[31] This was the amount of the private subscriptions upon which Government donations were made; but other large sums were raised by local Irish subscriptions, through the medium of some of the Relief Committees, of which no account was furnished to the Government, because the Committees concerned would not submit to the rule of selling at cost price except in cases of extreme destitution. Large funds were also administered by private individuals, quite independently of the Local Relief Committees; of which class of operations the following account of the expenditure of a Protestant clergyman in the south-west of Ireland, with a parish of 10,000 inhabitants, no resident gentry, not a single town in the whole of it, nor a road through the greater part of it, may be taken as a specimen:—
| £ | s. | d. | |
| Gratuitous aid of every sort | 306 | 6 | 0 |
| Loss by sale of food under market price, when exorbitant | 208 | 9 | 0 |
| Payment of labour—making road to the bog, and other public works | 150 | 10 | 0 |
| Seed—corn, wheat, oats, and barley | 300 | 0 | 0 |
| Turnip seed | 15 | 0 | 0 |
| Fishing materials | 150 | 10 | 6 |
| £1,130 | 15 | 6 |
Funds of this sort administered by benevolent and public-spirited individuals in Ireland, were generally supplied by the exertions of their relations and friends, or by grants from societies in England and elsewhere. It was a common practice for ladies in England to have parishes assigned to them in Ireland, and each lady raised all she could, and made periodical remittances to the clergyman of her adopted parish, receiving accounts from him in return, of the manner in which the money was expended. The self-denial necessary to support this charitable drain was carried to such an extent at Brighton and elsewhere, that the confectioners and other trades-people suffered severely in their business.
[32] Two electoral divisions were sometimes united under one Relief Committee, but the accounts of each electoral division were kept separate.
[33] The ration consisted of one pound of biscuit, meal, or flour; or one quart of soup thickened with meal, with a quarter ration of bread, biscuit or meal. When bread was issued, one pound and a-half was allowed. It was found by experience that the best form in which cooked food could be given, was “stirabout,” made of Indian meal and rice steamed, which was sufficiently solid to be easily carried away by the recipients. The pound ration thus prepared, swelled by the absorption of water to three or four pounds.
[34] Report from Count Strzelecki to the British Relief Association.
[35] Seventh and last Monthly Report of the Relief Commissioners.
[36] Letter from Sir John Burgoyne, quoted by the Chancellor of the Exchequer in the House of Commons.
[37] Third Report of the Relief Commission.
[38] The small holders in the Barony of Erris, in this county, declined at first to accept the seed which was offered them, saying that if they sowed it, the crops would be seized by their landlords. This was not believed at the time in England, but it has nevertheless turned out perfectly true. This barony, of which Belmullet is the principal place, is the darkest corner of Ireland. In some instances broken Landowners and their families were receiving rations, while their Tenants were starving.