore, together with t'!ie tower. That of Dr. Thomas LelVis O'Bcirnc, Rectory of Buruchurch, diocese of Ossory. the then diocesan, occupies a si"-nilar posit.iou He rnsigned the reci;ory shortly aftGr the over the entrance door on the northern side, disestal>lirshL0.ent of the Church of Ireland; and. with it is impal&d the bla.wn of the See but he retaraed. his Deanery until Lis death. of Meath, viZ'.-" Diamond, t!:ue'3 initres This event took place on November 24, labelled, topaz, 2 and l." Mr Robinson's Ul84, at th0 advaneed. age of 85 years, at his health wouJd seem to have bacome impaired, \ son's l~ectory of Dredon, W orC'estershire. for in the year 1822 his recovery was deemed ' Tr..e Dean's remaini 'ttere brourrht to Mulhopeless. In that year the governors of tlie j lingar and. vere laiJ beside tL.ose of his wife Blue Coat Hospital, the owners of the rt:c- (who Lad died. on June 24, 1858) in the torial tithes of tbe p<J.rish, appointed a. coru- churchyard : not far from the, soui.h side of mittee to make enquiry as to their right of thA tower, where a tombstone marks their presentation to the benefic3. •rrus right grave. Thomae Woouward was presented by the would. seem to have been indefeasible, but had lain RO long unexerciseJ and '1.ormant, Crown, in January, 1850, as Dean Drowue's that it was unrecognisable, and the com- succesor in the Vicarage of Mullingar. Mr mittee made no report about the matter. W ooclward was youngest son of Rev. llenry J\fr Robinson lived until the year 1828. E:is Woodward, R0ctor of Fethard, :::>iocese of death took place early in that year, and hie Cashel, and was grandson of Dr. Richard r~mains were interred in the churchyard of W oodwa.rd, Bishop of Uloyr.e, who was a. Moyli~ker, but no· stone marks hie grave. native of GMsbury, near }lristol. Mr A Rev, Thomas Robinson, had on Feb. 1, Woodward was Lora in 1814; educated at 1781-, license from the Dub1in Consistoria.l Trinity College, Dublin, where he obtained. Court for marriage wjth Eliza.be.th scholarship in 1834, a.nd graduated B.A~
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.,4LL B.AI.NTS', MULLI.1\-G.AR, P.ARISH M.AG.AZI.NE.
I.
<l MA V . · 1849 He '. conduct tvwards all poor and rich, will long · 18"7 V enus, . 0 , an ·. · emis, · : be remembered by all who knew him. was ordamed Deacon m July, 1841, by ~he Charles Parson!:! Reichel, D.D., was, in ~ishop of B.ipon [C.T. ~ongley], and~nest JnJy, 1864, presented by the Crown to the m J?ec<:m ber, 1841, l>y l1ichard Mant, Bishop Vicarage of Mullingar, in succession to Rev. of Down, &c. Mr Woodward served his John Hopkins, B.A. Dr. Reichel waii edu. father's ('Uracy. at Fethard, and in January, ci.ted at I'rinitv College, Dublin, where he 1~50, was 1;1omma:ted by ihe Crown to the obtained Bchoiarship, and graduated B.A. V1earage of Mulhngar. He was promote,d Vernis, 1843 ; M.A. Vernis, 1847; B.D. to the Deanery of Down as De~n Blalr.eley s I Vern.is, 1853, and D.D . .lEstivis, 1858. He successor! also by the Crnwn, m Feb~uary, was Professor of La.tin in the Queen'11 Uni. and was rnstalled on. ~arch. 30, 185.?. , Dean versity in Ireland, at Belfast, and also held Woodwar<l was a di~tmg~1£shed wnter a~d the chaiY of Ecclesiastical History in the preacher. . He marncd, m October, 18..,0, 'Uuivernity ot Dublin for some years. Dr. Frances Eliza, daughter of ~ ~obert B~r!;;~! Reichel was collated to the Treasurship of !d.D., of .Annebrook, Mullrngar, and. Epis~Down, and was installed on July 23rd, 1864, ls.sue,. a 30n and two daughters. The -les , +, resigned the dignity some years afterdied suddenly m London, aged 61, on Se , ds. He held the Vicarap;e of Mullingar 30, 1875. _ ,,;il 18'15,when he resigned it, having been Rev. John Hopkins, was prc1>ented by the l elected tot.be valuable Incumbency of Trim. Crov.n, in 1856,. as Dean Woodwa1:u:s sue- · 'Ihe great Bell which now han~s in the cessol' at Mullmgar. Mr Ropkm s .11'.as ! tower of All Saints' Church, Mullingar, was born in 1812, '.1ncl was edvc:;,ied a.t Tnmty i purchased by subsc,iption durin~ Docto~ College, Dul.ilm, whore he graduate.d B.A. : Reichcl's IncumbeLC.v of the pansh. Ha .lEstivis, 1834. He was son of Francis ~fop- I was further promoted in 1875, to the Arch. ::Llns, of N ewt0w~, Cc Meath, and.was a lm~al I deaconry of Meath; in 1882, he was collated d escendant of Dr. Ezekiel Hopkms, a nafave to the De:tnery of Clonmacnois. In 1885. of Devonshire, who, in 1671, was consecrated he was elected to the Bishopric of Meath, Bis.h op of Raphoe, a.n d ten y~ars later and was conEecrated on September Z9th, w s translated to Derry. 'Ihe Bishop was , 1885. Bishop Reichel's brillaut talents most distinguisheil. scholar and preacher, ! both as a 8chofar and a Preacher ?,re well and died in London, June 22, 1~90. ~r John known a.nd are much esteemed. Ropki11s served as Curate o.f Mullmg~r for i Rev. Francis Swift was elected on July -some years, a11d :vas very widely and.highly ! 30, 1875,as Dr. Reichel'11 successor..He was esteemeO. by all cJasses o~the com.mumty..He educated at Trinity College, Dublin, and was cousin to the fate Su Francis Hopkms, graduated B.A. Vernis, 1851, and M.A. of Rochfort, now Tudenliam Park, a:n.d w~s Vernis, 1865. As Curate of the Parish, as Incumbent of connected with several other families m Westrnrnih. Havin~ hel~ the vicarage for Kilbixy, and asVicarofMullingar, ~r Swift eight years, Mr II.?pkms died very suddenly, has always gained hearty approbat~on. Th.al.mmarricd, aged ·"2. on July 14, 186~, and now handsomely i·enova.ted church is an ev1. was buried towards the north-east P<'.rtion of dent proof of bis untirjng energy. He .w~s the churchyard, ·u niversally regretted. The collated to the Dea~ery of ClonmMno~s m eastern widow of ihe chancel has been filled October, 1885. This was the present D10cewith stained glass, as a memorial of Mr Jo~n san's first Episcopal act. Long may the Hopkins. During his Incumb~ncy, galleries worthy Dean enj?y his dignity ; so well {since removed), were erected m the north deserved, and so nghtly bestowed. and south transepts of the parish church. coNcr.usrnN. The prese~t vestry room ~tliat in ~he tower The Report of the Ecclesiastic:i-1 Com. :having been found very mconveme~t), and mission, IrelaDd, ordered ~o be prmted .by ibe chancel aisle, or chapel, appropnatPd ~o the House of Commons m 1837, contams 1.he Lyons' family, wer~ ~ddl~ to the fa~nc. the following account of Mullingar Chur~h: Mr Hopkins was a d1stmgu1sl1cd horticul- " One Church capable of acom~odatmg turist. His genial .ma~n ers and ~~rm {00 persons, re-built an• enlarged i~ .1813, :friendsbip, as well as his kmd a:!d cou s1s~ent at tho cost of .£3,553 16s. ll!d, Bntiah, of
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which sum £2,261 10s. 9!d was raised by RE ST. eight parochial assessments; £184 12s. 3!d was a donation from the King's Hospital, in Wandering through the city lieu of repairing the Churc·h and keeping it My heart was sick and sore ; in order for the future, and £1,107 13s. Full of feverish longing lOtd. was a loan from the late Boa.rd of I entered an old church door. Pirst Fruits, of which loan, there remained Da.rk were the aisles and gloomy, £662 15s. 5d, chargeable on the parish in Type of my troubled breast; 1832. Divine Service is performed twice on Mourpful.and sad I paced there Sundays, and on Good Friday, and ChristEa.ger to be at rest. mas Day, besides Morning Service every Wednesday and Friday, and the Sacrament Sudden the)unshine lighted is administered fourteen times in the year,.,. · The Rectorial Tithes of this parish, whi ' Ha.t · Tho arches with golden stream, Chasing the c'.arksome shadows consists of all Corn Tithes in 15·388 ,f . ! W" ~ With brightly glancing beam. arc impropriate and belong to the ~ J ' Hospital, commonly called The Blrn~t,; , ~t A chord pealed forth from tho organ, Hospital; they have been compounded for Tender and soft and sweet, £415, and aro demised for 21 yea.rs, at the Trembling along the pavement annual sum of £323 ls. 6td, reduced to Like tho thread of the angels' feet. £274. The Vicarial consist of the entire tithes of 1,669 acres, 3 roods, 13 perches, The light, as a voice from Heaven Statute Measure, and all tithe of hay, Bid all my care to cease; sheep, lambs, and fl.ax, for the remaining Tho chord, as a song of seraphs, Whispered of God's own peace. 15,388 acres, 1 rood, 27i perches, the amount of the composition on this last was £415 -"Wayside Readings"-Rev. JOHN A. _ gross, or £327 16s 8d net income. JENNINGS. In the Report of the Established Church Commission, 1868, the number of members The Lord Bishop of Meath held an 01tliof the Established Church in the Parish was 574; the gross income was £366 15s. nation for Deacons at Castlepollar1l Church 9d, and the net income, after payment of a on St. Thomas' day. Mr William H. Roper Curate and all other deductions, was £237 was ordained fo.c the Curacy of CastJe13s 9d. pollard. The sermon was preached by the 'fhe Communion Plato bears this inscripDean of Clonmacnois who, in tho abse~co tion, " The Church of Mullingar, l 791." of the Archdeacon, presented the candidate , LAUS DEO. for ordination. · W. REYNELL, B.D., M.R.A.I. An Ordination for Priests will be held in :M:ullingar Church on the ]'east of the TO SUBSCRIBERS. Epiphany, 6th January, 1887. The service As we have now a magazine published for our will commence at 12 o'clock. The sermon Diocese, and also a "Church of Ireland" Magazine,:the Editors of our Parochial Magazine have will be preached by the Rev. Graha.m Craig, come to the conclusion that it is no longer required. Rector of Tullamoro and Registrar of the They have therefore arranged not to issue it again. Diocese. 'l'bcy desire to return their sincere thanks to those kia<l friend~ who have assisted them by contrilmt· ing articles on various subjects, and especially to the Rev. William Reynell, for the very learned an1l interesting papers he !ms written on the history of our Parish. The Diocesan Mngnzine, price ls, or post free, ls 6d,can be obtaiuetl from Rev. J, A. Jennings, Donaghpatrick Rectory, Navan.
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Vicar-Very Rev. DEAN SWIFT, M.A., All Saints' Vicarage, Mullingar. Curate-Rev. JOHN H. BOURKE, B.A.
Synodsmen-JOHN SWIFT, H. W. LLOYD, W. A. GREEN, M. F. BARNES. Parochial Nominators-JOHN SWIFT, W. A. GREEN, M. F. BARNES. Churcliwardens-ROBERT GORE ANNESLEY and WM. HARR.ISON. Select Vestry-The Parochial Clergy and Church War<lens ex-officio-J. WATSON MURRAY, W. E. GILL, W. A. GREEN, JOHN W. GORDON, W. J. THOMAS, M. F. BARNES, R. LARKE, C. DILLON, J. SWIFT, II. W. LLOYD, R. G. LARKE, W. J. ROBINSON. Parocliial Treasurer-JOHN SWIFT, J.P., Keoltown, Mullingu. Se:vtoness-Mrs CAIN, Church Avenue, Mullingar.
SER V I C ES, &c. CIIURCH SERVICES-Snndays, 12 noon ; 7 p.m. Fridays-7.30 p.m.
Week days-WeJneadays, 10 a.m.
HOLY COMMUNION-Second Sunday in the month, a 8 o.m. and last Runday in the month, at 12 noon. HOLY BAPTISM-Every Wednesday, al 10 a.m. S\JNDAY SCIIOOL-In the Church, at 10.30 a.m. Q CHOIR PRACTICE-_ Fri<lRv Rv~f';"~-
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Vicar-Very Rev. DEAN SWIFT, M.A., All Saints' Vicarage, Mullingar. Curate-Rev. JOHN II. BOURKE, B.A. Synodsmen-JOHN SWIFT, H. W. LLOYD, W. A. GREEN, M. F. BARNES, Parocltial Nominators-JOHN SWIFT, W. A. GREEN, M. F. BARNES. Churchwardens-ROBERT GORE ANNESLEY and WM. HARRISON. Select Vestry-The Parochial Clergy anil Church War.Jens ex-officio-J. WATSON MURRAY, W. E. GILL, W. A. GREEN, JOUN W. GORDON, W. J. THOMAS, M. F. BARNES, R. LARKE, C. DILLON, J. SWIFT, II. W. LLOYD, R. G. LARKE, W. J, ROBINSON. Parocltial Treasurer-JOHN SWIFT, J.P., Keoltown, Mullingar. Sextoness-Mrs CAIN, Church Avenue, Mullingar.
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JULY,
1886.
MEATH DIOCESAN CHORAL FESTI- font, as a parcel of the e;tate of the Priory VAL. of Llanth?ny, near Gloucester, in EnglaTI ,i. It was claimed by Lord Moore's trustees as WESTERN DIVISION. a portion of his estate at an Inquisition held The seventh annual Choral Festival for at "·Molliugar" in January, 1629. It was the Diocese of Meath was held on V\' ednes- fu1tber conveyed by Charles, 2nd Viscount. <lay, the 30th ult., in St. Mary's Church, Moore, to the trustees of Sir Georo·e Radcliffe, together with the Rectorial Tithes of Athlone. The Service commenced at 3.30 p.m., with the p111'ish1on April 24, 1640. We havP the opening Hymn, " 0 worcl of God incar- see~ how these Tithes Lecame and still renite," 236th Ch. Hymnal. The following mam the property of the Hospital of King clergymen officiated: - Rev. 1\fr Joly, lkctor; Charles II., at Oxmanto-wn, commonly .Rev. Mr Grierson, Curate ; Rev. Mr Dow e, lmown a "The Blue Coat School." The· Rev. Mr Rennison, Rev. Mr Craig, and the Advowsou thus conveyed should. have also P..cv. Mr Brabazon. The sermon was preached belong~ll to this institution. .The right was hy the Very l=tev. tho Dean of Clonmacnois, never exercised either by Lord 'Moore or b v and being earnest and singularly appropriate the trustees of the HospitaJ. It remained it was listene•l to with t.he most solemn at- not~thstancling . the grant by James I., a~ tention by a very large congregation. There the right of the Pettyt family, together with were several other clergymen from thP. ad- t~e Lordship of tb.e Manor. At an Inquisijoining parishes present in their robes, all of tion held at. Mullingar on April 14, 16il5, whom, about twenty, took their seats in the Gerald Pettit, late of Irishtown, was dechancel. The special Psalms, 147t.b, 148th, cl~red to have clied on February 27, 1634, l4~th, an~ l~Oth, were e;hanted by the seized of the advowsou of the Vicarage. umtccl choirs mth mue;h power ttnd steadi- He left a son and succe'sor, Thoma;s Pettit uess; but it is for the manner in which the then 28 years of age, and married. Th~ members renderccl Stainer's Evening Ser- Civil Survey of ] 640, ~hows that he was vice in E, fl.a.t, ancl the anthem "\Yortby the the~ possessed of :Irishtown, Sarsanstown, La~b," (MPssiah) that i.h0y deserve spccia.l Ard1voghau, aml KilpaLrick, in the Parish of Mullingar, 1222 acres being profitable praise. . Tne other Hymns sung during the Ser- and 191 acres unprofitable. The Down Sur:r1ce were the 235th anJ 356th (Ch. Hymnal), vey of 1657, bas the letters I. P. placedafter m which the congregation joinet1 with much Mr Petlit's namC'. I conclude, therefore, heartiness. Luncheon a.nd tea. had Leen th:it he tool~ the Joi;ing side in the great provided by the parishioners l•f .Athlone for Irish Rcbellwn of 164.1. At tho rcstor,i,lhe variou~ choirs and their friends, audit. is tion his estate was forfeited aucl a. portion neeJluss to say tlrnt the arrangements in this of it was grautcJ t.o the Duke of York 1·espcct were excrllcnt. and mnst have be,' lt a,fterwards King Jn.mes II.. The advo1'~ thol'Oughl.1" appree:ia.te1l h,v all t.bc visitor~. sou of the Vicarage was, as we have seeu the right of the Lord of the 1\fonor; bv th~ :-:SOME ACCOUNT OF- THE p A RISH OF confiscation of Mr Pettit' ('state it bccam<' _1.IOLYNGA.1{: I·I ODrn nfULLTNU .\.TI. nsttd in the Crown, uotwithsi~Lnu iug the grant to Lord Moore in 1605. The Triennial Visitation Rook of 1661 declared Cl-1.\PTEi:: nr. , ·'Mullengar Vicarage and Rector\· vacaut ." The A.dvow.son or H.igh~ of Pn·seut;tfion T~e Primate (Bramhall), conseciuently apt;;.i ~he V1car'.lge of the Parish Clrnreh of All pomted Dr. Ren,sby to be Seqnstra.tor. J Samts, .1Inllingar, belongetl originnlly to the infer, therefore, that there was some diffiLord .of the M:a.n~r. Tt was, howeYd', granted culty about the right of Patron::o·<', as tlie by Krng James I. in the 3'C'ar 1605 tu Sir , Patron's name is not gi,·en. T his state of <Garrett Moore, of Droghcda, ll'ho was sub- t irings continued for somp time. At the :.<<>qnent.ly crmtPd Viscount '!lfoorc of Melli- · next Trienial Visitation h1·lel iu 1664, thi•
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following return was ma,de :-" Mullingaie Eccles:a.''i "l\Iullingare est Rectoria et V caria. Randulpbus Adams, Reqnestrator comparuit et exhibuit sequestrationem ad Ecclesiaru Parochialem de Ballymore, ab Almol'itia; couc·ess, per Hemicu·m Epum Mid<'n, dat. 21 Ang. 1662.'' "Clericus paro1:hialis Jacobus J\loreheail enhibuit." .dr Adams had also been sequestrator of f'hurchtown Rectory from May 1, 1663. The Crown thus seems to have retainecl the advowson and from a similar case-with regard to Ballygarth Rectory, abo in Meath Diocese, a.s a matter of fact; exercise] the right until the dis-establishment of The Church of Ireland. :Mullingar Vicarage did not long remain vacaut. Mr Ralph Adams haC. a faculty from the 1 'ourt of Prerogative on July 10, 1664, which perw.itted him to hold it with his previous p:i.rish of Rathconrath. I bave not found the actual elate of his appointment to .Mulliugar, nor by whom the Presentation was made. Ranclulph or Ralph Adams was a native of England, spnrng from a family seated at Tidd St. Marys, in the Ccunt.v of Lincoln. Hc was euucatecl partly at Christ Church, Oxford, and partly at Trinity College, Dublin, "11erc in 1623 he graduated B.A., and was elected a Fellow in 1626, ancl proceeded M.A. l\lr Ad:tms entered H0ly Orders. By what Bishop he was admitted a Deacon I do not find; lmt on Augui;t the first, 1631, he was ordained Priest by Bishop A.nthonv Mintin, of Mea1 h. Mr Adams was inst1t;utecl to lbthcomath Rectory, of the value of £60 1wr annum, Lord .,..iseount Roscommon being the Patron, an<l. was inductetl on Se2tember 4, 16::l0, by ReL James Byra.m, B.A., Viear of Ra.thconnell. Mr Adams was also institufo<l on October 13, 1630, to lhe Rectory of Piercetow.n, Edward Fitzgcrakl of the same [place] being Patron, of the annmLl value of 20 pounds. He was inductecl b. Rouert Lackey, 1\1.A., R. of Lough bracken, an<l Curate of Lackyn,Leney, Kilbi~key, Kilmamevan, and Templeoran, 011 October 25, 1630. l\Ir Adams held lands in the ~'arony of Rathconrath, and obtained a grant of sezernl forfeited estates, namely, Lcdwitcbtown, Keolstown, and ]'a.nainga:11an, in the parish of Mulliugar, containing 448 acres, and held under a Crown Rent of .£9 2s 3d. His descendants lived at Rath<·onnell Court, near Mullingar, and con-
tiuu in possession of that estate until it wa.s sold to Lord Greville, who caused th(} house to be unroofed and partly pulled down. A tower still intact, stands near it. and the ruin of the old Parish Church of St . .Tohn Haptist with iis burial g~ound are also adjacent. A plot of glebe land containing about four acres, was also contiguous, and was possessed until the dis-fi'stablishment bv the Vicar of RathconnelL Thetownlands "of Clongowney and Baltrasna, in the p[trish of M ullingar, still remain in the hands of l\lr Ralph Adams' dE~cendants. :illr Atlams continued as Vicar of All Saints' Mullingar, until his death in 1675. His memoria,l tablet still remains p~accd high tlJ> on the nMth wall of the west transept of the parish Church, and bears the following inscription:-" Hie sitre sunt exu\'ire Reverendi Viri Randolphi Adams, Illustri familia de Ted St. Mary's in agro Lincoln, Oriuudi Oxon aliquando lEilis Xti Alumni olim, autem Coll i:3acrre et Individure Trins_ juxta Dublin A.fi'L et S.non itapridem apud Leclwitchtown pie et ubique viventis, qui vita migravit A.D. 1675. Habet in Sepulchro usque M:triam uxorem, filiam natu maxima,m .Johnis Archdall A.rmigeri cujus gentilis de Darcham co. ::luff. etiamnum stat alta Domus, una a ljacet qme adolevit liberorum ac nepotum numero Progenies. In quorum Memoriam hoc monument.um posuere amantissimi ejus .Amici. Hie sincera Quies operum et tranquilla piorum. Urna jacet rediviva modo." This monument was repaired by order of Francis Adams, Esq., of Rathconncll, A.D 1819. [I have ta.ken this inscription from" The Grand Juries of Westmeath", where some notice of the Adams family may be found], Ou Deeembcr 21, 1675, according to the "Liber Munerum Hibemire'', Doctor James Hierosme or Jerome, was presented by the Crown to the Vicarage of Mullingar. He was a Frenchman, and before the year 1660. was French Minister at the Savoy Chapel in London. On March 1st, 1666, he was presented by the Crown to the Precentorship of the Oathedra.1 of Waterford, and o July 5 of the same year to the Treasurership of the Cathedral of Lismore. He seems then to have removed to Ireland, where on March 9, 1667, was enrolled the Lord Chancellor's certificate on his behalf as a denizen.
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~L4GAZINE.
In 1668, he had a gr:mt of £20 per annum Deanry of Holland, .Archdeaconry and from the Government. On July 14, 1668, county of Lincoln, Engla.nd, in the Patroa King's Letter thus mentions him-" The nage of the Crown-Brown Willis' CatheJ King (Charles II.) taking notice of the drals iii-283. piety and learning of James Hierome, Clerk, W, REYNELL, B.D., M.R.l.A. (to whom the r~ord Lieutenant in cous1de('.! o be continued). ration of his being a stranger and one who - -not only e:uly submitted himself to the DISHOPS OF MEATH FROM A.D. 1530. Edward Staples. Government of the Church of England, but 1530 brought the French congregation, which l?i54 William Walsh. then met at the Savoy, to conform thereto, 1563 Hugh Brady. gave the Vicarage of Chapel Isold), has 1534 Thomas Jones. thought fit, as well in consideration thereof, 1605 Roger Docl. as in regard of his undertaking to expend 1610-11 George Montgomery. £300 in repairs of it house and land, to grant 1620-1 James Ussher. him a lease 0£ a ruin0us house and a-half 1623-4 .Anthony '.Martin. acre of land iu Chapel Isold, for 99 years, 1660-1 Henry Lesley. at 40s per au., together with free grazing 1661 Henry .Jones. for two horses and 8 cows in Phamix Park 1681 .Anthony Dopping. or same term." Dr. James Hierome was 1697 Richard Tennison. probably Vicar 0£ Rathconnell. .A Licence 1705 William Moreton. issued from the Consistorial Court of Dub- 1715 John Evans. lin, dated 8 .April, 1672. for the marriage of 1724 Henry Downes. "James Hierome, D.D., Vicar of ChapeLzod, 1726 Ralph Lambert. and Elizabeth Gilborne, of St. Michan's 1731 Welbr,re Ellis. [Dublin], wiclow." On April 3, 1679, he 1733-4 .Arthur P1·ice. had a faculty to hold his Chancellorship 1744 Henry Maule. and Treasurership, with the Rectories of 1758 Hon. William Carmichael. Richard Pocncke. · Churchtown and Piercetown (Meath), 1765 and on .April 7, 1680, he wal;l made Rector 1765 Arthm Smyth. of Clo~game and Newtown, in the Diocese 1 66 Hon. Henry l\faxwell. of Lismore. Ho probably died in 1682. .A 1798 Thomas Lowis O' Beirne. curious letter from Dr . .Abbadie, afterwards 1823 Nathanael .Alexander. Dean of Killaloe, and a celebrated Preacher 1840 Charles Dickenson. and Divine, addressed to Bishop Anthony 1842 Edward Storford. Dopping (of Meath), dated Jan. 28,'1690-1, 1850 Thomas Stewart Townsend. runs as follows:-" I most humbly, (my 1852 Joseph Henderson Singer. Lord), beseech your Reverence, and entreat 1866 Samuel Butcher. y_ou on the ground of your generous affec- 1876 William Conyngham, 4th Baron. t10n towards me, which to the present moPlunket. t.U ~ent I so often seek for, that all delay be-\ 1885 Charles Parsons~ mg euded, you would ask for me, from tho Lords Justices the living of Mullinghar ~J!tntu) for tfJt ;flflontf)., (formerly held by our Doctor Jerome), which, if it can be attended to by a Vicar, there July. Evening·. Morning. is no objection but thatI might hold it for a 4th, .Anthem, 236, 356. 90 p. ii. 247, 27I, similar reason." What .A bbadie sought was 11th, 108, 143, 300. 326, 393, 18. to hold the benefice, the duties of which 18th, 262, 141, 20. 5, 32, 388 were to be performed by a Vicar, since it 25th, 317, 21. 247, 139, 360. 104, appears that neither he nor Dr. Jerome DIED. could speak English. His request, however, was of no avail. His letter is in Latin, RonrnsoN-On June 8th, Mrs Lois Robinson, the beloved wife of Mr W. J, Robin. and remains in MS. in the Public Library, son, :Mullingar. " Blessed are the dead Armagh. which die in Lord." NOTE-Tidd St. Mary is a Rectory in the
Vicar-Very Rev. DEAK SWIFT, M.A., All Saints' Vicarage, ~Iullingar.
Curate-Rev. JOHN II. BOURKE, B.A. Bgnodsme11-JOHN SWIFT, H. W. LLOYD, W. A. GREEN, 1\I. F. BARNES.
Parochial Nominators-JOHN SWIFT, W. A. GREEN, M. F. BARNES. Ciarchtvardens-ROBER1' GORE A. ' NESLEY and WM. HARRISON. Select Vestry-The Parochial Clcrj?y andChurch Warclens ex-officio-J. WATSON MURRAY, W. E. GILL, W. A. GREEN, JOHN W. GORDON, W. J. THOMAS, M. 11. BARNES, R. LARKE, C. DILLON", J. ~WIFT, II. W. LLOYD, R. G. LARl\.E, W. J. ROBI.SSOl . ¥arochial Treasurer-JOUN SWIFT, J.P., Keoltown, Mullingar. &.t:to11ess-Mrs CAIN, Church Avenue, i\follingar.
S E R V I C E S, &c. HURCR SERVICES-Sundays, 12 noon ; Fridays-7.30 p.m.
7 p.m. Week days-Wetlnes1lays, 10 a.m.
HOLY COMMUNION-Secr>nd Sunday in the month, a 8 a.m. and last Runday in the month, at 12 noon. ROLY BAPTISM-Every Wednesday, at 10 a.m.
SUNDAY SCHOOL-In the Church, at 10.30 a.m.
<CHOIR PRACTICE-On Friday Evenings, at 8 p.m. LENDING LIBRARY-Open at the Schoolhouse on Saturdays, from l to 2 p.m.
HE DAILY SCHOOlcl-Open at 10 a.m. ELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION-Daily from 2.30 to 3 o'clock.
All Saints' Church Parish Magazine (PUBLISHED Subscriptions, .. ., by Post ..
MONTHLY). :2s. Od. per annum} bl . d ,, paya e ID a vance 28• 6tl.
·-Subscriber& can have copies forward4d by leaving their Names and Addresses wit11 the Se:a:toneu o.. application to the Parochial Clergy, or to the !Ion. Teasurer, M, F. Barnes.
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{l,L SAINTS', klULLINGAR, PARISH
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STMEATH PROTESTANT ORPHAN SOCIETY. The 46th annual meeting of the Westmeath Protestant Orphan 8ociety was held in the Court· house, Mullingar, on Tuesday, 27th July. The chair was yirken at 12 o'clock by the Most Rev. The Lord -Bishop of Meath. The meeting was oprrrtrJ with prayer by the Dean vf Clonmac· nois.l 'rhe 445th hymn was then sung. The chairman gave a short introductory address, in whicll he eloquently expressed the great pleasure it gave him to preside at a meeting of the Protestant Orphan Society in the parish where he lived for so many years. He sai1l " I regret to find that the finances of this Society are not in as ftourishing a condition as they ought to be. I think probably this may be attributed to the peculiarity of the circumstances of the past few years, viz :-That Ireland has been going through an extraordinary trial the like of IPTURE QUESTIONS AUG. which it has not gone through since 1869. A tiial ]1as been put upon us in winch we have not been ACTS OF APOSTLES. assisted by the sympathy-the intelligent sympathy .-Christian, three.times in Act~? . at lellst-of our English and Scotch brethren. The grea\est ignorance prevails in tht:se places with 2.-Marginal readmg of "er-ceeding regarrl. to Ireland. One reason of that is, these peopi l get their information from Irish newspapers, fair?" where they get entirely opposite views. More 3-Thauks c;1,nd praise before th wishedcontradiction and more unsupported views are for event had taken place ? found in lrish papers than in those of any other 4.-Was the giving of the offering into country. It is tl>erefore impossible for those acroas the channel to know the true state of affairs the common fund optional ? in Ireland. We must therefore bear with due 5.-What was the argument of St. Paul's patience with this ignorance, and all the results speech at Athens ? which are the natural consequences of such ignorance. We may be thankful to Almil.(hty Got.I, and 6-Wbat aspect of the Ch1-istiau r ligion we should express in deed our thankfulness for did St. Paul preach at Thessalouica ? the great deliverance so far experienced-I say advisedly so far-because the strul(gle is not yet 7.-Where did Luke join St. Paul? over. There is always a danger still lurking, and 8.-St. Paul's third journey ? we cannot tell in what form it may come forth. If we feel really thankful we ouj!:ht to make use of 9.-Give St. Paul's voyage to the rt!sp!te we now have, to express our thankfulName the places rema.rk:1.ble for pa ness by performing more active deeds in the cause 1 of Protestant benevolence. 1 th~refore confidently events. l!ppeal to you on behPlf of this society, which is a 10.-Who first preached the G sc~iety 110 good, so acknowledgedly good, that abeol tely nothing could be said in favour of it by me Antioch? that very one of you do not know by heart. I 11. -Why was Barnabus sent t trust ;)\OU will not allow it to go down for want of a trifle from each one of ,you. If you do, the sad the Gospel at Antioch ? consequences will be incalculable. 12.-Who probably baptised 001 ,us? Tne hon, sec., the Rev. Richard Dowse, then read the report, 'which &hoifed a blLlance of £45 l3s lOd. 13.-Account for St. Pete1.. s jo~n.ey to against the soeiety. Joppa? The Ven. th~ Archdeacon of Meath, in proposing the secoed reso'.~tion, urged in a forcible and elo14 -The part of scripture t e Eth. quent manner the,_nece1&ity of supporting the Pro- Eunuch was reading ? testant Orphan Scc\ety, and the ··uty of self-denial. Be said that it was hie own custom to lay aside each lb.-Give short account of mirac." peryear a portion of his income for charitable purposes. formed at Lydda ? Be considered that the duty of dtnying themselves to J.ielp others and to further God'e glory was one 16.-St. Paul's speech at Antioch rec;..1~ ~ 11ot eufllciently practi1ed amongst Protestants. Peter's with reference to a certain subjeci ~
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~fAGAZINE.
Mr H. R~ynel1, Rev. George Kirpatrick, RPv. P. Mooney, Rev. HicharJ Dow•e, and the Rev. II. Vere White andreesecl the meeting. On the motion of the Denn of Clonmaonois, the chair w n.s vacated by the Bishop, and Mr R Reynell was invited to the second chair. The Dea a then proposed a vote of thn.n ks to the Bishop, which was heartily uccorded. After a few words of thanks from the B iohop a c'J llection was made, and the meeting ende.1 with prayer. The following donations hllve been sent in since th e meetin!.l :£10 0 Anonymous 5 0 (; Hon. Mrs Smyth (G ,1vbrook) ..• 5 0 {) J. ·wntson Murray, Esq, 5 0 0 H. R. Reichel, EFCJ., .. A .b'lietHl per Dean of Clonmaca0is 10 0 0
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Mullingar Church Restoration Fund.
A BAZAAR FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE .A.BOVE FUND, WILL BE HELD (D.V.,)
IN THE COURT-HOUSE, MULLIN.GAR On the 4th and 5th of May, 1'Sio By the kind permission of Colonel DAVIB and the Officers of the XX Regiment their Band will play each day from 2 till 6 o'clock.
A
PHONOGRAPJ.i
From CHANCELLOR'S will be exhibited the First Day. The B.A.Z.A..A.R will open each day at One o'clock. On the Second Day it will be open in the Evening from 8 to 10 o'clock.
Admi<>sion-One Shilling. CHILDREN lliLF PRICE.
l..:.ady Patronesses. The Countess of LoNGb'ORD. The Lady GREVILLI". The Lady PLUNKE'l'. Lady CHAPMAN. The Hon. Mrs. SMYTH, (Gaybrook). The Hon. Mrs. V ANDELEUR. The Hon. Mrs. LEICESTER SMYTH, (Dru.mcree.) Mrs. RocHFORT-BOYD. , Mrs, .MALONE, (Baronston). Mrs. SMYTH, (Ballynegall). Mrs. TOTTENHAM. Mrs. CooPER. Mrs. FETRERBTON Low&Y. Mrs. MEARES. Miss CoNoLLY.
~l! ~aints' ~gnrtg,
PARISH
ltnllingar,
MAGAZINE,
OCTOBER, 1884,
ltnbtt tbt birutton of tfJt
All
Saints' Church,
WALLIS,
~arocbial
(!tlng11.
M uilingar.
Printer, .M ullingar.
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'Vicar-Rev. FRAKCIS SWIFT, M.A., All Saints' Vicarage, lfollingar.
Curate-Rev. HARLOW PHIBBS, Il.A., Springfield, Mullingar. Churchwardens-R. W. C. LEVINGE, Levington Park, Mullingar ; JOIIN W. GORDON, Earl-street, Mullingar.
Parochial Nominators-JOUN SWIFT, JOIIN ODL"UM, W. A. GREEN. Select Vestry-The Pnrochial Clergy and Cburch Wnr.Ieos ex-officio-PETER JOHN BLAKE, HENRY ODLU.\l, W. A. GREEN, J. !':WIFT, M. F. BARNES, JOHN ODLU.U, W. J. RO BISSON, W. J. TIIO}IAS, R. LARKE, W. E. GILL, C. DlLLON, IT. W. LLOYD.
Synodsmen-JOIIN SWIFT, JOHN ODLU.\I, II. W. LLOYD, M. F. BARNES.· Parochial Treasurer-JOHN SWIFT, J.P., Keoltown, Mullingar. Sextoness-"1trirs CAIN, Church Avenue, Mullingar.
SE R VI C E S. &c. CIIURClI SERVICES-Sundays, 12 noon; Fridays-?.30 p.m
7 p.m. Week days-Wednesdays,
IO a.m.
HOLY COMMUNION-Second Sunday in the mouth, at 8 a.m., and last S11nday in the month at 12 noon. HOLY BAPTISl\I-Every Wednesday, at 10 n.m. SUNDAY SCHOOL-In the Church, at 10.30 n.m. CHOIR PRACTICE-On Friday Evenings, nt 8 p.m. LENDING LIBRARY-Open at the Schoolhouse on Saturdays, from l to 2 p.m. THE DAILY SCIIOOLS-Open at 10 a.m. RELIGIOUS INSTRUCTION-Daily from 2.30 to 3 o'clock.
All Saints' Church Parish Magazine (PUBLISHED Subscriptions, •• by Post .. ,,
MONTHLY.) 2s. Od. per aunum} bl . d ,, paya e in a vance. 28• 6J.
Subscribers can lmve copies forwarded by leaving their Names and Addresses with the Sextene11, r on application to the Parocl11al Clergy, or to the Hoo. Treasurer, J. A. Parker.
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THE DEATH OF CLEOPATRA. The Hon. Verouiqm Gre>ille, Mrs Chest 'l', Miss Swift, Mr '\ats1n Murra.1·. Snng~lr E. Dames-LougwQrth.
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"How happy could I be with either were t'other dettr charmer am1y" Tbis Tableau reprcSPnts two lowly country nrni1lN1s, and a bandsome young- rnstie, who is eYitlPntly puzzletl which fair ouc to <'hoose.- Miss Hodson, Miss O'Hara, Mr Fox. Soug "The White Sqmdl," Ra,.l.:e,., ~
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IV, HIS WIFE, CLYTEMXESTRA.
A ganw of Cribbage in the last Century.
Mrs. St. George, Mr Chatterton. Song
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This Tableau represents 1fachdh coming out of Duncan's c:haniher aftm· committing the murder.
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WJX. At1THENTIC BBPOBT OF THB
ADDRESS OJI'
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BARON SIR WILLIAM SMITH, TO
CltIEF ~O~STABLE BLAirn, AND OTHERS 011 THE CONSTABULARY, ON THEU:t ACQUITTAL AT THE LAST ASSIZES AT MULLINGAR.
llfULLING·AR :
Printed by John Dickson. 1831.
The .Address of BARON Sm WILLIAM Sl\IITH on the acquittal of those of the (:onsta-bulm71, who wc1·e t1·ied at tlte last .llssizes for a hom."cide, com1nitted at Castlepollard, delivered with that eloquence and feeling for which hia L i.rdship is so J usil!J distinguished, contained so much excellent rm1d t c1·, so p rofitable to all, parties, that I conceived a wide ci'rculation of it, p articulm·Ty in this CounfJJ, might le attended with considerabl. benefit, and might possibl.'f tend to assuage, if not entire(l/ alla.lJ, any exis:ing angry feelings, which though local C/1i1t110I fail to l:e defrimental to the public peace. To the Ministers ef Justice, the Constabulary, ii contained most Judicious and useful advice. To the Public generally, a vate·m al exhortation is given, not only to submit to but to respect~ look up to those lau:s, which from time to time have lJeen enacted fm· the presei·z:alion ~f thrir lives . and JJropei·ty, and to avoid the cttlpable, nay criminal idea, of REDRESSI.'.\'G THEl\1SELVES for any 1·eal or s "pposed inju1·y. With my mind thus imp1·cssed, I 1l'aited on his Lordship, and regi·etted that he h-ad not notes of his .;Jdd·ress, but I took the libe1·ty of 1·equesting- he wouldfurwartl me that public paper, in which hi1 slw'iild find his remm·ks most faithjiilly replrted, sta t·ing, that with his pc1·missior" I should wish to 1
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publish it. To this 1·equest his LordsMp mosi kindly assented, and added that 1c•hen he had the JVeit,sp_ap~r bef01·e him he would be enabled to amend <!n.11 ine01·1·ectne.~s and supply any deficiencies, which might ltave occur1·ed, thus 1·endei·· ing it as complete as his 1·ecollection woitkl enable him to do. I am therefm·c enabled tlwouglt Ids Lords/tip's assistanc<>, to la.'! !JCfm·e the Public what may· be called an AUTHENTIC . REPonT of !tis most excellent .!ldd1·ess, fm· icltich I beg Ida Lo1·dship to accept my most g?·ateful thanks, and I beliet•e I may add, the thanks of cve1·y well dis. posed pe'rson in the cmnrnunity. I impl01·e those pe1·sons into n·lwsc. hands the following pages may fall, f~nd I !1'ttst t!tey may haue an cxtensh•e cfrculation, to 1·ead tltem attentiuel!J, and ponde1· oi1e1· tlie fnstn'ess ~f the remarks they contain, sincerely hoping tiuit hia Lrn·dship's hitmane intentions, in thus address. fog the ConstabitlaJ"y and the Public on that au'fitl occasion, will have such an tjfect as can• not fail to be most gratifying tu him, as a sin,.> cere friend and well wisher to the counf'ry• .IOHN LYONS.
REPORT ..
Baron SMITH then ordered the prisoners to stand forward. He proceeded to address them as follows : " Now that these proceedings have been brought to a termination I foel it not inexpedient to make a few observations, previously to your being discharged. When the account of that fatal occurrence which has been the subject of our enquiry, reached the Government, a law officer of the Crown was de' spatched to investigate the circumstances o.f the transaction. The result was its appearing to call for the most serious discussion, and that it was the duty of the crown to give its itest assistance towarrls the attainment. of justice, and it was a<'corclingly deemed neces.. sary to send one of the law officers to conduct the prosecution. The jury also, a hig;hly re.:. spectable one, manifestly considered with great attention, a case 'vbich certainly required rlelihera.te consideration, inasmuch as it ¡was one in which no incon~iderahle rlegree of cloubt prevailed. The jury lrnve accorrlingly remaineil, for, I heHeve nearly eleven hours in deliberation. In tr11th, the case was a most momentous one. The effusion of blood has been very great ; anrl amongst those who fell, many innocent persons \Yere unfortu.. nately inclnded~nay, it is impossible for me from any thing that appeared in evidence, to pronounce that all the suffer~rs may not have
E
6
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been quite innocent. The jury, in acquitting you, have found, that the somewhat indiscriminate effusion of blood which has taken place, was but the deplorabJe consequence of the situation in which you were plaled, and of t11e pressing路 necessity which that situation produced-in short, that the sanguinary act, though to be deplored, was not uncalled for. All human tribunals are necessarily fallible and imperfect ; but to a more unerring路, perhaps the least erring of earthly judgmentst o that of conscience-I refer you, to pronounce whether or not you have unnecessarily embrued y our }1ands in the blood of your fellow-subjects ; and I sincerely . hope and wish, that your conscience, concurring with the verdict of the jury, may acquit you. When the grand jury ig nored the bills of inclictment for murder, (for observe, such and so serious were the circumstances of the case that the crown iawyers felt it their duty to prefer indict ments of that heinous character ag ainst you) when the g randjury, I say, ignor ed t h e bills for mur der, I felt it due to their h igh respectability of charact er, to entertain ;md state a full persuasion, that in cloin~ so, they acted in strict accordance with their _dut y. But in tl1e absence of the evidence which ha<l come before thcn1 , it wa s impossible for me t~en to give a more decided opinion on t~he, subj ect. Now, h nwevcr, tlmt the wh ole of the case has bceri disclosed, I feel no 路 lwsitathm in giving my entire assent to the opin ion of the grand jury, that this " 路as not a case of rnunler, and t hat the only question mu st lrn
\
7 . . that which has been submitted to the petit jury, namely, whether the act you did was justifiable or excusable, or amounted to that offence which· the law calls manslaughter.Upon that enquiry the jury were impannelled, and certainly they had some conflicting testimony to deal with before they returned ·a verdict of acquittal. You, Mr. Blake, have received a most excellent character, from various persons, all highly respectable, and most if not all of whom were placed in situations which made them competent to form a correct judgment of it. They have come forward to give testimony 'to your humanity and mildness ; this circumstance cannot fail to make me feel pleasure at the result of this trial, and to give me hopes that a person who · obtained, and I must suppose, deserved su:ch testimonials, will profit by the awful lesson which this trial has been calculated to give him: and that so long as you fill the situation . which you at present hold you ·will endeavour to justify the character which has been given you ; and if there be any thing like a cloud yet resting on it in consequence of the share you had in this unfortunate transaction, you will remove that cloud and le.a ve nothing like a slur attaching to it ; you will recollect what are some of the important consequences of filling the office of chief constable-that in being guilty of rashness himself he may involve and implicate many others who are under his command, · and who will not only be likely to follow the example of his rashness, hut wiU be .placed in the embarrassing situa-
v
I/
s tion of not knowing how to act; wliether to obey the commanrls of their officers or to take upon themselves the exercise of theJr private judgment, and to pronounce the command illegal, and consequently not to be obeyed.That the command of the officer will notjnsti· fy the inferior in the violation of the law, is, as I conceive, a matter quite unquestionable. I consider this as not only long since decided, by the first principles of law-hut thatamore · tangible decision in point of fact, has been had. I refer to a case wh re a person being in custody of the military, on a charge of mis· demeanour, and attempting to escape, was fired on by a private, by command of his officer, and shot. The verson who fired the shot was brought to trial, and was is1dicted for, and convicted of, murder. \\'hat pretensions he may have had to mercy, from the peculiar situation in which he stood, and how fa1• such pretensions were found available in his case, is a matter more 01· less beside the present question. Persons who owe obedience to their officers, ought to know tlrnt they owe a higher obedience to the law, and to the paramount au thority of this latter they must bow. I am sure that every man of proper feeling, who holds the situation of chief constable, will see the necessity of avoiding the 1·ash commission.,.o f any acts, which may involve in crime and penal consequences not only himself, but those under his command. °""llat I am now about to state, with rt'.spect to the peculiar situation of this co1Jntry, is so n9to.rious,. that iq making that statetuenf:: l
/
\ feel 1 a'tn conununicating nothing that is nut already known-namely-that one of the greatest misfortunes of this country, the ah.undant source of so many ills is, that the lower orders distrust the law-that instead of looking up to it_as their great protector, as that which can alone raise them to a sort of level with their superiors, they seem to view it with a jealousy amountingto aversion, and are too apt to consider it as theh路 enemy, not their friend. Yet, having路 filled the situation which I have still the honour to hold, for a great number of years, following again upon some years of professional experience llS to the manner in which the Jaw is administered in this country, I am enabled to form ~ pretty accurate opinion how far that distl'ust is well founded, or the contrru路y; and I llave no hesitation in declaring, that I consid.or it to be a very ill-founded distrust. But s.till, it is one of the great evils or.maladies of路 our country. Now it strikes me to be the duty of every 'nflunntial person in the countt'y to do their utmost t<nvards curing this disease ; towards removing this sinister impression from th publie mind. \Vith this salutary view, it behoves those in authority, hy the course and tenor of their conduct, t6 prove that this dlst.rustful opinion is ill-founded ; to clisabusc our lower orders and to shew them-kinflly shew them-that the law is their genuine and best protector. This distrust, I say, I consider to be quite illfoundcd. But while I do so, I feel that it i11 I\Ot' the. less pernicious for being a mistake :
10 or at least only the less mischievous, because every mistake is open to correction. We should teach the people to sheltei!'themselves under the wings of the law; to c-0nsider it as their cordial patron and protecting friend : to demonstrate to them the folly of their almost suicidal conduct, in attacking that, which if they knew their own true_ interests, they would support, and zealously defend. I do not know whether or not I am unnecessarily \ consuming time by the observations I am making: but I can declare with a safe conscience, that in doing so I am actuated by the best intentions ; by an hone.s t and sincere desire to serve my country, as well as, without transgressing my narrow province, is within my power. I am nQt ostentatious in my disposition, if I know myself. â&#x20AC;˘ There is rather a something in my character, which leads me to shrink from every thing that is called 'shew off;' and I am accordingly adrlressing yon without any premeditation.Every thing I say issues almost spontaneously from my heart and conscience, rather than from my head.
I
(
I think a great deal may be in ;tlie power of the constabulary, towards reconciling the people to the law. I believe that the police liave some how or other incurred odium amongst the people; and th"s I should not say if I were~ot able to a.dd, that as a body, this odium they clo not appear to me to have deserved. It is impossible but, tba.t in a bodv . so numerous as thev. ar~, some
'¡
11
individuals or parties will be found to have transgressed. But this ought not to stamp odium upon the body in general. I suspect it is the more necessary that the constituted 路 authorities should conduct themselves with mo路r e than ordinary strictness, pi:opriety and caution, because I am afraid, that not only路 are tlie people liahl~ to he misled, but that there are not a few who are willing, nay eager to mislead them ; to withdraw their trust in, ~ml allegiance to the law ; and undermine their confidence in those by who~n it is administered; Therefore while it is our bounden duty, a duty which I trust we -shall always be ready to perform, fearlessly, under all circumstances to support the law, and firmly to resist all attempts at its subversion, let us at the same time do every thing within our power to disabuse the lower orders of the false impressions which they have received, and write the law in the l1earts of the people of our deluded country. This case, which has excited no common sensation in the public mind, has had an ample discussion. The people have had all the assistance that the crown could give them; they had the protection of the g1路and jury-who, while they ignored the bills fot~ murder, accompanied that act with a most praise worthy intimation, that they were quite ready to entertain hills of indictment for manslaughter. Thus, in the grand jury, a most material and popular portion of the law department, the people may
J
disc('rn ~protector, if they will see what ~!! before their eyes. Ag·ain, the case has be~n submitted to a petit jury, notcomposed of th~ lower orders. The length of their laboriollii h1vestigation shows, that they were ready tq ~tand between the people and any invasion qf t:heir rights. , The trial has been conducted before 6. Judge, inferior to some if not to maq.y othe~~ m. judicial attainments, out who yields tq none in kindly feelings towards the humhl~r· classes of his countrymen, or jn cordial wish.,. e~ to promote their happiness, and to guard tHem from oppression. I have served th~ public to little purpose for many years if my countrymen do not repose confidence in m~ \ and having said thus mucp., I wiU add, tha,t_ though I think the verdict to be what is comrqonly called a merciful one (for I will no~ shrink from giving utterance to my senti-, ments) I think it a verdict the propriety of which is not liable to just censure. The Jury· doubted and deliberated. If I had been one oJ the jury, I shoulclhave clone the same : but f think in their finding I should finally hav;e concurred. The laws have entrusted arms of a deadly nature to the hands of the police, and the state of the country required them to do so. Their being armed in such a way is calculated. to put down all disturbance, and prescrvathe peace, by giving them the pow~ of ov~t whebnin~ all undue resistance to the law.-
13
. h, h(m,- ever, the police should rashly abuse the power thus committed to them ; if they sh1Jul<l make an incautious use f the arms which are plac>e<l in their hands, they y;ould but aggravate the evil which this placing of arms at their disposal was intended to remove. I therefore shall. be happy if the observations I am now making, and the circulation which they may obtain, shall have the effect of preventing our playing· the game of the misleaders of our people, and foes to our peace and constitntiori, by g iving- any plausible pretext for thei r invidious clamours and misrepresentations. I would not, however, have it understood, that I wished the police to act any other than a firm part. In the exercise of their duty, it is essential that tliey should be firm; but it is also most desireahle, that they should combine and temper that firmness with equal and even conciliatory caution ; and deserve at least to be reinstated in the favourable opinion of the people. I have hitherto addressed to you thoughts arising on the moment; b 1t in doing so have only given utterance to sentiments which I have long and habitually entertained-so long that I have but to open my mouth, and tliey naturally flow out. The1·e is however, one topic, which I purposely omitted in my address to the gr and j ul'y, conceiving it might then be premat ure; but whic•h strikes me as not being now inopportune. In the mean time I ·w ill be open.-I see no mischief that can ensue from this acquittal, if it do not produce or leave any
,V
14 angry soreness in the exasperated feelings ·Of those lower orders, whose opinion is, by something bordering on an abus<! of terms, very frequently denominated the public mind. 1'he late occurrence, the copious effusion of human blood which it produced, was calculated to excite a sensation which ought to he allowed for. But again, in this ill-fated cou.ntry, one can scarcely find a ques tion with which a party feeling 'does not mix ;' and I fe ar it has been ming·ling ~ith the present question. I am fat· in deed from meaning, that in any such feeling the recent trial had its orit')in and source. The transaction imperatiYely called for strict and open inves tigation ; and if this had not been fairly and fully had, those whose object is to agitate and disturb the public, would, I fear, have been supplied with more than a pretext for ren rlerin£"thepopufacediscontenterl-with tJ1e administration of the law. I, for my part, shoul<l have much regrctte rl, if we had furnished the enemies of order with a topic, of which su.ch mischievous use might have been made. But tho' the trialo.riginatedin an eminentlyproper source, I am not free from apprehension, that party spirit may ha,'e infused itself into the question; and heartily 1vish it may rid itself of this. Where opposite pa:t·ty feelbg comas 1nto conflicting co tact, each· patty is to() a~)j; pertinaeio'1sly to pnrsne its oh,'.ec'·, as il a failure to n.Un.in it touche:l il:s t it:rnity n.11 I hone . rr:rnse wbo nro.. ee:L{C •dth ziul ~t".J g~_·o;:i~;·:y ccnsl.WC•l h~r 1~1 rn o~h~ r~ v~w ,lS z·.!n..1 T!-,,,,.,.,·n·u··ei"1 .. ·'-o·te(!.1_,. "n'\41 .,..:_,1 \_-. d- . 1 ur- 1 urc".,,, :,.)J.~'f
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15 party spirit heig htened into venom on botb I
sides. But ag e and experience have taught ine to see thing s in a very different light, or rather, it h ath pleased God to make these his instruments, for bringing my mind to a better anrl more charitable judg ment. Zealous prosecutors I can well conceive to be as honest as they are keen. 'l1o the zeal of those on the other hand, who patronise a defence, I can attribute as u p righ t motives. Each perhaps is zealou s, from the view which he takes, r eally a nd b ona fi de of t he ca se. And when the issue and de termin ation come, instead of being furi ous and gnashing their teeth on one another, the successful party ought not to inclu!g·e a n insulting triumph ; the unsuccessful ot <~h t t o admit his opinion to ha,-e been w rong , wh en a trib unal of his country h as p ronounced it to have been so : while, at the same time, he m ay haYe no reason to reproach l1ims, f, fo r having pursued the course which his conscience r eC'ommeuded ; · nor to be ashan:c<l of being· falli ble, as tl1e best judgh~g of ns must he. If you ha d been fo und guilty 9 your offence would appear to have been nv more t han this-th e having fired rnshly and prematurely, and perhaps under t he influence of some angry excitat ion, b efor e t he mome,1t of as fficiently cogent necessity had al'i~e,1 . But you h ve been acquitt ed a:togethcr: n ul let those who prosecuted r elent, ant! <11sn1iss all soreness a nd ir. ri t ation. They snlm1itte•1 their cmnpJaint to th e law ; let them aeq1 ]esce in its imp;,i:t•'ial determination, and if they 8 l0Uld COnS.i{:cr
0
16
!
y u as acquitte;! o 1 a< ouht, Jet them retnember hat u:1 !er sit •ih r circ mstances of accusatim , so wcml< they: and let them rejoice at H-dng nnc1er lhat lenient code, 'd1ich re· cognizes d011bt as a legitimate ground of exculpation. I end as I began. Let chief con· stubJes act with the greater circumspection, because their rashness might compromise at once the safoty and the character of their men. Let all the coustabu!ary recoHect, tlmt the incorrect cond1 ct of every individual has a tendency to 1·eflect discredit on, and stigmatize the entire c>orps of which he is one. Tl1e police, by attending to these rules, and blending <liscr tion with their firmness, (for firmt1·ey ought to }le) may <lo mueh honor to themselves, and render the most important servic>es to their country. The better opinion their n ild conduct procures them with 'the people, the more effi<;ient must their bo<ly he-the more must t ey concilia"e our lower orc!ersto the law. Most happy should I be, if the advice which I have been giving should contribute anything to the production of so sa utary an effect. J have given that advice honestly, an<l without any 1wemeditn ti on.
Th.e prisoners were then liberated. ~~...,_.
STATEMENT OF ACCOUNT
FOR THE
r
OF
MULLING AR.
Rev. F. SWIFT, Vicar·. RICHARD LEVINGE. Esq., } JOHN ODLUM, Esq.,
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1•r.1vn ll A"I 1 IJ I•:
Churchwardens.
L L L l :/>. ll A R :
'· \\" ESnl KA 'J ll Gl'ARDIA:K ., OFYICE BY s. WALLIS
RECEIPTS. £
s. J.
601 7 0 100 0 0
Ml's Kelly
I
2 2
Mrs Mansel
1
u
100
0
0
Miss Elliott
1 0 0
50
0
0
Mr James Austin
l:
0 0
50 0 0
Mr S. Bollar(l
i
() 0
30
Colonel G rovo
1 0
Miss Oairnes
1 0 0
'William Thompson, Esr1.
1
l\fr lvlichnel Dillon
1 0 0
s. d.
£
Rev. F. SmIL Miss Barlow The Right Hon. Lord Greville The Right Hon. the Earl of Longford :Mrs Tottenham C. Brinsley Mai.Jay, Esq John Swift, Esq. John Od!um, Es!] .... Robert Smylh, Esq. (Ga,ybrook) T. J, Srnyt11, Esq. (Ballynegall) Robert F. Lerhb1·idge, ERtJ ... Ech·:ml 'rsrrnll, Jt:Rq. :;_[r-· Hy<k f'larkc Mrs Gortlo11 Mrs Carroll James Brnbazon, l<:Hq. Mrs Iiyons John \\r. Gordon, '!!:sq. Bichal'd Mnrr;1y, l•isq. Hcv. J. •.'l:wton, D.D. Dr. C:. ~tok<•s, E~q., 1\f.D ....
\V. J. Hul.ii11 srn 1, Es'l· Dr. \'\r. lJe111·,- 1\fiddlt·Lon '.\fr IV. ;1. 'l'l111111n;;i Ed\Y:nd :\la:d111i. Es'i. 'J'l!e H:1ni11c~s ll <,i,.;u1·c1· ~frs
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0
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20 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 15
0
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1
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1 0 0
:Mr W. Hixon
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0
1liss Bl'Ock ...
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Hev. G. M. Dennis
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0
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Mr B. Power
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13 lU
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l\liss Kate Stokes (wo1·k sold)
() 10
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RicLal'11 TI(•yuell, Es'l· (Clumlris~) F. B. Felhcn;lon lI., Esq. Sir Benjamin C1apmau Rev. \\'illiam HL')HCll Mrs Culc ... Oen. a11d 1.I1s 1Jeu,res
5
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Mr Robert LnrLe ;.rr Daniel Rogers James '1\nell, Esq. Hiclrnl'll l3uuk1·1· Lee, J•:s11· ... \Villia111 ,\. U1·l'1·11. Esq .. A Tlia11k <lfferi11g" llou. H:tlpl1 ll11lt1m AntLu11y A. J: <'illy. 1-:,.,,J· )fr Jol111 Cl<:ary Ur Baycli .. l\I. F. Titm1cs, l~Hj . ...
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EXPENDITURE.
£
Builder (1fr Hague, Ca.van)
cl
s.
16t5 10 0
Hot Water Ap1xtratus (Bacon & Co., Lollllo11 J
131) 18
0
100 0
0
51 HJ
5
"27
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6
01·gau Front in Transept Arcl1
17
0
0
Gas Fitting (Messrs. Cle<Lry u1al O'Brien)
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4
0
.l!'ecs to Mr llerrniugha111 fo1· measuring <Jll<WL .lil's
10 10
0
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0
13
0
~,ces
to 'l'homas Drew, Es11. (Architect)
Discouul aull Stamps Hcmoving, repairi11g, an1l f 1111i11"
n"c;:P1
flepairing Plaster of Iloof of Cl1un:h
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Exlra Insurance Printrng Service for Hc-upcui11g Cltu rdt Adve1 lising-
Collccliug Lc:ul aml Postage Clca11i11g aml rcpai1·i11g Clock 1'1·intiug }1.ccou1il (.C.:. Wallis)
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0 0
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0 HI
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0 l.)
0
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£:l,0:2!J 17 ll
.. . ..,. Gifts from Miss Barlow, Mrs Kelly, John Swift, Esq., and Rev. F. Swift, viz :-Pulpit, Pi-ayer Desk, and Sedelia, Lectern, Font, Curtains, &c, &c, amounting to about £300, s h owing a tot::ll expenditure of £2,329 17s. I lei.
---
-
'
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------------
~
I
'
OF
"TABLEAUX VIV ANTS" IN THE
P AROCHIA.L HALL,
MULLINGAR, Monday Evening, February 9th.
The Proceeds of the Entertainment to be given towards
DEFRAYING THE EXPENSES OF THE Parochial
Hall and
Parochial
.. llin8• •
Doors open at 7.30.
•
School .
m
Performance to commence at 8 o'clock.
First Reserved Seats, 3s. 6d. Second Reserved Seats, 2s. Siats and Gallery. ls.
,
:M.
Back
,. t
ULLINGAR:
PRINTED AT THE " WESTMEATH GUARDIAN" OFFIEC.
, f
,;
Song
"Polly," Molloy. Mr Green. SCENE II. "I'he E.xecu1ion of Lady Jane Grey.-Lady J ane Grey is lmeoliu"' Tfferi~g her last. pr~yer; Sir J ohn G.ig1>, Constable of th~ owei i. :t Chaplam of the Tower, a L ady in W ;titin<> 'and· t h e 0 · Execut10ue1-, stand. a r ound." ' ·1=
---~-=~--
ri.Lnofortc Solo ~
Mr Haytln Orr.
T a ble a u
.,
I.
"A N ight Eivouac in the Deser t." Miss O'HAI~A, Song
i
Mrss NoRA.H BowLBY, Mr LETHBRIDGE, Soldiers. " Goodbye," Tosti. M r Gordon.
Tableau
II.
Three scenes from "Ivanhoe."
,
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i
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SCENE I. "Rehccen, the beautiful J ewess, nursing the wounded 8axon Knight, I vanhoG; a Page assisting." Mr L ethbri.dge. bong SoENE II. "lieberca's visit to the Saxon Lady Rowena, whom I vanhoe has married. She brings ct present of magnifil·ent jewels." SCENE JII. "Rt h~· eca. rcquci,ts tbv Lr..dy Rowena. to mise her veil, that she may see her face." The Uonourable V1mONIQUE GREVILLE, :Mrs A. PILKINGTON, Miss BowLB\', Captain GALLWEY, Song " Thi Old Brigade," Barri. Mr Green.
T a b leau
111.
Mrs BowLBY, Miss EVA.NS, Miss MENNIE, Captain NIXON Capt ROBINSON, Mr LLOYD, J\lr WATSON Mmrn.A.Y, Mr ANDE~SON, ·
I
I~
JP&.~w aa~
"The Sleeping Beauty."
t
SCENE
Last Days
of Pompeii."
SCENE I. "Glaurns buying flower11 from Nydia, th e bliud slave girl ; Ione looking on." Song Mrs A. P ill.i.Ggton. SCENE II. "Nydia's t1ispn.ir whcu <1he tlisoovor s t.hat Gla1H·1rn ltlvcs Ione" Mit:.s E. S111YTH, M]ss R ICHARDS, MJ· ATctt1mr.Ev. Snng .Mr Lcthhridgr.
T abl8a u IV.
'Iwo ecen es in the life of Lady Jane Grey. Sc\NE I . "Lady J ane Grey rl'fusing tlie crown which tho Dnkcs of Northum . her1and and Suffolk are b1'g-ging her to take. Her busban<l, J;ortl Guildfonl l iu<lley, •llld the Drn:hess of Nortlrnmbcrlaml :Lrc adding their entrcati1.~-s.'
I.
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Mrs P ilkington .
Song
"
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"I'he Princess's visit to the old Witch; she pricks her finger."
,
SCENE II. "The Prince discovers the P rincess and her attendants, who have been asleep for a hundred years."
...
SCENE III. "·rhe awakening of the Princess and her atten.dants at the kiss of t he P rince." Miss LITTLE, Miss B OWLBY, Miss B. L ITTLE, Miss N ORAH BOWLBY. Song
· ··
· ··
. ..
Tableau
TWO SCEN ES FROM LORD LY TTO:\ 'S 'l'A LE OP
' 'The
V.
Tableau
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,..
Mr Lethbrid,;e.
.. .
VI.
A Minuet and Country Dance a Hundred Years Ago.
Son•~ ,.,
4
SCENE I. " First Step in t he Minuet." SCENE II. . "Second Step in the Minuet." 2\1.r W atson Murray.
SCENE III. "A Co1mtry Dance." Mi~s DMY'l'H, Mrs ~fALLE'.rT, Miss BOWEN, Miss Honso:N, Captain CooPEn., C.tptam GAJ.LWEY, Mr LLOYD, Mr ATCUEULEY. SONG Mr Green. LAST T'1BLEAU-Grnnpiug of all tho FigureR.
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THE SERVICE TO BE USED AT
THE
RE-OPENING OF TIIE
CHURCH OF ALL SAINTS, MULLl NGAR 1 1
ON
WEDNESDAY,
25TH OF
SEPTEMBER, 1878.
--1'>·~'---
Service to commence at 12 o'clock. -~=-==:io<=>c:===~-
THE
SERMON
WILL BE PREACHED BY
THE RIGHT HON. AND MOST REV. THE LORD PLUNKET;. BISIIOP OF MEATH.
THE
OFFERTORY
COLLECTION
WILL BE APPROPRIATlrn TO THE
RESTORATION
•
FUND.
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MULLIN GAR: PRlNTl!:D AT THE "WBS'l')IEATII Gt:ARDIAN" OE'i'ICE.
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THE
SERVICE
TO BE USED AT
THE
RE-OPENING OF THE
CHURCH OF ALL SAINTS, MULLINGAR, ON
WEDNESDAY,
25TH OF
SEPTEMBER, 1878.
Service to commence at 12 o'clocks
THE
SERMON
WILL BE PREACHED BY
THE RIGHT HON. AND MOST REV. THE LORD PLUNKET. BISHOP OF MEATH.
THE
OFFERTORY
COLLECTION
WILL BE APPROPRIATED TO THE
RESTORATION
FUND.
MULLINGAR: PIUNTED AT THE "WESTMEATH GUARDIAN" OFFICE.
,
,
MORNING
PRAYER.
---l>â&#x20AC;˘<--At tlzc beginni'i1g of the Service.
Hymn 379.
J
QNW:Marching ARD, Christian soldiers, as io war, Looking unto J esm:, Who is gone before. Christ the Royal l\foster Leads against the foe; Forwanl into h:1ttle, See, His banners go . ./)'Onward, Christian soldiers~ Marching as to war, Looki11g lmto Jesus, "\Vh'o is gone before.
mf At the name of Jesus Satan's host lloLh flee : On, then, Christian .¡oldiers, On to victory. Hell's foundations c1ui>er At the shout of praise; crcs Broth.ors, lift your voices, f Loud your anthems. raise. ff Onward, &c.
mf
Like a mighty army Moves the Church of God; Brothers, we aro treacling Where the saints have trod; We are not di,idcd, All one body we, One in hope and doctrine, One in charity. ff Onward, &c.
Service at Re-openiii[J of
4
p
Crowns and thrones muy perish, Kingdoms rise nncl wane, cre1- But the Ch'urch of J csus Consfant will remain ; f Gates of Hell cun never 'Gainst that Church prevail ; \Ve have Clu·ist's own pl'Omise, And that cannot fail. fl Onw:n·d. &c.
f
Onwar<l, then, ye }Jeople, Join our happy thron8", Blend with ours your voices In the friumph-soug ; Glory, lau<l, and honour Unto Christ tlic King, This through countless ages 1Icn ancl angels sing. ff' Onward, Chri~tian soldiers, }.farching as to war, Looking unto Jesus, "WJ.10 if! gone before. .Amen. ~
__
.......__
Psalm 95. Venite, exultemus Domino.
0 2
3 4
5 p
6
7 mf 8
ALDRICH. 1\ o. 83. COME, Jet m; sing unto the I Lorcl: let us heartily rejoice in the strergth of our sal- I -rn- I -tion. Let us come before llis prcsrnce >Tith I thanks - I - giving: and shew ourselves I glad iu I Him with l_psalru,,. For the L0rd is a I great I God : and a great I King a - I - bove all I Golk In His hand are all the comers I of tho I ca1'ih : aml tho strength of the I hills is I His I also. . The sea is His, ancl E.e I made I it : and His hands pre - I - pared the I dry I land. 0 come, let 1111 'yorship and I fall I <lmrn: and kneel before the I Lol'll our I Ma - I - k:cr. -. For -He is the I 1•Ord our I Goel : ancl we arc the people of llis pasture, aud Uw I sheep of I His I haud. To-diy if ye will huar Bis voi~c, harden I not your I hca1·ie: as in the provocation, and as in 1.he da:-,. of temptation I in the I wilder - I - ness ;
I
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AU Saints' Clwrc71, .JluUingar.
f
5
9 Wbon your fathers I tempted I :M:e: proved [Mo and j saw :My works. 10 .F'ort.;- years long was I grioYed with this genorntion, j and j imid : It is rt people that do crrJ in [their hearts, for tlwy j have not I known 1.Iy j ways. 11 Unto whom I sware I in :tliy I WTath: i.hat they should not j enter I into J\Iy j rest. Glory be to the Father, I and to the I Son : and I to the I .Holy I Ghost; As it w:is in the hegi1miug, is now, and I ever shall I be: world without I oml. I A- - I · men.
Psalm 122. Laetatus sum. 1st Tone. 4th ending. No. 32. (In wii'son) .
JI
WAS glacl when they [said unto I me: We will go I into the j house of the I Lord. 2. Our feet shall stand I in thy I gates: 0 1-Je. ] -rusa· I lem. 3. J emsalem is built I as a I city : that is at I unity I in it- I -self. 4. For thither the tribes go up, even the tribes I of the I Lord; to testify unto Israel, to give thanks unto tho I Nnme I of the j Lord. 5. For there is the [ seat of [ judgment : even the seat I of the I house of j David. p 6. 0 pray for the peace of Je- I rusa · I -lem: they shall j prosper that j love I thee. 7. Peace be with· j ·in thy I walls : and plenteousness witli- I -in thy I pala- I · ces. mf 8. For my brethren and com· I -panions' I sakes : I will wish I thee pros- I -peri · I -ty. 9. Yea, because of the house of the I Lord our I God : 1 will j seek to I do thee [ good. f Glory be to the Father, I and to the I Son : and I to the l Holy I Ghost; . As it was in the beginning, is now, and I ever shall I be : world without I end. I A - J - men.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __ _ _ _,_"'""'r...._,,..-...--....-;_..,.. , ,.. r-, ,- '
Service at R e-opening of
6
Psalm 132. Memento, Domine. 5th Tone. 2nd ending. No. 42, (In unison). David : and I all I -his I re- I -member trouble; How he aware I unto tho I Lord : and vowed a vow unto the Al- I -mighty I God of I Jacob; I will not come within the tabernacle I of mino I house : nor I climb up I into my I bed ; I will not suffer mino eyes to sleep, nor ·mine I eyelids to slumber : neither the temples of my head to I take any I rest; Until I find out a place.for the temple I of the I Lord: an habitation for the I nrighty I God of Jacob. Lo, we heard of tho samo at I Ephra · I -ta : and I found it I in tho I wood. We will go into His I tabor · I - naclo : and fall low on our I knees be - I -foro His I footstool. Arise, 0 Lord, into Thy I resting· I ·place : Thou, and the I ark I of Thy I strength. Lot Thy priests be clothed with I righteous- j ncss: and let Thy saints I sing with I joyful- I -ness. For Thy servant I David's I sake : turn not away the I presence of I Thine A- J ·nointed. · The Lord hath made a faithful oath I unto I David: and He I shall not I shrink from I it; Of the fruit I of thy I body : shall I I set up· I -on thy I seat. !£ thy children will keep My covenant, and My testimonies that I I shall I learn them : tlieir children also shall sit upon thy I soat for I ever- I more. For the Lord hath chosen Sion to be an liabit::i,tion I for Him· I ·self: Ho I -hath I longed I for her. This shall be My I rest for l over: hero will I dwell, for I I have a de- I -light tl1cre- I ·in. I will bless her I victuals with f increase : and will satis - I -fy her I poor with I bread. I will deck her I priests with I health: and her saints I shall re - I -joice and l sing. There shall I make the horn of I David to l flourish : I \ave ordained a I lantern for I Mine A- f -nointed.
mJLORD, 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.
p
7.
f
8. 9.
p 10.
f
11
12. 13.
14. 15.
16.
17. 18.
I
11ifl9. As for his enemies, I shall clothe I them with I shame:
J
but U}lOn himself I sha,11 his I crown I flourish. Glory be io tho Father, I and to tho I Son : and I to tho I Holy I Ghost; As it was in tho bC'ginning, is now, and I over shall I be: world without I encl. I .A.-- I -men.
..
---~
First Lesson, 1
-
CHR.
-:'---
xxrs:. D to v. 18.
Te Deum Laudamus. CROl:>TllWAITE.
No. !),1.
WE
praise I Thee, 0 I God: wo acknowledge I Theo to I be the I Lord. 2. All tho earth doth I worship I Thee : the Father I ever. I -last- I -ing. 3. To Thee all Angels I cry a,. I ·loud : the He::wens, and I all tho I Powers there· I -in. 4.. To Theo Cherubin and I Sera- I -phin: con- I ·tinual- I ly do I cry, 5. Holy, Holy, I Ho· I -ly : Lorll I Goel of I Saba· I · oth ; 6. Heaven aml earth are foll of tho I Najes- I -ty: Of I Thy I Glo- 1-ry. mf 7. Tho glorious company of the A- I · pos - I · tlos : f praise 1--1--1 Thee.
f
The goodly fellowship of tho I Pro. I · phets : f praise I - - I - - I Thee. mf 9. The noblo army of I l\Iar - I · tyrs : praise 1--1- - I Thee. f 10. The Holy Church throughout I all the I world: doth I ac· I -l-nowlcdgo I Theo ; 11. The I Fa- j -thor: of an I infinite I Majes-1 -ty; 12. Thine honour· I ·able, I truo: ancl I on·-1-ly I Son;~ 13. Also tho I Holy I Ghost: tl10 I Com- f -fort· I -er. 14. Thou art the King of I Glo-1-ry: 0 1--1--1 Chi·ist.
mf 8.
* Or Thine honourable, true, and I only I Son: also the Holy I Ghost the I C11mfort • I ·er.
Service at Re-opening of
8
Thou art the ever- I -lasting I Son: of I -tho I Fa- l -thor. When Thou tookostupon Thee to c1o- I -liver I man: 'l'hon didst not ab- I -hor the I Virgin's I womb. 17. When Thou hadst overcome tho I sharpness of I dcat.h: cres. Thou didst open the Ki11gdom of HeaYen to I all be- I - liev- I ors. f 18. Thou RitteRt at t110 right j hand of I God : in tho Glory I of the I Fa- I - tber. _ W c believe that j Thou shalt I come: to I be I our I J uc1ge. 'P rn. 20. We therefore pray Thee, help Thy I ser- I -Y:rnts: ·whom Thou hast redeemed I with 'l'hy I precious I blood. 21. Make them to be numbered I with Thy I Saints : cres in glory I ever- I -last- I -ing. p 22. 0 Lord, I save Thy : people and I bless Thine I heri- I - tage. er. 23. Go· I - ·vern I them: and lift them I up for I o- I - vor. f ~4. Day I -by I day: >YO I magni- I -fy I Thee; 25. And we I worship Thy I name: over I worlc1 with· I -out I end. p 26. Vouch- I ·safe 0 I Lord: to keep us this I cln.y with- I -out I sin. 27. 0 Lord, have) mercy up- J ·on us: h:i,vc ! mercy up- I -on I us. 28. 0 Lord, Jct Thy mercy lighten j upon I us: cres. as our I trust is I in I Thee. f 29. 0 Lord, in Thee have I I trust· I · eel : lot me never j be con · I -found- I · eel.
15.
p lG.
'
Second
r~esson,
HEB. x. 19
to \. 26.
Psalm 100. Jubilate Deo. CAMIDGE.
No. 10.
BE joyful in tho Lord, I all ye I lands : serve the Lord with gladness, and come before His I presence I with a j song. Be ye sure that tho Lord I Ho is I Goel: it is He that hath mf2. made us, and not we ourselves ; wo a1'e His people and the l sheep of His I pas - I -ture.
All Saints' Oliurclt, lJi1ll£11gar.
f
0 go yolli' way into His gates with thanksgiving, ~ncl into His I comts with I praise : be thankful unto Him, and speak I good of I His I N mne. p 4. For the. Lord is gracious, His mercy is ever- I -last· I -ing : aucl His truth enchU'eth from m~s . generation to I gene- \ -m· I -tion. f Glo1·y be to the Father, I aml to tho / Son : and I to the I Holy I Gho. t ; As it was in the beginning, is now, and I ever shall I be : world without I encl. j A- - I - men, 3.
- - -- -·••E<::>•tj••-----
ANTHEM. " 0 liow
am~·able
are Tl1y dwellings."
RlCfilRDSON.
Psalm 84. 1, 2, 4.
0
HOW amiable are Thy dwellings : Thou Lord of hosts! 2. My so11l hath a desire and longing to enter into the courts of the Lord : my heart and my flesh rejoice in the living Goel. 4 Blessed arc they tbat dwell in Thy house: they will alway be praising Th{)e. Hallelujah!
---,,.·c1--SANCTUS. LTIIlJGEWATER.
H
OLY, holy, holy, Lord God or l.;osts, hcn,vcn and earth arc foll of Thy glory: Glory be to Thee, 0 Lord most High.
--o-KY RI E. BRIDGEWA'l'.CR.
--o-DOXOLOGY. 'r.ALLis .
No. 26.
10
Service at
Re~opming
of
JJejt;re the Sermon.
Hymn 421. p
cres. dim.
When the weary, seeking rest, 'l'o Thy goodness floe ; When the heavy-laden ca~t All their load 011 Tlice; When the troubled, seeki11g peace, Ou Tl1y Name sha11 rall; When the siill,ler, seeking life, At Thy feet shall fall : Hear then, in love, 0 Lol'd, tho cry, In heaven, Thy dwelling-place on high.
nif W11en foe worldling, sick at heart,
cres. dim.
Lifts his soul above; When the prodigal looks 1Jack 'l'o Lis Father's Joye; \Vhen the proud man from his pricle Stoops to seek Thy face ; Wlwn t,l1e bnnlened brings his guilt '110 'l'by throne of grace: Ilear then, in love, 0 Loru, the cry, In heaven, Thy dwelling-place on high.
rnf When the child, with grave fresh lip, Youth, or maiden fair ; When the aged, 1\·eak and gra.y, Seek Thy face in prayc1'; p When tho widow weeps to Thee, Sad, and lone, ancl low ; When the orphm1 brings to Thoe All his orphan woo : · cres. Hear then, in love, 0 Lor11, the cry, dim. ln heaven, '£hy dwelling-place on high~ When creation, in her pangs, Heaves her.beaYy groan; When Thy Sa.lem's exiled sons Breathe their bitter moan ; pp When Thy wa.iting, weeping Church, Looking for a home, Sondeth up her frequent sigh, "Come, Lorcl Sesns, come! " cr·es. Hc11r then, in love, 0 Lord, the cry, dim. In heaven, Tliy dwelling-place on high.
p
Amen.
.tlll Sat"nts' Chnrcli, Jlullingar.
Offertory Sentences. B!.R~BY.
Before Prayer for Cliurcli Militant.
Hymn 247.
f
Psalm
104.
0 worship the King All-glorious above; 0 gratefully sing His power and His love ; Our Shield and Defender, The Ancient of days, Pavilioned in splendour, And girded with prairn.
f
mf
0 tell of His might, 0 sing of Bis grace, Whose robe is the light Whose canopy space; His chariots of wmth Deep thunder-clouds form, And dark is Eis path On the wings of the storm. T he earth with its store Of wonders untold, Almighty, 'l'hy power Bath founded of old; Hath 'stablished it fast By a changeless decree, And round it hath cast, Like a mantle, the sea.
Thy bountiful care What tongue can recite ? It breathes in the air, It shines in the light; mf It streams from the hills, It descends to the plain, p And sweetly distils In the dew and the rain. p
11
12
Serv1·ce at Re-opening of All Saints' Glmrol1, ltfalhngar. --- · - - -- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - JJ
cres. p
cres.
f
Frail c}l.ilclren of dust, And feeble as frail, In Thee do we trust, Nor find rrhee to fail. 'l'hy mercies how tender ! Bow firm to the encl ! Our Maker, Defender, Redeemer, ancl Friend.
f
0 measureless Might, Ineffable Love, mf While angels delight To hymn Thee abo>e, Thy ranson_ed creation, 'l'hough feeble their lays, p cres. ·with true adoration Shall sing to Thy praise. Amen. f p
,,
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Will be ~iven in the above Hall, On Easfrr T11t'sdav. ot!t r1pn'/, IQOI. . -
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PART I. I
" .Fal'C\rell lo the
Glee
PART II.
Fore ~l , ··
Jle11Jels.<1Jltn
Song and Chorns
" Mikado," M. F. Barnei:; .
Sulliv(ll/'I,
" Hungarian Da11ce,"
Brahms
.'.\lisses Green. :'llr Allen, and .'.\Ir Grec11. / 1
" (,Jueen of the
Song
l~arth, "
(', Pi11mti
Pia110 Solo
l\frs J, Loyd .
_\fr Cra111pfn11.
lj
" 1'hr
So11g
Mt· ~~agl', ..
fl fume// t /11 ti
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"2.1
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oPa Fnnu Ya1·tl
Cpmic Sung
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. " Atllly l.l 'Elror>." _\fr
('laud I:'. Coghill.
Violin Solo
Song
1 '
".\ i'\nrnrner 8hower,"
Reading
Ste.wart M mTay.
.. 'l'lte Defr11!'e of Lt1!'k1111w," lh. 8i>y11w111'.
Nereuade,''
Jfa.r::ials
"
\'i oliu Solu
"::\Ir;; Hrcnrn \ l'rnlirella,"
Tennyson
PolCJ11ai~t' .'.
.\Ir~ I~.
_'.\frs '\\' . .\lmra.r.
I
:JJoir
:.\[r :\. . .T. Pilkington.
i\Ii-.~ Lr1 11;;.
0,rigirml
" Down the Vale. "
Song
:\. Sl1aw.
Song
" 'l'he LittlP Hero," _\Ir Crarnptou.
Snug
" Call me B<tek," (With Violin Oblignto.)
S. Adams
_\fr Hoger~.
::;oug
" 1 haJ. a Flvwer," ~Jrs
I,
Chamte' Skotd>
A. J. Pilkington.
:\Irt; Wm. -;\[unay. " Arrah go on," Clnud P. Cnghill.
Cha1:ader Song
'' 'l'he Street Singer,"
( 'larn1 P. Coghill.
II===·
Kellie
UOD
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Deu::a
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'uo1ssajo;d
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'9pJ([
LECTURE
Name,
FORM.
DE.A.TH OF THE VERY REVEREND THE DEAN OF CLONMACNOIS. After a very brief illness which culminated on this morning at 4 o'clock, a.m., the Very Rev. Francis Swift, D.D., Vicar of Mullingar Parish, and Dean of Clonmacnois, passed peacefully to his rest, and the Church has sustained a loss in this diocese which may be looked upon as almost irreparable. The Dean officiated as usual at Divine worship on Sunday, the 24th ult., but immediately after the Communion Servire was obliged to retire to the vestry,,his last words to the congregation who loved him so well
being "Jesus, thy blood and righteousness, My beauty are, my glorious dress," and having announced these opening words of the beautiful hymn, the Dean virtually parted from his church and flock for ever on this earth. During the short interval which elapsed betwe1>n his illn1>11R and death, , the anxiety of his friends and parishioners t• was strung to the highest tension, and the Deanery was daily besieged by numbers of people earnestly hoping for the re-assuring 11ews of his uJtimate recovery. In this anxiety every creed and class were at one, for the Dean was universally beloved by all ". sorts and conditions of men. To advert, in this obituary notice, to the : deceased Dean's benevolent ancl charitable life, his loving and a..ffectionate disposition, . and the numberless virtues which <'rowned ail bis public and private life, would be in very I'! deed a work of supererogation; they speak trumpet tongued, and no effort of ours is therefore required to do his memory justice. The late Dean, who was ordained in the yea.r 1855, wa.s Ron of John Swift, Esq., of Keoltown (who died in 1830), formerly of the 84th Regiment, and Susan, d:t.ugbter of the late John VF.strange, J.P., of Keoltown. After his ordination in 1855, he was appointed to the Curacy of Mullingar, aud became Rector of the Parish of Kilbixy in 1865, Rector of Mullingar Parish, 18'75, and Dean of Clonmrt.cnois 1885 (a decade intervening in each case), and took his degree as Doctor of Divinity in 1891, whan he was pre· Mented by his parishioners and other friends with a massi,re silver salver in commemoration of the auspicious event. The late Dean was a generous benefactor to his church and parish, and amongst many of the good works in which he was the promi· neut figure were the complete restoration of Mullingar Church, the erection of the pulr-it, reading desk and lectern; the handsome entrance gates and piers, the encaustic tiled chancel, the Communion railings and coronas; the building of the 11paoious Parochial-hall -the remaining heavy debt upon which he finally paid off, and only quite recently he had set his hea.rt upon re-modelling the organ and restoring the steeple of theChurch. It is also a well known fact that a penny of his stipend never found its way into his own pocket. Loving, and beloved, amiable, affable, kind, gentle, even-tempered, genial to rich and poor alike, passed away the good Dean into the joy of his Lord and Master, Jesus Christ. The remains will be removed for inte1·mcn t to the family burying place, Mulliugar, 011 Monda.y next at half-pa.Mt three o'Clock.
WOHAN SENTENCED TO DE.A.TR. Wincheeter A.uiz"• on Konday, before Mr. ice Charles, Ellen Lewi1, 32, wae tried for the dor o( Iler child, aged six months. Prisoner was at the Spring Asnizee, but the jury disngreed, ing understood that eleven were for the con· ion an<l ono for acquittal. 'l'ha prisoner and her children left Cbri&tcburoh Union on December , anti went to Bournemouth. Next day she for Ringwood, Hying she was going to leave child with a woman, but the following morning a• found deatl in 11 watercouree.-Priaoner was d guiay, I.Jut atrongly recommended to mero7. Lenco of death was paasetl. TllB DUNMOW FLITCH. hil rompQtition took place in a. large marquee at unou-, arwmg lho•o preseut being Lord and y Bruo1<.c1, J,,.·ly Gordon Lennox, and "ol Loni. .,.n!\1l, .\l.l'. Tho claimants were Mr. l\ir~. Drn11ois f:rit!goman, of l!'orest Hill, and nm! ~fr•. Hird ~.n ~ctogeuarian couple residing Bt•l'I'. A <J"c•t.hm wns rl\iRed whether the lih·i· ~ 1 ,.,j,,.! extended over the fi.l'Bt twelve 1tl;• ul "'''' ria•I lifo, or any subsequent similar i11<l. 'I IF• !''" tiP•, lrnwcvor, wore willing to wMr tl:"t Liit'J hau ncYar offended each other. h cunl'I"" 1P)1e nw"rdud a flitoh, and took iht t,·m.. ,; oaLu ku~6li.utr 011 eli1Hp 1tono1.
E lli.Gn:H:tis OF LORDS LEITRIH .A.ND M'.i U1'iT.MORRES. TXTW.OlU>Ui.lRY
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A (,':....;;"w oorrespomleut tinya that William
rler ;un, :u{cJ. lhirt,r ~eTen, has oonfeaaed t.bat he <•k p&Tt iu tho Raeas.~inat.ion of Lord Leitrim in 1 0 &U'1 bUIUe zrars &iooe, and iu the 1Ub8Gquenl nr<lcr uf Lor Mountmorre~, having been hired b1 P m11n .. ho ~ubeequently shot Carey, the informer, the t;1<po. '1 he former was nso11seinated on April nd, 1878, while drivin~ with hie clerk and another lltijou, llbuut three mile• from Milford, and not far ow J\lanor Vaughan, hi• lordship's residence in ouuty Derry. All three were attnoked by a arty of men, ali.d were shot dead. 'l'he uriminala ere no-er brought to justice ; but it may bt ememhered that a man whe died in America om11 time since left a oircumatantial confession of huing aeeisted in the crime. Lord .Mountmor· ' n waa fonnd on September 25th, 1880, near his eltden:cll, Elior Hall, couuty (~ltl'ay, with sbt evoly~r bulleh in his body. Audcrson wa• but ZJ ears of age at the tiw~ of the earlirH~ of tb~o mur• era. He is well-knotrn t.o the police, Im ling freuently been in t-roublu. Hia criminal cnreor owmeuced at nine years of age, and he •pant some tar1 in a refonnator1. Ile aened terms of iui· riaolllllent both before and after the murders, but tween 1878 andl888 he waa, aofaraa 11scortaiued, at liberty. Ht aeom1 to han spent a good deal oi hia time in Glaegow, 11nd frequent convictions ara recorded •iainet him in that city, 'l'he alleged oifeno• for whioh he ii now in ouatody is that oi breaking int;o a atabl• and stealing a horse nnd a set of harnen. He seems quite aerioue in makina; IW statement, but it is thought possible that his intellect is rather weak, and that he ma1 hine b.ieu impelled to make the oonfession by readmir the &en• aatioa.al ooufeuion of the murder of Lord Leitrim above referred to. In the meantime the fullest in• qulriH ~e belug made in reference to the details of !iii 1io1" and tho l'ri1oa. Oommiuionera han ordered Ill ezam~ation of the pd.oner with a Tiew to 11acor• tain hi1 montal condition. Andoreon desired to make hil oonf1111io11 Kr. Allston, goyernor of Glasgow Jail, a mon\h 1101 but that omolal oommunioa.tet! with the Priton Oommiulonera, and a reJ?reoeutatln wu 1ent to take the 1tat1mont in writing. It ii at&ttd that the detail.a of the crime as etated b7 Alldortoti are of a 1om11"hat improbable oh1ua\\ter.
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DEA.TO: OF EARL BATHURST,
We regret to announce the death, at CirentlGBt&t Ho1Ue, Cireuceater, of Earl Bathurst, from a paralytio afi'euLiou which bcoalll& aoute early on Monday morbiug. ln the afternoon a large fete in connection "ith Bank holiday took plaoe in the ground8, hia Lord1hip ha Ying gi ;en iustruotiolUI that in th11 Ment of his demile the fee Li yitiea were not to be etoppod. Allen Alexander Bathurst, the sixth ea.rl, born in Loudon in 1832, W81 twice married, :first to a daught~r of the second Lord De Tabloy, and 1eoondly to ll:velyn, only daughter of Mr. G. B. Bankey, of Fetcham Park, Surrey. It was on the deceaae of hil uncle in 1878 that he came to the earldom, and hill ion, Lord Apsley, now sucoeods
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MARRIED. BBOCJX·HOLLIN&&••D and ABllflT.A.OB-On the 28th July, at St. Mary'd the Bolton11 south Keolio1• ton, by the Rev F Armi&age, a11i1ted b7 tho a.v Allan Armatage, Captain L B10ck-BolllDebeld, Queen's O"n (Royal West Keu•) R1gt, you11rc1t
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