Copyright Oggbashan December 2020
Edited January 2021
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
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I didn't like my great-uncle Rory. I thought he was a bigoted arsehole who treated his tenants like dirt. It seemed that he reciprocated the dislike.
I was with some of my relations at the reading of his will. As I expected, he had left his English estates to his other great nephews. They weren't overjoyed because all of the lands needed investment and had disaffected tenants who had been abused and neglected for years. They would have to spend money and regain trust.
I didn't expect anything from him but the family solicitor had told me there was a bequest to me. Finally he got to that part of the reading that referred to me.
"To my great nephew Andrew, whose dislike of me is as great as mine for him, I leave my Irish Estate which has been a thorn in my side for decades. He can have the useless title, Lord Strathbally, which goes with it. May it cause him as much grief as it has me..."
The Irish Estate is several thousand acres around a small harbour. Great-Uncle Rory's house, which he had rarely visited, was an artillery fort built by Henry VIII as a defence against French invasion. It had been updated with modern cannon, Gatling guns, and still had an operational drawbridge. Whenever Great-Uncle Rory had visited, the drawbridge had been raised to protect him from the anger of his tenants.
The tenants had suffered badly from the potato famine. Hundreds had starved and those that had or could borrow a few pounds had emigrated to America. The population of the estate was about a quarter of that before the famine, and those that had survived were desperately poor. None had been able to pay their rents for at least five years, and just before he died Great-Uncle Rory had instructed his agent, Mr Ferguson, to evict everyone and turn the estate over to sheep farming. His agent had stopped the evictions as soon as he heard that Rory had died and was waiting instructions from the new owner. He had written to the family solicitors requesting advice, saying that whether he evicted people or not, this year's harvest was expected to be so poor that he thought half of the remaining population would be dead by the end of winter.
I asked the solicitor to draft a letter to the Mr Ferguson, stopping the evictions, cancelling all outstanding rent arrears and that no rent should be paid this year. I arranged to see the solicitor by myself at three o'clock.
My cousins and I went across the road to an Inn for lunch. We were all unhappy that Great-uncle Rory's bequests were more liabilities than benefits. We all had English estates in good heart because of our fathers' rejection of Great-Uncle Rory's methods. But they all commiserated with me. The Irish estate would be a real drain on my resources. I already had a Scottish estate that barely paid its way. I had refused to take part in the Highland clearances so I still had hundreds of tenants living hand to mouth and the estate brought me less than a few pounds a year. But my English estates were very profitable, as were those owned by my cousins. We could afford to spend thousands of pounds to bring Rory's estates back to a profitable state, but whether the Irish one ever would, we all doubted.
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Back at the solicitors' office, I read the Mr Ferguson's letters to Rory and his replies for the last few months. They were dire news. The agent was pleading for clemency but Rory wanted his pound of flesh, or everyone evicted. Apart from stopping the evictions, the cancellation of the debts, and no rent for this year, I enclosed a banker's draft on an Irish bank for five hundred guineas and I asked the agent to acquire as much food locally as he could and distribute it in conjunction with the Anglican vicar and the Roman Catholic priest. I said I would be at my London house for the next week and would then come to Ireland.
The solicitor deals with Irish estates for other clients.
"Lord Strathbally, the problem with most Irish peasants is that they live on potatoes, and the potatoes have all been blighted. They don't know what to do with cereals such as wheat or rice. They have no idea how to bake bread nor have they got the ovens in which to do it. Flour is useless to them and there are very few mills capable of producing it, if wheat was grown. Without potatoes, they starve. But the fort, your Great-Uncle Rory's house, has a large bread oven to supply what was the garrison. If they had flour, they could make bread. Whether the people would eat it? That's another problem."
"OK, Thank you. I will try to alleviate distress but I will need the tenants' cooperation. Whether they will with an English landlord? That might be difficult but I'll try. I have asked the agent for my English estates to come to London tomorrow to advise me. I expect to spend a large amount of money. Whether that will change things? I don't know but I'll try."
"Why are you doing it, Mr Andrew?"
"Probably because I am annoyed with great-uncle Rory. He was an arsehole and I want to prove that the Irish estate could be much better even if it is a drain on my finances for years. My Scottish estate was similar if not as bad. After a decade of improvements my tenants are surviving but it will be a few more years yet before they can do more than exist. They will because they are beginning to spin tweed in their cottages and that is giving them a small cash income. When the cattle herds start to increase? They could pay my low rents easily. But now it is amazing that at least half can already."
"I think you are taking on a thankless task, Mr Andrew. The tenants hate the English and your great-uncle gave them good reason for that hate."
"I hated him... No that's not true. I despised him. He had an income but only by grinding his tenants' noses in the dirt. That is no way to run any estate and he was particularly obnoxious to his Irish tenants..."
"I wish you well. Mr Andrew but..."
"You're worried I might not succeed? At worst I could give the estate to the tenants but as it is they possibly couldn't survive even if they owned the land."
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Mr English agent, Mr Simmonds, was a valuable source of information and advice. His brother had managed an Irish estate before the famine but had moved to England when that estate was hit by the potato blight.
Mr Simmonds told me that Mr Ferguson and his three sons, my Irish agents, who had been Rory's, were in fear of their lives for what they had do to on Rory's orders. It would be better to replace them with an Irish Catholic who could speak Gaelic.
I asked him to arrange for a ship and supplies with some Irish Catholic workers -- a baker, a mill wright, a miller, some builders and farm experts. He did all that and better. He found an Irish gentleman's younger son, Seamus O'Connor, who had come to London because his father's estate could no longer support the whole family. Seamus O'Connor had been his father's agent for some of the subsidiary estates so knew the conditions in Ireland very well.
But that took time. Instead of the week I had intended, it was three weeks before we set sail for Strathbally harbour. During the voyage I spoke to my new employees and told them the task ahead -- to make lives easier for the tenants, to repair or replace their cottages, to improve the land and grow crops not affected by the potato blight, and help the people on the estate. As they were all Irish they had a good idea of what they would face.
When we entered the harbour I could see signs of neglect. The breakwater had been breached in several places and the quay was weed grown. The fort was on a hill beside the harbour with a church and large stone built Priory barn beside it. Except for a couple of houses near the church every other building was mud-walled and thatched with very poor state thatch, doubtfully waterproof.
I had arranged to pay the sailors to move the cargo into the barn. While they did that, I met Mr Ferguson and his sons. We walked together up to the fort and across the drawbridge. My new Irish workers followed. I asked my new servants to prepare for tea in a half an hour's time. It was actually three quarters of an hour before the tea was ready as they had had to unpack everything.
I spoke to Mr Ferguson and his sons and suggested to them that they could be the agents for my Scottish estate because my factor there, Mr Campbell, should retire. As I expected they jumped at the chance.
"We are hated here," Mr Ferguson said," because we had to carry out your great-uncles impossible orders and because we are Protestants in a catholic community."
"How many Protestants are there?" I asked.
"Us three, the vicar, two agents and their families from neighbouring estates and two gentlefolk -- less than a dozen."
"In that large church?"
"Yes, It is stupid. The church could hold three hundred and the congregation each Sunday is usually six."