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Ballingarry or Gare Civil Parish, Slievedarragh Barony Tipperary County, IRELAND BALLINGARRY or GARE, a parish, in the barony of SLIEVEDARAGH, county of TIPPERARY, and province of Munster, 5 miles (E. by N.) from Killenaule; containing 5872 inhabitants.
The principal seats are Coal Brook, that of H. Langley, Esq., a handsome residence; Harley Park, of J. P. Poe, Esq., pleasantly situated in a richly planted demesne; and Ballyphilip, of Ambrose Going, Esq., the demesne of which is tastefully laid out. The
living is a vicarage, in the diocese of
Cashel, and in the patronage of the Bishop; The rectory is impropriate
in the Rev. ??? Hayden; the tithes amount to £738 9S. 2¾d.,
of which £492 6S. 1¾d is payable to the impropriator, and
the remainder to the vicar. The church, a neat plain edifice with a tower,
was erected by aid of a gift of £470 from the late Board of First
Fruits, in 1811. The glebe-house was built by a gift of £350 and
a loan of £450 from the same Board, in 1814: the glebe comprises
17 ½ acres, subject to a rent. The Roman Catholic parish is co-extensive with that of the Established Church; the chapel which is situated in the village, is a handsome and spacious edifice, erected in 1828 on a site of about two acres of land given by the late Col. Pennefather; in the chapel yard is a school-house. A
school-house under the trustee's of Erasmus Smith's foundation was erected
at an expense of £300, and two acres of land were assigned to it
by the late Col. Pennefather; and there are three other schools, supported
by private subscription. These schools afford instruction to about 250
boys and 120 girls; and there are also six pay schools, in which are about
270 boys and 170 girls. The
coal field, of which a considerable portion is within this parish, extends
7 miles in length and 3 miles in breadth; the coal is found in three distinct
seams of 12, 18 and 24 inches in thickness, lying above each other at
intervening distances varying from 90 to 140 feet, dipping to a common
centre, and appearing at the surface on all sides; the extreme depth of
the lowest seam is about 700 feet. The coal beds lie about 1800 feet over
a mass of limestone rock of great thickness, which shows itself at the
surface all around on an average within two miles of the pits. The coal
field is divided among various proprietors in portions varying from 1000
to 1500 acres, each of whom is the owner of the coal upon his own land.
Some of the mines have been drained and worked by the proprietors, by
means of day levels or adits, for which the undulation of the surface
is extremely favourable; and of late years several of the collieries have
been let on lease to the Mining Company of Ireland, who have erected steam-engines
for raising the water from the deeper parts of the mines, and made various
other improvements for working them to greater advantage. The collieries on the estate of Coalbrook had been worked upon a judicious plan and with great success by the late proprietor, Charles Langley, Esq., for the last 30 years, and are still carried on in a similar manner by the present proprietor. On the estate of Kilballgalavin, also in this parish, and the property of the Earl of Carrick, are mines under lease to the Mining Company, which are now being opened; and on the estate of Boulinlea, belonging to Edward Cooke, Esq., and others under lease to the same Company, which are now in operation, and for working which, on a more extensive scale, preparations are now in progress. the mines on the estate of Ballyphilip are very extensive, and the coal is of good quality; they have not laterally been worked to advantage, but arrangements are now in progress for opening them upon a more improved plan. the average price of large coal at the pit is 15s. per ton, and of culm, 7s. The coal, which is of the non-flaming kind, is in great request with malsters and millers for drying corn; and is also esteemed very profitable for culinary uses, for which it is carried to a great distance. About three-fourths of the produce of the mines is culm, which is used chiefly for burning lime. The entire produce of the coal field at present is valued at about 25,000 pounds per annum; but the returns are likely to be much augmented by the more extensive working of the mines and the increased demand arising from the progressive improvements in agriculture.
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