“Houses of
the Nobility and Gentry”:
Big Houses of County Galway
Heritage Week Photographic Exhibition
19 – 24 August 2019
O’Donoghue Centre, NUI, Galway
Galway Landed Estates from the Archives
Heritage
Week Seminar
24 August 2019, 10.00-13.30
O’Donoghue Theatre, NUI, Galway
Programme
10AM: Welcome
10.10-11.15: Researchers’ Panel
Olivia Martin: West of Ireland Landed Estates
collections as sources for women’s lives
Joe Murphy: The Redington Papers: Insight into a 19th
Clarinbridge estate
Ann O’Riordan: Hearnesbrook House & Estate,
Killimor
11.15-11.45 Coffee/Tea
11.45-12.30
Landed Estates resources in practice
Geraldine Curtin: Family History in estate
archives: the Wilson-Lynch Collection
Martin Curley: The Landed Estates database as an
educational tool for primary and second-level students
Brigid Clesham: Landed estates collections as evidence
for landscape studies, the Plunket estate, Tourmakeady
12.30-13.30 Marie Boran & Brigid Clesham: Landed
estates research workshop: Landed Estates
database researchers will be on hand to help with queries relating to sourcing
material on the history of big houses and landed estates in Ireland.
ADMISSION IS FREE BUT
BOOKING ESSENTIAL. See https://www.heritageweek.ie/whats-on/event/galway-estates-from-the-archives for details.
NUI
Galway, Galway County Council Heritage Service and Skehana Heritage Group are
collaborating on a photographic showcase on Galway Estates as part of Heritage
Week, which takes place from 17 to 25 August.
In
2016 Skehana Heritage Group first began displaying images of some of Galway’s
“Big Houses”, the buildings from which landed estates large and small were
managed for over 200 years. They were the multi-nationals of their day in
providing employment. Sadly, however, their legacy was frequently one of
control and which perpetuated an increasingly unsustainable economic model. The
estates’ demise principally came about in the first decades of the twentieth
century when the government-sponsored Land Acts advanced the money to tenant
farmers to purchase their holdings and become owner-occupiers.
It
has been estimated that east Galway, in particular, had a larger proportion of
such houses, large and small, than any other county in Ireland. The Skehana
initiative complements the research conducted at NUI Galway’s Moore Institute
in the Irish Landed Estates project which has been in existence since 2007. For
more information on the Irish Landed Estates project see http://www.landedestates.ie/.
The
Heritage Week event will see hundreds of photographic images of these houses -
some intact, some ruined, some whose memory only exists on the landscape in the
form of a map or drawing from the nineteenth century – on display in banner
format in the O’Donoghue Building foyer, from 19 to 24 August. An added
attraction will be facsimile copies of leases, maps, memoirs and marriage
settlements from the over 20 landed estate archival collections housed in the
James Hardiman Library’s Archives and Special Collections.
NUI
Galway will also host a half day seminar, Galway Estates from the Archives, on
Saturday, 24 August from 9.30am to 1.30pm. The seminar will explore how
historians and other researchers employ these documents to tell the stories of
their families, local areas, landscapes and communities.
Marie Boran, NUI Galway Special
Collections Librarian and Landed Estates researcher, said: “This is the
first time the Galway Big Houses banners will be on display in Galway City,
though they have been exhibited in various parts of the county. It will be a
wonderful opportunity for Galway people and visitors alike to learn more about
these buildings which are so central to our past.”
Attendance
at the event is free. Details of booking and information are available at: https://www.heritageweek.ie/whats-on/event/galway-estates-from-the-archives
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