IRELAND UNDER COERCION
THE DIARY OF AN AMERICAN
BY
WILLIAM HENRY HURLBERT
VOL. II.
SECOND EDITION.
1888
“Upon the future of Ireland hangs the future of the British Empire.”
CARDINAL MANNING TO EARL GREY, 1868
CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
CHAPTER VII.
- Rossbehy, Feb. 21, [1]
- The latest eviction at Glenbehy, [1]
- Trafalgar Square, [1], [2]
- Father Little, [3]
- Mr. Frost, [3], [4]
- Priest and landlord, [3]
- Savings Banks’ deposits at Six-mile Bridge, [5]
- Drive through Limerick, [5]
- Population and trade, [5], [6]
- Boycotting and commerce, [6], [7]
- Shores of the Atlantic, [7]
- Tralee, [7]
- Killorglin, [8]
- Hostelry in the hills, [8]
- Facts of the eviction, [9]-[13]
- Glenbehy Eviction Fund (see Note [G2]), [12]
- A walk on Washington’s birthday, [13]
- A tenant at Glenbehy offers £13 in two instalments in full for £240 arrears, [13]
- English and Irish members, [14]
- “Winn’s Folly,” [15]
- Acreage and rental of the Glenbehy estate, [16]
- Work of eviction begun, [17]
- Patience of officers, [17]
- American and Irish evictions contrasted, [17]
- “Oh, he’s quite familiar,” [18]
- A modest Poor Law Guardian, [18], [19]
- Moonlighters’ swords, [20]
- Father Quilter and the “poor slaves,” his people, [21],[22]
- Beauty of Lough Caragh, [23]
- Difficulty of getting evidence, [25]
- Effects of terrorism in Kerry, [25]
- Singular identification of a murderer, [26]
- Local administration in Tralee, [28]