Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2008
This article is a study of the Owenite community established in Co. Clare, Ireland from November 1831 to November 1833. It examines the role of economic crisis in Ireland in stimulating interest in Owenite solutions. It analyses the differing motivations of the various actors (landowner, Owenite reformer, the peasantry) in joining the venture. It examines the sources of the community's stability – economic, sociological, and cultural. It argues that the community was destroyed by the contradictory roles of its founder, Vandeleur, who was both owner and President. In the process a detailed description of the community is provided, covering matters such as institutional arrangements, the division of labour, wages and benefits, gender relationships, and religion.
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22 Supplement to Appendix (E). Reports of Commissioners for Inquiring into the Condition of the Poorer Classes in Ireland. Parliamentary Papers XI, 1836, pp. 154–163.Google Scholar A study of the events of 1830–1831 in the Clare parish of Clare Abbey and Killone can be found in Power, J. “Terry Alt and Lady Clare”, The Other Clare, 10 03 1986.Google Scholar Interesting material on the social structure of a parish in Clare can be found in Part 1 of Kierse, S., The Famine Years in the Parish of Killaloe 1845–1851 (Killaloe, 1984).Google Scholar There has also been a study of another Clare parish, Kilrush. This parish is also of interest because its leading family was a branch of the Vandeleur family. McGuane, James T. in Kilrush from Olden Times (Inverin, 1984)Google Scholar, thus provides useful material on both the first half of the nineteenth century in the county and on the early history of the Vandeleurs.
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85 Ibid., p. 119.
86 Ibid., p. 121.
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105 Craig, , Irish Commune, p. 160.Google Scholar For newspaper accounts of these events see: The Limerick Chronicle, 13 11 1833Google Scholar, The Dublin Evening Post, 21 11 1833Google Scholar, The Clare Journal, 10 03 1834Google Scholar, and The Clare Journal, 6 12 1834.Google Scholar
106 Craig, , Irish Commune, pp. 148–152.Google Scholar “Ohone” is a mistranscription of the word “Ochón” which means “Alas”. David Lee gives the correct usage in Ralahine, p. 51.Google Scholar
107 The ordinary members had to cope with the Great Famine of 1845–1849. County Clare was one of the four worst affected counties in 1845 (official figures, probably overestimated, suggest that in this initial year over 50% of Clare's potato crop was destroyed by the blight). Since the other three counties (Antrim, Monaghan, and Waterford) were relatively cushioned by their affluence, it could be argued that Clare suffered the first hammer-blow of the famine (see Daly, M., The Famine in Ireland (Dundalk, 1986)).Google Scholar Up to this period the population had been rising. The difference between the censuses of 1841 and 1851 reveal the immediate impact of the Famine in terms of death and emigration (Rathlaheen North: 1841, 83 persons; 1851, 6 persons; Rathlaheen South: 1841, 364 persons; 1851, 337 persons). The figures toward the end of the century tell a story of continuing decline (Rathlaheen North: 1881, 1 person; Rathlaheen South: 1881, 33 persons). Sources: “Population (Ireland)”, Parliamentary Papers, XCI, 1852–1853, p. 389Google Scholar; “Population – Census of Ireland”, Parliamentary Papers, XCI, 1892, p. 24.Google Scholar
To obtain population figures from the 1821 and 1831 censuses one has to use the broader parish unit of Tomfinlough (which includes Ralahine and other local areas, including the town of Newmarket-on-Fergus). Again the effects of 1845–1849 are clear: 1821, 2789; 1831, 4053; 1841, 4401; 1851, 3182; 1881, 1726. Sources: “Population Abstract of 1821”, Parliamentary Papers, XXII, 1824, p. 138Google Scholar; “Population of Ireland”, Parliamentary Papers, XXXIX, 1833, pp. 128–129Google Scholar; “Population – Census of Ireland”, Parliamentary Papers, XCI, 1892, p. 24.Google Scholar
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The story of Vandeleur's family is a sad one. Of his five children, three died as youngsters: Boyle, the eldest son, was drowned, whilst Diana and Emily died of tuberculosis; Arthur, after a distinguished military career, died at the age of 31. Emily Vandeleur, John Scott's wife, never recovered from the shock and died in June 1843. Arthur, with the help of relatives was, however, ultimately able to keep the estate in the Vandeleur family.
108 Gráda, ó, “The Owenite Community”, pp. 204–205.Google Scholar In an 1838 account, Craig suggests that just before the community collapsed Vandeleur was planning to ease the burden of the community: “Mr Vandeleur had made arrangements at the end of 1833 for reducing the terms, and making the profits resulting from the exertions of the people more certain and available than they were the first two years”. Craig, E. T., “Letter VIII”, The Star in the East, 10 11 1838.Google Scholar No details are given.
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