Showing posts with label Dunhill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dunhill. Show all posts

Thursday, September 16, 2021

Dunhill Tower House, Co. Waterford

 

Dunhill Tower House, Co. Waterford

Niall C.E.J. O’Brien

 

The tower house at Dunhill lies in the townland of Dunhill in the parish of Dunhill which is in the barony of Middlethird, County Waterford. Dunhill tower house is situated at the tip of a spur of a high ridge bounded on the east by the Annestown stream and bounded on the west by another stream in a ravine. The name Dunhill was spelt Donoil in medieval times from the Irish Dun Áil which means fort on the cliff. The rectangular tower house with a base batter measures 10.5m E-W and 9.55m N-S and survives to first floor level on the west side. The corners still display some cut stone quoins to first floor level. The first floor displays few architectural features except for traces of embrasures on the north, south and west walls. The ground floor chamber has three embrasures (one with a wicker centering) with the lights largely destroyed.[1]



West gable of Dunhill tower house


No date of construction of the tower house is known. Tower houses as a structure begin to be constructed from the 1440s and continued into the early decades of the seventeenth century. Most tower houses are possibly constructed in the first half of the sixteenth century. The absent of any fireplaces or garderobes at Dunhill suggest that it was an early construction, possibly late fifteenth century. A small bawn (diameter of c.10m N-S and 10m E-W) surrounds the tower house on the east and south sides with the remains of a secondary building in the south-east corner. 


Interior of north wall at Dunhill

The area around Dunhill was given to the Power or le de Poer family in the late twelfth century and became the caput of Robert le Poer, the senior of three brothers who came over from Somerset in England to colonise Ireland after the Norman invasion. Robert le Poer (d.1177) was succeeded by Robert (d.1228). In the early thirteenth century King John granted the barony of Dunhill to Henry le Poer, son of Philip le Poer of St. Laurence in Pembrokeshire.[2] This appears to be one of those speculative grants by King John. Later Robert le Poer, son of the first Robert le Poer, recovered Dunhill. Robert le Poer was the father of John (d.1243) who was the father of John II (living 1260) and Robert (d.1249).[3] The family possibly built a small castle on the site of the later tower house or somewhere in the locality. John II le Poer was the father of Peter and Matthew (ancestor of the Power family of Curraghmore). Peter le Poer was described as baron of Donoil in 1283 when he died from drowning while crossing the Irish Sea to Wales leaving a two year old son, John III as his heir.[4] In 1305 John III fitz Peter le Poer, baron of Dunoil, was appointed sheriff of Co. Waterford.[5] During the period 1307-1314 John le Poer, baron of Donoil, received £100 for sending troops to Scotland to fight for King Edward II.[6] John III le Poer (d.1329) was the father of Peter (d.1328) and John IV. Peter le Poer (killed in the Desmond wars) was the father of John V le Poer (d.1361) who came of age in 1344 and was exiled to France with the Earl of Kildare.[7] 



Interior view of the west wall at Dunhill


John V le Poer was the father of Eustace le Poer (d.1355) and Ismania le Poer, wife of Nicholas de Bekensfield. In 1361 Nicholas de Bekensfield was a follower of Lionel, Duke of Clarence, when the latter came to Ireland.[8] Although Nicholas de Benesfield was married to Ismania le Poer he took little interest in his Irish property being described in 1368 as an absentee landlord. With the failure of male heirs Dunhill and the baronage of Dunoil passed to the heirs of John IV le Poer through his son, Eustace and grandson John VI le Poer who 1375 was named baron of Donoil.[9] It is said that the Powers of Dunhill were killed in battle at Tramore in 1368 and so the estate passed to the Kilmeaden branch of the family. Instead it was a combination of the male heirs dying out at Dunhill and Bekensfield losing Dunhill because he was an absentee landlord. In 1380 Nicholas FitzJohn le Poer of Kilmeaden, a descendent of William le Poer (living 1172 and brother of Robert of Dunhill) was summoned to the Irish Parliament as Nicholas le Poer of Kilmeaden, feudal lord of Doniol.[10]



View of Dunhill from the south


Dunhill was given to a junior branch of the Kilmeaden family. Although east Waterford had many different Power family’s claiming descent from the three brothers of the time of King Henry II, the genealogy of these families is unclear until Tudor times. In the 1420s Milo le Poer (also called Power as the surname changed form), baron of Dunhill, was one of the collectors in County Waterford of a parliamentary subsidy granted to the lord deputy.[11] In the mid fifteenth century the male lineage of the barons of Dunhill ended with Milo le Poer as the last baron. Milo was succeeded at Dunhill by his natural son, Nicholas le Poer. By 1463 Nicholas had six sons (William, Maurice and Robert along with Piers of Gilcagh, Thomas and Nicholas), possibly from two marriages, who had administration of the Dunhill estate. In 1493 the six sons were sort of administrating the estate as they challenged a grant they made in 1463 of property in Islandikane and Ballydermody to William Wyse. An act of parliament in 1493 gave the land in question to William Wyse which was reconfirmed in 1528 in opposition to Nicholas Fitzthomas le Poer (son of one of the six brothers).[12] A trustee of the 1528 settlement was Nicholas Power, lord of Kilmeaden.[13]



View of the south-west corner at Dunhill


In the decades around 1500 somebody of consequence built the present tower house at Dunhill. In the sixteenth century the Power family at Dunhill seems to have kept a low profile as they are rarely mentioned in the records. In the 1570s Robert Power of Kilmeaden was listed among the principal gentlemen of County Waterford with no reference to Dunhill.[14] In 1617 Nicholas Power held Dunhill castle and the surrounding estate.[15] In 1640 John Power held Dunhill castle (more correctly referred to as a tower house). John Power held a court leet and a court baron on his manor of Dunhill and was owner of about half the parish of Dunhill with further property in adjacent parishes. The same John Power also held the Kilmeaden estate of his ancestors. Although he held the manor courts of leet and baron at Kilmeaden the estate was left neglected as the tower house there was in ruins.[16] Have said that in 1646 when John Power was given freedom of Waterford city he described himself as John Power of Kilmeaden.[17] 



Interior view of west wall at Dunhill


The Dunhill tower house fell to Cromwellian forces in 1649-50 and was possibly partly destroyed. Legend says that Lady Power was in command of the defences and gave a gunner buttermilk instead of beer, and in disgust, the gunner opened the gates and left in the Cromwellian soldiers for which act he was rewarded by being hanged. In later times some of its stone work was removed to build houses in the locality. In 1912 a storm caused much of the east side of the tower to collapse.



The open east side of Dunhill


Charles Smith said that the Act of Settlement of 1666 restored John Power to his property at Dunhill but the estate later passed out of the family.[18] Other sources say that John Power lost all his property and none of it was restored Under Charles II.[19] Sir John Cole acquired the Dunhill estate while Henry Nicoll received the Kilmeaden estate. John Power does not appear in the list of transplanted landowners and appears to have stay in east County Waterford. It is said that John Power of Dunhill had at least three sons; William, Pierce and Nicholas but the genealogists differ on this. William Power was grandfather of William Power of Knockaderry (part of the old Kilmeaden estate) which property was held by leasehold as the family remain Roman Catholic, and ancestor of the Power family of Bellevue House near Slieverue and Faithlegg House, south-east of Waterford.[20] In the 1850s Rev. John B. Palliser was the owner of Dunhill.

 


The south-west corner of Dunhill



Steps up to the south-east bawn



South wall of secondary building in south-east bawn




Artist view of the tower house south-east view point



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Views from Dunhill tower house



View south to the sea at Annestown



View eastwards from Dunhill



View northwards from Dunhill




View of south-west corner from the cliff base




Another view eastwards from Dunhill




West gable at Dunhill



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[1] Moore, Michael (ed.), Archaeological Inventory of County Waterford (Dublin, 1999), p. 224, no. 1609

[2] Turtlebunbury.com article ‘De le Poer Beresford of Curraghmore, Co. Waterford’

[3] Parker, Ciaran, ‘Paterfamilias and parentela: the le Poer lineage in fourteenth-century Waterford’, in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Vol. 95C (1995), pp. 93-117, at p. 95

[4] Parker, Ciaran, ‘Paterfamilias and parentela: the le Poer lineage in fourteenth-century Waterford’, in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Vol. 95C (1995), pp. 93-117, at p. 97

[5] www.Chancery.tcd.ie.closeroll33edwardi/46 accessed 15th September 2021

[6] Connolly, Philomena, ‘List of Irish entries on the memoranda rolls of the English Exchequer, 1307-27’, in Analecta Hibernica, No. 36 (1995), pp. 163-218, at p. 202

[7] Parker, Ciaran, ‘Paterfamilias and parentela: the le Poer lineage in fourteenth-century Waterford’, in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Vol. 95C (1995), pp. 93-117, at p. 113

[8] Dryburgh, Paul & Smith, Brendan (eds.), Handbook and Select Calendar of Sources for Medieval Ireland in the National Archives of the United Kingdom (Dublin, 2005), p. 313

[9] Parker, Ciaran, ‘Paterfamilias and parentela: the le Poer lineage in fourteenth-century Waterford’, in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Vol. 95C (1995), pp. 93-117, at p. 115

[10] The Complete Peerage (Gloucester, 1987), vol. X, p. 565

[11] Richardson, H.G., & Sayles, G.O. (eds.), Parliaments and Councils of Mediaeval Ireland, volume 1 (Dublin, 1947), pp. 136, 159

[12] Waterford City Museum, Wyse collection 2012, document number 5, 6, 11

[13] This Nicholas le Poer of Kilmeaden was the son of Walter and grandson of John of Kilmeaden (living 1471)

[14] O’Dowd, Mary (ed.), Calendar of State Papers, Ireland, Tudor Period, 1571-1575 (Dublin, 2000), no. 796

[15] Brewer, J.S., & Bullen, William (eds.), Calendar of the Carew Manuscripts preserved in the archiepiscopal library at Lambeth (London, 1873, reprint Liechtenstein, 1974), p. 341

[16] Simington, Robert (ed.), The Civil Survey A.D. 1654-1656 County of Waterford Vol. VI with appendices: Muskerry barony, Co. Cork; Kilkenny City and Liberties (part) also valuations, circa 1663-4 for Waterford and Cork Cities (Dublin, 1942), pp. 132, 138, 147

[17] Byrne, Niall (ed.), The Great Parchment Book of Waterford: Liber Antiquissimus Civitatis Waterfordiae (Dublin, 2007), p. 269

[18] Brady, Donal (ed.), Charles Smith’s The ancient and present state of the County and City of Waterford (Dungarvan, 2008), p. 64

[19] Burke’s Irish Family Records, 1976 (reprint 2007), p. 963

[20] Burke’s Irish Family Records, 1976 (reprint 2007), pp. 963, 964

Saturday, September 7, 2019

Poher family in the Stogursey charters


Poher family in the Stogursey charters

Niall C.E.J. O’Brien
     
The village of Stogursey lies in undulating pasture land at the foot of the Quantock Hills, Somerset. Between 1100 and 1107 William de Falaise and Geva his wife gave the church of St. Andrew at Stoke and its tithes to the Benedictine Abbey of Lonlay, Normandy. The Abbey of Lonlay was founded by William de Bellême in 1026. The first mention of a religious community at Stogursey is in about 1120. From that time until 1295 the priory of Stogursey was a dependent house of Lonlay Abbey. At the start of war between England and France in 1295 such “alien priories” were taken into the king’s hand.[1]
     
The Stogursey charters and documents contain some important information relating to the families of FitzUrse, Courcey, Columbers, Regni and Poher.[2] This article will hope to put a family story to the often dry words of charters and such legal documents. The task is far from easy as the editors of the charters said that information on the family is not very considerable and their lands which they held in the Honour of Courcey are not easily identified.[3]
     
Along with other families from Somerset such as that of Cogan, de Marisco and Courcey, the family of Poher went to Ireland as part of the invasion and conquest of that country. Robert de Poher sailed to Ireland in 1172 and William his brother along with John son of Robert went over in 1186.[4]

The spelling of Poher and Power
     
In Ireland, as in Somerset, the family name of Poher was written variously as Poher, de la Poer and de la Pour before later settling down as Power. In the Stogursey charters we see the name of Power in use by the mid-fourteenth century. In September 1347 the prior of Stogursey made a lease for life to Sir Ralph de Myddelnee the tithes in the manor of Blakeford. Among the witnesses to this lease was Henry Power. Henry Power was elected Member of Parliament in 1332. He married Matilda de Gyverney and died in 1361. His only daughter and heir, Joan Power married William de Shareshull.[5] Having said the proceeding the spelling of the family name still had variants as Henry Powair senior was referred to in documents from 1350 while his seal used the spelling of Power.[6] This difference of spelling is not unusual as definite spelling of surnames did not come into existence until the seventeenth century. Walter Ralegh, a courtier of Queen Elizabeth I, spelt his own surname in various ways throughout his wife.

Nicholas le Poher
     
Sometime before 1189, possibly in 1186, Nicholas le Poher granted to St. Andrew of Stoke all the land which Theobald Carpenter held from him in Middleton. Among the witnesses to this grant was Joan the mother of Nicholas le Poher along with William le Poher and Philip le Poher. These lands are said to be in the place now known as Milton Podimore as they were still listed as owned by Stogursey Priory in 1505.[7]

Ralph le Poher
     
The Stogursey charters say that Ralph le Poher had two sons called William and Robert. Other sources say he had three sons, William, Robert and Roger.[8]

Stogursey Church of St. Andrew by Martin Southwood


William le Poher
     
On or before 1185 William le Poher, son of Ralph le Poher, confirmed the grant of 10s rent from Knaplock made by his brother Robert le Poher, senior, to the church of St. Andrew of Stokes. Knaplock Farm is in the parish of Cannington, some two miles east of Stogursey.[9] In 1185 William le Poher sailed to Ireland. William le Poher died sometime before 1204.[10] In 1172-3 William le Poher and Hugh Pincerna owed 9lbs from their property in Oxfordshire for the army of King Henry II crossing to Ireland.[11] In about 1184-1189 William le Poher granted land and tithes at Aghred and Tueos in Ireland to Stogursey priory.[12]

In 1200 William le Poher was a witness to an agreement between Meyler Fitz Henry and Fulk de Cantilupe whereby the Fulk leased land at Corkach in the fee of Hubrim in Ireland to Meyler for ten years.[13] In October 1200 William le Poher was at Gloucester to witness the grant of 40 carucates to Thomas, abbot of Glendalough.[14] By 1204 William le Poher was deceased.[15] But not before he left a son called John le Poher, ancestor of the le Poher family of Kells, Co. Kilkenny and Kilmeaden, Co. Waterford.[16]

Robert le Poher, senior

In 1172-3 Robert le Poher owed 10s from his property in Oxfordshire for the army of King Henry II crossing to Ireland.[17] Sometime before 1181 Robert Poher senior made a grant of 10s rent from Knaplock to the church of St. Andrew of Stokes.[18] Robert le Poher was killed in 1178 in a battle with the Irish in South Kildare.[19]

Robert le Poher, junior

In 1172 Robert le Poher junior sailed to Ireland. In about 1181 Robert le Poher junior confirmed the grant of his father, Robert le Poher of the 10s to St. Andrew’s and also confirmed the grant of 8d rent to same made by his brother, John le Poher.[20] In July 1221 Robert le Poher was informed that the king had replaced Geoffrey de Marisco as justiciar of Ireland by Henry, Archbishop of Dublin.[21] By 1228 Robert le Poher junior had died and was succeeded by his son John. In November 1228 Richard Duket and Henry de St. Florence gave the king 100 marks to have the right of marriage of John le Poher.[22] In April 1230 John le Poher made homage for his father’s property in Ireland.[23] By October 1249 John le Poher was dead and was briefly succeeded by his eldest son, Robert le Poher, but Robert died before October 1249 and the justiciar was instructed to find Robert’s brother and heir (John) to give custody to John Maunsel.[24] John le Poher was the ancestor of numerous Power families in medieval Waterford including the baron of Dunhill family.[25]

Roger le Poher
     
In 1175 Robert son of Alfred granted to the church of St. Andrew of Stokes his church of St. John of Holeford. This grant was witnessed by a number of Poher family members like Durand le Poher, William le Poher and Roger le Poher.[26]
     
This Roger le Poher was the third son of Ralph le Poher. In the 1170s Roger le Poher went to Ireland where he assisted in the invasion and colonisation. In 1177 Roger le Poher was said to have assisted John de Courcey at the battle of Down. In 1181 Hugh de Lacy made Roger a captain of Leighlin.[27] Roger le Poher was the ancestor of Poher families in Kilkenny and east Cork. A number of his descendants were sheriffs of Co. Waterford in the fourteenth century.[28]

John le Poher
    
Meanwhile back in 12th century England John le Poher was one of two sons of Robert le Poher, senior. In about 1180 John le Poher confirmed the grant made by his father, Robert, of 10s rent in Knaplock to the church of St. Andrew of Stokes. At the same time John added to his father’s grant by giving an additional rent of 8d to Stogursey. The grant was affixed with the seal of John de Poher which displayed a fleur de lys in its design.[29] The French heritage of the Poher family was something of high value to the family. This was in the days before King John lost Normandy and the Hundred Years War when the Anglo-Normans still considered themselves French first and English a distant third after Normandy.

Conclusion

The Poher family were a small landed family in 12th century Somerset but the Norman Invasion of Ireland in 1169 opened up an opportunity of advancement. The three brothers from Stogursey went on to hold extensive property in Ireland and their descendants are still numerous in that country today.

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[1] Tremlett, T.D. & Blakiston, N. (eds.), Stogursey Charters: charters and other documents relating to the property of the alien priory of Stogursey, Somerset, now belonging to Eton College (Somerset Record Society, Vol. LXI, 1949), pp. ix, xi, xiii, xiv
[2] Tremlett & Blakiston (eds.), Stogursey Charters, p. xviii
[3] Tremlett & Blakiston (eds.), Stogursey Charters, p. xx
[4] Tremlett & Blakiston (eds.), Stogursey Charters, p. xx
[5] Tremlett & Blakiston (eds.), Stogursey Charters, no. 63
[6] Tremlett & Blakiston (eds.), Stogursey Charters, no. 66
[7] Tremlett & Blakiston (eds.), Stogursey Charters, p. xx, nos. 18, 170
[8] Parker, C., ‘Paterfamilias and parentela: The le Poer lineage in fourteenth-century Waterford’, in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Vol. 95C (1995), pp. 93-117, at p. 95
[9] Tremlett & Blakiston (eds.), Stogursey Charters, no. 13
[10] Tremlett & Blakiston (eds.), Stogursey Charters, no. 13
[11] Sweetman, H.S. (ed.), Calendar of Documents relating to Ireland (London, 1875, reprint Liechtenstein, 1974), vol. 1 (1171-1251), no. 41
[12] Tremlett & Blakiston (eds.), Stogursey Charters, no. 51 (21)
[13] Sweetman (ed.), Calendar of Documents relating to Ireland, vol. 1 (1171-1251), no. 129
[14] Sweetman (ed.), Calendar of Documents relating to Ireland, vol. 1 (1171-1251), no. 132
[15] Tremlett & Blakiston (eds.), Stogursey Charters, no. 13
[16] Parker, C., ‘Paterfamilias and parentela: The le Poer lineage in fourteenth-century Waterford’, in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Vol. 95C (1995), pp. 93-117, at p. 95
[17] Sweetman (ed.), Calendar of Documents relating to Ireland, vol. 1 (1171-1251), no. 41
[18] Tremlett & Blakiston (eds.), Stogursey Charters, no. 15
[19] Parker, C., ‘Paterfamilias and parentela: The le Poer lineage in fourteenth-century Waterford’, in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Vol. 95C (1995), pp. 93-117, at p. 95
[20] Tremlett & Blakiston (eds.), Stogursey Charters, no. 15 accessed on 17th April 2013
[21] Sweetman (ed.), Calendar of Documents relating to Ireland, vol. 1 (1171-1251), no. 1001
[22] Sweetman (ed.), Calendar of Documents relating to Ireland, vol. 1 (1171-1251), no. 1635
[23] Sweetman (ed.), Calendar of Documents relating to Ireland, vol. 1 (1171-1251), no. 1786
[24] Sweetman (ed.), Calendar of Documents relating to Ireland, vol. 1 (1171-1251), no. 3014
[25] Parker, C., ‘Paterfamilias and parentela: The le Poer lineage in fourteenth-century Waterford’, in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Vol. 95C (1995), pp. 93-117, at p. 95
[26] Tremlett & Blakiston (eds.), Stogursey Charters, no. 12
[27] Orpen, G.H., Ireland under the Normans (Dublin, 2005), Vol. II, p. 12
[28] Parker, C., ‘Paterfamilias and parentela: The le Poer lineage in fourteenth-century Waterford’, in Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy, Vol. 95C (1995), pp. 93-117, at p. 95
[29] Tremlett & Blakiston (eds.), Stogursey Charters, no. 14