287:, whom he found living in the house of an old friend. "I can't tell," quoth Hampson, "if it was not the devil buckled us together, she being lame and I blind." By this wife he has one daughter , married to a cooper, who has several children, and maintains them all, though Hampson (in this alone seeming to doat), says, that his son-in-law is a spendthrift and that he maintains them; the family humour his whim, and the old man is quieted. He is pleased when they tell him, as he thinks is the case, that several people of character, for musical taste, send letters to invite him; and he, though incapable now of leaving the house, is planning expeditions never to be attempted, much less realized; these are the only traces of mental debility; as to his body, he has no inconvenience but that arising from a chronic disorder: his habits have ever been sober; his favourite drink, once beer, now milk and water; his diet chiefly potatoes. I asked him to teach my daughter, but he declined; adding, however, that it was too hard for a young girl, but that nothing would give him greater pleasure, if he thought it could be done."
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210:'I asked him if he heard the Pretender speak; he replied – I only heard him ask, "Is Sylvan there;" on which some one answered, "He is not here please your royal highness, but he shall be sent for." He meant to say Sullivan, continued Hampson, but that was the way he called the name. He says that Captain McDonnell, when in Ireland, came to see him, and that he told the captain that Charley's cockade was in his father's house.
252:(Draperstown) who built it in 1702. It bears the name 'C O Devlin', perhaps the name of its original owner. After Ó hAmhsaigh's death it was taken to the house of his last patron, Rev. Hervey Bruce of Downhill House. From there it acquired its current name 'The Downhill Harp'. It was not at Downhill when the house burned, eventually coming up for auction in the 1960s, at which point it was purchased by the
240:"he played at the famous meeting of harpers at Belfast, under the patronage of some amateurs of Irish music. Mr Bunton, the celebrated musician of that town, was here the year before, at Hampson's, noting his tunes and his manner of playing, which is in the best old style. He said, with the honest feeling of self love, "When I played the old tunes, not another of the harpers would play after me."
168:, County Londonderry, where his father, Brian Darrogher Ó hAmhsaigh "held the whole town-land of Tyrcrevan; his mother's relations were in possession of the wood-town (both considerable farms in Magilligan)". He was raised here and it was also where his musical education began.
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and ground rent free to build a house, joining the family at the housewarming. Lord
Bristol helped alleviate the family's distress "in the dear year, his lordship called in his coach and six, stopped at the door, and gave a guinea to buy meal."
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According to the Rev. George
Vaughan Sampson, who collected his memoirs in 1805, 'his favourites' included 'Coolin', 'The Dawning of the Day', 'Ellen a Roon', and 'Cean Dubh Dilis'.
320:"greatly increased; it is now hanging over his neck and shoulders, nearly as large as his head, from which circumstance he derives his appellative, "the man with two heads."
213:'Hampson was brought into the Pretender's presence by Colonel Kelly, of Roscommon, and Sir Thomas Sheridan, and that he (Hampson) was then above fifty years old."
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was there, he was called into the great hall to play; at first he was alone, afterwards four fiddlers joined: the tune called for was, "
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184:. He spent the next decade travelling and playing both in Ireland and Scotland. His second journey to Scotland coincided with the
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233:(c. 1680 – c. 1750) and played a number of fine baroque-style variation sets by Lyons.
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or Denis
Hempson (1695 – 5 or 11 November 1807), was an Irish harper.
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company. It is now on display in their
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HE RAISED ME UP TO THAT DEGREE QUEEN OF MUSICK YU MAY CALL ME
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UNTIL 17 HUNDRED AND 02 I WAS FOUND BY CR KELLY UNDER GROUND
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copy of Rev. Sampson's letter of 3 July 1805 (LETTER XXVII)
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In his second trip to
Scotland, in the year 1745, being at
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Dictionary of Irish
Biography; Hempson (O'Hempsy), Denis
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Ann
Heymann: Dennis O'Hampsey His Style and Technique
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248:, was originally owned by a Cormac O Kelly of
244:His harp, which has since become known as the
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79:Learn how and when to remove this message
420:http://www.earlygaelicharp.info/hampsey/
375:"Verse Inscription on the Downhill Harp"
42:This article includes a list of general
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259:It bears the following inscription:
350:Chadwick, Simon (5 November 2007).
160:Ó hAmhsaigh was born in Craigmore,
202:The king shall enjoy his own again
48:it lacks sufficient corresponding
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470:19th-century Irish male musicians
465:18th-century Irish male musicians
460:Musicians from County Londonderry
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265:HIS FLOOD I HAVE NOT BEEN SEEN
236:Rev. G. V. Sampson wrote that
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402:The Ancient Music of Ireland
127:Denis Hempsey, Denis Hempson
500:19th-century Irish harpists
495:18th-century Irish harpists
225:O'Hampsey did play some of
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262:TIME OF NOAH I WAS GREEN
156:Early life and background
314:because of a growth, or
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490:People from Magilligan
354:. earlygaelicharp.info
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119:5 or 11 November 1807
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373:Billinge, Michael.
475:Irish centenarians
379:wirestrungharp.com
218:His music and harp
162:County Londonderry
109:County Londonderry
352:"Denis O'Hampsey"
182:The Downhill Harp
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275:Later life
166:Magilligan
132:Occupation
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285:Inishowen
194:Edinburgh
325:See also
306:Nickname
254:Guinness
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384:30 June
296:guineas
227:Carolan
196:, when
178:Garvagh
135:Harpist
104:c. 1695
57:improve
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360:2016
116:Died
101:Born
316:wen
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