'^ London AND Londonderry TRANSACTIONS OF Three Centuries Considered from a Historical and Legal Stardpoint m Bis d^ l,*>^-^a Return this book on or before the Latest Date stamped below. A charge is made on all overdue books. U. of I. Library Mriv; [1 > .- 60 11148-S London AND Londonderry TRANSACTIONS OF Three Centuries Considered from a Historical and Legal Standpoint ' Sic vos fion vobis " %ont>on: ^ MARCUS WARD & CO., LIMITED ORIEL HOUSE, FARRINGDON STREET, E.C. AND AT ROYAL ULSTER WORKS, BELFAST 1890 ..^l i PREFACE. "P^ARLIAMENTARY discussions and press references -*- to the matters dealt with in this treatise, have not hitherto furnished to the pubh'c the material on which any well-considered opinions could be based. Favourable opportunities have been availed of for investigating the many vo)uminous records which contain all that can be considered historical on the subject ; and the result of a very close investigation is now given in the most condensed form, compatible with lucidity. Many current statements, though of importance, have been excluded, becau.'^e not contained in the records referred to, and care has been taken to keep within the accurate limitations indicated in the title. J. C. W. Belfast, April, i8go. 1 5?8I4 LONDON AND LONDONDERRY. SECTION I. THE GOLDEN AGE OF THE PLANTATION. In 1608, the greater part of six counties in the province of Occasion of Ulster, viz., Donegal, Fermanagh, Cavan, Tyrone, Armagh, and Coleraine, had, upon the attainder of the Roman Catholics in the recent rebellions (that of O'Neill and O'Donnell, and that of O'Dogherty), escheated to and were then absolutely vested in King James I. in right of his Crown ; and about that year King James, with the advice of his Privy Council, was desirous of planting a settlement of his Protestant subjects on the escheated lands,('z) His Majesty's object being to secure the peace and welfare of Ulster by establishing and securing the Protestant religion there, and replacing the rebellious Irish by English and Scotch settlers, together with such of the natives • as might be willing to conform to the English religion and English customs. In pursuance of this design a collection of Orders and Orders and Conditions were issued by the Privy Council,!') addressed 1^8.'"°"^ to all undertakers. In the preamble it is stated that the King, " of his princely bounty, not respecting his own profit, " but the peace and welfare of that kingdom, by the civil ^^ plantation of those waste and unreformed countries, is " graciously pleased to distribute the said lands to such of Qualifications " his subjects, as well of Great Britain as of Ireland, as ° "" ^'" '^ '^'^^ {a) Skinners' Company v. Irish Society ; Case for Respondents, the Mayor and Commonalty and Citizens of London, p. 3 ; Appendix to Case for Respon- dents, p. 148. (/') Appendix to Case for Respondents, pp. 146-149. 6 London and Londonderry. "being of merit and ability shall seek the same, with " a mind not only to benefit themselves, but to do service "to the Crown and Commonwealth," aqd complains that some are importunate for too large portions, "intend- " ing their private profit only." Three classes of under- takers were recognised — ist, Those who were to plant with English and Scotch tenants ; 2nd, Servitors or Military undertakers; 3rd, Native Irish to be admitted as Free- holders. The chief difference in these three classes was in The Kin- s the quit-rent reserved to the King, ;^5 6s. 8d. per 1,000 ""'^' acres for the first class, and for the second where they plant with English and Scotch tenants ; ^8 for the second class where they leave the Irish tenants; and £\o 133. 4d. for the third class. All were required to have strong places and arms for military defence, to let their lands on the easy rent of undertakers, to avoid Irish exactions, and to be resi- dent. None were permitted to accept as tenants the " mere" Irish. A most important provision was that in each of the counties there should be a convenient number of market towns, and corporations for tradesmen and artificers, and at least one free school in every county for the education of youth in learning and religion. Authority was given to all but the third class to create manors, and the British under- takers were offerad the privilege of importing from Great Britain for three years, free of custom, everything requisite for placing the plantation on a satisfactory footing. In July, 1609, Commissioners were appointed, with instruc- First Survey, tious to survcy the cscheated lands, and divide them into convenient parcels,(«) allocating suitable sites for towns. From these it is evident that to promote the general interests of the whole realm was the King's object, not the private profit of the undertakers. I'roposais for As early as 1609, the King showed great anxiety that tlie Londoners ,^r/-. Settlement. the Couuty of Colcrame should be undertaken by the City of London, probably thinking that powerful Corporation better fitted than individual undertakers to attempt the [a) Appendix to Case for Kespondcnt.s, p. 149. The Golden Age of the Plantation. 7 most important and difficult part of the work ; for from the first he meant this county to form the kernel of the whole Plantation, as furnishing the easiest means of communication with Great Britain. Accordingly, proposals were made in His Majesty's name about 1st July, 1609, through the then Lord Mayor, that the Corporation should undertake the task of restoring the city of Derry and the town of Coleraine, and planting the rest of the county with undertakers/^) These proposals were supported by a printed copy of Motives and " Motives and Reasons to induce the City of London to " undertake the Plantation in the North of Ireland." (''') These included the ofier of the customs for twenty-one years at 6s. 83. per annum, the fisheries of the Bann and the Foyle, free licence to export wares grown on their own lands, and the admiralty of Tyrconnell and Coleraine. To this was added a glowing description of the commodities for food, manufactures, and commerce yielded by the North of Ireland, its sea and rivers ; and the profits held out to London were summed up in the following all- important statement : — " If multitudes of men were employed proportion- "ally to these commodities which might be there by " industry attained, many thousands would be set on work " to the great service of the King, strength of his realm, " advancement of several trades, and benefit of particular "persons, whom the infinite increasing greatness (that "often doth minister occasion of ruin to itself) of this " city might not only conveniently spare, but also reap a " singular commodity by easing themselves of an insupport- " able burthen which so surcharged all the parts of the city " that one tradesman can scarce live by another, which in all " probability would be a means also and preserve the city "from infection; and by consequence the whole kingdom, "of necessity, must have recourse thither, which persons " pestered or closed up together can neither otherwise or " very hardly avoid. (a) Case for Appellants, p. 2 ; Appendix, &c. , p. 150. {b) Ibid. pp. 150^152. 8 London and Londonderry. Advantages held out to the City of London. No individual personal gain offered. " These colonies may be a means to utter infinite com- " modities from London, to furnish the whole North of " Ireland, which may be transported by means of the rivers "of Bann and Lough Foyle into the counties of Coleraine, " Donegal, Tyrone, Armagh,' and Antrim." As a further spur to the City to undertake this " pious " and patriotic purpose," and in particular to restore the city of Derry, the example of Dublin, restored by the citizens of Bristol in the reign of Henry II., is cited for their imitation. From all this, bearing in mind that the Orders and Conditions for undertakers of the previous year must be held binding on the Londoners as well (except as subse- quently modified, e.g.., in the amount of the quit-rent), it is evident that the following were the advantages offered to the City, viz. : — 1st. An abundant supply of raw material for their manu- factures, with the advantage of procuring these under favourable conditions. 2nd. A large supply of articles to create a profitable commerce. 3rd. An extensive and convenient market for their wares of all kinds (infinite coniniodities ). 4th. The relief of the City from over-population, and the establishment of the surplus in circumstances where they could have an easy livelihood. There is not the slightest hint as to the acquisition of personal gain by any individual member of the Corpora- tion, or by the members generally(«) (which may have been one reason why strong pressure was required, and in the case of the Companies actual threats). In fact, the easy rents of undertakers, taken in connection with the forced levies afterwards raised, negatives such a supposition, and the mention of benefit of the particular persons who were to be settled on the lands (that is, the future tenants) con- clusively proves that direct personal gain was not intended (a) Sec Case of the Mayor, S:c., of London, p. 4. The Golden Age of the Plantation. 9 for any others. But the benevolent and patriotic inten- tions of His Majesty have been sadly eluded, as the after history will show. On 1st July, 1609, the Court of Aldermen (the Legis- xheCompanies lative of the Corporation, as the Court of Common Council city to is the Executive) sent a precept to each of the Companies ""^ertake. desiring them to appoint representatives to consider on what terms they would be willing to undertake, and to report by 5th July.('') A similar precept was issued on 14th July, requiring the Companies to give in their answer in writing.(''') Their answer displeased the Lords of the Privy Council (in other words, they refused to undertake), as we see by the report of the Court of Aldermen, i8th July, in which the City appoint a Committee of their own The City take "to treat and confer concerning the Plantation, and to ignoring the " make report to the Lord Mayor and Court of Aldermen "(0 h° Comprn°is. (not to the Companies or to their Committee). On July 22nd, after the report, a precept was issued to the Com- panies requiring them to ascertain " what every particular "man will willingly adventure j'^'^) and on 24th July, a further order was issued requiring the Companies to have a full meeting to ascertain what each man " will willingly " CONTRIBUTE to the furtherance of so noble a project," and requiring absent members to be noted, in order that they might hQ fined for contempt. On 1st August, 1609, the Court of Common Council Viewers appointed four viewers to "survey the place and grounds " intended for the new Plantation, and to make report to this " Cityy^^) These gentlemen having made their report, a further Committee was appointed to confer with them on 2nd December,!/) and on 15th December the Court of Com- mon Council approved of certain demands to be made on behalf of the City.C?) what money should be expended, what (a) Appendix to Case for Respondents, p. 152. (b) Ibid. pp. 152, 153. (<-) Ibid. p. 153. (d) Pleadings in Chancery, Skinners' Company v. Irish Society, pp. 455, 456. (e) Ibid. pp. 458, 459. (/) Case for Appellants, in the Lords, pp. 47, 48. [g) Ibid. pp. 48, ^g. behalf of tlie City, lo Londo7i and Londonderry. things should be performed, and how all should be ordered. The money proposed to be expended was ^15,000, to be raised "/« the Companies by the poll according to the corn " rate," some inferior Companies to be spared, but not the ij.mands on able vieii in them. The demands were, in addition to what the King had already offered, the woods of Glenconkene and Killetrovve for building, with church patronage, and the rents of the 7,000 acres (4,000 for Derry and 3,000 for Coleraine) to be 53s. 4d., or about one-fifteenth of that required of ordinary undertakers, with restrictions on exports, save by licence from the city officers of Uerry and Coleraine, and certain further liberties, with forces for defence maintained at the King's charge. What was to be done was to build 200 houses at Derry and leave room for 300 more, and to build 100 at Coleraine and leave room for 200 more, and to make fortifications for defence. The management was proposed to be by means of a Committee constituted in London (afterwards the Irish Society). On December 22nd, ^5,000 more was voted for the "clearing of " private men's interests."('') By agreement of 28th January, '1C09 (16 10), with the Privy Council, the demands were conceded with slight modifications, the chief being to require sixty houses at D^rry and forty at Coleraine, to be finished by ist November following, and the rest of the houses by ist November, 161 !.(''') On 9th January, a pre- cept was issued to the Companies by the Lord Mayor in Common Council for the immediate levying of ^^5,000, the first instalment of the ;^20,ODO.(') On 19th March, 161 1, a precept was issued for the levying of the residue.!*^) The precept of 9th January terminated with the significant words — "Wherein you are not to fail, as you will answer " the contrary." 1 hcse precepts Now, it is worthy of note that these two latter precepts, n t.ixdiioit, not . , , ^ , . . _ . , . a proposal for With numcrous othcrs for the raismg of further sums of apurciias:. money, are not by way of invitation to purchase, but {a) Case for Appellants, in the Lords, p. 49. (l>) Ibid. pp. 51, 52. (<•) Ibid. p. SQ {d) Ibid. pp. 53, 54. The Golden Age of the Plantation. 1 1 authoritative and peremptory. The levies were in fact a tax, and a tax not to be levied on the Companies, but in the Companies. This was then the regular method of raising money for any and every public purpose. The Corporation, either receiving notice from the King what amount was required from the City, or themselves resolving on some taxation for a municipal or othcf public object, apportioned the taxation among the different Companies, requiring each to raise its quota among its own members. No other method would then have been so convenient, as every burgess was required to be a member of some one or other of the Guilds or Companies ; and over these Com- panies the Corporation of London exercised a sway, both legislative and executive, that was practically absolute. In proof of this, we find members and officers of the Com- panies fined, expelled, or committed to prison by orders of the Courts of Aldermen and Common Council,'"^) the corn rate assessed on all the Companies,!''') soldiers raised and ships ordered to be built,(^)and the expenses of State page- antry{<^) levied by the same authority. This fact is of itself sufficient to refute the claim that the lands in County Derry were " purchased " by the twelve Companies and their asso- ciates, as some of them had the hardihood to allege in their returns to the " City of London Liveries Commission " in 1882, even after the decision of the House of Lords in 1839, in the case of the Skinners' Company v. the Irish Society. Indeed, the very word "taxation" occurs in one of the precepts, and Mr. Kindersley, for the Irish Society, in 1838, strongly maintained and proved by the facts of the case and numerous other instances that it was taxation, compelling the Companies to be "volunteers," as they style themselves. The Companies allege that the City were their " agents " in the whole transaction, but it is a .\ strange forr.-. curious kind of agency where the "agents" compel their ° ' -^"'^•' principals to disburse sums of money, threatening them ((z) Appendix to Case for Respondents, pp. 452, 453, (b) Ibid. pp. 453, 454 (<■) Ibid. pp. 455-457- (.d) Ibid, pp 457-458- 1 2 London and Londonderry. with penalties if they refuse. A slave-driver would, on this principle, be the " agent " of the slaves he whips, or a rack- renter the " agent " of the tenants from whom he exacts his rents. By decree of Common Council, loth July, 9th James I. (161 1), .£^20,000 more was levied by the same " agents,"(«) but liberty was in this instance offered to the Companies to decline paying their quota, if they were content to lose their previous contributions. Two minor Companies ac- cepted this alternative, and their shares were transferred to the Corporation of London. On the 14th January, 1610 (161 1), power was given by the Common Council to the Committee of the Corporation (afterwards the Irish Society) to divide the lands among the Companies that were willing to accept them, "and so "to build and plant the same" [the Plantation] ''at their " own cost and charges accordingly, as by the Printed Book of " Plantation is reqnircd.'\i') (That is, the lands were not to be granted as the private property of the Companies.) The alternative The alternative offered by the Lord Mayor was "that ° '■"'''^' • " you will refer the letting and disposing thereof to the " Governor and Committee." By the 28th February, eight of the principal Companies had expressed their willingness to accept the lands, and the other four afterwards consented also. Answers to the In 1610, Certain propositions were submitted to the Privy epiity. (Council from the Lord Deputy, Sir Arthur Chichester, to which answers were returned, including the following points : — (2) " The Londoners are to plant their lands as "other undertakers do, excepting the special privileges "excepted in the Articles. (25) The Londoners ^x& first to "provide habitations for such poor and necessary men as " they draw thither for their business, and afterwards to let "for such rents as shall be fitting as well for the good of the " Plantation as for some valuable rent (THE CHARGE CON- " SIDERED), the Londoners ahv ays performing the Articles of (a) Case for Appellants, in the Lords, p. 57. (/■) Ibid. p. 55. The Golden Age oj the Plantation. i 3 " Plantation!^'') It would appear from this that the sub- scribers were intended to recoup themselves for their outlay, but this was never done ; the Companies, when they obtained the lands, adding all the proceeds to their cor- porate funds, instead of repaying their members who had been taxed. The King always continued to display the anxiety for Ti <• King's the welfare of the tenants (then future) that appears from goo'aof the this 25th Answer (a good example, which appears to have '"^"^"'s. been uniformly followed by Charles I., but to have gone into disuse afterwards), and therefore was in no hurry to grant the Charter, and have the lands finally assigned, until the preliminary conditions were fulfilled. His caution was fully justified, even at this early period. In 1612 a letter was sent to the King, seemingly by Sir shortcomings Thomas Phillips,(' ) which stated, " They should have built Londoners. " before this at the Derrie 200 houses, and now there are " not 20." " The Londoners, seeking manifestly their own " private advantage, neglect the common good, and convert " much timber to merchantable uses." The scire facias will prove this last charge true. On the 2ist December, 1612, the King wrote to Sir A. jhe Kings Chichester, quoting these complaints, stating, " If there ''^"^'■' '^■^■ " were no reason of State to press it forward, yet we would " pursue and efifect that work with the same earnestness, " merely for the goodness and morality of it, esteeming the "settling of religion, the introducing of civility, order, and " government among a barbarous and unsubjected people, " to be the acts of piety and glory, and worthy also a " Christian Prince to endeavour;" and after giving numerous directions, he concluded — " Once again we do strictly "enjoin you to give us a faithful account of the trust which " we repose in you, without care or fear to displease any of "our subjects, English or Scottish, of what quality soever. "M (a) Hill's Plantation in Ulster, pp. 407, 415. (//) Ibid. p. 420. (c) Case for Respondenls, the Irish Society, p. 22 ; Plendings in Ch.incery, P- 519- r'lantntion purposes. 14 London and Londonderry. Tiie Charter of This letter probably produced good effects for the moment. Kinsf lames I. . .. . ■■«■ , ^ » /* r^t At all events, on 29th March, 1013, the first Charter was granted, r.ot to the Coinpauies, which had never yet been men- tioned by the King or his advisers, but to the Irish Society, as representing the Corporation of the City of London for Plantation purposes. The preamble enumerates the "piotis " and patyiotic purposes" which the King had in view, and credits the Mayor, Commonalty, and Citizens of London with a " flagrant zeal to promote this our pious intention," and with having made progress therein. («^ The Charter then directs the formation of the County of Londonderry, then first so named, defines the jurisdiction of Derry and Coleraine, and incorporates the City under a specified government, subject to the Irish Society, which is con- incorporation stituted and incorporated " for the better ordering, direct- Socii^ty for " iHg, and governing all and all manner of things for and "concerning the City and Citizens of Londonderry afore- " said, and the aforesaid County of Londonderry, and the " Plantation to be made within the same City and County " of Londonderry, and other businesses belonging to the " same.'V) giving the Society power to purchase and hold in fee, for these purposes, lands, goods, &c., in England or in Ireland, to have a common seal, and to sue or be sued.W It al.so nominates the first members, and provides for the election of half their number (except the Governor and the Recorder of London) each year.<'0 Several formal pro- i..in(!sgrartid. visions follow, and then comes the grant of the lands, Timber .,,, rT »*»!• r r-> reserved for mcludmg the barouy of Loughmshohn, taken from Co, purposes'"///)'. Tyrone, and a grant of the timber of Glenconkene and Killetragh only for the Plantation, " and the building of " Houses and Edifices, . . . and to be spent towards " other necessary uses of our aforesaid realm in Ireland, (li) C.ise for Respondents, the Irish Society, p. 22. (/') -Appendix to Case for Respondents, pp. 224, 225 ; C.ise for Respondents, the Irish Society, p. 22. ((■) .\ppendix to Case for Respondents, p. 269 ; Case for Respondents, the Irish Society, p. 24. ((/) .Appendix, &c., p. 220; Case, &c., |i. 24. The (j olden Age. of Ihe P lanlaiion. i 5 " . . . and not for any other causes to be merchandized "and sold."(«) The fisheries of the Foyle and the Bann to Lough Neagh are also granted/''') and covenants of further assurance are added. Power is also granted to create manors and establish manor courts.(') Some minor privi- leges are also granted — some temporary, some perpetual — and some specified duties, military and ecclesiastical, are ' imposed. On the face of this Charter it is evident that the Irish ihe iriih Society were in no sense intended to be beneficiaries from 'uu^.Jt^u^r^ this grant, but merely Trustees for public purposes. This ''"J.''"^^^^ is proved, not merely by the specific duties imposed on them, but by the following all-important considerations : — 1st, The Society were incorporated and received their powers for Plantation purposes only; 2nd, The timber granted them was forbidden to be made matter of mer- chandise, being reserved for Plantation purposes, and other necessary uses in Ireland. In this latter respect, therefore, the duties were more extensive than the delegated authority. (The supposition that they were trustees for the Companies, as afterwards alleged by the Skinners' Company, is unworthy of serious consideration, for the Companies had not yet been mentioned by the Crown.) It must be added that all the Crown proposals previously are to be taken along with the Charter, which refers back to them, viz., the Orders and Conditions, the Motives and Reasons, and the xArticles of Agreement with the Privy Council. It has been shown before that these do not include but exclude private or individual gain. The Charter to the town of Coleraine, June 28th, 161 3, in no way modifies any of the trusts. After a view of the lands by two plenipotentiaries appointed by the Court of Common Council,^ Messrs. Smithies and Springham, the lands were divided among the (a) Appendix to Case for Respondents, p. 269. (h) Ihid. p. 254. (c) Ibid. pp. 274, 277-278, &c. (d\ Case for the Respondents, the Irish Society, pp. 23, 24. s i6 Londtm and Londonderry. twelve Companies by Act of Common Council, December i/tb, 1613, the ferries, fisheries, and town lands (of Derry and Coleraine) being reserved for the management of the Irish Societ}', in accordance with the recommendation of the viewers.('0 Kurthcr The King still observed his praiseworthy caution. The the Londoners. Conditions imposed on the undertakers, especially that prescribing the easy rent of undertakers, and those for completing with due speed the buildings of Derry and Coleraine, were systematically neglected, and the policy of "grab-all" (to use the words of Mr. Lea, M.P., 1889) was begun by the Companies. This is proved by the letter of Mr. G. Canning, agent for the Ironmongers' Company, in May, 161 5 (besides other evidence) — "Here are some English " and Scotch which are willing to deal with me for some of "your townlands, and hardly any of the English comes to " the rents they are now at, if tliey build at their oivn charge" (a condition not warranted by the King's grant) " If the natives do depart from off the City lands, the prices " will doubtless fall. I desire to be fully instructed upon " what conditions and covenants I may safely set part of "your lands to the natives."!^') In the summer of 161 5 Sir Josias Bodley was sent to report on the state of Ulster. His report was most unfavourable,(''') and gave rise to King King James' James' letter to Sir A. Chichester, 31st August, 161 5, 15. (jjj.g(,t.jng ^ ^g^ survey by Sir J. Bodley, and that the Londoners and all other planters be required to repair their defects and omissions, concluding with the following postscript /;/ the Kings own hand: — " My Lord, in this " service I expect that zeal and uprightness from you, that " you will spare no flesh, English nor Scotch, for no private " man's worth is able to counterbalance the particular " safety of a kingdom, which this Plantation, being well " accomplished, will procure."^' ) (a) C^sL- for Respondents, the Irish .Society, pp. 24-25 (l>) Hill's Plantation in Ulster, p. 449. (<■) Cn^e for Respondents, the Irish Society, p. 27. rhe* Golden Age of the Plantation. \ y This letter, and the subsequent investigation in 1616, Licence to hold 1 ,- . ■ . , T , • 1 /- in i '" Mortmain. must have frightened the Londoners into a better fulnlment of their duties for the time, for, on 30th September, 1616, the King granted a licence to the twelve Companies to hold in mortmain whatever lands, &c., the Irish Society or others should be iviUing to grant to them. In the preamble they are praised in a measure for what they have already done " to effect and bring to end the said pious and worthy "work."(") This was followed by grants from the Irish Society to Grants by the the twelve Companies of the lands allotted to them, by t" the erecting manors and then granting feoffments. (This was Companies, changed into a lease and re-lease after the new charter of Charles II.)(''') All the grants, and the new ones in the reign of Charles II., contained a reservation of the timber and other building materials, as well as the rights of fish- ing, fowling, hunting, and hawking.W and some, but not all, reserved a quit-rent, and all contained a reservation of a right of re-entry if the conditions of the grant were violated. That the Companies were, and were intended to be, TheCompanies Trustees is clearly proved— ist. By the fact that the licence ^'""^'^^^■ only permitted them to receive from the Irish Society what the Society should be zvilling to grant, &c. ; i.e., they were not given a right to claim anything whatever, they were not treated as having made a purchase, as they now assert. 2nd, The Irish Society imposed on them the conditions of the Plantation, reserving not merely what the Charter required to be reserved, but several other rights and privileges. 3rd (perhaps most important of all). The Irish Society were themselves Trustees (as has been proved above), and therefore could not convey the lands freed from the Trusts ; they could not, in fact, grant more than they (a) Case for Respondents, the Irish Society, p. 28. Appendix to Case for Respondents, pp. 327, &c. (b) Case for Respondents, the Irish Society, p. 28. (c) Appendix to Case for Respondents, pp. 335, 338 ; Case for Appellants, in the Lords, pp. 264, 270, 275, 280, 285-286, 289, 293-294, 299, 305, 310. B 1 8 London and Londonderry. • themselves possessed, and they actually granted less, reserving certain specified powers for the benefit of the Plantation. 4th, The Companies themselves implicitly recognised their fiduciary position, when underletting, by requiring their undertenants to perform the conditions of the Plantation,(<') and all covenants made with, and regu- lations of, the Irish Society. TheLondoners Full particulars of the proceedings of the Londoners for transgressing, the next eight years are not preserved, but there is abun- dant evidence that they again showed themselves more anxious for their personal gain than for the fulfilment of the trusts committed to them. We find in this interval the Irish Society beginning in 1623 the evil practice of dividing the "surplus" of the "undivided estate " among the Companies. This was at first probably under the mis- taken notion of recouping the contributories for the tax laid upon them (which was augmented from time to time, as we find in the days of Charles I. the amount expended on the Plantation by the City variously estimated from ;^ 1 30,000 to iJ" 1 50,000) ; but as the Companies added the money to their corporate funds, never repaying one farthing to their members that were taxed, this was sheer robbery of the Plantation. But we find that in 1620 an infor- mation was laid against the Londoners for neglect to carry out the works required, and that sequestration was granted.!''') This does not appear to have been enforced, but it is important as proving the proceedings under Charles I. not to have been arbitrary, as has been sometimes alleged. Again, in 1624, 2nd June, there were read at a Court of Common Council complaints from the Privy Council of defects in the work done, one item being that the 4,000 acres had not been laid to Derry and the 3,000 to Cole- raine as required ;(<") and the Common Council had the audacity to reply (in the teeth of the Articles of Agree- (a) Appendix to Case for Respondents, p. 328, in lease to II. Gary from the Skinners' Company. {/') Appendix to Case for Respondents, p. 132. (<■) Case for .-\ppellants, in the Lords, p. 77. TJue Golden Age of the Plantation. 1 9 ment) that they were not bound to pass the 4,000 acres, but had in favour allotted 1,500, and would allot more to houses as they should be built, and they admitted that Coleraine had received only 500 acres.i*^) That is, the two towns had hQcn plundered of part of their lands since 1616, for in that year Messrs. Probie and Springham certified that Derry had already to the Mayor and houses 3,217 acres, and for a free school 300 acres, and that Coleraine had 1,826 acres, with Sir Randall M'Donnell's promise to make this up to 2,260 acres.('^) With this terminated the efforts of King James to keep The first the Irish Society and the Companies in the path of duty charies i. towards the Plantation. The reign of his successor, Charles I., was more stirring, and the leading transac- tions are of transcendent importance for the present day. Articles senf: by His Majesty's special direction from the Privy Council were read at a meeting of Common Council on 27th May, 1625, of which the following are of special significanccC-^) " (9) The lands to be past, some in free- " hold, some in leases for lives, and none for years certain, " thereby debarring them from transferring their estates to " other men, and so depart from their holdings and from the " kingdom, we wish the rent were made certain by the acre, "according to the goodness thereof. (13) That every of the " twelve Companies do make six freeholders of one Balliboe" {i.e. 60 acres) "at least upon every portion, and ten lease- " holders for lives to whom they are to set lands, to the free- '^ holders for ninepence English the acre, and to the leases for " tiuelvepence the like money, so as they cannot resume or reserve " as much as shall serve for the freeholders and leaseholders at " the rent aforesaid . . . the rest of their lands they may " set for lives to the natives who are conformable in religion " withus.and shall take the oath of allegiance and supremacy, " learn our language, wear our fashion of apparel, and resort (a) Case for Appellants, in the Lords, p. 78. (/') Hid. p. 76. [c) Case for Appellants, in the Lords, p. 80 ; Appendix to Case for Respon<:ents, p. So. 20 LondoJi and Londonderry. Fair Rent Fixed. " to our churches . . . cind for this favour ihcy may be " iudjici'd to doiiblc their nuts, as other undertakers %vho have " broken titcir condition of Plantation are to dj." We have here the principle of a fixed fair rent laid down plainly, showincf that this is not an innovation of the nineteenth century, but a partial restoration of the original objects of the Crown. To tlie gth the Common Council answered that it was at present impracticable, but would be obeyed as soon as circumstances allowed.(") To the 13th it was answered that the freeholders were already established as required, and the leaseholders on one estate at rents less than that commanded ; that the other Companies could not obey at present, having let their lands at long terms, but would obey when practicable ; and it was petitioned that they should not be required to charge the conforming natives the double rent.C^') [A strange case indeed, land- lords anxious (seemingly) to obtain low rents ! ! ! None of the Companies have shown such anxiety in recent times.] The transgressions of the Irish Society and of the Companies appear to have continued as before, for in 163 1(') an information was laid in the Court of Star Chamber by the Attorney-General for repealing the Charter [on grounds mentioned in the Judgment of the Star Chamber and the scire facias (to be afterwards quoted)] against the Corporation of the City of London. A second information'^) was laid in 1632, joining the Irish Society, on which a fine of ^^70,000 was imposed, and the letters patent of March 161 3 ordered to be cancelled. The estates not being surrendered, a third informationW was laid, in which the Companies also were joined, and a commission of inquiry into the lands, &c., was issued out of the Court of The judgment Exchequer. A writ oi scire facias w&s a\so \ss,ug6. out of Chamber and ^^^ Court of Chancery, and judgment given in Hilary, 1637 \h<:icin'/adas. (q\^ Style), that the letters patent of 29th March, 161 3, and [a) Case for Appellants, in the Lords, p. 80. (/') Jlu'd. p. Si. (f) Case for Appellants, p. 13 ; Apjiendix to Case for Respondents, p. 136. [d) Appendix to Case for Respondents, p. 136 ; Case for Appellants, p. 14. {e) Appendix, &:c., p. 136 ; Case for Appellants, p. 14. The three informations in the Star Chamber. Ike Golden Age of the Plantation. 2 i the enrolment thereof, be cancelled and annulled/") and the premises granted to the Irish Society seized into the hands of the King. Technically speaking, the judgment of scire facias and ri eciiarges that of the Court of Star Chamber are two distinct docu- Corporation of ments ; but in dealing with the same subject-matter, and in J-ondon, the , Irish society, their practical legal effect, they are one, and as such must be and thetwche here considered. The charges they bring against the Lon- in the two' doners, and for which they declare the Charter annulled, and J^'^g™^"'''- the estates estreated, are chiefly the following: — ist, Unduly and deceitfully obtaining the letters patent, "under pretence "of a due oteervance of the articles ;"('''.' 2nd, Obtaining more land tfian it was the King's intention to grant('^J (97,000 acres of fertile land, instead of 27,000), the rents mentioned being "one hundred and ninety-three pounds, ■"eight shillings and fourpence, and no more;"(') 3rd, The neglecting to plant with English and inland Scots, and illegally leaving many of the "mere Irish" (names being given) in possession of the lands ;('/) 4th, Rack-renting of an atrocious type. " Their Agents ... do still continue "the natives upon the said Plantation, and paid the Fines ^' imposed upon them, according to the said Proclamation, for " not departing from the British undertaken Lands, because " they luoiild give greater Rents for tlic said Lands than the " British zccre able to make and live upon, and did prefer the " Irish before the English, because they pretended they were " more serviceable unto them, by which means, AND BY THEIR "EXCESSIVE RAISING THE RENTS FROM FORTY SHILLINGS "AND FIFTY SHILLINGS A BALLIBOE, UNTO TEN POUNDS, "TNVELVE POUNDS, AND TWENTY POUNDS AND THIRTY ■" POUNDS A BALLIBOE, the English were and are much dis- ■" heartened, and the natives do far exceed the British, &c.;"('') («) Appen0 "per annum,"(''') which, at .;^5 6s. 8d. per 1,000 acres, would make the total amount of arable land 30,000 acres only. Pynnar's survey, on behalf of the Crown, in 1618-1619, gives the amount of arable land for each of the twelve Companies 3,210 acres.O) or 38,520 acres in all. Now this was six years after the grant of the Charter, and three years after the licence to hold in mortmain, so it is evidence only as to the land then in possession of the Companies. While confirming the scire facias, therefore, as to the fact, it does not disprove it as to the extent of the fraud. But the fact is all that is required to justify the charge. The third charge, of neglecting to plant with English and inland Scotch, and leaving many of the mere Irish in possession, is proved by the fact of its never having been denied, and by the letter of Mr. G. Canning before referred to.{'^) The charge of rack-renting, with its results and objects, never having been denied, must be taken as proved from the very silence of the accused. It is confirmed, moreover, by the letter of the accuser of 16 12, "for which they " already receive near hand i^2,6oo per annum, which will " daily increase,"^ and is at all events rendered credible by {a) Si ire /at/as, .\ppendix, &c., p. 419. (/') Hill's riantation in Ulster, p. 421. (c) Ihid. jip. 576-579, 5S1-587. (1/) Ibid. p. 443. ((.') //'/(/. p. 421. The Golden Age of the Plantation. -D the subsequent rack-renting (of which evidence will be furnished later on), and by the reply of inability to execute King Charles' 13th order in full. This is a strange way of fulfilling the promise made to the King in 1C25 to charge the freeholders only ninepence English per acre, and the leaseholders only twelvepence, the natives (conforming; paying only double, especially on the part of gentlemen who were anxious not to be required to exact such high rents from the native tenants ! ! ! No wonder cynical critics speak of the age of hypocritical cant as already set in. Of course the enormity of this offence can only be, realized by taking together the King's 13th order for rents varying from ninepence per acre to two shillings at most, the reply promising compliance, and the fact stated in the judgment of Star Chamber {a fact never denied), of rents being raised from forty and fifty shillings a Balliboe to as high as even thirty pounds. This proved an enticing example for I lie darker age that followed. The fifth charge is also proved by the absence of denial, Thesp( liation and corroborated by the fact that the woods/ have com- '^ ^^ ""^ ^' pletely disappeared long since. But apart altogether from the question whether all the Tiie Kings charges were well founded, there was nothing arbitrary or Siot'aTbi'trary, unjust in the King's resuming a grant, given subject to'"^''"^'- trusts, which had been either violated or inefficiently executed. This is proved — ist, By the necessity under which King James I. was of interfering by the strongest threats to compel the grantees to fulfil their engagements ; 2nd, By the information and sequestration of 1620. Of course this sequestration was not actually carried out ; because the King, in his tenderness for the interests of the tenants, did not wish to punish the delinquents, but to hold it over them in tcrrorem to compel them to greater activity and faithfulness in the future ; 3rd, By the claims made on behalf of the Crown by the Attorney-General in iSsS.^'^) In fact, the action of Charles I. was simply resuming a con- («) Case for the Responclenls ; Case of the Attorney-General, pp. lo, II. 26 London and Londonderry. ditional grant from the Crown, the conditions of which had been grossly and systematically violated by the grantees. The close of With the energetic proceedings of King Charles I. and Age. his advisers, the earnestness of the Crown to compel the fulfilment of the trusts, or exact the penalty in case of failure, abruptly ceases. Henceforth, for a period of not much less than two centuries, " Ichabod — the glory is " departed " may be written of the action of the Crown. The Corporation of London were already in a dead sleep, as far as controlling the Companies was concerned, while their deputed representatives — the Irish Society — had shown many strong indications of the vices and weakness of the period of the Babylonish Captivity. The Babylonish Captivity. 27 SECTION II. THE BABYLONISH CAPTIVITY. The rc-grant by Oliver Cromwell in 1650 need not be dealt with, as it was treated as a nullity after the Restoration ; but in 1662 a fresh Charter was granted by Charles II., of which The Charter of ,, . . . , . , ^. f Charles II. an inspexiimis copy in 1665 is in existence, a translation 01 which was put in in evidence in the case of the Skinners' Company v. the Irish Society. The preamble of this Charter, after referring to that of James I., and mentioning the judgments, and the consequent resumption of the lands, refers to an intention of Charles I. to restore the letters patent of James I. exactly as they stood before the legal proceedings. This intention the new Charter purports to carry into effect. There are some variations between the two Charters, which are of two classes : — ist, Merely tem- porary arrangements, whether of definite privileges, such as the more particular control of the city of Derry by the Irish Society for ten years, or of express trusts already completed, such as the maintenance of Culmore Fort for a definite period (for which a fixed and permanent money payment was now substituted), are omitted ; and, 2nd, Temporary trusts or privileges unexpired are appointed for such shortened period as will cover the period contem- plated in 161 3. (Besides, greater powers of government are in some cases reserved to the Crown.) All this only proves the care taken by Charles II. and his advisers to restore matters exactly as they stood under the Charter of James I. The Irish Society was(«) restored with precisely The Irish the same powers of government and management as in f^ored 161 3, and, as then, the first members were appointed in the Charter itself, the method of election (half each year) restored as before.W and the same mandatory clause of («) Appendix to Cise for Respondents, pp. 2lS, 219. (/') Ibid. p. 220. 28 London and Londonderry. Re- grant of lands, &c. ICffect of til Charter. The great mistake of both Kings. removaK'O in case of death, departure, or misconduct — "we "will to be removable and removed" — was re-enacted. the The same lands, &c , as before, under precisely the same conditions, and with the same reservations of quit-rent, were granted to the restored Irish Society,(''') and the same government and privileges granted to the city of London- derry, with the same covenants for further assurance, the only important variation being that in several places "granted" was altered to "granted and coitfinued," thus directly recognising the Charter of James I. as the sole basis and foundation of the new Charter, s It is clear from all this that all the trusts existing under the original Charter of James I. sprang up afresh, ipso facto, of their own strength, under the Charter of Charles II. It follows at once that the Conditions and Orders, Motives and Reasons, and Articles of Agreement remain in force as interpreting and explaining the new Charter, although they are not expressly referred to, and they were rightly treated as still in force by the Counsel for the Respondents in the great Chancery suit. It may also be fairly inferred that the celebrated 9th and 13th Orders of Charles I., in 1625, still remained binding (except so far as the changed value of money may warrant modifications). That Charles II., more anxious for his ease and pleasures than for the fulfilment of the duties or enforcing the rights of his Royal office, should have made mistakes, is not strange. But it does appear surprising that King James I. and his advisers (among whom were men of such distinguished abilities and wisdom as Lord Bacon and the great ]5urleigh) should have failed to realize the total unfitness of a body so constituted and elected as the Irish Society to manage the important interests of the Plantation. The original mistake, of course, lay with the Corporation of London ; but it is astonishing that it was reserved for the nineteenth century to discover (or at least definitely express) the fundamental objections to such a plan : — {a) Appendix to Case for Respondents, p. 221. [Ji) lliid. pp. 254-306. The Babylonish Captivity. 29 1st, The government from London, which necessitates 7 he Irish all the active management to be by an Agent, who, from necessarily want of authority, could not interfere with sufficient [orXi'r''dutL. promptitude to check malversation on the part of the Companies. 2nd, The total inability of a large body, half of whose members are changed annually, to understand the circum- stances of the Plantation so fully as to resolve on and carry out the best measures for its well-being and prosperity. 3rd, The heavy expenses of mere management necessi- tated by an absentee body of rulers. 4th, The danger of the Society, meeting in London, and likely to be largely recruited from the twelve great Com- panies, becoming merely the tool of those under-grantees whom it was their right and duty to control, so as to keep them to the due fulfilment of their trusts. Retaining, as before, the ferries, fisheries, and town lands The lands under their own direct management, the new Irish Society [heCompanies forthwith reconveyed the divided lands to the Companies, adopting the method of lease and release to save time and expense, and making the same reservations as before ; thus once more recognising that they were Trustees, and con- veyed to the Companies subject to the Trusts of the Plantation. Dark days, however, followed at once. Even before the The Down interference of the Law Courts in the reign of Charles L, ''^ *"" the City of London appears to have given undue recogni- tion to the Companies in electing the members of the Irish Society, and from the renewal of the Charter up to 1830 or 1 83 1, the Corporation uniformly elected members of the Companies to the position, so that the Irish Society became practically a Committee of the Companies, servants of those whom they ought to have controlled (for of course the two permanent members, the Governor and the Recorder of London, would be utterly powerless to thwart the will of the elected twenty-four). It thus became both the interest and the pleasure of the members of the Society to abandon 30 London and Londonderry. all efforts at controlling the Companies, if any such had ever been put forward, and even to transfer to these bodies as much as possible of the funds that they ought to have employed for public purposes alone. We have not full information as to the exact year the division of the "surplus" among the Companies first began, owing to the destruction of some of the Irish Society's books by fire, but there is evidence that it was not long delayed. Thus we have the admission of the Irish Society and the Cor- poration of the city of London, " that the said Society has, "from time to time since the date of the said letters patent " of King Charles II., and whenever there has been any such "surplus as aforesaid, made payments in tl\e nature of divi- " dends, on the principle aforesaid, to each of the said twelve "principal Companies in respect of the said surplus."!") That is, members of the Companies, for the benefit of the Companies, plundered the city of Derry and the town of Coleraine, by distributing for their own corporate fund a "surplus" that could not have existed if the trusts binding on the Society had been faithfully carried out. But this was only the beginning of the "mistaken views" of their duty that characterized the Irish Society during the dreary period of the Companies' ascendancy. The City of London neglecting duty wholly, and the Crown having ceased to pay any attention to the affairs of the Plantation (an inaction which, following the evil example of Charles II., continued till the time of the great Chancery suit), the Companies, of course, did as they pleased with the lands given to their management, regarding them simply as a means of making money, in addition to the spoils handed Theiudslet ^^^'^ '-'^ ^'^^ Irish Society. The lands were let to middle- to middlemen, men by some of the Companies on leases for lives or terms of years, the leases falling in at different times in the early part of this century; while others sold the lands as soon as they could find purchasers to their satisfaction. In the lettings to middlemen (always for a heavy fine, the least {a) Appendix to C.ise for ResiJondents, p. 54. The Babylonish Captivity. 3 1 being ^16,000, and a moderate yearly rent, though far above the standard of the 13th Order of Charles I.) we find in all casesW the lessee bound to observe the conditions of the Plantation, and all conditions and covenants imposed by the Irish Society ; though, as no measures seem to have been ever taken to secure the fulfilment of this condition, it can only be regarded as a formal clause intended to save the Companies from any violation by their lessees of the trusts to ufhich they still found it necessary in practice to admit that they themselves were subject. The monies obtained were, of course, added to the corporate property, and the work of further rack-renting was left to the middlemen, who do not, however, appear immediately to have oppressed the tenants, except in the case of Stewart of Ards, to whom the Mercers' estate was let in 175 1, and that of Ogilby, who held from the Skinners.(''') As, during nearly all the period on which we have now entered, the action of the Companies was mainly confined to the reception of money, without any attempts at management for good or for evil, the chief topic of interest will be the proceedings of the Irish Society, which we shall find, with scarcely a break, going on from bad to worse under the guidance of the Compani'es. After the resumption of the lands by Charles I., the Oppression notorious Bishop Bramhall of Derry contrived to get into ror^ration of his hands the 1,500 acres left to the Corporation (out of '-°"'i°"'^^"7- pretended favour) by the Irish Society out of the 4,OCO commanded by James I. to be assigned. The Corporation were compelled to pay him rent for these lands, being then unable to contend with so powerful a foe, or to obtain pro- tection from the then abolished Irish Society. After 1662 the new Irish Society entered into a protracted litigation with the Bishop, which was compromised by an Act of Par- liament, the lands given up, and a fixed payment to the ■• Bishop agreed onW of ;^250 per annum. The Corporation (a) See the Skinners' lease to Henry Cary, 1742, Appendix, &c., p. 352. [b) See evidence of Robert Stuart, Kilrea, 1882. (f) Report of Commissioners on Municipal Corporations in Ireland, 1S54. 32 London and Londonderry. Loans from Companies, 1689. Still descending. The lowest deep. immediately applied to the Irish Society for the lands (really their own), offering ^140 lo^. per annum as rent. The Irish Society refused, insisting on ;^200 a-year, and the insertion of a clause to the effect that the only title of the Corporation luas derived froj/t this letting; thus setting at nought the arrangements of King James, and despoiling the Corporation of Derry of the last fragment of their 4,000 acres — except the Sheriff's Mountain (waste), for which they imposed rent {£2'Si per annum) for the first time in l820.(") tiie However, the Irish Society did not pretend that they were not Trustees for the benefit of the city (and the town of Coleraine), for we find them, in 1689, borrowing money, with the sanction of the Common Council, from the Com- panies, ^100 from each, for the repair of the houses ruined by the siege,(''') which was repaid with interest a few years after. But on 9th June, 1692, " R. Rochfort and D. Cairnes "were appointed by the Society as Commissioners to adopt " the best measures for rebuilding Londonderry, and grant- " ing leases."(< ) That is, the Society, instead of rebuilding themselves, held out inducements to the almost ruined in- habitants to do so. In strange contrast to the fair promises of this time is an entry of 15th September, 17 13. " It was " made a standing order of the Society that no leases should " be renewed until within three years of their expiration."('') To this rule, so admirably adapted to retard progress, was added another of similar character in 1733, 12th October. " The Society resolved not to grant any leases " for a longer period than forty-one years, or three lives " certain, except in cases of new building, and then for sixty- "one years ;"(') followed on 29th March, 1734, by "The " Society, at this period, did not consider themselves bound " to respect any tenants' rights to renewal, and in many " cases accepted the proposals of strangers ;"(/) and on 12th (a) Report of Commissioners on Municipal Corporations in Ireland, 1854. {l>) Appendix to Case for Respondents, p. 212. (c)Conciso View, 1822, p. 77. { years, or at the fall of every life, the holding every life three years absent from Great Britain and Ireland to be dead, and a fee on each renewal of three guineas to the Secre- tary,('^) this fee being afterwards shuffled in as additional rent. The Corporation had long held under the Irish Society Rack-renting what were called the "Common Holdings," including the fn 1820!^^^ ferry over the river Foyle, at the rent of £^,2 3s. 4d. Irish. The lease having expired in 1820, part of these holdings was severed by the Society, and for the rest (exclusive of the ferry, leased for ^20 in perpetuity in 1790) the rent of £6qo British (! ! !) was imposed, including the £2% now first charged for the Sheriffs Mountain, this latter being a (a) Concise View, 1822, p. 119. (i) Minute of Irish Society, 30th August, 1766. 34 London and Londonderry. Education neglected. Gratuities to employes and others. distinct usurpation.('0 In 1820, the rent of the Corpora- tion for the quays, built by the Corporation at a cost of about £ijfioo, though the Irish Society were h'able for this improvement, was raised from £6 13s. 4d. to ^350 15S.W Further, as to education, notwithstanding King James' requirement that one Free School at least be founded in every county, we find as late as 1849 no provision whatever made for this purpose in County Londonderry, although urgent orders were frequently made on the subject by King James I.(') This transformation of Trustees for public purposes (for so the Irish Society still confess they are) into grasping landlords over their cestuis que trust, though perhaps the worst evil introduced under the absolute rule of the Com- panies (for it has so far proved permanent'), is far from being the only one. A few others must be briefly referred to, before passing from this long period of midnight darkness. Here we have to thank the Skinners' Company for letting in, however much against their true intention, the fierce light of publicity on the dark misdeeds of the Com- panies during their long and undisturbed reign. The first gratuity on the books is 20 guineas to Mr. Secretary Coventry in 1675, and 10 guineas to his secretary('^. and to the secretary, clerk, and officer of the Society, ^22 in all. In 1678 we find ;^40O voted to Mr. Davis, in addition to his account^) and in the same year ;^50 to the secretary, and ^20 to his assistant, besides their salaries. In 168 1, £60 to the secretary, and ^20 to his clerk.C/) In 1682, 40 guineas to Mr. Davis. In 1683, 60 guineas to Mr. Davis,(/) besides several other smaller (a) Report of Commissioners on Municipal Corporations in Ireland, 1854. (i5) See " Duties of Irish Society in reference to the Port and Harbour of Derry ;" The City and Liberties of Londonderry and the Irish Society, 1854, P- 23- (c) Return to the House of Commons, August, 1849. (d) Appendix to Case for Respondents, p. 363. (e) Ibid. p. 364. (/) Ibid. p. 365. The Babylonish Captivity. 35 gratuities. In 1692, again, we find gratuities to R. Roch- fort(<^) and several minor employes; and in February, 1794, £2i,Q to the secretary, and ^50 to his officer, with the intimation that these were the same as the gratuities of the previous year.C'''') Doubtless, the complete books, if avail- able, would show many more cases, for it is not probable a system continued from 1675 to 1696 was suddenly inter- mitted till 1793. The gross abuse of the Trustees paying themselves out Trustees of the Trust funds for attendance at Courts and Committees [he'ms^ives appears to have been first introduced in 1682, at all events ^rformance(') that is the date of its being first publicly recorded. On of their duties. 13th October of that year it was resolved that 40s. be divided among those who make a Court, and 20s. among those that make a Committee, the Governor to have a double share, and the Deputy a share and a-half (^) The evil thus began on a comparatively modest scale, but it soon assumed larger proportions. We find in 1683, £},6 ordered to be paid to members; in 1684, £z^; in 1685, ;^33; in 1686, ^38 ; in 1687, £\\ ; in 1692, £z^g; in 1693, ^52 ;W in 1734, ;^283; in 1735, ^^175; in 1736, £171.^'^) This malpractice has continued, and we find the sums vastly increased in more recent times. Thus we find in the accounts of the Society from 1825 to 1832 inclusive the item " Allowances to Members" set down as .^308 in 1825 ; in 1826, £264; in 1827,^^228; in 1828,^^473 los. ; in 1829, £So6 15s.; in 1830,^^424; in i83i,i;'6i5 los,; and in 1832, £S93 iSs.W However, the General Statement of Receipt and Expenditure presented by the Secretary for the year 1877 shows only £^yi 19s, under this head, so that perhaps the light of publicity may be introducing a partial improve- ment. But the practice of Trustees paying themselves out of the Trust fund is repugnant to all principles of law and equity, even if it were not the fact that much of their (a) Appendix to Case for Respondents, p. 384. (i) Ibid. p. 396. {c) Ibid. p. 366. {d) Ibid. p. 396. (e) Case for Appellants, p. 250. 36 London and Londonderry. conduct has been a systematic and continuous violation of their duties as Trustees. Dinners and other tavern expenses. In May, 1680, we find an order to entertain to dinner at the expense of the Society {i.e., of the Trust money, for the Society has no income but that derived from the Trust property) Lord Massereene and his son, "with 'such "others as his Lordship shall please to bring with him.''(<^) In 1689 we find a similar dinner to the Rev. George Walker and his friendsC''') [and this at a time when money was required to be borrowed for repairing the ruined houses of Londonderry !]. In 1696 the Lords Justices and Lord Chancellor of Ireland were similarly invited ;('•) and in 1698 we find the dinner bill ^^145, of which ^^50 was ordered to be paid on account.('^ We find also, in 1737, bills for dinners, &c., audited and ordered to be paid, but the amounts are not given. W And coming down to more modern times, we find the item of "Tavern Expenses" returned in 1825 at ^^576 2s. ; 1826, £266 15s. 6d.; 1827, ;^489 19s. 6d. ; 1828, ^^498 14s.; 1829, ^555 55.; 1830, ;^357 i8s. 4d. ; 1831, £601 13s. 2d.; and 1832, ^^452 14s. 3d.(/) This abuse, too, has proved permanent. Presentation to On February 3rd, 1737, it was ordered that the picture of of^^ate^^c. ^^^ Governor should be placed in the Irish Chamber at the Society's expense.i,?) On April 17th, 1739, it was ordered that plate of twenty guineas' value be presented to Alderman William Lecky-C-^) It was also admitted by the Defendants that plate had been presented in Novem- ber, 1763, to Alderman Alsop ; and in October, 1765, to the Mayor of Londonderry, though it was asserted strongly that none had ever been purchased for the use of the Society. (0 It was also admitted by the Irish Society that " when the Society was composed wholly, or for the most " part, of members of the twelve Companies," pictures were painted at the expense of the Society — eight in number — (a) Appendix to Case for Respondents, p. 366. (6) Ibid. p. 367. (r) Ibid. p. 367. ((/) Ibid. p. 367. {e) Ibid. p. 397. (/) Case for Appellants, in the Lords, p. 250. {g) Appendix, &c.,p. 397. {h) Ibid. p. 398. («) Ibid. p. 59. The Babylonish Captivity. t^J and it was added that "all such portraits are of members "of the twelve Companies.'^) These qualifications are un- questionably true, and the disclosure illustrates the im- prudence of thieves quarrelling and appealing to law to settle their differences ; for in .proving these charges against the Irish Society, and in their admission by the Defendants, the Skinners' Company, and the other Companies sym- pathizing with and supporting them, ivcre simply proving a case of misconduct as Trustees against their own members. It is pleasant to record, to the honour of the reconsti- tuted Irish Society, that this particular abuse has not been perpetuated. The expenses of Deputations to Ireland, though heavy, cannot be fairly called an abuse in the same sense as the previous lines of conduct, as they are part of the necessary management, though they furnish a strong argument in favour of the objection that such a body as the Irish Society are incompetent to exercise their functions econo- mically. Complaints, however, have often been made from many quarters, not from the discontented Companies only, that these Deputations are, and are regarded by the members as, not journeys for the fulfilment of a public duty, but pleasant excursions at the expense of the Trust property ; and this would be a legitimate subject for inquiry. It is pleasant to turn from this dreary list of malversa- tions to another class of actions, unfortunately too few and on too small a scale, which show a practical acknowledg- ment of the fact of their Trusteeship by the Society during this the worst period in their history. On July 2ist, 1676, was passed a resolution to con- Contributions tribute part of the cost of the repair of churches, when schoou!^ ^^' the inhabitants and the ecclesiastics shall have done their t-"harities, &c. part.C') On November 8th, 1676, an order was made to pay the schoolmaster's salary (of free school),('') and on May 26, 1682, an additional allowance of twenty {a) Appendix, &c., p. 59. (/■) Ibid. p. 367. {c) Ibid. p. 36S. 38 London and Londonderry. Support of Corporation, &e. Acknowledg- ment of trust. nobles was voted to the master and usher.('0 Oi> August 15th, 1689,^10 was voted to Joseph Bennett, in consideration of his poverty, and for services during the siege ;(''') and on December 14th, 1689, a like sum to Mrs. Cocken for similar reasons.(') On March 17th, 1694, sixty tons of timber were voted for repairing the court-house. ("'> On September 22nd, 1692, iJ^20 a-year was voted to the usher of the free school ;W and in 1695 and 1696, sums of money were voted to sufferers from the siege. In 1739, again, it was voted to build a free school at Coleraine, and to endow the master during the Society s pleasure. On April 2nd, 1690, ii^Soo was voted to the Mayor of Londonderry for the relief of the poor.(/) On December ist, 1690, ;^20 was ordered to be paid to the Mayor, UO and on July 25th, i695,(''') £\o per annum was directed to be paid to the Recorder. In 1695(0 it was ordered to bring an ejectment against the Bishop for the 1,500 acres. (The unsatisfactory and unjust finale of this has been already given.) And on December nth, 1789, besides other pay- ments to charities, &c., ^^90 los. was directed to be paid to the Corporation of Londonderry.'/') We find also the following items in the accounts from 1825 to 1832 : — " Expenses of Schools, Ireland," is returned at ;^478 9s. 3d. in 1825; 1826, ;^389 4s.; 1827, £66^ los. 9ld. ; 1828,. ;^522 OS. 4d. ; 1829, ^^382 i2s. 8d. ; 1830, ;^439 19s. 9d.;. 1831, ^^438 I2S. 4|d.; and 1832, ^^468 9s. 2d. "Charit- able Donations, Ireland," are given in 1825 at ^^25 ; 1826, .1^222 6s. ; 1827, ;^I46 3s. l|d. ; 1828, ^208 9s. 3d.; 1829, ^349 4s- 7^d.; 1830, £195 4s. 7|d.; 1831, i:53o; 1832 (the first year the dividend to the Companies was omitted), ;^I556 IS. 8d.!(^) All these payments — and no doubt the complete books would show more of the same type — are gratifying in them- (a) Appendix, &c., p. 368. {h) Ibid. p. 368. (r) lOid. p. 369. [d) Ibid. p. 369. \c) Ibid. p. 369. (/) Ibid. p. 369. (a') Bid. p. 369. {h) Ilnd. p. 369. (/) Ibid. p. 369. (j) Ibid. p. 400. (/!•) Case for Appellants, &c.,, p 250. The Babylonish Captivity. 39 selves as contributions to public and charitable objects, and important as links in the unbroken chain of practical acknowledgments that the Society are and have always been Trustees for public purposes. Similar acknowledg- ments on the part of the Companies will be given further on. 40 London and Londonderry. SECTION III. THE DAWN OF ENFRAN'CIIISEMENT. Abolition of the perpetual Curacy. Interference in politics. At last, about the year 1830, the Corporation of the City of London awoke out of their Rip Van Winkle sleep, and realized for the first time the absurdity of having the con- trol of the Companies entrusted to a Committee of the ruled. It was too late for them to cure the evils already wrought, but at least the absolute supremacy of the Com- panies might be brought to a full stop. Fortified by the opinion of several distinguished lawyers, the Corporation determined in future elections to admit indiscriminately all freemen of the City. In the election for 183 1 the great Companies appear to have been almost ignored, and so also in that for 1832, the first result being the ceasing of the division of the " surplus" in the latter year,(«) and since then the Companies connected with the Irish Estates have been always kept in a minority, but few of their members being elected, and in some years none. Before, however, their ascendancy was completely destroyed, they contrived to introduce a new abuse, for the first and last time. In 1 83 1, the Governor of the Society, Alderman John Thomas Thorp, having been nominated as a Parliamentary can- didate for the borough of Coleraine, the Society petitioned against the return of Sir J. Brydges, at a cost of £6%}, 2s. 2d., but found it necessary to withdraw the petition.^ Their candidate next year, Alderman Copeland, was returned on his own petition, but without cost to the Society.(') This was one of the grounds on which the Companies charged the Irish Society with misapplication of the funds, but the blame must be distributed. [a] Appendix, &c. , pp. 87, 88. (/<) J/'icL p. 79. (c) Il'id. p. 79. The Dawn of- Enfranchisement. 41 Not merely were the City justified in electing freemen The City right ,. rr 1-1 • 1 • 1 t 1 in their new indifferently, without considering whether they were mem- departure. bers of the Companies or not, but it was actually carrying out a long-neglected duty to exclude the members of the Companies who had introduced and kept up so many violations of the Trusts. This is proved by the mandatory provision in both Charters that members misbehaving " we will to be " removable and removed.'\'^) But the Companies were, not unnaturally, dissatisiied at the downfall of their long ascend- ancy (of which, however, they did not venture to complain as of a wrong), and still more so at the loss of the spoil they had so long enjoyed from the rents and profits of the undivided estate. After a long epistolary negotiation, the Companies found the Irish Society, for the first time, un- willing to admit that they had parted with their discretionary control for the benefit of their under-grantees (practically it had been for over a centuiy and a-half scarcely exercised except in delaying dividends, in cases of dispute), and the Skinners' Company boldly rushed into the breach, chln^^'suu • filing a bill in Chancery, in which they complained of the The Skinners' , Company v. misapplication of the Trust funds of which the Irish Society The insh had been guilty, while it was a Committee of the Companies "'^'^ ^' (omitting only the division of the "surplus," which was treated as a just act, and as giving the Companies a rightful claim to the Trust property of Londonderry and Coleraine), and praying that .the Irish Society might be declared Trustees for the Companies of all the rents and profits of the undivided property, after the fixed payments and the necessary expenses of management had been djeducted.l^') In this notable thieves' quarrel — for, considering the history The thieves' of nearly two centuries, it was nothing else — all the greater i"^""^- Companies and the majority of the minor ones were on the side of the Skinners' Company, as is proved by their answers,(<") and their supporting the case of the plaintiffs by (a) Appendix, &c., p. 227. (/') Case for Appellants, Amended Bill. ((■) Case for Appellants, &c., pp. 254-259. 42 London a7id Londonderry . their counsel.(«) But none of the other great Companies — though urged to do so — was imprudent enough to risk its funds in the venture; all preferred being nominal defend- ants. Against their will, the Skinners' Company were compelled to join as defendants the City of London, which The Crown claimed a paramount authority over both the Irish Society awa esaso. ^^^^ ^.j^^ Companies, resisting the claim as wholly un- founded,(''') and also the Attorney-General for the Crown, which, in the interests of the public, asserted its rights for the first time since i638-39.('') All these genuine defendants maintained, and with success, that the Trusts of the Irish Society were for public purposes alone. It is noteworthy that the City of London emphasized the principle, or fact, that no individual benefit XKjas intended by the King, but the tranquillity of Ireland, arid the establishment and promotion of the Protestant religion, The'irust i.e., PUBLIC PURPOSES ONLV.l'O It was the first time the for public -.,,,. , ,• , , , 1 ■ ,1 1 purposes only, irish Socicty publicly and expressly claimed that they were Trustees for public purposes only, rejecting the mistaken viezvs under which they had acted so long ; and the Master of the Rolls, in his judgment, declared that these mistaken views " do not vary the conclusion to be deduced front the " Charters, and the circumstances contemporary zuith the grant " of the first Charter."{t:) Still it was, perhaps, fortunate for the public that the Irish Society were able to point to a continuous series of acts, even during the darkest period of their history, which proved a tacit recognition by them all along of the public trusts for which they had been appointed and incorporated. The only plausible argument advanced for the Skinners' Company (for the allegation that the City had been their agents was supported neither by facts nor by law) was the fact of the division of the "surplus" (a) Pleadings in Chancery, pp. 363-426, &c. {b) Case for the Respondents, the Mayor, &c., of London, pp. 6, 7, 20, 22, 38, 40, 43-45, 52, 53. (c) Case of the Attorney-General, pp. 3-5, 10, 11. ((/) Case for the Respondents, the Mayor, &c., p. 4. (e) Pleadings, &c. ; the Judgment, p. 1246. T/ie Dazun of EnfranchisemeJtt. 43 for so long a period, and even here a discretionary power was established by the circumstance that the dividends had always been in round numbers, a balance being carried over. But there is one argument used in terroreni by their TheCompanie:; Chief Counsel, Sir W. W. Follett, a former Attorney- ^™,^'^*'^' General for England, which must not be passed over, as it tells with fatal effect against all the pretensions of the Companies, seeing that the case was decided against them, not once, but three times — "If they could convince your " Lordship that that undivided property was burthened with " any trust, I do not see but that it must of necessity follow " that the separated land, the divided land conveyed " to the Companies, is similarly burthened. . . . I " cannot distinguisJi between ike one property and the other; "IF THERE BE A PUBLIC TRUST ON ONE, THERE IS ON "THE OTHER."('^) An argument on which great stress was laid, that the trusts were too indefinite for a Court of Equity to execute them, was completely overthrown by Sir C. Wetherall for the City — "If the Court itself cannot The power of " undertake to form such a scheme, and to reduce into remedy*" '° " precise shape an object too generally expressed, the Crown ;ndefiniteness " has a right to interfere and direct the appropriation or Trusts. " distribution by sign manual. Such has long been the estab- " llshed law."U') The Master of the Rolls expressed his entire concurrence with this view, and mentioned his practice of acting on it. The same learned gentleman also laid down pertinent law and facts of almost greater importance at the present time — " It is true that the governing body is " an English Corporation. . . . But Londonderry and " Coleraine are Irish Corporations, the whole property is The Trusts as "Irish; everything that was to be done in execution 0/ the p^^^^^iy ^ "Charter, zvas to be done on Irish soil and freeho'd ; the ^"^'^ °"'y- "enjoyment, the dominium utile, is EXCLUSIVELY in the " realm of Ireland. Is not the trust, therefore, territorial, as " well as the property .''V) According to this, the charitable (a) Pleadings in Chancery, p. 139. {l>)Il>id. p. 814. {c) Ihid. p. 870. 44 London and Lotidonderry. QuEM Deus VULT PERDERE PRIUS DEMENTAT. Lord Langdale's judgment. donations given in England by the Irish Society, which appear in all their accounts, are a misapplication of the trust funds. The Bill in Chancery was first filed on i6th July, l832,('') and was first tried on a motion in i835(*) that money should be paid into the bank by the Irish Society, and a receiver appointed, and the Irish Society restrained from collect- ing the rents, &c. This motion was dismissed with costs by the Lord Chancellor (Pepys) in i836.('') Thence the Skinners' Company took the case for trial before the Master of the Rolls, Lord Langdale, and it was dismissed with costs as against the genuine defendants.C'^ As though anxious to secure the highest legal authority in favour of the rights of the public, and against themselves, the plaintiffs appealed to the House of Lords, and the judg- ment of the Master of the Rolls was most emphatically confirmed.^ All along, the Irish Society disclaimed any beneficial interest in the property.(/) Lord Langdale, in giving his judgment, after summing up the evidence, said : — " It is, I think, impossible to read " and consider the Charter, without coming to the conclusion " that the powers granted to the Society were more extensive " than, and very different from, any which in the ordinary " course of affairs are vested, or would upon this occasion " have been vested, in mere private Trustees for the benefit " of particular undertakers-C,?") The powers indeed are, many "of them, of a public and political nature, and . . . were " given for the public purposes of the Plantation. . . . " The Companies of London were, with the burthen of under- " taking the plantation of such lands as might be allotted to " them, to receive such benefits as were offered to . . . "ordinary undertakers." . . . "The Charter of Charles (a) Case for Respondents, the Mayor, &c. , p. 46. (/') Ibid. p. 46. (;-) Ibid. p. 46. (d) Ibid. p. 47. (4 Speech of Mr. I^ea, M.P. for South Londonderry, in the House of Commons, June 28th, 1S89, p. 10. {f) See their Case, their Answers, and the Pleadings, passim, ig) Pleadings, &c., pp. 1232, 1233. ■S '; The Dawn of Enfranchisement. 45 " appears to me to be substantially, as it is avowedly, a res- " toration of the Charter of James."('^) " The property is part " of that granted for the purposes of the Plantation, and the " powers possessed by the Society, as well as the duties with " which it is charged, Jiave all of tliem reference to the Planta- " tioJl."W " I AM OF OPINION THAT THE POWERS GRANTED "TO THE SOCIETY, AND THE TRUSTS REPOSED IN THEM, " WERE IN PART OF A GENERAL AND PUBLIC NATURE, "INDEPENDENT OF THE PRIVATE BENEFIT OF THE COM- " PANIES OF LONDON, AND WERE INTENDED BV THE "CROWN TO BENEFIT IRELAND, AND THE CITY OF " LONDON, BY CONNECTING THE CITY OF LONDONDERRY "AND THE TOWN OF COLERAINE AND A CONSIDERABLE " IRISH DISTRICT WITH THE CITY OF LONDON, AND TO " PROMOTE THE GENERAL PURPOSES OF THE PLANTATION, "NOT ONLY BY SECURING THE PERI-'ORMANCE OF THE " CONDITIONS IMPOSED ON ORDINARY UNDERTAKERS, BUT "ALSO BY THE EXERCISE OF POWERS AND THE PERFORM- "ANCE OF TRUSTS NOT WITHIN THE SCOPE OF THOSE "CONDITIONS."^) On the appeal to the House of Lords, the Lord Chan- The House of cellor, Lord Lyndhurst, said : — " The result of all these Lyndhurst's'^ " observations is this, that the objects are public and im- judgment, &c. " portant ; that they were constituted for the purpose of "carrying those objects into effect; that those objects are " still in existence ; that the funds of this district are applic- "able to tl.ose purposes; that they have a discretion to "exercise as to what extent they will apply those funds, " and to \)fhat objects. If that be so, my Lords, they are ''public officers, invested with a public trust, having a right "to apply those funds in discharge of that public trust." Lord Campbell expressed his opinion in language of equal strength and force.(<^) This famous case forms, as yet, the most important Transcendent importance of (a) Pleadings, &c., p. 1244. this case. {b) Ibid. p. 1245. (0 ■^'''"^- PP- 1248, 1249. ((/) Quoted by Mr. Lea, M. P. for South Londonderry, in his speech in the House of Commons, June 28th, 1889, p. 10. 46 London and Londonderry. incident in the history of the Plantation since the reign of Charles I., for the following reasons : — 1st, It has finally established, by the decision of the highest legal authority in the realm, that the Irish Society are merely Trustees for public purposes. (This furnishes a strong support indirectly to the arguments proving the Companies to be merely public Trustees, though that question was not in issue.) 2nd, It has finally settled, by the same authority, that the Trusts of the Irish Society are unexhausted and inex- haustible. The importance of this point will appear later on. 3rd, It has let in a flood of light on the management of the Society, and put the public in possession of valuable information as regards their rights, which was not readily available previously. 4th, It has established the rights of the Crown, and has awakened the Crown from the long apathy engendered by the selfish indifference of Charles II. 5th, It has brought to light the worst and most gigantic of the frauds early perpetrated by the Companies, i.e., the spoiling of the woods to the value of ;^s 50,666 13s. 4d. 6th, It has been the forerunner of the period of inquiry which ought to end in stripping the Companies of their ill-gotten spoil, and securing its application to Plantation purposes, according to the original intention of James I. oppression still Rampant. 47 SECTION IV. OPPRKSSIOX STriJ. RAMPANT. The reform initiated by the City of London in 1830 ended where it began. The purified Irish Society have, it is true, increased their contributions to charitable purposes (one notable example being the founding of a chair in Magee College, with an endowment of ;^250 a-year, and the gift of ;^i,ooo to the building fund of that institution), but some of this is given in England, as will appear from their accounts. Nor has there been any change for the better in the harshness of their conduct as landlords, in the matter of tavern expenses, or in their opposition to measures calculated to benefit the city or harbour of Londonderry, though they have, under pressure and the fear of an appeal to Parliament, granted ^700 per annum to the Corpora- tion of Derry and ^500 to the improvement of the city, and now hold themselves (according to the evidence of Alderman Humphrey, Governor in i854)('2) bound legally and equitably to continue these, payments for ever ; and quite recently they seem disposed to contribute large sums to certain special improvements in the city. Among the Standing Orders of the Society, dated loth Feb., 1847, are the following: — 5th. "That no leases be "granted in perpetuity;" 6th. " That no determinable leases " be renewed until within three years of their expiration "W — the very same rules that so endangered the very existence of the city as to call for the interposition of Alderman Alsop's Committee in 1766, referred to before. The same spirit is shown in their opposition to the Leasehold Conversion Act, and their endeavours to prevent their tenants getting the benefit of this Act, by threatening legal proceedings when opportunity offers. (a) City of London Corporation Commission, p. 24. (b) City and Liberties of Derry, 1854, p. 25. 48 London and Londonderry. Expensive Management. Legal Expenses. " The total expenditure (deducting the permanent pay- " ments) and costs of management stood to one another "in the following proportions in the three periods of ten "years from 1818 to 1847 :^ Expenses of Management. 44,198 S5>985 " Years. "1818-27 " 1828-37 "1838-47 " Total, Total Expenditure (less permanent payments). 73.416 86,970 i,"2i9,898"(«) ^^133.912 It must be admitted that part of this period was during the reign of the Companies, but " the expense of manage- "ment, and the total expenditure less the permanent "payments, from February 1847 to February 1853, stand as "follows: — Expenses of management, ;^2 1,161 ; total ex- "penditure, ;£"50,292. . . . The existing income of the "Society is stated by Alderman Humphrey, the Governor, "at about ^^"10,000 a-year; and he estimates the present "costs of management, including an allowance of .1^600 "for legal expenses, at about iJ^3,ooo a-year. "(''') The recommendation of the Royal Commission (1854) on the Corporation of London was, " That the Irish Society be "dissolved; that its Trusts be declared by Act of Parlia- "ment ; and that new Trustees be appointed by the Lord " CIia7icellor of Irelandr Legal expenses are enormous, but it is difficult to know their true amount, as it was found by Sir C. E. Lewis, M.P. for Derry City, in 1876, that much that should come under this head is concealed by being entered under other titles ; e.g., the cost of opposition to Port and Harbour Bill of 1874 (which was passed) was hidden under the item — "/« aid of Public Lnproveinents — Building Expenses, &c., "in Londonderry, Coleraine, and Culmore"!!!W {a] The Irish Society of London, 1875, p. 13 ; Report of the Royal Com- mission (1854) on the Corporation of London, &c. (1^) The Irish Society of London, 1875, pp. 13, 14 ; Report of Royal Com- mission, &c. (c) The Irish Society of London, its Expenditure and Account-keeping, 1876, pp. 3-6, 8, II, 12. oppression still Rampant. 49 As to its practical landlordism, we find the following Treatment facts among others, sworn in evidence. A tenant in 1832 got a sixty-one years' lease, under which he was bound to expend L'JS'^, and did so, and afterwards continued his ex- penditure till it amounted to over £6,000. He applied for an extension of his lease repeatedly, and in 1847 received the answer that he would be allowed a further new lease of fourteen years, on condition of his augmenting his rent from £\\2 19s. 2d. to £\62 19s. 2d., and giving up all claims to compensation for buildings and improvements.(<^) Another tenant, having purchased a farm, applied for an extended lease, and was offered one for sixty-one years on condition of expending ;^i,ooo, but it turned out the sixty- one years was only to apply to twenty acres, and for the other and larger portion only a twenty-one years' lease would be given.C''') In Coleraine the matter is not quite in so bad a condition, most of the lettings having taken place long since ; but there is strong complaint that the Irish Society give no contributions to the Town Commissioners, and nothing to the improvement of the town.W All the witnesses from Derry and Coleraine, examined in 1854 before the City of London Corporation Commission, gave the opinion that the Irish Society are quite incompetent for their duties. It is now time to turn to the Landlordism Landlordism. of the Companies. Here the evidence available to the public is far from complete, nor can it ever be so until the books are compelled to be produced by authority of Parliament. But there is enough to convict the Companies of much rack-renting in practice (quite in the teeth of the 13th Order of Charles I. in 1625), and of a desire for much more. During the 17th and iSth centuries four of the Companies sold their estates, tlte Irish Society in each case requiring a bond of indemnity. i'i) A clear proof that the Irish Society, (a) City of London Corporation Commission, 1854, p. 6. (b) Ibid. p. 7. (f) Ibid. pp. 15, 18. (8o5 i6s. 6d. ; 1829-30, " £^,667 2s. rod.; 1830-31,^:1,205 7s. iid.; 1831-32,^1,378 "17s. 5d.; 1832-33.^:1,399 los. 5d.; 1833-34, i:2,o63 15s. " iod."("') " Seven schools, masters' houses, and gardens in " Londonderry rent free."M " Irish account, grants to " schools, farming societies, and to Roman Catholic and 'Presbyterian ministers, 1870,^:1,052 7s. 2d.; 1871, i:i,i42 "5s. 8d.; 1872, i:2,i94 3s. 5d.; 1873, ;^i,852 123. 8d.; 1874, "i:2,io2 I?.; 1875, £\,SO<) i8s. 2d.; 1876,^1,397 15s. 4d.; " 1877. £^006 6s. 2d.; 1878, i:i,592 17s. 8d.; 1879, ^1,854 " 2s. 5d. Outlay on improvements, &c., 1870, ^1,658 5s. "lod.; 1871,^:1,324 I2s.8d.; 1872, ;Ci,092 3s.; i873,;^i,689 "5s. lod.; 1874, ;^2,3i7 7s. 5d.; 1875, ;^2,5i3 3s. id.; 1876, "i:i,547 i8s. 8d.; 1877, i:i,705 os. 4d.; 1878,^1,409 lis. "9d.; 1879, /:1,2980s. 8d.;"(/) besides rates, taxes, tithe rent- [a) Returns, p. i. (/■) Ilu'd. p. 33. (<) Ibid. p. 34. (1/) Returns, pp. 2-4. (<:•) Ibid. p. 83. (/) //'/(/. pp. 85-103. oppression still Rampant. 55 charge, and county cess. Contributions to churches in Ireland are given from 187010 1879 at £2'66 15s. iod.,(«) and seven schools are returned as maintained by the Com- pany.W Annual subscriptions in Ireland, including to an infirmary, orphan societies and mutual improvement so- cieties, schools and one church, are given at — " 1870, ;^34 "14s.; 1871, i;i25 14s.; 1872, ;^i04iis.; 1873, ;6'io6 IIS. ; "1874,^:102 IIS.; 1875, i;i09 IIS.; 1876, ^109 lis.; 1877, "i^QQ IIS.; 1878, £(:)6 8s.; 1879, ^112 I4.'(') Among the recipients of annual grants are enumerated dispensaries. The Skinners' Company make the following statements: — .skinners' " The Skinners' Company, for the purpose of securing the °'^P^"y "speedy construction of a railway from Uungiven to Lima- " vady, . . . has recently given the land where the railway " is on their estate, paid ^500 towards the preliminary ex- " penses, and guaranteed five per cent, interest on ;^ 20,000, " a large portion of the capital to be expended. . . . The " Company make an annual grant to the Rector of Dun- " given, and his farm rent free, . . , also annual allow- "ances to Presbyterian ministers and Roman Catholic " priests ; provide a large building for schools, pay the " masters' and mistresses' salaries, pay salary of dispensary "surgeon, subscribe to the repair of churches, &c., building " of manses, pay for the cleansing of streets, and subscribe to " everything for the benefit of the tenants, &c."(<0 " They " have also recently guaranteed interest at five per cent, on " £Sf>oo, portion of the capital to be expended in con- "structing a railway from Magherafelt to Draperstown."('^) " Grants are anmialty made to schools upon the estate of " the Company in Ireland."*/) The Salters' Company return " Donations and subscrip- Saiters' "tions to Irish objects, 1870-71, ^276 2s. 4d. ; 1871-72, ^°'"P''"''- ";^208 i6s. 2d. ; 1872-73, ;^ 1 464s. 9d.; 1873-74,;^ 1,041 i6s. "9d. ; 1874-75,^:1,524 4s. 4d. ; 1875-76, i:2i3 i8s. iid. ; " 1876-77, ;^208 5s. iid. ; 1877-78, ^194 i6s. 2d.; 187S-79, {a) Returns, p. 115. [b) Jhid. p. 116. (;) Ibid. p. 112. ((/) Returns, p. 20. {e) Ibid. p. 20. (/) //'/(/. p. 31. 56 London and Londonderry. The Deputa- tion of the Skinners' Company, 1873. Ulster Tenant-riglit questioned. "-^93 9S- ; iS7(j-8o, £2^j i8s. 5d.,"(") and for religious and educational purposes, "1870-71,^1,244 3s. 2d.; 1871-72, " £\,6oS OS. 8d. ; 1872-73, i^ 1,868 17s. yd. ; 1873-74, ^^2,526 " los. id.; 1874-75, ^1,817 OS. id.; 1875-76, ^^1,804 2s. "8d.; 1876-77, ;^i,798 los. 8d. ; 1877-78, 1,900 15s. id.; "1878-79, i;i,8o2 los. 4d. ; 1879-80, ^^1,983 8s. 2d." W They also stated ) that they have, since 1853, given large subscriptions to the building of churches and payment of clergy. The Companies that had sold their estates before 1881 (the Haberdashers', Vintners', Goldsmiths', Grocers', and Clothworkers') make no Irish returns, but the Grocers still keep up their contributions (as pointed out before), and the Clothworkers when selling abated .^1,500 per annum out of the interest of the money left on mortgage to meet expendi- ture for public and charitable purposes, out of which it appears Sir H. Bruce allows ofily £\'-,o a-year for the purposes mentioned. The Report of the Deputation of the Skinners' Company to the Court of Assistants, 1873, sheds considerable light on the proceedings of the Companies for good and evil. These gentlemen recommend additional grants to a con- siderable amountW to the payment of the clergy of different denominations, the repair of churches, and the building and repair of schooIs,(^) as well as to the development of railways,(/) the improvement of the town of Dungiven,(,?') a system of arterial drainagejC-^) and the making and repair of bye-roads ;(0 and so far their report is unobjectionable; but there are other recommendations of a very different type. The hint is given that " In the case of the Skinners' " Company, it might possibly be held, if the question were "litigated, that the Ulster Tenant-right Custom, though " undoubtedly prevalent, in fact, during the latter part of Mr. " Ogilby's lease, does not in law now bind the Company as [a) Returns, p. 25. (b) Ibid. p. 25. (c) Ibid. p. 26. [d] Report, pp. 24-30. {e) Ilnd. pp. 30-32. (f) Ibid. pp. 47, 48. [g) Ibid pp. 48-53. (/i) Ibid. pp. 53-54. (/•) Ibid. pp. 54-55. oppression still Rampant. 57 " reversioners ; 'V) rules are recommended, of a very stringent character, for the purpose of limiting and gradually destroy- ing the tenant-right, beginning with the prohibition of open free sale ;(''') and re-valuation is recommended, on the ground that the rents are too low» (It may be noticed here that the usual course for all the Companies has been to have re-valuations at intervals of twenty or twenty-one years, and that in almost every case re-valuation means increase of rent ; but it is seldom that object has been so openly admitted beforehand, as in this instance.) The tables of rentals, &c., appended, show that in almost every case the rent was already above the Government valuation, exclusive of buildings.!"') (a) Report, p. 35. (/;) llnd. pp. 37, 38. (< ) Ihid. ]ip. 42, 43. ((/) Report, Tables A to F inclusive. /. V 5S London and Londonderry . SECTION V. liRIGIITENING PROSPECTS— THE CLAIMS OF THE FUTURE. Prelude to the Age of Inquiry. Principles established in 183S. Public attention could not fail to be earnestly directed to the self-damaging exposures on both sides that occurred in the ever-memorable case of the Skinners' Company v. the Irish Society. For, although the plaintiffs failed at all points on the merits of their case, they elicited many facts that both sides would have been wiser to keep back, and the counsel for the Crown and the City of London, while defending triumphantly the right of the Irish Society to exercise a large discretion, regardless of the Companies, in the administration of their trust property, emphatically declined to endorse, as a whole, the way in which that dis- cretion had been actually exercised ; and Lord Langdale, in giving judgment in the clearest and most forcible terms in favour of that discretion, distinctly stated that the Society had in the past adopted mistaken viexus as to their duties and responsibilities. Besides, the definite establish- ment of the fact that the Irish Society are Trustees for p7iblic purposes alone, of necessity would draw attention to the position of the Companies who hold by grants from the Irish Society, and so the inauguration of the Age of Inquiry was inevitable, though it might not immediately set in. Furthermore, the Crown was not likely to go to sleep again, even if the City of London should do so ; and two important principles laid down by Sir C. Wetherall for the City were sure to bear fruit at no distant day, especially as Sir Charles was on the zu inning side. These were — ist. The undeniable right of the Crown to remedy all indefinitcness in public trusts, apart altogether from the absolute legis- Brightening Prospects — Claims of tlic Future. 59 lative power of the Crown, Lords, and Commons ;(«) and The Trusts 2nd, The fact that the trusts as well as the property are '™''' territorial, are Irish only.(''') In these two principles will be found the main elements for a final solution. The first beginning of the Age of Inquiry was the Com- The Age of mission of 1834, to which some of the Companies sent in •"'i^'O' sets in. returns, while others, not recognising that the ground was beginning to slip from beneath their feet, neglected to do so. No immediate result followed from these proceedings, but from 1854 the inquiries by public authority have become more numerous and searching, with the inevitable result that the pretensions of the Companies to be private landowners, and the claims of the Irish Society to per- petual continuance, are being more and more strongly scouted by intelligent public opinion, and the day of reckoning is visibly drawing nigh. In that year, evidence chiefly regarding the Irish Society was received by the Commissioners on Municipal Corporations in England and Wales, from whose report quotations have already been given showing the contempt with which the Irish Society treated the visitatorial power of the City of London. The most remarkable item in the report of these Commissioners was the following : — "We do not know of any pretext of Supremacy " argument for continuing this municipal supremacy of the corporations " Irish Society. The Commissioners declined to receive '"defensible, "evidence of the manner in which it is exercised. . . . ''But a control of this kind, maintained at the present day " by the municipality of one town in England over another " in Ireland, appears to us so indefensible in prittciple that " our opinion would not have been changed, even if it had " been found (which we have no reason to doubt) that " hitherto it has been conducted with discretion and for- " bea ranee." That it has not been exercised with either discretion or forbearance, however, is clearly proved by facts which have been already cited in Sec. II. and Sec. IV. from official records, and by the evidence before (a) Pleadings, &c., p. 864. (/') //'/^:.' 72 London and Londonderry. State, in dissolving them, is under no equitable restraint in dealing with their funds, except such as may arise from just claims to compensation. The only cases in which such claims can be fairly considered just are the following: (a) In the case of officials thrown out of employment by reform, and holding no other employment ; (/i) In the case of poor members receiving pensions or donations from the corporate fluids ; (y) In the case of the repre- sentatives of the original contributors to the tax imposed by the City for the purposes of the Plantation, if such can be found, and whether they be present members of the Companies or no. The equitable claim of this last class arises from the fact that the original contributors were never repaid as much as a farthing, the Companies transferring all the monies they received to their corporate funds. 2nd, The Companies, as a matter of fact, have added to their corporate property enormous sums of which they have defrauded the Plantation, while, at the same time, trampling on the rights of the Crown. This item of plunder, far larger than any or all perpetrated in England, consists of the following three portions : — (a) The spoil of the woods for merchandise, as established by the scire facias (quoted in Sec. I.), to the value of ^550,666 13s. 4d. Taking into account the changed value of money, this would now represent considerably over a million sterling, even without counting interest ! (/?) The dividends of the "surplus" received during the Babylonish captivity. These, on the lowest calculation, would now represent between iJ'200,000 and ^^300,000. (y) The net rents received from the estates, and carried over to London. It is 'difficult to estimate this exactly ; but it is certainly not an exaggerated estimate to set down the total of the three portions of the plunder as at least two millions sterling ! (We do not add the proceeds of the sale of some of the estates in the past, as we claim all that for Ulster.) To the arguments already given (in Sec. I.), proving the Brightening Prospects — Claims of the Future, jt, Companies Trustees for public purposes in regard to their TheCompanies Irish estates, may be now added the following, derived u.drw'sh"' from the history of their relations to Ireland : — Estates. Sth, That they have all along practically acknowledged the fact (see cases cited in Sec. II. and Sec. IV.) by contributions to churches and clergymen, schools and schoolmasters, public buildings for commercial and legal purposes, orphan societies, local societies of various kinds, dispensaries, infirmaries, roads, arterial drainage, building, paving, and cleansing towns, &c., and, in the present century, railways. 6th, That they were treated as Trustees responsible to the Crown in the sequestration in the reign of James I., the Articles of Charles I. in 1625, the informations in the Star Chamber, the judgment of the Star Chamber, and the scire facias. 7th, That the highest legal authorities, some speaking for the Companies, have recognised the effect of the judgment of the House of Lords in 1839 to be that the Companies are Trustees for public purposes ; Sir C. Wetherall adding that the trusts, as well as the property, are territorial. To the objection, which has been actually raised, that some of these arguments would prove private gentlemen who are landlords to be also Trustees for public purposes, it is sufficient to reply — (i) The original private undertakers were Trustees for one definite purpose under the Orders and Conditions, but this trust was temporary, and ceased when once the lands granted to them were settled with tenants at the easy rent of undertakers, and the provision for mili- tary defence completed. Whatever faults may, in some cases, be found with their successors, will come under a totally different heading from violation of public trust. (2) The Londoners, on the contrary, were bound also by the Motives and Reasons, &c., by the Articles of Agree- ment, the Charters, and the Orders of Charles I. in 1625, which, taken collectively, imposed ■Oi^.ny permanent trusts, indirect. 74 London and Londonderry. pronounced by the House of Lords, as to the part that came before them, to be unexhausted and inexhaustible. There is, therefore, no parallel whatever between the case of the Companies and that of private landlords. Who are the The Only question, then, remaining for solution is. Who ene ci.iries . ^^.^ j^ equity and justice the beneficiaries i" — the tenants on the Companies' estates t or London .■' or the general public purposes of the Plantation, and specially of the county of Londonderry, the city of Derry, and the town of Coleraine i^ The points that have been already established by unanswer- able arguments will enable us to solve this question without much difficulty. Not the It is with regret that we are forced to conclude that the Tel!^ui1",'" Companies' tenants have no direct claim on the purchase- ?n 't°fi^ res'i'ect "^o"^y of the estates or the revenues of the Irish Society. are only They have been rack-rented most mercilessly in nearly every case, and robbed of the fruits of their own industry, and this would, if the Legislature admitted the principle of restitution, give them a strong direct claim on the past rents levied by the Companies, which would so far diminish the fund available for the claims of London. But we have not a particle of evidence to indicate that they were intended by James I. or Charles I. to reap any more benefit than what would result from their holding land at easy rents. Their claim to benefit indirectly from the due disposal of the funds is, however, too strong to be ignored. Their industry has created most of the present value of the property ; they have been rack-rented without mercy in defiance of the wishes of James I, and the express command of Charles I. — this rack-renting being one of the serious offences punished by the scire facias and the Star Chamber's judgment ; they have been forced to pay rent for the wastes that were intended to be theirs without charge, or deprived of those waste lands altogether — attempts have been even made to deprive them of the property which modern legislation has aimed at protect- ing ; they have been forced to bear a part of the public Brightening Prospects — Claims of the Future. 75 burdens which ought to have been discharged by the Com- panies ; they have been robbed of the benefit of the woods, intended mainly for the Plantation, though in part for the rest of Ireland as well. (In this respect, as in all others, the case against the Companies is strengthened by the 70,000 acres unduly obtained.) All these facts make an overwhelming case for indirect benefit, much stronger than that of dwellers in the rest of the Plantation. It will be shown afterwards how this claim may be satisfied, in part at least. But the tenants have, beyond all doubt — if the spirit of James I.'s intentions and regulations is to be at all respected — a direct claim to be the purchasers of the Com- panies' estates, and that on reasonable terms, not on the basis of the rack-rents. It must be admitted that the claims of London against Not London the Companies cannot be gainsaid or explained away, whatever. But it is not less clear that these claims apply only to the corporate estate and the trust property in England, and do not extend to the Irish estates or the revenues of the Irish Society. This is conclusively proved by the following considerations : — (a) The advantages offered to the City of London, as an inducement to undertake the Plantation, were merely com- mercial and manufacturing, together with the settlement of a superabundant population in positions where they could make an easy livelihood. No personal or individual gain was contemplated for, or offered to, any but the actual settlers. This was perhaps, as has been often suggested, the strongest reason for the reluctance of the City at first, and the Companies afterwards. (/?) Even if the claims of London against the lands were as large as some persons seem to think, the conduct of the Companies has created a fund more than sufficient to meet those claims. The sums — which, as has been pointed out, are fully two millions sterling — of which the Plantation has been robbed by the Companies, render the corporate pro- perty the natural fund to meet the rightful claims of 76 f.ondon and Londonderry. London, and are sufficient to satisfy these claims to the full. Indeed, it might be argued that the enormous amount of these sums gives the Plantation a claim on the corporate fund. We do not, however, insist on this, though we do claim most emphatically for Ulster the entire proceeds of the estates in County Derry that have been sold, as well as the purchase-money of those that yet remain unsold. Hut the public By the method of exhaustion, then, we find that the piant°a^t!on, and Only rightful direct beneficiaries are the public purposes of Uircountyof *^^^ Plantation, and especially of the county of London- Londonderry, derry, the city of Londonderry, and the town of Coleraine. Londonderry, This is what the very language of all the public documents of CoWaine." issued by James I. on the subject would inevitably lead to, more especially the Charter, where it recites the powers of the Irish Society, and the purposes for which they are granted. It is further confirmed by the judgment of the House of Lords in 1839, and by the arguments used in the pleadings in Chancery, 1838, especially the famous saying of Sir Charles Wetherall, that the trusts, as well as the property, are territorial, are Irish only. As for the revenues administered by the Irish Society, it is needless to refer to them particularly, for the repeated decisions in the great Chancery suit have settled beyond question that they belong exclusively to the two Corporations of Derry and Coleraine, and the lands, harbours, &c., thereto attached (as has been repeatedly claimed by Sir C. E. Lewis, former M.P. for Derry City, and many others). It must be repeated here that the claim of the Plantation is in one sense retrospective ; it includes the purchase-money received for the estates sold in the past ; the Haberdashers', the Goldsmiths', the Vintners', the Grocers', the Cloth- workers', and the Salters' Companies are no more entitled to remove the monies received for the estates to England than are the Skinners' or the Mercers' Company, who have not yet sold. (It must be added, too, that the former tenants of the Clothworkers' Company are in justice entitled to redress of the wrong inflicted on them in the sale to Sir BrioJUening Prospects— Claims of the Fiitu re. 7 7 Hcrvcy Bruce, by having that sale cancelled, and them- selves substituted as purchasers, and, if possible, restitution made to them of the increased rents in which they have been mulcted since 1874.). How, 'then, ought the funds to be allocated so as to How the secure the just rights of the beneficiaries, and meet the be anocat°ed.'^ indirect claims of the tenants (and others) ? The exact details of such a measure is for the Legislature to settle (or a Royal Commission, if that machinery should seem ex- pedient for a final settlement) ; but the following is an outline of what will be a just and satisfactory arrangement: — 1st, A portion of the fund — how much must be left to the Legislature to determine — ought to be employed in the relief of local burdens, such as poor-rates, county cess, &c. The justice of this is amply proved by the fact that some of the Companies have (occasionally at least) made contributions for these and similar objects. In this way the tenants would be indirectly benefited. Indirectly, also, they would share with other residents (in Co. Londonderry and the Plantation generally) in the benefits arising from the more direct application of the funds to general public purposes. 2nd, A portion — probably the larger portion — of the funds ought to be applied to purposes of acknowledged public utility (to use the words of the Royal Commission), chieily within the County of Londonderry, but not neces- sarily confined to it, as the rest of the Plantation ought in some measure to share the benefit. These should be — (1) Educational and religious purposes — contributions to churches and clergy (of different denominations), schools and schoolmasters, including new schools where needed, whether elementary or advanced ; colleges, and the support and development of technical education, including in this the instruction in the best modern agricultural improvements of all farmers willing to profit by such instruction. (2) Objects of general public utility, such as public libraries, museums, scientific societies, court-houses, police 78 London and Londonderry. Conclusion. The two main points established : Indefiniteness no difficulty in the way of these. barracks, asylums, hospitals, infirmaries, dispensaries, alms- houses, outdoor relief of the poor in special emergencies, and similiar objects. (3) Works of special utility, such as the improvement of workmen's houses and labourers' dwellings, sanitary reforms of towns, and the development of special trades in localities suited for them. (4) Means of communication — railways, roads (high- ways and bye-ways), improvement of the quays and harbours of Derry and Coleraine and any other suitable ports within the Plantation. (5) Direct development of the resources of the Planta- tion — utilizing for manufactures, &c., the water-power of the Bann, the Foyle, and other rivers ; subsidies to the sea fisheries, development of commercial communication with Great Britain and elsewhere, and arterial drainage. This list is but an outline, put forward by way of suggestion, not as exhausting the subject. We may conclude by claiming that we have proved, beyond the possibility of cavil, the two points that must serve as the foundation of sound legislative reform in the immediate future : — 1st, That London is entitled to the corporate property of the Companies for public purposes. London in this connection is by moderns usually employed to mean the whole metropolis, and we have no quarrel with this ex- tended use of the name. 2nd, That the Plantation, especially the county of Lon- donderry, the city of Londonderry, and the town of Cole- raine, is entitled absolutely to the revenues administered by the Irish Society, and to the whole of the purchase- money of the Companies' estates in County Derry, retro- spectively as well as prospectively, and this, too, for public purposes. The indefiniteness of some of the trusts is no objection to this or any similar scheme, for the power of the Crown to rectify this indefiniteness in the case of public trusts by Brightening Prospects — Claims of the Future. 79 sign manual is an established principle of law. And over and above all, there remains the absolute legislative power of the Crown, Lords, and Commons, to which, in the last resort, must be our appeal to sweep out of existence wrongs under which our people have been groaning for nearly three centuries. The Trusts being once declared by proper authority, the Courts would find no difficulty in enforcing them, if necessary, against the new Trustees. But this necessity could scarcely arise, if, in accordance with the prayer of those most directly interested in the coming reform, care is taken to have the new Trustees chosen from local gentlemen of independent position and high character for integrity and administrative ability. Marcus Ward & Co., Limited, Printers, London and Belfast.