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Overlooking the River Mourne
Michael Cox
其他書名
Four Centuries of Family Farms in Edymore and Cavanalee in County Tyrone
出版
Ulster Historical Foundation
, 2006
主題
History / General
History / Europe / Great Britain / General
History / Europe / Ireland
Social Science / Sociology / Rural
Technology & Engineering / Agriculture / General
ISBN
1903688442
9781903688441
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=gf0kwdkfjPQC&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
The close ties between the people and the land in Ulster has only within the last two generations, been replaced by a more urban "modern" lifestyle. This study of the farms and farming families, on two thousand acres of hilly terrain in two adjacent townlands, Edymore and Cavanalee, south-east of Strabane and overlooking the River Mourne, is a model for local studies. The story is based on research in one of the greatest collections of estate records in Britain or Ireland, the Abercorn Papers in the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland. Before 1600 the land belonged to the great O'Neill clan. After the Plantation, it was granted to the Abercorn family and the land divided into small farms. Over the ensuing centuries the farmers created well-run and profitable mixed farms. At the beginning of the 20th century came another great sea-change: families at last had the chance to own the land that their forebears had, as tenants, tilled for generations. If anything, changes through the 20th century, both on and off the farms, have been greater than those of the previous 200 years. Some farms expanded, some stayed the same size: what links them all is that the family unit remained as the cement that held them together and bound them to the land. The development of the farms and the lives of four of the longest-surviving families are retraced in absorbing detail. So too is the social fabric which linked town and country. Strabane, less than an hour's walk away, was a focal point for markets, education and social activities. More than that, the writer's own family connections with the townlands over the last 50 years provide the homely touch that gives this book such a distinctive charm.