CITY OF LONDONDERRY. 
On the 1st of March, 1834, the state of the bequest was as follows 
£13,289 17 
26,676 18 
The income resulting from this capital was £1870 13s. on the 1st of March, 1835. On the 
1st of April, 1835, the funds were estimated at £44,008 9s. 
Sub-section 2 .—Establishments for the Indigent. 
0 
5 
1,772 19 
2,570 
0 
9 
0 
£44,309 15 2 
To avoid a too complicated classification it has been thought advisable to tank under his 
head not oMy such establishments as are intended for the actual pauper, but such as contemplate 
the removal of the pecuniary disabilities, to which individuals of a much higher order in the scale 
of society are exposed. With establishments of each description this city is well provided. A t he 
head of them stands the Clergymen’s Widows’ Fund, next to which are the Savings Bank and 
Friel The Mowkig may more properly be termed “ Establishments for the_ Indigent;:”-the 
ine iouuwin 0 “O' r t J . ■ , •. u,. nnr h the Flax Fund, the Poor Shop, the 
flnritaHp Tnan the Ladies Penny Society witn its Diancn me j-iaA J. uuu, r> 
Ohantable man, uio < . ' T , (Taol also is made subservient to benevolent pur- 
Mendicity Association, and the Penitentiary, lhe Caol also is maue su following 
poses, and three bequests have been left to the poor of the district. In addition the following 
nnticps much information will be found in the annexed table. , . , , ^ 
The Clergymens Widows’ Fund originated in a voluntary subscription to which mos of 
the Protestant^clergy of the diocese contributed, and which has accumulated to a sum, out of 
which the widows arl each paid £35 annually. The 5 senior widows have houses rent-free. These 
houses which constitute the Widow’s Row, adjacent to the cathedral, were bu.lt from the 
funds. 
On the 19th of October, 1830, the state of the institution was as follows 
Balance of stock in hands 
Corporation securities 
Earl of Bristol’s bond 
Government securities 
£3046 3 1 
923 1 6i 
2500 0 0 
Balance on hands 
£6469 4 74 
196 7 6i 
£6665 12 
r\ *i i«fU rininlior 1834 the clergy of the diocese, then assembled in visitation, agieed 
on a number of rules for the future government of the institution, among which 
-that a committee of nine beneficed clergymen—to meet quarterly, and ot whom three snomu 
nett incomes after the following deductions . 
1. Salary to curate or curates. 
2. Interest to board of first fruits. 
3. Agents’ fees. 
4 Per-centao’e allowed to landlords on tithe payment. 
5. Per-centage payable to ecclesiastical commissioners. 
6. Rent of house, where no glebe-house is, not to exceed £j0 a yea . 
7 ‘ Interest of ^mone^expende'd in building a glebe-house, and included in certificate. 
