Mullanacre Lower
Mullanacre Lower is a townland in the Parish of Tomregan, Barony of Tullyhaw, County Cavan, Ireland.
Etymology
The townland name is an anglicisation of the Gaelic placename "Mullagh an Acre" which means ‘The acre of the summit’. In the 17th century it formed part of Carrowmore, County Cavan townland.
Geography
It is bounded on the north by Mullanacre Upper townland, on the east by Carrowmore, County Cavan townland, on the south by Drumane & Bofealan townlands and on the west by Moher townland. Its chief geographical features are the Crooked River and Slieve Rushen mountain, on whose southern slope it lies, reaching an altitude of over 600 feet (180 m) above sea-level.
The townland is traversed by the R200 road (Ireland), Carrowmore Lane and other minor lanes.
The townland covers 315 statute acres, including 1-acre (4,000 m2) of water.
History
It formed part of the Manor of Calva which was granted to Walter Talbot in 1610 as part of the Plantation of Ulster.
The Tithe Applotment Books for 1827 list the following tithepayers in the townland- Henderson, Hewitt, McCabe, Donahey.[1]
The Ordnance Survey Name Books for 1836 give the following description of the townland- "South-west of parish. This in old times was part of Carramore. Property of Montgomery. Rent 16 shillings to £1 per arable acre. 70 acres of mountain and pasture. Sandy soil. A Danish fort, 2 quarries. Poor natives. Old and new roads."
The 1841 Census of Ireland gives a population of 23 in Mullanacre Lower, of which 13 were males and 10 were females, with 4 houses.
The 1851 Census of Ireland gives a population of 18, a decrease of 5 on the 1841 figure, due to the intervening Irish Famine of 1845–47, of which 9 were males and 9 were females, with 4 houses. The decrease was larger in the male population.
Griffith's Valuation of 1857 lists the landlord of the townland as the Annesley Estate & the tenants as Donohoe, McBrien, Henderson, Graham, Reilly, McKiernan, Armstrong, McGovern, Kelliher and Annesley.[2]
In the 1901 census of Ireland, there are fourteen families listed in the townland.[3]
In the 1911 census of Ireland, there are eleven families listed in the townland.[4]
Antiquities
The historic sites in the townland are a medieval ringfort south of the Bawnboy Road, (Site number 1019, page 128, Mullanacre Lower townland, in "Archaeological Inventory of County Cavan", Patrick O’Donovan, 1995), and some old quarries.