Hello all …I've been having difficulty finding information concerning how 
tenancy was passed along from generation to generation on the plantation farms. 
What was the legal framework for inheriting the lease on the farm that the 
family had been occupying … in our case for at least 150 years prior to the 
land acts at the end of the 19th century? Hoping somebody might be able to 
steer me somewhere on this issue.
Also, any insight on how a decision was made within a family regarding which 
son (or daughter) would assume responsibility for the lease?
Thanks, as always …
  Rick Smoll


-----Original Message-----
From: elwyn soutter <elwynsout...@googlemail.com>
To: James McKane <jamck...@gmail.com>
Cc: Rick Smoll <rsmoll...@aim.com>; CoTyroneIreland.com Mailing List 
<cotyronelist@cotyroneireland.com>
Sent: Thu, Jun 11, 2020 8:21 pm
Subject: Re: [CoTyroneMailingList] Morrison Family Name in Ulster 1610 - 1633

Rick, Ballyboe is from the Irish words “Baile bo”meaning “cow land.” According 
to Philip Robinson - “The Plantation of Ulster”,a ballyboe was “A small Irish 
land division which, before the plantation,represented the territory within 
which several families worked the land.Although the real area of the ballyboe 
varied greatly with the quality of theland, it was assumed by the plantation 
surveyors to contain 60 acres ofprofitable land in most areas of north-west 
Ulster. Many modern townlands haveevolved from these ballyboes.” Not all land 
in Ireland was requisitionedby the Crown at the time of the Plantation. At 
least a third remained in thehands of local Irish landlords, normally provided 
they agreed to be loyal tothe Crown.  An obvious example would bethe Maguires 
who had lands in Fermanagh. Chunks of land were declared forfeitfollowing the 
1641 uprising and reallocated. Details in the Down survey: 
http://downsurvey.tcd.ie/down-survey-maps.php Robinson spends some time 
discussing theorigins of settler names in Tyrone, and to what extent Scottish 
undertakers hadScots tenants, and English undertakers had English tenants. The 
implicationbeing that they originated in their landlords respective estates. 
However therewas evidently a lot of mixing. For example on p122 he says:  The 
evidence of Scots settling outsidetheir allocated baronies of Strabane and 
Mountjoy is supplemented by a statementof Lord Audley’s in 1614 when he claimed 
that his estate of Finagh and Rarone inOmagh barony had as many Scots as 
English in it. Although there is considerable degree ofcontinuity between 1630 
and 1666 in the distributional pattern of Britishsettlement, and indeed in the 
persistence of English and Scottish localities,the actual surnames on most 
estates did change dramatically. This turnover ofpersonnel cannot be attributed 
simply to the ravages of the 1641 rebellion, forcomparable changes can be 
observed between 1622 and 1630. A high degree oftenant mobility is a striking 
characteristic of plantation settlement, despitethe continuity of settlement 
patterns.” He goes on to discuss colonial spread. “In1622 the percentage of 
Scots on any Tyrone estate was closely related towhether or not the estate was 
Scottish owned, and only marginally related tothe physical distance from 
Londonderry as the natural entry point for Scottishsettlers. However by 1630 
the gap between the statistical significance of thesetwo factors had narrowed, 
and by 1666 it was the distance from Londonderrywhich was most significant. 
This supports the model of colonization outlinedabove, whereby the process of 
direct plantation, with subsequent internalmigration operated simultaneously 
with that of colonial spread. Furthermore thecontention that colonial spread 
became relatively more important than directplantation with time is also 
supported.” (This continues for pages but you willhopefully get the general 
drift.  Manysettlers in Tyrone and particularly the Scots arrived via 
Londonderry and movedacross Tyrone. Some stayed put and some moved about. After 
40 years colonialspread meant that a significant percentage were no longer in 
the place wherethey first settled). Loughterush is in the barony of Omagh 
East.For me, the absence of Morrisons in that part of Tyrone in the Muster 
Rolls (iec 1630) strongly suggests your ancestors must have there arrived 
afterthat.  There’s only 1 Morison in Tyronein the Muster Rolls, a Robert 
Morsion in Strabane barony. Perhaps your familywere connected to him and moved 
south to Loughterush. So colonial spread? Your question is whether Audley 
brought theMorisons over? I doubt he brought them over himself because he 
appears to haveacquired those lands from his uncle, Lord Castlehaven who was 
the originalUndertaker. The family were from Petersfield in Hampshire.  Morison 
is not a name particularly common inthat part of England so that would make me 
doubt they were Castlehaven tenantsin England. But I might be wrong.   Elwyn
On Fri, 12 Jun 2020 at 01:21, James McKane <jamck...@gmail.com> wrote:

A search of the CoTyroneIreland.com Tithe Applotment Index shows this entry

| MORRISON | Edward | Loughterush | Sloy Manor, Kilskerry 1826
 |



Jim McKane
Kitchener, Ontario

On Thu, Jun 11, 2020 at 5:02 PM Rick Smoll via CoTyroneList 
<cotyronelist@cotyroneireland.com> wrote:

I located a copy of the 1654-1656 Civil Survey that covers the townland of 
Loughterush in Kilskeery Parish … this obviously does not list the tenants 
names, only the owner … but there is interesting information there that for me 
begs some questions that perhaps some of you could help me with. I have 
attached the top page with the header that describes the area and names the 
owner, and then the page that lists Laghterish (older spelling or misspelling 
of Loughterush) among the townlands in his possession.
Questions:1. Is there any reason to have confidence that Col. Audley Mervin  
would have been the one to have brought the Morrisons over to Loughterush? 2. 
Were all of the lands of Ulster apportioned out in the time frame around 1610, 
or did it take a longer period of time (ie, could Mervin have been granted his 
land after 1630?) He was also listed among those who came to the aid of 
Londonderry during the siege by James II in 1690, so he was not likely an 
original grantee in 1610.3.The total acreage for the townlands of Lisnahanna, 
Loughterush, and Derryvokenan (?) is listed as 65 acres … there is obviously a 
lot more than 65 acres there (even Irish acres) ; the Morrison farm alone was 
about 40-50 acres … could that be referring to only the amount of acreage under 
cultivation?
Other items of interest: … I now know what a Balliboe is.
… Based on the note in the left column of the first page, Audley was apparently 
among those protestant royalists who were penalized by Cromwell with the 
settlement act of 1652.

  Rick Smoll 

-----Original Message-----
From: elwyn soutter <elwynsout...@googlemail.com>
To: CoTyroneIreland.com Mailing List <cotyronelist@cotyroneireland.com>
Cc: rsmoll999 <rsmoll...@aim.com>
Sent: Thu, May 21, 2020 9:27 pm
Subject: Re: [CoTyroneMailingList] Morrison Family Name in Ulster 1610 - 1633

Rick, The surname, the general location and thefamily denomination all point to 
them being settlers who probably arrived inIreland in the 1600s. MacLysaght’s 
surnames of Ireland describesMorrison as  “an English name numerous inUlster.” 
The location ie Tyrone, is a county heavily settled by Scots &English in that 
period, and the family denomination (Methodist in 1901) alsopoints to them 
being incomers. (They would almost certainly have been Church ofIreland – ie 
Anglican- in earlier times, prior to Methodism’s arrival inIreland).  So in 
effect you have 3pointers to them being of settler origins. The Muster Rolls c 
1630 show a number ofMorrisons in Ireland, and one in Tyrone, but none in the 
Barony of Omagh East(which includes Loughterush) so that points to a post 1630 
arrival in theLoughterush area, if not in Ireland. It’s very rare to find any 
documentationfor the 1600s, unless you were an Undertaker or major land owner, 
or had landforfeit after the 1641 rebellion.  Theearliest likely records might 
be in the Registry of Deeds which start around1709. If the family registered a 
lease or other significant document, thatsometimes gives you a date. Failing 
that, church records may help. KilskeeryChurch of Ireland records start in 1767 
so you might find them there. For somepeople the tithe applotment records in 
the late 1820s/early 1830s are often theearliest records to be found.   I 
searched the PRONI e-catalogue but see nomention there of Morrison in 
Loughterush other than in the tithes in 1826.There were no comprehensive 
records of when people first acquired land. Formost 17th century settlers, the 
first 150 years or so of their timein Ireland are lost in the mists of time. 
Elwyn
On Fri, 22 May 2020 at 03:06, rsmoll999 via CoTyroneList 
<cotyronelist@cotyroneireland.com> wrote:

Peter  ... thanks for responding  ... the links you sent are not working for 
me. I'll do some more hunting for those sites.Sent from my Sprint Samsung 
Galaxy S9.
-------- Original message --------From: Peter McKittrick via CoTyroneList 
<cotyronelist@cotyroneireland.com> Date: 5/21/20  8:43 PM  (GMT-06:00) To: 
"CoTyroneIreland.com Mailing List" <cotyronelist@cotyroneireland.com> Cc: Peter 
McKittrick <petermck...@gmail.com> Subject: [CoTyroneMailingList] Morrison 
Family Name in Ulster 1610 - 1633 A past Genealogical Society of Victoria 
(Australia) handout indicates that Morrison appears in Scottish names in 
Tyrone, 1610-1633 based on muster rolls and estate maps.Sources:             
Brian Orr, Plantation of Ireland and the Ulster Scots published on 
http://www.irishclans.com/ <http://www.irishclans.com/>                      
Gwen Rawlings-Barry, The Ulster Plantation (1605-1697) published on 
http://www.canadasulsterscots.tripod.com/ 
<http://www.canadasulsterscots.tripod.com/> (website not found).Peter 
McKittrick> On 22 May 2020, at 10:23 am, Gordon Wilkinson via CoTyroneList 
<cotyronelist@cotyroneireland.com> wrote:> > Rick, My guess is that they could 
have been part of the plantation of Ulster in the 17thC. I suspect(based on my 
surname) that my ancestors may have been part of that event too but have not 
been able to find any records of who arrived from where and when. Any help 
(thanks Len S. for your earlier help) would be appreciated. Gordon> > On 
22/05/2020 3:14 am, Rick Smoll via CoTyroneList wrote:>> My Morrison ancestors 
occupied a farm in the Loughterush townland (Kilskeery Parish) from at least 
the mid 1700s until 1970 when the last Morrison on the farm passed away (he was 
a bachelor), and the farm was sold at public auction. The earliest ancestor I 
have found records for was Edward Morrison, and the earliest reference to 
Loughterush was with the birth of a daughter of his in 1781.>> My question is: 
Is there a way to find out when the Morrisons first came to occupy the farm in 
Loughterush?>> Thank you for any help on this.>> >>   Rick Smoll>> 
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_________________________________> Nereda & Gordon Wilkinson, Hyde Park, South 
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