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Corbally Civil Parish, Tipperary County, IRELAND CORBALLY,
a parish, in the barony of IKERRIN, county of
TIPPERARY, and province of Munster, 3 miles (S.E.)
from Roscrea; containing 3090 inhabitants. This
place derived an early degree of celebrity from a very ancient abbey
founded about the 7th century for Culdean monks, on an island in the
parish, called Mona Incha, and dedicated to St. Columba.
This island, which comprised little more than two acres of firm ground
encompassed by a soft morass, recently drained by its proprietor and
brought into cultivation, is noticed by Giraldus Cambrensis,
who came into Ireland as a preceptor of John, Earl of Moreton, afterwards
King of England, who says that there are a few Culdees or Colidei
"did devoutly serve God." An opinion even in his time prevailed
that no person, however severe might be his malady, could die in this
island, from which tradition it obtained the appellation of Insula
Viventium, or "the Isle of the Living." This
legendary celebrity made it the resort of numerous pilgrims from the
remotest parts of the country, but did not prevent the brethren from
emigrating to the more healthy shores of the neighbouring village
of Corbally, where they fixed their residence, and where there
are still the remains of a small neat cruciform chapel, with narrow
lancet-shaped windows. The abbey continued to flourish till the dissolution,
and, in the 28th of Elizabeth, the site and possessions were granted
to Sir Lucas Dillon. Of the abbey on the island there are still the
remains of the church, which, though raised on a spot scarcely accessible,
exhibits a beauty of style and costliness of materials scarcely to
be expected in so retired and isolated a spot. The abbey church appears
to have been 44 feet in length and 18 feet in width; the arches of
the choir, and of the western entrance, are of the Norman semicircular
character, and decorated with rich and varied mouldings embellished
with highly wrought ornaments. To the north of the church is a small
oratory, and the abbey and a separate room for the abbott were formerly
to be traced. Attached to the church, in which are the remains of
a fine cross. There was also on this island an ancient building called
the "Woman's Church." The
parish consists of three detached portions intersected by the parish
of Roscrea, and comprise 10,125 statute acres, as applotted
under the tithe act, of which about 400 of woodland, 3200 bog, and
the remainder good arable and pasture land. The
system of agriculture is improved, and there is no waste land except
the bog, which affords abundance of fuel. There are numerous quarries
of grit-stone, which forms the basis of the principal hills, and is
used in all kinds of building; there are very few quarries of limestone,
but limestone gravel and pebbles, which make the whitest lime, are
found in abundance. Mount
Heaton, the property of the Misses Taylor, but now occupied
by Mrs. Hutchinson, a handsome mansion with a castellated front,
flanked at the principal entrance with two stately towers. and containing
spacious and elegant apartments, is beautifully situated in a richly
wooded and highly embellished demesne of 400 acres, watered by a branch
of the river Brosna, and finely diversified; the gardens are
spacious and kept in excellent order, and in the grounds are some
white thorn trees of the growth of more than two centuries. Corville,
the seat of the Hon. F.A. Prittie, is a handsome structure
in the Grecian style, and is seen to great advantage terminating a
long avenue from the entrance gate; the demesne is ample and tastefully
embellished, and in the grounds are the ruins of an old church and
a square tower on an eminence. Timoney, the seat of J.D.
Hutchinson, Esq., is situated on a rising ground surrounded by
hills finely wooded, and by plantations covering 100 acres; the grounds
are embellished with timber of stately growth, and contain some of
the largest spruce and Scottish fir trees in the country. Great improvements
have been made on this estate by the proprietor, and much rocky mountainous
waste land has been reclaimed. Rockforest, the seat of W.
H. Hutchinson, Esq., was a castle occupied by the family of Hutchinson,
whose ancestor came to Ireland as a captain in Cromwell's army, and
subsequently settled here in 1660, and has since been the seat of
the eldest branch of that family. This castle sustained several sieges,
and repeated injuries from the raparees, who, on one occasion, surprised
the garrison and carried off the proprietor into Connaught, where
he was detained a prisoner; the present house, which is incorporated
into the old castle, is situated on a bold eminence and surrounded
by extensive plantations, which, rising abruptly from the plain, forms
one of the most striking and beautiful prospects between Dublin and
Limerick: there is some fine old timber on the grounds. It was anciently
called Knockballymaher, which was exchanged for its present
name by its late proprietor, T. Hutchinson, Esq., who at considerable
expense excavated a handsome lake in the demesne, and made great improvements
on the estate; the lake is well stocked with fish, and on it is a
canoe of considerable dimensions, hollowed out from a single tree
by the American Indians; it was picked up off the banks of Newfoundland,
and presented to Mr. Hutchinson. Dungar, the seat of J.
Hutchinson, Esq., is beautifully situated in a highly cultivated
demesne, and the gardens are very extensive; in the grounds is an
old castle covered with ivy, having a commodious staircase leading
to the summit from which is an extensive and beautiful view of the
surrounding country. Birch Grove, the seat of J. Birch,
Esq., is a handsome residence pleasantly situated; some additions
were made to the house by the late Mr. Elsam; the principal
staircase winds through a round tower with a richly gilded dome; the
east window of the old abbey at Roscrea is preserved and placed in
a very picturesque situation in the grounds, and the ancient carved
door of the "Woman's Church" at Mona Incha forms the entrance
to the gardens. Mona Incha, the residence of G. Birch, Esq.,
is an elegant villa in the Italian style. Mount Butler, the
residence of Capt Smith, is a very pleasing villa; the grounds
are tastefully laid out and kept in excellent order. Derryvale,
the residence of W. Smith, Esq., and Tenderry, of Charles
Hart, Esq., are also in the parish. Spruce Hill is the
handsomely planted demesne of Lord Norbury, but contains no
residence. An
extensive distillery at Birch Grove, and a large brewery at
Racket Hall, are carried on by Messrs. Birch & Co.,
and afford employment to 100 persons. Fairs are held at Williamstown
on March 11th and Nov. 27th, chiefly for pigs. A private canal, about
four miles in length, has been constructed, from which are several
branches, one for conveying turf to the distillery at Birch Grove,
and another to the Rathdowney
(Co. Laois) road leading to Roscrea and partly supplying the
latter town; all run into the bog of Corbally, in which is
a lake about one Irish mile in circumference. A considerable portion
of the bog has been reclaimed by Messrs. Birch, and is now in a high
state of cultivation. It
is a rectory, in the diocese of Killaloe, entirely impropriate
in the Earl of Portarlington, by whom the tithes, amounting
to £403 1s. 6 ¾ d., are leased to several persons. There
is no church, but divine service is performed in a private building
on the Timoney estate, every Sunday and holiday, and evening
service every Wednesday during the summer, by a clergyman principally
supported by J. D. Hutchinson, Esq. In
the Roman Catholic divisions the parish forms part of the union
or district of Bourney; There are two
chapels, one at Williamstown, and one at Camlin. There
is a meeting-house for the Society of Friends on the Rockforest
estate, endowed by the family of Hutchinson. A
school is supported by J. D. Hutchinson, Esq., in which about 80 children
are instructed. There are two chalybeate springs on the demesne of Rockforest, considered as strong as that of Ballyspellan, in the county of Kilkenny; also a petrifying stream.
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