Chapter 7

A.Abercrombie, Lord, in Ireland and in Egypt,lxxx-lxxxiiAbraham Hutchinson,lxxxvAbsentees, remittances to,76Acts of Parliament quoted:"Edward III., 17th, 34th, and 50th of,110"Edward IV., 3rd of, 4th of,111"Henry VII., 10th of,112"(English), Henry VIII., 13th and 28th of, &c.,116"Elizabeth,87,116"James I.,8"Charles II.,87"of Settlement and Explanation,131"12th,57"13th and 14th of,115"17th and 18th of,20"20th and 22nd of,106"22nd and 23rd of,119"William and Mary, first of,57"William III., 7th and 8th of,57"(English) Acts of 1697,59"(Irish) Acts of 1695, 10th and 11th of,20,88,91,105"for encouraging Tillage,38note"for Bounties on Land, Carriage and Coal Supply to Dublin,lxx, and39"3rd and 4th of Anne,108"10th, 11th, and 22nd of Anne,96"1st of George II,122"4th and 6th of,120"(English), 32nd of George II,54, note"(1750), taxing Irish Exports,92"George III., 10th of,93-96"18th of,96"Imposing Duty on Woollen Goods,67"Loan, 1759,40Address of English Parliament to William III.,62-65Admiral Hawke,xvAldborough, Petition of,85Aldred Mr., of Oxford,xlvAdvance, in Linen Trade,51Alexander the Great,xxxivAlexandria, Lord Hutchinson of,lxxxviAlnager, Office and Fees of, x and155, noteAmerica, Robertson’s History of,xiii"Wool and Linen Trades transferred to, by Irish Emigrants,147Anderson, Dr., quoted,72, noteAndrews, Provost,xxxiAnthologia Hibernica,lxxxviArchbishop Craddock,xxxiv, noteArchbishop Fowler,lxviArchbishop King quoted,10Archbishop Laud quoted,xxvArms of Militia given to Volunteers,xiv, noteArmy Augmentation,40,44,48Asia, Africa, and America, closed against Ireland,90B.Baird, Sir David, his Expedition from India to Egypt,lxxxiiBallinamuck, Battle of, French defeated at,lxxxiBanks in Dublin failed,35-40Bankruptcy Law not known here in 1755,35, noteBarlow, Mr., T.C.D., Exercising the Veto,xxv, noteBarrè, Colonel Isaac, his description of Hutchinson,lx, &c., and noteBatchelor, the,xiiBaratariana, meaning of name,xiii"Written by,xiii"Extracts from,xv,xvii,xxi, note"appeared originally inFreeman’s Journal,xiiiBeaconsfield, Lord,x, noteBedford, Duke of, Lord Lieutenant (Speech from the Throne),37Beer, Exports and Imports of,156Berkeley, Bishop, his Opinion on State of Irish People,cxviiiBerwick, Rev. Edward, deprived of Scholarship by Provost Hutchinson, and reinstated by Visitors,xxxivBessborough Commission,xxix, noteBiographie “Generale,” “Universale,” and “des contemporanes,” quoted,lxxxiBishops, Irish, ordaining on Scotch degrees,liiiBlack-Dog prison,cvi, noteBlackburne, Mr., quoted,xcixBlacquiere, Sir John,xxiii,lxxviiBoard and Provost of Trinity College, the, Publisher’s thanks to,vBolton, Duke of, Lord Lieutenant (Speech from the Throne),24Boulter, Primate, his desire to have Englishmen appointed to Irish Bishoprics,xxvi, note;xlvi, noteBounty on Land Carriage, and on Coals, to Dublin,lxx,cx,43Bowes, Lord Chancellor,60Boyle, Lord Shannon, Speaker,xcivBretagne, Duke of, Treaty with,112Broderick, Speaker, Solicitor-General, Lord Chancellor,17Brown, Prime-Sergeant, pumped on Mr. Mills,xix, noteBruce, Lieutenant, aided in effecting Lavalette’s escape,lxxxiiiBuckinghamshire, Lord Lieutenant. The Letters addressed to,xcix"""Entertained by Trinity College,lxvi"""A jobber in a mask,lxviii, noteBurke, Sir Bernard, quoted,xxiii,lxxxiBurgh, Hussey, his Speech for opening the College to Catholics;do. on the Irish bishops;do. on a Money Bill, and Dismissal from Office,liii,lxxii, noteBurrowes, Peter, his speech,xlix"Robert,xlixBuyers, none at fairs,2Byron, Lord,x, noteC.Campbell, Dr., his “Political Survey”,72Carson, Rev. Dr., S.F.T.C.D., his extract from College Register,xxxvii, noteCarte, his life of Ormond quoted,cv,12,54Carteret, Lord Lieutenant,28Castlebar, Battle of, English defeated at, strange mistake by French Encyclopædists,lxxxvi"atrocities of English army in retreat from,lxxxviCastlereagh, Lord, Chief Secretary,xcviCatalogue of College Plate, by Mr. Hingston,xxix, noteCattle, Exportation Prohibition Act,cvand55Catholic Scholars, T.C.D.,xlv,li, and noteCatholics, admitted to the College by connivance;how debarred from Scholarship and from voting,xlvi,li, noteCattle Trade destroyed by England, loss of, drove the Irish into the wool trade,cxi,11Cattle, Present of, sent to London after the great fire, and ungraciously received,cvCauses of Ireland’s debt,48Chaffers, In Act of Edward IV.,111Chancellors of the Exchequer, Irish,xcivChancery-lane,xiv-xxiiiChapelizod Church, Inscriptions in, to the third Earl of Donoughmore,lxxxiv“Chapels” in T.C.D.,xxCharles I., Subsidies to,9Charles II., Letter from,12Charles II.SeeActs.Charlemont, Lord, Life of, quoted,lviCharter Schools, cxi,45Chesterfield, Lord Lieutenant,32China, Trade of,73,cxiiCista Communis,xxixCivil Establishment pensions, lxix,45,4Clarendon, Lord, his “History”,10Clonmel, Factory at,cv,13College Plate in South Kensington Exhibition,xxix, noteCollege rack-renting, as alleged by Mr. Duigenan—as explained by Mr. Galbraith,xxix, noteCollege Park,xx, noteCommercial Restraints and Colonial Trade,1Commission of Trade,67Committees, Parliamentary, on the Hutchinsons,xl,xliColonies, Ireland excluded from commerce with,68Commons, House of, could not cure the evil,31"pass the Act against Irish trade,cvii, and66"advanced money for local purposes,36"(Irish), Dispute with the Crown,35"What they effected in 1782,lxxi, note"English, Address to William III.,62Commons, in Trinity College,xlviiiCondition of Irish people,26Cooke’s Institutes,110Constellation, The, Captain of,cv, noteCorporation of Weavers,49Council of Ireland present a Bill to Parliament,67Corporation of Dublin petition the College for Lucas’ son,lxivCowper, Lord Lieutenant, his speech at Belfast,cxviiiCox, his history of Ireland,9Croker, Crofton, Popular songs, quoted,xxxi, noteCurates, Salary of,liiiD.Davis, Sir John, quoted,7and note,9,110,127,149Decker, his “Decline of Foreign Trade”,74-78Debt, National, smallness of in Ireland in 1715,24"the alarm caused by the slight increase of, a proof of the destitution of the country,24"how increased,46Delany, Dr., F.T.C.D., his pupils and income,xlvi, noteDevonshire, Duke of, Lord Lieutenant,32Donoughmore estate, The,lxxv, noteDonoughmore, Lord, “blood relations of,”xxxi, noteDistress in Ireland,23-29Dobbs, Mr., on the trade of Ireland,14,77, noteDorset, Duke of,29,78"Distress in, 1759,40"Sir Bernard de Gomme’s Map of,xx, note"Scandinavian Kingdom of,xx, noteDublin, Collection in, for the Waldenses—for New England—"its freedom given to Hutchinson,x"""to Captain Porter,cv, note"aid for the Londoners,cv, noteDuigenan, Dr. Patrick, F.T.C.D., &c., his “Lachrymæ Academicæ,”xxi""Sketch of his Life,1, note""educated in St. Bride’s Parish School, lived in Chancery-lane,lxxxvii""his sham duel,lvi, note""his oratory,lix""a fanatical anti-Catholic and anti-Nationalist,lxxxviii""did not bring the Provost before the Visitors,xxxvii, noteDunkin, Rev. Mr., Master of Great Ship-street School, had an annuity from the College,lxivDutch carried on the Trade of Ireland,73Duty paid on Export of Linen,21E.Edward III. and IV.’s Acts,110Egypt, trade at,cxiEmbargo on Irish provisions, 1776,5Emigration of linen workers from Ulster,101Embargoes in Ireland,24;from 1740 to 1779,157England, prohibition of cattle exportation to, civ, note,5"remittances to, more than double the entire trade of Ireland,81"Great Seal of, to certify Irish Acts,75"and Ireland compared as to taxation,76"a sufferer by her restrictions on Ireland,77"in 1779, had to pay for Irish army,4"a gainer by Ireland,cxvii,149"the cause of Irish distress,cxvii"repaid fifty-fold for advances to Ireland,128English Parliament’s Address to William III., to destroy Irish wool trade,cvii, and61Equivalent of linen trade an imposture,97Essex, Lord, Lord Lieutenant,143Explanation, Act of,131Exshaw’s Magazine,xli,xlvi, noteF.Failures of Dublin Bankers, Ferral and French,35Farmers of Customs,57Farming in Ireland depressed, and why,2Fashion, former, of Chancery-lane, Stephen-street, Ship-street, &c. &c.,xiv, noteFaulkner’s epistle to Howard,lvi, noteFawcett, Postmaster-General, his Speech at Shoreditch,cxviiiFellows of Trinity College, Bishops, &c.,xxvi, noteFellows of Trinity College, their income,xxviii-xlviFellowship, worth of,xxxiiiFerguson, Sir Samuel, the Publisher’s thanks to,viiiFitzgerald, Lord Edward, on College Parliamentary Committee,xliii""voted against Hutchinson,l""served in Irish force in America,lxiFitzgibbon, John, Earl of Clare, educated in St. Michael le Pole’s School;his college contests with Grattan,xciihis early and rapid successes,x, noteunseats the Provost’s son for the University, and replaces him,xliAt first a parliamentary supporter and great admirer of Grattan; his final quarrel with Grattan,lxxxixcrushed the Round Robin and humbled the Provost,xxxixas Vice-Chancellor holds a College Visitation,lxvihad an Honorary L.L.D. from the University,lxxxixhis speech on the progress of Ireland, during the 18 years of freedom, quoted,cxixFitzgerald, Rev. Mr., Fellow, treated harshly by Provost Hutchinson,xxxivFlanders producing good wool,99Flax-seed imported into Ireland, bounty on, 1776,95Flax an uncertain crop,99Flemings; they beat the Italians out of the wool markets, and are beaten by the English,99Flood, Henry, Candidate for the Provostship,xxiv"His Will,do., note"Life of, quoted,do., noteFolkestone, Petition of,84Food of the Irish people in 1672, and in 1779,cxii, and noteForbes, John, supporter of Grattan, opposed pension list, educated in St. Michael le Pole’s School in Great Ship-street, lived in Stephen-street,xciiiForeign Trade of Ireland annihilated,74France used to supply England with linen,92Free Trade, Meaning of,lxxii, noteFreeman’s Journalpublished on St. Audoen’s Arch, and in Macœna’s Head, Bride-street (1776),xiii""printer of, prosecuted,xviii""quoted,xiii,xviiinote,xixnote,xxvi,xlinote twice,xlvnote,liiinote,cxvii.French Pensioners,38Friezes exempted from tax,65Froude, Mr., quoted,xii,xviii, note,xxix, note twice,xxxvi,xxxvii,xli, note twice,xlvnote,lii, note,cxviii.G.Galbraith, The Rev. J. A., S.F.T.C.D., Letter on College Rents,xxix, noteGalway, Lord, Lord Lieutenant, his speech from the throne,63Gardiner’s Relief Bill,lxviiGentleman’s Magazine, quoted,xi,lviiiGeorge II., Acts of,54-120George III., Acts of,121Gladstone, Mr., his speech in 1880, quoted,xcivGloucestershire, Petition from,84Grafton, Duke of, Lord Lieutenant, 1723, his speech from the throne,27Grattan’s Life of Grattan,lixGrattan, partly educated at St. Michael le Pole’s,lxxxix"his College Course and early contests with Fitzgibbon,xcGraziers prosperous under cattle and wool trade,xciiGreat Britain, Sums remitted to, from Ireland, in pensions and salary, double the whole of Irish Trade,81“Groves of Blarney,” Verse of,xxxiH.Habeas Corpus for Ireland, Heads of Bills for, cushioned in England,159"carried in ’82,lxxxi, noteHaliday Collection, R. I. Academy,xxix, note,liv, noteHalifax, Lord Lieutenant, his speech from the throne, 1762,44Hardy, his Life of Lord Charlemont,lviHarris, his Life of William III. quoted,13Haughton, Dr., Senior Lecturer, quoted,xxxii, noteHearth Money,75-151Herrings from Waterford and Wexford prohibited by England,85Hertford, Lord Lieutenant, his speech from the throne,50Hessians, The, refused by Irish Parliament,lxi, noteHibernian Journal,xviiiHindostan, Trade of, by foreigners,cxiiHistorical Manuscripts Commission Report,xvii, noteHingston, Mr., his catalogue of the College Plate; in charge of the plate at South Kensington Exhibition,xxix, noteHistorian, no professed, of Ireland, since 1669,23Homer, quoted,cxiv,127Hours of Examination in College formerly,xxHouse of Commons Journal, quoted,xliHusbandry, Grants for, prove the poverty of the country,35Hutchinson, Rt. Hon. John Hely, Provost, &c.,ixhis Matriculation,xmention of, in College Calendar; his career and numerous appointments,ximade Provost by Sir John Blacquiere, Chief Secretary,xxxiiand the price of the appointment,x-xivaccused of a corrupt use of the office,xxitrampled on Duigenan,xxichallenged Dr. Doyle, Lucas, and Tisdall,xxxiiprosecuted in King’s Bench and defended himself,xxxviiia warm supporter of Grattan,lixinculpated before a Parliamentary Committee, and acquitted,levidence brought forward there concerning him,lxvMiller’s Pamphlet on, and Young’s,livLord North’s saying about him,lxHardy’s, Grattan’s, Taylor’s, Will’s, Barre’s, Pery’s, and Single Speech Hamilton’s favourable opinions of him, &c.,lvipublished the “Commercial Restraints”,lxiventertained the Lord Lieutenant in the College,lxvhis liberal and national politics,lxviithe constitutional changes which he witnessed and helped to produce,lxviiiread the King’s message to the Irish Parliament in 1782,lxxxivhis death and will,lxxxivhis family,lxxvia good husband and father,xxxihis love for his children,lxxxviiihis likeness by Sir Joshua Reynolds,Frontispiece


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