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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1286

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Title: Stewart and Kincaid, Irish Land Agents in the 1840s
Author: Norton, Desmond
Date: Feb-2002
Publisher: University College Dublin. School of Economics
Series or research strand: UCD Centre for Economic Research Working Paper Series
WP02/08
Type of material: Working Paper
Abstract: Drawing on a recently-discovered correspondence archive of the 1840s, this article describes activities of the then most important land agency in Ireland, Messrs Stewart and Kincaid. Several of the firm’s clients resided in England. The partners supervised major agricultural improvements. They also implemented programmes of assisted emigration during the great Irish famine. The correspondence yields new insights into economic and social conditions in Ireland during the forties. It undermines popularly-held views of such conditions and suggests need for revision of findings of modern historians. In the late 1980s and early 1990s the author acquired about 30,000 letters written mainly in the 1840s. These pertained to estates throughout Ireland managed by J.R. Stewart and Joseph Kincaid. Their firm, hereafter denoted SK, was then the most important land agency in Ireland. Until the letters became the author’s property, they had not been read since the 1840s. Addressed mainly to the firm’s Dublin office, they were written by landlords, tenants, local agents, clergymen, civil servants, financiers, etc. The author has been researching them since 1994. It is intended to publish details on individual estates in book form. The title proposed is Landlords, tenants, famine: business of an Irish land agency in the 1840s. The first part of the present background article describes the evolution of the Dublin agency over a period of two hundred years. Part II indicates how the firm used family connections, membership of societies and ‘influence’ to generate business. Subsequent discussion is restricted to the famine decade of the 1840s. The third part examines the firm’s administrative structure. Part IV indicates that SK was not only a manager of land. The fifth section outlines aspects of what was happening in the 1840s on some of the estates not considered in detail in the book under preparation. The final section provides a summary of overall conclusions from the larger project from which the present article is drawn.
Web link to reference this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10197/1286
Subject Heading: Administration of estates--Ireland--HistoryIreland--History--Famine, 1845-1852Ireland--Economic conditions--19th centuryIreland--Social conditions--19th century
Other web versions: Publisher's version
Status of Item: Not peer reviewed
Availability: Full text available
Appears in Collections:Economists Online Collection & RePEc
Economics Working Papers & Policy Papers, 1982 -- August 2011



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