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Sheriffs’ sales during the land war, 1879–82

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

Adam Pole*
Affiliation:
School of History, Trinity College Dublin

Extract

On Saturday 12 February 1881 two horses belonging to Andrew Kettle, executive member of the Land League, were auctioned at a sheriff’s sale at his residence, Kilmore Cottage, Artane, County Dublin. Lord Talbot de Malahide, Kettle’s landlord, obtained a decree to have Kettle’s goods seized and sold to obtain the £40 in rent Kettle had refused to pay. Norris Goddard, solicitor of the Property Defence Association, a landlord defence organisation, opened the bidding on the first horse at £5 but was soon outbid by Kettle’s brother at £20. A second draught horse was then auctioned to Kettle’s brother for £30, thus raising enough to cover the debt and costs.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Irish Historical Studies Publications Ltd 2005

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References

1 Freeman’s Journal (henceforth F.J.), 14 Feb. 1881; The Times, 14 Feb. 1881; Kettle, L.J. (ed.), The material for victory (Dublin, 1958), pp xi-xiiGoogle Scholar.

2 For landlord indebtedness see Curtis, L.P. jr, ‘Incumbered wealth: landed indebtedness in post-Famine Ireland’ in Amer. Hist. Rev., lxxxv (1980), pp 332-67CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Vaughan, W. E., ‘An assessment of the economic performance of Irish landlords, 1851–81’ in Lyons, F. S. L. and Hawkins, R. A. J. (eds), Ireland under the union: varieties of tension: essays in honour of T. W. Moody (Oxford, 1980), pp 17399Google Scholar; Dooley, T. M., The decline of the big house in Ireland (Dublin, 2001), pp 79111Google Scholar.

3 For the most recent discussion of landlords and the land war see Curtis, L. P. Jr., ‘Landlord responses to the Irish land war, 1879–87’ in Eire-Ireland, xxviii (2003), pp 134-88CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

4 See table, below, p. 393.

5 Solow, B. L., The land question and the Irish economy, 1870–1903 (Cambridge, Mass., 1971)Google Scholar, Donnelly, J. S. Jr., The land and the people of nineteenth-century Cork (London, 1975)Google Scholar; Vaughan, W. E., Landlords and tenants in mid-Victorian Ireland (Oxford, 1994)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; O’Neill, T.P., ‘Famine evictions’ in King, Carla (ed.), Famine, land and culture in Ireland (Dublin, 2000), pp 2970Google Scholar.

6 Bew, Paul, Land and the national question in Ireland (Dublin, 1978), pp 1559Google Scholar; Clark, Samuel, Social origins of the Irish land war (Princeton, 1979), pp 306Google Scholar, 307, 308, 313; Carter, J. W. H., The land war and its leaders in Queen ‘s County, 1879–82 (Portlaoise, 1994), pp 11921Google Scholar; Ball, Stephen, ‘Crowd activity during the Irish land war, 1879–90’ in Jupp, Peter and Magennis, Eoin (eds), Crowds in Ireland, c. 1720–1920 (Basingstoke, 2000), pp 212-49, esp. pp 215–16CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

7 Distraint was the act of executing the law of distress, that is, seizing and selling goods for recovery of debt.

8 9 Anne, c. 8 (1710). In the 1870s and 1880s the act applied to executions of county court decrees as well as those from superior courts.

9 Report from the select committee on law of distress ..., pp 39–40, H.C. 1882 (284), viii, 329–30.

10 Gloag, W. M. and Henderson, R.C., The law of Scotland (11th ed., Edinburgh, 2001), p. 639Google Scholar; Report from the select committee of the House of Lords on the law of hypothec in Scotland ..., pp iv-v, H.L. 1869 (367), ix, 308–9.

11 de Moleyns, Thomas, The landowner’s and agent’s practical guide (7th ed., Dublin, 1877), pp 129-30Google Scholar.

12 Report from the select committee on law of distress... For a discussion of distraint in Ireland in the late 1860s see Sproule, John, ‘On the effects of the law of distress and the feudal rule as regards improvements in the relation between landlord and tenant’ in Journal of the Statistical and Social Inquiry Society of Ireland (henceforth J.S.S.I.S.), v, pt 35 (July 1868), pp 512Google Scholar. See also Dowling, Alan, ‘A parliamentary history of the law of distress for rent from 1845’ in Dawson, Norma, Greer, Desmond and Ingram, Peter (eds), One hundred and fifty years of Irish law (Dublin, 1996), pp 17190Google Scholar.

13 Judicial statistics (Ireland), 1870, p. 71 [C 443], H.C. 1871, lxiv, 301.

14 Atkinson, George, A treatise on the office of high sheriff, undersheriff, bailiff, &c. ... (6th ed., London, 1878), p. 303Google Scholar.

15 Criminal and judicial statistics, 1875, p. 81 [C 1536], H.C. 1876, lxxix, 353.

16 Hancock, W.N., ‘The law of judgements and the jurisdiction of the sheriffs in selling land, considered with reference to the complaints of the County Down people on the subject ...’in J.S.S.I.S., vi, pt 48 (Dec. 1875), p. 491Google Scholar.

17 First report of her majesty’s commissioners appointed to inquire into the law relating to the registration of deeds and assurances in Ireland..., p. xxxvii [C 2443], H.C. 1878–9, xxxi, 441.

18 Hancock, ‘Law of judgements’, p. 492.

19 27 & 28 Vict., c. 99 (29 July 1864).

20 Ibid.; Hancock, ‘Law of judgements’, pp 491–2; Dodd, W. H., ‘On the law relating to the realization of judgements and decrees, with special reference to judgements and decrees against tenant-farmers’ in J.S.S.I.S., vii, pt 55 (Nov. 1878-June 1879), pp 391-6Google Scholar; idem, ‘Prize essay on the jurisdiction of the local courts in Ireland, Scotland, and England compared’, ibid., pt 51 (Dec. 1876-Apr. 1877), pp 99–125.

21 Proclamations issued by Chief Secretary Forster from May 1881 warned that persons assembling for the purpose of obstructing the execution of the law would be dispersed with force. 45 & 46 Vict., c. 25 (12 July 1882) allowed for the special prosecution of persons assaulting bailiffs attempting to deliver decrees. For crowd activity in the land war see Ball, ‘Crowd activity’, pp 212–49.

22 Carter, Land war in Queen’s County, p. 163.

23 Thompson, Frank, The end of Liberal Ulster: land agitation and land reform, 1868–1886 (Belfast, 2001), p. 211Google Scholar.

24 Ball, ‘Crowd activity’, p. 232.

25 4 Geo. I, c. 5(1717).

26 8 Geo. I, c. 2(1721).

27 Garnham, Neal, The courts, crime and the criminal law in Ireland, 1692–1760 (Dublin, 1996), p. 205Google Scholar; Ball, ‘Crowd activity’, p. 215.

28 27 & 28 Vict., c. 99 (29 July 1864).

29 Ibid.

30 F.J., 9 Jan. 1882; Gorey Correspondent and Arklow Standard (henceforth G.C. & A.S.), 21 May, 23 July, 27 Aug. 1881; King’s County Chronicle (henceforth K.C.C.), 19 May, 16, 23, 30 June, 21 July, 11,25 Aug., 1 Sept. 1881; The Times, 16 July, 1,11,26 Aug. 1881,8 Jan. 1882.

31 Thompson, End of Liberal Ulster, p. 36. In Ulster it was common for sales of interest in farms to take place in cases where no improvements had been made, and even where the condition of the farm had deteriorated.

32 33 & 34 Vict., c. 46 (1 Aug. 1870); Vaughan, Landlords & tenants, pp 93–102; Dowling, M. W., Tenant right and agrarian society in Ulster, 1600–1870 (Dublin, 1999)Google Scholar.

33 27 & 28 Vict., c. 99 (29 July 1864); Dodd, ‘Prize essay’, p. 103.

34 Dodd, ‘On the law relating to the realization of judgements’, p. 392.

35 Bew, Land & the national question, p. 122.

36 Report of her majesty’s commission of inquiry into the working of the Landlord and Tenant (Ireland) Act, 1870 ... [C 2779], H.C. 1881, xviii-xix. Fixity of tenure meant that no rent-paying farmer could be evicted. Free sale referred to the custom of outgoing tenants selling the ‘interest’ in their farms (value of improvements) to the incoming farmer. Fair rent was a vague term referring to a ‘just’ rent, usually below market levels.

37 44 & 45 Vict., c. 4 (2 Mar. 1881).

38 44 & 45 Vict., c. 5 (21 Mar. 1881).

39 In 1879 there were 863; in 1880 there were 2,585; in 1881 there were 4,439; and in 1882 there were 3,433 (Vaughan, Landlords & tenants, p. 280).

40 See table, above, p. 393.

41 Vaughan, Landlords & tenants, p. 21.

42 F.J., 9 Jan. 1882.

43 G.C. & A.S., 19 Mar., 16 Apr., 30 July 1881; K.C.C., 24 Mar., 9, 30 June, 7 July 1881; The Times, 10 Aug. 1881.

44 Geary, Laurence M., The Plan of Campaign, 1886–1891 (Cork, 1986)Google Scholar.

45 Moody, T. W., Davitt and Irish revolution, 1846–82 (Oxford, 1981), p. 317Google Scholar.

46 Quoted in Ball, ‘Crowd activity’, pp 215–16.

47 Ibid., p. 215.

48 Irish Farmers’ Gazette, 24 Sept. 1881.

49 Thorn’s almanac and official directory (Dublin, 1845- ) annually published the names of each county’s high sheriffs.

50 K.C.C., 21 June 1881. W.E. Forster was chief secretary of Ireland from April 1880 to May 1882. The ‘buckshot’ reference was to a decree by James Lowther, the previous chief secretary, ordering the R.I.C. to use buckshot instead of shot in dealing with crowds during the agitation.

51 The Times, 26 Aug. 1881.

52 K.C.C., 16 June 1881. The P.D.A. and Orange Emergency Committee were in some ways very similar to the Land League: all three were subscription-based aid organisations.

53 Ibid., 30 June 1881.

54 F.J., 1 Mar. 1881.

55 Ibid., 29 Mar. 1881.

56 Ibid., 20 Mar. 1881.

57 Bew, Land & the national question, pp 171–3.

58 Ibid.

59 F.J., 13 July 1881.

60 K.C.C., 1 Sept. 1881.

61 G.C. & AS., 21, 28 May, 23, 30 July, 6, 27 Aug., 10 Sept. 1881; K.C.C., 24 Mar., 19, 26 May, 2, 9, 16, 23, 30 June, 1, 14, 21 July, 4, 11, 25 Aug., 1, 8, 15 Sept., 6, 13 Oct., 24 Nov., 15 Dec. 1881; The Times, 16 July, 1, 8, 10, 11, 13, 26 Aug. 1881.

62 G.C. & A.S., 26 Mar., 16 Apr., 6 Aug. 1881; K.C.C., 24 Mar., 30 June, 1, 14 July, 4 Aug., 13 Oct. 1881; The Times, 8, 10 Aug. 1881.

63 The Times, 15 Feb. 1881.

64 Pameli used this phrase at the 8 June 1879 meeting at Westport (Davitt, Michael, The fall of feudalism in Ireland: or, The story of the Land League revolution (London, 1904), p. 154)Google Scholar.

65 Thompson, End of Liberal Ulster, p. 227.

66 The problem posed by unlettable farms was addressed by the establishment of the Land Corporation in 1882 by Arthur MacMurrough Kavanagh, M.P., to purchase boycotted holdings from landlords.

67 K.C.C., 23 June 1881.

68 G.C. & A.S., 28 May 1881.

69 Ibid., 6 Aug. 1881.

70 K.C.C., 14 July 1881.

71 Ibid., 13 Oct. 1881.

72 G.C. & A.S., 26 Mar. 1881.

73 Dooley, Decline of the big house, pp 99–101.

74 Thompson, End of Liberal Ulster, pp 262–5.

75 Clark, Samuel, ‘The social composition of the Land League’ in I.H.S., no. 68 (Sept. 1971), pp 447-69Google Scholar; idem, Social origins of the Irish land war.

76 Sheriffs’ decree and order books, County Wexford, xv (1879) (N.A.I., 1C 43 56); ibid., xvi (1880) (1C 43 57); ibid., xvii (1881) (1C 43 58); ibid., xviii (1882) (1C 43 59).

77 Rev. J. N. Constable to James Lowther, 9 Dec. 1879 (ibid., C.S.O., R.P. 1879/22801).