Sorry, Averil - doesn't work!
"From John Looney in his Will in 1770 to Daniel Looney & Isabel Cashin.
John Looney & Margaret Kelvy – to his son.
Daniel Looney 1745 & his wife Isabel Cashin - to his son
John Looney 1770 & his wife Isabel Camaish - to his son
John Looney 1888 [1788] & his wife Rachel Redhead. (who sold Gob ny Scoute & went to Australia)."
John Looney's 1770 will: "The sd. Daniel Looney & his wife …. and also agreeing to acquit and give up the half of Gob no Scoote w’ch he had in Settlement to his brother John Looney in lieu of Crow creen Lands at ye decease of the Survivor of us together with our other half of Gob no Scoote which I leave and bequeath to my Said Son John after the Decease of the longer liver of us…"
So the land went from father John d.1769 to his son John b.c.1748, not to Daniel’s son John b.1770 and then to his son b.1788.
It looks as though what the Radcliffes wrote was correct: "third son John (1748-1835) bought the intack Boshin and other land near what became the Hibernian, the inn first opened by his son John and his wife Rachel".
Only three generations, and I am no closer to knowing who John Looney married, with all the same named children.
Sue