John Casey had another house on plot 16 while Loughlin McHugh had a house and lands in neighbouring plot 15. As Loughlin's house on this plot was valued at 2 shillings, the lowest of any house in the village, you can assume it was run down and not lived in. This implies that he lived in his other house on plot 15.
Again, this is an example of a Rundale system. You can normally assume that all people involved in a "Rundale System" were in some way related unless, in the meantime, land had been sold or transferred elsewhere. But here the names are so diverse, that its impossible to see the family connection.
| Plot | 14 | |||||
| Occupier | Description | Leased From | Area | |||
| Thomas Coleman John Casey Bridget Flannery Dominick Flannery David Sherlock Roger Casey Loughlin McHugh |
Land, House, Offices Land, House, Offices Land, House, Offices Land, House, Offices House Garden, House Garden, House |
George French Dominick Flannery John Casey Bridget Flannery & Dominick Flannery |
Share 60a 2r 6p none 0a 3r 20p 0a 2r 20p |
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| Occupier | Value of Land | Value of Buildings | Total Value | |||
| Thomas Coleman John Casey Bridget Flannery Dominick Flannery David Sherlock Roger Casey Loughlin McHugh |
share £13-6-0 none 15/- 8/- |
15/- 9/- 10/- 10/- 5/- 5/- 2/- |
£4-1-0 £3-15-0 £3-17-0 £3-17-0 5/- £1-0-0 10/- |
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