1940 Conveyance to The Ministry of Agriculture

Mullaghmore and Seskinore Estate Lands

On 8 March 1940, Captain Wilfred Heyman Joynson-Wreford of Seskinore conveyed portions of the Mullaghmore and Seskinore estate to the Ministry of Agriculture for Northern Ireland.

The conveyance comprised:

227 acres, 3 roods and 15 perches

situated in the townlands of Mullaghmore and Seskinore, Barony of Omagh, County Tyrone, for the sum of:

£1,950

The deed is historically important as it records the continued breakup of the former McClintock estate and confirms that by 1940:

“Mullaghmore House” was already described on the map as “in ruins.”


Historical Background

The lands formed part of the extensive estate settled under the celebrated Marriage Settlement of 26 April 1893 between:

  • John Knox McClintock
    and
  • Amy Henrietta Eccles McClintock

The settlement placed the estate into trusteeship and secured financial provisions for Amy Henrietta McClintock, including a jointure of:

£300 per annum

charged upon the estate should she survive her husband.

Following the death of John Knox McClintock on 24 October 1936, the estate passed to his only child:

Amelia Isobel Eccles Joynson-Wreford

Amelia died on 30 January 1937, having previously made a will dated 22 January 1935, by which she left her estate to her husband:

Captain Wilfred Heyman Joynson-Wreford

Probate was granted in England on 24 August 1937 and resealed in Northern Ireland on 16 February 1938.


Redemption of the McClintock Jointure

Before the Ministry could obtain clear title, the longstanding McClintock jointure had to be extinguished.

Under arrangements completed in 1937–1938, Amy Henrietta McClintock agreed to release her rights in exchange for a lump sum payment of:

£3,703 15s

This formally released the estate from all claims arising under the original 1893 settlement.


Earlier Mortgage

The conveyance also recites an earlier mortgage dated 18 September 1911 whereby:

Henry George Samuel Alexander

advanced:

£1,000

to John Knox McClintock and Amy Henrietta McClintock.

Although the mortgage had long since been repaid, the executors of Colonel Henry George Samuel Alexander joined in the 1940 conveyance to formally release any remaining legal interest.

Those executors were:

  • Major Charles A. M. Alexander
  • John Colquhoun Crosbie
  • Adam Murray Alexander

Trustees and Estate Figures Mentioned

The deed references several prominent Tyrone families connected with the later history of the estate, including:

  • McClintock
  • Eccles
  • Joynson-Wreford
  • Browne
  • Stewart
  • Alexander
  • Thompson

Among the trustees and parties named are:

  • James Gildea Browne
  • Hugh Charlie Godfray Stewart
  • Edward Charles Thompson
  • Henry George Samuel Alexander

Documents Referred to in the Conveyance

DateDocument
26 April 1893Marriage Settlement
11 September 1923Appointment of New Trustees
26 April 1930Appointment of New Trustees
15 December 1937Release extinguishing Amy Henrietta McClintock’s jointure
4 February 1938Supplemental Release and Conveyance

Historical Importance

This conveyance marks an important stage in the final fragmentation of the old McClintock estate at Seskinore and Mullaghmore.

It documents:

  • the succession of the estate from McClintock to Joynson-Wreford,
  • the extinguishment of long-standing settlement rights,
  • the disposal of estate lands to the Northern Ireland government,
  • and the ruined condition of Mullaghmore House by 1940.

The conveyance therefore provides a valuable legal and historical summary of the estate between:

1893 and 1940


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