Dungar, Coolderry, Co Offaly

Dungar, Coolderry, Co Offaly 

Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London. 

p. 115. “A two storey C19 house with a front and side elevation of three bays, the centre bay of the front being recessed, and that of the side breaking forwards. Porch and arches and rusticated piers; single-storey curved bow in centre of side elevation; prominent quoins; entabaltures over ground floor windows; eaved roof on bracket cornice. The home of Mr Harry Read, who in 1911-12 had the unique distinction of playing for Ireland at cricket, rugby, and tennis. Some years ago, Mr and Mrs Read moved to a new house which they had built for themselves near an old castle in the grounds, and which is named the Old Castle House.” 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/14943005/dungar-house-dungar-county-offaly

Detached three-bay two-storey over raised basement country house in the Italianate style, built in 1839, by Thomas A. Cobden, architect, with portico to entrance and bow to south-facing side elevation. Two-storey five-bay range to north. Hipped slate roof with rendered chimneystacks, open eaves and cast-iron rainwater goods. Ruled and lined rendered walls with sandstone dressings including plinth, quoins and string courses. Square-headed window openings with sandstone architrave surrounds and timber sash windows. Rusticated ashlar portico with arched-openings contains round-headed door opening with sandstone surround, timber panelled double door and glazed fanlight. Door accessed up six sandstone steps. Walled garden to north-west of house. 

Dungar House, County Offaly, courtesy of National Inventory.
Dungar House, County Offaly, courtesy of National Inventory.
Dungar House, County Offaly, courtesy of National Inventory.
Dungar House, County Offaly, courtesy of National Inventory.
Dungar House, County Offaly, courtesy of National Inventory.

Built in 1839 by the architect Thomas A. Cobden, Dungar House is an extraordinary mid nineteenth-century country house. Located east of Roscrea, the house displays a high degree of architectural detailing and embellishment in the bold ornate Italianate style. The former owners left this house and built a new home near the ruins of the old castle on the estate. The house was neglected but fortunately the present owners acquired the house before it fell into ruin and saved this valuable contributor to the architectural heritage of County Offaly. The walled garden is notable for its size. 

Russellstown Park, Carlow, Co Carlow – A ruin

Russellstown Park, Carlow, Co Carlow – A ruin

Bence-Jones, Mark. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988, Constable and Company Ltd, London.

p. 251. “(Duckett, sub Eustace-Duckett/IFR) A two storey Classical house of 1824 by Thomas Alfred Cobden… Demolished.” 

Listed in Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988.

p. 35. A two storey classical house built in 1824 to the design of Thomas Cobden for the Duckett family. Demolished, but a good gate lodge survives.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/10300302/russellstown-park-russellstown-co-carlow

Detached three-bay single-storey gate lodge, c. 1835, with granite ashlar façade and tetrastyle Tuscan portico. 

Record of Protected Structures: 

Russellstown Park Gate Lodge,  

Rainstown . townland: Russellstown 

Detached three-bay, single-storey gate lodge, c. 1835, with granite ashlar façade and a tetrastyle Tuscan portico.  

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/10300303/russellstown-park-russellstown-co-carlow

Gateway, c. 1835, comprising group of granite piers with curved walls having cast-iron gates and railings. 

Newstown, Tullow, Co Carlow

Newstown, Tullow, Co Carlow – recently sold 

Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses.[originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978; Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.] 

p. 225. “(Eustace-Duckett/IFR) A late-Georgian house with a pillared porch, built 1824-28 to the design of Thomas Alfred Cobden, of Carlow and James Sands, of London; incorporating an earlier house said to date from C17. Sold 1973.” 

http://www.igp-web.com/Carlow/Newstown_House_1.htm 

Detached five-bay two-storey house, c. 1824, with granite Doric portico and bow windows to sides. Designed by Thomas Cobden, c. 1824. Part remodelled. Designed by James Sands. Interior retains colonnaded hall, chimney pieces and enriched friezes. 

Detached five-bay two-storey house, c. 1824, with granite Doric portico and bow windows to sides. Designed by Thomas Cobden, c. 1824. Part remodelled. Designed by James Sands. Interior retains colonnaded hall, chimney pieces and enriched friezes. 

Record of Protected Structures: 

Newstown House, Tullow. Townland: Newstown. 

Detached five-bay, two-storey house c. 1824, with granite Doric portico and bow windows to sides. Designed by Thomas Cobden c. 1824. Part remodelled. Designed by James Sands. Interior retains colonnaded hall, chimney pieces and enriched friezes.  

Jimmy O’Toole book, p. 120. [see Eustace of Castlemore] 

The Newstown branch of the family was established by Col Robert Eustace, son of Edward Eustace of Castlemore, who purchased the property in 1799 from Ephraim Carroll. The present regency house was built in 1824 and a portion of the earlier house was retained as servants’ quarters. The last member of the family to live there was Edward Arthur Rawlins Eustace, CIE, OBE, born 1899 [p. 121], who served with the 4th Gurka Rifles betwn 1918-1922, and served in the Indian Civil service from 1923-1947. Edward Arthur, who died 1970, had inherited following the death of his cousin Maurice James Eustace, a captain in the Royal Air Force, who was killed in action in Singapore in Feb 1942. 

Newstown was subsequently purchased by Paul Byrne, and Allard  and Ruth Von Rohr, a German couple. Their daughter, Alexandria, sold the property in the late 1980s and returned to live in Germany. 

recently sold €175,000 

Browne’s Hill House, Chapelstown, Co Carlow 

Browne’s Hill, County Carlow photograph courtesy of Irish Times 30th July 2020 
Browne’s Hill, County Carlow photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

Browne’s Hill House, Chapelstown, Co Carlow 

Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses.[originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978; Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.] 

p. 48 “(Browne-Clayton/IFR) A distinguished mid-C18 house of three storeys over a basement, faced in very regular granite ashlar; built 1763 for Robert Browne, to the design of an architect named Peters. 6 bay entrance front, with two bay pedimented breakfront. Partly enclosed pedimented Doric porch, with coupled columns at both sides. Shouldered window surrounds. Solid roof parapet; balustraded area parapet. Curved entrance hall with mutule cornice and frieze of swags, and pedimented Doric doorcase, shaped to the curve, with fluted half-columns. Staircase hall decorated with plasterwork foliage; wooden stairs with turned balusters and carved ends to treads. Drawing room with ceiling of rococo plasterwork incorporating birds in high relief, in the manner of Robert West. Octagon bedroom. Some alterations carried out in 1842, probably to the design of Thomas Alfred Cobden. Magnificent triumphal arch at entrance to demesne, with pediment, pilasters, volutes and rusticated wicket-gates, surmounted by lions; now removed to Lyons, Co Kildare. Browne’s Hill was sold by Lt-Col W.P. Browne-Clayton 1951.” 

Browne’s Hill County Carlow (1) photograph courtesy of Irish Times 30th July 2020 
Browne’s Hill County Carlow (1) photograph courtesy of Irish Times 30th July 2020 
Browne’s Hill County Carlow (1) photograph courtesy of Irish Times 30th July 2020 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/10300724/brownes-hill-house-kernanstown-county-carlow

Detached six-bay three-storey over basement neo-Classical country house, built 1763, with granite ashlar façade having pedimented central breakfront and full-height canted bay to rear. Renovated and extended to rear, c. 1842, with pedimented projecting Doric porch and balustrade added. 

Browne’s Hill, County Carlow photograph courtesy of National Inventory.
Browne’s Hill, County Carlow photograph courtesy of National Inventory.
Browne’s Hill, County Carlow photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/10300723/brownes-hill-house-kernanstown-co-carlow

Detached seven-bay two-storey stable complex, c. 1842, on a quadrangular plan with cut stone façade having central breakfront and gabled advanced end bays. 

Browne’s Hill, County Carlow photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/10300725/brownes-hill-house-chapelstown-co-carlow

Detached three-bay single-storey neo-Classical gate lodge, c. 1842, with diastyle pedimented projecting Doric portico, blocked entablature and corner pilasters. 

Browne’s Hill, County Carlow photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

Record of Protected Structures: 

Browneshill House, townland: Kernanstown 

An important, classical house built in 1763 with a six-bay, three-storey façade over a deep basement. The façade is of granite ashlar with a two-bay, pedimented breakfront with raised coigns to the breakfont and the ends of the façade and other walls finished with lime rendering. The rear façade has a full-height, half-hexagon bow. The windows on the façade have granite, lugged architraves while those on the other fronts have plain block and start granite dressings. All windows have small paned sashes which appear to be original. The hipped roof is obscured by a high parapet resting on a heavy cornice. An enclosed porch was added to the house in 1842 and has a wide pediment supported by a hexastyle, Tuscan Doric portico with full entablature. The porch is flanked by a granite balustrade round the basement area. The interior has its original decoration including a superb, rococo, decorative-plaster ceiling and full-height, open-well staircase  

Importance: national, architectural, interior, artistic, social. 

Jimmy O’Toole, The Carlow Gentry: What will the neighbours say! Published by Jimmy O’Toole, Carlow, Ireland, 1993. Printed by Leinster Leader Ltd, Naas, Kildare. 

Chapter: Browne of Browne’s Hill 

p. 41. Browne’s Hill House and its 600 acres had been sold to the Harold partnership by Lieut Col William Patrick Browne-Clayton and his wife Janet, who moved to live at Cashel House, in Connemara, with their son Robert Bruce and daughter Magdalene.” 

p. 42 of Jimmy O’Toole: 

“Labelled the “Carlow Land War” by the media, its leader was Kathleen Brady of Bennekerry, the daughter of a neighbouring small farmer [neighbour to Myshall Lodge], who was one of the founders of the local land club. The writer Brendan Behan called her the Joan of Arc of the small farmers fight for land in County Carlow, and the land club had an even more important literary ally in another radical of the period, Peader O’Donnell… as a result the Harold syndicate sold Browne Hill House to the Land Commission.” 

p. 44. The first of the family to settle in Ireland in 1654 was Robert Browne, from Wickham in Buckinghamshire, who served with Colonel Henry Prittie’s Regiment during the Civil War in England. He died in Carlow in 1677. His great grandson, Robert Browne II (1729-1816), completed the building of Browne’s Hill house in 1763, a year after he married Eleannor Morres, daughter of a Dublin MP. They had four sons and two daughters. The second son, Lieut General Robert Browne III married Henrietta Clayton, only daughter and heir of Sir Richard Clayton of Lancashire in 1803, and he added the name Clayton following the death of his father-in-law in 1829. It was sixty years later before a Browne’s Hill heir added the Clayton name.” 

William Browne (1763-1840) inherited Browne’s Hill after his father’s death in 1816, and he was an MP for Portarlington – the only member of the family ever to hold a seat in Parliament. It was after his wife, Lady Charlotte Bourke, daughter of the Earl of Mayo, who was Archbishop of Tuam, that Charlotte Street in Carlow is named. His son, Robert Clayton Browne, contested the election in 1852, against MP John Sadlier, but was defeated. Sadlier tended towards the liberal side in politics…” 

p. 47 “Prior to the death of his father, Robert Clayton Browne lived at Viewmount, a short distance from the family seat and one time home of Sir Edward Crosbie, Bart, whose controversial execution during the 1798 Rebellion would remain a subject of bitter debate years afterwards…p. 48. Viewmount House was built in 1750 and was demolished about 1860. All that now remains in ruins are some stables and outbuildings.” 

The Browne-Claytons were one of County Carlow’s most decorated military families William Browne-Clayton (1835-1907) , who assumed the additional name of Clayton in 1889, and his wife Caroline, whom he married in 1867, had three sons and nine daughters. Their son William died 1897 in battle. … The eldest of the family, Bridadier-General Robert Browne-Clayton (1870-1939) married an Australian bride, Mary Magdalene Wienholt..” 

Paddy Rossmore. Photographs. Edited by Robert O’Byrne. The Lilliput Press, Dublin 7, 2019.  

p. 10. “In spring 1961 the Irish Georgian Society’s Bulletin warned readers that a house called Browne’s Hill in County Carlow was due for imminent demolition unless a buyer could be found; the house on just five acres (the Land Commission having taken and distributed all the rest) was being offered for £2500. … The architect is known simply as “Peters”: this may be the gardener and landscape architect Matthew Peters who was then working in Ireland. The superlative entrance gates of Browne’s Hill, for which an unsigned and undated drawing survives, are attributed to the same person and thought to be of the same period. Taking the form of a triumphal arch, they feature a carriage opening flanked by Doric pilasters with Gibbsian postern gates on either side on each of which sits a lion. …Following intervention by the Irish Georgian Society, Browne’s Hill survived, and was converted into flats. The magnificent entrance to the estate was acquired by University College Dublin, dismantled and erected at Lyons, Co Kildare, which was then owned by that institution.” 

http://sites.rootsweb.com/~irlcar2/Brownes_Hill_House.htm 

Browne’s Hill mansion occupies the site of an ancient religious establishment called St. Kieran’s Abbey. The Browne family moved from Essex and quickly became one of the most influential families in County Carlow. Built in 1763, Browne’s Hill is one of the few surviving Georgian mansions in the county and should thus be considered as a work of considerable historical value. It was probably designed by the Georgian landscape architect, Matthew Peters.  

This fine house originally comprised a detached six-bay three-storey over-basement structure, built in the Neo-Classical style with a granite ashlar façade. the house ‘quickly became the flagship seat in the county and the property which all others tried to emulate or outbuild’. It was renovated by Thomas Cobden in the 1830s, with a pedimented central breakfront on the front and a full-height canted bay extended to the rear. The park wall and nearby house at Viewmount were built using material from the original quondam abbey, while the high wall around the estate was built as part of a Famine Relief project in the 1840s. 

Note from Michael Purcell 

Unfortunately much of the Browne and Browne-Clayton archives have been lost or destroyed, meaning much of the family history may be lost forever. In the present archive is a letter from the family’s Dublin based solicitor, dating to the 1880s, in which he apologizes for the fact that his cellar has flooded with the result that certain boxes of Browne deeds and papers had been damaged beyond recognition.  

A number of papers were burned shortly before the family left Browne’s Hill in the1950s. When Frank Tully, the present owner of Browne’s Hill House, moved in during the late 1950s, he found wine in the cellars, oil paintings on the walls and a large pile of Browne-Clayton family documents in one of the rooms. Some documents relating to land in the area were duly framed.  

The remaining documents were removed by the builder and destroyed. Following the death of the Carlow solicitor Hugh O’Donnell in the 1960s, one witness recalled seeing a young man burning all the papers and deeds relating to O’Donnell’s clients, including the Browne-Claytons. This same witness points out that we are thus extremely lucky that there is anything left of the Browne-Clayton papers at all. 

Source: Michael Purcell 

Robert Browne of Browneshill 

Robert Browne from Wickham in Buckinghamshire, came to Ireland in 1650 and settled at Browneshill, townland of Kernanstown (property of Wall family prior to 1641 rebellion). 

On 24 December, 1674 Charles II granted a new Charter to Carlow. Robert Browne was appointed the first modern Sovereign of the Borough. He had been the last Portreeve under the old Charter of James Ist. He died in 1677. 

John Browne (Son) married Mary Jennings of Kilkee Castle, Co. Kildare. 

William Browne their (Son) married Elizabeth Clayton Kildare. He died in 1772. 

Robert Browne II (1729 – 1816) succeeded his father William. He married Eleanor Morris, Dublin. 

William Browne (1763 – 1840) (Son) was M.P. for Portarlington – only family member to hold a seat in Parliament. It was following his wife’s death Lady Charlotte Bourke in 1806 that Charlotte St. was named. 

Robert Clayton Browne (Son) (1799 – 1888) contested Carlow Borough Election in 1852 was defeated. 

William Browne Clayton (Son) (1835-1907) Assumed the additional name Clayton by Royal Licence in 1889 (had been adopted previously). On 10th January 1867, he married Caroline Barton, fifth daughter of John Watson Barton, DL, JP, of Stapleton Park near Pontefract. Yorkshire. England. 

Robert Browne Clayton (1870 – 1939) Brigadier General Married Mary Magdalene Wienholt (Australian). 

William Patrick Browne Clayton (Son) (Colonel) (1906 – 1971) sold the estate to G. W. Harold in 1951 and went to live in Connemara

On 23rd October 1935 he was married at St Margaret’s, Westminster, to Janet Maitland Bruce Jardine. 

The last house on the corner of Browne Street and Charlotte Street (now a car park) was the Town House of the Brownes. The buildings halfway up Charlotte Street were their stables and coach houses. 

William Clayton Browne-Clayton 

Carlow Sentinel. 

Saturday, October 9th, 1897. 

Lieutenant William Clayton Browne-Clayton Killed In Action. 

On Saturday last a feeling of profound sorrow was caused not only in this town and county but throughout every portion of her Majesty’s wide dominions by the sad intelligence that some British officers had been killed in action at the North-Western frontier in India, including a gallant young Carlowman, Lieutenant William Clayton Browne-Clayton, second son of William Clayton Browne-Clayton, Esquire, D.L., of Browne’s Hill, Carlow. 

Very meagre particulars of the engagement have as yet been received, but it is probable that it was a hand-to-hand encounter, and it is certain that our young county man was in the forefront of the fight when cut down in the prime of youth, and when apparently a brilliant career was before him. 

By early post on Saturday a letter was received from him from the seat of war, written in excellent spirits, and it was not until some members of the family reached the Carlow railway station, with the intention of proceeding to Dublin by early train, that they learned the sad news through the morning papers. 

By every section of the community sorrow and sympathy find deep expression, and during the day the Church bell was tolled in honour of the dead. 

The gallant young officer, whose death is everywhere mourned, had only been in the army a little over two years, having entered the Royal West Kent Regiment on May 29th, 1895. 

[note added 2010 by Michael Purcell]. 

The following account of the battle during which William Browne-Clayton was killed was compiled by Philip Wilson,  transcribed by Grace Bunbury. 

In September 1897 Lieutenant Colonel J.L. O’ Bryen commanded the 31st Punjabis in the Expedition to Bajour and took part in various operations until he fell whilst gallantly leading it in the storming of the heights were the villages of Agrah and Gat are situated in the Mamund Valley on the 30th September 1897. 

Winston Churchill in his book The Malakand Field Force invites the reader to examine the legitimacy of village-burning. A camp of a British Brigade, moving at the order of the Indian Government and under the acquiescence of the people of the United Kingdom, is attacked at night. 

Several valuable and expensive officers, soldiers and transport animals are killed and wounded. The assailants retire to the hills. Thither it is impossible to follow them. They cannot be caught. They cannot be punished. 

Only one remedy remains; their property must be destroyed. Their villages are made hostages for their good behaviour. 

On the 29th September over a dozen villages in the plains of the Mamund Valley were destroyed, without a single loss of life. However on the 30th September events took a totally different course Brigadier General Jeffrey’s 2nd Brigade attacked the fortified villages of Agrah and Gat. 

These two villages occupied the strongest strategical position of any yet seen, perched on the lower slope of a steep and rugged hill, and mutually supporting each other they were protected on either side by high rocky boulders, great rocks lay tossed about, interspersed with these were huts or narrow cultivated terraces, covered with crops, and rising one above the other by great steps of ten to twelve feet. 

Both villages had to be occupied at the same time and this compelled the Brigade to attack on a broader front in full view of the enemy, whose drums could be heard as they manned the rocky heights, their red flags plainly visible to the advancing army. 

The Guides Cavalry on the left advanced as far as the scrub would allow them drawing fire from isolated skirmishers. The Guides Infantry was ordered to clear the spur to the left; the 31st Punjab Infantry supported by the 38th Dogras, the centre ridge between the two villages, while the Royal West Kent Regiment was meant to advance straight up the hill on the right of the Guides. 

The fighting was at very close quarters and it soon became apparent that there were insufficient troops to undertake the task. A gap opened in consequence, between the Guides and Royal West Kents and this enabled the enemy to get round the left flank of the Royal West Kents, while the 31st Punjab Infantry was also turned by the enveloping enemy on the right. 

The Royal West Kents eventually forced their way into the village of Agrah and encountered stiff enemy resistance in strongly occupied sangers. Under heavy enemy fire the Bengal Sappers and Miners commenced to destroy the village with explosives. 

Meanwhile on the right flank the 31st Punjab Infantry commanded by Lieut. Colonel O’Bryen were exposed to severe fire from a rocky ridge on their flank. Their attack was directed against a great mass of boulders tenaciously held by the enemy. The two advance companies being hotly engaged at less than 100 yards, experiencing cross fire from their right flank. 

Lieut Colonel O’Bryen moved swiftly from point to point directing the fire and animating his men who were devoted to him. As the enemy marksmen’s bullets struck the ground everywhere around his prominent figure he continued to live a charmed life. 

‘Two companies of the 38th Dogras’ came up to clear their right. The gunfire, though accurate, could not shift the tribesmen from their cover. So Lieut Colonel O’Bryen of the Punjabis ordered a charge.  

As O’Bryen rose to lead the 31st Punjabis in the charge towards their objective he was mortally wounded and was then carried to the rear. The casualty roll for the 31st (Punjab) Regiment of Bengal Infantry confirms he died of gun shot wounds to the abdomen. 

Brigadier Jeffreys ordered the 7th Battery to engage the enemy from 600 yards to cover the withdrawal of the 2nd Brigade. The shells screamed over the heads of the Royal West Kents who were now clear of the hills retiring towards the guns. As the guns of the 7th Battery continued to fire, white puffs could be seen as the shells burst along the crest of the ridge, tearing up the ground adding great clouds of dust, whilst flames and smoke continued to rise from the burning village. 

At length the withdrawal was complete and the 2nd Brigade returned to its camp five miles down the valley ..?.. job almost done. The Village of Agrah was well and truly destroyed whilst the village of Ghat had been severely shelled. 

On hearing the news General Sir Bindon Blood proceeded to Inyat Kila with sizeable reinforcements. He arrived on the 2nd October giving orders for fourteen 12 pounder guns to arrive in time for a determined two Brigade strong attack on Agrah and Gat which was scheduled for the 5th October. As the British Army poured into the Mamund Valley, the tribesmen sued for peace on the 4th October. 

After the action on the 30th September Lieut Colonel McCrae 45th Sikhs was sent up to command the 31st Punjab Infantry and Winston Churchill was attached as a temporary measure to the 31st Punjab Infantry to fill the vacancy arising from Lieut. E.B. Peacock receiving gun shots wounds to the thigh in the action on the 30th September. The total casualties for the day being 61 of which 8 being officer casualties: Lieut Colonel O’Bryen (killed) 2nd Lieut W.C. Browne-Clayton of the Royal West Kents (killed ) with a further six Officers of the Royal West Kents being wounded that day at Agrah. 

Source: Michael Purcell & Turtle Bunbury website 

Prayers for Lieutenant William Browne-Clayton. 

[Sermon preached in St. Mary’s Church, Carlow, on Sunday, 3rd October 1897, extracted from Dean John Finlay’s notes 24 years later, in 1921, at the age of 80 years, Dean Finlay, one time Dean of Leighlin, was himself murdered by the Irish Republican Army following a raid on his home. G.B.] 

Rev. Dean John Finlay delivered the following address on the death of 24 year old Lieutenant William Clayton Browne-Clayton, who was born at Browne’s Hill House in 1873 and was killed in Afghanistan in September 1897. 

A feeling of sorrow I know pervades this congregation to-day for the Browne-Clayton family – which has been plunged into grief by the loss of one of its members. 

Oh! — how hard it is for a father and a mother, how hard it is for the brothers and sisters to think of a young life full of health and strength and hope being taken so suddenly. 

The anxious watching, day by day, for news, and then when it comes with its burden of sorrow, the hearts of the waiting ones are wrung with grief –such grief as only those who suffer can know its depth. 

He fell doing his duty. 

You, my brethren, I know do sorrow this day with those that sorrow – you give them your heartful sympathy ; but, brethren, stop not here. 

Give them also your prayers that God may comfort and strengthen them; and when we kneel and use the words: 

“We humbly beseech Thee of Thy goodness, O Lord, to comfort and succour all them who in this transitory life are in trouble, sorrow, need, sickness, or any other adversity”: and we also bless The Holy name for all Thy servants departed this life in Thy Faith, and fear. 

When we use these words , I say, let us think of those who sorrow to-day, and let us commit them to God’s care. 

We are all one in Christ. 

We are all bound to feel for one another, and to pray for one another. 

May a feeling of closer union take possession of our hearts to-day, that Christ may dwell in our hearts by faith, that we being rooted and grounded in love may be able to comprehend with all the saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height, and to know the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge, that ye may be filled with all the fullness of God. 

And then out of that fullness may we give the sympathy that softens sorrow, and the prayer which will comfort those who mourn, with the comfort which comes from the Father of us all. 

Source: Michael Purcell & PPP 

Captain Robert Bruce Browne-Clayton 1940-2014. 

By Michael Purcell. 

The death on the 19th of January 2014, following a short illness, of Capt. Robert Bruce Browne-Clayton, terminated the last link with a Carlow gentry family whose connection with the area stretched back to the mid-17th century. Robert spent his early years at Browne’s Hill House, Carlow. 

His ancestor Robert Browne settled in Carlow town in 1650, having come as an officer in Oliver Cromwell’s New Model Army and was a witness to the surrender of Carlow Castle in July of that year. 

In the years that followed Robert Browne purchased land throughout Carlow. 

By the 1700s the family owned nearly all of what is now Graiguecullen and Sleaty as well as large tracts of land in Carlow, Dublin and several other counties. 

For generations they held positions such as, Keeper of the Rolls, High Sheriff and Deputy Lord Lieutenant for the county and were often called upon to act as Magistrates, Justice’s of the Peace and settlers of disputes.  

The family were regarded as fair landlords. During the Famine they provided employment by building the massive high wall stretching for miles around the Browne’s Hill estate. 

In recognition of the high regard the family were held in, it is recalled today by family members, and confirmed by local research, that in the 1920s during “the troubles” in Ireland, President Éamon de Valera issued a direct order that Browne’s Hill House should not be raided or damaged by the Irish Republican Army.  

Robert Browne-Clayton, better known as Robbie,  was born on 25th April 1940, the only son of Lieutenant Colonel William Browne-Clayton and Janet Jardine.  

He received his early education at home and in the Browne-Clayton Memorial School in Barrack Street, the school was founded and funded by his grandfather  Brigadier General Robert Browne-Clayton, DSO GOC.  

His maternal grandfather was Brigadier General James Bruce Jardine, CMG DSO DL. From this side of the family Robbie was a direct descendant of James Bruce, the famous 18th century Abyssinian explorer, who was credited with finding the source of the Nile. 

At a young age Robbie was sent to Frilsham House boarding school near Reading and later to Loretto School, Muselborough in Scotland. Travelling on his own by ferry, train and bus he became, in his own words, “a seasoned traveller by the age of nine”! 

He completed his education and military training at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. 

Following in the family tradition of service in the British Army he was commissioned in 1960 as an officer in the Royal Green Jackets. 

In August 1961 on the night the Berlin Wall was erected he was in command of a British force stationed nearby in the old Reichstag building. He witnessed the Soviets shooting down civilians attempting to flee. With his platoon on full battle alert he contacted the Allied command post for orders, only to be told that if his men fired one shot in retaliation it would lead to the outbreak of World War Three. Not wishing to be recorded in history as the man responsible for firing-up such a catastrophe, Robbie reluctantly ordered his men to stand down. 

During his posting in Berlin his platoon was placed on security duty at Spandau Prison, there Robert often engaged in conversation with Albert Speer and Rudolf Hess as they tended to the little gardens they had established on the prison grounds. Robert told me that he found Hess to be talkative and friendly but he found Speer to be reserved and not so friendly. 

He later served in British Guyana, Malaya and Borneo. He retired from the army in 1968, 

After leaving the army he studied at The Royal Agricultural College and after graduating was appointed as agricultural adviser to the Conservative Research Department. 

When the Conservatives won the general election in 1979, Robbie was appointed by Margaret Thatcher as consultant to her Government on Agricultural, Fisheries, Food, Forestry and Countryside policies. Robbie’s friendship with Mrs Thatcher continued following her resignation as prime minister. 

In his youth he was sponsored to become a member of one of the great City Livery Companies, Merchant Taylor. In the 1970s he was made a Freeman of the City of London. 

 As a result of his years “in” Politics he held several  Political and Public Affairs positions after leaving the Conservatives until he retired :-  Director, Economic & Public Affairs at the Building Employers Confederation. Director General, The National Home Improvement Council. Director of External Affairs, Federation of Master Builders. General Secretary (Chief Executive), the Chamber of Coal Traders. Chief Executive Officer, IFA Promotions Ltd. as well as serving in the Financial Services Industry in London. 

He was a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts. 

 In 2007 I advised Robbie that he should donate the Browne-Clayton estate papers and family documents to the archives in Carlow County Library. He agreed to do so and later that year travelled to Carlow from his home in Devon bringing with him a large collection of documents dating from 1640s to the 1900s.  

Among the documents are parchments signed by the Earl of Thomond and the Earl of Ormonde, memorials, deeds, indentures, estate records and details on the little known Carlow Orphan Society and the Carlow Cowkeepers Association. 

Speaking of his donation to the library, Carlow County Librarian Josephine Coyne stated, “we owe a debt of gratitude to Mr Browne-Clayton for depositing his papers in the Carlow Archives, they have proved to be an invaluable asset for historians and for students researching Irish history. The collection is also a superb utility for genealogical research”. 

During his visit to Carlow he was delighted to meet up with his cherished childhood nanny Bridie Fleming, the last time they met Robbie was aged nine, they chatted about old-times and shared happy memories of Browne’s Hill and the days they spent there. He made his first visit in over 60 years to Browne’s Hill House courtesy of the present owners Frank and Patty Tully, where he recalled many fond memories of growing up in a place he dearly loved.  

Robbie often humorously recalled that he had inherited, but never used or availed of, the title of Prince which had passed down from Major General Robert Browne who was, in 1794, created a Prince of the Holy Roman Empire by Pope Pius V1 in recognition of his role as a commander in the 12th Light Dragoons.  

Throughout Robbie’s life his great interests apart from his family were fishing, hunting, Classical music and all sports. He was a member of the KRRC Celer et Audax Club and the RGJ Officers Club/Regimental Association. 

In 1969, in a ceremony performed by the Bishop of Tuam, the Right Reverend Arthur Butler, MBE, Robbie married Jane Evelyn Butler in Christchurch Cathedral, Dublin. They lived for a time in Dublin before moving to live in England. At the time of his death he was living with his family in Devon. 

He is survived by his wife Jane, his son, Benedict, daughter, Clare, grandchildren, Corisande, Thomas, Charlie, Esmonde, Celeste and Sophie, sister, Magda Dunlop, nephews and nieces. 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

The following is extracted from Eulogy delivered at St. Peter’s Church, Lamerton by Major Carol James Gurney, — a fellow officer and a former member of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen at Arms to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth. 

We come together today with Robbie’s family to remember him to and to thank God for a good life and to support, his wife Jane and children Ben and Clare. 

Born in Scotland in 1940, early in the war, in the border country where his mother came from, his father being away in the war. After the war the family moved back to Ireland to the family estate at Browne’s Hill in Carlow. 

In County Carlow and later when the family moved to Connemara, in the far west, was where Robbie grew up and where he developed his love of the countryside and learnt to fish and shoot, sports that remained his passion throughout his life.  

I am told he swum under water to learn where the salmon lay and several times when hunting shot a left and right snipe etc. 

He attended Loretto School in Scotland where he excelled at swimming, tennis, rugger and music. 

He was a good friend to me for over 50 years, originally as soldiers together, then when he lived in London and latterly when he and Jane moved to Devon. 

I first met Robert at Colchester at the end of 1963. That summer, at very short notice the Regiment was sent to British Guyana to calm the riots.  

While in Guyana we somehow managed a week’s leave and spent it together in Barbados where we stayed in a very scruffy little hotel. Each day Robbie managed to charm us in to the grandest beach hotels, where we spent most of our days, returning at night to our down-market hotel rooms. 

He always had charm, style and elegance that won over every person he came in contact with. 

Then we were both posted for two years to the Junior Leaders Training Regiment– a school for 16/17 year-olds. That was a lot of fun with much sport. Robbie was on the adventure training side; climbing, sailing, canoeing and potholing mostly out in the wilds of Wales. 

Then back to the Regiment in Penang with six monthly postings in Borneo, another interesting and enjoyable post. 

Then back to Germany where Robbie is still fondly remembered for organising a magnificent dance in the officer’s mess with the best dance band and food available in a divided Berlin. He arranged an aeroplane to fly out girls from the UK for the event and managed to keep them all under control, one of them is with us in this church today. 

I make no apology for dwelling on this time of his life — it moulded him for the rest of his life — it was when I knew him most closely — and when many of his friendships were made, evidenced by the number of brother officers here today. 

Robbie retired from the army in 1968 after eight happy and eventful years. 

He returned to Ireland and there did the best thing he ever did — he met and married Jane in 1969. 

They moved to London and lived for 30 years in their lovely house backing on to Greenwich Park. Ben and Clare grew up there and from where Robbie had a number of interesting jobs. 

But before that in the mid 1970s he bravely enrolled in a two year course at The Royal Agricultural College Cirencester by then a mature student in his mid thirties.  

A very interesting job followed– with the Conservative Party in opposition, at the Research Department working on Agricultural policy. He much enjoyed his eight years there and maintained his links for that time and his interest in agricultural affairs. 

There was a cultural side to Robbie’s life, well known to his earlier soldiers – he loved Classical music – he liked and understood good pictures and art – he was a Fellow of the Royal Society of the Arts and a Merchant Taylor, one of the great City Livery Companies and a Freeman of the City of London. 

In 2001 he retired and moved down to Horsebridge in Devon overlooking the Tamar River where he spent many happy hours trying to catch its elusive salmon. 

Robbie loved the English and Irish countryside but he and Jane also loved the sun and enjoyed visiting his little place in Egypt. 

He was fond of his Irish background and visited there as often as time allowed. He kept in touch with friends from the different phases of his life, not least his Regimental friends. 

He was a wonderful and caring grandfather, not just generous but loving and genuinely interested in their achievements.  

He revelled in the successes and lives of his children and family, above all he enjoyed and appreciated the love and support of Jane through thick and thin. 

Personally I shall remember him as a staunch friend, an enthusiastic sporty companion, a true countryman, a charming, cultured, elegant and kind gentleman. 

Bless you Robbie and thank you for your friendship. 

Source: Michael Purcell c.2014 

http://www.turtlebunbury.com/history/history_family/hist_family_b_clayton.html 

Browne’s Hill mansion occupies the site of an ancient religious establishment called St. Kieran’s Abbey. The Browne family moved from Essex and quickly became one of the most influential families in County Carlow. Built in 1763, Browne’s Hill is one of the few surviving Georgian mansions in the county and should thus be considered as a work of considerable historical value. This fine house originally comprised a detached six-bay three-storey over-basement structure, built in the Neo-Classical style with a granite ashlar façade. the house ‘quickly became the flagship seat in the county and the property which all others tried to emulate or outbuild’. (It was renovated by Thomas Cobden in the 1830s, with a pedimented central breakfront on the front and a full-height canted bay extended to the rear. The park wall and nearby house at Viewmount were built using material from the original quondam abbey, while the high wall around the estate was built as part of a Famine Relief project in the 1840s. [1a] 

In October 2009, the Department of Manuscripts in the National Library of Ireland stumbled upon several boxes of maps, drafts, surveys and correspondence relating to the Browne-Clayton family, which had been acquired by the NLI in 1982.  

See also the Carlow Rootsweb pages by Michael Purcell who greatly assisted with the writing of this piece. 

The Browne’s of Carlow originally came from the West Country of England with Cromwell in August 1649.  

Robert Browne, second son of Sir William Browne of Abbas Roding in Essex, is said to have come to Ireland with Cromwell. He married Jane Feltham of Gray’s Inn, London and died on 10 Feb 1677. [1b]  

His eldest son, John Browne of Carlow was married circa 1680 to Mary, daughter of Robert Jennings of Kilkea Castle, Co. Kildare. As late as 1717-1723, Benjamin Burton’s leases of Feltham’s concerns listed John Browne as lesse of three properties in Carlow Town.  

John’s younger brother was Robert Browne of Tullow Street, Carlow. In 1675, King Charles II granted a new charter to the borough of Catherlough, in which His Majesty appointed Robert to be Sovereign; he was succeeded by Edward Reynolds. An account of this Robert’s early days in Carlow found by Michael Purcell among the family papers reads: ‘When King James II came to the throne of England in 1685, Mr Browne suffered great hardships and loss, his house was occupied by his enemies and his family imprisoned. His land and stock sequestered and plundered and still worse might have happened only for the intervention of a worthy and respectable Roman Catholic gentleman of the name of Allen from Pollerton near Carlow town. Upon their release Robert built a roomy Mansion close to the Tullow Gate in Carlow town’. The “roomy Mansion” referred to is now Lennon’s Pub and adjoining house, (120/121 Tullow Street, Carlow).  

Another reference to him provide by Friend of Carlow from the Browne-Clayton Papers refers to a  Round Tower which stood on the east of the present church ruins at Killeshin up until 1734. In the Browne-Clayton papers of 1704, it is recorded by Robert Browne that ‘on Monday at 3 o’clock in the afternoon the 8th day of March 1703 the 105 foot high Steeple Tower of Killeshin was undermined and flung down by Mr Bambrick who was employed by Captain Wolseley in three days work. There were two Inscriptions on the doorway of the Tower Steeple the rubbings are attached and require translation by scholars.’ (Alas, the attachments have gone missing in action). 

WILLIAM BROWNE (C. 1684 – 1772)  

In the parish applotment of Carlow town from 1744, William is listed as a resident of the north side of Tullow Street in Carlow Town while a Major Browne is registered, alongside Philip Bernard, on the east side of Burrin Street.   

William married Elizabeth, daughter of Rev John Clayton, Dean of Kildare and Derry, and sister of the learned Robert Clayton, Bishop of Clogher and Dean of Derry. She was said to be a kinswoman of the Clayton baronets of Adlington Hall, Lancaster, with whom the Browne family later married.[2]   
  
Their firstborn son John died unmarried on 23 April 1765. Their second son Robert succeeded and is dealt with anon.   
  
As to their four daughters:   
(1) Juliana (1744-1787) who wasmarried twice, 1, in 1762, to Thomas Cooper of Benekerry and Newtown, and 2, in 1776, Captain James Fitzmaurice (1735-1813). One of Captain Fitzmaurice’s younger sisters Gertrude married Thomas Bunbury Lenon, a grandson of Benjamin Bunbury II of Killerig, Carlow. For more on the Fitzmaurice link, see here. With thanks to Catherine FitzMaurice, Bandon Genealogy.  
(2) Anne was married on 20 July 1758 to the Rt Rev Thomas Bernard, DD, Bishop of Limerick;  
(3) Catherine married the Rev Abraham Symes, DD;   
(4) Mary married Peter Gale of Ashfield, Queen’s County.  

   

THE CONSTRUCTION OF BROWNE’S HILL, 1763  

The Brownes purchased land adjoining Carlow in the 1650s. Over a century later, Browne’s Hill House was apparently built in 1763, after a design by Mr Peters, probably in celebration of Robert Browne’s marriage to Eleanor Morres the year before. [1a, 1c] Together with its neighbouring mansion of Viewmount to the east, the house occupied the site of an ancient quondam abbey dedicated to St. Kieran. During the suppression of the monasteries, this property was granted to one of the forbears of the Earl of Thomond. Three towers of this monastic pile were still standing in the 1760s, but these remains were later used as building materials for both Viewmount House and the park wall at Browne’s Hill. (Parliamentary Gazeteer of Ireland, 1845). One of the most majestic megalithic remains in Europe is to be found in the vicinity – the Browne’s Hill Dolmen. Its 103 ton granite table stone is believed to be the biggest of its kind in the world.   

The house was built for John Browne’s son and heir, William Browne of Browne’s Hill, Co Carlow. I visited the property with my parents and David Ashmore of Sotheby’s in August 2020. The front facade is instantly gorgeous; the Victorian backside is a little too busy for me, and oddly institutional, with windows galore and not quite the right proportion. There is a fabulous wide moat around the back, with rooms for coal and timber carved deep into the earth beneath the back lawn. As my father observed, the structures were so well constructed that they seem to have lasted with little or no attention. They were after all built in the time of the Seven Years War in an age when people still felt much empathy for their fallen House of Stuart and the Jacobites.  

The stable yard is fabulous, reminiscent to my untrained eye of James Gandon’s yard at Carriglass in County Longford. The buildings are in good nick, including the interconnected lofts where Robbie and Magda used to roller skate from one end to the other. I was particularly impressed by a cool room that I think must have been for storing apples – a cold, hallowed sanctuary of marble beneath an octagon roof. One side of the yard houses five separate carriage houses while the rooms opposite appear to have been for the family’s hunters, including what seems to be quarters for a broodmare and her offspring. Parts of the farm were carved up by the Land Commission are distributed among neighbouring farmers, as was the old walled garden, but there are still a couple of fields adjacent, perhaps 50 acres or more. Some of the beech and lime trees are fabulous. My parents, members of the Tree Society, observed that they were curiously narrow while my father suggested that the hat-trick of Scots Pines somehow indicated a support for Jacobites, although that doesn’t quite tally with what I know of the Browne’s in the period of 1688-1745. There is also a charming folly-like game larder close to the house.   

ROBERT BROWNE (D. 1816)  

Robert Browne succeeded to Browne’s Hill on the death of his father in 1772. Ten years earlier, on 27th March 1762, he married Eleanor, daughter of Richard Morres, MP, barrister-at-law (see de Montmorency). At some point he seems to have purchased a site in modern day Graigecullen from the Earl of Thomond which later became the site of Father Fitzgerald’s Graig Chapel. He was the man who leased Viewmount to Sir Edward Crosbie in 1792 and he appears to have turned his back on Lady Crosbie when she sent her agent to him for help during Sir Edward’s court martial. He died in January 1816, leaving four sons – William (see below), Robert (see below), Colonel Redmond Browne who died unmarried and the Rev John Browne – and two daughters, Elizabeth and Anne, who both died unmarried.  

MAJOR BROWNE, PRINCE OF THE HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE  

Robert and Eleanor Browne’s second son was Lieutenant General Robert Browne Clayton (d. 1845), a distinguished officer who commanded His Majesty’s 12th Regiment of Light Dragoons. In 1794, while still a Major, he was stationed with the regiment near Rome. During this time he received an audience with Pope Pius VI. He was accompanied by fellow officers Captain Head and Lieut. the Hon Pierce Butler. The Pope ceremonially placed a Dragoon helmet on Browne’s head expressing ‘his gratitude to the British nation, his earnest desire for its welfare’ and concluding with a prayer that truth and religion might triumph over injustice and infidelity.   

The Pope made Robert a Prince of the Holy Roman Empire, a title that has passed down to the present head of the family, Robert Browne Clayton. A painting of this ceremony hangs in the Victoria & Albert Museum in London. It was painted by James Northcote RA, a pupil Sir Joshua Reynolds, and entitled ‘The Presentation of British Officers to Pope Pius VI’.[3].The painting is said to hang in the Army Museum in Chelsea in London while a copy is at Sandhurst. The 8th/12th Royal Lancers used it as their Christmas card some years ago.   

THE EGYPTIAN CAMPAIGN  

He served during the Egyptian campaign of 1801, including the actions of the 8th, 13th and 21st March. As such he was on the scene when the British commanding officer Sir Ralph Abercromby was fatally wounded at Alexandria. He also served in the costly and unsuccessful Walcherën campaign in 1809 and was present at the siege of Flushing.  

SUCCESSION TO ADLINGTON HALL  

On 1st December 1803, he married Henrietta Clayton, only daughter and eventual heiress of the essayist Sir Richard Clayton, 1st Bart, of Adlington, Lancashire, Recorder of Wigan and sometime Constable of Lancaster Castle. Her brother was Major Sir Robert Clayton, 2nd and last Baronet.[4] When Sir Richard died at the Consul in Nantes in April 1828, it was the General who succeeded to the classical brick mansion of Adlington Hall. He was also given the Carrigbyrne estate in County Wexford where the Browne-Clayton memorial stands today.   

Sir Richard’s brother Robert succeeded to the Clayton baronetcy but died without male heir in 1839, whereupon the title became extinct. The General’s succession to Adlington was completed on 6th April 1829 – less than two weeks after the Catholic Relief Act was passed by Parliament – when he assumed the additional surname and arms of Clayton by Royal License.  

CARLOW POLITICS  

During the turbulent political days of the 1830s he was a prominent magistrate and Conservative representative in Carlow affairs. In 1839 he became embroiled in a heated debate with Daniel O’Connell over the case of a Colonel Verner, a Protestant magistrate from Armagh apparently dismissed from his post for raising a toast to the Battle of the Diamond, an ancient fray in which Protestants had beaten Catholics.  

HIS NEW SPECTACLES  

By February 1841 the name of ‘General Browne-Clayton’ had become well-known among those early Victorian readers of The Times. In an advertisement on page 7 of the March 9th edition he said he was ‘desirous to express the comfort and advantage he [had] derived at his advanced age of 78 years, and after two years trial, from the use of Messrs. S and B Solomon’s newly invented spectacles’. This ‘valuable invention fully merits the patronage they have received of the Royal Family and so many individuals of high distinction, as well as the numerous scientific and eminent medical practitioners’.[5] This testimonial continued to run in The Times until long after his death in March 1845. By September 1841, Major General Sir Hoard Elphinstone was begging to say the very same of these excellent spectacles. Solomon’s also offered an ‘Invisible Voice Conductor” which would provide ‘immediate relief to old standing extreme cases of deafness’.   

THE BROWNE CLAYTON MONUMENT  

Whether it was land rents or a handsome pay-check from Solomon’s is unclear but, by the autumn of 1841, he had sufficient money to pay the ‘several thousand pounds’ required to complete the Browne Clayton Monument. It stands today on the Browne’s old estate at Carrigadaggan Hill, Carrigbyrne, Co. Wexford, just off the N.25. The 94 feet tall Corinthian column was designed in 1839 by Thomas Cobden, famous for redesigning Browne’s Hill House, as well as the gothic Cathedral in Carlow Town and  Ducketts Grove near Tullow, Co. Carlow. The builder was James Johnston of Carlow. It was made of the finest cut Mount Leinster granite. Nine uniformed dragoons are standing around with the figure that is probably the architect, in frock coat and top hat concentrating on a drawing board.   

The London Times declared it ‘one of the most chaste and classic ornaments of which the country can now boast’.[6] They later described it as ‘worth a dozen of the wretched abortion now in course of erection at Charing Cross’.[7] The monument is considered particularly significant as it is the only internally accessible Corinthian Column in existence The monument was designed as a tribute to the General’s commanding officer, General Sir Ralph Abercromby, who died heroically on 28th March 1801 in the conquest of Egypt during the Napoleonic Wars. (The local name for it is reputedly ’Browne’s Nonsense’ as legend has it that Browne originally built it in memory of his son – thought to be killed in battle but who turned up alive and well shortly after completion of the pillar).  

The column is modelled on the celebrated Pompey’s Pillar near Alexandria (AD296), which General Browne-Clayton first saw the very day Abercrombie received his mortal wound. Pompey’s Pillar was a popular classical landmark of the day, and the Irish version proved equally so upon completion. In his will, General Browne-Clayton stipulated details for an indefinite military ritual to be performed at the column. Every year, at sunrise on the 21st March (the day on which General Menon attacked the British encampment before Alexandria), the tri-coloured French flag was to be hoisted on the top of the column. At 10 o’clock this was to be lowered and replaced by the British flag which will remain until sunset. The General further stipulated that on 28th March, the flag be hoisted at half-mast in honour of Sir Ralph who, mortally wounded by a spent ball on the 21st, died on board HMS Foudroyant on the 28th. Abercromby’s debarkation of the troops in Egypt, in the face of strenuous opposition, is ranked among the most daring and brilliant exploits in British military history.   

Today the column stands as a beautiful cultural landmark rather than a memorial to the Empire and an eccentric general. Disaster struck when the Browne Clayton Column was hit by alightning bolt on 29th December 1994. Several huge stones were dislodged from the capital and the upper third of the shaft, and two large sections of masonry on each side were also pushed apart. This left a dramatic jagged opening about 5 metres high and 1 metre wide. The column was meticulously restored by the Wexford Monument Trust Ltd (a hybrid of Wexford County Council, the World Monument Fund in Britain, and An Taisce) with a topping out ceremony in October 2004.[8]  

DEATH OF THE GENERAL  

The General was a keen scientist to the end, attending sittings with the British Association for the Advancement of Science in Manchester in June 1842. He died at Adlington Hall on 10th March 1845. His widow Henrietta died at Clifton, Gloucestershire on 8th September 1858.[9]  

THE LANAUZE AFFAIR  

Aside from his directions for the Browne-Clayton Monument, the General’s will was a somewhat messy business. He had entrusted some £9000 of government stock to a broker by name of Henry Lanauze with strict instructions on how it was to be exchanged for other stock. In November 1847, Lanauze was brought before the courts to answer a charge that he had unlawfully converted and used that sum ‘to his own use’.[10]  

RICHARD BROWNE CLAYTON (1807 – 1886)  

General Browne-Clayton left a son, Richard, and a daughter, Eleanor. The latter married the Rev James Daubney and died at the Albany Villas in Brighton in 1896.[11] Richard Browne Clayton, DL, JP (1807–1886) lived at Adlington Hall, Chorley, Lancashire, and Carigbyrne, Co. Wexford. He graduated with a BA from Oxford on April 16th 1828 and an MA on May 2nd 1832. On 5th January 1830 he married Catherine Jane Dobson (d. 1889), only daughter of the Rev. J. Dobson. These two only children were to experience great pain in the summer of 1856 with the death of their only son, Harrow-educated Robert John Browne Clayton in the Crimean War. An officer with the 34th Regiment, he was badly wounded during the assault on the Redan on 18th June 1855 and died in the camp on July 12th at the age of 20. [12] A copy of Robert’s his bible survives, inscribed by his mother Catherine with the words: ‘This belonged to my son Robert Browne Clayton. It is all I have to remind me of him.’   

THE BROWNE-CLAYTON DAUGHTERS  

On 29 July 1859, Richard and Catherine’s eldest daughter Henrietta (1831–1884) was married at St James’s Paddington to Robert Thomas Carew, DL (d. 20 Jan 1886) of Ballinamona Park, Co Waterford.[13]   

Their second daughter Katherine Annette (d. 1909) was married on 16th April 1857 to Colonel Philip Savage Alcock, JP,(d. 20 May 1886) of Park House, Co. Wexford, third son of Harry Alcock and the heiress Margaret Savage.   

A third daughter Emma Jane died unmarried in Crowborough, Sussex, in May 1929, leaving an unsettled estate of over £40,000.[14]   

The fourth and youngest daughter Mary Edith was married at Christ Church, Cheltenham, on 15th January 1885 to Major Thomas Edwards Harman, DL, JP, Queen’s Regt, of Palace, New Ross, County Wexford. Palace appears to have been pulled down afterwards. Mary Edith inherited  Carrigbyrne/ Carrygbyrne outside New Ross on her father’s death in 1886. The Harmans had one son Thomas Harman (who died playing Polo for his regiment in 1913) and one daughter, Catherine ( Kitty) Harman. Kitty Harman‘s children were  Frances Ross (mother to Tom Bell of Ramsley Lodge, Dartmoor, who contacted me in May 2017 and April 2018) and Thomas Clayton Ross (who married Honora McSwiney, a daughter of the Marquis MacSwiney of Mashanaglass, near Macroom, Co. Cork, and is father to Charles, Harman and Catriona Ross).  

WILLIAM BROWNE (1763-1840)  

The General’s elder brother William Browne (1763 – 1840) was hailed by The Times as ‘admittedly one of the best landlords on Ireland’.[15] Born in January 1763, he was 53 years old when he succeeded his father Robert at Browne’s Hill in 1816. It may be that he lived at Viewmount until then. A JP and magistrate, he served as High Sheriff of Carlow in 1794 and was later Lord Lieutenant for the county as well as MP for the former Huguenot stronghold of Portarlington. In the 1830s, Thomas Cobden carried out some alterations and additions to the house.   

I think, but am not certain, that this included the portico, with its wonderful carved heads and six mighty granite columns, an extraordinary feat of workmanship by (I imagine) anonymous stonemasons of another age. The stucco plaster work within the three main reception rooms is also exceptional.   

Cobden also designed the cathedral in Carlow and Duckett’s Grove, as well as the Abercromby monument. This work was recorded in a painting which he exhibited at the Royal Hibernian Academy in 1842, the year of his death. William Browne’s brother subsequently commissioned Cobden to design the Corinthian column at Carrigbyrne.  

Click here to see a copy of the Patent appointing William Browne Esquire to be Custos Rotulorum for the County of Carlow from 1818.  

THE CHILDREN OF WILLIAM & LADY CHARLOTTE  

William’s first wife was Lady Charlotte Bourke, daughter of the 3rd Earl of Mayo,Archbishop of Tuam. She bore him two sons – Robert, their heir, and Captain Joseph Deane Browne, Carabiniers, (who married Miss Thursby and died on 1st January 1878) – and four daughters. Captain Joseph Deane Browne’s will was found during a house clean in January 2019.  

The eldest daughter Elizabeth was married on 31st January 1814 to Sir Joseph Denny Wheeler-Cuffe, 1st Bt, (d. 9 May 1853) of Leyrath, Co. Kilkenny, and died 15 Jan 1871 leaving issue.   

The second daughter Eleanor Mary married on 5th May 1840, as his second wife, William Fitzwilliam Burton, JP, of Burton Hall, Co. Carlow; he died just four years later on 15th Nov 1844 and she died, without surviving issue on 5th December 1870.   

The third daughter Charlotte was married in 1835 to William Brownlow, DL, JP, of Knapton House, Queen’s County, eldest son of the Rev Francis Brownlow, Rector of Upper Comber, Co Derry; they had issue before his death on 18th July 1881.   

The fourth and youngest daughter Annette was married on 10th May 1826 to the Ven Hon Henry Scott Stopford (d. 28 Oct 1881), Archdeacon of Leighlin, fifth son of the Earl of Courtown, KP, and died without issue on 27th March 1842.  

Lady Charlotte Browne died in 1806.  

WILLIAM & THE NORBURY CONNECTION  

On 8th March 1813, William was married secondly to Lady Leitita Toler, second daughter of the 1st Earl of Norbury, aka ‘The Hanging Judge’. As Chief Justice of Ireland during the early 19th century, Lord Norbury was infamous for the number of men he condemned to the gallows, including the Finnegan Gang from Rathvilly who attacked the Rev Trench en route to raid Benjamin Bunbury‘s house in 1822. An anecdote survives of how Lord Norbury was addressing the jury in one such case when his voice was drowned out by the sound of an irate ass. “What noise is that?” he inquired angrily. ‘Merely an echo of the Court, my lord‘, was the defending barristers risqué reply. But Norbury could be quick too. At dinner one day, his host told him he had shot 31 hares that morning. ‘I don’t doubt it‘, replied his lordship, ‘but you must have fired at a wig’. The Hanging Judge died peacefully in July 1831.   

In January 1839, just days before the Night of the Big Wind struck, his grandson – Lady Letitia Browne’s nephew – the 3rd Earl of Norbury was assassinated in Durrow, County Offaly, in retaliation for the proposed clearing of tenants to make way for a deer park. Indeed, it was during the Big Wind that the Browne’s Hill estate, like so many in Ireland, was decimated of its tree population.  

William Browne died on 1st April 1840 aged 77. Lady Letitia gave him a further three sons and a daughter.  

We know nothing of the eldest son John Toler Browne save that he appears in the 1881 census at the Croydon home of his brother Hector Graham Browne and is identified as a lunatic and unmarried.  

The second son was Captain (William) Raymond Browne, 7th Fusiliers who died in 1907. He was married, firstly, in London in 1859 to Olivia Elizabeth Cathery Depree (b.1833) and soon after emigrated to New Zealand. Olivia died in Croydon in 1884. Two years later, Raymond Browne was married secondly in 1886 to Adelaide Anne Villiers Perry (1837-1912).  
  

His children by his first marriage to Olivia Depree were all born in Christchurch, New Zealand, namely:  

1) Letitia Grace (1861-1937). She was married at St Peter’s, Eaton-square, in November 1887 to the cricket-loving cotton magnate Sir Henry Hornby, 1st Bart. (In 1883, she was presented to the Queen by her aunt, Gertrude Browne[16]).  
  

2) Frances Mary (1862-1862)  
  

3) Redmond Toler (1863-1937) who successfullly petitioned Pope Pius X and was granted the title of Count which had originally been granted to Robert Browne-Clayton who died in 1845. Redmond?s will states he was commonly known as Count Clayton. He resided at La Punta Cervara, near Genoa.  
  

4) Olivia Caroline (1864-1865)  
  

5) William Dealtry (1868-1951) who was married in 1907 in New Zealand to Evelyn Agnes Scherff.  
  

6) Lina Beatrice (1872-1906).   

7) Letitia Grace (d. 1937)   
  

The third and youngest son (Hector) Graham Browne was married in 1878 to Gertrude Sophia, eldest daughter of John Horrocks Ainsworth of Moss Bank, Lancashire. He lived in Croydon at time of 1881 census. (With thanks to Graeme Stanton).  

As to William and Lady Letitia’s daughter Grace Isabella, she was usefully married on 26th June 1852 to Richard Godfrey Bosanquet (d. 15 May 1875) of Benham Park, Berkshire, younger son of Jacob Bosanquet, a director of the East India Company, of Broxbournebury, Herts, but died without issue.  

ROBERT CLAYTON BROWNE (1799 – 1888)  

Upon his death in 1840, William was succeeded by his eldest son Robert Clayton Browne (1799–1888), then aged 41. Educated at Eton, Robert was an important magistrate in Carlow, being variously DL, JP and High Sheriff in 1859. The house was renovated in about 1842, with a pedimented central breakfront on the front and a full-height canted bay extended to the rear. During the Great Famine, aided by grant money, he employed some 400 men to build the high wall and gates around the Browne’s Hill estate, feeding them and their families from the gardens. He stood for the Conservatives of the Carlow borough in the 1852 election but was defeated by John Sadlier.   

On 28th October 1834 he married Harriette Augusta (d Jan 1898), third daughter of Hans Hamilton, MP, of Sheephill, Co. Dublin. (see Holmpatrick). Details of their children and grandchildren will be found below. I thank Michael Purcell for transcribing this record of their Golden Wedding from the Carlow Sentinel of 1st October 1884:  

CELEBRATION OF A GOLDEN WEDDING.  
On Tuesday afternoon, the 28th October, Mr and Mrs Clayton Browne entertained at Browne’s Hill a large party of their friends and relations on the occasion of the celebration of their Golden Wedding.   
They received numerous handsome presents, amongst them a gold cup, presented by their four children and twenty-one grandchildren.   
They also received an address from the Select Vestry of the Parish of Carlow.  
The following received invitations, most of whom were present to offer their congratulations in person :-  
The Marquis and Marchioness of Kildare, Lord and Lady Rathdonnell, the Hon. Edward and Mrs Stopford, the Hon. Hugh and Lady Mary Boscawen, Sir Thomas and Lady Butler and Miss Butler, the Dowager Lady Butler and Miss C. Butler, Sir Charles and Lady Burton, the Hon Mrs Clements, Sir Clement and Lady Wolseley, the Right Hon Henry . Mrs Bruen, Mr Henry and the Misses Bruen ; Mr and the Hon Mrs Rochfort, Mrs and Mrs Kavanagh, Mrs W. Kavanagh and Mrs Meredith, Mrs Pack-Beresford and family, Mr and Mrs Clayton Browne and family, Miss G. Langrishe, the Dean of Leighlin and Mrs and Miss King and Miss A. Newton, Mrs Thomas, Mr and Mrs Jocelyn Thomas, Mr and Mrs Duckett, Mrs Lecky and Miss Watson, Mr, Mrs and Miss Watson ; Mrs Gray and Miss Watson, Mr Newton and Miss Newton, Mount Leinster ; Mr and Mrs Steuart Duckett, Mr, Mrs Bagenal, and Miss Hall-Dare ; Mr and Mrs Alexander, Major and Mrs Hutchinson, Mr and Mrs George Alexander and Mr S Alexander, Major and Mrs Tanner, Mr and Mrs Charles Duckett, Mr and Mrs Fred Lecky, and Mr R. Lecky, Mr and Mrs Rupert Lecky , Mr, Mrs and Miss Newton, Mr and the Misses Hore, Mr and Mrs Arthur and the Misses Fitzmaurice, Mr William and Mr and Mrs Edward Fitzmaurice, and Mrs Clarke, the Ven. Archdeacon and Mrs Jameson, Mr and Mrs William Fitzmaurice, Laurel Lodge ; Mr and Mrs Fitzmaurice, Fruit Hill, ; Dr and Mrs Ireland, Major and Mrs and the Misses Bloomfield, Mr and Mrs H. Cooper, Mr and Mrs Hall-Dare, Captain and Mrs Persse, Colonel and Mrs Vigors, Mr and Mrs Alcock, Rev J. and Mrs Dillon, Mr and Mrs Standish Roche, Mr, Mrs and the Misses Eustace, Castlemore, Mr and Mrs Eustace, Newstown ; Mr and Mrs Ponsonby, Mr and Mrs Hone, Very Rev. W.E. and Miss Ryan, Mrs Rawson, Mr and Mrs Cornwall Brady , Rev. C. and Mrs Bellingham, Mr and Mrs Borrer, Mr and Miss Cooper, Mr and Mrs Stuart, Mr and Mrs Lecky-Pike, Dr and Mrs Newell, Mr C. Butler, Mr J. Mrs and Miss Butler, and Miss Owen, Mrs Vesey, Rev. J. and Mrs Finlay, the Rev. T. and Mrs Philips.  

Robert Clayton Browne died on 22nd July 1888 leaving three sons and a daughter.   

COLONEL CHARLES HENRY CLAYTON (1836 – 1889)  

Robert and Harriett’s second son Colonel Charles Henry Clayton (1836 – 1889) died unmarried in April 1889, less than a year after his father. Born in 1836, he entered the 97th Regiment in 1854, became a captain in 1857, a major in 1872, a lieutenant-colonel in 1878, and retired as a colonel in1882. He served with his regiment in the Crimean campaign, where he was wounded. He was mentioned in despatches, and received a medal with clasp, also the Sardinian and Turkish medals and the 5th class of the Medijidieh. He later served in the Indian Mutiny where was again wounded and received a medal and clasp. He commanded the regiment with the Natal field force during the Transvaal campaign in 1881 and from 1885 until his death commanded the 23rd Regimental District. He was created a CB in 1886. He died at the depot in Wrexham from pleuro-pneumonia aged 53. [17]  

ROBERT CLAYTON BROWNE (1839-1906)  

Robert Clayton Browne (1839–1906), Robert and Harriett’s third son, died unmarried. My thanks to Michael Purcell for transcribing this obituary fom the Pat Purcell Papers which appeared in the Carlow Sentinel in December 1906.  

Death of Robert Clayton Browne, Esquire.  
With deep regret we announce the death of Mr Robert Clayton Browne, which occurred on Friday 14th December 1906, at his temporary residence, Green Ville, near this town.  
The deceased gentleman, who was unmarried, was born 3rd May, 1838, and was the third and youngest son of the late Robert Clayton Browne, Esquire, D.L., of Browne’s Hill, Carlow, by Harriette-Agusta, third daughter of the late Hans Hamilton, Esquire, Lord of the Manor of Carlow, and for many years Member of Parliament for County Dublin.  
Owing to delicate health Robert did not at any time take an active part in the public affairs of his native county, but was a zealous and earnest friend of every philanthropic and charitable movement, and a generous supporter of the Church of Ireland at and after its disestablishment.  
Kind hearted and generous in disposition he enjoyed the love and esteem of a large circle of relatives and friends by whom, as well as by the general community, his death, which occurred after a long illness, borne with patient resignation, is deeply deplored.  
On Tuesday the interment took place in the family burial ground in Killeshin. The remains were enclosed in a suite of lead-lined coffins, were brought into Carlow Church, where the first portion of the solemn burial service was read by the Very Rev. Dean Finlay and the Ven. Archdeacon Hatchell.  
After the special Lesson, the Hymn “Lead Gently Light” was sung, and as the coffin was borne out of the church, the Dead March was played.  
The chief mourners were Mr William Browne-Clayton, D.L., brother ; Major Browne-Clayton, Mr D.R. Pack-Beresford, D.L., Mr Reynell Pack-Beresford and  
Mr Hugh Pack-Beresford, nephews.  

ANNETTE CAROLINE BROWNE  

Robert and Harriett’s daughter Annette Caroline Browne was married in the parish church of Carlow on 12th February 1863 to fellow Carlovian Denis William Pack-Beresford, DL, JP, MP, of Fenagh. The Ven Henry Scott Stopford, Archdeacon of Leighlin, officiated.[18] Pack-Beresford was the second son of Sir Denis Pack, a much decorated military general, and in 1854 had succeeded to the estates of the first and last Viscount Beresford (an illegitimate son of the Marquis of Waterford, for which he assumed the additional surname and arms of Beresford. Denis died on 28th December 1881 and Annette on 11 Feb 1892, leaving seven sons and two daughters; the late ‘Commander Beresford’ of Fenagh was their grandson.   

[Following the death in 1986 of Commander Pack-Beresford, his son Denis Raymond Pack-Beresford sold the estate and family papers by public auction. Their whereabouts is presently unknown].  

WILLIAM BROWNE (1835 – 1907)  

Robert and Harriette’s eldest son William succeeded to Browne’s Hill on the death of Robert on 22nd July 1888. Educated at Eton and Oxford University, William was only 24 years old when he filled the seat of High Sheriff for Carlow in 1859. Like his father he was also a JP and DL. In 1889 he assumed by Royal Licence the additional surname of Clayton.   

On 10th January 1867 (the year of the Fenian Rising), he married Caroline Barton, fifth daughter of John Watson Barton, DL, JP, of Stapleton Park near Pontefract, a cousin of the Bartons of Saxby Hall. In May 1867 he was presented to Queen Victoria by the Marquis of Drogheda at a Levee held in St James’s Palace.[19] The Marchioness of Drogheda introduced Caroline to the mourning monarch the following month.[20]   

In December 1867 the couple were listed as subscribers to the Palestine Exploration Fund which sought to unearth the Temple.[21] In 1876, William was commended in The Times for of a school on his estate ‘where children of the poor are taught cookery very successfully’.[22] In 1881, Caroline was noted as a £10 subscriber to the Association for the Relief of Ladies in Distress through Non-Payment of rent in Ireland’.[23]  

He died on 13th January 1907. Here his obituary, transcribed by Michael Purcell in April 2013, which was published in ‘The Carlow Sentinel’ in March 1907.  

Death of Mr William Browne Clayton J.P., D.L.   
With sincere regret, shared by the entire community, we record the death, after a brief illness, of Mr William Browne-Clayton, which occurred on Sunday last, at his residence, Browne’s Hill, Carlow, in his 72nd year. For some time past the deceased gentleman was not in robust health, but up to within a fortnight of his demise he discharged his various private and magisterial duties, when he was seized with an acute attack of influenza, which developed into heart trouble, to which he succumbed, despite the unremitting care of his medical adviser, Dr Kidd.  
The sad event , which was unexpected, and cast a gloom over the locality, is intensified by the fact that little more than three weeks previously he was chief mourner at the funeral of his younger and only surviving brother, Mr Robert Clayton Browne, whose death was recorded in our issue of the 22nd February.  
Mr Browne-Clayton was the eldest son of the late Mr Robert Clayton Brown of Browne’s Hill, by Harriette- Agusta, third daughter of the late Hans Hamilton, for many years M.P. for County Dublin. He was born 20th November, 1835, and was descended from the family of Browne, seated in Essex since 1422, a branch of which settled in Carlow about 1654.  
He married on the 10th January, 1867, Caroline, daughter of the late Mr John Watson Barton, of Staplestown Park, Yorkshire, who with two surviving sons and nine daughters mourn the loss of a devoted husband and a fond father.  
In all the other relations of life – as a resident and popular landed proprietor, an impartial magistrate, an efficient member of the several local public bodies, he won the esteem of all sections of the community.  
As a churchman he took an active part in its reconstruction, and rendered valuable service as a member of the Diocesan Synod and Council, and was a liberal contributor to its funds, as well as a warm supporter of its various charities.  
As a mark of respect to his memory as one of the oldest magistrates of the county and sympathy with his family in their bereavement, the Carlow Petty Sessions Court was adjourned on Monday.  
He is succeeded by his eldest son, Major Browne-Clayton.  
THE FUNERAL.  
The Funeral took place on Wednesday from Browne’s Hill, and was attended by a large concourse, which included representatives of the principal county families and townspeople generally. The remains were encased in a suite of lead-lined coffins, the outer one of polished oak, bearing the inscription “William Browne-Clayton, died 13th January 1907, aged 71 years.” It was borne to and from the hearse by employees on the estate.  
As a mournful procession passed through Carlow all the business houses along the route were closed as a testimony to the esteem in which the deceased gentleman was held.  
The remains were brought into Carlow Church where the first portion of the solemn funeral service was performed by the Very Rev. Dean Finlay (representing the Right Rev Bishop of the Diocese, who was unable to attend owing to a previous important engagement), the Ven Archdeacon Hatchell, and the Rev A.A. Markham, of St Jude’s, Liverpool, nephew of the deceased.  
The service included the singing of the Hymn “Lead kindly Light”, and as the coffin was borne into and from the church the Funeral March was played. The procession then proceeded to the Killeshin Cemetery, where interment took place in a brick-lined grave, Dean Finlay conducting the grave-side service.  
The following were the chief mourners :- Major Browne-Clayton (son), Mr T.H.B.Ruttledge, D.L.; Mr Pease, Colonel Johnston, Captain Hall, (sons-in-law), Mr D. R. Pack-Beresford, D.L.; Captain Pack-Beresford, Mr Reynell Pack-Beresford, Mr Hugh Pack-Beresford, Mr Philip Hope and Rev A.A.Markham (nephews).  
Several beautiful wreaths were sent, and a massive floral cross, from the family of the deceased, which was interred with the coffin.  
The funeral arrangements were carried out by Mr Edwin Boake, Carlow.   

After William’s death, his widow Caroline settled at Dunkeld, Portmarnock, Co. Dublin. She died on 24th September 1916. They had three Eton-educated sons and nine daughters. The eldest son Robert Clayton Browne is dealt with shortly.  

‘An Important Land Case.- Browne Clayton of Browne’s Hill, Carlow, sued Joseph, Patrick, Ellen, and Catherine Kinsella for possession of lands in Carlow and Chaplestown[?], with £500 profits of same during the time they were withheld. Justice O’Brien advised a settlement, and it was accepted. Browne to get possession, without cost of law suit; the Kinsellas to be paid for all improvements made by them or their predecessors and allowed the value of the crops received by the landlord.’ - The Irish World, 22 March 1890.  

2ND LT WILLIAM CLAYTON BROWNE (1873 – 1897)  

The second son 2nd Lieutenant William Clayton Browne was born on 29th July 1873 and educated at Eton. In October 1892, he was commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant with the 3rd Battalion of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers.   

He was serving with the (Queen’s Own) Royal West Kent Regiment during the Malakand Field Force expedition in north-west India (or at Agrah Malakan in Afghanistan?) when killed on 30th September 1897, aged 24. The Times printed a telegram sent from the Viceroy on October 1st which explained: ‘[General] Jeffrey’s brigade encountered enemy in force at Agrah and Gat village. Enemy made considerable resistance and troops, being hotly engaged at close quarters, suffered some loss. Agrah finally burnt, and Gat partly burnt’. 2nd Lt William Clayton Browne and Lt-Col O’Bryen, 31st Bengal Infantry, were among the dead. [24]  Winston Churchill, his friend, wept when he saw William’s corpse which, as he wrote to his mother Lady Randolph Churchill, was, “literally cut to pieces on a stretcher. Their friendship is the subject of a book called ‘Churchill’s First War’, as well as a short radio play aired by the BBC.  

LT-CMDR LIONEL DENIS BROWNE (1874 -1946)  

The third son, Lt-Cmdr Lionel Denis Browne (1874 – 1946) served with the Royal Navy Reserve. On 4th April 1914 he married Winifred, daughter of the Rev. John Bell, MA, Vicar of Pyrton Hill, Watlington, Oxon. Winifred died at the Okanagan Mission in British Columbia in June 1938.[25] Lionel died in the same Mission on December 29th 1946 aged 72.[26]  

Their son Robert Denis was born at Pyrton Hall in 1917, served in the Second World War as a Lieutenant with Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry and settled in Kelowna, British Columbia, with his Canadian born wife Patricia Acland.[27] They had three children – Patrick (born 13 March 1947), Peter Shane (born 21 May 1949) and Jeanne Madeline (b. 19 August 1953).  

Their daughter Zoe settled in Montreal where she was a well known medical and scientific journalist with the Montreal Star. She married Jacques Louis Bieler, Bsc, youngest son of Professor Charles Bieler of McGill University’s Theological College, and had issue a son Brian (born 1949) and daughter Zoe (born 1950) who both appear to have pursued intellectual careers. An account of Zoe’s early years and first visit to Browne’s Hill can be found in Women on the Verge of Home (2005), p. 116, by Bilinda Straight and Ruth Behar.  

THE NINE DAUGHTERS OF WILLIAM AND CAROLINE BROWNE-CLAYTON  

Mary Caroline was born on 13th Nov 1867. She was married on 6 Oct 1898, as his second wife, to Thomas Henry Bruen Ruttledge, DL, only son of Robert Ruttledge Esq ofBloomfield, Co. Mayo. The marriage took place at Staplestown Church in Carlow with the Bishop of Ossory and the Dean of Leighlin officiating.[28] He died 23 Sept 1917. By this marriage there were two sons,Major Robert Francis Ruttledge, MC (a noted huntsman, ornithologist and founder of the Saltee Bird Observatory in Co Wexford) and William (a respected entomologist and falconer). Mary died on 27 Feb 1955.  

Annette (Constance) was born on 20 Dec 1868. She was married in Whonnock, BC, Canada on 20th May 1913 to Robert Harris, son of Edward C Harris of Bryn Towy, Carmarthen. The Gosport-educated Robert left the security of Whonnock on the outbreak of the war, enlisting in the Public School Battalion of the Middlesex Regiment. In March 1915 he obtained his commission in the Duke of Wellington’ Regiment (in the service of which regiment his late brother-in-law Horace Johnston had died). He went out to Gallipoli with the drafts in September and served during the evacuation of the Peninsula. He was killed in action in France on September 28th 1915, seven weeks after Horace was killed. Annette died on 15 Feb 1948.  

Margaret (Frances) was born on 30th June 1871. She later lived at 4 Saville Court of Brompton Square, London. She died unmarried on 22nd July 1938.  

Florence (Hope) was born on 15 Aug 1872. She was married on 28 April 1904 to Lt Col Horace James Johnston, DSO, younger son of Francis Johnston of Dunsdale, Westerham, Kent. On August 26th 1915, Horace’s mother published a request in The Times for ‘any information concerning Colonel HJ Johnston, DSO, 8th Duke of Wellington’ Regiment (West Riding Regiment)’. She noted that he had been ‘reported missing in the Dardanelles between August 7 and 11’.[29] Alas it transpired that he had been killed in action at Gallipoli on 11th August 1915. She lived in Sloane Square. She died suddenly at her home in Abinger Common, Dorking, on 18 Oct 1939. They left issue.  

Kathleen (Louise Octavia) was born on 20th October 1875. She died unmarried in Winchester on 15th April 1961 and was buried in St Michael’s Church.  

Madeleine (Emma) was born on 28th November 1876 and died unmarried on 19th June 1953.  

Lucy Victoria was born on 3rd March 1878. On 12th December 1901 she married Claud Edward Pease, JP, subsequently director of Barclay’s Bank. He was the youngest son of Arthur Peaseof Hummersknott, Darlington, and Cliff House, Marske-by-the-Sea, Yorkshire. Lucy was awarded the OBE in 1918. He died on 22nd March 1952 and she died 10 months later on 3rd February 1853. They left issue; see Pease in Burke’s Peerage).  

Julia (Harriet Vere) was born on 29th April 1881. On 10th January 1914 she married at St. Anne’s in Dublin to (later Lt Col) Coote Hely-Hutchinson, OBE, Royal Fusiliers. The Primate of Ireland performed the ceremony. Julia was given away by her brother Major Browne-Clayton. Richard Tottenham was best man while Julia’s sister Madeleine and Noelle Hely-Hutchinson were bridesmaids. She wore white satin charneusse trimmed with old Carrickmacross lace. A veil of similar lace covering a wreath of orange blossom and myrtle was in her hair. The reception was held in the Shelbourne Hotel, after which the new Colonel and Mrs HH left for London.[30] Coote was the eldest son of John Hely-Hutchinson, DL, JP, of Seafield, Donabate, Co. Dublin. He died n 30th September 1930 and she died on 10th June 1948, leaving issue. (See Donoughmore in Burke’s Peerage).  

Caroline Zoe was born on 16th December 1882. On 14th December 1905, the 23 year old youngest daughter married Captain Hubert Chase Hall, 5th Fusiliers, only son of Major Henry Hallof Denbie, Lockerbie, Dumfrieshire. He died on 27th March 1947. She died 17th September 1957.  

BRIG-GEN ROBERT BROWNE-CLAYTON, DSO (1870 – 1939)  

William and Caroline Browne-Clayton’s eldest son and heir Brig-Gen Robert Browne-Clayton was born on 24th February 1870, making him the third eldest of the twelve children. Educated at Wellington he joined the army soon after school.  

On April 18th 1890, The Times announced that he had been promoted from 2nd Lieutenant to Lieutenant with the 3rd Battalion of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers.Tom Connolly, who would perish in the Boer War, was gazetted 2nd Lieutenant the same day. Having passed his military exams, he awaited a vacancy in the cavalry. It came in December 1890 when he transferred to be a 2nd Lieutenant with the 5th (Royal Irish) Lancers. [Burke’s erroneously claim he was in command of the 5th Lancers by 1890]. He was promoted to lieutenant in September 1894.   

In 1900 he was made Adjutant of his regiment, retaining that office during the South African War (1899-1902), in which he was three times mentioned in despatches and made Brevet Major and hon Brig-Gen. He was awarded the Order of the White Eagle of Serbia (3rd class) with crossed swords. In February 1903 he was presented to His Majesty King Edward VII at a Levee held in Buckingham Palace by Lt Gen WGD Massy, CB.  

On 25th November 1905, The Carlow Sentinel gave the following account (which was gallantly transcribed in 2013 by Michael Purcell’s team at the Pat Purcell Papers).  

FASHIONABLE WEDDING.  
The marriage of Captain and Brevet Major R. Brown-Clayton, 5th Royal Irish Lancers, eldest son of William Browne-Clayton, of Browne’s Hill, Carlow, with Miss Magda Wienholt, youngest daughter of the late Edward Weinholt, of Jondaryan, Queensland, was celebrated at St Mary’s Abbots, Kensington, on the 19th of November, the officiating clergy being the Rev. A.A.Markham ( cousin of the bridegroom ), and the clergy of St Mary’s Abbots.  
The bride was given away by her cousin, Mr Rowland Malony, and wore a gown of ivory satin, draped with duchesse lace, and a brocade train softened with lace and chiffon. Her tuille veil fell over a tiara of orange blossoms, She carried a bouquet of white exoties, myrtle, white heather, and lily of the valley.   
Miss Brenda Wienholt, sister of the bride, acted as bridesmaid, and wore a dress of heliotrope crepe de chine, with hat of the same shade. Her bouquet was of mauve orchids, harmonising with her toilet, which, with an enamel and diamond brooch in the form of the regimental badge, was the gift of the bridegroom.  
Capt. Willcox, a brother officer of the bridegroom, was best man. The interesting ceremony took place at 2.30pm.  
The bride was met at the door by the choir and proceeded up the aisle singing the hymn ” O Perfect Love, all human thought transcending”. While the register was being signed the choir sang the hymn, ” Fight the good fight with all thy might”. The service was fully choral.  
The church was beautifully decorated with palms and white flowers.  
The reception was held afterwards at the Royal Palace Hotel, and subsequently the bride and bridegroom left for Ireland.  
  

Carlow Sentinel (courtesy of the Pat Purcell Papers).  
December 1905.  
HOME-COMING OF MAJOR BROWNE-CLAYTON AND BRIDE.  
On Monday last Major Browne-Clayton, 5th Lancers, brought home his bride. This was made an occasion of great rejoicings amongst the tenants and employees of Browne’s Hill, many of the townspeople joining in.  
The Staplestown Road was splendidly decorated with flags and arches, bearing words of welcome.  
On arriving at the front gate, which was beautifully and artistically decorated under the supervision of Mr Bell ( steward ), the carriage was met by a large crowd of enthusiastic friends, and was drawn up the hill by many willing hands, while a fire of twenty-one guns from a small piece of ordnance, in charge of ex-Sergt Clifden, Royal Artillery, announced the approach of the procession.  
In the afternoon the employees and tenants were entertained at dinner, and in the evening a numerous gathering from the neighbourhood assembled round a bonfire, and the proceedings terminated by a band from Carlow playing varied selections.  

On 22nd May 1909, Robert retired from the army in the rank of major. He was 39. His retirement did not completely curtail his military activity, however. He remained as an officer in the Special Reserve, serving with the South Irish Horse. He was a noted polo player between 1906 and 1909, lining out for the 5th Lancers when they crushed the Irish Guards 7-1 in the 1906 Inter-regimental tournament at Aldershot.[31] He also played for Carlow in the Irish Open Cup 1909 and County Cups of 1912 and 1913. He also played for Ireland in the Patriotic Cup in August 1909 but The Times rather meanly wrote him off as having been ‘quite outclassed from start to finish’. The Major was Field Master of the Carlow Hunt before the First World War at a time when Mr Grogan and Colonel Williams were joint-Masters.  

‘An Agreement made the 23rd day of March 1914. Between Major Robert Browne-Clayton of Browne’s Hill, Carlow of the One Part and Patrick Brennan of Chaff Street, Graigue of the Other Part whereby the Said Major R. Browne-Clayton agrees to let and the said Patrick Brennan agrees to take the forge Situate on Castlecomer road now in his possession together with the yard and premises now adjoining and formerly in possession of William Curran, as a tenant from Year to Year at the Yearly rent of Two Pounds Twelve shillings to be paid by two Half Yearly installments of £1-6 shillings each on the 1st day of March and 1st day of September in each year.  
And the said Patrick Brennan agrees to keep the said premises in clean and Sanitary Order. And it is further agreed that Six months Notice in writing from either Gale days ie 1st March or 1st September in any year on behalf of either the contracting parties to the Agreement shall be sufficient to determine the tenancy hereby created. Signed by the Said Major R. Browne-Clayton and Patrick Brennan in the presence of Charles Johnson, 3 Athy Street, Carlow. 23rd March 1914.’ Transcribed by Michael Purcell, 2009.  

In July 1915 he was appointed Commanding Officer of the 16th Battalion Cheshire Regiment, one of the Bantam battalions raised by the Birkenhead MP Sir Alfred Bigland. The 16th Cheshires were deployed to France in January 1916 as part of 105th Brigade, 35th Division. Browne-Clayton was awarded the DSO for his part in the fighting at Trones Wood in July 1916. He was promoted GOC 59th Brigade, 20th (Light) Division on 14 October. 20th Division took part in no more operations on the Somme after 8 October and was comparatively little employed in the first half of 1917. Browne-Clayton remained in command until 26 August 1917 when he was replaced a few days after the battle of Langemarck.  

During the War of Independence and later during the Civil War in Ireland, Eamon De Valera gave instruction that neither the Browne family nor their property were to be harmed. In December 1927, the Free State Government of Ireland appointed him to a Special Committee investigating the alleged grievances of ex-British servicemen in the Irish Free State. Their report, issued in February 1929, concluded that there were indeed some grievances but that these should be leveled against the British government rather than the Free State government. [32] The General was re-elected as a Ratepayer in Carlow and, in November 1928, the council paid tribute to him for the keen and practical interest he took in the administration of the county council and the county board of health.  

In later life he looked after his herd of prize shorthorns, selling them at the annual Horse Show in Dublin. In June 1938, he attended the 5th Lancers annual dinner at the Cavalry Club. He died at Browne’s Hill on March 5th 1939 aged 69.  

On 16th November 1905 he married an Australian girl, Mary Magdalene, third daughter of Edward Wienholt of Jondaryan, Queensland. (‘My sister Magda and I were terrified of her’, recalls Robert Browne-Clayton, ‘with her booming voice in the hunting field. If we overtook her on our pony, she would yell at us to stop and we would be roundly admonished, particularly if we had taken a fence before her. She died in agony from cancer, refusing any medication as she was a Christian Scientist.’   

Two years later, in 1907, he succeeded his father at Browne’s Hill. She died at Pimperne, Blandford, on 20th July 1932 and was cremated in Woking. He died on 3rd March 1939, leaving Browne’s Hill to his only son, William. Robert and Mary’s only daughter Annette Mary was born on 28th April 1908 and married in the Holy Trinity Church at Sloane Street, on 21st April 1933, to The Times polo correspondent Colonel Sir Andrew Marshall Horsbrugh-Porter, 3rd Bart, DSO and bar. The H-Ps lived at Chipping Norton, Oxon, and had issue.  

—————————————————————————————-  
  
The Nationalist, 31st January, 1920. (PPP)  
Letter to the Editor.  
Browne’s Hill, Carlow.  
27th January, 1920.  
Sir—I see by your last week’s issue that I was shown as elected as a Unionist member of the Carlow Urban District Council.   
I beg to point out that I stood as representative of the Comrades of the Great War, an organisation, which is strictly non-political. —-  
Yours faithfully, Robert Browne-Clayton, Browne’s Hill House.  
—————————————————————————————-  

The Nationalist, 7th Feb. 1920. (PPP)  
“CARLOW UNIONISM IN THE QUICKSANDS”  
Letter to the Editor.  
Sir—-In your issue of last week Lieutenant Colonel Browne-Clayton repudiated the publication of his name as a Unionist in connection with the recent Carlow Urban Elections. He says he stands as a “representative of the Comrades of the Great War” and for the life of me I cannot understand why such an association can be interested in local municipal life. Why did not the gallant Colonel issue an election address stating what he was proposing to represent. Is County Carlow Unionism in the Quicksands ?—  
Yours truly,  
UNIONIST.  

Memories of Mr. H. Boake. 1950., courtesy of Michael Purcell.  

  
“Usually the manager of a National school was the Parish Priest or Rector but in the case of the Rutland National School, Mrs Browne-Clayton, wife of Brigadier Browne-Clayton of Browne’s Hill was the manager. (She was also the manager of the Barrack Street National School in Carlow town.). She did her duty well, visiting the school regularly, and seeing to our wants. She walked in without knocking as was her right. We stood up somewhat falling over ourselves, so sudden was her entry. She made a bee-line for the teacher’s chair beside the open fire, and if the teacher happened to be sitting in it, she had to be out of it quickly, otherwise Mrs Browne-Clayton would probably have ended up on her lap. She listened to the teaching for a while, and then stood up suddenly, tall and gaunt and dark, beside our rather diminutive teacher, said a few words to her, and then with a swish of tweeds made for the door, we again having to be upstanding again. It was woe betide the pupil nearest the door who had not caught the glare from teacher to get the door open in time. A copy of the “Christian Science Monitor” was left on the chair. Mrs. Browne-Clayton belonged to this sect. We all owed a debt to Mrs Browne-Clayton. She kept the school in repair and kept a roaring fire going in the school room for about 20 to 25 pupils, all at her own expense. She provided the highlight of the year too, the Christmas Tree party. The tree stood in the corner decorated and lit and laden . We had never seen anything like it before. The presents were mostly in a large box over which the Rector stood guard over while we feasted on everything sweet, sticky and curranty. Eventually we saw the great moment was coming near and we made a last effort to stuff down another bun, before Mrs Browne-Clayton reached into the box In the ensuing silence she called out a name. Half paralysed with fright and excitement the owner of the name advanced. All sorts of things came out of that box, all good valuable presents. The girls maybe were wishing for dolls, but there was one sort of present looked forward to by the boys. The older boys always got Barber pen knives. They were best quality and razor sharp. The speculation was “would I be regarded as old enough and would I get one ?” Eventually I did, and likewise some others. At the end of the Christmas Tree Party the Rector wold call for three cheers for Mrs Browne-Clayton. Our Christmas was made. Over 50 years later I still have that Barber pen knife.  

LT COL WILLIAM PATRICK BROWNE-CLAYTON (1906 – 1971)  

Lt Col William Patrick Browne-Clayton (1906 – 1971) was 33 years old when, in March 1939, he succeeded his father at Browne’s Hill. Educated at Wellington and Sandhurst, he served with the12th Royal Lancers from 1926 through World War Two until 1947. He was a keen huntsman, point-to-pointer and polo player. He played on the 12th Lancers team with his brother-in-law Andrew Marshall Horsbrugh-Porter when they reached the semi-finals of the Ranelagh Cup in 1936 and when they won the Subalterns Gold Cup in 1937. He owned some useful steeplechasers, Sweet Peach and Isric who raced at courses such as Northampton, Birmingham and Sandown Park before the Second World War.   

On 23rd October 1935 he was married at St Margaret’s, Westminster, to Janet Maitland Bruce Jardine. It is said he felt obliged to marry her after he shot her eye out during a shooting accident. Charles Spencer, 12th Royal Lancers, was best man. The honeymoon was spent in the west of Ireland. Janet was the elder daughter of Brig-Gen James Bruce Jardine, CMG, DSO, DL, 5th Royal Irish Lancers, of Chesterknowes, Selkirk, Roxburghshire (see Burke’s LG 1952). One of her ancestors was James Bruce (1730-1794), the Scotsman who discovered the source of the Blue Nile in 1770 and who was described by Dr. Livingston as the greatest travellor of them all.   

Colonel Browne-Clayton died on 3rd September 1971. His widow lived at The Coach House, 6 Vesey Place, Dun Laoghaire, Dublin, before moving to Wandsworth in London where she died in 2002.  

In 1937, William and Janet had a daughter Magdalene Jardine. She was followed by a son Robert, born in 1940. A second daughter was born in Edinburgh on March 2nd 1942 but sadly did not survive.[33] William was reported wounded in August 1942.[34] By 1946, Janet was advertising in The Times for a young Governess to look after her son and daughter.[35]   

THE SALE OF BROWNE’S HILL  

The legal papers that were handed over to Michael Purcell show that William had hoped to establish an equestrian centre at Browne’s Hill. However, Janet was less keen.   

In 1951, Lt Col Browne-Clayton was obliged to place the 700 acre estate up for sale. The Land Acts had reduced the families’ wealth considerably, and they also at some point lost money with Lloyd’s of London. Pressure from Janet intensified after a row with the local priest about grounds in Bennekerry - the school, perhaps – and an accusation that Willliam had reneged on a commitment. William decided to leave Carlow. An English syndicate headed up by Norfolk grain farmer WH Harold purchased the estate for in excess of £70,000. [The newspapers suggest it was GW Harrold or AE Harrold … Mick Purcell has him as W.H.Harold, along with his brother and another business partner as purchasers.] In 1957, the syndicate acquired the 1,500 acre Bruen estate at Oak Park, following Henry Bruen’s controversial disinheritance of his only daughter Patricia. Many in Carlow resented Harold’s purchase, believing the two farms should have been acquired by the Land Commission and divided amongst local farmers. Harold resisted until one morning he opened a letter bearing an Irish postmark which contained a single bullet.   

Shortly afterwards, the Browne’s Hill Estates syndicate negotiated a deal with the Land Commission. Browne’s Hill House was put up for sale on 4 ½ acres by auctioneer William Mulhall with an asking price of £2,500. For several weeks, the best price offered was £1,800 from a Dublin buyer, Thomas Stafford, whose interest was in salvage value after demolition.   

In 1961, the April-June issue of the Irish Georgian Society’s Bulletin advised readers that Browne’s Hill ‘is to be demolished if a buyer does not come forward within the next month.’ The house was on sale by William Mulhall, Auctioneer and Valuer, for £2500, with five acres. The author Anita Leslie and Eoin ‘The Pope’ O’Mahony led the IGS campaign to save the house, especially when it became apparent that the Longford firm who had lately stripped an important Palladian house at Dalyston in County Galway, were homing in on Browne’s Hill. Baronness Simone de Bastard was among those said to have expressed an interest. For more on the Irish Georgian Society’s role, see The Irish Aesthete blog. Fortunately a number of last minute bids were placed, and the eventual buyer in June 1961 was local travel agent Frank Tully. (Local lore is that the price paid was £1200). The house and its beautiful stable yard went on the market in the summer of 2020.  

The original entrance gates to Browne’s Hill, which took the form of a splendid triumphal arch, were removed, purchased by University College Dublin and erected at the entrance to the Lyons estate in County Kildare. Lyons was then owned by the college and was later home to the late Tony Ryan of Guinness Peat Aviation / Ryanair. The gates can still be seen there at the entrance to the now-private house.  

By 1958, the Browne-Claytons were living at Cashel House in Connemara, the same landscape in which their daughter Magda would find her husband. William died in Dublin on 3rd September 1971. Janet died in 2002.  

My father adds: ‘For many years Browne’s Hill was the location for the Carlow Agricultural Show, which I remember attending. After the estate was sold the Carlow Agricultural Society declined and the nearby Tullow Show took on the role of county show. Oak Park subsequently became the major research centre for the Agricultural Institute, which eventually morphed into Teagasc.’  

   

ROBERT BROWNE-CLAYTON (1940-2014)  

Robert Bruce Browne-Clayton was born on 25th April 1940 and educated at Loretto in Scotland and Sandhurst. He served as a Captain in the Royal Green Jackets, retiring in 1968. He was subsequently Agricultural, Fisheries, Food, Forestry and Countryside adviser to Margaret Thatcher and her Government, as well as CEO to various Trade Associations including the Coal Industry, Building Industry and Financial Services Industry. On 1st March 1969 he was married in Christchurch Cathedral, Dublin, by the Bishop of Tuam (Arthur Butler), to Jane (Eveline Reine) Butler. She was a daughter of Eric Peter Butler of The Close, Blagdon, near Bristol. They have issue a son, Benedict John (b. 11 March 1970) and daughter Clare Louise (b. 20 Nov 1973). In 2007, Robert presented Carlow County Library with a collection of over 3,000 documents dating from 1640s to 1900s, relating to the Browne-Clayton Estate in Carlow. Robert passed away in 2014, aged 73.  

MAGDA DUNLOP  

Robert’s elder sister Magda Dunlop (nee Browne Clayton) is the author of the useful history of ‘Browne’s Hill 1763 – 1951’ upon which some of this text is based. She was born on 16th June 1937 and educated at Lawnside, Great Malvern and the Froebel Educational Institute in Roehampton. On 19th September 1959 she was married in Chelsea to the late Captain Brian WH Dunlop, 17th/21st Lancers, younger son of the late Canon Douglas Lyall Chandlee Dunlop of Kilcummin Rectory, Oughterard, Co Galway.   

Brian was a grandson of Henry Wallace Dunlop, the engineer who built the original Lansdowne Road stadium. Born in Mumbai, India, Dunlop was a son of the deputy superintendent of the Bombay Water Police. A champion sprinter and speed walker, he founded the Lansdowne Rugby Football Club in 1872. He rented an 8.5-acre plot just east of this station on which he constructed three football pitches, a 400-seat grandstand and a 586-yard cinder track for running, as well as grounds for cricket, croquet and archery. At the time of its demolition in 2007, Dunlop’s stadium was the oldest international rugby ground in continuous use in the world, having hosted its first match in 1878. The Aviva Stadium opened in 2010.  

Brian’s aunt Sheila Cathcart Dunlop (1919–2007), MBE, married Michael Morris, 3rd Baron Killanin, president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) from 1972-80. Lord Killanin made his name as a journalist in the 1930s before serving in Normandy during the Second World War. He later co-founded An Taisce (Ireland’s National Trust) and produced several movies for the film directors John Ford and Brian Desmond Hurst. Having taken office as president of the IOC just after the Munich massacre, he subsequently appointed the first women to the IOC and oversaw China’s return to the Olympics. Their four children include the racehorse trainer Mouser Morris and the producer Red Morris (whose films include the 2021 Netflicks film, ‘The Dig’).   

Brian and Magda had issue two sons, Julian Pilkington (b. 1961), Dominic Patrick (b. 1969, aka the photographer/author Nic Dunlop), and a daughter Lindsay Janet (b. 1963).  

   

APPENDIX  

In 1824, a mineralogy report noted: ‘A few days ago there was taken up at Browne’s Hill, Carlow, the estate of Wm Browne esq, part of a stone in which was found the following combination – siliceous limestone, pearl spar, carbonate of lime, quartz crystal and hepatic iron pyrites; forming one of the most curious specimens we have seen in the compass of less than three inches square. The quartz crystals are common at Browne’s Hill, but not in company with the pearl spar or iron pyrites. They are, we believe, generally found distinct in the carbonate of lime and are of a very superior quality of the Irish diamond’. New Monthly Magazine (1824), by Henry Colburn, Thomas Campbell, William Harrison Ainsworth, Edward Bulwer Lytton, Theodore Edward Hook, Thomas Hood.  

ARMS QUARTERLY  

1st and 4th, gu, a chevron between three lions’ gambs erect and erased arg, a border arg on a chief arg an eagle displayed sa, armed and crowned or (for BROWNE); 2nd and 3rd arg, a cross engrailed sa between four totteaux (CLAYTON).  

With thanks to Magda Dunlop, Michael Purcell, Nic Dunlop, Ivor Bowe, the late Robert Browne-Clayton, Graeme Stanton,Bill Webster, Michael Brennan, the Carlow Rootsweb, Tim Edwards, Avice-Claire McGovern and others.  

FOOTNOTES  
  

[1a] ‘The Country House And Its Demesne In County Carlow‘, by R.Timothy Campbell and Stephen A. Royle, from Carlow History and Society (Irish County History and Society Series, 2008), edited by Dr. Thomas McGrath.  

[1b] Will dated 10 Feb 1677, pr 27 May 1678  

[1c] The reference to Mr Peters comes from JN Brewer, Beauties of Ireland(1826) II, p. 9. The Irish Architectural Archive propose that this could refer to the gardener and landscape architect Matthew Peters who is said to have been born in Belfast in 1711. He was brought up in England by his uncle William Love, who was head gardener to the first Viscount Cobham at Stowe. He came to Ireland in about 1742 and opened a seedsman’s business in Capel Street, Dublin. He also designed and laid out gardens and estates, as he advertised in Faulkner’s Journal 11-14 October 1746 and December 1748. He was consulted about the building of the stove and walks at Marino, Co. Dublin and is said to have been employed by the Irish government to improve the navigation of lakes and rivers. Peters was a member of the Dublin Society and the author of a number of works on agriculture, published in the 1770s, by which time he was living at Freshwater on the Isle of Wight. He married twice. By his first wife he was the father of the painter Matthew William Peters (1741-1814).   

However, Romilly Turton, a direct descendant, wrote to me in June 2014, stating that the concept of Mathew Peters being the architect was ‘highly speculative. She writes: ‘Peters, of course, was never an architect. I also doubt if he could have produced a plan for such a large house. Moreover, he kept a copy of his survey plans for the Navigation Board. So I am quite certain he would have kept a plan of Browne Hill had he been responsible for one, but none has ever been mentioned. However, he might have produced a plan for the garden! ‘.   

See: Irish Architectural Archive. See also A. Young, Tour in Ireland() I, 87; J.B. Burke, Visitation of Seats and Arms 2nd ser. (1855) II, 202-3; Georgian Society Records (1909-13), V, 81.   

[2] Burke’s Extinct & Dormant Baronetcies  

[3] Presented by Richard C Browne Clayton Esq. See British Miscellany, 1865.  

[4] Burke’s Extinct & Dormant Baronetcies  

[5] The Times, Tuesday, Mar 09, 1841; pg. 7; Issue 17613; col E  

[6] The Times, Wednesday, Oct 13, 1841; pg. 6; Issue 17800; col D  

[7] The Times, Wednesday, Apr 20, 1842; pg. 15; Issue 17962; col F  

[8] See: www.wmf.org.uk/projects/view/browne_clayton/  

[9] The Annual Register: World Events, Edmund Burke. (1859).  

[10] The Queen v Lanauze, Nov 19 & 22 1847, Reports of Cases in Criminal Law Argued and Determined in All the Courts in England and Ireland, Edward William Cox, published by J. Crockford, Law Times Office, 1848  

[11] The Times, Thursday, Mar 07, 1895; pg. 1; Issue 34518; col A  

[12] The Gentleman’s Magazine (1855); The Times, Saturday, Jul 19, 1856; pg. 9; Issue 22424; col E  

[13] The Annual Register of World Events A Review of the Year (1859).  

[14] The Times, Wednesday, Aug 21, 1929; pg. 15; Issue 45287; col C  

[15] The Times, Friday, May 21, 1852; pg. 8; Issue 21121; col B  

[16] The Times, Tuesday, May 22, 1883; pg. 8; Issue 30826; col A  

[17] Obituaries, The Times, Wednesday, Apr 17, 1889; pg. 7; Issue 32675; col B  

[18] The Times, Monday, Feb 16, 1863; pg. 1; Issue 24483; col A  

[19] The Times, Thursday, May 30, 1867; pg. 11; Issue 25824; col C  

[20] The Times, Monday, Jun 17, 1867; pg. 9; Issue 25839; col C  

[21] The Times, Monday, Dec 02, 1867; pg. 6; Issue 25983; col C  

[22] The Times, Monday, Nov 06, 1876; pg. 4; Issue 28779; col D  

[23] The Times, Tuesday, Dec 13, 1881; pg. 8; Issue 30376; col B  

[24] The Indian Frontier Risings. Further Fighting. The Times, Saturday, Oct 02, 1897; pg. 5; Issue 35324; col A  

Carlow Sentinel.  
Saturday, October 9th, 1897.  
LIEUTENANT WILLIAM CLAYTON BROWNE-CLAYTON KILLED IN ACTION.  
On Saturday last a feeling of profound sorrow was caused not only in this town and county but throughout every portion of her Majesty’s wide dominions by the sad intelligence that some British officers had been killed in action at the North-Western frontier in India, including a gallant young Carlowman, Lieutenant William Clayton Browne-Clayton, second son of William Clayton Browne-Clayton, Esquire, D.L., of Browne’s Hill, Carlow.  
Very meagre particulars of the engagement have as yet been received, but it is probable that it was a hand-to-hand encounter, and it is certain that our young county man was in the forefront of the fight when cut down in the prime of youth, and when apparently a brilliant career was before him. By early post on Saturday a letter was received from him from the seat of war, written in excellent spirits, and it was not until some members of the family reached the Carlow railway station, with the intention of proceeding to Dublin by early train, that they learned the sad news through the morning papers.  
By every section of the community sorrow and sympathy find deep expression, and during the day the Church bell was tolled in honour of the dead. The gallant young officer, whose death is everywhere mourned, had only been in the army a little over two years, having entered the Royal West Kent Regiment on May 29th, 1895.  
  

[Note added 2010 by Michael Purcell:   

The following account of the battle during which William Browne-Clayton was killed was compiled by Philip Wilson, transcribed by Grace Bunbury.  
In September 1897 Lieutenant Colonel J.L. O’ Bryen commanded the 31st Punjabis in the Expedition to Bajour and took part in various operations until he fell whilst gallantly leading it in the storming of the heights were the villages of Agrah and Gat are situated in the Mamund Valley on the 30th September 1897. Winston Churchill in his book The Malakand Field Force invites the reader to examine the legitimacy of village-burning. ‘A camp of a British Brigade, moving at the order of the Indian Government and under the acquiescence of the people of the United Kingdom, is attacked at night. Several valuable and expensive officers, soldiers and transport animals are killed and wounded. The assailants retire to the hills. Thither it is impossible to follow them. They cannot be caught. They cannot be punished. Only one remedy remains – their property must be destroyed. Their villages are made hostages for their good behaviour.’   

On the 29th September over a dozen villages in the plains of the Mamund Valley were destroyed, without a single loss of life. However on the 30th September events took a totally different course Brigadier General Jeffreys’ 2nd Brigade attacked the fortified villages of Agrah and Gat. These two villages occupied the strongest strategical position of any yet seen, perched on the lower slope of a steep and rugged hill, and mutually supporting each other they were protected on either side by high rocky boulders, great rocks lay tossed about, interspersed with these were huts or narrow cultivated terraces, covered with crops, and rising one above the other by great steps of ten to twelve feet. Both villages had to be occupied at the same time and this compelled the Brigade to attack on a broader front in full view of the enemy, whose drums could be heard as they manned the rocky heights, their red flags plainly visible to the advancing army.  

The Guides Cavalry on the left advanced as far as the scrub would allow them drawing fire from isolated skirmishers. The Guides Infantry was ordered to clear the spur to the left; the 31st Punjab Infantry supported by the 38th Dogras, the centre ridge between the two villages, while the Royal West Kent Regiment was meant to advance straight up the hill on the right of the Guides. The fighting was at very close quarters and it soon became apparent that there were insufficient troops to undertake the task. A gap opened in consequence, between the Guides and Royal West Kents and this enabled the enemy to get round the left flank of the Royal West Kents, while the 31st Punjab Infantry was also turned by the enveloping enemy on the right.  

The Royal West Kents eventually forced their way into the village of Agrah and encountered stiff enemy resistance in strongly occupied sangers. Under heavy enemy fire the Bengal Sappers and Miners commenced to destroy the village with explosives. Meanwhile on the right flank the 31st Punjab Infantry commanded by Lieut. Colonel O’Bryen were exposed to severe fire from a rocky ridge on their flank. Their attack was directed against a great mass of boulders tenaciously held by the enemy. The two advance companies being hotly engaged at less than 100 yards, experiencing cross fire from their right flank.  

Lieut Colonel O’Bryen moved swiftly from point to point directing the fire and animating his men who were devoted to him. As the enemy marksmen’s bullets struck the ground everywhere around his prominent figure he continued to live a charmed life. ‘Two companies of the 38th Dogras’ came up to clear their right. The gunfire, though accurate, could not shift the tribesmen from their cover. So Lieut Colonel O’Bryen of the Punjabis ordered a charge. As O’Bryen rose to lead the 31st Punjabis in the charge towards their objective he was mortally wounded and was then carried to the rear. The casualty roll for the 31st (Punjab) Regiment of Bengal Infantry confirms he died of gun shot wounds to the abdomen.  

Brigadier Jeffreys ordered the 7th Battery to engage the enemy from 600 yards to cover the withdrawal of the 2nd Brigade. The shells screamed over the heads of the Royal West Kents who were now clear of the hills retiring towards the guns. As the guns of the 7th Battery continued to fire, white puffs could be seen as the shells burst along the crest of the ridge, tearing up the ground adding great clouds of dust, whilst flames and smoke continued to rise from the burning village.  

At length the withdrawal was complete and the 2nd Brigade returned to its camp five miles down the valley – job almost done. The Village of Agrah was well and truly destroyed whilst the village of Ghat had been severely shelled.   

  
On hearing the news General Sir Bindon Blood proceeded to Inyat Kila with sizeable reinforcements. He arrived on the 2nd October giving orders for fourteen 12 pounder guns to arrive in time for a determined two Brigade strong attack on Agrah and Gat which was scheduled for the 5th October. As the British Army poured into the Mamund Valley – the tribesmen sued for peace on the 4th October.  

After the action on the 30th September Lieut Colonel McCrae 45th Sikhs was sent up to command the 31st Punjab Infantry and Winston Churchill was attached as a temporary measure to the 31st Punjab Infantry to fill the vacancy arising from Lieut. E.B. Peacock receiving gun shots wounds to the thigh in the action on the 30th September. The total casualties for the day being 61 of which 8 being officer casualties: Lieut Colonel O’Bryen (killed), 2nd Lieut W.C. Browne-Clayton of the Royal West Kents (killed ) with a further six Officers of the Royal West Kents being wounded that day at Agrah.  

And here, once again courtesy of Michael Purcell, is part of the sermon preached in St. Mary’s Church, Carlow, on Sunday, 3rd October 1897, extracted from the notes of John Finlay, Dean of Leighlin at ths time:  

A feeling of sorrow I know pervades this congregation to-day for the Browne-Clayton family — which has been plunged into grief by the loss of one of its members.  
Oh ! – how hard it is for a father and a mother, how hard it is for the brothers and sisters to think of a young life full of health and strength and hope being taken so suddenly.  
The anxious watching, day by day, for news, and then when it comes with its burden of sorrow, the hearts of the waiting ones are wrung with grief — such grief as only those who suffer can know its depth.  
He fell doing his duty.  
You, my brethren, I know do sorrow this day with those that sorrow — you give them your heartful sympathy ; but, brethren, stop not here.  
Give them also your prayers that God may comfort and strengthen them ; and when we kneel and use the words :” We humbly beseech Thee of Thy goodness, O Lord, to comfort and succour all them who in this transitory life are in trouble, sorrow, need, sickness, or any other adversity” :  
and we also bless The Holy name for all Thy servants departed this life in Thy Faith, and fear.  
When we use these words , I say, let us think of those who sorrow to-day, and let us commit them to God’s care.  
We are all one in Christ.  
We are all bound to feel for one another, and to pray for one another.  
May a feeling of closer union take possession of our hearts to-day, that Christ may dwell in our hearts by faith, that we being rooted and grounded in love may be able to comprehend with all the saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height, and to know the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge, that ye may be filled with all the fullness of God.  
And then out of that fullness may we give the sympathy that softens sorrow, and the prayer which will comfort those who mourn, with the comfort which comes from the Father of us all.  

[25] The Times, Tuesday, Jun 28, 1938; pg. 1; Issue 48032; col B  

[26] The Times, Friday, Jan 03, 1947; pg. 1; Issue 50649:; col A  

[27] Their eldest son Patrick Robert Browne was born in 1947 and educated at Notre Dame University, BC. Their second son Peter was born in 1949, married Mary Law of Vancouver and lived in British Columbia.  

[28] The Times, Monday, Oct 10, 1898; pg. 1; Issue 35643; col A  

[29] The Times, Thursday, Aug 26, 1915; pg. 9; Issue 40943; col B  

[30] The Times, Tuesday, Jan 13, 1914; pg. 11; Issue 40419; col B  

[31] The Times, Monday, Jun 11, 1906; pg. 6; Issue 38043; col D  

[32] The Times, Friday, Feb 01, 1929; pg. 9; Issue 45116; col E  

[33] The Times, Thursday, Mar 05, 1942; pg. 1; Issue 49176; col A  

[34] The Times, Thursday, Aug 13, 1942; pg. 8; Issue 49313; col C  

[35] The Times, Friday, Mar 15, 1946; pg. 10; Issue 50401; col D  

  

…. 

In 1951, Lt Col Browne-Clayton was obliged to place the 700 acre estate up for sale. The Land Acts had reduced the families’ wealth considerably and obliged them to leave Carlow. An English syndicate headed up by Norfolk grain farmer WH Harold purchased the estate for in excess of £70,000. In 1957, the syndicate acquired the 1,500 acre Bruen estate at Oak Park, following Henry Bruen’s controversial disinheritance of his only daughter Patricia. Many in Carlow resented Harold’s purchase, believing the two farms should have been acquired by the Land Commission and divided amongst local farmers. Harold resisted until one morning he opened a letter bearing an Irish postmark which contained a single bullet.  

Shortly afterwards, the Browne’s Hill Estates syndicate negotiated a deal with the Land Commission. Browne’s Hill House was put up for sale on 4 ½ acres by auctioneer William Mulhall with an asking price of £2,500. For several weeks, the best price offered was £1,800 from a Dublin buyer, Thomas Stafford, whose interest was in salvage value after demolition. Fortunately a number of last minute bids were placed, and the eventual buyer was local travel agent Frank Tully. It has remained his family home ever since. 

The entrance gates to Browne’s Hill were removed, purchased by University College Dublin and erected at the entrance to the Lyons estate, then owned by the college and later home to the late Tony Ryan of Guinness Peat Aviation / Ryanair.  

By 1958, the Browne-Claytons were living at Cashel House in Connemara, the same landscape in which their daughter Magda would find her husband. William died in Dublin on 3rd September 1971. Janet died in 2002. 

Browne Clayton of Browne’s Hill, Co. Carlow  

Motto: Fortiter et fideliter.   

I penned the following account of Browne’s Hill for the Irish Times on 30 July 2020. I include it here now as an introduction before moving on to the rest of my findings to date. I have not yet researched this family in the depth they merit.   

For most people in Carlow, the name Browne’s Hill is synonymous with the mighty dolmen that stands just outside the town. The Browne’s Hill Dolmen, which boasts one of the largest capstones in Europe, is named after a townland which, in turn, takes its name from the Brownes, the family who lived here from 1763 through until the 1950s.  

As one of the few surviving Georgian mansions in County Carlow, Browne’s Hill is a building of considerable historical value. The handsome mansion occupies the site of an ancient abbey that was granted to the Browne family from Essex in the 17th century.  

The family descend from Sir William Browne of Abbas Roding, Essex, whose second son Robert came to Ireland as an officer with Oliver Cromwell’s army in the 1640s. His son, another Robert, was appointed Sovereign of Carlow by King Charles II and narrowly avoided a grizzly death during the Williamite wars.  

By 1700, the Brownes were one of the most powerful dynasties in Carlow, owning property in both the town and county, as well as extensive lands in Dublin, Kildare and elsewhere.  

Browne’s Hill House was built in 1763 for William Browne, after a design by a Mr Peters. It originally comprised a detached six-bay three-storey over-basement structure, built in the Neo-Classical style with a granite ashlar façade. The house was instantly the envy and the inspiration for other gentlemen in the vicinity as the penchant for building Georgian mansions cranked up several notches.  

At the time of its completion, three towers of the ancient abbey at Browne’s Hill were still standing. These were later either pulled down or fell naturally; some of the stone was reused for the park wall.  

Within the house itself, generation upon generation of Brownes came and went, picking up the additional surname of Clayton along the way. They invariably served as magistrates for Carlow, frequently in the capacity of high sheriff or deputy lieutenant. Some were churchmen but most were of a military bent.  

Among the most prominent was General Robert Browne Clayton, who was made a Prince of the Holy Roman Empire by Pope Pius VI. His greatest legacy was the 94 feet tall Corinthian column that he erected on his Carrigbyrne estate in County Wexford. Restored by the Irish Georgian Society, the column honours his commander, Sir Ralph Abercromby, mortally wounded while leading British forces in Egypt during the Napoleonic Wars.  

In 1842, another Robert succeeded to Browne’s Hill and commissioned the architect Thomas Cobden to redesign the house, with a pedimented central breakfront and a full-height canted bay to the rear. With the onset of the Great Hunger, Robert employed some 400 men to build five-miles of high stone wall around the estate.  

Two generations later, there was sorrow for the family when William Browne was killed in hand-to-hand fighting in Afghanistan in 1897. Prior to his death, he had become friendly with a young journalist reporting on the war by name of Winston Churchill. The future prime minister wept when he saw William Browne-Clayton’s lacerated body laid out on a stretcher.  

William’s brother Robert inherited Browne’s Hill in 1907 and made his mark as a polo player in the Edwardian age. His wife Magda Weinholt was the daughter of a 300,000-acre sheep grazier from Australia.  

The Carlow Sentinel reported on the ‘great rejoicings’ at Browne’s Hill when the newlyweds came home. ‘On arriving at the front gate, which was beautifully and artistically decorated, the carriage was met by a large crowd of enthusiastic friends, and was drawn up the hill by many willing hands, while a fire of twenty-one guns … announced the approach of the procession.’  

Magda made a robust impression as manager of the national school at nearby Benekerry, as one of the pupils recalled: ‘She walked in without knocking as was her right. We stood up somewhat falling over ourselves, so sudden was her entry. She made a bee-line for the teacher’s chair beside the open fire, and if the teacher happened to be sitting in it, she had to be out of it quickly, otherwise Mrs Browne-Clayton would probably have ended up on her lap. She listened to the teaching for a while, and then stood up suddenly, tall and gaunt and dark … and with a swish of tweeds made for the door.’   

Éamon de Valera reputedly gave instruction that neither the family nor their house were to be harmed during the Civil War. Robert, who had risen to the rank of brigadier in the First World War, was also onside with Cosgrave’s government who appointed him to a Special Committee investigating grievances by ex-British servicemen in the Irish Free State.  

He was succeeded in 1939 by his only son William, a keen huntsman, point-to-pointer and polo player. William’s wife Janet descended from James Bruce, the Scotsman who discovered the source of the Blue Nile in 1770.  

William had dreamed of establishing an equestrian centre at Browne’s Hill but, under pressure from Janet, as well as bitter dispute with the local priest, he put the 700-acre estate up for sale in 1951.  

William and Janet’s son Robbie, who died in 2014, was a British officer stationed in Berlin at the time the Berlin Wall was erected. He went on to be an Agricultural, Fisheries, Food, Forestry and Countryside adviser to Margaret Thatcher.  

Robbie’s older sister Magda Dunlop is the last surviving member of the Browne family to have lived in the house. She is mother to Nic Dunlop, the photographer/author who tracked down Comrade Duch, Pol Pot’s chief executioner in Cambodia. Duch was subsequently sentenced to life imprisonment for his war crimes and died in September 2020.  

In 1953, Browne’s Hill House was purchased for in excess of £70,000 by an English syndicate headed up by Norfolk grain farmer G.W. Harrold, who hosted the Carlow Agricultural Show on the grounds. The syndicate also acquired the nearby 1,500-acre estate at Oak Park. There was considerable resentment by those felt that the two estates should have been acquired by the Land Commission and divided amongst local farmers. One morning Harrold opened a letter, bearing an Irish postmark, which contained a single bullet.   

Shortly afterwards, the syndicate negotiated a deal with the Land Commission. Browne’s Hill House was put up for sale on 4 ½ acres with an asking price of £2,500. For several weeks, the best price offered was £1,800 from a Dublin buyer whose interest was in its salvage value after demolition. Fortunately, a number of last-minute bids were placed, and the eventual buyer was local travel agent Frank Tully and his wife Patty. They maintained Browne’s Hill as family home through until Frank’s death in 2018. As of July 2020, it went on sale via Ireland Sotheby’s International Realty and Dawson’s.  

The entrance gates to Browne’s Hill were removed, purchased by University College Dublin and erected at the entrance to the Lyons estate, then owned by the college and later home to the late Tony Ryan of Guinness Peat Aviation / Ryanair.  

must be a private house. 

https://theirishaesthete.com/tag/brownes-hill/

Escaping the Wreckers’ Ball 

Aug17  

 
In 1961, the April-June issue of the Irish Georgian Society’s Bulletin advised readers that a house in County Carlow called Browne’s Hill ‘is to be demolished if a buyer does not come forward within the next month. Situated in a large park with fine timber, Browne’s Hill is in first-rate structural repair and would make a lovely, easily run family home. Although it is on top of a hill with panoramic views, it is not remote, the town of Carlow being only 1 ½ miles away, and Dublin 50 miles. 
The house was built in 1763 by an architect named Peters for Robert Browne, in whose family it remained until recently. The three reception rooms have rich plaster ceilings and the original mantlepieces, the front hall is paved with black and white squares, and the kitchen (with Aga) is on the ground floor. The grand staircase leads up to ten bedrooms of various sizes, he principal one being octagonal with windows facing in three directions. There are two bathrooms, three lavatories, oil fired central heating and E.S.B. main electricity. 
The courtyard comprises 15 stables, garages, loose boxes, dairy and groom’s house with excellent living accommodation, approximately 5,000 square feet of lofting, all in good condition. For permission to view, apply to – William Mulhall, Auctioneer and Valuer, 60 Dublin St., Carlow. 
Price £2,500 with five acres. 
A further 68 acres is available, if required, £7,000.’ 

 
 
 
 
Browne’s Hill was occupied by successive generations of the same family until 1951 when William Browne-Clayton offered the house for sale with 700 acres. Two years later an English syndicate purchased the estate, along with another nearby, the 1,500 acre Oak Park. These purchases were not well-received locally, farmers in the area believing the land ought to have been divided up among them by the Land Commission. Eventually in 1961 the syndicate, faced with growing hostility, negotiated a deal with the commission, whereby the estate underwent division and the house with its immediate five acres were put on the market with an asking price of £2,500. It was at this point that the Irish Georgian Society placed a notice in its bulletin warning supporters that unless a sympathetic buyer could be found – and soon – the house would be demolished. This news understandably caused alarm among those who were fighting to ensure the survival of the country’s steadily diminishing architectural heritage. Among them was author Anita Leslie, then dividing her time between her own family home, Castle Leslie in County Monaghan, and Oranmore Castle, County Galway, a property she had bought with her husband Bill King. Anita Leslie was also battling to save Dalyston, an important mid-18th century house that had just been sold to a County Longford firm that specialized in stripping old buildings of all saleable assets. Seeing Dalyston unroofed and gradually picked bare, she was determined the same fate should not befall Browne’s Hill and embarked on a campaign to save the property. For a time, she thought it might perhaps be bought by one of her friends, such as the wealthy Simone, Baronne de Bastard who had just spent huge sums restoring the 17th century château de Hautefort in the Dordogne, but it seems Mme de Bastard did not care to purchase a house in the Irish countryside. 

 
 
 
 
As June 1961 drew to a close, the fate of Browne’s Hill seemed sealed: it was destined to be demolished since the best purchase offer had come from the same company that had stripped and unroofed Dalyston. But then the Land Commission, in a rare gesture of sympathy, advised the Irish Georgian Society that it would allow a further six months’ grace before a decision over the house’s future was made. Anita Leslie battled on, helped by another stalwart of the society, Eoin ‘The Pope’ O’Mahony (he had been nicknamed ‘The Pope’ while still a schoolboy after declaring his ambition in life was to hold this title). A wonderfully eccentric character, one-time barrister, orator, genealogist and supporter of many lost causes, in this instance O’Mahony announced that he had persuaded a Fellow of St Catherine’s College, Cambridge to back a scheme whereby Browne’s Hill would be bought for 2,000 guineas, to be used as a student hostel. Extensive correspondence survives between Anita Leslie, Eoin O’Mahony, and Desmond and Mariga Guinness of the Irish Georgian Society as all of them – sometimes at cross-purposes – sought the best means of securing Browne’s Hill’s long-term future, each of them, and others besides, hounding the local auctioneer William Mulhall for information about possible rival bids for the place. On July 10th, Anita Leslie wrote somewhat histrionically to the Guinnesses, ‘I feel like Atlas holding up the last Georgian houses in Ireland on drooping shoulders & slender purse.’ If necessary, and as a last resort, she was prepared to pay the £2,500 required for Browne’s Hill, thinking it could either be let to a tenant or else run as a guesthouse. Finally, despairing that demolition awaited without her intercession and without telling her husband of the decision, she sent the auctioneer a cheque for the deposit. The cheque was promptly returned: it transpired that another offer for the property had been made – and not by any firm with demolition in mind. Instead, Browne’s Hill was bought by a local travel agent Frank Tully and his wife Patty. They subsequently moved into Browne’s Hill, which remained a family home until Mr Tully died in November 2018. Last month Browne’s Hill came on the market for only the second time since it was built more than 250 years ago. 

 
The original entrance gates to the Browne’s Hill estate, which took the form of a splendid triumphal arch, were sold during this period and bought by University College Dublin, which in 1962 purchased the Lyons estate in County Kildare to run as a research farm. The gates can still be seen there at the entrance to the now-private house at Lyons. 

Browne’s Hill County Carlow photograph courtesy of Irish Times 30th July 2020.

Braganza, Carlow, Co Carlow – converted into apartments 

Braganza, Carlow, Co Carlow – converted into apartments 

Braganza, County Carlow, photograph by Robert French, Lawrence Photographic Collection, National Library of Ireland.

Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses.[originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978; Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.] 

p. 46. “By Thomas A. Cobden, of Carlow; built ca 1818 for D.S. Hill. Two storey, with a wide eaved roof carried on brackets and a shallow curved bow at either side of both the front and the rear elevations. Small single storey Tuscan portico with pediment between the two bows of the front, which have a Wyatt window in each storey, the lower one being set under a relieving arch. Another Wyatt window in the centre, above the portico. Bold string course between the storeys, continuing around the side of the house. Hall with flat circular ceiling over pendentives. Fine large drawing room, running the full depth of the house, with a bow at each end and an unusually broad frieze of plasterwork. Curving staircase in room on opposite side of hall to drawing room. A few years after it was built, the house became the residence of the Catholic bishops of Kildare and Leighlin, which it continued to be until recently.” 

not in National Inventory 

https://archiseek.com/2015/1818-braganza-house-carlow-co-carlow

1818 – Braganza House, Carlow, Co. Carlow 

Architect: Thomas A. Cobden 

Originally built for Col. Sir Dudley Hill by Thomas A. Cobden, later the architect of the nearby Roman Catholic Cathedral. After been used as the Bishop’s Palace for many years, it was sold to a developer. A housing estate was constructed on the grounds and the house itself fell into ruin. It has since been redeveloped into apartments. 

http://sites.rootsweb.com/~irlcar2/Braganza_Villa.htm 

How Cobden’s palace became a ruin… 

Hidden at the rear of a housing estate is one of Carlow’s oldest and most important buildings — Braganza. Once the seat of the bishops of Kildare and Leighlin, the beautifully designed mansion has, with the passing of time, been reduced to a ruin. 

Designed by Thomas Cobden, the English architect who was also responsible for the construction of the Cathedral of the Assumption, Braganza Villa, according to Fr. P. J. Brophy in the 1949 issue of Carloviana was built for Sir Dudley St. Leger Hill in 1819. 

In fact, to be precise, work on the house, said to have been modelled on Portuguese architecture, began on Monday, August 26, 1819. 

Elegant breakfast 

According to the local newspaper of the time, The Carlow Post, “the first stone was laid by Mrs. Hill, mother of Sir Dudley. About 9 am Mr. and Mrs. Hill, with a large party of friends to the number of forty, sat down to an elegant breakfast prepared for the occasion.” 

Mother laid first stone 

“Mrs. Hill proceeded with a silver trowel and an appropriate apron to lay the first stone, which having done. Mr. Cobden, the architect, made a few suitable remarks and concluded the ceremony by giving the signal for three cheers.” 

But progress on the building was slow and, three years later, it still was not completed. Sir Dudley, who had distinguished himself in battle in both the South American War and later with Wellington at Corunna and Talavera, was obviously growing weary of the country squire life and opted to re-join the British Army, being appointed Major in the 95th Derbyshire Foot in December, 1823. 

At that time, he also offered for sale the now completed and fully-furnished Braganza Villa on six acres of lands. Anxious to show their appreciation for the work their bishop Dr. James Doyle (JKL) had done for the diocese, the clergy met and passed a resolution “That anxious to signify to our Revered Prelate the sincerity of our attachment and gratitude, we do forthwith institute a subscription in order to procure for him such a residence as will fix the attention of posterity on the period and on the prelate.” 

A close up of a map

Description automatically generated﷟HYPERLINK “http://sites.rootsweb.com/~irlcar2/Carlow_13.jpg”The committee decided to purchase Braganza for the sum of £2,500 and in 1826.  Dr. Doyle left his residence at Old Derrig and came to live in Carlow. 

From then, until the death of Dr. Thomas Kehoe in 1969, Braganza was the residence of the bishops of Kildare and Leighlin, and was referred to as the bishop’s palace. However, on his elevation to Bishop, the late Dr. Patrick Lennon opted to break with tradition and bought a house on Station Road. His official residence was later built on the grounds of the presbytery at Dublin Road. On July 12, 1972, Braganza Villa, standing on approx. seven acres of land, was sold by public auction. 

A local construction company erected 25 private houses on the site and Braganza was walled off, leaving only one entrance at the rear. 

As a listed building, under the Town Development Plan, a developer is required to get the consent of the local Urban District Council before carrying out any alterations or before demolishing the building. 

In 1978 An Bord Pleanala granted planning permission to a developer to convert the building to three apartments but this was never done. 

An application is currently before the UDC for the conversion of the building to six apartments. As yet, no planning permission has been granted. 

Source: The Nationalist February 16th 1990 

http://www.patrickcomerford.com/2016/10/an-elegant-regency-house-saved-from.html 

Braganza is hidden at the rear of a housing estate off Athy Road. This once elegant Regency mansion is one of Carlow’s oldest buildings and the former seat of the Bishops of Kildare and Leighlin. For six years the residence of Bishop Michael Comerford while he was coadjutor bishop of the diocese. 
 
This beautifully designed mansion, looking down onto the banks of the River Barrow, was recently in danger of being reduced to a ruin. Braganza Villa was first built for Major-General Sir Dudley St Leger Hill (1790-1851), a Carlow-born army general and colonial governor. The house was designed by Thomas Cobden, the English-born architect, when he was only in his mid-20s. Hobden also designed the Roman Catholic Cathedral of the Assumption, Saint Mary’s Church of Ireland parish church, and the Scots’ Church or Presbyterian Church in Carlow. 
 
Thomas Alfred Cobden (1794-1842) was born in Chichester, and had moved to Ireland by 1814 or 1815, when he prepared designs for Gurteen le Poer, Co Waterford, for John William Power. Most of his Irish commissions were in Co Carlow and Co Wexford, and included Duckett’s Grove, Co Carlow. He lived for some time in College Street, Carlow, but returned to London by 1832 and died in Hackney in 1842 at the age of 48. 
 
Sir Dudley Hill was born in Carlow in 1790, the son of Dudley Hill of Dublin Street, Carlow. His ancestors are said to have come to Ireland a century earlier with the army of King William III. His grandfather, Edward Hill, married Catherine Colclough, a daughter of Henry Colclough of Kildavin, near Bunclody, and a cousin of Beauchamp Bagenal (1741-1802), MP for Enniscorthy and Carlow and remembered as a rake – he is said to have jilted Princess Charlotte, who later married King George III. 
 
Hill joined the army at the age of 17 in 1804, when he was appointed an ensign in the 82nd Foot. A year later the transferred to the 95th Rifles. 

As Lieutenant Hill, he was sent to South America in 1806, and during the Battle of Montevideo in 1807 he commanded the scaling party that captured the north gate of the city. He was wounded and taken prisoner in the subsequent attempt at Buenos Aires, when he fought under Colonel William Carr Beresford. 
 
He accompanied his battalion to Portugal in 1808, under the command of Sir Arthur Wellesley, later the Duke of Wellington, and he was present at the Battle of Roliça, was wounded at the Battle of Benavente, and took part in the Battle of Corunna. 
 
He was back in Portugal in 1809, when he took part in the Battle of Talavera and the operations on the Côa River. Later, he was appointed to the Portuguese army and had a commanding role both with the Loyal Lusitanian Legion at Battle of Bussaco in 1810, and at the Battle of Fuentes de Oñoro in 1811. 
 
Hill then commanded the 8th Caçadores at the Siege of Badajoz, at the Battle of Salamanca in 1812, and in the Burgos retreat, where he was wounded and taken prisoner. He was present at the Battle of Vitoria and was wounded at the Siege of San Sebastián in 1813. He was also present at the Battle of Bayonne in 1814. In all these campaigns, he was wounded seven times. 
 
Hill later returned with the Portuguese army to Portugal, where he spent some years. He was knighted in Portugal in 1815 as a Knight of the Order of the Tower and Sword, and when he returned home he was knighted as a Knight Bachelor in 1816. 

Around 1818, he began building the manor house of Braganza on the banks of the River Barow in Carlow. He named the house Braganza in honour of the Portuguese Royal Family, inspired by his long military career in Portugal. 
 
In 1819, at Saint Marylebone in London, Hill married his first wife Caroline Drury Hunter (1799-1831), a daughter of Robert Hunter of Kew, Surrey, and his wife Charlotte (Hansford), and they had six children, some of whom were born in Carlow. 
 
He had returned to Portugal once again by 1820 and by 1823, when he decided to sell Braganza, he was an army major. 
 
But in 1834 he became a senior British colonial figure when he was appointed the Lieutenant-Governor of Saint Lucia, where he was involved in the emancipation of the slaves. 
 
He returned home when he married a second time in 1838. His second wife Mary (Watkins) was the widow of Mark Davies, of Turnwood, Dorset. A year later, he was made Commander of the Order of Aviz in Portugal in 1839. 
 
He was appointed a major-general in 1841, and, after spending time on the army staff in Ireland, he was appointed to a divisional command in Bengal in 1848, when he was made a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB). He still held his colonial post in Indian when he died of apoplexy at Umballa in Bengal on 21 February 1851. 
 
His grave in Ambala Cemetery bore the inscription: ‘Sacred to the memory of Major General Sir Dudley St. Leger Hill, KCB, Colonel of HM 50th Regt who died at Umballah while in command of the Sirhind division on the 21st February 1851.’ 
 

A house with trees in the background

Description automatically generated

Braganza in its elegant days as the Bishop’s Palace  
 
Braganza is said to have been modelled on Portuguese architecture. Cobden was probably commissioned to design the house in 1818, and building work began on Monday 26 August 1819. According to the local newspaper of the time, The Carlow Post, the first stone was laid by his mother and Hill and his wife then entertained a large party of 40 friends to ‘an elegant breakfast prepared for the occasion.’ 
 
But progress on building Braganza was slow, and three years later it still was not completed. Hill seems to have been frustrated by these delays, and in 1823 he offered the now-completed and fully-furnished Braganza Villa for sale along with six acres of lands. 
 
In a tribute to Dr James Doyle (JKL), Roman Catholic Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin, the priests of his diocese launched a collection to buy the buy the house for their bishop and his successors. The organising committee decided to buy Braganza for £2,500. In 1826, Bishop Doyle left his house at Old Derrig and moved to live in Carlow. 
 
From then, until the death of Bishop Thomas Kehoe in 1969, Braganza was the residence of the Bishops of Kildare and Leighlin, and was referred to as the ‘Bishop’s Palace. 
 

A sign on the side of a building

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The episcopal arms on the portico of Braganza … they show the arms of the Diocese of Kildare and Leighlin on one side and on the other what may be a representation on the talbot and indented cross of the Comberford family (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2016) 
 
From 1888, Braganza was the residence of Bishop Michael Comerford (1831-1895)following his appointment by Pope Leo XIII as titular Bishop of Corycus in Cilicia Prima, and Coadjutor Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin, with the right of succession as Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin. 
 
Michael Comerford was born in 1831 in Tullow Street, Carlow. His father, James Comerford (1788-1859) of Clohamon and Newtownbarry (Bunclody), Co Wexford, moved from Bunclody to Carlow, and lived at 11 Brown Street, within walking distance of Carlow Cathedral and Saint Patrick’s College. He also owned property close to the then Methodist Church in Charlotte Street – named after the once jilted Queen Charlotte. 
 
Michael Comerford was consecrated bishop on 1 January 1889 in Carlow Cathedral, which was also designed by Cobden. He died suddenly on 19 August 1895 without living to succeed as Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin. Following his death, there were vespers in Braganza, his residence, ‘and a magnificent demonstration of respect and of sympathy in the procession of religious confraternities through the town where all of the shops were closed and crape universally worn.’ 
 
His funeral rites ended with Matins and Lauds in the cathedral. He was buried in front of the High Altar in Carlow Cathedral, where the Flemish pulpit was erected in his memory. A plaque in Brown Street also commemorates his work as both a bishop and an historian. 
 

A close up of a sign

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A plaque in Brown Street, Carlow, remembers Bishop Michael Comerford (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2016) 
 
When Dr Patrick Lennon became Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin in 1969, he decided to break with tradition and bought a house on Station Road. His official residence was later built on the grounds of the presbytery at Dublin Road. On 12 July 1972, Braganza Villa, standing on about seven acres of land, was sold at public auction. 
 
A local construction company built 25 private houses on the site and Braganza, by then a listed building, was walled off, leaving only one entrance at the rear. For many years it was in danger of falling into ruins, but it has since been renovated and converted into apartments. 
 

A house with trees in the background

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Braganza has been restored and converted into apartments (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2016) 

Ballynoe (or Newtown), Tullow, Co Carlow

Ballynoe (or Newtown), Tullow, Co Carlow – private? 

Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses.[originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978; Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.] 

p. 27. “[Barratt/LGI1969] A small late-Georgian house of two storeys over basement. Thee bay front and sides; glazed and curving porch; eaved roof. Extended by a two bay Victorian addition of two storeys with pediment; further extensions again. In recent years the home of Major and Mrs S.G.R. Elton-Barratt.” 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/10301323/ballynoe-house-ballynoe-or-newtown-county-carlow

Detached two-storey over basement house, c. 1775, with stone façade having pedimented advanced bays. Extended to right, c. 1825, comprising three-bay range with central breakfront having bay windows to ground floor. Renovated, c. 1980, with bowed granite projecting porch added. Stable complex to site. 

Representative view

Record of Protected Structures: 

Ballynoe House, Aghade, Tullow. Townland: Ballynoe or Newtown 

A very curious house of different dates, with an asymmetrical façade of different styles. The house is said to date from circa 1775 and to have been a four-bay, two-storey house with a two-bay, deeply advanced breakfront and a basement. The breakfront and one bay survives and added to this a three-bay, two-storey house of circa 1820.The earlier house is built of coursed-rubble stone with brick dressings to the windows, a gable on the advanced bays, which has a strong cornice giving it the look of a pediment. The sash windows have six panes in each sash. The roof is hipped with wide eaves. The later house has painted, rendered walls and a breakfront, a high basement, oriel windows flanking the simple, round-headed doorcase. There is a most unusual semi-circular porch of four free-standing, granite piers – each pier is composed of three, cylindrical shafts. The low-pitched, hipped roof has wide eaves. The later house is probably by Thomas Cobden.  

Importance: regional, architectural, artistic, interior, technical 

Jimmy O’Toole, The Carlow Gentry: What will the neighbours say! Published by Jimmy O’Toole, Carlow, Ireland, 1993. Printed by Leinster Leader Ltd, Naas, Kildare. 

Chapter: Riky of Ballynoe 

http://www.igp-web.com/Carlow/Ballynoe_House.htm 

Originally built by the Ricky family, this residence is a fine late Georgian two storey house which according to author Jimmy O’ Toole’ s book ” The Carlow Gentry” originally stood on circa 600 acres and was one of Carlow’ s smaller estates. Reduced this century to approximately 50 acres, Ballynoe has had a number of interesting owners over the years. Renowned architect Sam Stephenson owned the property for a time in the 1970s. The current owners have made Ballynoe House their home for the last fourteen years during which time they bred many fine draught horses from Ballynoe.  

Shape﷟HYPERLINK “http://www.igp-web.com/Carlow/Ballynoe_01.jpg”

Situated in an area of outstanding natural beauty, the area has much to offer those interested in country pursuits. The Slaney Valley and the renowned Altamont gardens are just a five minute drive from the property with the choice of first class championship golf courses including Mount Wolseley Golf & Country Club in nearby Tullow, Killerig Castle Golf & Country Club, Carlow 27 hole championship course, Coolattin Golf Club. It is in the country of the Carlow Hunt, and there is also excellent trout fishing on the River Barrow which flows through Carlow town which also provides facilities for boating and cruising. There are a number of gun clubs in the area and private shoots within easy drive which are always in need of new guns. The scenic Wicklow way walk passes the nearby village of Clonegal and provides beautiful walks through the Slaney Valley and the Wicklow Hills.  

This is a fine cut stone granite wall and cast iron gates set off a quiet country road leads onto a gravelled lane surrounded by mature trees. At its end stands Ballynoe House on an elevated site taking advantage of the fine views of the rolling countryside and farmland and the Wicklow and Blackstairs Mountains. 

THE STUD FARM:- Circa 49 acres including residence, gardens and pleasure grounds the lands are arable of excellent quality currently in permanent pasture, with water to all paddocks and due to the lay of the lands can provide great shelter for livestock.  

The enclosed cut stone stable yard, containing 9 loose boxes, tack and feed rooms, hay and straw barns are all beautifully maintained, and are an attractive addition to the property. A new machinery and feed storage shed was constructed in 1998.  

Surrounding the house and gardens are fine ornamental standing trees, an attractive circa 2 acre old stone walled ornamental garden with extensive orchard, herb & vegetable area, heated swimming pool with adjoining changing rooms and sauna housed in a timber framed pavilion.  

To the western boundary of the property lies the river Slaney and Ballynoe has the benefit of salmon fishing rights for approximately 2kms on the bank adjoining the property. It is an area of outstanding natural beauty near the popular Aghade Bridge with a picturesque river walk along the bank. The fishing along the bank is excellent with eight weirs, four named pools a long the beat providing varied and productive water at mort levels. A small fisherman’ s lodge along the bank provides welcome refuge from the summer showers 

https://www.irishtimes.com/life-and-style/homes-and-property/2.1233/carlow-estate-with-angler-s-chalet-for-1-25-million-1.1363358

April 18 2013 

Five years ago, Ballynoe House on 50 acres at Ardattin, Co Carlow, was valued at €3.8 million. Today, the estate is for sale by private treaty from joint agents Sherry FitzGerald and Browne Corrigan, with an asking price of €1.25 million. 

At this price, there appears to be value and it’s likely to attract savvy overseas interest.  

The property, in lovely Slaney river valley countryside, is a short drive from junction five on the M9 (Dublin to Waterford) motorway – about an hour south of theRed Cow interchange and nine miles from Carlow town.  

The owners – Willem and Anneke Savelkouls – fell in love with Ireland during a hunting holiday two decades ago and bought the estate in 1995. They first used it as a holiday home but eventually moved to Ireland to pursue country sports, breed horses and keep sheep.  

Now they’re downsizing “with a lot of regrets” and returning to the Netherlands but will “miss the space, the way of life where everything goes so easy” – and even the Irish weather.  

Ballynoe House was originally home to a Carlow “gentry” family followed by a succession of British army top brass. For a few years in the 1970s, it was owned and used as a weekend retreat by the late architect Sam Stephenson(best remembered for his controversial Central Bank in Dame Street and Dublin City Council offices at Wood Quay designs).  

His primary legacy – one of the most unexpected and jaw-dropping features to be found in any Irish country house – is an outdoor swimming pool and modernist pavilion with sauna and changing rooms plonked into an early 19th-century walled-garden.  

It’s as shocking and unexpected as any of his Dublin structures. Why did he bother when the property has access to natural swimming in the Slaney? This carbuncle could be easily removed. If not, the pool and pavilion will need some costly overhaul and maintenance. 

The spacious late-Georgian house (with Victorian extensions) has a curved porch entrance leading into 9,149sq ft (850sq m) of bright, well-maintained accommodation arranged as two storeys over basement. 

The ground floor has a big welcoming reception hall and two large reception rooms with high ceilings, big windows and great natural light.  

There’s also an open-plan living room/kitchen and a very large study which once housed a private school.  

Upstairs are seven bedrooms: a master suite, five family bedrooms sharing two further bathrooms, and a separate guest bedroom suite with a shower room.  

The garden or basement level, which can be accessed from internal staircases or directly from outside, is pleasantly bright and includes a games room, an extra bedroom, a wine cellar, a drying room, office and a self-contained apartment (living room, bedroom, kitchen and bathroom) for a live-in caretaker or housekeeper.  

An attractive, spick-and-span granite courtyard has extensive stabling, tack room, hay loft, woodshed and barn.  

The surrounding 50 acres are “richly fertile lands, which include good pasturage and woodland” with some very fine trees and what the agents accurately describe as “a fabulous stretch of the river Slaney” – 1.25 miles (2km) of private riverbank with some noted weirs and pools for private salmon and trout fishing.  

Willem Savelkouls, incidentally, hasn’t adopted the Irish angler’s habit of whopping exaggeration and admits, with disarming honesty, to never having landed a salmon – despite frequent efforts – but, has, over the years, “caught lots of trout”.  

Perched high above the riverbank is a little fisherman’s chalet with a log fire and picture window overlooking a mesmerising vista. 

You could travel the length and breadth of rural France and not find a more idyllically Arcadian spot for a picnic, river bathing, angling or just plain idling. No wonder the Dutch found it “wonderful” and “unbelievable”.