Dowth Hall, near Slane, County Meath 

Dowth Hall, near Slane, County Meath 

Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy National Inventory.

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. 107. “Netterville, V/DEP; Gradwell/LGI1958) A small and extremely elegant mid-C18 house, built for 6th Viscount Netterville; with a two storey front, but with an extra storey fitted in as a mezzanine at the back. The front, of ashlar, is five bay; the lower storey is rusticated; the windows in the upper storey are higher than those below, and have alternate triangular and segmental pediments over them. Urns on roofline; pedimented doorway with Doric columns and frieze. Splendid interior plasterwork, possibly by Robert West, who may in fact have been the architect. Doric frieze in hall. Beautiful rococo decoration on walls and ceiling of drawing room. Dining room ceiling with birds and clouds. Library with simple rococo ceiling and swags on walls. A little way from the hosue is a famous prehistoric burial mound, one of several in the neighbourhood. 6th Viscount Netterville, who was a somewhat eccentric character, used to sit on top of it and “attend” mass by training a telescope on a distant chapel. Dowth Hall was acquired mid-19C by the Gradwell family, who sold it ca 1951. It subsequently became the home of Mr Clifford Cameron.” 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/14402009/dowth-hall-dowth-co-meath

Detached five-bay two-storey over basement country house, built c.1760, with additional mezzanine to the rear. Hipped slate roof with rendered chimneystacks and ashlar limestone parapets. Ashlar limestone walls with string courses having channelled ashlar to the entrance level. Timber sash windows, with alternating pediments to upper floor. Paired timber panelled doors. Carved limestone porch, comprising columns supporting entablature and pediment, approached by flight of limestone steps. Conservatory, c.1900, attached to south elevation. Outbuildings to north elevation. 

Appraisal 

This house was built by the sixth Viscount Netterville, and is a well designed building, which is representative of mid eighteenth-century architecture in Ireland. The building is articulated with ashlar limestone dressings, with channelling to the entrance level, string courses and alternating pediments to upper floor. The building retains many interesting features and materials, such as the slate roof, timber sash windows and timber conservatory. The building retains fine interior features, which have been attributed to Robert West. 

Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy National Inventory.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy National Inventory.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy National Inventory.

Record of Protected Structures: 

Dowth Hall, townland: Dowth. 

Detached five-bay two-storey over basement country house, built c.1730. Conservatory, c.1900, attached to south elevation. Outbuildings to north elevation. Incl Stables and Gate lodge 

https://archiseek.com/2014/1760-dowth-hall-co-meath

1760 – Dowth Hall, Co. Meath 

Architect: George Darley 

Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Archiseek.

Dowth Hall dates from c.1760 and was built for John, Viscount Netterville (1744-1826), and probably designed by George Darley. According to theirishaesthete.com: “The real delight of Dowth lies in its extravagantly decorated interiors, where a master stuccadore has been allowed free hand. The drawing room (originally dining room) is especially fanciful with rococo scrolls and tendrils covering wall panels and the ceiling’s central light fitting suspended from the claws of an eagle around which flutter other birds. None of the other ground floor rooms quite match this boldness but they all contain superlative plaster ornamentation, with looped garlands being a notable feature of the library. Again, the person responsible for this work is unknown, but on the basis of comparative similarities with contemporary stuccowork at 86 St Stephen’s Green in Dublin (on which George Darley is supposed to have worked) Dowth Hall’s decoration is usually attributed to Robert West (died 1790).” 

featured in Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915. P. 61 

“This is a plain, square mansion, with cut stone front, situated in County Meath, some four miles to the west of Drogheda, on the southern bank of the River Boyne. The hall is large, with grand stairs in three flights, ending on the first floor. The ceiling is without ornament, with Doric frieze, and all the doors have broken architraves, in which the principal feature is the cast iron stove, a nice specimen of Georgian workmanship, bearing what appears to be intended for the arms of the fifth Viscount Netterville and his wife, though, being of Continental manufacture, the heraldry is wrong and exhibits unmistakenly foreign characteristics. The door on the extreme right admits to the dining-room, which has a carved wood mantel, the ceiling being in free rococo, with a cornice of five enrichments. 

“a remarkable display of rococo plaster is to be found in the drawing room, also on this floor, both walls and ceiling being quite covered with graceful scrolls and swags. ..There is a siena and white marble mantel, which, like the joinery, would appear to be original. To the left is the library, a small room, with rococo frieze, carved wood mantel, and mural decoration in festoons. 

As regards the upstairs portion of the house, two of the bedrooms have ceilings slightly decorated in heavy relief, while one has the Bossi mantel and the original brass grate, set in white marble… 

“Dowth is the ancient home of the Anglo-Norman family of Netterville, the estate, according to Burke’s “Visitation of Seats and Arms” being granted to them by Hugh de Lacy, Lord Justice of Ireland. [p. 62] Sir John Netterville was resident here in the thirteenth century, and from his descended a long line of owners. Several of the family were distinguished as lawyers, John Netterville of Dowth being a Justice of the King’s Bench, as was also his youngest son, Thomas, while Lucas Netterville was appointed second Justice of the Queen’s Bench in 1559. 

“On 3rd April 1622 Nicholas Netterville, the then head of this ancient house,… was raised to the peerage of Ireland as Viscount Netterville of Dowth.  In 1641, on the breaking out of the rebellion, he made protestations to the Crown, and expressed his readiness to assist in suppressing it; but, his offers of service being rejected, he took offence, and soon after joined the Confederates. As a result of this action he was deprived of his estates, and on 17 Nov 1642, declared an outlaw. Ten years later he was excepted from pardon by Cromwell’s Government. 

“Sir John Netterville, Knight, who succeeded as second Viscount on his father’s decease in 1655, was for some time a prisoner in Dublin Castle, charged with treason, but obtained his liberty by sending a petition to the king. In this he stated that he had been living at Dowth when the insurrection broke out, and that during the siege of Drogheda by the rebels large parties of them more than once forced their way into his dwelling, and resided there against his will, so that he had been unjustly condemned for harbouring rebels in his house, since he had been unable to keep them out. He married, in 1623, Lady Elizabeth Weston, eldest daughter of Richard, Earl of Portland, who, being an Englishwoman, obtained an order under the Commonwealth to enjoy a fifth part of the revenues of her husband’s forfeited estates, and having no other place of residence, was permitted to remain in possession of Dowth. Lord Netterville [p. 63] died in Sept 1659, and was succeeded by his eldest son, Nicholas, the third Viscount, who, failing to obtain restitution of his estates at the Restoration, went to England and laid his case before the King, who was pleased to have it enacted by the Act of Explanation that he should be reinstated in all the lands and property, spiritual livings, tithes, rectories, and parsonages excepted, which had been enjoyed by the late lord or his father on the outbreak of the rebellion, to hold the same as if he had been adjudged innocent, and that he should be restored in blood to all intents and purposes. Notwithstanding, he was only able to regain possession of the fifth part previously held by his mother, for which he passed patent on 18 June 1666. Charles II also granted him a pension, which he retained under his successor, James II, who was pleased to appoint him a Privy Councillor in Ireland. He served in the Jacobite army at the siege of Derry, where he had the misfortune to be taken prisoner on 8th May 1689, and died soon afterwards… Some month later, however, he was found guilty of high treason before the Grand Jury of County Westmeath, and in consequence declared an outlaw; but, on a petition lodged by his children showing that he had in fact died before the indictment, his attainder was annulled. 

“John, fourth Lord Netterville, who was a minor and at school on the Continent at the time of his father’s death, returned to Ireland, while still under age, in 1692. On 19 Jan 1715, he took the Oath of Allegiance in the Irish House of Lords, but declined to make the Declaration, and was accordingly debarred from taking his seat, and ordered to withdraw. On 30 May 1704, he married the Hon. Frances Parsons, eldest daughter of Richard, Viscount Rosse, by whom he had an only son. 

Lord Netterville died of fever at Liege, in Flanders, on 12 Dec 1727, aged 54, and was buried in the Convent of Nuns there. 

Nicholas, the fifth Viscount, who then succeeded his father in the title and at Dowth, spent two years at the university of Utrecht, returning to Ireland in Aug 1728, and, having conformed to the Established Church, took his seat in the Houes of Lords the following year. He married on 25 Feb 1731, Catherine, only daughter of Samuel Burton, of Burton Hall, Co Carlow, being described at the time as “a fool and a fop, but a lord with a tolerable estate.” [Autobiography and Correspondence of Mary Granville, Mrs Delany, vol. 1, p. 338]. On 1 Aug 1743, he was indicted for the murder of Michael Walsh, but after a trial, lasting fifteen hours, in the following February he was honourably acquitted by his peers. He died on 19 March 1750, aged 42, and was buried at Dowth. He is stated to have left £1000 per annum [p.64] and £5000 personalty, so that his only son John, sixth Viscount Netterville, who did not attain his majority till 1765, found himself in a more affluent position than most of his predecessors. He was some time an Ensign in the 122nd Regiment of Foot. On leaving the service, he settled at Dowth, where about 1780 he erected the present mansion. He appears, however, to have only resided there for a short period, and in or before 1812 he let the house and demesne to Roger Hamill, of Drogheda, for a term of 31 years, at £300 per annum. 

“Lord Netterville never married, and on his death, 15 March 1826, the Viscountcy became dormant. By his will the old castle at Dowth, which in 1812, though somewhat ruinous, was still habitable, was fitted up as an Alms House for six aged women and six orphan boys, and for their support and the maintenance of a school he devised 60 acres of land. He also left his house in Blackhall Street, Dublin, which he had purchased in 1795 on disposing of his father’s residence in Sackville St, as a dispensary for the benefit of the poor. From 1826, and until he was dispossessed under a decree in Chancery, dated 19 June 1835, Dowth was occupied by John Netterville Blake, grandson of the last Lord’s only sister. 

“His kinsman, James Netterville, succeeded as seventh Viscount by a decision of the House of Lords on 14 Aug 1834, but, although he obtained possession of the estates settled by his predecessor, he had lost so much money in establishing his claim to the peerage that the property became heavily mortgaged. It was finally sold in 1845 by the Court of Chancery, the purchaser being Richard Gradwell, a Lancashire gentleman, father of Robert B.G.A. Gradwell, Esq, the present proprietor.” 

Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy of Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy of Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy of Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy of Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy of Georgian Mansions in Ireland with some account of the evolution af Georgian Architecture and Decoration by Thomas U. Sadleir and Page L. Dickinson. Dublin University Press, 1915.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.

https://theirishaesthete.com/tag/dowth-hall/

Located midway between Slane and Drogheda, and immediately north of the river Boyne Dowth is today known as the site of one of a number of important Neolithic passage tombs in County Meath, others in its immediate vicinity including Newgrange and Knowth. But Dowth deserves to be renowned also for an important mid-18th century house which is due to be auctioned at the end of January. 
Dowth Hall dates from c.1760 and was built for John, Viscount Netterville (1744-1826). His family, of Anglo-Norman origin, had been settled in the area since at least the 12th century: in 1217 Luke Netterville was selected to be Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland. That religious streak remained with them and come the 16th century Reformation the Nettervilles remained determinedly Roman Catholic. For this adherence some of them suffered greatly; when Drogheda fell to Oliver Cromwell in September 1649 the Jesuit priest Robert Netterville was captured and tortured, subsequently dying of the injuries sustained. Nevertheless, the Nettervilles survived, and even acquired a viscouncy. They also held onto their estates, one of a number of families – the Plunketts of Killeen Castle and the Prestons of Gormanston spring to mind – who retained both their religious faith and their lands, thereby disproving the idea that Catholics automatically suffered displacement during the Penal era. 

The sixth Viscount was only aged six on the death of his father, the latter dismissed by Mrs Delaney as ‘A fop and a fool, but a lord with a tolerable estate, who always wears fine clothes’ and otherwise only notable for having been indicted the year before his son’s birth for the murder of a valet (he was afterwards honourably acquitted by the House of Lords). 
The young Lord Netterville was raised by his widowed mother and spent much time in Dublin where the family owned a fine house at 29 Upper Sackville (now O’Connell) Street. The old castle in Dowth seems to have fallen into ruin and so a few years after coming of age Viscount Netterville undertook to construct a new house on his Meath estate. 
As is so often the case, information about the architect responsible for Dowth Hall is scanty. The common supposition is that the building was designed by George Darley (1730-1817), who had been employed for this purpose by Lord Netterville in Dublin where he was also the architect of a number of other houses. And indeed from the exterior Dowth Hall, rusticated limestone ground floor and tall ashlar first floor with windows alternately topped by triangular and segmental pediments, looks like an Italianate town palazzo transported into the Irish countryside; not least thanks to its plain sides, the house seems more attuned to the streets of Milan than the rich pasturelands of Meath. 

The real delight of Dowth lies in its extravagantly decorated interiors, where a master stuccadore has been allowed free hand. The drawing room (originally dining room) is especially fanciful with rococo scrolls and tendrils covering wall panels and the ceiling’s central light fitting suspended from the claws of an eagle around which flutter other birds. None of the other ground floor rooms quite match this boldness but they all contain superlative plaster ornamentation, with looped garlands being a notable feature of the library. Again, the person responsible for this work is unknown, but on the basis of comparative similarities with contemporary stuccowork at 86 St Stephen’s Green in Dublin (on which George Darley is supposed to have worked) Dowth Hall’s decoration is usually attributed to Robert West (died 1790). 
Although not as extensive, there is even a certain amount of plasterwork decoration in the main bedrooms on the first floor, which is most unusual. And the house still retains its original chimneypieces (that in the entrance hall even has its Georgian basket grate), along with fine panelled doors and other elements from the property’s original construction. This makes it of enormous importance, since many other similar buildings underwent refurbishment and modernisation in the 19th century during which they lost older features. 

There are reasons why Dowth Hall has survived almost unaltered since first built 250 years ago. The sixth Viscount Netterville, somewhat eccentric, fell into dispute with the local priest and was banned from the chapel on his own land; in retaliation, he built a ‘tea house’ on top of the Neolithic tomb from which he claimed to follow religious services through a telescope. But then he seems to have given up living at Dowth and moved back to Dublin. He never married and on dying at the age of 82 left a will with no less than nine codicils. One of these insisted that the Dowth estate go to whoever inherited the title, but it took eight years and a lot of litigation for the rightful heir, a distant cousin, to establish his claim. He did so at considerable cost and so, despite marrying an heiress, was obliged to offer Dowth for sale; the last Lord Netterville, another remote cousin, died also without heirs in 1882 and the title became extinct. Meanwhile Dowth was finally bought from the Chancery Court in 1850 by Richard Gradwell, younger son of a wealthy Catholic family from Lancashire. His heirs continued to live in the house for a century, but then sold up in the early 1950s when the place changed hands again. It did so one more time around twenty years later when acquired by two local bachelor farmers who moved into Dowth Hall. Following their respective deaths (the second at the start of last year), a local newspaper reported that the siblings had gone ‘to Drogheda every Saturday night, would attend the Fatima novena at 7.30pm then would walk over West Street to see what was going on, although they never took a drink or went to pubs.’ 
Now Dowth Hall is for sale, and there must be concern that it finds a sympathetic new owner because the house is in need of serious attention. It comes with some 420 acres of agricultural land, which means a sale is assured but that could be to the building’s disadvantage: it might fall into further desuetude if the farm alone was of interest to a purchaser. Too many instances of this have occurred in the past and it must not be allowed to happen here. One feels there ought to be some kind of vetting process to ensure prospective buyers demonstrate sufficient appreciation of the house. Only somebody with the same vision and flair as the sixth Lord Netterville should be permitted to acquire Dowth Hall. 
This last image is taken from Georgian Mansions in Ireland by Thomas Sadleir and Page Dickinson published in 1915. 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/14402009/dowth-hall-dowth-county-meath

Detached five-bay two-storey over basement country house, built c.1760, with additional mezzanine to the rear. Hipped slate roof with rendered chimneystacks and ashlar limestone parapets. Ashlar limestone walls with string courses having channelled ashlar to the entrance level. Timber sash windows, with alternating pediments to upper floor. Paired timber panelled doors. Carved limestone porch, comprising columns supporting entablature and pediment, approached by flight of limestone steps. Conservatory, c.1900, attached to south elevation. Outbuildings to north elevation

Appraisal

This house was built by the sixth Viscount Netterville, and is a well designed building, which is representative of mid eighteenth-century architecture in Ireland. The building is articulated with ashlar limestone dressings, with channelling to the entrance level, string courses and alternating pediments to upper floor. The building retains many interesting features and materials, such as the slate roof, timber sash windows and timber conservatory. The building retains fine interior features, which have been attributed to Robert West.

http://ladynicci.com/history/visit-dowth-hall-boyne-valley-meath/ 

My novel is called December Girl and is set in Dowth, Drogheda and London. It’s inspired by the true story of an eviction that took place at Dowth in 1880 – and follows the life of fictional character Molly Thomas, who sees herself caught up in a web of murder, prostitution and the loss of her child, in her quest to come home. 

Located midway between Slane and Drogheda, and immediately north of the river Boyne Dowth is today known as the site of one of a number of important Neolithic passage tombs in County Meath, others in its immediate vicinity including Newgrange and Knowth. But Dowth deserves to be renowned also for an important mid-18th century house which is due to be auctioned at the end of January. 
Dowth Hall dates from c.1760 and was built for John, Viscount Netterville (1744-1826). His family, of Anglo-Norman origin, had been settled in the area since at least the 12th century: in 1217 Luke Netterville was selected to be Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland. That religious streak remained with them and come the 16th century Reformation the Nettervilles remained determinedly Roman Catholic. For this adherence some of them suffered greatly; when Drogheda fell to Oliver Cromwell in September 1649 the Jesuit priest Robert Netterville was captured and tortured, subsequently dying of the injuries sustained. Nevertheless, the Nettervilles survived, and even acquired a viscouncy. They also held onto their estates, one of a number of families – the Plunketts of Killeen Castle and the Prestons of Gormanston spring to mind – who retained both their religious faith and their lands, thereby disproving the idea that Catholics automatically suffered displacement during the Penal era. 

The sixth Viscount was only aged six on the death of his father, the latter dismissed by Mrs Delaney as ‘A fop and a fool, but a lord with a tolerable estate, who always wears fine clothes’ and otherwise only notable for having been indicted the year before his son’s birth for the murder of a valet (he was afterwards honourably acquitted by the House of Lords). 
The young Lord Netterville was raised by his widowed mother and spent much time in Dublin where the family owned a fine house at 29 Upper Sackville (now O’Connell) Street. The old castle in Dowth seems to have fallen into ruin and so a few years after coming of age Viscount Netterville undertook to construct a new house on his Meath estate. 
As is so often the case, information about the architect responsible for Dowth Hall is scanty. The common supposition is that the building was designed by George Darley (1730-1817), who had been employed for this purpose by Lord Netterville in Dublin where he was also the architect of a number of other houses. And indeed from the exterior Dowth Hall, rusticated limestone ground floor and tall ashlar first floor with windows alternately topped by triangular and segmental pediments, looks like an Italianate town palazzo transported into the Irish countryside; not least thanks to its plain sides, the house seems more attuned to the streets of Milan than the rich pasturelands of Meath. 

The real delight of Dowth lies in its extravagantly decorated interiors, where a master stuccadore has been allowed free hand. The drawing room (originally dining room) is especially fanciful with rococo scrolls and tendrils covering wall panels and the ceiling’s central light fitting suspended from the claws of an eagle around which flutter other birds. None of the other ground floor rooms quite match this boldness but they all contain superlative plaster ornamentation, with looped garlands being a notable feature of the library. Again, the person responsible for this work is unknown, but on the basis of comparative similarities with contemporary stuccowork at 86 St Stephen’s Green in Dublin (on which George Darley is supposed to have worked) Dowth Hall’s decoration is usually attributed to Robert West (died 1790). 
Although not as extensive, there is even a certain amount of plasterwork decoration in the main bedrooms on the first floor, which is most unusual. And the house still retains its original chimneypieces (that in the entrance hall even has its Georgian basket grate), along with fine panelled doors and other elements from the property’s original construction. This makes it of enormous importance, since many other similar buildings underwent refurbishment and modernisation in the 19th century during which they lost older features. 

There are reasons why Dowth Hall has survived almost unaltered since first built 250 years ago. The sixth Viscount Netterville, somewhat eccentric, fell into dispute with the local priest and was banned from the chapel on his own land; in retaliation, he built a ‘tea house’ on top of the Neolithic tomb from which he claimed to follow religious services through a telescope. But then he seems to have given up living at Dowth and moved back to Dublin. He never married and on dying at the age of 82 left a will with no less than nine codicils. One of these insisted that the Dowth estate go to whoever inherited the title, but it took eight years and a lot of litigation for the rightful heir, a distant cousin, to establish his claim. He did so at considerable cost and so, despite marrying an heiress, was obliged to offer Dowth for sale; the last Lord Netterville, another remote cousin, died also without heirs in 1882 and the title became extinct. Meanwhile Dowth was finally bought from the Chancery Court in 1850 by Richard Gradwell, younger son of a wealthy Catholic family from Lancashire. His heirs continued to live in the house for a century, but then sold up in the early 1950s when the place changed hands again. It did so one more time around twenty years later when acquired by two local bachelor farmers who moved into Dowth Hall. Following their respective deaths (the second at the start of last year), a local newspaper reported that the siblings had gone ‘to Drogheda every Saturday night, would attend the Fatima novena at 7.30pm then would walk over West Street to see what was going on, although they never took a drink or went to pubs.’ 
Now Dowth Hall is for sale, and there must be concern that it finds a sympathetic new owner because the house is in need of serious attention. It comes with some 420 acres of agricultural land, which means a sale is assured but that could be to the building’s disadvantage: it might fall into further desuetude if the farm alone was of interest to a purchaser. Too many instances of this have occurred in the past and it must not be allowed to happen here. One feels there ought to be some kind of vetting process to ensure prospective buyers demonstrate sufficient appreciation of the house. Only somebody with the same vision and flair as the sixth Lord Netterville should be permitted to acquire Dowth Hall. 
This last image is taken from Georgian Mansions in Ireland by Thomas Sadleir and Page Dickinson published in 1915. 

For those of you who have been concerned about the future of Dowth Hall (see my piece Netterville! Netterville! Where Have You Been? on December 24th last), the estate was sold at auction yesterday. Seemingly there were three interested bidders, the buyer is Irish and paid €5 million for Dowth and surrounding 420 acres (a considerably higher figure than the €3.75m guide price). A lot more will need to be spent if the house, with its ravishing rococo plasterwork, is to be brought back to good condition. Let us hope the new owner is prepared to undertake this task… 
*On Thursday February 7th The Irish Times reported that Dowth’s new owner is a County Meath resident, Owen Brennan, who owns a successful agri-technology business. 

Dowth Hall is located to the east of Slane, near Dowth passage grave. Dowth Hall may have been designed by Robert West or George Darley. The plasterwork is similar to that of Newman House in St. Stephen’s Green, Dublin. The drawing room has a remarkable display of plasterwork. The entrance hall is large with a grand staircase. The joinery is similar to Dunboyne Castle.  Bence–Jones described Dowth Hall as ‘a small and extremely elegant mid-eighteenth century house.’ The splendid interior plasterwork was possibly by Robert West who may also have been the architect according to Bence-Jones. Mulligan also suggested West for the plasterwork but says that George Darley is more likely as architect. 

A conservatory with views to the west was added to the two-storey over basement house. A range of stables, set out around a central courtyard, date to 1760. The gate lodge dates to about 1830. 

An ornamental temple erected on top of Dowth mound allowed Lord Netterville to attend Mass at the nearby chapel without actually being in the building. He could not then be accused of being a Catholic and having his lands confiscated. 

The Nettervilles were the lords of Dowth from the fourteenth century and lived at Dowth Castle to the west of the present house. Nicholas Netterville was created Viscount Netterville of dowth in 1622 by James I. Nicholas Netterville, the fifth viscount,  succeeded to the title following the death of his Catholic father in 1727.  He conformed to the State religion and took his seat in the House of Lords in 1729. In 1731 Nicholas married Catherine Burton of Burton Hall, Carlow. He was described at the time as a ‘fool and a fop, but a lord with a tolerable estate.’ In 1743 he was indicted for murder but acquitted the following year. The mansion was erected before 1731 and the demesne was created over the following twenty years. The new house was partitioned from the old castle, church and tumulus by a plantation of trees. To the east of the house stands a large embanked enclosure. So much funds were expended on the house and demesne that the Nettervilles had to sell off some of their lands in Westmeath and put some of the Dowth lands into trusteeship. It would appear that this house lasted for about fifty years with a new house or a complete renovation taking place fifty years later about 1780. 

Dowth House was erected about 1780 by John 6th Viscount Netterville. His father had been tried by the Irish House of Lords for murder and found innocent.  He settled at Dowth after leaving the army. George Darley is believed to be the architect as he designed the Netterville townhouse in Dublin in 1767. In 1812 he let the house and demesne to Roger Hamill for a term of 31 years. In the same year he made his will leaving Dowth to a charity for six poor widows and six poor orphan boys.  He died unmarried in 1826. His successor, a distant cousin, James had to take a case to the House of Lords to secure the title. As a result of the cost of court cases in order to secure the title Netterville was forced to sell Dowth in 1845. 

In 1835 Dowth was occupied by Mr. Blake. A racecourse was developed at the east end of the demesne but it was dangerous as there was a sheer drop into a limestone quarry. The house was described as a modern three-storey slated house with a demesne of 259 acres. The house and demesne were not in a good state as a result of the ongoing legal dispute. In the south end of the demesne was a deerpark. The demesne also included the Neolithic tomb of Dowth. 

Richard Gradwell purchased the house in 1845. The Gradwells originally came from Preston but also held lands at Carlanstown, Co. Westmeath. The family also held Mullaghmean, now a forestry plantation on the borders of Meath and Westmeath.  His older brother, John Joseph Gradwell, purchased nearby Platten Hall about 1870. 

Richard married Maria Theresa, eldest daughter of James McEvoy of Tobertynan House in 1852. In 1876 Richard Gradwell of Dowth Hall held 845 acres in County Meath and 3169 acres in Westmeath.  Richard Gradwell died 1884 aged 60 years and was buried in the vault in St. Andrew’s Church, Westland row, Dublin.  Maria Gradwell of Dowth Hall died in 1914 aged 88 and she too was buried in the vault in St. Andrew’s Church, Westland row, Dublin. Richard was succeeded by his son, Robert, who was appointed High Sheriff of Meath in 1892. Robert married Lady Henrietta Plunkett, daughter of the Earl of Fingal in 1884. 

Robert died without an heir in 1935 and the property went to his cousin, Francis Gradwell of Beltichburn House, Drogheda, who was living in the house in 1941.  

The house was sold about 1951 to Clifford Cameron family and then the Pidgeon family purchased the property. 

For sale April 2023 A92 T2T7 

Dowth Hall & Farm On C. 368 Acres, Dowth, Co. Meath 

7 beds970 m2 

https://www.myhome.ie/residential/brochure/dowth-hall-farm-on-c-368-acres-dowth-co-meath/4697284

€6,000,000 

Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.

With 6000 years of documented history and now home to ground-breaking food production research, Dowth Hall is a significant approx. 148 Hectares (368 Acre) Estate with the option of purchasing Netterville Manor and up to a further approx. 74 Hectares (184 Acres) of rolling lands and lush woodland with a breath-taking backdrop of the Boyne River and Valley in the heart of County Meath and within easy commute of Dublin City Centre. SPECIAL FEATURES • Approx. 148 Hectares (368 Acre) Estate with the option of purchasing Netterville Manor and up to a further approx. 74 Hectares (184 Acres) of rolling lands and lush woodland. • 2.59km of frontage onto the River Boyne, with private access and fishing rights to the river. • Historic 18th Century Georgian Country residence at the focal point of the Estate. • 7 bedrooms and 5 reception rooms extending to approx. 970 sq.m (10,440 sq.ft) • 1 of 12 exemplary sustainable farms worldwide, the Global Network of Lighthouse Farms • Productive lands suitable for several uses such as grazing or tillage. • Beautiful old walled garden, stables and 5 additional houses surrounding the main house. • Located just outside the historic town of Drogheda and village of Slane in the heart of County Meath • Approx. 47km from Dublin International Airport • Excellent road network throughout the lands • Lands very well laid out with the majority newly fenced and secure • Spectacular views over Newgrange Stone Age Passage Tomb • Full planning permission for the restoration of the Main Residence • Private grass airstrip on land directly adjacent to estate DESCRIPTION ONE OF THE OLDEST FARMS IN THE WORLD Ancient farming and civilisation at its genesis can be found at Dowth, dating back 6000 years ago. The 368 acres of roaming pasturelands and mystifying woodland are bounded by the River Boyne, with Dowth Hall at the focal point of the estate. Situated less than fifty-five kilometres from Dublin, Dowth is a rare architectural example of excellence in prehistoric architectural preservation with a stunning backdrop of the Boyne Valley and surrounding countryside a rare commodity on the market these days. The transformation from the Mesolithic period, characterised by hunter gatherers, to Neolithic farmers happened around 6,000 years ago in Ireland. For the first time settlements remained in permanent locations formed by farming communities. The three principal megalithic passage tombs of Newgrange, Knowth and Dowth dating from 5,500 years ago, that together form the world-renowned Brú na Bóinne UNESCO World Heritage Site, are a testament to the success of these first Irish farmers and the fertility of the rich Boyne Valley soil. Dowth Hall sits regally on the highest point on the estate, looking out over the spectacular Boyne Valley, a rich and royal landscape. Built in 1745, this 18th century country pile is the perfect example of a Georgian Country house. Whilst the historic finds around the house have been the centre of attention at Dowth, this period residence tells a story in itself and the owners have lovingly preserved and readied the structure for a full restoration. LOCATION Dowth is located between the townlands of Slane and Drogheda in County Meath which is named ‘The Royal County’ due to its history as the seat of the High King of Ireland. Meath was formed from the eastern part of the former Kingdom of Mide but now forms part of the province of Leinster. The seat of the High King of Ireland was located at Tara Hill which, is only some 10 km / 6 miles from Navan. Slane is a beautiful village and rich in history and is very well known throughout the world for the renowned concerts that Slane Castle holds regularly and now is also known for Slane Castle Whiskey. The Castle is the focal point of the village and attracts many tourists into the area creating a vibrant atmosphere all year round. The Conyngham Arms Hotel, Inside Out Restaurant and Village Inn are great spots for a bite to eat and the local bakery, Georges Patisserie is a popular spot for breakfast. Slane village stands on a steep hillside on the left bank of the River Boyne at the intersection of the N2 (Dublin to Monaghan Road) and the N51 (Drogheda to Navan road). Coming into the village from Dublin you pass over a beautiful stone bridge that goes over the River Boyne with the Old Mill to the right making it one of the most picturesque settings for entering a village in Ireland. The village centre dates from the 18th century. The village and surrounding area contain many historic sites dating back over 5,000 years. Drogheda is approx. a 10-minute drive and is known for its heritage, an active arts and culture scene and for shopping with both an attractive main street and two retail parks on its outskirts. County Meath is home to Fairyhouse Racecourse, Navan Racecourse, Bellewstown Racecourse and of course, Tattersalls Ireland. Nearby, for almost over one hundred and fifty years, the annual races are held on the strand at Laytown. County Meath is proud of it’s Horse Racing heritage and is the only county in Ireland with 4 racetracks. There are several excellent golf courses in Co. Meath. Killeen Castle, only a 35-minute drive, with its highly regarded Jack Nicklaus Signature Design 18 hole Championship golf course that hosted the 2011 Solheim Cup as well as the Ladies Irish Open from 2010 until 2012. Baltray Golf Course is a mere 25-minute drive from Dowth, famous for hosting the Irish Open in 2004 and 2009. With central Dublin only 55km away, the M1 and M2 (N2) offer a convenient route to the city. Dublin airport is a 35-minute drive. Access by helicopter is possible, co-ordinates available upon request • 8.5 km to the Slane • 9 km to Drogheda • 13.5 km to Duleek • 23 km to Navan • 38 km to Dundalk • 54 km to Dublin • 47 km to Dublin Airport

BRÚ NA BÓINNE Bounded on the south by a bend in the River Boyne, the prehistoric site of Brú na Bóinne is dominated by the three great burial mounds of Knowth, Newgrange and Dowth. Surrounded by around forty satellite passage tombs, they form a burial landscape recognized for its high ceremonial value, drawing later monuments from the Iron Age, early Christian, and medieval eras. The site is some 55 kilometres from Dublin, on a hill between the rivers Boyne and Mattock, and is surrounded by other prehistoric mounds. It is part of a region rich in tales about Ireland’s ancient history. The region, which is primarily agricultural at the moment, has been intensively examined by archaeologists and historians for more than a century, with excavation revealng several peculiarities and features. To give a brief history, the Knowth group, whose earliest features date from the Neolithic period and the most recent from the Anglo-Norman period, has produced thirty monuments and sites that are included in the official inventory, including petroglyph-adorned passage graves, enclosures, occupation sites, and field systems. With a ringfort, cursus, passage burials, and a now infamous henge, the Newgrange complex is entirely prehistoric. The Dowth group is comparable to Newgrange, but also has medieval remains in the shape of a church and a fortress. Dowth Hall is the largest land holding within the core area of the Unesco World Heritage site that is Brú Na Bóinne

DOWTH HALL Dowth Hall Estate is a significant country estate steeped in history through the centuries. At it’s heart is Dowth Hall – a true 4 bay, 3 storey over basement Georgian country house. Dating from 1745, this regal home was built by the 6th Viscount of Netterville. Thanks to the present owners, the home is in fine shape for a thorough restoration and will soon be restored to its former splendour. The main house is a substantial structure, a magnificent example of its era. Common belief holds that Lord Netterville employed the most renowned architect at the time, George Darley to design this country pile. Darley’s designs are also characteristically linked to the Tholsel building in Drogheda and to Dunboyne Castle, a mere 50 kilometres away. The formal front façade is treated with dressed Ardbraccan limestone, similar to Leinster House, the 1921 Custom House restoration and of course Ardbraccan House. The rest of the building is built in brick and treated minimally. Through the front door, the entrance hall features an ornate fireplace and a majestic staircase with further draws your eye to the striking coving designs. The principal reception rooms comprise of a drawing room, dining room and library, all light filled rooms with high ceilings. The drawing room in particular features special rococo stuccowork covering the wall panels. The ceiling boasts a light fitting suspended from the claws of an eagle, surrounded by smaller birds. The remaining rooms on the ground floor also boasts ornate plasterwork. The stuccodore attributed to this work in Dowth Hall is not confirmed, but rather speculated to be Robert West. The similarity in contemporary stuccowork at the Newman House, 86 St. Stephens Green is striking, on which George Darley supposedly worked on. George Darley’s designs were frequently complemented by Robert West’s work and not to mention, Robert West’s designs were flamboyant in design and frequently featured birds thanks to his passion for ornithology, all of which are characteristically present at Dowth Hall. The first floor with the higher elevation offering magnificent vantage points of the surrounding royal countryside in all its wonder. There are three principal bedrooms on the first floor, one of which is to the front of the house and two are to the rear. The layout could lend itself to allow for a larger master bedroom suite with living area, bathroom and a guest bedroom suite with bathrooms. The remaining four bedrooms are on the second floor. The basement features high ceilings, not a common occurrence in Georgian style abodes. Thus, the basement is bright in areas and provides an opportunity for additional living space on this floor. Two private drives lead to Dowth Hall the shorter North drive bringing you to the north side where a quaint courtyard lies to the side of the Hall. The longer, formal carriage drive takes you firstly through a restored Lime Tree quadrant in the racecourse field and further through the estate to the Georgian front facing east. The Courtyard cottage and stables have planning permission for renovations. The East gate lodge, West gate lodge, Redbrick Cottage, and Chapel House have potential to be renovated to provide further accommodation, subject to full planning permission from the local county council. The walled garden is vast in size and is ready to be planted, rejuvenated and reinstated to its former glory. LANDS AT DOWTH County Meath is dominated and characterised by both the quality of its agricultural land and its status as the heart of historical importance in Ireland. The ancient site of Newgrange is in sight, with Knowth and the Hilof Tara also in close proximity. The gardens and grounds at Dowth hold as much historic interest as the house and have a rich botanical and architectural story to tell. Home to Irelands first farmers some 6000 years ago, the Lands at Dowth have been exemplary to the farming industry in recent years thanks to Devenish Nutrition who are helping to shape sustainable farming and food production for the future. Devenish Nutrition have been operating at ‘Lands at Dowth’ Global Lighthouse Farm, striving to produce zercarbon beef and lamb by developing a dynamic and healthy ecosystem. The Devenish strategy ‘One Health,from Soil to Society’ emphasises the importance of maximising nutrient uptake in soil, plants, animals and the environment as key and interconnected components of the value foodchain. Their HeartLand project in particular has caught the attention of many. This project has been developed to create economically and environmentalsustainable livestock products of enhanced nutritional value through pasture-based production systems. Theused 36 hectares of land (86 Acres) in Dowth, splitting the lands into pastures with different grazing swards TECHNICAL INFORMAT IONServices and Features | The property is serviced by mains electricity, well water and drainage is to septic tanks within the grounds.Tenure and Possession | The property is offered for sale freehold by private treaty with vacant possession being given at the closing of the sale.Local Authority & Protected Status | Record of Protected Structures within World Heritage site Meath County Council AreaMH020-107 – Dowth Hall, Dowth – Detached five-bay two-storey over basement country house, built c.1765. Conservatory, c.1900. Outbuildings to north elevation. Incl Stables and Gate lodgeMapping And Rights Of Way | The property is offered for sale subject to and with the benefit of all matters and rights of way contained in or referred to in the Deeds.Building Energy Rating (BER) | • East Gate Lodge Exempt• West Gate Lodge Exempt• Redbrick Cottage Exempt• Courtyard Cottage Exempt• Chapel House – ExemptViewing Strictly By Appointment Only 

Accommodation  

BER Details  

Exempt 

Negotiator  

Philip Guckian 

Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.
Dowth Hall, County Meath, courtesy Sherry Fitzgerald.

https://theirishaesthete.com/2023/05/01/dowth/

Second Time Around

by theirishaesthete

Dowth Hall, County Meath was first discussed here in December 2012, when the house and surrounding land were offered for sale. Now, more than a decade later, the place has come back on the market. Below is the original text, along with fresh photographs of Dowth Hall taken in recent weeks. 



Located midway between Slane and Drogheda, and immediately north of the river Boyne, Dowth is today known as the site of one of a number of important Neolithic passage tombs in County Meath, others in its immediate vicinity including Newgrange and Knowth. But Dowth deserves to be renowned also for an important mid-18th century house. Dowth Hall dates from c.1760 and was built for John, Viscount Netterville (1744-1826). His family, of Anglo-Norman origin, had been settled in the area since at least the 12th century: in 1217 Luke Netterville was selected to be Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland. That religious streak remained with them and come the 16th century Reformation, the Nettervilles remained determinedly Roman Catholic. For this adherence some of them suffered greatly; when Drogheda fell to Oliver Cromwell in September 1649 the Jesuit priest Robert Netterville was captured and tortured, subsequently dying of the injuries sustained. Nevertheless, the Nettervilles survived, and even acquired a viscountcy. They also held onto their estates, one of a number of families – the Plunketts of Killeen Castle and the Prestons of Gormanston spring to mind – who retained both their religious faith and their lands, thereby disproving the idea that all Catholics automatically suffered displacement during the Penal era.





The sixth Viscount was only aged six on the death of his father, the latter dismissed by Mrs Delaney as ‘A fop and a fool, but a lord with a tolerable estate, who always wears fine clothes’ and otherwise only notable for having been indicted the year before his son’s birth for the murder of a valet (he was afterwards honourably acquitted by the House of Lords). The young Lord Netterville was raised by his widowed mother and spent much time in Dublin where the family owned a fine house at 29 Upper Sackville (now O’Connell) Street. The old castle in Dowth seems to have fallen into ruin and so, a few years after coming of age, Viscount Netterville undertook to construct a new house on his Meath estate. As is so often the case, information about the architect responsible for Dowth Hall is scanty. The common supposition is that the building was designed by George Darley (1730-1817), who had been employed for this purpose by Lord Netterville in Dublin where he was also the architect of a number of other houses. And indeed, from the exterior Dowth Hall, rusticated limestone ground floor and tall ashlar first floor with windows alternately topped by triangular and segmental pediments, looks like an Italianate town palazzo transported into the Irish countryside; not least thanks to its plain sides, the house seems more attuned to the streets of Milan than to the rich pasturelands of Meath.





The real delight of Dowth lies in its extravagantly decorated interiors, where a master stuccadore has been allowed free hand. The drawing room (originally dining room) is especially fanciful with rococo scrolls and tendrils covering wall panels and the ceiling’s central light fitting suspended from the claws of an eagle around which flutter smaller birds. None of the other ground floor rooms quite match this boldness but they all contain superlative plaster ornamentation, with looped garlands being a notable feature of the library. Again, the person responsible for this work is unknown, but on the basis of comparative similarities with contemporary stuccowork at 86 St Stephen’s Green in Dublin (on which George Darley is supposed to have worked) Dowth Hall’s decoration is usually attributed to Robert West (died 1790). Although not as extensive, there is even a certain amount of plasterwork decoration in the main bedrooms on the first floor, which is most unusual. And the house still retains its original chimneypieces (that in the entrance hall even has its Georgian basket grate), along with fine panelled doors and other elements from the property’s original construction. This makes it of enormous importance, since many other similar buildings underwent refurbishment and modernisation in the 19th century during which they lost older features.





There are reasons why Dowth Hall has survived almost unaltered since first built 250 years ago. The sixth Viscount Netterville, somewhat eccentric, fell into dispute with the local priest and was banned from the chapel on his own land; in retaliation, he built a ‘tea house’ on top of the Neolithic tomb from which he claimed to follow religious services through a telescope. But then he seems to have given up living at Dowth and moved back to Dublin. He never married and on dying at the age of 82 left a will with no less than nine codicils. One of these insisted that the Dowth estate go to whoever inherited the title, but it took eight years and a lot of litigation for the rightful heir, a distant cousin, to establish his claim. He did so at considerable cost and so, despite marrying an heiress, was obliged to offer Dowth for sale; the last Lord Netterville, another remote cousin, again died without heirs in 1882 and the title became extinct. Meanwhile Dowth was finally bought from the Chancery Court in 1850 by Richard Gradwell, younger son of a wealthy Catholic family from Lancashire. His heirs continued to live in the house for a century, but then sold up in the early 1950s when the place again changed hands. It did so one more time around twenty years later when acquired by two local bachelor farmers who moved into Dowth Hall. Following their respective deaths (the second at the start of last year), a local newspaper reported that the siblings had gone to Drogheda ‘every Saturday night, would attend the Fatima novena at 7.30pm then would walk over West Street to see what was going on, although they never took a drink or went to pubs.’ Now Dowth Hall is for sale, and there must be concern that it finds a sympathetic new owner because the house is in need of serious attention. It comes with some 420 acres of agricultural land, which means a sale is assured but that could be to the building’s disadvantage: it might fall into further desuetude if the farm alone was of interest to a purchaser. Too many instances of this have occurred in the past and it must not be allowed to happen here. One feels there ought to be some kind of vetting process to ensure prospective buyers demonstrate sufficient appreciation of the house. Only somebody with the same vision and flair as the sixth Lord Netterville should be permitted to acquire Dowth Hall.



Dowth Hall, along with 420 acres, was sold in January for €5 million. Now with 552 acres, the house is back on the market for €10 million. 

Johnstown House, Carlow, Co Carlow 

Johnstown House, Carlow, 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. 161. “(Connellan/LGI1912 and sub Fairliecuningham, Bt/PB) A two storey gable-ended house of early C18 appearance, built on the foundations of a medieval monastery and with C19 Tudor-Gothic embellishments. Entrance front not quite symmetrical; stepped gable and little turrets in centre, some battlements and buttresses with finials at the end of the façade. Tall tudor-style chimneys. In 1814 the home of John Campion; now of Lady Phyllida Couchman, daughter of C.L.Connellan, and of her son, Mr John Couchman.” 

Detached four-bay two-storey double-pile house with dormer attic, c. 1725, on an asymmetrical plan with projecting chimney breasts. Renovated, c. 1840, with Tudor Revival façade enrichments added including stepped gable, crenellations, turret finials and paired chimney stacks. 

Gateway, c. 1840, comprising granite ashlar piers with sandstone pine cone finials having wrought iron gates and railings. 

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

Detached four-bay two-storey double-pile house with dormer attic, c.1725, on an asymmetrical plan with projecting chimney breasts. Renovated, c.1840, with Tudor Revival façade enrichments added including stepped gable, crenellations, turret finials and paired chimney stacks. 

The original house was built on the foundations of an old medieval monastery. Apart from the Bunbury’s the house had several owners over the years including John Champion in 1814, and later the Elliots and Fitzmaurices. It was rented in 1918 by Corry Langrishe Connellan. Hi daughter, Phyllida Connellan married Walter Couchman, who was knighted when he became Vice-Admiral in the Royal Navy. 

p. 69 Jimmy O’Toole: “…Of the many other houses owned by the early generations of the Bunburys, Johnstown House, dating from early 18C, is the only one to have survived…The house had several owners, including John Campion in 1814, and later the Elliots and Fitzmaurices. It was rented in 1913, and purchased in 1918 by Corry Langrishe Connellan. His daughter, Phyllida Connellan married Walter Couchman, who was knighted whenhe became Vice-Admiral in the Royal Navy…. Johnstown is now the home of Lady Couchman, and the family of her son, John Couchman.” 

Source: ‘The Carlow Gentry’ p.69 

Record of Protected Structures: 

Johnstown House, Johnstown. Townland: Johnstown 

A very interesting house being an early-18th century house of circa 1725 gothicised in the 1830s. It is essentially a long, two-storey house with projecting, end stacks and a high-pitched roof. It has a gothic-revival screen added to the façade giving it a four-bay composition with two bays in the centre, over a wide, square-headed doorcase, and flanking bays with wide, double-sash windows. These bays are delineated by gothic turrets. The central bay has a gable with crow-stepped crenellations flanked by further crenellations. The stacks are particularly impressive being very tall and in a tudor-gothic style. There is a further bay at the north end which appears to date from the early 18th century.  

http://www.turtlebunbury.com/family/bunburyfamily_bunburys/bunbury_family_bunburys_johnstown.html 

For much of what follows below, I am indebted to the late Peter R Bunbury, Michael Purcell (of the Pat Purcell Papers, aka PPP), Gill Miller, Michael Brennan, Johnny Couchman, Ken Baker, Marie Boran (Special Collections Librarian, James Hardiman Library, National University of Ireland – Galway), Anne Marie Kalishoek, Bill Webster, Tom La Porte, Ron Medulison, Alan Martin, Bob Fitzsimons, Ignacio Fiterre, Susan Bunbury, William Minchin, James Grogan, Maurice O’Neill, Paul Murray, Susie Warren, Yvonne _____and the manifold contributors to the Carlow IGP Website

DU VALL OF JOHNSTOWN 

Johnstown is located in the modern parish of Urglin, just east of Carlow Town. [1a] The area has been home to humanity since ancient times being only a mile or so from the Brown’s Hill dolmen and boasting its own bullaun stone. Prior to the Bunbury’s, the land at Johnstown was owned by the Wall family, descendants of William Du Vall (or de Valle), alias Wall, who accompanied Richard de Clare, Earl of Pembroke (aka Strongbow) to Ireland in 1172 and died in 1210. His son John Du Vall, alias Wall, settled at Johnstown, presumably in the age when William Marshall built the new castle in Carlow. Another proposed origin for the townland’s name derives from the Knights of St John who apparently ran a hostel here in the 12th century. Mark Bence-Jones stated that Johnstown House was built on the site of this hostel. The ruins of an ancient castle of some description have been found at Johnstown, as well as a graveyard on the present avenue. The castle was probably built by the Du Vall’s, who owned the lands around Johnstown until the about 1700. As Jacobite supporters, they were probably dispossessed when the Penal Laws kicked in, although at least some of their lands were sold as late as 1712. [1b]  

Johnny Couchman, the present owner of Johnstown, writes: “The graveyard has no famine stones and no gravestones or anything apart from a ruin of wall down one side. The explanation for the graveyard came to light when a local man with a metal detector discovered a MASS of lead bullets across the front field. His machine only works to about three inches down, and I remember that field being ploughed fifty years ago, so clearly there was a serious battle there – thus the graveyard. The bullets looked like 15th century. There is a monument on said graveyard which we had to move as it was being broken up by the lime tree roots underneath it; when we dug the foundation for the rebuilding some twenty feet away we found, only about six inches down, a mass of human bones!’ 

John de Vall’s eldest son William succeeded to Johnstown, as well as Kilcash and Rathkien (ie. Rathkynny or Rathkenny), County Tipperary. John’s other sons were established at Droughty, County Galway, Coolnamuck, County Waterford; Dunmoylan, County Limerick and Ballymalty. [2] A man named Johanne de Valle held the monastery at Acaun by Lisnavagh in 1303. In 1359, Edward III granted Thomas Wale [sic] of Johnstown, Sheriff of Carlow, £20 for his services in repelling the O’Nolans and killing Donald Tagson O’Nolan and others. A generation later, Geoffrey Wale of Johnstown, who was also Sheriff of Carlow, was likewise rewarded with £20 and credited with the killing in 1375 of Donnchadh MacMurrough, the sixth clan leader to be slain in the previous 21 years. (See here

The impaled arms of William Wall of Johnstown, County Carlow, who died in 1620 were given in his funeral entry. [3] According to William Hawkins, the Ulster King of Arms, William was the first to bear a shield ‘Argent, on a cross Sable five lioncels rampant Or, in the first quarter a cinquefoil pierced Azure.’ According to Hubert Gallwey’s book ‘The Wall Family in Ireland 1170 to 1970’ (2nd edition, Curragh Publications), Johnstown was created a manor under Wentworth’s Commission for the remedy of defective titles in 1637.  

The Walls were deeply involved in the Confederate Wars of the 1640s, especially Edward Wall of Ballinakilly, or Ballinakill, now known as Ballinakelly Wood, where some ancient yew stand to this day. This stood on the site of Burton Hall at Palatine, just east of Carlow Town. Edward Wall, whose wife was a Sarsfield, is said to have commanded 1,000 men in a siege of Carlow Castle in 1641. Remarkably he was also appointed Military Governor General of Leinster by the Earl of Ormonde in 1648, three years before his death. (See here) An Edmund Wall, who held lands in Urglin, was also attainted in 1641. (See here

Edward’s son Ulick Wall had his lands in the barony of Forth restored to him through the influence of Lord Ormonde. According to the Down Survey of 1655-1656 Ulick Wall, William Wall and James Wall possessed a combined acreage of 3,191 in the adjoining parishes of Killerrig, Urglin and Carlow. William Wall, who owned 1,879 of those acres, appears to have been headquartered in Urglin, where the survey noted a church, a castle and four slate-roof houses. At the time of the survey, Johnstown belonged to Ulick Wall who is assumed to have lived in a castle ‘of apparently modern appearance’ on the land, with four houses marked in its precincts. James Wall owned 489 acres which are thought to have been centred upon a castle at Killerig, shown on the survey alongside an adjoining church and a ‘tentative street with three houses.’ Killerrig was taken up by Benjamin Bunbury as early as 1669. (William Nolan, County Carlow 1641-1660: Geography, Landownership & Society’, in “Carlow: History & Society”, edited by Thomas McGrath, p. 368.)  

Confusingly certain lands at Urglin (c. 606 acres), Johnstown (c. 419 acres), Little Pollardstown (c. 181 acres) and Kernanstown (c. 243 acres) were granted to a Samuel Blackwell Esq in 1667. (Ryan, p. 195), while, two years later, James, Duke of York, later James II, is named as the owner of over 79 acres at Johnstown. (Ryan, p. 198) I may be wrong but I think these lands were then restored to the Wall family. In March 1680, under the Acts of Settlement and Explanation, Patrick Wall, son and heir of the late Ulick Wall, and grandson of Edward (who led the Carlow rebels in the Confederate siege), received a confirmatory grant of some 1,392 acres in County Carlow, including Ballynakill Castle (with c. 68 acres), the moiety of Ardnehugh aka Ardnahue (c. 166 acres), two parts of Pollardstown (c. 188 acres), Graigue Spidoge (24 acres), the moiety of TemplePeter (c. 66 acres), Clonshannon alias Cloghneshannon (c. 116 acres), a moiety of Killane (11 acres) and the moiety of Myshall (219 acres) ‘to the use of the heirs and assigns of Ulick for ever.’ Patrick, who married a Barnwall, also secured 288 acres in County Kildare.  

According to Ryan’s History of Carlow (p. 153), a Joseph Bunbury, gent., was administrator to John Robinson when the latter claimed a £120 mortgage on a portion of Patrick Wall’s lands at Pollardstown (Pollacton), just east of Carlow Town, in 1684. I imagine this was the twin brother of the first Benjamin Bunbury of Killerrig, who intermarried with the Huguenot family of Desminières. (Certainly the future Joseph Bunbury of Johnstown was too young to be called a gentleman in 1684.) Again, I don’t completely understand what these deeds mean, and whether Joseph Bunbury acquired any of the Wall estate at Pollardstown at this point is not clear to me.  

James II’s defeat at Aughrim and the Boyne spelled the end for the Walls of Carlow. Once dispossessed, many of the Walls relocated to Galway. Many of the Ballynakill family made their mark in France, including Balthasar-Francois Wale (see here) and Patrick, Viscount Wall, a notable figure at the court of Louis XIV and was murdered in 1787.’ (Hayes, Richard. “Biographical Dictionary of Irishmen in France: Part XXI.” Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review, vol. 36, no. 143, 1947, pp. 343–349.) I assume that Patrick Wall of Ballynakill Castle and Pollardstown was inspired by the spirit of his Confederate grandfather to fight for James II. He may have been the Patrick Wall who served as one of 28 Roman Catholic burgesses of Old Leighlin in July 1688 during the last days of James II’s ill-fated reign. On 10 April 1690, Patrick Wall was one of the Carlow assessors appointed by James II for a commission issued by the King applotting £20,000 per month on personal estates and the benefits of trade and traffic “according to the ancient custom of this Kingdom used in times of danger.” [John D’Alton, Illustrations, historical and genealogical, of King James’s Irish army list, 1689 (Dublin, 1855, p . 29-30)]. He was indicted in 1690 and bound over to appear at the King’s Bench in Dublin, which he continued to do for several years. He finally succeeded in obtaining a trial at Carlow summer assizes in 1699, at which he was acquitted. (John Gerald Simms, ‘The Williamite Confiscation in Ireland: 1690-1703’ Faber & Faber, 1956, p. 37). 

Johnstown is one of the few places outside Carlow Town listed on Visser’s 1690 map of Ireland (de Wit). John O’Neill, a son of one of the Earl of Athlone’s officers, who went to France with the Irish Brigade, is described as ‘of Johnstown, Co. Carlow’ in Burke’s Landed Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland (1863). [4] On 22 June 1703, Richard Tighe of Dublin Esq bought out King James’s 79 acres at Johnstown for £348. 

In 1712, the Trustees for the Sale of Forfeited Estates sold Ballinakilly aka Ballynakelly to Benjamin Burton (died 1728), an Alderman, Lord Mayor (1706) and Member of Parliament (1703-1723) for Dublin who founded Burton’s Bank. (The bank went bust in 1733). Elsewhere it states that Benjamin had already settled the mansion house of Ballinakill, alias Burton Hall, including the outhouses and demesnes, on his son Samuel Burton, MP, on the occasion of his marriagein 1708 to Anne Campbell, the daughter of Charles Campbell. Anne was sensationally killed in a fall from a scaffold at the Coronation of George I in 1714. I do not know if Ballinakilly Castle still stood when Burton bought the place. Given the description of their house at Burton Hall as being ‘built on an eminence which has a gradual ascent’ in the 1786 Post Chaise Companion Through Ireland, I suspect it may have stood where Burton Hall was built in 1730. The Papers of the Burton Family show that they secured ownership of the Wall lands at Pollardstown (Pollerton) by buying out (I think?) Mary Allen, only child and heir of Ulick Wall of Pollardstown, in 1754. Burton Hall was later home to the Cooper family. Burton Hall was demoilshed in 1930 but a second house, with a wall garden, not far from the original, was bought by the Rankin family and is now home to the Fawls. The site of the original house is now part of the farmyard owned by Hugh and Mary Kavanagh who have restored the original Burton stables. The house adjoins Ballinakelly Wood, formerly known as Rankins Wood, which is open to the public. The wood once adjoined the Russellstown Park demense of the Duckett family, lands well known to the Russellstown Bunburys, but is now seperated by the M9 motorway. The entrance to the wood is on the same laneway as the ‘Mad for Models’ sign. (With thanks to James Doyle. See here for a history of the Burton family). 

Perhaps some of the Walls are buried in the old Knockaunarelic cemetery in Pollerton outside Carlow. Located on the Palatine Road, in a field that was part of Lady Denny’s Pollacton estate, the cemetery was cleaned up in the summer of 2019 by a group of volunteers headed up by Dr Seamus O Morchu, who then tried to transcribe the headstones.  

*** 

See Dr. Padraig Lenihan’s essay, ‘The Catholic Elite and Aughrim’ in ‘Reshaping Ireland: 1550-1770, a collection of essays in honour of Prof. Nicholas Canny, published by Four Courts in 2011. Another potentially useful essay is Michael O’Dwyer’s ‘Confiscation of land in county Kilkenny and transplantation to Connacht’, Ossory, Laois and Leinster 7 (2019), pp.123-134. I have not read this yet but it would be interesting to see what resources he used. Thanks to Dr Marie Boran. 

THE ARRIVAL OF THE BUNBURYS 

The Bunburys of Johnstown descends from the Baron de St. Pierre of Normandy, France, whose sons were granted lands at St Boniface’s Borough (or Bone-borough, later corrupted to Bunbury) in Cheshire in the wake of the Norman Conquest of 1066. Almost five hundred years later, during the English Civil War, the Baron’s descendent Sir Henry Benjamin Bunbury was stripped of his lands and imprisoned for his support of King Charles I. It seems as if Sir Henry’s half-brother Thomas Bunbury was a clergyman who was simultaneously hounded out of his vicarage in Reading by Presbyterian’s. 

Thomas’s twin sons Benjamin and Joseph Bunbury moved to County Carlow in Ireland in the 1660s and Benjamin appears to have taken over James Wall’s lease of Killerrig from the Duke of Ormonde in 1669. In 1712, Benjamin’s youngest son – and thus Joseph’s youngest brother – Benjamin Bunbury junior paid £500 to buy up lands at Killane and Myshall, County Carlow, from Patrick Wall, formerly of Ballynakill and Johnstown, and Ulick Wall, Patrick’s son and heir. [4a] It is sometimes assumed that the lands seized from dispossessed Jacobites was simply swiped and handed to loyal subjects. While this is true to an extent, it appears to me that the new landholders did actually have to pay for their leases. That was the case with those who took over the land of John Warren, who had to forfeit much of his land for being a member of the Patriot’s Parliament for the borough of Carlow under James II between 1689 and 1691.  

In 1713 Joseph Bunbury paid £165 to take over a lease from John Green ‘of the town of Catherlogh, Gent’ from the Earl of Thomond on the estate right, title and interest on ‘all that tenement and plot of ground situated in Dublin Street in the Town of Catherlogh’, as well as a tenement and plot ‘in Southcott Lane in the town of Catherlogh along the River Barrow’. [5] Among the witnesses was Joseph’s younger brother, Thomas Bunbury of Cloghna. This is the earliest known deed in the Land Registry Office in Dublin connected to Joseph. 

On 1 July 1713, Joseph married Hannah Hinton, a daughter of the Venerable Archdeacon Dr Edward Hinton, Dean of Ossory. [6] The following November, Joseph, a former High Sheriff for County Carlow, and his brother Benjamin, the then High Sheriff, were drawn into controversy over an apparent fixing of an result in the election of Jeffery Paul that year. [7] 

In June 1717, Joseph was conveyed 130 acres of Wentworth Harman’s estate at Rathdean, County Carlow by Hugh Fagan of Kilewick, co. Carlow, gentleman. Thomas Bunbury was again a witness, alongside John Smith, a public notary from Dublin City, while the lease also referenced Richard Butler, Gent. This was possibly the future Sir Richard Butler, 5th Bart, of Ballintemple, although Richard would have been only 18 or 19 at this time. [8] Wentworth Harman was probably the former Captain of the Battle-Axe Guards and resident of Castle Roe, County Carlow, who died in 1714, or his son, Wentworth Harman of Moyne, who married Lucy Mervyn of Trillick, County Tyrone, in 1714.  

As well as the Bunburys and the Burtons, numerous other English families were establishing themselves in County Carlow at this time. The Browne’s were in Carlow from the 1670s although I am unsure where they lived before they built their houses at Viewmount (1750) and nearby Browne’s Hill (1763). I think the land at at Browne’s Hill was seized from the monasteries and granted to the O’Briens, Earls of Thomond, in the 16th century. Thomas Duckett bought Kneestown (aka Duckett’s Grove) off Thomas Crosthwaite of Cockermouth in 1695, and I believe that his son, also Thomas Duckett, bought Philipstown, [Rathvilly?], Co Kildare, from the Earl of Ormonde. I’m unsure who had either property before Crosthwaite or Ormonde. Russellstown Park was built by William Duckett in 1824 after, I think, he obtained the land from Harry Bunbury, another family member who went bankrupt.  

JOSEPH BUNBURY OF JOHNSTOWN HOUSE 

I am, as yet, unsure when Joseph Bunbury acquired the land at Johnstown. This included the bulk of the present two-storey, four-bay, double-pile house at Johnstown, with a dormer attic and projecting chimney breasts. The Couchmans who live at Johnstown today believe the house to be the oldest continually occupied building in Carlow; they suggest the foundations date back to the time of the de Valles. That said, Johnny Couchman counsels that it’s impossible to pin a date on it: 

‘The original house forms the main part of Johnstown as it is today. The shutters suggest a date between the 14th and 16th century but the construction remains a mystery as there seems no particular logic to it. An expert on ancient houses was utterly foxed by the whole setup; all his presumptions about old houses were knocked on the head! The cellars start halfway across the hall. The “loggia” outside the present house has a bricked up cellar underneath it. There are all sorts of oddities too – when we were putting in a waterpipe to our new house, we came across the foundations of another building in front of the present front door which was at right angles to same! In the yard I was digging a hole some years ago for a pit and found, about five feet down, a corner wall with big well-cut stones, again at right angles to the existing farm buildings. The house has two ley-lines running through it.’ 

Joseph died on 14 January 1730 and was buried in Urglin two days later. [9] Hannah followed him on 19 December 1738. They left at least one son, Henry Bunbury, and a daughter, Henrietta Bunbury (1708-1761), who married Paul Minchin (see below). 

  

THE MINCHIN CONNECTION  

Henrietta Bunbury, daughter of Joseph and Hannah, married Paul Minchin, variously described as of Ballynakill, King’s County, and of Bogh (or Bough), just outside Rathvilly, County Carlow. Paul served as High Sherriff of Co Tipperary in 1736 and died in 1764. 

The Minchin family had formerly owned land in Gloucestershire. During the reign of Queen Elizabeth, three brothers, John, William and Daniel came to Ireland as adventurers and purchased estates John Minchin’s wife Mary was a sister of Colonel Thomas Walcot of Croagh, Co. Limerick, executed for his part in the Rye House Plot of 20th July 1683. John’s eldest son Colonel Charles Minchin (1628–1681), Paul’s grandfather, served with both Cromwell and Ireton in Ireland and was awarded a Crown Grant of Busherstown, Co. Offaly, after the Restoration (later confirmed 1680). In 1669, he purchased the Annagh estate in Co. Tipperary from Major Solomon Cambie and in 1680, he purchased the Balinakill estate from Sir Richard Stephens. By his wife Elizabeth (Paulet?), he had at least six sons and two daughters. His second son Humphrey Minchin succeeded to Balinakill Castle and later purchased the Busherstown estate from his elder broter’s estate. Humphrey built the Round Tower at Busherstown and began reconstruction of the house. He was High Sherriff of Co. Tipperary in 1686 and later MP for Tipperary. In December 1660, he married Rebeccca, daughter of Joshua Paul of Bough, Rathvilly, Co. Carlow, who gave him seven sons and eight daughters. The eldest daughter Rebecca married John Carden (see 9 above) while other daughters Anne married Thomas Bernard of Ratho, Co. Carlow, and Sophia married Benjamin Hobart of Co. Carlow (Hobart was presumably the Carlow school teacher). Humphrey died in 1733 and was was succeeded at Ballinakill by his eldest surviving son, Paul Minchin, who married Henrietta and later settled at Bough.  

Paul and Henrietta had two sons and three daughters. Their eldest son Humphrey Minchin (1727–1796), a keen cricketer, was a prominent political ally of William Pitt and sat in the House of Commons as MP for Okehampton and, later, Bossiney, from 1778 until his death in 1796. He succeeded to Ballinakill, presumably in 1764, but sold the property in the 1760s and moved to England where he had large estates at Aston Hall, Staffordshire and Holywell, Soberton, Hampshire. In August 1750, he married Clarinda, daughter and co-heiress of the Dublin banker George Cuppaidge. Among their children were Vice Admiral Paul Minchin, also a noted cricketer; Lieutenant Spencer Minchin, RN, killed in the Battle of Copenhagen; and Henry Minchin, Lord of the Manor of Soberton. He died very suddenly from a fit while hanging up his hat before dinner.  

Paul and Henrietta’s second son (Joseph) Paul Minchin was born in 1730 and educated at Trinity College but died without issue. 

Paul and Henrietta’s elder daughter Rebecca Minchin (d. 1800) was married in November 1760 to Daniel Toler, MP of Beechwood, Co. Tipperary, from whom descended the Earls of Norbury.  

Paul and Henrietta’s second daughter Elizabeth Minchin was married on 9 June 1780 to Rev. Charles Woodward.  

Paul and Henrietta’s youngest daughter Jane Minchin married William Maunsell.  

Also of interest in the Minchin family was Paul’s nephew, Captain William Minchin (1774–1821), son of Captain George Minchin, who was caught up in a mutiny when he and his wife went to Australia in 1797 on the female convict ship, Lady Shore, and were cast adrift off Brazil. He was later involved in the rebellion against Governor William Bligh in Australia, finishing up as Director of the Bank of New South Wales. William’s brother, George Minchin, settled in New Brunswick where he became fantastically wealthy merchant and a noted philanthropist. Another of Paul’s nephews was Ensign George Minchin, 29th Regt, son of Humphrey, killed in action at the Battle of Bunker’s Hill in 1778.  

HARRY BUNBURY (1716-1772) OF JOHNSTOWN  

Joseph and Hannah’s only son, Henry – or Harry – was born in 1716 and educated at John Garnet’s Latin School in Athy in 1717-1718, alongside his cousins Billy Bunbury (later of Lisnavagh) and Tom Bunbury (later of Kill). [10] He then went to Trinity College, Dublin, from which he graduated with an M.A. in 1736. He succeeded to Johnstown on his father’s death in 1730, although the house was presumably held in trust for him until he came of age. 

Henry appears to have become directly involved with the Jacobite Rising which erupted in 1744 and concluded with the defeat of Bonnie Prince Charlie at Culloden in April 1746. This came to light with the discovery of a document relating to the trial and execution of Philip Nowlan of Ballykealy in the Pat Purcell Papers. [11] This was almost certainly Peter Nowlan (or Nolan), the last chief of the Nowlans of Ballykealy and a descendent of the 16th century chieftain, Cahir O’Nolan of Ballykealey. He may have been caught recruiting Irishmen for service in the Irish Brigades in France. [12] According to the 1744 document, an unusually large turnout of sixteen Magistrates, Justices of the Peace, Sheriff’s and members of the gentry of county Carlow became involved in the case, underlining the seriousness of the charge. Nowlan was subsequently hanged in Clonmel in 1745 for “high-treason” for his support of the Jacobite cause. 

It seems likely this was the Henry Bunbury involved in a property transaction in July 1762 concerning the present-day location of the Carlow County Council offices with the Hon. Arthur Dawson of Athy Street, Carlow. [13] Henry served on the Carlow Council in 1768, and probably earlier. On 14 July 1767, he was the presiding magistrate in the case of Sarah Conners of Hacketstown who had been attacked by Hugh Conneron when he came to her house three days earlier ‘in a very Gross Manner … a Razor open in his hand and made Several Attempts with said Razor to cut [her] Throat [and] verily Believes he would Murder her on the spot’ were it not for the intervention of bystanders. The fate of Sarah Conners and her intended terminator is unknown. [14] 

In about 1760, the Bunburys knocked down some sheds at the back of Johnstown House and built a new Palladian style front, which now faced north-west, as it does today. The old broad avenue – a very wide road with huge verges – still runs straight to the present garden side, which used to be the front, while a large widow under the plaster at the first landing is exactly aligned with where the original front door was. Some stones strewn around the farm look like the surround to an elaborate doorway. The reorientation of the house also explains why the cellars do not match; the cellars from the old part were bricked up. The fact that the Bunburys finances were waning in the late 18th century may also be relevant. The Victorian castellations, chimneys and back wing were added by the Elliotts circa 1860-1870. 

  

THE PYNSENTS & WILLIAM PITT 

Harry Bunbury’s wife, Henrietta Pynsent was a daughter of Captain Robert Pynsent, who died in 1738, and a sister and sole heiress of the Rev Sir Robert Pynsent, the fourth and last baronet. The Pynsent baronetcy was created by James II on 13 September 1687 for William Pynsent, sometime Sheriff of Wiltshire. [15] Henrietta’s brother Robert Pynsent, aka ‘Pinsenty’, was also a past pupil of at John Garnet’s Latin School in Athy, where he was schooled alongside the Bunburys and Pole Cosby. He became a prominent cleric in Ireland, serving at various churches in Limerick, Cork and Derry between 1741 and his death in 1781. [16] Robert was also heir to the baronetcy from his wealthy cousin Sir William Pynsent. As such, he had good reason to anticipate a substantial inheritance from the childless Sir William when the latter died in 1765. However, he was to be most disappointed. Sir William had been a prominent Whig MP in the parliament of Queen Anne but retired to the country when the Tories came into power. As Waylen and Goddard put it, ‘his manners were eccentric, his morals lay under suspicion, but his fidelity to his political principles remained unalterable.’ When Sir William died in 1765, he controversially left a fortune worth £30,000 to the Whig leader William Pitt (later Earl of Chatham, and a close ally of the Bunbury’s cousin Humphrey Minchin, see above), as well as 1000 guineas to ’the notorious John Wilkes.’ Pitt’s inheritance, and simultaneous elevation to the earldom, inspired a parody-ballad, ‘Pynsent’s Ghost’, readable here. Robert Pysent, then rector of Killmore, unsuccessfully contested the will in the Court of Chancery in April 1771, as did Henry Daw Tothill, another kinsmen of the Pynsents. Robert married Mary Nuttall, but died without issue in 1781, at which point the Pynsent baronetcy became extinct. 

Henrietta Pynsent was apparently 17 years older than Harry but nonetheless bore him at least two sons, Joseph and Robert, and two daughters who were christened in Urglin at this time – J. Edith Bunbury (25 August 1733) and Henrietta (23 July 1735). Edith died on 12 January 1739. It is to be noted that a Benjamin Bunbury of Killerig was baptised in Urglin on 2 August 1736.  

Henry and Henrietta may also have been parents of Harriot Bunbury who was married at Johnstown in June 1770 to James Archibald Hamilton. [17] And James may have been the gentleman who was tied up with Carlow Castle and who leased Hamilton’s Brewery in Carlow town to Constantine Brough. As it happens, Constantine Brough, his wife and his daughter are all buried at Urglin. 

There is also a possibility that Henry and Henrietta were the forbears of a branch of the family who were established at Ardnehue, near Johnstown, as well as in Livepool, England. For more of this, see Bunbury of Ardnehue and Liverpool

On Wednesday 4 March 1772, Finns Leinster Journal noted that Colonel Henry Bunbury had died at Johnstown the previous Thursday morning and that ‘by his death, an estate of 900l. per annum devolves to his son, Rev. Joseph Bunbury’. [18] 

MAJOR HENRY BUNBURY 

I remain confused by the origin of Captain / Major Henry Bunbury who, co-founded the Carlow Legion, a unit of the Irish Volunteers, with Colonel J. Rochford, in September 1779. He may have been another son of Harry and Henrietta. In 1780, he captured an outlaw, as per this report from the Freeman’s Journal of 20-23 May 1780.  

‘Carlow May 17: Early on Tuesday morning a detachment of the Palatine Town Volunteers commanded by Captain Henry Bunbury marched to Cranny[?] in the County Kildare, and after some resistance, apprehended one Murtagh Darcy, a notorious rioter….for an assault committed on one of the Volunteers of said company, and brought him before Sir Charles Burton, Bart, who committed him to gaol. 

Major Bunbury was also mentioned in this report from Walkers Hibernian Magazine: 
 
‘Carlow July 12, 1785. This day the volunteers of this County, with some corps from the Queen’s County, and county of Kildare, were reviewed on the field of Pollarton; at twelve o’clock, Sir Charles Burton, the reviewing general, came to the field, attended by Lieutenant Colonel Doyne, Majors Bunbury and Dillon. There were present most of the principal gentlemen of the county; the troops went through their evolutions and firings to the perfect satisfaction of the general, and the numerous spectators. The day was remarkably fine; the review ended at half past three o’clock; several of the distant corps were hospitably entertained by the general, in tents pitched in his lawn.’ 

  

*******************  

Rev. Joseph Bunbury, Rector of Urglin  

The Rev. Joseph Bunbury, the eldest son of Harry and Henrietta Bunbury, was Rector of Urglin, or Rutland, 2¼ miles from Carlow. The church where the families of Duckett, Burton, Denys, Crosbie and Bunbury gathered to pray in the 18th and 19th centuries was located a few fields away from Johnstown. Initially built by the Tighe family circa 1760s, this would also have been the closest church to Killerig (2 ½ m) and also seems to have welcomed members of the Palatine community from the Rhineland, 88 of whom had settled on the Burton estate earlier in the century. The fields of Johnstown occupy the foreground, with roads and bridges in the distance, and the fairy tale towers of Duckett’s Grove on the eastern horizon. Framed by his fellow peers, Sir Edward Crosbie, the so-called ‘head’ of the 1798 rebels in Carlow also has a prominent connection to the church. The present church was erected in 1821 and is just as Samuel Lewis described it in 1837 – ‘a neat plain building with a spire’. Its construction was paid for ‘by aid of a loan of £700 from the late Board of First Fruits’. Josep Bunbury’s name can be seen on a weather-beaten slab above the front door along with the names Tighe, who presumably repaired the church, as well as the Rev Brooke. Joseph placed this tablet on the original church, “that his piety and generosity might become known to his posterity” in 1787. 

Joseph Bunbury married Elizabeth Nixon, a daughter of Abraham Nixon (or Nickson) of Munny House, County Carlow. She may well have been a sister of Rachel Nickson who, in December 1765, married the Rev. Christopher Harvey of the Bargy Castle family in Co. Wexford. [19] They had two sons Henry Bunbury (1753-1819) of Russellstown and Bunbury Lodge and Benjamin (who died aged 4 on 7 December 1758.) 

He does not seem to have been too keen to move into Johnstown. A year after his father’s death, he placed this advertisment in Saunders’s News-Letter (21 May 1773): 

Carlow. To be set [let?], for Lives or Years, the House and Demesne of Johnstown, within 3 miles of Carlow, and 3 of Castledermot; the House is in great Order, and the Demesne remarkable rich Meadow, well divided and inclosed, and fit for the immediate Reception of a large Family. 
Proposals to be made to the Rev. Jo. Bunbury at Johnstown aforesaid, near Carlow, or Mr Richard Frizzel at Rathfarnham, near Dublin, either of whom will immediately declare an improving Tenant, on reasonable terms. May 13th 1773.  

The Rev Joseph Bunbury was Chaplain to the County Carlow Legion, commanded by John Rochfort. On 25 May 1784 he chaired a meeting of the corps in Tullow in which they declared solidarity with the wider Volunteer movement across Ireland, approved the stance of their parliamentary representative, Sir Richard Butler, and appointed Beauchamp Bagenal as their ‘reviewing General.’ [20] Johnstown was described as the Rev Joseph Bunbury’s house in Wilson’s 1786 Post-Chaise Companion to Ireland. When John Rochfort of Cloghrennan sold 200 acres of riverside woods to pay off his debts in 1789, Joseph was one of the two principals whom interested parties could contact, the other being Mr Eustace of York Street, Dublin. [21] 

***************************************** 

Colonel Robert Bunbury (1734-1790) & the WALSH family 

Robert John Bunbury, second son of Henry and Henrietta Bunbury of Johnstown, was a Colonel in the 12th (Prince of Wales) Light Dragoons. He was born in 1734 at Portarlington, a Huguenot settlement on the banks of the River Barrow straddling the border of the King’s and Queen’s Counties (now Offaly and Laois). A deed relating to his son Henry’s marriage to Eleanora Shirley in 1790 refers to him as Robert John Bunbury of Borlanlinstone, Queen’s County. [22] 

On 29 October 1762, he married Jane Walsh, the sister of one of his fellow officers in the 12th, Major Philip Walsh. [23] The Walsh’s father, also Philip, was a prominent barrister in Georgian Dublin, graduating from Trinity College Dublin to become a Bencher at the King’s Inn and a senior counsellor before his death in 1745. Jane’s grandfather, the Rev. Philip Walsh (1655-1740), rose from his position as Chaplain to Archbishop Michael Boyle to become Primate and Chancellor of Ireland. Jane’s uncles were all clergymen – Rev. John Walsh (d. 1756), Rector of Kilcoole, Co. Tipperary; Rev. Jeremiah Walsh (d. 1789), Rector of Killiah, Co. Meath; and the Rev. William Walsh (d. 1781), Vicar of Blessington and Rector of Ardnurcher, Co. Meath, and Kill and Lyons, Co. Kildare. The latter is an ancestor to Lesley Fennell (née Walsh) of Burtown House, Athy, Co. Kildare. 
 
Jane Despard’s later recalled: 

‘Lady Allen was a gentle creature and left two sons, two daughters and two beautiful grand-daughters, whom I mentioned before. 
Of another sister I never heard anything but that her immediate descendants, the Moore’s, live in the County of Cork and Tipperary. 
Mrs. Rowe, the youngest of the five, left two daughters, one of whom was killed by jumping out of a carriage while the horses were running away. 
The other married my grandmother Despard’s brother, who was Solicitor General of Dublin when he died and his property descended to her grandson, Bunbury, who has squandered away every shilling of it as I mentioned before. 
These are five co-heiresses of Killaghy Castle [Mullinahone, Co. Tipperary], a memento of whom, an immense oak tree with five great arms, was felled to the ground with peculiar bad taste by the late Mr. Despard. The axe had not been idle among their descendants.’ 

 
The brother who ‘became Solicitor General’ was, in fact, Philip Walsh, and he was merely a King’s Counsel, not Solicitor General. The lost fortune appears to have gone to Robert and Jane’s son, the Rev Henry Bunbury, below, who did indeed go bust. [24] 
 
Robert is believed to be the member of the Coulter Club, according to the following report in the Pat Purcell Papers. I do not know what the club was, save that its opponents sound like Whiteboys:  

Leighlinbridge, August 2, 1773. The Members of the COULTER CLUB, having a just abhorance [sic] to the violent and wicked outrage committed lately on Mr John Gorman, by setting fire to a large parcel of hay belonging to him, in the deerpark at Garryhunden, in the county of Carlow, and entirely consuming the same; and being desirous of bringing to condign punishment the person or persons guilty of the villainous and atrocious a crime, do hereby offer a reward of ONE HUNDRED POUNDS Sterl. for the discovering and prosecuting to conviction at any time, the person or persons guilty of the said crime. 
The said reward to be paid immediately on conviction by THOMAS GURLY, Esq. 
[signed by] William Steuart, Ben Roche, Wm. Paul Butler, James Butler, Richer Mercer, Wm. Dawson, Simon Mercer, Robert Bunbury, Thomas Gurly, Thomas Bennett, Matt Humphrey, Owen Whelan, John Gorman, Richard Pack, Edward Vigors, John Humphrey, Amyas Thomas. 
 
Colonel Robert Bunbury died in 1790. His will is dated 30th November 1790 and he appointed his brother-in-law William Walsh (solicitor) as his trustee. His son Henry had married Henrietta Shirley just 10 days earlier. 

  

REV. HENRY BUNBURY (1768-1845) & ELEANORA SHIRLEY (1772-1841) 

Colonel Robert Bunbury’s eldest son Henry was born in c. 1768 and followed the path of his uncle Joseph by entering the church. He was with the Stronge family at Tynan in County Armagh when, on 20 November 1790, at the age of 22, he married 18-year-old (Henrietta) Eleanora Shirley (1772-1841). Born in Bath, she was a daughter of the Hon. and Rev. Walter Shirley and niece of the Earl of Ferrars. The wedding took place at Annadale, County Dublin. [25] 

Henry Bunbury, BA, became Rector of Mansfieldstown, County Louth, in 1793, but ‘discharges the duties from a distance of six miles’ as there was no glebe house at this time. [26] He had an address at Beaulieu, near Drogheda, but when their twins Selina and Robert were born in 1802, Henry and Eleanora were apparently based at Kilsaran House in County Louth. (Curiously the McClintocks of Drumcar held the living of Kilsaran at about this time). He resigned from Mansfieldstown in 1815. 

According to the memoirs of Lady Allen, Henry inherited a considerable fortune from the Walsh family but ‘squandered away every shilling of it.’ Henry appears to have gone bankrupt by 1819, and may have sold Johnstown House to John Campion as early as 1814. There is a suggestion that Johnstown House was abandoned at about the time of the 1798 Rising, when Henry was 26 years old. In June 1800, ‘the Joice Floors Doors Windows, Door and Window Cases Boards Rafters Lentals and other Timber and valuable Articles’ of the house were ‘feloniously stolen at different times and carried away’. Henry set off at the head of a party of the Tullow Yeoman Infantry, then quartered at Grangeford, and searched several houses. They found a good deal of the missing timber in ‘the dwellings’ of Michael Wall and Lawrence Dempsey, both of Johnstown. [27] Some of Henry’s sisters or daughters are said to have moved to a cottage on Johnstown Lane and there were still Bunburys living there when Mary Moore of Grangecon was a young girl. Johnny Couchman believes the last of the Johnstown Bunburys died in about 1937. Bun’s Bog exists today nearby, see below. 

Eleanora moved to Dublin with the family, although she also appears to have had an address at Loughrea, County Galway. In about 1830 she moved to Liverpool with a number of her children, to be close to her son Robert, who was now a clergyman in the vicinity. When the 1841 census was taken, Henry was staying in Shropshire while his wife and their daughters, Harriet and Augusta, were living in Liverpool. Eleanora Bunbury died in Falkner Street, Liverpool, aged 69, on 21 December 1841 ‘in the sure and certain hope of the resurrection to eternal life. [28] At the time of her passing, her sons Robert and Thomas were clergymen. 

By 1821, Henry was the Church of Ireland curate of Drummaul, County Antrim, from where he wrote to the Office of Chief Secretary of Ireland complaining of his reduced circumstances and debt, which he blamed on ‘frauds having been committed against his property’ resulting in ‘a very weighty Chancery suit’. [29] This may have been a case taken by the Hon. Benjamin O’Neale Stratford (later the 4th Earl of Aldborough) over lands at Burntchurch and Gracetown, County Tipperary. [30] [NB: There is also mention of a Rev. Henry Bunbury of Rochestown, Co. Tipperary, living at this time.] 

By 1824 he was receiving the tithes as Rector of the vicarages of Kilcoan and Kilbride in County Waterford, or the Diocese of Ossory, although he lived in another parish at the time. [31] He was still rector of Kilcoan when his son James was married in 1840. He died at South Frederick-street, Dublin, aged 83, on 22 February 1846. [32] 

Henry and Eleanora had fifteen children, including: 

(1) Harriet Jane Bunbury, their eldest daughter, born c 1792, painted a portrait of her sister Selina and died unmarried at Upper Canning Street, Liverpool, in 1854. [33] 

(2) James Hamilton Bunbury (1793-1873), see below. 

(3) Maryanne Bunbury, born c. 1795, died at Kilsaran on 11 April 1801, aged six. 

(4) Molesworth Bunbury, born c. 1797, died on Army service in America in 1815. 

(5) Henry Bunbury, who died at Kilsaran on 14 April 1801, aged one. 

(6) Frances Bunbury, born 1801, died unmarried at 72 Canning Street, Liverpool, in 1855, her oldest sister Harriet having died on that same street (and probably that house?) 18 months earlier. [34] 

(7) Selina Bunbury (1802-1882), see below. 

(8) Rev Robert Shirley Bunbury (1802-1846), see below. 

(9) Rev Thomas Henry Bunbury (1805-1888), see below.  

(10) Louisa Bunbury, born c. 1809 and died in Ranelagh in 1829. [[35]] 

(11) Augusta Bunbury, born 1816, of whom little is known except she was living in Liverpool with her mother Henrietta Eleanora and sister Harriet in 1841. 

(12) Henry Bunbury (1815-1827), their youngest son, who died aged 12 at Williamstown, Blackrock, ‘in perfect submission to the will of his Heavenly Father, humbly trusting in the merits of his Redeemer.’ [36] 

(13) Clara Bunbury (b. 1823), see below. 

JAMES HAMILTON BUNBURY (1793-1873) & THE CUBAN LINK 

James Hamilton Bunbury, Henry and Eleanora’s eldest son, was agent to the Rev Hans Hamilton, Rector of Knocktopher, he appointed Edmund Butler, a local butcher as tithe collector. In 1831, Butler was killed at the height of the Tithe Wars, alongside as Sub-Inspector, eleven constables and three others in a riot at Carrickshock, County Kilkenny. [37] In 1840, James was married in Tramore to the considerably younger Johanna Kettlewell (1822-1906), youngest daughter of Major-General John Wilson Kettlewell (1790-1857), Royal Artillery, of Hammondsville, Tramore, Co. Waterford. James appears in Griffiths Valuations as owner of considerable property. There are also several Dublin deeds relating to his failure to pay his sister Selina Bunbury her due inheritance. James died in 1873. His widow died on 26 February 1906. It seems unlikely that he was the James Bunbury of Raheen, Co. Carlow, a yeoman, arrested for stealing a frieze coat from the Watsons of Ballydarton but I had best not rule him out. [38] Raheen is close to Hackettstown.  

The author Selina Bunbury was particularly fond of JHB’s only son, Henry Shirley Bunbury (1843-1920), a civil servant and contender for Oscar Wilde’s ‘Bunbury.’ His patents lived in Dublin for a while and were apparently good friends with Oscar Wilde’s parents. Born in Waterford on 6 April 1843, HSB was educated at Magdalen College School, King’s School, Ely and King’s College, London. He entered the Civil Service in 1863 and served in the Chief Inspector’s Department (Stamp and Taxes, Somerset House, London). He travelled extensively, visiting Russia, Sweden and Denmark, Holland, Italy, etc. and lived for some time in Canada, the United States and Cuba. He lived with his aunt Selina in Hammersmith / Kensington, London, for a period between 1864 and 1870. In May 1880, he married his first cousin Clara Augusta Jones, daughter of Robert Henry Jones and his wife Clarissa Bunbury (see below). Henry lived in Stirling, Scotland, where he was a surveyor of taxes and assessor. He appears to have become bankrupt and moved via Ontario, Canada, to Jamaica when he retired in 1903, becoming a prolific contributor to the Jamaican press. [39] He died at Mandeville, Jamaica, aged 77 on 24 April 1920, having written a poem five years earlier, ‘The Wind, The Water and The War’, about parents suffering the death of children in the war. [40] See here for more on his poems

Henry and Clara also appear to have developed a strong link to Cuba, where Clara died in 1926. Sir Henry Noel Bunbury recalled: ‘These I knew well, and once stayed with them at Stirling, where he [HSB] was Inspector of Taxes. He was an eccentric, addicted to literary activities, and she kept the establishment on the rails – a pleasant, kind, sensible woman, who, I fancy, had a good deal to put up with.’ 

Henry and Clara had four children: 

1. Walter H. H. Bunbury (born 1 Nov 1881, Dixton, Monmouth; d. Apr 1960, Falmouth, Cornwall, aged 79. m. (1) Henrietta, a Dutch lady, who was born in 1881 at Teborg, Holland, and died in Plympton, Devon in May 1949, m. (2) (Dec 1950) in Plymouth Kathleen Selwood (who died in 1960, aged 68). He was a Commercial Intelligence Officer at the British legation in Havana until 1939 when he retired and went to live in Plymouth)  

2. Molesworth Charles Bunbury (1882-1941, whose grandson Ignacio Fiterre of Miami, Florida, gave me this information) 

3. Cecil James Bunbury (1886-1957), born in Newton Abboyt on 30 June 1886, died in Havana in 1957. 

4. Eleanora Shirley Bunbury (1888-1957, known as Nora), an employee of the British Embassy in Havana, who also moved to England when she retired. 

This branch are now scattered in places such as Havana, Boston and Miami and Jacksonville, Florida. [41] 

In 1866, JH Bunbury’s only daughter Harriet Eliza was born in Waterford on 4 November 1840 and was married in Kensington, London, in 1866 to William Johnson (1835-72), a clerk with the Bank of England and son of the late Rev. M. Johnson, with whom she had a daughter Isabella Mary, born in Lewisham, Kent, in 1867. [42] William seems to have died in the 1870s. By 1881, Harriet was a nun with the Sisters of Mercy working at the All Hallows Orphanage, Ditchingham, Norfolk. [43] 

  

Selina Bunbury the Writer (1802 – 1882) 

Selina Bunbury, daughter of the Rev Henry and Eleanora Bunbury, was a well-known early Victorian travel writer and novelist. Henry Boylan’s Dictionary of Irish Biography states that she was born in Kilsaran, County Louth, in 1802. She was a twin of the Rev. Robert Bunbury, Vicar of Swansea (see below). Selina’s mother moved to Dublin with the children shortly after her father went bankrupt in 1819. Selina took up a job as a primary school teacher and began to write books about pre-famine Ireland, such as A Visit to my Birthplace (1820, 12 editions in her lifetime), Cabin Conversations and Castle Scenes (1829) and Tales of my Country (1833). In ‘Cabin Conversations’, she slammed both the ‘evils of Popery’ and the proselytising efforts in the west of Ireland. Her most successful work was Coombe Alley (Dublin: Curry 1844), a Guy Fawkes narrative set in the reign of James I. Another hit was the two-volume Sir Guy D’Esterre (London: Routledge 1858), following the adventures of an English soldier in the train of Sir Henry Sidney who is captured in Ireland -‘the cursedest of all lands’, falls in love and meets Hugh O’Neill.  

She moved to Liverpool in about 1830 to keep a house for her twin brother, Robert, at which time she wrote many popular novels. After Robert’s marriage to Adele Galton in 1845, she visited most of the countries of Europe and published a number of travel books, such as The Pyrenees (1845), Summer in Northern Europe (1856) and Russia After the War (1857). She visited every country in Europe, except Greece and Portugal, and moved frequently between Ireland and England. She was especially fond of her nephew Henry Shirley Bunbury and her niece Clara Jones, to whom she provided support. (See above) These two cousins eventually married and it was at their home in Cheltenham that Selina died in 1882. [44] 

See more here or a detailed account from Orlando here or another one showing her book covers here and also here. (Thanks to Victoria House) 

REV ROBERT SHIRLEY BUNBURY (1802-1846), VICAR OF SWANSEA 

The Rev Robert Shirley Bunbury, Selina’s twin, was awarded his MA from of Trinity College, Dublin, and, like his younger brother, Thomas Henry, he was a curate of St. Peter’s, Nottingham, as well as Leamington Priors. In 1843, he was appointed to the perpetual curacy of Ecclestone, Lancashire, although he was also incumbent of St. Thomas’s Church, St. Helen’s, near Liverpool, from at least 1842. [45] [His obituary in the Coventry Standard confusingly stated: ‘Mr. B. was well known in Birmingham, from having had the temporary charge successively of St. Thomas’s and Christ Church’] [46] 

In May 1845, he married Adèle Galton, a first cousin to Charles Darwin and a brother of Sir Francis Galton, the eugenics pioneer (who coined the term ‘eugenics’ as well as the phrase “nature versus nurture”.) [47] Adèle’s face had been badly cut in an accident when the donkey carriage she was riding in overturned. She also had a spinal curvature that obliged her to spend long periods on her back. She was known in the family as Delly. 

Four months after his marriage to Adèle, he was appointed Vicar of Swansea. [48] However, tragedy struck when Robert died of gastric fever in 1846 aged 42, just weeks after the birth of their daughter, Millicent Galton Bunbury, in Swansea. The christening of his daughter was the last service Robert performed. Robert’s courtship, marriage and death were all chronicled in the memoirs of Adèle’s sister Elizabeth Ann Galton and can be found in the footnotes. [49] His Swansea residence had lasted ‘barely nine months’, noted the Cambrian Newspaper. The funeral procession left Robert’s home at Russell-Place at 11:30am on the Wednesday after his death, proceeded slowly and solemnly through Gower-street, Goat-street and Cross-street, before reaching the church shortly before midday. It comprised of four coaches – one for clergymen, one for doctors, one for servants and one for ‘the brother of the deceased and another gentleman.’ The shops were closed in token of respect. He was interred in a new vault near to that of two predecessors (Rev Miles Bassett and Rev D Hewson). ‘The ceremony being over, the bells of St Mary’s rang a solemn mourning peal.’ St. Mary’s Church was rebuilt in 1898 but subsequently destroyed in the three-night Swansea Blitz in February 1941. It reopened in 1959 and in the early sixties the graveyard around the church was reordered with the gravestones laid flat and covered with six inches of soil. The tops of the chest tombs over the vaults were laid as a path around the north side of the church. In February 2020, Paul Murray, the archivist of St Mary’s informed me that while he had found the tomb tops of his predecessors Bassett and Hewson, there was no sign yet of Robert’s. His name appears on the Rectors/ Vicar’s Board at St Mary’s, while his burial was also entered into the parish register. 

Adèle Bunbury, died on 31 December 1883 at Edymead House, Launceston, Cornwall. In 1866, her daughter, Millicent – or Milly, as she was known in the family – married John Christopher, Baron Lethbridge of Tregeare, Cornwall, had nine children, and died on 29 July 1942. [50] 

CLARE BUNBURY JONES 

Clara Bunbury (1823-?), the youngest of Henry and Eleanora Bunbury’s daughters, was born in Drogheda. In 1850, she was married at St. Paul’s Church, Liverpool, to Robert Henry Jones, a flax and hemp merchant who was variously based between Liverpool, the Wirral and London. [[51]] Clara’s brother, the Rev Thomas H. Bunbury, officiated at the service. [52] 

The Jones’s moved to London circa 1856 where Robert Henry Jones continued in the flax and hemp trade and became a Commission Agent. By 1871 they had returned to the Wirral. It is not known what happened to Clarissa or Robert Henry Jones post 1871 or where they died. The family’s hemp and flax business appears to have dwindled during the early 1860’s. 

Robert Shirley Jones, the eldest of their four children was born in 1851, changed his name to Robert Bunbury Jones and went to New Zealand in the early 1870’s where, in 1875, he married Hannah Elizabeth Bennett at Dunedin. They had eight children, all born in New Zealand. A complex character, Robert Bunbury Jones died in 1901 at Bygalorie, New South Wales, Australia, under the assumed name of ‘Alan Forbes’. His wife Hannah Elizabeth Bennett remarried and died at Auckland in 1930.  

Robert and Clara’s second son Alfred Henry Jones was born at Tranmere, Cheshire, in 1853 but nothing else is known of him.  

Robert and Clara’s eldest daughter, Henrietta Louisa Jones, was born in Liverpool in 1856 but died in London just three years later. 

Robert and Clara’s youngest daughter Clara (Clare) Augusta Jones was born in Feltham, London, on 16 January 1858. A favourite of her aunt, the novelist Selina Bunbury, Clare married her cousin Henry Shirley Bunbury, a civil servant, in 1879. When he retired in 1911, they moved to Jamaica. She died in Cuba. (See above, under James Hamilton Bunbury).  

THOMAS HENRY BUNBURY (1805-1888), VICAR OF GREAT WARLEY 

Born in County Louth on 24 June 1805, Thomas Henry Bunbury was the fourth surviving son of the Rev. Henry Bunbury and his wife, Eleanora (née Shirley). Having been awarded a BA from Trinity College Dublin in 1831, he was admitted to Holy Orders as a Deacon that same year by Dr. John B. Sumner, Bishop of Chester, at an ordination service in the Cathedral Church. [53] From 1831 until 1839, he was licensed to the Curacy of Birkenhead Parish Church although, like his brother Robert, he appears to have had a stint as a curate of St. Peter’s, Nottingham. On 28 September 1837, he was married at St. Nicholas’s Church, Nottingham, to Mary Bell (1804-1869), second daughter of the late William Bell of Nottingham. [54] 

In 1839 he became curate of Whitwick, near Leicester, which living was in the gift of the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. By the time Mary gave birth to their firstborn son, Thomas Henry Bunbury junior, on 14 February 1840, Thomas was living at Whitwick Vicarage.[55] He was still in Whitwick at the time of the 1841 census, when his three-week-old son, Shirley Bunbury, was also registered. 

In 1846, he commenced a nine-year run as “Perpetual Curate”, or Vicar, of the Holy Trinity Church in Seghill, a large mining area in Northumberland. A new church was built at this time for which Thomas worked closely with the Carr family, who owned Seghill Colliery, to raise the money. Designed by John and Benjamin Green, architects, of Newcastle, the new church opened in 1849. 

He remained at Seghill until 1855 when he was appointed Vicar of Christ Church, Great Warley, which came with a residence and £270 per annum. He would remain at Great Warley for the next 33 years until his death in 1888. The Essex Standard noted that, as ‘a member of the Low Church School, [he] was most zealous in the discharge of his Ministerial duties, and he was held in the greatest respect by all classes in the district.’[56] During this time he officiated at many family weddings, including his sister Clara Bunbury’s marriage to Robert Henry Jones, a Liverpudlian flax and hemp merchant in 1850, and his niece Millicent Bunbury’s marriage to John Christopher Baron Lethbridge, in 1860.[57] 

His ‘beloved wife’ Mary died at the Vicarage in Great Warley on 19 January 1869.[58] T. H. Bunbury also died at the vicarage, aged 82, early in the morning of Monday 2 January 1888.[59] At his funeral, his son Thomas played the “Dead March” in Saul, while his sons Shirley Bunbury and the Rev. Robert J. Bunbury were also present, as was Miss Bunbury, daughter.[60] 

The Rev Thomas Henry and Mary (née Bell) had at least four sons and two daughters, viz. 

1) Rev. Thomas Henry Bunbury (1840-95), see below. 

2) Rev. Shirley Bunbury (1841-1914), Vicar of Brooke, Norfolk, and British chaplain at Spexia, Italy, [61] and Rector of Fyfield, Ongar, Essex from 1908.[62] He was married, firstly, in 1870 to Sarah Lucy Gibson (1844-1906), daughter of the Rev Henry Gibson, Rector of Fyfield, and had issue, 

     (a) Rev Walter Shirley Gibson Bunbury, BA, of Heanor, Derbyshire (1873-1938), married Marjorie Mee Stain of Canada. 

     (b) Rev Alfred Bunbury (1874-1910) [63] 

     (c) Arthur Bunbury (1877-1900), Assistant-Paymaster, Royal Navy, died on board HMS Hermione at Nanking on 1 August 1900, during the Boxer Rebellion [64]  

     (d) Lucy Mary Bunbury, authoress under the nom de plume “Margaret Shirley”. 

Shirley Bunbury was married secondly at the age of 67 on 7 October 1908 to Florence Mary Stewart Cook in London. He may have been an ancestor of Frederick Molesworth Bunbury, who was in the Royal Navy, and possibly emigrated to Canada. 

The Rev Shirley Bunbury died at Fyfield Rectory on 17 September 1914, having latterly had the parish of Willingale Spain.  

3) Rev. Robert John Bunbury (1842-1913) was ordained a priest by the Bishop of Hereford in 1869 after graduating from Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, in 1866. [65] He was Curate of Hope-under-Dinsmore, Hertfordshire (1968-1870), Curate of Halberton (1870), Assistant Curate of East Stonehouse, Devon (1872), curate of Ecclesfield (1874) and was licenced to a curacy for Camden Town by the Bishop of London in 1883. [John Bull, 3 March 1883, p. 13.] He was based in Downton when he narrowly survived the North Charford Railway Accident of 3 June 1884. [66] He died at Bromley-by-Bow in 1913. [67] 

4) Walter Francis Bunbury (1844-1903), youngest son, died aged 59 on 22 March 1903. [68] 

5) Dorothea Bunbury, Formosa Street, Maida Hill, London W. 

6) Mary Henrietta Eleanora Bunbury (1847-1870), the youngest daughter, who died aged 23 at Croft House, Fairford, Gloucestershire, on 28 February 1870. [69] 

[NB: One of the above was father to Mary Bunbury and Master Harry Bunbury.] 

REV. THOMAS HENRY BUNBURY (1840-95) OF HIGHGATE 

Thomas Henry Bunbury, the eldest son of the Rev Thomas Henry Bunbury (1805-1888) and his wife Mary (née Bell) was born at Whitwick Vicarage, Leicestershire, on 14 February 1840. On 24 June 1875 he married Marion Martin at Thorpe, Surrey. Her brother the Rev Henry Martin officiated, assisted by the Rev. T. H. Bunbury, father of the bridegroom, and the Rev. M. J. Sutton, a brother-in-law of Marion. [70] At this time, the Rev T. H. Bunbury senior was vicar of Christ Church, Great Warley. [71] 

Thomas Henry and Marion Bunbury lived at Highgate, London, and had five children between 1876 and 1885, namely (1) Sir Henry Noel Bunbury, (2) Cecil Molesworth Bunbury, (3) Rev Percy St. Pierre Bunbury, (4) Marion Shirley Bunbury and (5) Edith Marjorie Bunbury. Thomas died at Bareilly, Claremont-road, Highgate, on 12 December 1893, aged 53. [72] Marion subsequently moved to Khandallah, Willingdon Road, Eastbourne, on the coast of East Sussex, where she was still living in 1911. [73] 

*****  

SIR HENRY NOEL BUNBURY, KCB (1876-1968)  

Sir Henry Noel Bunbury, the eldest son of Thomas Henry Bunbury and his wife Marion (née Martin) was born in Mitcham, Surrey, England, on 29 November 1876. He was educated at Merchant Taylor’s School, and St John’s College, Oxford (BA). He joined the Civil Service in 1900, working as a Clerk in the War Office. In 1903, he was transferred to the Exchequer and Audit Department at the Treasury where he was based for the next six years. [74]  

On 20 April 1911, he married Dorothea Merivale, youngest daughter of an adventurous railway engineer Walter Merivale, M.I.C.E., and his equally vivacious wife Maggie, aka Emma Magdalene Merivale (née Pittman) (1854-1940) of Chiswick. [75] Henry and Dorothea’s wedding took place in St. John, Paddington, Westminster, and was performed by the Rev. Meyrick J Sutton and the Rev. P. St. P Bunbury, uncle and brother of the bridegroom. 

The Bodleian Library at the University of Oxford holds a catalogue of correspondence of the Merivale Family from 1869-1943, mainly relating to Walter and Maggie Merivale, covering their time in India (1881-1889), Costa Rica (1890-1892) and Barbados (1894-1899). Dorothea’s older brother Philip Merivale was a respected stage actor who entered the cinema during the silent era, appearing in twenty films before his died from a heart ailment aged 59 in 1946; he was married to two actresses in succession, Viva Birkett and Gladys Cooper. Maggie’s sister Agnes was married to Captain Richard Walter Rawlins. Part of this correspondence was handed over by Judith Bunbury, third daughter of Sir Henry Noel Bunbury. (See also Appendix 2). 

In 1912, Henry Noel Bunbury was a founder member of the National Health Insurance Commission, serving as its first Accountant and Comptroller-General, and later as a Commissioner from 1913. [76] For this he was appointed Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in the 1913 Birthday Honours. [77] In 1917 he was appointed Accountant-General and Financial Adviser to the Ministry of Shipping and in 1920 Comptroller and Accountant-General of the General Post Office, serving in the post until his retirement in 1937. He was appointed Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB) in the 1920 New Year War Honours. 

The Bunburys lived in Park Hill, Ealing, and later at Malt End Cottage, Ewell, Surrey. In 1945 their address was given as Orford, Suffolk. Sir Henry Noel Bunbury died at 8 Church Street, Ewell, on 2 September 1968. Between 1912 and 1926, Sir Henry and Lady Bunbury had seven daughters, the ‘remarkable sequence’ earning a mention for ‘The Seven Misses Bunbury’ in the Yorkshire Evening Post in 1926. [[78]] The seven daughters were: 

    1. Elizabeth Marion Bunbury (b. 1912) 
    2. Katharine Littleton Bunbury (b. 1913) 
    3. Judith Shirley Bunbury (b. 1915, civil servant, lived at 100 Homecross House, Fishers Lane, Chiswick, London; died 24 February, 2006, aged 90, buried at Putney Vale Crematorium. [79] 
    4. Patricia Merrivale Bunbury (b. 1917, became Mrs J Barber, seems to have been involved with Special Operations Executive personnel during Second World War. [80] 
    5. Janet Dorothea Bunbury (b. 1920, married Greiser and settled in Boston). 
    6. Penelope Frances Bunbury (b. 1922, married in 1945 to the inventor (and former RAF pilot) Philip Neville George Knowles, son of Capt. and Mrs. G. Knowles, Tankerton. 
    7. Rachel Mary Bunbury (1926-2005). Born at Bedford Park, West London, she was married on 1 September 1953 to Thomas, 2nd Baron Bridges (1927-2017) of Headley, co. Surrey and of St. Nicholas at Wade, co. Kent. [[81]] Thomas was Assistant Private Secretary to the Foreign Secretary (1963-1966), Counsellor to Moscow (1969-1971), Private Secretary (Overseas Affairs) to the Prime Minister (1972-1974), Minister (Commercial) to Washington (1976-1979), Deputy Under-Secretary, Foreign and Commonwealth Office (1979-1982) and UK Ambassador to Italy (1983-1987). Baron and Baroness Bridges had three sons, 
          (i) Mark Thomas, 3rd Baron Bridges, personal solicitor to HM Queen Elizabeth II; 
          (ii) Hon Nicholas Edward Bridges, architect 
          (iii) Hon. Harriet Elizabeth Bridges.  

***** 

CECIL MOLESWORTH BUNBURY (1878-1970) 

Cecil Molesworth Bunbury, the second son of Thomas Henry Bunbury and his wife Marion (née Martin), was born at Mitchm, Surrey, on 15 Apr 1878. During the Anglo-Boer War, he enlisted with the 26th (Younghusband’s Horse) Battalion Imperial Yeomanry. An engineer by profession, he remained in Africa and joined the East African Railway Transport Department as a skilled maintenance engineer. He was Assistant Engineer and, later, Superintendent of the Busoga Railway from 1906 until 1917. Constructed for the cotton trade, this was a line of the Uganda Railway that provided a link between Lake Victoria and the Lake Kyoga basin. In 1913, he was based at Masongaleni in Kenya, where he was employing 400 men, made up from different tribes, which was unusual given that so many labourers were brought in from British India at the time. 

During the First World War, he joined the Uganda Railway Volunteers as a Secondary Lieutenant, retiring with the rank of Honorary Major. [[82]] He rose through the ranks to become Chief Engineer of the Kenya and Uganda Railway by 1928, and Chief Engineer and Government Inspector of Railways and Harbours, Kenya and Uganda. [83] He was a member of the International Organization for Standardization, founded in 1947. 

On 12 March 1914, he married Margaret M Hamill at the Catholic Church, Chiswick; they had several daughters and a son, John. On their return from Africa, they lived at 32 Harold Road, Upper Norwood, London. In 1939, their eldest daughter Dorothea Marion Bunbury was married at the Church of the Faithful Virgin in Upper Norwood to Cuthbert Joseph Richardson. Her sister, Margaret Molyneux Bunbury was bridesmaid. [84] 

When the Second World War broke out, he went to work as an Air Raid Warden. In a widely publicized gesture, he donated 40 guineas, the sum total of his earnings as a warden, to the Finland Fund in 1940. [85] His only son John was killed in the war. (See below). Cecil died on 16 May 1970 at 106 Foxley Lane, Purley, Croydon, Surrey. 

  

F/O John Shirley Bunbury (1922-1942) 

F/O John Shirley Bunbury, Cecil’s only son, was born in Nairobi in 1922 and educated by the Jesuits at Beaumont College in Berkshire. He served with the Royal Airforce Volunteer Reserve during the war. He was injured at Kinver after having to force-crash a Tiger Moth during pilot training at Stourbridge, Worcester. 

After a short recovery spell at Corbett Hospital in Stourbridge, he was awarded his wings and posted in December 1941 to 455 Squadron RAAF which had Australian ground crew at Swinderby Lincolnshire and was equipped with Hampden bombers. Initially he carried out sea mining and attacks on the Channel ports before moving to German cities. He completed 17 missions with the squadron before posting to 50 Squadron at Swinderby at the end of April 1942 where he flew an Avro Manchester. He took part in Operation Millennium the “1,000 aircraft” raid against Cologne on 30/31 May 1942. 

On August 17th 1942 he piloted a Lancaster bomber that left from RAF Swinderby to join a stream of 139 aircraft on a bombing mission to Osnabruck. His plane was lost without trace and neither it nor the bodies of John or his six crew were found. They may have been shot down by AA flak off the Dutch coast. Although he was only twenty years old, this was John’s 30th mission after which he would have been rested from operation. He is recalled at Runnymede RAF memorial. [86] 

***** 

REV PERCY ST. PIERRE BUNBURY (1879- 

Percy St. Pierre Bunbury, the third and youngest son of Thomas Henry Bunbury and his wife Marion (née Martin), was born at Hornsey, Middlesex, on 25 October 1879. He graduated from St Catherine’s College, Cambridge, with a BA in 1904, after which he was ordained a priest and became Curate of St. Clement’s, Barnsbury, Islington and of St. Ann, Stamford Hill (1904-09). [87] Having earned an MA in 1906, he became something of a wandering curate in London, serving at Salehurst, East Sussex (1909-11); Sandy (1911-12); St Stephen’s, Battersea (1912-13); St. Mark, Peckham (1913-16); St. Matthew’s Denmark Hill (1917-19); Lane End, Bucks (1920-21) and St. Michael’s Stockwell (1922-23). It is not yet known where he went from Stockwell but he died in St Barnabas Homes, Dorman, Lingfield, Surrey, on 16 November 1963. 

***** 

MARION SHIRLEY BUNBURY (B. 1881) 

Marion Shirley Bunbury, the eldest daughter of Thomas Henry Bunbury and his wife Marion (née Martin), was born at Hornsey, Middlesex, on 26 June 1881. In 1923, she married Captain Francis Leonard Cater. He was probably a son of the Rev Joseph Cater, MA, who served as Rector of St John the Baptist, Bisley, near Woking, Surrey, from 1886 to 1895. The Rev Cater was Worshipful Master of Bisley Lodge No. 497, and an associate of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society and knew Sir Ernest Shackleton, the Antarctic explorer. If this is the right link, Francis Leonard Cater was born on 2 February 1889 and died in November 1975. [[88]] 

EDITH MARJORIE BUNBURY (1885-1971) 

Edith Marjorie Bunbury, the youngest daughter of Thomas Henry Bunbury and his wife Marion (née Martin), was born in Islington on 6 July 1885. She was a charity worker and lived at Lyndhurst Road, Peckham, Camberwell, and wrote an unpublished diary. Part of this referenced her horror at drunken munitions workers during the Great War, and her support of Lloyd George’s campaign to end drinking. [89] In 1916 she was a donor to ‘a maternity unit for the relief of refugees’ from Russia and Poland at 50 Parliament Street, London. [90] She died on 26 May 1971. 

Johnstown House – AFTER THE bunburys 

Johnstown House was substantially renovated in the 1840s, with Tudor Revival façade enrichments added, including stepped gable, crenellations, turrest finials and paired chimney stacks. By 1837, John Campion had sold the house, with 700 acres, to a Thomas Elliot. In 1867, Mr Elliot’s eldest son, Nicholas G Elliot, was married in Dublin to Anna, eldest daughter of Sir Thomas Ross of Castletown, Co. Carlow. (The Gentleman’s Magazine, 1867, p. 809). In 1870, it was registered as belonging to Robert Tighe with Mr Elliot as agent, and had 1,652 acres. From Elliot it went to Arthur Fitzmaurice, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Antiquarians. [91] 

The house was rented in 1913 and then purchased in 1918 by Corry Langrishe Connellan. His daughter, Phyllida, married Admiral Sir Walter Couchman, KCB, CVO, DSO, OBE, a former Vice-Chief of Naval Staff. At the Coronation Naval Review in 1953, he led the Fleet Air Arm Fly Past in a Vampire jet. The Admiral died in 1981. Johnstown is now the home of the Admiral’s son John, his wife Mary and their family. Mary Couchman is godmother to this author, and a damned good one too.  

FOOTNOTES 

[1a] Curiously, Urglin may derive its name from the O’Lyn or Leyn family; Lisnavagh was associated with Redmond Leyn in 1606. Johnstown is part of Bennekerry townsland and RC parish but part of Urglin or Rutland and Staplestown for COI Parish. The name Urglin is only used in recent years in historic terms. I grew up a mile away from Urglin Church and same distance from The Towers. It was called Rutland and Urglin is really only used to name the Church nowadays. It was always called Rutland COI. So Rutland and Urglin postal address is Rutland and Urglin, Bennekerry, Palatine. Rutland, Urglin, Ardnahue, Johnston, Friarstown, Russellstown, Duckett’s Grove, Burton Hall, Palatine are allpart of Bennekerry. 

[1b] Eric St. John Brooks, Knights’ Fees in Counties Wexford, Carlow and Kilkenny, 13th-15 Century (Stationery Office, 1950), p. 69. 

[2] These were Walter Wall of Droughty, County Galway, ancestor of the Walls of Coolnamuck, County Waterford; Richard, ancestor of the Walls of Dunmoylan, County Limerick and John, the fourth son, ancestor of the Walls of Ballymalty. 

[3] N.L.I., Dublin, G.O. Ms. 66, quoted at http://burkeseastgalway.com/wall-of-drought/ 

[4] Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland, Sir Bernard Burke (Harrison, 1863). 

[4a] Memorial dated 26th & 27th October 1712 & registered on 22nd January 1712. Patrick WALL of Catherlogh, co Catherlogh, Esq and Ulick WALL, son and heir apparent of said Patrick WALL – in consideration of £500 sterling grant lands of Clonmshoneene, Ballybreene, Ballycoolune, Cranochan, one moiety or half of the lands of Killane and Myshall, co Catherlogh. To:- Benjamin BUNBURY of Killerrig, co Catherlogh, Gent. Witnesses: James FITZPATRICk, Catherlogh, co Catherlogh, apothecary, Matthew HUMFREY, Catherlogh, co Catherlogh, merchant and Thomas PURLEVENT of Catherlogh, co Catherlogh, Gent. Signed: Benjamin BUNBURY [seal] (Thanks to Susie Warren).  

[5] The memorial can be found at #9230 vol. 18 p. June 6, 1717 John Green to Joseph Bunbury in the Grantor Indexes to the Deed Memorials at the Dublin Land office. The indexes are also recorded by the Church of Latter Day Saints in their Family History Libraries. Tom La Porte kindly made the following notes on the memorial although, as he said, ‘ this isn’t anything like a transcription, it’s just some words selected here and there to get the flavour of the people and the land involved’. Having had a lifelong fear of land law ever since I purchased Wylie’s magnum opus, I do not understand the actual linguistics of the memorial. His notes read: ‘Memorial of a mortgage bearing date Mar. 12, 1713 between John Green of the town of Catherlogh Gent. of the one part and Joseph Bunbury of Johnstown, in the said county Esq. of the other part whereby Green in consideration of 165 pounds paid to him by Joseph Bunbury has sold to Joseph Bunbury his Estate Right Title and Interest in and to One Fee Farm deed of lease dated Sept. 26, in the 11th year of the reign of the late Queen Anne made by the Right Hon. Henry Earl of Thomond to John Green of all that tenement and plot of ground situated in Dublin Street in the Town of Catherlogh (followed by land description) also a tenement and plot in Southcott Lane in the town of Catherlogh along the River Barrow (further land description). 

[6] Congreve’s Irish Friend, Joseph Keally , Kathleen M. Lynch, PMLA, Vol. 53, No. 4 (Dec., 1938), pp. 1076-1087. 

[7] ‘Thomas Burdett Esq: the Case of Thomas Burdett’; occasioned by a printed paper entitled ‘The Case of Joseph Bunbury, Esq, late High Sheriff of the Counbty of Catherlogh’ [complaining of Bunbury’s conduct with regard to the election in Co. Carlow]. This may refer to an incident in November 1713 ( ‘The History and Antiquities of the County of Carlow’, John Ryan, 1833 page 261) where Burdett challenged the results of the election, claiming ‘that Benjamin Bunbury Esq., high sheriff of said county, having been guilty of partial, undue and illegal practices at said election, in favour of Jeffery Paul Esq., did return the said Jeffery Paul as knight of the shire for said county’. Benjamin was accused of interfering in in the election process in ‘a zealous and most industrious manner’, menacing, managing, seducing, and creating freeholders. A further reference on page 16 of ‘The Carlow Parliamentary Roll’ by Robert Malcolmson, M.A.T.C.D., states ‘that Benjamin Bunbury Esq. high sheriff of the said county’ had been found guilty of the above charges. The complaint was referred to the Committee of Privileges and Election but nothing seems to have come of this. Perhaps the challenge was lost amid the events surrounding the death of Queen Anne and the Hanoverian Succession in August 1714.  

[8] #9238 vol. 18 June 5 & 6, 1717 Fagan to Bunbury, Grantor Indexes to the Deed Memorials. The deed concerns a memorial of mortgage ‘by way of lease and release between Hugh Fagan of Kilewick, co. Carlow, gent of the one part and Joseph Bunbury of Johnstown, co. Carlow Esq. of the other part’. By this deed, Fagan ‘conveyed unto Joseph Bunbury part of the lands of Rathdean, co. Carlow, lately Wentworth Harman’s part containing 130 acres profitable land’. The lease also covered ‘the lease for three lives renewable for ever made to the premises by Wentworth Harman to Richard Butler, Gent who assigned the same to Hugh Fagan to hold unto Joseph Bunbury, his heirs and assigns during the three lives in the lease’. Once again, Thomas Bunbury of Cloghna was a witness. 

[9] A memorial deed connected to the Burtons of Burton Hall suggests that Joseph was dead by April 1719, which is a little confusing. Memorial (78.216.54765) dated 12th April 1719 reads as follows: ‘Benjamin Burton of Burton Hall Co Carlow to James Jones of Killmacart Co Carlow The Warren lands of Killmacart – 88 acres Barony of Rathvilly [Lop] ??? of Clonmore county of Carlow deed dated 25th March 1718 for the lives of said James Jones, Hanah Jones, wife and Mary his daughter… with £13.6d provided … received fees plus 4 capons at Christmas or 5/- in lieu of. [Capon is a French word for castrated male chicken or fat male chicken] Joseph Bunbury of Johnstown county of Carlow deceased. Witnessed by John Whelan, John Russell of Rutlands. John Whelan and Francis Robinson, Francis Hardy.’ (Thanks to Susie Warren).  

[10] Thomas U. Sadleir, ‘Loveday’s tour in Kildare in 1732‘, Kildare Archaeological Society Journal 7 (1912–14) 168–177. In Loveday’s Tour of Kildare in June, 1732, he remarks “We returned to dinner to Col. Nevil’s [Dollardstown], who dined with us y e day before, when we had also y e company of Mr. Henry Bunbery’s lady, of Mrs. Spencer [Mr. Stratford’s sister], and 3 of y e Plunkets her nieces.’ The editor says that this is the Harry Bunbury mentioned in the Autobiography of Pole Cosby of Stradbally, Queens County, as being a school-fellow of his at John Garnet’s Latin School in Athy in 1717-1718. In fact, Pole Cosby names ‘Billy and Tom Bunbury of y County Carlow and Harry Bunbury who married Miss Pinsent’ as being ‘the chief of my schoolfellows’, albeit alongside almost fifty other names. He also mentions ‘Robert Pinsent now a Minister’. See his description of Athy school at  

[11] November 1744 – Hear Ye. By Virtue of a Warrant under the hand and Seal of Jacob Peppard Warren Esquire. High Sherriff of Carlow upon a Writ issued forth of his Majesties Court in Ireland bearing to Peter Nowlan of BallyKeeley now a Prisoner in the Gaol of Carlow under a Warrant of Henry Bunbury Esq. for Treason whenever he shall be brought for Trial. Witnessed : Beauchamp Bagenel Esq.~ Thomas Gurly Esq.-Beaumont Astle Esq.~ Harcourt Pilsworth Lightburne Esq.~Hardy Eustace Esq. (Pat Purcell Papers). 

The High Sherriff for Carlow in 1744 was Jacob Peppard Warren from Nurney]. Maurice Warren, his father, had supported William III yet Jacob’s grandfather John Warren, MP for the borough of Carlow 1689, supported James II and served as a Captain in the Jacobite army under Sir Maurice Eustace. John Warren was attained, lost considerable lands in Carlow and his will was proved in 1701. It is not known whether he died of natural causes or was hanged but he reputedly had a large family, including Maurice, most of whom lived in County Carlow. Thanks to Michael Purcell, Roger Nowlan and Susie Warren. For more, see http://nolanfamilies.org and “The Early Cullen Family” page 188.  

[12] For instance, William O’Shaughnessy (1674-1744), was colonel of Clare’s regiment in the Irish Brigade and attained the rank of marshal after almost fifty years of active service in France, a period which began when he served in King James’s army at the Boyne. 

[13] Henry may be the Henry Bunbury referred to in the following document which is an abbreviated transcription from a long account of property transaction on faded parchment in the Pat Purcell Papers and is provided courtesy of Michael Purcell. It is to be noted that. 

This Indenture made the fourteenth day of July in the Second Year of the Reign of our Sovereign and Chief Lord, George, King, and so Forth, of the Kingdom of Ireland, between the Honourable Arthur Dawson, of Athy Street in the County of Catherlough, and the Court of the Exchequer in Ireland, Dublin, Esquire, one of the Barons of our Lord the King of the one part and Henry Bunbury, of the same, Esquire, one of our Justices of the Peace of our Lord the King, of the other part.  
Witnessed here that in consideration of the yearly Rent and Covenants herein mentioned to lett the house, outoffices and garden adjoining, situate on Athy Street, in the Town and County of Catherlough, bounded on the West by the River Barrow walk, on the East by Athy Street, on the North by Gurley’s Plotts and on the South by Dobbyn’s and Proctor’s Holding. 
ALL THAT TO HAVE AND TO HOLD ALL THAT herein mentioned for and during the Reign of our said Lord the King, by the said Henry Bunbury, his Executors, Administrators, and Assigns, the said House and the Ground adjoining commencing the twentyfirst day of July in the Second Year of the Reign of our said Lord the King. 
(signed) George Dawson, Bart. Henry Bunbury, Esquire, J.P. 
Witnessed this the Fourteenth Day of July in the Second Year of the Reign of our Sovereign Lord the King, (signed) Walter Carmichael, Clerk for Catherlough, James Jackson, Assistant Clerk. 

[14] Pat Purcell Papers. 

[15] A history of the Pynsent (sometimes Pinsent, or Pysint) family of Chudleigh in Devonshire can be found in ‘A history, military and municipal of the ancient borough of the Devizes’ by James Waylen and E. H. Goddard (Brown & co., 1859), p. 394-397. A branch settled at Erchfont near Devizes where they have a large vault in the chancel of the church (later appropriated by others), but no memorial to state who any of them were. Two hatchments of the Pynsent family were also destroyed. There is a record of a Robert Pynsent from circa 1738. Sir William was buried at Erchfont. 

[16] Sir Robert was Rector of Kilmurry and Dunmoylan, Limerick (1741-1772), P. Donoghmore, Limerick (1764-1766), R. V. of Macroom (1767-1772) and Vic. Chor of Limerick(1773-1778) ; and P. Moville, Derry (1772 to his death in 1781). 

[17] MARRIED. At Johnstown, County Carlow, James Archibald Hamilton, Esq; to Miss Harriot Bunbury. Freemans Journal (5-7 June 1770). Thanks to Bob Fitzsimons. 

[18] He is this not to be confused with another Henry Bunbury who represented the parish of Fennor as a prebendary in Cashel from his collation on May 14th 1781, and who died in 1785 and was buried in Tipperary. 

[19] Educated at Trinity College Dublin, the Rev. Christopher Harvey was an eminent churchman in the hey-day of the Church of Ireland, being variously Rector of Kyle, Incumbent of Rathdowney and Rosscarbery, and Prebendary of Edermine. He became a key player in the Volunteer movement of the late 1700’s, openly speaking out against England’s neglect and misrule of Ireland. He gave a sermon of thanks for the Volunteers, a portion of which ran: “To our public misfortune was added every distress of a private nature, the small remnant of trade dealt out with a niggard hand to us…Manufacturers were pining in our streets for lack of bread and the labourers and useful peasant – one of the glories and support of empire- forced by distress to flee from their families and native homes.” This reference to the crippling trade laws imposed by England became the hallmark of his persona. In his last years he tried to create an apolitical society for the betterment of agriculture. 

[20] Dublin Evening Post – Tuesday 8 June 1784, p. 1. 

[21] Dublin Evening Post, 3 November 1789, p. 4. 

[22] Deed 426 532 278682 dated 29.11.1790. 

[23] REGISTRY OF DEEDS DUBLIN ABSTRACTS OF WILLS VOL. Ill 1785-1832 
1 WALSH, WILLIAM, Esq. 25 Oct. 1783. Full tf> p. 14 Feb. 1785. Brother and heir of Philip Walsh, deceased, late a Major of Dragoons. My brother’s and my debts to be paid and thereafter my real, freehold and personal estate to my brother-in-law Robert Bunbury, Esq., exor. Witnesses to will and memorial: Peter McDermott, city of Dublin, Edwd. Hunter, city of Dublin, Jno. Carroll, Golden Lane, attorney. 363,421,244985 Robt. Bunbury (seal). For more see here. 

[24] With thanks to John Colclough. 

[25] A deed dated 29th November 1790 – and which is probably a marriage settlement refers to “Revnd Henry Bunbury eldest son & heir at law of Robert John Bunbury of Borlanlinstone, Queen’s Co; & Henrietta Eleonora Shirley spinster & Hon: Henrietta Maria Shirley widow and guardian of said Henrietta Eleonora both of Annadale, Dublin.” (Deed 426 532 278682 dated 29.11.1790). 

[26] JB. Leslie, History of Kilsaran union of parishes in the County of Louth, being a history of the parishes of Kilsaran, Gernonstown, Stabannon, Manfieldstown and Dromiskin; with many particulars relating to the parishes of Richardstown Dromin and Darver, comprising a large section of Mid-Louth” 

[27] Pat Purcell Papers. 

[28] DEATHS. At Liverpool, on the 21st December, aged sixty-nine years, Henrietta Eleanora. wife of the Rev. Henry Bunbury, and daughter of the late Hon. and Rev. Walter Shirley. Perthshire Courier – Thursday 6 January 1842, p. 2. 

On the 21st ult. in Falkner-street, Liverpool, Henrietta Eleanor, wife of the Rev. Henry Bunbury, and mother of the Revs. Messrs. R. S. and T. H. Bunbury, formerly curates of St. Peter’s, Nottingham. Nottingham Review and General Advertiser for the Midland Counties – Friday 07 January 1842. 

On the 21st inst., in Falkner street, Liverpool, in the sure and certain hope of the resurrection to eternal life, Henrietta Eleanora. wife of the Rev. Henry Bunbury, and daughter of the late Hon. and Rev. Walter Shirley. Waterford Mail – Wednesday 29 December 1841 

[29] The registered papers of the Office of Chief Secretary of Ireland from 1818 to 1852 include a letter from Reverend Henry Bunbury, then a Church of Ireland curate of Drummaul, County Antrim, to the Chief Secretary’s Office at Dublin Castle and dated 10th August 1821. In the letter, he complaining of his reduced circumstances and debt. He enclosed a memorial requesting relief and claimed that ‘the entire of his Landed property in the hands of a Receiver under the Court and owing to frauds having been committed against his property he has been obliged to seek redress by engaging in a very weighty Chancery suit’. He also included a certificate from Captain Thomas Martin, indicating that Henry was both the representative and heir of Colonel Philip Walsh of 12th Regiment of Dragoons, ‘a most excellent officer’. Does this refer to Philip Walsh, his grandfather? (NAI REFERENCE: CSO/RP/1820/250) 

[30] For details of a case in the Court of Chancery in which the Rev Henry Bunbury and others were defendants against Hon. Benjamin O’Neal, Stratford, plaintiff, over lands at Burntchurch and Gracetown, County Tipperary, from circa 1813-1824 era, see, for instance https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001057/18130102/017/0004 or https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000435/18220601/036/0004 … This linked in with Robert Bunbury, late of Portarlington. 

[31] Journals of the House of Commons (1824), Volume 79, p. 990. See also references to tithes and Henry Bunbury here, such as letters from 26 Aug 1833-31 Aug 1833 (CSO/RP/1833/4138) from [Rev Henry] J Bunbury, Grosvenor Square, London, [England], to [Lieut Col Sir William Gosset, Under Secretary, Dublin Castle], asking how to proceed against a tithe commissioner who does not certify an agreement between Bunbury and parishioners; stating that he is incumbent of Kilcoan and Kilbride, [County Waterford], also mentioning his son James Bunbury, Waterford, [County Waterford] to whom he enclosed a letter. 

[32] Feb. 22, at South Frederick-street, Dublin, at the advanced age of 83 years, the Rev Henry Bunbury, for many years Rector of Kilcoan and Kilbride, in the diocese of Ossory, and formerly Rector of Mansfieldstown, in the county of Louth. Belfast Commercial Chronicle, 2 March 1846, p. 3. 

[33] March 20, in Upper Canning-Street, Harriet, eldest daughter of the late Rev. Henry Bunbury. [Liverpool Mercury – Tuesday 21 March 1854, p. 7] 

[34] On the 28th inst., at 72, Canning-street, Frances Anne, second daughter of the late Rev. Henry Bunbury. (Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser -Tuesday 30 October 1855, p. 7) 

[35] DEATHS. At Ranelagh, Louisa, fifth daughter of the Rev, Henry Bunbury. Dublin Morning Register – Saturday 14 November 1829, p. 4. 

[36] DEATHS. At Williamstown, Black-rock, aged 12 years, Henry, youngest son of the Rev. Henry Bunbury; he died in perfect submission to the will of his Heavenly Father, humbly trusting in the merits of his Redeemer. Saunders’s News-Letter, Wednesday 8 August 1827, p. 3. 

[37] He was almost certainly James Bunbury of Gaulskill, Cappagh, who was land agent to the Rev Hans Hamilton, Rector of Knocktopher. Butler was killed alongside Sub-Inspector James Gibbons (a veteran of the Napoleonic Wars), eleven constables and three others on a boreen in the townland of Carrickshock Commons, between Ballyhale and Hugginstown. 

[38] In 1839, James Bunbury, late of Raheen, Co. Carlow, and described as a Yeoman, is charged with theft on 5th July. His crime was to ‘feloniously’ steal, take, and carry away ‘against the Peace of our Lady the Queen, her Crown and Dignity’, one Frieze Coat, value one shilling, ‘of the goods and chattels of one Thomas Watson of Ballydarton’. (Pat Purcell Papers). At this time, Thomas Watson was Master of the Hunt, a position he held for 62 years from 1807-1869. He was grandfather of Myra Bunbury, who married Jack Bunbury, and ancestor of Joe T. Watson, the Chairman of the Augusta Golf Club,). This ‘James Bunbury’ could feasibly have been Henry and Eleanora’s son. But does this James really fit the yeoman description? 
[39] Jamaican details via Stirling Observer, 8 April 1916. 
The shipping lists for Ellis Island that on May 3rd 1905 HSB and his wife Clare and daughter Eleonora arrived in New York on the S.S. Mesaba and the ship’s manifest showed HSB as being headed for Hamilton, Ontario whilst lower down on the passenger list and immigration list both CB and EB are headed for Home at 13,Bold Street, Hamilton, Ontario. The papers show that HSB had previously entered the U.S. whilst for his wife and daughter it was their first time. In 1908 HSB entered the U.S. at Ellis Island as a passenger from Cuba to meet his wife who was at a Brooklyn address. So he left Canada for Cuba sometime in 1906 or thereabouts. Obviously after his bankruptcy someone in the family organized the funds to get the family to Canada and later on to Havana. 

[40] The Scotsman – Thursday 20 May 1920, p. 12. Henry Shirley Bunbury is claimed as a muse of Oscar Wilde, as per https://muse.jhu.edu/article/500941/summary 
Modern Drama, 41 (1998) 327 328 W, CRAVEN MACKIE: “Thirty years later Kerry Powell would echo Reverend Ridgway’s disappointment: “Bunbury’s name, like so many in Wilde’s plays, is difficult to pin down in terms of its source.”4 Green himself rejects the possibility of place names as a source, arguing instead for names of actual people. He concludes that Bunbury was “a composite” of two contemporary figures, classical scholar Edward Herbert Bunbury and an acquaintance of the Wilde family in Dublin during Wilde’s youth, Henry Shirley Bunbury. Among the replies to Ridgway’s inquiry, Green discovered a letter from Henry’s son Walter recalling , “My father gave me to understand that it was he whom Wilde had in mind” at the time the play was written. Walter further recalls that his father “was in rather poor health,” convincing Green that Henry Shirley Bunbury was indeed “the primary model.”5 Without crediting Green, Richard Ellmann adopts the family friend thesis: “Many of [Wilde’s] relations lived in England, and so did friends like Henry S. Bunbury … who would give his name to the errant behaviour of Algernon in The Importance of Being Earnest.,,6 Kerry Powell argues that “the concept of Bunburying – and its name – could have been suggested to Wilde by the recent success of Godpapa,”7 an unpublished farce that had enjoyed a modest run in 1891 and in which an aspiring drunk named Bunbury unwittingly facilitates a kind of Bunburying by the hero. Joseph Donohue and Ruth Berggren reason that “Wilde appears to be following his habit of deriving surnames from place names,'” citing the village in Cheshire, and Peter Raby dutifully reports that the name can be found in the Army Lists of 1894.” Do any of these speculations, however, provide a logical explanation for what prompted the hastily scribbled note “Mr. Bunbury – always ill”? Wilde had not seen or heard from the family acquaintance for sixteen years. He never met or acknowledged the classical scholar. That he would have had any desire to recall a nearly forgotten play by a rival playwright seems doubtful. And there is no proof that he had any knowledge of the village in Cheshire or of the Bunbury tucked away in the 1500 pages of the Army Lists. ” 

[41] In August 2017, I was contacted by Ignacio Fiterre of Miami, Florida, who told me that his mother Clara Teresa Bunbury was born in Cuba in 1916 and was a daughter of Molesworth Charles Bunbury who died in Cuba four years before Ignacio’s birth in 1945. Ignacio added: ‘I knew my great uncle, Cecil Bunbury and great aunt Nora Bunbury. Both passed away in Cuba in the mid 1950’s. Their older brother, Walter Bunbury was a Commercial Intelligence Officer at the British legation in Havana until 1939 when he retired and went to live in Plymouth. The remaining Bunburys in Cuba fled to the United States in 1960. All I have are copies of letters from my great uncle Walter Bunbury to his cousin, Sir Henry Bunbury and a family tree.’  
In September 2017, I was contacted by Ignacio’s first cousin Susan Bunbury, daughter of Charles Bunbury (1913-2008), who was a brother of Clara and thus a son of Molesworth Charles Bunbury. Susan, a graphic designer, was born in 1955 in Havana, Cuba. She has a sister, Elizabeth (1943) in Jacksonville, Fl, and a brother, Richard (1956) who lives near her in the Boston area. She was too young to meet her grandfather and his siblings but she also has copies of the aforesaid letters and tree.  
[42] BUNBURY —June 26, St. Philip’s Church, Kensington, by the Rev. A. Johnson, brother of the bridegroom, M Johnson, Esq. of Cleveland Terrace Gardens, Kensington, son of the late Rev M Johnson, to Harriet Eliza, only daughter of J. H. Bunbury, Esq., of Waterford, and granddaughter the late Rev. Henry Bunbury. and of the late Major-General Kettlewell, RA. Northern Whig – Saturday 30 June 1866, p. 2. 

The Lisnavagh agent William Johnson was still alive in 1874 so seemingly not the same man! 

[43] White’s History of Norfolk – Ditchingham – The House of Mercy, or Female Reformatory, was founded in 1858 by the late rector, the Rev. William Edward Scudamore, M.A., and has a Refuge at Norwich in connection with it. It is a large red-brick building, with room for 30 inmates, and surrounded with a high wall, in the precincts of which is a Community House, erected in 1868 for the use of the sisters, who have a small chapel, built in 1864. It is conducted by the Church of England Sisterhood, who have also, at a short distance from the Reformatory, an Orphanage for daughters of clergymen and others, built in 1864, at a cost of £2000, to accommodate 30 children, and enlarged in 1881, at a further cost of £700, as a School for Boarders of a higher class. Attached to it will be an Industrial Training School for 16 girls, now in course of erection, at a cost of £600. Between the Orphanage and the Reformatory is the chaplain’s house, a neat Gothic building, built in 1873 at a cost of £600; also a gardener’s house and other lodges.  

[44] Brian McKenna, Irish Literature, 1800-1875: A Guide to Information Sources (Detroit: Gale Research Co. 1978) McKenna (Irish Lit., 1974) summarises, ‘freshness and humour distinguish the best of her work, including her early novels on Irish themes.’ See also Irish Book Lover, Vols. 1 & 3; and ibid., Vol. 7 (1916) pp.105-07. According to the Mormon database, Selina Bunbury was born in 1807, daughter of Henry Bunbury of Tynan, Armagh, and Henrietta Eleanor Shirley. Other sources date her birth to 1806. For a biography of Selina, see 
https://www.deburcararebooks.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Irishwomen-Children-Education.pdf 

[45] Liverpool Standard and General Commercial Advertiser- Tuesday 31 January 1843, p. 6. 

[46] Coventry Standard – Friday 05 June 1846, p. 4. 

[47] MARRIED. On Tuesday, the 13th Instant, at St. Mary’s Church, Leamington, by the venerable Archdeacon Shirley Bunbury, incumbent of St. Thomas’s, St. Helens, son of the Rev. H. Bunbury, and grandson of the late Hon. and Rev. Dr. Shirley, to Millicent Adele, third daughter of S. Tertius Galton, Esq. of Dudson House, Warwickshire, and Lansdowne Place, Leamington, Waterford Chronicle – Saturday 17 May 1845, p. 2. 

Millicent Adèle Galton was born at Ladywood, Birmingham, on 21 July 1810. She was a first cousin to Charles Darwin through her mother Frances Ann Violetta Darwin. Her brother Sir Francis Galton, the pioneer of eugenics, married Louisa Jane Butler (1822–1897) on 1 August 1853; the union of 43 years proved childless.  

[48] Hampshire Advertiser – Saturday 13 September 1845, p. 2. 

[49] BIRTHS On the 13th inst., at Swansea, the lady of the Rev. Robert Shirley Bunbury, Vicar of Swansea, of a daughter. (Leamington Spa Courier, Saturday 21 March 1846).  

Extracts from the memoirs of Adèle’s sister Elizabeth Ann Galton, with kind thanks to Yvonne ____. 

……’I mentioned that Adèle had been upset in her donkey carriage and her face cut and plastered up. The day after my Mother and I went to St. Leonards and Adèle was left alone, Mr Robert Bunbury called to see her. He had been curate to Mr Craig at the Parish Church for some time and knew Adèle, seeing her at the school and at Dr Marsh’s. He left Leamington and soon after got a living in Lancashire, and immediately came to Leamington to propose to her, saying that he had long been attached to her, but had not means to marry her till then. Adèle, with her patched face, told him that she must think about it and talk it over with her family before she could give him an answer. When she joined us, she told me what had happened, and we both agreed nothing could be said or done while my Father was so ill. Adèle wrote to tell him she could not think about it under the circumstances. He however was very persevering and, soon after we returned home, he told my Mother and came to Leamington and was soon after accepted. He was an excellent clergyman, much liked and respected wherever he had been. His Mother was a Shirley, his Uncle and Aunt a good old couple in Derbyshire, respected and liked by everyone.’ 

…….. ‘On 24th January (1845) I returned home, Mr Bunbury came to Leamington and called every day, and was finally accepted by my sister. His cousin became Bishop of St. Asaph, and a curious thing happened. Mr Shirley, to escape legacy duty, made over all his money to his son the Bishop, who however died before his father, so that he had to pay all the expenses to get his own money back!….  

…….’On 13th May, my sister Adèle was married to Robert Bunbury at St. Mary’s Church. As we were all in deep mourning, the wedding was perfectly quiet: Darwin, Mary, James and Lucy, Erasmus, Francis, Mr Thomas Bunbury, Emma and I went to Church. Darwin gave her away, and Archdeacon Shirley (afterwards Bishop of St Asaph) married them. Dr Marsh and Mrs Chandos Pole came to breakfast with us and, soon after, Adèle and her husband set off to the Isle of Man. We were delighted with Archdeacon Shirley, so truly religious a man, without any cant. Religion seemed to pervade everything he said, and we were sorry when he went.’…..  

……’About this time Robert Bunbury had the living of Swansea given to him, the value about £860 a year, and he and my sister were glad to leave St. Helens and remove there. Swansea was a large place, and many of the inhabitants were Unitarians, but Robert gradually made friends with them by conciliating manners, and was much liked by all the Protestants. He preached excellent practical sermons, and he and my sister did much good during the short time they were there.”…. 

…….’My sister Adèle Bunbury was getting near her confinement and, as I was so near, it was settled we should go to Swansea that I might be with her. We therefore left Cross, after a pleasant visit, went by post to Ilfracombe, and the next day went in a small sailing packet across the Bristol Channel, being assured we should soon get across. All went well till we were half way, when the wind fell and there was a dead calm, and not an inch could we move. The cabin was a small place one could not move in, and no room to lie down in, and we began to think we should be all night. The sailors whistled for a wind, and after not moving for an hour at so, one exclaimed “She’s coming,” and soon after, a breeze came on and we landed at six o’clock at the Mumbles, not far from Swansea. A large omnibus, capable of carrying sixteen people inside, was just starting, and we went in it to Swansea. There was no one but ourselves in the vehicle, and we were consequently jolted all the way. We were received very kindly by Adèle and her husband in their comfortable house, and we found her pretty well. The next day we took a lodging near her, which was fortunate, for I was laid up for some days and not able to leave the house.’……  

…….’I have said before that many of the principal families and others in Swansea were Unitarians, and soon after Mr Bunbury came, they challenged him to prove they were wrong in their belief. Mr Bunbury wished to decline controversy, but they insisted. In consequence, he preached a sermon, a copy of which I have, which created a great sensation in Swansea. It was delivered a Sunday or two before we arrived, and everyone was talking about it and praising it. The Church was crammed to hear it – many Unitarians present. A young officer, Mr Wills, told me the interest was so great, you might have heard a pin drop, as the saying is; though the service lasted three hours, everyone was sorry when it was over. As soon as I was well, I spent most of the day with my sister, who was confined on 13th March of a little girl, Millicent. She made a good recovery, and we stayed in Swansea till 26th March. It was a large town and not well kept. The pipes which carried the water down from the tops of the houses did not go down into a drain, but stopped about a foot from the ground, and consequently the water ran upon the footpath after rain. Many lobsters were caught in curious baskets; the bay was covered with these baskets.’…….  

……’On 5th May we went to stay at Claverdon and saw a letter come from Adèle, saying that Robert Bunbury was dangerously ill of gastric fever, which was just then very prevalent in Swansea; nearly every house suffered more or less. At one time the account of Robert was better, and we quite hoped he would recover.’………  

……..’In the meantime, Adèle was in constant anxiety about her husband and sent her baby and its nurse to my Mother, for fear it should take the fever, and she and Robert would follow as soon as he was well enough, but on 25th May he had a relapse and became worse every day till the 28th, on which day he died. My poor sister had gone through much trouble, the two doctors disagreeing about his treatment and quarrelling by his bedside. Robert Bunbury was only forty-two years old’. 

‘It was agreed among us that Edward and I should go at once to Adèle, and we set off on the 30th, as far as Bristol, where we slept, and the next day we went on in the Swansea mail, a long day’s journey. Being Sunday, there were scarcely any passengers but ourselves. An intensely hot day, and the dust covering everything, I was alone inside, and vary glad when Edward recommended me to come outside with him. We arrived very late and slept at the hotel. I went to see my sister as soon as I arrived and found the house full. I was with Adèle all day, and we urged her to return with us after the funeral, for sickness and fever were raging in the town. 

‘On 3rd June the funeral took place. Mr Thomas Bunbury, my Husband, three clergymen, and three doctors attended, and this scarcely a month after I had left them so happy with their child. The last service Robert Bunbury performed was christening his own child. The day after, the Bunburys left, and we began packing away everything in the house safely till she returned. Great sorrow was expressed by all at Swansea at the loss of their Vicar, and Mr Warner preached a very good sermon on the occasion.’…..  

[50] YARDLEY. On Wednesday last, at the Parish Church of Yardley, Mr. John Christopher Baron Lethbridge, of Tregeare, near Launceston, Cornwall, was married to Millicent Galton, only daughter of the late Rev. Robert Shirley Bunbury, M.A., Vicar of Swansea. The bride was given away by her uncle, the Rev. Thomas Henry Bunbury, B.A., and the service was performed by her cousin, the Rev. Hesketh Biggs, M.A. The bride is the grand-daughter the late Mr. Samuel Tertius Galton, of Duddeston Hall, near Birmingham ; and the bridegroom a justice of the peace in Cornwall, who succeeded his father, Mr. John King Lethbridge, for twenty years the highly respected Chairman of the Quarter Sessions in that county. The old parish church was tastefully decorated by Miss Baird, Miss Ashmore, Miss Sarah Barrows, and other friends of the bride, with wreaths and flowers, and the walls were ornamented with the following appropriate mottoes:—”God bless, preserve, and keep them,” “Peace be on them and mercy,” “The Lord make His face to shine upon them, and be gracious unto them,” &c. 

The weather was very fine, and the village presented an animated appearance. elegant triumphal arch was erected over the gate leading to the church, under the direction of the Rev. Frederick Beynon. The youthful bride was dressed rich white moire antique dress, and wore a tulle veil, with a wreath of orange blossoms. The bridesmaids, eight in number, consisted of Miss Lethbridge, Miss Annie Lethbridge, Miss Elinor Lethbridge, Miss Lucy Wheler, Miss Alston, Miss Emilia Lloyd, Miss Emma Lloyd, and Miss Chapnis, and were accompanied by their respective groomsmen, viz., Captain Simcoe, R.N.; Mr. Philip Simcoe, the Rev. S. L. Warren, Mr. Christopher Lethbridge, Mr. Paul Simcoe, Mr. George Fillingham, Mr. John King Lethbridge, and Mr. Shirley Bunbury. 

The appearance presented in the chancel of the church during the performance of service was not only pretty but imposing. After the marriage the happy pair, together with the bridesmaids, groomsmen, relations, and friends, were conveyed to the Oaklands, the residence of Mrs. Bunbury, the mother of the bride, in twelve carriages, and partook of an elegant breakfast. Among those present were—Mrs. Lethbridge, the mother of the bridegroom, Mrs. Alston, the Rev. Jones Burleton Bateman and Mrs. Bateman, Mr. Edward Wheler and Mrs. Wheler, Mr. Thomas Lloyd and Mrs. Lloyd, Miss Galton, of Leamington, Miss von Scriba, Miss Sarah Barrows, the Rev. Henry Gisborne Cooper, Mr. William Evans, &c. Later in the day the newly-married couple left the Oaklands for Shrewsbury, en route for North Wales and Scotland. 

Aris’s Birmingham Gazette – Saturday 26 May 1866, p. 8. 

[51] In 1850, the 27 year old was married in Liverpool to Robert Henry Jones. Born in Lancashire in 1824, Robert Henry Jones was a son of John Jones, who started the business in the 1820s, ultimately bequeathing it to Robert and his brother Alfred in the 1840s. In the mid- 1840’s, Alfred Jones & Co., Flax and Hemp Merchants, had their base at 17 Goree Piazzas. Directory listings for the 1850’s show Alfred living at Grove Road, Wallesey. It is suspected that the family had residences on the Wirral, but little is known about them. 

[52] On the 8th instant, at St. Paul’s Church, Prince’s-park, by the Rev. T. H. Bunbury, Incumbent, of Seghill, Northumberland, Robert Henry Jones, Esq., of this town, to Clara, youngest daughter of the late Rev. Henry Bunbury. Liverpool Mail, 12 January 1850, p. 7.  

[53] Westmorland Gazette – Saturday 24 December 1831, p. 3. 

[54] On Thursday, the 28th ult., [Sept] at St. Nicholas’s church, Nottingham, (by the Rev. Henry Bell, B.B.,) the Rev. Thomas Henry Bunbury, B. A., to Mary, second daughter of the late Mr. Bell, of Nottingham. (Lincolnshire Chronicle, 6 October 1837, p. 3.) An online forum suggests Mary was a daughter of Nottingham grocer John Bell and his wife, Dorothy (née Fox). 

[55] At Whitwick Vicarage, Leicestershire, on the 14th inst. the lady of the Rev. Thomas Henry Bunbury, of a son. (Lincolnshire Chronicle – Friday 28 February 1840) This was THB junior. 

[56] DEATH of the Rev. T. H. BUNBURY. We regret to announce the death of the Rev. T. H. Bunbury, Vicar of Christ Church, Warley, which took place early on Monday morning. Mr. Bunbury had reached the ripe age of 83 years, and was appointed Vicar of Christ Church in 1855, and he had, therefore, held the living nearly 33 years. The deceased gentleman, who was a member of the Low Church School, was most zealous in the discharge of his Ministerial duties, and he was held in the greatest respect by all classes in the district. (Essex Standard – Saturday 7 January 1888, p. 3.) 

‘The Rev. Thomas Henry Bunbury, B.A. (Trinity College, Dublin), has just died at Christ Church Vicarage, Great Warley, Essex, a vacancy in that benefice being thus created. On being ordained in 1831 by Dr. John B. Sumner, Bishop of Chester, Mr. Bunbury was licensed to the Curacy of Birkenhead Parish Church, which he retained until 1839, when he accepted a similar appointment at Whitwick, near Leicester, which living is in the gift of the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. After holding the Vicarage of Sighill, Northumberland, for nine years, he in 1855 accepted the living of Christ Church, Great Warley, which now becomes vacant. The benefice, to which a residence is attached, is worth £270 per annum, the patrons being the trustees. Mr. Bunbury was on his 83rd year.’ Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser, 5 January 1888, p. 3. 

[57] Among other marriages he officiated at was this one: Earthy— Trimm.— April 25th, at Christ Church, Great Warley, by the Rev. Thomas H. Bunbury, Vicar, Mr. William George Nixin Earthy, Officer of Excise, Tower Hill, to Emily, second daughter of Mr. Charles Trimm, of the Brewery, Brentwood. Essex Standard – Friday 05 May 1871 

[58] Bunbury – 19th inst. at Christ Church Vicarage, Great Warley, Mary, the beloved wife of the Rev. Thomas Henry Bunbury, aged 64. (Chelmsford Chronicle, 22 January 1869, p. 8.) 

[59] BUNBURY – Jan. 2nd, at Christ Church Vicarage, Great Warley, the Rev. Thomas Henry Bunbury, for 33 years Vicar of the parish, in his 83rd year. [Essex Standard, 7 January 1888, p. 5] 

For the story of a theft of silver from the Rev Bunbury’s house at Great Warley on 18 December 1861, resulting in a sentence of 15 months hard labour on a mechanical engineer, see https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000165/18610308/007/0002 … Or of the theft of Dorothea Bunbury’s gold Geneva watch from the Great Warley kitchen in 1871, while on loan to the cook, for which the culprit received a days imprisonment and 12 strokes with the birch see https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000225/18710908/053/0008 

[60] At a committee meeting of the Christ Church Reading-room, Warley, the following resolution has been passed unanimously : “The committee of the Christ Church Reading-room and Mutual Improvement Institute, in adjourning as a mark of respect to the memory of their late president, beg to express their deep sense of the great loss they have sustained through the death the Rev. T. H. Bunbury, and tender Miss Bunbury and the other members of the family the respectful assurance of their warmest sympathy with them their sad and sudden bereavement.” 

On Sunday Christ Church was draped with crape and black cloth, the work having been carried out by Mr. and Mrs. Spells, assisted by Mr. Mason and others. The hymns sung were appropriate, and the sermons preached by the Rev. Julian Harvey bore upon the sad event which filled the minds of his congregation. At the close of the morning service Mr. Thomas Bunbury, eldest son of the deceased, played the ” Dead March” in Saul. At the Congregational Chapel on Sunday the Rev. W. Legerton paid a high tribute to the work and character of the late Mr. Bunbury, and spoke of the loss which the Christ Church district has sustained by his death. 

THE FUNERAL. 

The great respect entertained for the deceased gentleman and the regret felt at his death were strikingly manifested on Monday afternoon last on the occasion of the funeral. The shops were either wholly or partially closed, blinds were drawn, and a large and representative company assembled first in the church and afterwards in the Great Warley Cemetery to show their regard for the memory the deceased and their sympathy with the bereaved family. 

The body was met at the entrance to the church by the Bishop of Colchester, the Rev. Canon Fraser, the Rev. H. R. Bailey, and the Rev. Julian Harvey, the opening passages of the Burial Service being read by the Bishop Colchester. The Rev. Julian Harvey took the next part of the service, and the beautiful hymn, “Now the labourer’s task is o’er,” was sung. The lesson was read by the Rev. Canon Fraser, and this was followed by the hymn, “How bright those glorious spirits shine.” 

As the body was borne out of the edifice Mr. Thomas Bunbury, the deceased’s eldest son, played the “Dead March” in Saul. A procession was then formed and moved slowly down the Warley-road to the Cemetery, where a large crowd was in waiting. 

At the head of the procession, walking two abreast, were Mr. E. Ind, Colonel Wood, Mr. W. A. Turnbull, Mr. W. J. Burgess, Mr. E. J. Burgess, the Revds. J. H. Newnum, R. T. Pollexfen, JS Goodday, J. A. Hull, A. H. Stephens, J. Donaldson, A. M. Greenwood, B. A., H.J. Clay, Kilburn, C . Gregson; W. Legerton and A. M. Carter, B.A. (Congregationalists), W. Walker (Baptist), W. Burnett, and Messrs. J. Biggs, Nichols, J. Young, O C. Cramphorn, R. Earthy, G. Davey, O. Brook, J. W. Pratt, E. King, A.T.G. Woods, T. Tate (representing Mr. Daldy, a former churchwarden), T. Hayes, H. Harlock, French, R. J. Longmore, F. C. Longmore, Gibson, Matt, Bridge, Messrs. P. Slaughter. G. Hammond, Jos. Winter, S. G. Carter, Warner S. Ford, G. Morris, W. King, Lloyd, Brewster, Rose, and many others. The officiating clergy came next, followed immediately by the coffin, which was covered with beautiful wreaths, and was borne by relays of bearers. 

The mourners were Mr. Thomas H. Bunbury, Mr. Shirley Bunbury, and the Rev. Robert J. Bunbury, sons of the deceased; Miss Bunbury, daughter; Mrs. Thomas H. Bunbury, Mrs. Shirley Bunbury, Miss Mary Bunbury, Master Harry Bunbury, and the Rev. R. Martin. 

The procession was brought up by the carriages of Mr. Ind, Mr. Turnbull, Mr. H. Joslin, Mr. Biggs, and others. The first part of the service at the grave was read by the Rev. H. R. Bailey and the concluding part by the Bishop of Colchester, the body of the deceased lowered into the same grave which contained the remains of his wife. 

The inscription upon the coffin was “Rev. Thomas Henry Bunbury, born 24th June, 1805, died 2nd Jan., 1888.” 

Among those who sent wreaths were the district visitors, the children of the Christ Church and Crescent-road Sunday Schools, the teachers of Christ Church and Crescent-road and Day Schools, the members of Church Reading-room, some of the oldest parishioners, the Misses A. K. and M. Parley, Mr., Mrs., and the Misses Biggs, Mr., Mrs., and Miss Clowes, Mr. and Mrs. Nichols and family, Mr. and Mrs. Cramphorn, Mr. O. C. Cramphorn, parishioners’ churchwarden, Mrs. Moull, Mrs. Taylor (cut flowers), and others. The funeral arrangements were carried out with perfect decorum Mr. W. Cudby, undertaker, of Warley road. 

Chelmsford Chronicle, 13 January 1888, p. 6. 

[61] Rev Shirley Bunbury had an address at 10 Turle Mansions, Tolington Park N, London. He was born on 16 May 1841 and married Lucy Gibson on 13 Oct 1870. Norfolk News, 09 June 1906. 

[62] Essex Newsman – Saturday 18 January 1908 

[63] Rev Alfred Bunbury of Rickmansworth, Herts was curate of Hammersmith Parish Church, London. He was married on 15 May 1901 to Florence, daughter of Richard Greenham of Trieste, and had a son, Richard Ferrers Bunbury, born 5 March 1903. Alfred was ‘greatly beloved, and especially so by the poor and the members of the Church of England Men’s Society, of which he took a deep interest.’ His nephew Percy Bunbury was at his funeral. Chelmsford Chronicle – Friday 10 June 1910, p. 8. 

[64] Details of Arthur’s demise at https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001842/19000915/071/0004 

[65] Morning Post – Thursday 23 December 1869, p. 6. He was born on 27 December 1842. 

[66] An Account of the Railway Accident at North Charford on 3 June 1884 The terrible railway accident which happened at North Charford on Tuesday, June 3rd, is too fresh in our minds to need any detailed description here. One of the middle carriages of the 4.50 train from Downton got off the rails about two hundred yards below the pile bridge across the Avon, and gradually working further to the left and inner side of the curve, finally caused seven carriages to fall down the embankment into the meadow. The three central ones were smashed to pieces, and two of these fell into a pool of water. A few men who saw the accident from the road, and the professors and students of the Agricultural College, were soon on the spot to render assistance, and Dr. Hartley and other medical men arrived shortly afterwards. About thirty persons were more or less seriously injured, some of whom were taken to Salisbury Infirmary, and others were received by Professor Clarkson into the Agricultural College. Four persons were killed, whose names are well known to many of us. They were Mr George Waters, jun., Mrs Lush, Mrs Corbin, and Miss Lilian Chandler; and one more Mr Dent died at the Infirmary next day. The Rev. R. J. Bunbury was in the second carriage, and had a most fortunate escape, of which he thankfully spoke in his sermon on Sunday morning. This event has been a great saddening of our Whitsuntide festivities, and has been much in the thoughts of us all. It is, in fact, a great sermon preached by God himself in the ears of every man, woman and child in Downton, which they can never forget as long as they live. (From Downton Parish Magazine, July 1884) 

[67] Chelmsford Chronicle – Friday 14 February 1913. 

[68] Barking, East Ham & Ilford Advertiser, Upton Park and Dagenham Gazette – Saturday 04 April 1903 

[69] Essex Standard, 11 March 1870, p. 3. 

[70] Morning Post, 1 July 1875. 

[71] Chelmsford Chronicle – Friday 02 July 1875, p. 8. 

[72] Bareilly is a city and district in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. BUNBURY.— Dec. 12, at Bareilly, Claremont-road, Highgate, Thomas Henry Bunbury, eldest son of the late Rev. T. H. Bunbury. vicar of Christ Church, Great Warley, aged 53. [London Evening Standard – Tuesday 19 December 1893, p. 1] 

[73] Khandallah is a suburb of Wellington, the capital city of New Zealand but the house is more likely named for Khandela in the Sikar district of the Indian state of Rajasthan, which s said to mean “Resting place of God” in an unspecified language. 

[74] Dod’s Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage of Great Britain and Ireland, Including All the Titled Classes (1921), p. 130. 

[75] BUNBURY-MERIVALE.—On April 20, at St. John’s Church. Paddington, by the Rev. Meyrick J Sutton and the Rev. P. St. P Bunbury, uncle and brother of the bridegroom, Henry Noel Bunbury, of the Treasury, eldest son of the late Thomas Henry Bunbury and Mrs. Bunbury of Khandallah, Eastbourne, to Dorothea , youngest daughter of the late Walter Merivale, M.I.C.E., and Mrs. Merivale of Chiswick. (Eastbourne Gazette – Wednesday 3 May 1911, p. 1.) 

‘The marriage took place at St. Giles’ Church, Oxford, on Tuesday, of Captain Richard Walter Rawlins, of the Ist Battalion Northamptonshire Regiment, only son of Lieutenant-Colonel J. Rawlins, of Great Houghton, and Miss Agnes Merivale. second daughter of the late Mr. Walter Merivale, M.lnst.C.E., and Mrs. Walter Merivale. of Oxford.’ Northampton Mercury – Friday 17 August 1906 

[76] Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer – Friday 22 January 1937, p. 10. 

[77] His photo was taken by Elliot and Fry, and can be obtained from the National Portrait Gallery at https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp79974/sir-henry-noel-bunbury  

[78] Yorkshire Evening Post – Friday 23 April 1926, p. 8. 

[79] Daily Telegraph 28 Feb 2006. 

[80] See https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C11645608 

[81] Thomas inherited the title in 1969 on the death of his father, Edward Ettingdean Bridges, 1st Baron Bridges; his mother was the Hon. Katharine Dianthe Farrer, a daughter of Thomas Cecil Farrer, 2nd Baron Farrer and Evelyn Mary Spring Rice. 

[82] His medal card is at https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/D1583477 

[83] He was promoted to Acting Chief Engineer on the Uganda Railway from 18 December 1925. Recorded as District Engineer, Uganda Railway, Nakuru, in Kenya Gazette, 27 April 1927; he was Chief Engineer of the Kenya & Uganda Railway by 1928. (Lawrence Saunders, The Railway Engineer, Volume 49 (S. R. Blundstone, 1928) 

[84] Croydon Advertiser and East Surrey Reporter – Friday 04 August 1939, p. 4. 

[85] ‘Mr. Cecil M. Bunbury, an Air Raid Warden, of Upper Norwood, London, S.E., has sent a cheque for 40 guineas to the Finland Fund. This sum represents his earnings as a warden since soon after the outbreak of war.’ Staffordshire Sentinel – Saturday 10 February 1940 

[86] See his picture and more details at http://aircrewremembered.com/bunbury-john-shirley.html 

[87] Morning Post – Tuesday 04 October 1904, p. 5. 

[88] A leading stoker with the Royal Navy named Francis Leonard Cater died on HMS Jupiter when it struck a mine on 27 February 1942. Alternatively, he may have been the Francis Leonard Cater who was born in 1873 and died in Manhattan in 1944 

[89] Her 1914-1915 diary is held by the London Metropolitan Archives, A/FH/F15/001/001-2 Jerry White, ‘Zeppelin Nights: London in the First World War’ (Random House, 2014). The National Archives (UK) hold a letter of 1936 from Edith M.Bunbury, Hazel N. Napier, Anne Elizabeth Rees, Ayana Angadi, Bela Menczer, Ruth von Schulze Guvernitz with suggestions on Abyssinia. (LP/WG/ITA/397) 

[90] Common Cause – Friday 18 February 1916, p. 12. 

[91] The following notes are provided by Bill Webster via Carlow Rootsweb, taken from Irish Genealogy Carlow COI records, Thomas and Anne Elliott had the following children baptised -1825 Mary Elliott at Aghold Parish 
1828 Mary Anne Elliott of Johnstown House at Urglin Parish 
1830 Thomas Bookay Elliott of Johnstown House at Urglin Parish 
1833 Nicholas Goselin Elliott of Johnston House at Urglin Parish 
1835 Elizabeth Elliott at Painestown Parish 
1838 Charles Simeon Elliott at Painestown Parish 
In 1870 Thomas Gosselin Elliott, son of Nicholas and Anna was baptised at Urglin Parish.  
Freeman’s Journal, November 5, 1840; On the 30th ult. the Rev. Charles Elliott, of Ballintubber, in the Queens County, son of the late Thomas Elliott, Esq., Racrogue, County Carlow, to Sophia, daughter of the Rev. Samuel Downing, rector of Fennagh, County CarlowDublin Evening Mail. “Marriages” “Elliott and Courtenay” August 13, 1861, at St. Anne’s Church by the Rev. Charles Elliott, rector of Ballintubber, Queens County, Laois, uncle to the bridegroom, and the Rev. Alexander Pollock, Nicholas G. Elliott, late Lieutenant 62 Regiment, eldest son of Thomas Elliott, Esq., of Johnston House, County Carlow, to Jane Adelaide, second daughter of Edward Henry Courtenay, Esq., of St. Stephens Green. Charles Elliott, 2 Nov 1818 aged 16 [b.c. 1802] son of Thomas, generosus. Born in Carlow. BA Vern. 1823 MA Nov 1832. From Griffiths to at least 1867, Rev Charles Elliott is recorded at Ballintubbert co Laois. Elliott did another wedding for his brother’s youngest daughter, Elizabeth, in 1857.Elliott was rector of Ballintubbert between 1831 and 1879 after which Ballintubbert was joined to Stradbally. So, the Thomas Elliott having children above in the 1830s was a brother of Charles, sons of Thomas. 
Charles Elliott Cairns of Monkstown dying while skating in Moritz, Switzerland.