T I P 



488 



T I P 



new CIOTM art ready, colic or otlicr bowel complaints are 

 -omenew of the diet ; and the 



.1 dis- 

 .ision 



I, which h, -id by 



]>.iving double the market-price. 



'lothim;. le improvement has 



taken place, though the peasantry are still very mditt'er- 



luiao- 



ture, but the women generally make up their own dresses: 



iiowcver t:. able to do this, uud h 



pay f, made. The use of shoes and 



in and 



\pcnditure of a 

 labourer's family on clothes is seldom less than a pound. 



,el is turf: ne:. -;,eap, 



but to one living at a distance of H or ID miles from a tur- 



\Vhen fuel is scarce, pi' 



and the destruction of woods and fences are common. 



and dried cow -dung are i. for turf. 



Tlie county ha.s always been one of the most disturbed in 



d : although there is an ebb and flow of crime in 



Tippcrary has always kept up steadily to 



hiirh-watcr-inarlc.' This \ .'incut of the n 



istiate of Cashel. (See Parliamentary j 



p. :i57.) 



\-r. Tlie county is divided into eleven 

 baronies, a.s follows : 



.nv. Situation. Pop. in 1831. 



Clanwilliam'. . . \V. 152 



Elio_'.itiy .... Central 38,531 



Ilia and "l )i!a :! S.E. 38,702 



West s.\v. 1.12 



Ike, in. . . . N.K. 27.H77 



Kilnemana-h . . \\ 30.771 



Middlcthird . . . Central .11.103 



id Lower). . N. 45,006 



Ormond (Upper) . Central 21, SOT 



Owney and Am. . W. 32.454 



Slievardagh ... E. 32.7(15 



402,5(13 



It contains the county-town of Clonmell or Clonmel 

 [CI.ONMKI.]; the city of Cashel [CASHKI.] ; the ex-bo- 

 ro-.lirh (formerly parliamentary) of Fethard ; the maiket- 

 - of Cahir', Carrick-on-Su'ir [CAKKH K-oN-Suiu], Clog- 

 . Killenaule, Nenasrh. Koserea, Tern; '. more, Thuilcs. 

 and Tippcrary ; the post-towns of 1! iinriis- 



o'-Kane, Cloghjordan, Golden, Littleton. N'e-.v Birmingham, 

 and Nfwpoit : and the villairc-. , dy, Mullina- 



hone, Silvermines, Toomavaia. and others. Some o. 

 are d ,red to above : of the others w . 



some account here. 



Kelhaid is in the barony of Middlcthird, W> miles from 

 Dublin by Kilkenny and ('alien, and '.) miles north from 

 Clonmell. The town contained, in 1S31, 5S2 houses, in- 

 habited by OH;) famiiies: 3;> houses uninhabited, and 5 

 l.nilding, with a population of 3405: the whole parish 

 .OHM'!,, inhabited by 7!'7 families ; -II houses 

 iniiii: .',d 7 buihlinsr : with a population of 4050. 



i on both banks, but chiefly 



on the left or north-eastern bank of a small stream, the 



Glashall, which ulti:: li the Suir below Clonmell. 



ard Ls an ai ',<. ived town, in a b\c situation. 



with little trade. Of the IMU.M-S about 120 arc slated, and 



ire that chid cabins, and of 

 the poorest description. There arc a parish church: a 



I'rimitive .Methodist meetini;-!. 



two Roman Catholic chapels, one the regular parish 



i 1, the other attached to an Aiigustinian friary. The 



:i church, of which the chancel is in ruins, und the 



friary chapel, are autient structures. There U a good 



1 school-house. Tlie town was formerly walled, and 



some portions of the walls an I ., -\ !,iv. 



main. Then 1 are ,.r eie lately four mills und a Ian-yard 



or two: the principal tnde i* snoemaking; but the chief 



.ilion of the labouring class is agriculture. 



to.vn was im :id : the 



.itcd lil Kd'.vard ill.. A.D. 1370: 



but the corporation has .1 \cd l:y the late Iri-h 



Mr,:,, uibi'is 



to Hi 'it, but was disfranchised at the I 



' t on Saturday, but it is of minor inipor- 



tance : the yearly sale of wheat i about 8UOO 



oats about 3000 



and a charitable' loan-fund 



.ntcd in Is of all kind- 



cluditiir a national school with ISO boys on Ih.' Uiok 

 an avei;i'j;e daily attendance' uf l:ui. 



Cahir, or Caller, is in the barony of I Ha and Oiia \ 

 11 1 miles south-west from Dublin by Clonincll. from - 

 it is distant 7 : n had, in 



i, inhabited by 7OO families: Gl hou 

 and 10 building, with a population 

 parish had 12:11 houses, inhabited by 11.. 



- uninhabited, and 23 building, v. ilh 

 Cahir is pleasantly situated on the b: 

 Suir, at tin 



and the Kiun-kincledown : it is. ).. 



toun, very clean, and has been stiadily incniLsinir,!!'. 

 not rapidly : the new houses are chiefly 01 



.-. oith I'roin H)/. to-U)/. per annu:t; 



a parish chur, liolic 



chajH'!, and a (Quakers' meeting-house. Near tlu 



-valry barracks; and on the 1.. 

 are the demesne and residence of the Karl ol G 

 atteni])t w;is made many years .11:0 to establish 

 manufacture, but it failed: since then the straw-p!:,. 

 introduced, an.! .j.loYnieiit to a nun.: 



females: there are also some exten 

 market is on Friday, and is an importa: 

 the Vi'arly silos of wheat had increased from ii. 1 

 in 182G, to 50.131 in i 



steady through the ssimo period, at :i7,(MK) barn 

 is a bridewell, and a body of co 

 town : there are also a dispensary and i'evcr-h 

 (by returns to parliament in lsa."> tiller 

 kinds; one of them a national school, with 2KO clu 

 (boys and girls) on the books, and an average : 

 of i."M) ; and two others on Erasmus Smith's ! 

 one with 51 girls on the books, and an a\ i 

 of 25 ; the other containing 11 boys. Near ti 

 an island of the Suir, are the picturesque ruins of the 

 of Cahir. 



Clogheen is in the barony of Iffa and Offa (West), 120 

 miles south-west of Dublin through Clonmell, and IH 

 miles from Clonmell. The town is chiefly in tl. 

 Shanraghan : it contained, in ]s31, 2!tl nouses, inh; 

 by 357 families : 17 houses uninhabited, and 3 

 with a population of l'.)2S : the whole parish hai'. 

 houses, inhabited by 11!)'.) families; 31) Inn 

 and 4 building: tne parish of Tullahorlon. into 

 the town extends, had -JT housi's. inhabited !' 

 Ik's; "> liuuses uninhabited, and 5 bnildiii!:. wit; 

 lion of 1 !)<;.">. \Vhat portion ut 

 we have no means of ascertaining. There is a !! 



ic chapel in the town: the paiisli church ol 

 raghan is in the immediate neighbourhood. Tu 

 parish has no church. A lar;<' corn-market 

 Saturday, at which the yearly a 

 from 42,125 barrels in I H2C, to 02,824 in : 



ley had decreased from .'{'iKI barrels in Is 

 in Is35: li . en Hour-mills in and round the 



the flour from which is sent by laud to ( 'lonmell. anil 

 thence down the Snir to \Vaterford, where it 



laix'e brewery. A body 

 arc po-tcd in the town ; and there are a small , . 



I small bridewell, and a dispensary and fe\ : 

 Near the town are the ruins of an antieiit parish , 

 and of an antient abbey. Shanbaliy Castle, the - 

 Lord Lismorc. is also in the neighbourhood. Uyt: 

 turns to parliament in ls:r> there were in the two parishes 

 eiu'ht private schools, but not any national or otl 

 Bupported by subscription or endowment. 



Killenaule is in the barony of Slievai-daiih. 

 south-west from Dublin by Urlingford, and 111 a 

 Clonmell by Fethard. The town, in 1S31, coi ' 

 bouses, occupied by 321 families; 31 ho: 

 and 2 Imildinir. with a po|)ulatio:i of ; , 

 parish had 27'' houses, inhabited by 300 families : :i In 

 uninhabited, and :i building, with a population of lss;i; 

 making a total population of 3l(i7. Th.Te aie a church, 

 a Roman Catholic chapel, and a dispensary: the church 



ill and antient. Tin i 



ral yearly fairs are held : a portion of tne county constabu- 

 lary is stationed in the town. Several of the collieries of 



