Ballyseede Castle, Ballyseede, Tralee, Co. Kerry

www.ballyseedecastle.com

Open: Jan 1-Dec 22, 8am-12 midnight

Ballyseede Castle, March 2023. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Ballyseede castle (pronounced Ballyseedy) is now a hotel, and Stephen and I treated ourselves to a stay in March 2023. The house was built in around 1760 for the Blennerhassett family, and parts were added and gothicized over time. Gothic revival additions may have been designed by William and Richard Morrison. Later renovations were carried out by James Franklin Fuller.

The castle is now one of four owned by the Corscadden family. We have visited the other properties: Cabra Castle in County Cavan and Markree in County Sligo, both of which are also section 482 properties (see my entries). We also visited the fourth, Castle Bellingham in County Louth, kindly welcomed by Patrick, who showed us around and I told him of my website. I am in the process of writing about that in my “Places to visit and stay in County Louth” page, still a work in progress.

Ballyseede Castle, March 2023: bifurcating staircase rising behind a screen of Doric columns at one end of the hall. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

The website tells us:

Take a step back in time with a hotel steeped in history that offers luxurious surroundings within 30 acres of private gardens and woodland.

The Doric columns that lead to an elegant oak staircase in the lobby are indicative of the grand decoration throughout the hotel. Impressive drawing rooms with ornate cornices, adorned with marble fireplaces provide an ideal setting for afternoon tea or morning coffee.

Elegant accommodation, fine dining with traditional Irish cuisine, rooms that tell a story and the picturesque natural setting, will all comprise to make your stay at Ballyseede Castle an unforgettable one.”

The entrance gates are described in the National Inventory: “Gateway, built c. 1825, comprising four limestone ashlar piers with wrought-iron double gates, flanking pedestrian gates and curved quadrant walls with half-round projecting bays having blind pointed arches. Painted and rendered walls with stone copings and having arched blind openings with painted sills.” © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The lovely drive up to the castle. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Ballyseede, March 2023. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Ballyseede Castle, March 2023: Limestone ashlar porch with crow-step gable and arched doorway with double-leaf panelled door. This porch was added in around 1880. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Ballyseede Castle, County Kerry. Impressive lions flank the door. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Ballyseede Castle, March 2023. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

The castle comes complete with dogs, a trademark of the Corscadden hotels. The Irish wolfhounds add elegance to wedding photographs.

The castle comes complete with dogs, a trademark of the Corscadden hotels. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
I fell in love with this affectionate little doggie, who had a particularly thick soft coat. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Her brown shaggy friend was adorable too and they vied for attention, full of excitement every time I stopped to pet them. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

The Landed Estates database tells us that the Blennerhassett family was originally from Cumbria in the north of England. Robert Blennerhassett was the first to settle in Kerry. He married Elizabeth, daughter of Captain Jenkin Conway of Castle Conway, Killorglin, County Kerry, formerly known as Killorglin Castle (now a ruin). He was originally from Pembrokeshire in Wales.

Between 1611 and 1618 Robert acquired lands in Ireland. He held the office of Member of Parliament (M.P.) for Tralee in 1613 and between 1635 and 1639. He lived in an old castle named Ballycarty Castle and also owned the old Ballyseedy Castle. The current Ballyseede Castle is different from the original Ballyseedy Castle, a castle that had belonged to the Fitzgeralds, located at the west end of Ballyseedy Wood.

The Landed Estates database tells us that a John Blennerhassett was granted an estate of 2,787 acres in the barony of Trughanacmy, County Kerry (where Ballyseede Castle and Ballyseedy woods are located) and 2,039 acres in the barony of Fermoy, County Cork under the Acts of Settlement in 1666. [1] This John is probably son of Robert.

Lady Blennerhassett (I’m not sure which one), Ballyseedy Castle, Tralee, Co. Kerry, Irish school 18th century, Adams auction 19 Oct 2021

John Blennerhassett, son of Robert and Elizabeth, was, following his father’s footsteps, MP for Tralee [2]. He too lived in Ballycarty Castle, now a ruin. He married Martha Lynn, daughter of George from Southwick Hall, Northamptonshire, England. They had several children and he died in 1676.

His younger brothers Edward and Arthur married and lived nearby.

The lawn in front of the castle. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

John and Martha’s son John was also MP for Tralee and high sheriff, but died only a year after his father, in 1677. He had married Elizabeth Denny in 1654, whose family lived in Tralee Castle (it no longer exists). She was the daughter of Edward Denny (1605-1646) who was also an MP and High Sheriff for County Kerry. [see 2] The Denny and Blennerhassett families intermarried over generations.

Edward Denny (1547-1600), who was granted land in Tralee County Kerry after the Desmond Rebellions photograph courtesy of the Roaringwaterjournal website.

In her Voices from the Great Houses: Cork and Kerry (2013) Jane O’Hea O’Keeffe tells us about the grandfather of Edward Denny (1605-1646), Edward Denny (1547-1599/1600), who moved to Kerry:

Following the Desmond rebellions of 1569-73 and 1579-83, Sir Edward Denny of Waltham Abbey, Herefordshire, who was born in 1547, was granted 6,000 acres of land around Tralee, County Kerry. The ruined thirteenth century Tralee Castle, formerly a Desmond property, was included in the grant. Sir Edward Denny was a relative of Sir Walter Raleigh, who was also granted 42,000 acres in Cork and Waterford at this time.” [3]

John Blennserhassett and Martha had other children beside John who died in 1677. Their son Robert also held the office of MP for Tralee and High Sheriff of County Kerry in 1682. He married Avice Conway (d. 1663), a daughter of Edward Conway of Castle Conway, County Kerry. Their son John (d. circa 1738) inherited Castle Conway from his mother.

John (d. 1677) and Elizabeth née Denny’s son John (d. 1709) was MP for Tralee, Dingle and County Kerry at various times. He married Margaret Crosbie (1670-1759) of Tubrid, County Kerry (Tubrid House no longer exists, and should not be confused with Tubbrid Castle in County Kilkenny). Her father Patrick held the office of High Sheriff of County Kerry in 1660.

Margaret née Crosbie and John Blennerhassett had several children. After John’s death in 1709 Margaret married David John Barry in the same year, son of Richard Barry (1630-1694) 2nd Earl of Barrymore but they had no children together.

Margaret and John’s heir was Colonel John (1691-1775), who was called “Great Colonel John” thanks to his hospitality. He followed in his forebears’ footsteps, becoming an MP. In 1727 he signed a family compact with Maurice Crosbie of Ardfert and Arthur Denny of Tralee, partitioning the county representation among the three families [see 2].

Colonel John married Jane Denny, daughter of Colonel Edward Denny (1652-1709) of Tralee Castle.

A website about the Blennerhassett family tells us that in 1721 the first “Ballyseedy House” was built among ruins of the Geraldine Ballyseedy Castle at the west end of Ballyseedy Wood. Colonel John lived here with his family. [4]

The foundation stone dated 1721 over the seventeenth century fireplace. The foundation stone is from the earlier Blennerhassett home called “Ballyseedy Castle,” built in 1721, and the fireplace may be from the earlier Ballycarty Castle or the Desmond Ballyseedy Castle. This fireplace is now in Ballyseede Castle (built c. 1780). © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

It was Margaret and John Blennerhassett’s younger son William (1705-1785) who built the house which has become the hotel Ballyseede Castle. It was built around 1780 (the National Inventory says c. 1760) and named “Elm Grove.” [4] William died during its construction and the work was completed around 1788 by his son William Blennerhassett Jr. (c. 1735-1797).

We will return to William and his family later. First, let’s look at the older son Colonel John and his offspring.

Colonel John’s son John Blennerhassett (1715-1763) would have succeeded his father and lived in the original Ballyseedy House, if he had not predeceased him in 1763. This John was admitted to the Middle Temple in London to train for the legal profession, and he also held the office of High Sheriff of County Kerry, in 1740, and M.P. for County Kerry between 1751 and 1760. He married Anne Crosbie, daughter of William Crosbie of Tubrid, County Kerry, who was MP for Ardfert between 1713 and 1743. Her mother was Isabella Smyth from Ballynatray, County Waterford, another Section 482 property – gardens only – that I’ll be writing about soon. Anne Crosbie had been previously married to John Leslie of Tarbert, County Kerry (another section 482 property which I hope to visit soon), but he died in 1736.

Anne died and John Blennerhassett remarried in 1753, this time wedding Frances Herbert, daughter of Edward Herbert (1693-1770) of Muckross, County Kerry. For more on Muckross House, see my entry on places to visit and stay in County Kerry.

Muckross House Killarney Co. Kerry, photograph by Chris Hill 2014 for Tourism Ireland, Ireland’s Content Pool.

Neither of John’s sons married and one died young. His house, Ballyseedy House, fell into disuse.

John’s daughter Frances married Reverend Jemmett Browne (d. 1797) of Riverstown, County Cork, another Section 482 property (see my entry).

Colonel John and Jane née Denny had a younger son, Arthur (1719-1799), who served as MP for Tralee between 1743 and 1760. He married Jane Giradot and had two daughters but no sons. His daughter Jane married George Allanson-Winn, 1st Lord Headley, Baron Allanson and Winn of Aghadoe, County Kerry. She was heiress of her father’s unentailed Ballyseedy estates – this would have been land that did not include what is now Ballyseede Castle. She died in 1825.

Colonel John and Jane née Denny also had several daughters. Agnes, born in 1722, married neighbour Thomas Denny (d. 1761) of Tralee Castle, son of Colonel Edward Denny (1728). Another daughter, Arabella (1725-1795), married Richard Ponsonby of Crotto, County Kerry (now demolished), MP for Kinsale, County Kerry, and then secondly Colonel Arthur Blennerhassett (1731-1810), a grandson of John who died in 1709 and Margaret née Crosbie. A third daughter of Jane and John Blennerhassett, Mary, married Lancelot Crosbie, who lived at Tubrid, County Kerry. Lancelot was MP for County Kerry between 1759 and 1760 and for Ardfert in County Kerry between 1762 and 1768 [see 2].

Ballyseede Castle, March 2023. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Let us return now to Elm Grove, now called Ballyseede castle. It is an eleven-bay three-storey over part-raised basement house, comprising a three-bay entrance bay to the centre with door opening approached by flight of steps, and a pair of three-bay full-height flanking bow bay windows and single-bay end bays. It has five-bay side elevations with three-bay full-height bow bay window to south elevation and eight-bay west elevation with two-bay breakfront. [5]

Ballyseede Castle, March 2023: Five-bay side elevations with three-bay full-height bow bay window to south elevation. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

William Blennerhassett Senior (1705-1785), son of John Blennerhassett (d. 1709) of Ballyseedy and Margaret Crosbie married Mary, daughter of John Morley, Mayor of Cork. Their son William (c.1735-1797) inherited Elm Grove.

Their daughter Agnes, born in 1740, married William Godfrey (c. 1738-1817) 1st Baronet of Bushfield, County Kerry, later called Kilcolman Abbey (renovated by William Vitruvius Morrison in 1818, demolished in 1977).

William (c.1735-1797) held the office of High Sheriff of County Kerry in 1761 and was the Collector of Customs at Tralee, which could have been a lucrative post.

William married Catherine daughter of the interestingly named Noble Johnson of County Cork. William and Catherine’s son Arthur (1779-1815) lived in Elm Grove with his wife Dorcas (1775/7-1822) daughter of George Twiss from Cordell House, County Kerry. Arthur died in 1815, but it seems that before he died he began plans to renovate the house. As was the case with his father and grandfather, Arthur’s son, another Arthur (1800-1843), continued the renovations.

Ballyseede Castle, March 2023. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Ballyseede Castle, March 2023. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

William and Catherine’s daughter Catherine (b. 1777) married Colonel John Gustavus Crosbie (d. 1797), a son of Lancelot Crosbie and Mary née Blennerhassett. He was M.P. for County Kerry between 1795 and 1797. In 1794 he killed Barry Denny, 2nd Bt. in an election duel at Oak Park (now Collis-Sandes House) and was subsequently poisoned, it is said, by the Denny family, which resulted in him falling from his horse as he was riding home from Churchill to his home in Tubrid. Catherine then married George Rowan of Rathanny, County Kerry (a beautiful Georgian house, still occupied). Rowan ordered the militia to fire into the crowd at an election rally killing five people. He was tried for murder but not convicted. [6]

Another daughter, Mary, married another cousin, Captain Nevinson Blennerhassett de Courcy (1789-1845). He was the son of Anne Blennerhassett of the Castle Conway branch of the family.

A younger son of William and Catherine née Johnson, John (circa 1769-1794), served as MP for Kerry between 1790 and 1794. He died unmarried.

Mark Bence-Jones tells us that the Gothic Revival renovation dates from 1816 and may be designed by Richard Morrison (1767– 1849). [7] The work was completed in 1821, and the house renamed “Ballyseedy House” because the original old “Ballyseedy” of Colonel John Blennerhassett at the west end of Ballyseedy Wood had by then fallen into disrepair and disuse.

The house was extended, adding a seven-bay two-storey wing to the north. This wing has a pair of single-bay three-storey turrets to the east elevation. These turrets have battlemented roof parapets and pinnacles. The ten-bay rear elevation to the west has hood mouldings to the openings and a single-bay three-storey corner turret on a circular plan to north-west. [see 5]

The seven bay two-storey Gothic-Revival addition, perhaps designed by Richard Morrison. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
This wing has two single bay three storey turrets. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The Gothic addition has battlemented parapet and hood mouldings over the windows. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

The Blennerhassett site tells us: “It was William Blennerhassett Jr’s son Arthur (1779-1815) and his wife Dorcas Twiss (1775/7-1822) who commenced addition of the long north wing, something of a “folly” with the stable yard surrounded by a great wall of false windows, with two carriage entrances and a round tower of medieval appearance at the north-west corner. The work of architect Sir William Morrison [From 1809 onward Richard Morrison collaborated increasingly with his second son, William Vitruvius Morrison (1794–1838)], this remodelling was completed in 1821, exactly 100 years after the older “Ballyseedy House” house had been built, by his son Arthur Blennerhassett (b. 1799 d.1843) then only 22 years of age.” [8]

Mark Bence-Jones describes: “At one side of the front is a long and low castellated service wing, with round and square turrets, the other side of which has a sham wall, consisting of a long range of false windows.”

I couldn’t work out where this sham wall of false windows was – perhaps later renovations changed this folly.

Ballyseede Castle, March 2023. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Ballyseede Castle, March 2023. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
This is the far end of the wing, with what must be the round tower mentioned in the description on the Blennerhassett website: “addition of the long north wing, something of a “folly” with the stable yard surrounded by a great wall of false windows, with two carriage entrances and a round tower of medieval appearance at the north-west corner.” © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Stephen liked the pike-wielding statues. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
This must be one of the carriage entrances. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
You can see in this photograph that the carriage entrance is open.

At the time of renovations, the son of Arthur and Dorcas, Arthur (1800-1843), was High Sheriff for County Kerry.

The Blennerhassett website tells us:

In the north wing is a “Banqueting Hall” which features a foundation stone dated 1721, set into the wall over primitive 17th century black oak fireplace surround.

In the north wing is a “Banqueting Hall.” © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
We ate our breakfast here every day. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The 17th century oak fireplace in the banqueting hall. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Detail of the seventeenth century fireplace in Ballyseede. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
We were treated to a delicious breakfast every day. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Breakfast includes lovely pastries and I confess Stephen and I sneaked a couple into our bag for lunch! © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Ballyseede Castle, March 2023. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

The Blennerhassett website tells us that another 17th century wooden fireplace surround of finer workmanship was installed in what was the library of the main house (now the hotel bar). The two fireplaces are believed to have been moved with other free-standing oak furniture from “Old” Ballyseedy” as it fell into ruin.

This is the fireplace in the bar believed to have been moved with other free-standing oak furniture from “Old” Ballyseedy” as it fell into ruin. My apologies for the quality of the photographs – the bar is used as a restaurant and I found it impossible to get a good photograph when people were eating in the room! © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
17th century wooden fireplace in the former library of Ballyseede Castle. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The former library of Ballyseede Castle is now the bar, where casual meals are also served. Stephen and I ate here every evening of our stay. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Arthur Jr. (1800-1843) married Frances Deane O’Grady (1800-1834), daughter of Henry Deane O’Grady (1765-1847). This would have been a prestigious marriage. Her sisters married, respectively, Edward Chichester, 4th Marquess of Donegal (Amelia); David Roche (1791-1865), 1st Baronet of Carass, Co. Limerick (Cecilia); John Skeffington (1812-1863), 10th Viscount Massereene (Olivia); and Matthew Fitzmaurice Deane (1795-1868), 3rd Baron Muskerry (Louisa). Thus Arthur would have been very well connected. He served as M.P. for County Kerry between 1837 and 1841.

One of the formal rooms of Ballyseede Castle. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The room has a lovely marble fireplace. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Another of the formal rooms of Ballyseede Castle. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Stephen and I particularly enjoyed the chess set and availed of it on two evenings, imagining ourselves in a drawing room in the eighteenth century. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Ballyseede Castle. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
One of the bay windows of Ballyseede. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

It must have been during this Arthur’s time in the 1830s that Ballyseede was leased to Edward Denny (1796-1889), 4th Baronet.

Edward Denny (1796-1889) 4th Bt , Poet and hymn writer, by Camille Silvy, 1862, National Portrait Gallery of London, Ax57667.

In Voices from the Great Houses: Cork and Kerry (2013) Jane O’Hea O’Keeffe tells us:

p. 160. “Several generations of the Denny family occupied the ancient castle in Tralee. They ran the estate through both peaceful and turbulent times until 1826, when Sir Edward Denny, 3rd Baronet [1773-1831, of Castle Moyle, Co. Kerry], decided to demolish the castle. Tom Denny ruefully remarks, “The demolition of Tralee Castle by Sir Edward Denny was a crime, and much resented in Tralee at that time. People felt angry that part of the town’s history was being destroyed. Sir Edward was really quite a muddled character. As a younger man, when he inherited the estate, he promptly set about enlarging the castle, something which is powerful father-in-law Judge Day found very irritating, and which created enormous problems for Sir Edward’s finances. He subsequently went to live in Worcester. He remained fascinated by genealogy and artefacts from the family’s past and continued to acquire Tudor portraits long after he had pulled down the Tudor remains of the Denny house. 

In the 1830s the Worcestershire Dennys came back to Tralee, and Sir Edward Denny, 4th Baronet, rented Ballyseedy Castle outside the town for a number of years. His younger brother William [1811-1871] became his agent, and he lived at Princes Quay in Tralee in a house when the Dominican church now stands. Sir Edward Denny planned to rebuild the [Tralee] castle, and he replanted the park and also built lodges on the estate. His plans came to an end in 1840 when he joined the conservative Plymouth Brethren movement and he lived thereafter in poverty in London, leaving the management of the estate to his family. 

The indebted Denny estate in Tralee was run by members of the family, or their agents, until 1892, when it was taken over by an insurance company; this severed a family link to the area which had remained strong for over 300 years. 

The Denny estates at one time, stretched to around 29,000 acres, extending from Fenit to Tralee and around the other side of the bay to Derrymore,” explains Tom Denny. “Sir Arthur Denny, 5th Baronet (1838-1921), was a notorious gambler who managed to lose the entire estate by around 1892.” 

The dining room of Ballyseede Castle. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Ballyseede Castle, March 2023. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Arthur Blennerhassett died in 1843 when his son, Charles John Allanson Winn Blennerhassett (1830-1859) was only thirteen years old. By this time, Ballyseedy was probably back in the hands of the Blennerhassetts. Charles’s mother has died when he was only four. I am not sure who raised him. A few of his uncles still lived in County Kerry: His uncle Thomas (1806-1878) remained unmarried and lived in Kerry, and uncle Lt.-Col. Francis Barry Blennerhassett (1815-1877) lived in Blennerville, County Kerry, also unmarried.

Charles John Allanson Winn married Marianne Hickson of Dingle, County Kerry, in 1855. He held the office of High Sheriff in 1858 and was a Justice of the Peace. He died at the young age of 29 and his wife remarried, this time to Captain William Walker. Before Charles died, his wife had two children: Barbara, who died at the age of ten, and Arthur (1856-1939). Young Arthur was only three years old when his father died. He was sent away to school in Harrow in England.

Charles John Allanson Winn Blennerhassett (1830-1859) had several siblings. His sister Adelaide married Standish O’Grady (1832-1860) 3rd Viscount Guillamore, County Limerick. His sister Dorcas married Robert Conway Hurly of Glenduffe, County Kerry. His sister Amelia married Chichester Thomas Skeffington, son of Thomas Henry Skeffington, 2nd Viscount Ferrard, County Louth. Frances Annabella married John Richard Wolseley, 6th Bt of Mount Wolseley, County Carlow. His only brother, Henry Deane, died unmarried in 1850.

Young Arthur Blennerhassett (1856-1939) was the owner of 12,621 acres in 1876 [see 2]. He held the office of High Sheriff in 1878. In 1882 he married Clara Nesta Richarda FitzGerald, daughter of Desmond John Edmund FitzGerald, 26th Knight of Glin.

The house was further remodelled during the 1880s for the Blennerhassett family by James Franklin Fuller (1835–1924), after which it was then known as “Ballyseedy Castle.” Fuller added a battlemented parapet, hood mouldings and other mildly baronial touches. The three-bay single-storey flat-roofed limestone ashlar projecting porch was added to the entrance bay. The Blennerhassett website tells us that the back of the castle became the front at this time.

Older pictures of Ballyseedy. It looks like this could be the original front of the castle. It is identified on the Blennerhassett family website as Ballyseedy c.1837-1841 and their version is titled “The Seat of Arthur Blennerhassett Esq MP, Co Kerry.”

The Blennerhassett family website [8] tells us more about the history:

During the 1880s Arthur’s grandson, Maj. Arthur Blennerhassett (b.1856 d.1939), commissioned a “mock castle” refacing of the house, as was popular during the late Victorian period, these changes causing what had previously been the front elevation and west facing main entrance to become the rear of the house. This work, executed by Kerry architect, historian and Blennerhassett descendant James Franklin Fuller, caused the house to lose its Georgian elegance and simplicity but resulted in the more impressive building we see today. Following these changes the house began to be referred to as “Ballyseedy Castle” and is named as such on the family headed writing paper of the time.” [8]

Unfortunately not having read this fully in advance of our visit, I didn’t take a proper picture of the back of the hotel, not knowing that it had originally been the front!

The back of the hotel. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
An early aerial shot of Ballyseede.

Out the back there is a lovely garden with statues, small hedges, trees and a gazebo perfect for wedding photographs. Unfortunately it rained during most of our visit, so we didn’t get to explore much outside.

The gardens at Ballyseede Castle. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The gardens at Ballyseede Castle. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The gardens at Ballyseede Castle. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The gardens at Ballyseede Castle. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
A later addition to the castle, a sixteen bedroom extension. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Arthur served as Deputy Lieutenant and Justice of the Peace. He fought in the first World War and gained the rank of Major in the 4th Battalion, Munster Fusiliers. In 1918, both he and Clara Nesta (known as Nesta) were appointed as Members of the Order of the British Empire (M.B.E.) for their services: Nesta because during WWI she and her younger daughters Hilda and Vera served as Voluntary Aid Detachment nurses caring for the wounded, first behind the battlefields of France, and later on Lord Dunraven’s hospital ship “Grianaig” in the Mediterranean. 

Arthur and Nesta had three daughters. Hilda and Vera lived at Ballyseedy. Hilda bequeathed the estate in 1965 to her kinsman Sir (Marmaduke) Adrian Francis William Blennerhassett, 7th Bt of Blennerville, County Kerry, who sold it 1967. [see 5] This branch of Blennerhassetts are descendants of Robert Blennerhassett of Ballycarty Castle and his wife Elizabeth Conway also, from their grandson Robert, younger brother of John from whom the Ballyseedy Blennerhassetts descended.

The Blennerhassett website has a copy of the auction of the contents of the house, held by Hamilton and Hamilton in 1967.

The stair hall of Ballyseede Castle. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Everywhere there are little touches and treasures. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Stephen and I loved this carved chair in the front hall. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The halfway landing at Ballyseede Castle, March 2023. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The halfway landing at Ballyseede Castle, March 2023. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The first and second floors of Ballyseede Castle, March 2023. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

Marnie Corscadden was kind enough to upgrade us to a beautiful suite, complete with stand alone clawfoot bath! We had a wonderful stay.

Our impressive bedroom, the Coghill suite. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Our room in Ballyseede Castle, County Kerry, with a stand alone clawfoot bath. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Our bedroom had an amazing carved wooden wardrobe. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The carved wardrobe in our room. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The rooms are named after various families associated with the Blennerhassetts. We stayed in the Coghill Room.
Busy at “work.” © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The bed was a work of art also. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
I can’t wait to go back sometime! © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Stephen admiring the view. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

We explored the other rooms of the castle. The back gardens open into another function room, the Orangerie, which was built in 2017.

The Orangerie, built in 2017. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
I love the balloons! © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
This rooms is very bright and comfortable. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
The Orangerie has some stained glass windows. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
A hallway along the back garden leads back to the reception area. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

There’s also a large reception room.

The banqueting hall in the north wing. We didn’t get to go into this room but I peered through the window to take a photograph. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
Ballyseede Castle, County Kerry. This leads to the large reception rooms. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
I noticed an old service bell in the hallway. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com
We sneaked into another room to see it while it was open for cleaning – I love the Oriental decor. © Jennifer Winder-Baggot, www.irishhistorichouses.com

[1] https://landedestates.ie/family/1834

[2] Montgomery-Massingberd, Hugh. Burke’s Irish Family Records. London, U.K.: Burkes Peerage Ltd, 1976.

List of M.P.s for County Kerry:

1692: Edward Denny (1652-1709 or 1712) of Tralee Castle; Thomas Fitzmaurice (1668-1741) 1st Earl of Kerry

1697: Edward Denny (1652-1709 or 1712) of Tralee Castle; William Sandes

1703: Edward Denny (d. 1727/8, son of Edward Denny (1652-1709 or 1712) of Tralee Castle); John Blennerhassett (d. 1709)

1709: Edward Denny (1676–1727/8); John Blennerhassett (1691-1775)

1715: John Blennerhassett (1691-1775); Maurice Crosbie (c. 1689 –1762) 1st Baron Brandon, of Ardfert, County Kerry

1727: Maurice Crosbie (c. 1689 –1762) 1st Baron Brandon; Arthur Denny (1704-1742), son of Edward Denny (1676–1727/8)

1743: Maurice Crosbie (c. 1689 –1762) 1st Baron Brandon; John Petty-Fitzmaurice (1706-1761) 1st Earl of Shelburne, son of Thomas Fitzmaurice (1668-1741) 1st Earl of Kerry

1751: Maurice Crosbie (c. 1689 –1762) 1st Baron Brandon; John Blennerhassett (1715-1763), son of John Blennerhassett (1691-1775)

1759: John Blennerhassett (1715-1753); Lancelot Crosbie (1723-1780)

1761: William Petty-Fitzmaurice (1737-1805) 1st Marquess of Lansdowne; Lancelot Crosbie (1723-1780)

1762: John Blennerhassett (1715-1763)

1763: John Blennerhassett (1691-1775); Thomas Fitzmaurice

1768: John Blennerhassett (1691-1775); Barry Denny (c. 1744-1794), 1st Baronet

1775: Barry Denny (c. 1744-1794), 1st Baronet; Arthur Blennerhassett (1719-1799) son of John Blennerhassett (1691-1775)

1776: Arthur Blennerhassett (1719-1799); Rowland Bateman (c. 1737-1803)

1783: Barry Denny (c. 1744-1794) 1st Bt; Richard Townsend Herbert (1755-1832)

1790: Barry Denny (c. 1744-1794) 1st Bt; John Blennerhassett (1769-1794)

1794: Barry Denny (d. 1794 in in dual with John Gustavus Crosbie) 2nd Bt; John Gustavus Crosbie (c. 1749-1797) son of Lancelot Crosbie (1723-1780)

1795: Maurice Fitzgerald (1774-1849) 18th Knight of Kerry; John Gustavus Crosbie (c. 1749-1797)

1798: Maurice Fitzgerald (1774-1849) 18th Knight of Kerry; James Crosbie (c. 1760-1836)

[3] p. 157. O’Hea O’Keeffe, Jane. Voices from the Great Houses: Cork and Kerry. Mercier Press, Cork, 2013.

[4] http://www.blennerhassettfamilytree.com/Ballyseedy-Castle.php

[5] National Inventory: https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/21302913/ballyseede-castle-ballyseedy-co-kerry

[6] http://www.thepeerage.com/p27968.htm#i279679

[7] p. 28. Bence-Jones, Mark. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (1988)

[8] http://www.blennerhassettfamilytree.com/Ballyseedy-Castle.php

Portraits C

C

Cornelius Callaghan, M.P., (d.1741), Lawyer Date: 1742 Engraver John Brooks, Irish, fl.1730-1756 After Unknown Artist, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.
Cecil Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore (1605/6-1675), Aged 51 Date c.1657 by Engraver Abraham Blooteling, Dutch, 1640-1690 After Irish 17th century, Irish, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.
Harriet de Burgh née Canning, Countess of Clanricarde (1804-1876), married to Ulick John De Burgh, 14th Earl and 1st Marquess of Clanricarde (1802-1874). I think the portrait is by John Lucas.
Elizabeth Stuart née Yorke (1789-1867). Lady Stuart de Rothesay, with her daughters Charlotte (1817-1861) and Louisa (1818-1891) by George Hayter, photograph courtesy of UK Government Art Collection. Elizabeth was the daughter of Philip Yorke 3rd Earl of Hardwicke; Louisa married Henry de la Poer Beresford 3rd Marquis of Waterford; Charlotte married Charles John Canning 1st Viceroy of India, 2nd Viscount Canning, 1st Earl Canning.
Algernon Capell (1670-1710) 2nd Earl of Essex.
John Craven Carden, 1st Baronet by Robert Hunter courtesy of Adam’s auction 13 Oct 2015. This portrait of John Craven Carden is in the uniform of the Templemore Light Dragoons, a volunteer regiment raised in response to the withdrawal of regular troops required for the American War but which rapidly acquired political leverage. Carden had inherited large estates in Tipperary acquired in the Cromwellian settlement of the 17th Century. Although without parliamentry influence, Carden represented landed interests which the Castle administration were keen to control. Bribes were measured and Carden was made a baronet in 1787. He proved to be a sound man in the 1798 rebellion and by fortifying the Market House in Templemore denied the town to the rebels. He also leased the land for a barracks (now the Garda Training College) and donated the site of the Catholic Church in 1810.
Sarah Cooper née Carleton (born around 1718), wife of Arthur Cooper (b. 1716) of Coopershill, County Sligo. Daughter of Guy Cathcart Carleton of Fermanagh and Mary Brooke of Brookeborough, County Fermanagh.
The painting is a portrait by William Hogarth of the 1st Earl of Charlemont, James Caulfeild (1728-1799) aged 13, with his mother, Elizabeth Caulfeild née Bernard (1703-1743)(portrait painted in 1741).
James Caulfeild (1728-1799) 4th Viscount, 1st Earl of Charlemont, 1790 by Martin Ferdinand Quadal, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.
James Caulfeild, 1st Earl of Charlemont (1728-1799) by Richard Livesay, British, 1753-1826.
Dorothy Bentinck née Cavendish, Duchess of Portland (1750-1794) by George Romney, c. 1772, daughter of William Cavendish, 4th Duke of Devonshire. She married William Henry Bentinck 3rd Duke of Portland who added Cavendish to his name to become Cavendish-Bentinck.
William Cavendish, 3rd Duke of Devonshire, (1698-1755), former Lord Lieutenant of Ireland by Engraver John Faber the Younger, Dutch, c.1695-1756 After Joshua Reynolds, English, 1723-1792, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.
Catherine Cavendish, Duchess Of Devonshire (1700-1777) née Hoskins or Hoskyn, As Saint Catherine by Charles Jervas (1675-1739), courtesy of Whyte’s auction March 2019. She married William Cavendish 3rd Duke of Devonshire.
William Cavendish (1720-1764) 4th Duke of Devonshire, who brought Lismore Castle, County Waterford, into the Cavendish family by his marriage. Painting by Thomas Hudson.
Charlotte Boyle (1731-1754) daughter of Richard Boyle (1694-1753) 3rd Earl of Burlington 4th Earl of Cork who married William Cavendish (1720-1764) 4th Duke of Devonshire and brought Lismore Castle, County Waterford, into the Cavendish family. Painting after style of George Knapton, courtesy of Chiswick House collection.
William Cavendish (1748-1811) 5th Duke of Devonshire by John Raphael Smith, after Sir Joshua Reynolds publ. 1776, NPG D1752.
Elizabeth Christina Foster née Hervey (1759-1824) later Duchess of Devonshire by Angelica Kauffmann courtesy of National Trust Ickworth. She was the daughter of Frederick Augustus Hervey 4th Earl of Bristol, Bishop of Derry who built Downhill, Co Derry. She married John Thomas Foster MP (1747-1796) and later, William Boyle Cavendish 5th Duke of Devonshire. Last, she married Valentine Richard Quin 1st Earl of Dunraven and Mount Earl.
Lady Elizabeth Foster (1759-1824) née Hervey, as the Tiburtine Sibyl c. 1805 by Thomas Lawrence, National Gallery of Ireland NGI788. She was the daughter of Frederick Augustus Hervey 4th Earl of Bristol, Bishop of Derry who built Downhill, Co Derry. She married John Thomas Foster MP (1747-1796) and later, William Boyle Cavendish 5th Duke of Devonshire. Last, she married Valentine Richard Quin 1st Earl of Dunraven and Mount Earl.
William George Spencer Cavendish (1790-1858) 6th Duke of Devonshire by George Edward Madeley, NPG D15276.
Margaret Jones née Cecil (1673-1727) Countess of Ranelagh, 2nd wife of Richard Jones 1st Earl of Ranelagh Engraver: John Smith, English, 1652-1743 After Godfrey Kneller, German, 1646-1723, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.
William Chambers in the style of Joshua Reynolds, courtesy of Adam’s auction 13 Oct 2015
Major Henry Chavasse (1863-1943). 4th Battalion Scottish Rifles.
Anna Georgina Chavasse, née Coghill (d. 1899). She married Reverend William Izon Chavasse (1835-1864).
Theresa Susey Helen Vane-Tempest-Stewart née Chetwynd-Talbot, Marchioness of Londonderry (1856-1919) by John Singer Sargent, Vicereine 1886-89, wife of Charles Stewart Vane-Tempest-Stewart , 6th Marquess of Londonderry.

Baron Chichester (1613)

  • Arthur Chichester, 1st Baron Chichester (1563–1625)
Arthur Chichester (1563-1625) Baron Chichester Of Belfast (c) Belfast Harbour Commissioners; Supplied by The Public Catalogue Foundation.

Baron Chichester and Viscount Chichester (1625)

  • Edward Chichester, 1st Viscount Chichester (1568–1648)
  • Arthur Chichester, 2nd Viscount Chichester (1606–1675; created Earl of Donegall in 1647)

Earl of Donegall (1647)

  • Arthur Chichester, 1st Earl of Donegall (1606–1675)
  • Arthur Chichester, 2nd Earl of Donegall (died 1678)
  • Arthur Chichester, 3rd Earl of Donegall (1666–1706)
Anne Barry née Chichester (1697-1753) Countess of Barrymore, 3rd wife of James Barry 4th Earl of Barrymore. She was the daughter of Arthur, 3rd Earl of Donegall.
Lady Anne Chichester, Countess of Barrymore (d. 1753) Attributed to Philip Hussey, she was daughter of Major-General Arthur Chichester, 3rd Earl of Donegall (1666-1706) and his wife Lady Catherine Forbes (d. 1743), and she married James Barry 4th Earl of Barrymore, and was the mother of James Smith-Barry.
  • Arthur Chichester, 4th Earl of Donegall (1695–1757)
Lady Lucy Ridgeway was the eldest daughter and co-heir of Robert Ridgeway, 4th Earl of Londonderry (d. 1713/14), she married Arthur Chichester, 4th Earl of Donegal (1695-1757), by Jonathan Richardson courtesy of Sothebys L11304.
  • Arthur Chichester, 5th Earl of Donegall (1739–1799; created Baron Fisherwick in 1790 and Earl of Belfast and Marquess of Donegall in 1791). He married Anne née Hamilton (1731-1780) who was the daughter of James Brandon Douglas Hamilton 5th Duke of Hamilton, Scotland. Arthur the 5th Earl of Donegall was the son of John Chichester (1700-1746), who was the son of Arthur 3rd Earl of Donegall.
Anne Chichester née Hamilton, Countess of Donegall (1731-1780), who married Arthur Chichester 5th Earl of Donegall. She was the daughter of James Brandon Douglas Hamilton 5th Duke of Hamilton, Scotland.

Marquess of Donegall (1791)

  • Arthur Chichester, 1st Marquess of Donegall (1739–1799)
Arthur Chichester (1739-1799) 1st Marquess of Donegall, by Thomas Gainsborough, courtesy of Ulster Museum. He was the grandson of the 3rd Earl of Donegall.
  • George Augustus Chichester, 2nd Marquess of Donegall (1769–1844)
George Augustus Chichester (1769-1844) 2nd Marquess of Donegall, courtesy of Belfast Castle.

George Hamilton Chichester, 3rd Marquess of Donegall, Baron Ennishowen and Carrickfergus (1797–1883). He married Harriet Anne née Butler (1799-1860), daughter of Richard Butler, 1st Earl of Glengall.

Harriet Anne née Butler (1799-1860) Countess of Belfast, wife of George Hamilton Chichester 3rd Marquess of Donegal and daughter of Richard Butler, 1st Earl of Glengall.
Frederick Richard Chichester (1827-1853), Earl of Belfast, Courtesy of Ulster Museum. He was the son of the 3rd Marquess of Donegall.
Frederick Richard Chichester (1827-1853) Earl of Belfast courtesy of Ulster Museum.
  • Edward Chichester, 4th Marquess of Donegall (1799–1889)
  • George Augustus Hamilton Chichester, 5th Marquess of Donegall (1822–1904)
  • Edward Arthur Donald St George Hamilton Chichester, 6th Marquess of Donegall (1903–1975)
  • Dermot Richard Claud Chichester, 7th Marquess of Donegall (5th Baron Templemore) (1916–2007)
  • Arthur Patrick Chichester, 8th Marquess of Donegall (b. 1952) [1]
Portrait c. 1740 of Archbishop Robert Clayton (1695–1758) and Katherine née Donellan by James Latham, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland. Known for his unorthodox views, at the time of his death Robert Clayton was facing charges of heresy.
Robert Clayton (1695–1758) Bishop of Cork and Ross, in Iveagh House on St. Stephen’s Green.
Robert Clements, later First Earl of Leitrim, by Pompeo Batoni, about 1753–1754, Hood Museum of Art.
Robert Clements (1732-1804) 1st Earl of Leitrim by Gilbert Stuart courtesy of Christie’s Irish Sale 2001.
Colonel Henry John Clements (1781-1843) of Ashfield, Co. Cavan by Martin Cregan, courtesy of Christie’s Irish Sale 2001. He was the son of Henry Theophilus Clements (1750-1795), a brother of the 1st Earl of Leitrim, and Catherine Beresford (1761-1836). He married Louisa Stewart (1778-1850) of Killymoon, Country Tyrone, daughter of James Stewart (1741-1821).
Charlotte Florentia Percy née Clive (1787-1866), Duchess of Northumberland (1787-1866), by Martin Cregan. She was the daughter of Edward Clive, 1st Earl of Powys, and she married Hugh Percy, Earl Percy.
John Clotworthy (d. 1665), 1st Viscount of Massereene, courtesy of Clotworthy House.
Archbishop Charles Cobbe (1687-1765) of Newbridge House, Dublin
Charles Cobbe (1687-1765), Protestant Archbishop of Dublin Date 1746 by Engraver Andrew Miller, English, fl.1737-1763 After Francis Bindon, Irish, 1690-1765, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.
Charles Cobbe, P. Archbishop of Dublin, (1687-1765) by Engraver Andrew Miller, English, fl.1737-1763 After Francis Bindon, Irish, 1690-1765, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.
Elizabeth Cobbe née de la Poer Beresford (1736-1806), wife of Thomas Cobbe (1733-1814) of Newbridge House, Dublin, in a costume evocative of Mary Queen of Scots, miniature, Cobbe Collection.
This portrait was painted the year that Marmaduke Coghill (1673-1739) was appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer, attributed to Francis Bindon, courtesy of Adam’s auction 15 Dec 2019. A firm adherent to the ‘castle’ administration he had ‘inherited’ from his father the position of Judge of the Prerogative Court and had enriched himself sufficiently to re-build Drumcondra House, probably using Edward Lovett Pearce. He had a penchant for commissioning outstanding pieces of silver from the Dublin silversmiths such as the extraordinary cistern in the Ulster Museum and the Monteith in Waterford. There is a monument to him by Peter Scheemakers in Drumcondra Church. Francis Bindon (1690 – 1765) is the most likely artist to have painted this portrait.
Marmaduke Coghill (1673-1738). Never married, he lived in Belvedere House, Drumcondra before building a house at Clonturk, afterwards known as Drumcondra House, he lived there with his sister Mary until his death. Adam’s auction 9 Mar 2014.
Admiral Josiah Coghill (1773-1850), 3rd Baronet Coghill, of Coghill, Co. York, UK.
Anna Georgina Chavasse, née Coghill (d. 1899). She married Reverend William Izon Chavasse (1835-1864).

I refer to Timothy William Ferres’s terrific blog to look at the Cole family of Florence Court in County Fermanagh, a National Trust property.

William Cole married Susannah, daughter and heir of John Croft, of Lancashire, and widow of Stephen Segar, Lieutenant of Dublin Castle, by whom he left at his decease in 1653,

MICHAEL, his heir;
John, of Newland, father of Arthur, 1st BARON RANELAGH;
Mary; Margaret.

Called Elizabeth Cole Lady Ranelagh, probably really Catherine Cole née Byron (1667-1746) Lady Ranelagh attributed to John Closterman courtesy of National Trust Florence Court. She married Arthur Cole, 1st Baron Ranelagh.

The elder son,

MICHAEL COLE, wedded, in 1640, Catherine, daughter of Sir Laurence Parsons, of Birr, 2nd Baron of the Irish Exchequer, and dvp, administration being granted 1663 to his only surviving child,

SIR MICHAEL COLE, Knight (1644-1710), of Enniskillen Castle, MP for Enniskillen, 1692-3, 95-9, 1703-11, who espoused firstly, Alice (dsp 1671), daughter of Chidley Coote, of Killester; and secondly, 1672, his cousin, Elizabeth (d 1733), daughter of Sir J Cole Bt.

Sir Michael was succeeded by his only surviving child,

JOHN COLE (1680-1726), of Florence Court, MP for Enniskillen, 1703-26, who espoused, in 1707, Florence, only daughter of Sir Bourchier Wrey Bt, of Trebitch, in Cornwall.

Florence Bourchier Wrey (d. 1718), courtesy of National Trust, Florence Court, County Fermanagh. She married John Cole (1680-1726) who built Florence Court, and named it after her.

John and Florence had the following children:

Henry (Rev);
JOHN (1709-67) his heir;
Letitia; Florence.

Mr Cole was succeeded by his younger son, John Cole (1709-67) MP for Enniskillen, 1730-60. John married in 1728 Elizabeth, daughter of Hugh Willoughby Montgomery, of Carrow, County Fermanagh. Mr Cole was elevated to the peerage, in 1760, in the dignity of Baron Mountflorence, of Florence Court, County Fermanagh.

John Cole (1709-1767) 1st Baron Mountflorence of Florence Court, County Fermanagh, courtesy of National Trust, Florence Court, County Fermanagh.

John and Elizabeth had the following children:

WILLIAM WILLOUGHBY (1736-1803) his heir;
Arthur, m in 1780 Caroline Hamilton;
Flora Caroline; Catherine.

His lordship was succeeded by his elder son, WILLIAM WILLOUGHBY, 2nd Baron (1736-1803), MP for Enniskillen, 1761-7, who was created Viscount Enniskillen in 1776; and advanced to the dignity of an earldom, in 1789, as EARL OF ENNISKILLEN.

William Willoughby Cole (1736-1803) 1st Earl of Enniskillen, by Nathaniel Hone, courtesy of National Trust, Florence Court, County Fermanagh. He was the son of John Cole 1st Baron Mountflorence.

William Willoughby Cole married, in 1763, Anne, daughter of Galbraith Lowry Corry, of Ahenis, County Tyrone, and sister of Armar Corry, Earl of Belmore, and had issue,

JOHN WILLOUGHBY (1768-1840) his successor, who became 2nd Earl;
Galbraith Lowry (Sir), GCB, a general in the army;
William Montgomery (Very Rev), Dean of Waterford;
Arthur Henry, MP for Enniskillen;
Henry, died young;
Sarah; Elizabeth Anne; Anne; Florence; Henrietta Frances.

John Willoughby Cole (1768-1840) 2nd Earl of Enniskillen, later 1st Baron Grinstead, by Thomas Robinson, courtesy of National Trust, Florence Court, County Fermanagh.
John Willoughby Cole (1768-1840) 2nd Earl of Enniskillen and 1st Baron Grinstead (1768-1840).
Lady Henrietta Cole, Lady Grantham, later Countess de Grey (1784-1848), Vicereine 1841-44, from Florence Court, Fermanagh. She was the daughter of William Willoughby Cole the 1st Earl of Enniskillen.
Florence Townley-Balfour née Cole (1779-1862) daughter of William Willoughby Cole 1st Earl of Enniskillen, she married Blayney Townley-Balfour. Painting by Richard Rothwell, courtesy of National Trust Florence Court.

JOHN WILLOUGHBY Cole 2nd Earl (1768-1840) married, in 1805, the Lady Charlotte Paget, daughter of Henry, 1st Earl of Uxbridge. The 2nd Earl of Charlotte had the following children:

WILLIAM WILLOUGHBY (1807-86) his successor, who became the 3rd Earl of Enniskillen.

Henry Arthur; John Lowry; Lowry Balfour; Jane Anne Louisa Florence.

William Willoughby Cole (1807-1886) 3rd Earl of Enniskillen, by William Robinson, courtesy of National Trust, Florence Court, County Fermanagh.

WILLIAM WILLOUGHBY, 3rd Earl (1807-86), Honorary Colonel, 3rd Battalion, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, married firstly, in 1844, Jane, daughter of James Casamaijor, and had issue,

John Willoughby Michael, styled Viscount Cole (1844-50);

LOWRY EGERTON, 4th Earl;

Arthur Edward Casamaijor;

Florence Mary; Alice Elizabeth; Charlotte June; Jane Evelyn.

He wedded secondly, in 1865, Mary Emma, daughter of Charles, 6th Viscount Midleton.

His lordship was succeeded by his eldest surviving son,

LOWRY EGERTON, 4th Earl (1845-1924), KP JP DL MP, who wedded, in 1869, Charlotte Marion, daughter of Douglas Baird.

Charlotte Marion Baird (1851/2-1937) Countess of Enniskillen, by Henry Richard Graves, courtesy of National Trust, Florence Court, County Fermanagh. She married Lowry Egerton Cole, 4th Earl of Enniskillen.

Courtesy of http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2017/08/florence-court-house.html

Nicholas Conway Colthurst (1789-1829) 4th Baronet of Ardrum, County Cork, by Martin Arthur Shee, courtesy of Eton College. He was Member of Parliament (M.P.) for the City of Cork between 1812 and 1829. His son the 5th Earl married Louisa Jane Jefferyes, through whom he acquired Blarney Castle.
Ambrose Congreve reading a newspaper at Clonbrock House, Ahascragh, Co. Galway, National Library of Ireland Ref. CLON422.

Timothy William Ferres tells us of the line of the Conolly family who owned Castletown House in County Kildare. [2] It was built by William Conolly (1662-1729), Speaker of the House of Commons in Ireland during the reign of Queen Anne, First Lord of the Treasury until his decease during the reign of GEORGE II, and ten times sworn one of the Lords Justices of Ireland.

William Conolly (1662-1729) of Castletown, County Kildare.

William Conolly married, in 1694, Katherine Conyngham, sister of Henry 1st Earl.

Katherine Conolly née Conyngham (c. 1662-1752) who married William Conolly, pictured with her great-niece Molly Burton. Portrait by Charles Jervas.

Speaker Conolly, MP for Donegal, 1692-9, Londonderry, 1703-29, was succeeded by his nephew, William James Conolly (1706-54).

I’m not sure but the top portrait looks like Katherine Conyngham to me, who marries William Conolly.
William Conolly, M.P. (d.1754) by Anthony Lee c. 1727 courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland NGI 421

William James Conolly (1706-54) married Anne Wentworth, eldest daughter of Thomas, 1st Earl of Strafford.

Lady Anne Conolly née Wentworth (1713-1797), daughter of Thomas Wentworth (1672-1739) 1st Earl of Strafford). She was married to William James Conolly (1712-1754), of Castletown, County Kildare. Painting attributed to Anthony Lee, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland. She was the mother of Thomas Conolly (1734-1803).
Lady Anne Conolly (born Wentworth (1712/1713-1797), daughter of Thomas Wentworth (1672-1739) 1st Earl of Strafford). She was married to William James Conolly (1712-1754), of Castletown, County Kildare. She was the mother of Thomas Conolly (1734-1803).

They had issue,

THOMAS (1734-1803) his heir;
Katherine, m. Ralph, Earl of Ross;
Anne, m. G. Byng; mother of Earl of Strafford;
Harriet, m. Rt Hon John Staples, of Lissan;
Frances, m. 5th Viscount Howe;
Caroline, m. 2nd Earl of Buckinghamshire;

[2]

Thomas Conolly (1734-1803). He was the son and heir of William James Conolly (d.1754) of Castletown House, by his wife Lady Anne Wentworth. Thomas Conolly married Lady Louisa Lennox, a daughter of Charles Lennox, the 2nd Duke of Richmond.
Thomas Conolly (1738-1803), 1758 by Anton Raphael Mengs, National Gallery of Ireland PGI 4458
Portrait called The Honourable Harriet Molesworth (1745-1812), wife of John Staples (1736-1820) (probably Harriet Conolly, d. 1771), by Francis Cotes, courtesy of National Trust. Springhill, County Derry.

Ferres continues, telling us that Thomas Conolly, MP for County Londonderry, 1761-1800, wedded, in 1758, Louisa Augusta Lennox, daughter of Charles, 2nd Duke of Richmond and Lennox.

The pastel on the top left is Thomas Conolly (1734-1803), Louisa’s husband.
Thomas Connolly of Castletown by Hugh Douglas Hamilton (1739-1808), courtesy Adam’s auction 28 March 2012.
Lady Louisa Connolly née Lennox (1743-1817) by Hugh Douglas Hamilton, (1739-1808), courtesy Adam’s 28 Sept 2005. She was the daughter of Charles, 2nd Duke of Richmond and Lennox.
Louisa Conolly née Lennox (1743-1817) who married Thomas Conolly (1734-1803).

Thomas and Louisa had no children so the estate passed to a grand-nephew, Edward Michael Pakenham (1786-1849) who assumed the surname Conolly in 1821. Now Edward Michael Conolly of Castletown, County Kildare, and Cliff, County Donegal, Lieutenant-Colonel, Donegal Militia, MP for County Donegal, 1831-49, he married in 1819, Catherine Jane, daughter of Chambré Brabazon Ponsonby-Barker, by the Lady Henrietta Taylour his wife, daughter of Thomas, Earl of Bective. They had issue,

THOMAS (1823-1876) his heir;
Chambré Brabazon, d 1835;
Frederick William Edward, d 1826;
Arthur Wellesley, 1828-54;
John Augustus, VC;
Richard, d 1870;
Louisa Augusta; Henrietta; Mary Margaret; Frances Catherine.

Thomas Conolly (1823-1876), painting by William Osbourne.

Thomas married, in 1868, Sarah Elizabeth, daughter of Joseph Shaw, of Temple House, Celbridge, County Kildare.

Sarah Eliza Conolly née Shaw, wife of Thomas.
Thomas Conolly (1823-1876) and his wife Sarah Eliza. Sarah Eliza was the daughter of a prosperous Celbridge paper mill owner, Joseph Shaw. Her substantial dowry helped to fund her husband’s adventurous lifestyle! A photograph album which belonged to her brother Henry Shaw, of a visit to Castletown, was rescued from the rubble of his home in London when it was destroyed by a German bomb in 1944. Sadly, he died in the bombing. The photograph album is on display in Castletown.

Thomas and Sarah Elizabeth had several children:

Thomas (1870-1900), killed in action at S Africa;
William, 1872-95;
EDWARD MICHAEL, of whom hereafter;
CATHERINE, Baroness Carew, mother of 6th BARON CAREW.

Mr Conolly was succeeded by his eldest surviving son,

EDWARD MICHAEL CONOLLY CMG (1874-1956), of Castletown, Major, Royal Artillery, who died unmarried, when Castletown passed to his nephew,

William Francis (Conolly-Carew), 6th Baron Carew. [2]

Albert Cunningham (d. 1691) first colonel of the 6th (Inniskilling) Dragoons, by Willem Wissing c. 1690, courtesy of British Cavalry Regiments website and wikipedia.
Albert Conyngham (d. 1691), courtesy of National Trust Springhill.
William Burton Conyngham (1733-1796), teller of the Irish Exchequer and treasurer of the Royal Irish Academy, 1780 engraver Valentine Green, after Hugh Douglas Hamilton, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.
Katherine Conolly née Conyngham (c. 1662-1752) who married William Conolly, with her great-niece Molly Burton. Portrait by Charles Jervas.

On his terrific website, Timothy William Ferres tells us about the Conyngham family of Springhill, County Derry in Northern Ireland: [3]

Colonel William Cunningham, of Ayrshire settled in the townland of Ballydrum, in which Springhill is situated, in 1609.

Colonel Cunningham’s son, William Conyngham, known as “Good Will” (d. 1721) married Ann, daughter of Arthur Upton, of Castle Norton (later Castle Upton), County Antrim, by his wife Dorothy, daughter of Colonel Michael Beresford, of Coleraine. William “Good Will” Conyngham died in 1721, and was succeeded by his nephew,

William Conyngham (d. 1721), “Good Will”, courtesy of National Trust. Springhill, County Derry.
Ann Upton (1664-1753) wife of William “Goodwill” Conyngham (1660-1721), daughter of Arthur Upton (1623-1706) of Castle Upton, County Antrim, courtesy of National Trust. Springhill, County Derry.

William “Goodwill” Conyngham was succeeded by his nephew George Butle Conyngham (d. 1765). He married , in 1721, Anne, daughter of Dr Upton Peacocke, of Cultra.

George Butle Conyngham (d. 1765), courtesy of National Trust, Springhill, County Derry.
Anne Peacocke (d. 1754), Mrs George Butle Conyngham, courtesy of National Trust, Springhill, County Derry.

George Butle Conyngham and Anne née Peacocke had children William (1723-84), the heir to Springhill, and David, successor to his brother, John who died unmarried in 1775 and a daughter Anne (1724-1777) who married in 1745 Clotworthy Lenox.

Called Anne Conyngham (1724-1777) Mrs Clotworthy Lenox, courtesy of National Trust. Springhill, County Derry. She was the daughter of George Butle Conyngham.

David who succeeded his brother William died without issue so Springhill passed to his nephew George Lenox (1752-1816), son of his sister Anne, and George adopted the surname of Conyngham. George married, first, Jean née Hamilton (d. 1788), daughter of John Hamilton of Castlefin. They had a son, William Lenox-Conyngham (1792-1858).

Jean Hamilton (d. 1788), wife of William Conyngham (1723-1774) by Joshua Reynolds, courtesy of National Trust. Springhill, County Derry.

George married, second, in 1794, Olivia, fourth daughter of William Irvine, of Castle Irvine, County Fermanagh.

William Burton Conyngham (1733-1796), teller of the Irish Exchequer and treasurer of the Royal Irish Academy, 1780 engraver Valentine Green, after Hugh Douglas Hamilton, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.
William Burton Conyngham (1733–1796) by Anton Raphael Mengs c. 1754-58, courtesy of wikipedia. He was the son of Francis Burton and Mary Conyngham, and he inherited Slane Castle as well as Donegal estates from his uncle William Conyngham who died in 1781.
William Burton Conyngham, engraving After GILBERT STUART courtesy of Adams Country House Collections auction Oct 2023.

Slane Castle passed to William Burton Conyngham’s nephew Henry Conyngham (1766-1832) 1st Marquess Conyngham. Henry married Elizabeth Denison.

Elizabeth née Denison, Marchioness Conyngham (1769-1861), wife of Henry 1st Marquess.
Elizabeth Conyngham née Denison, wife of Henry 1st Marquess by Thomas Lawrence 1821 courtesy of Calouste Gulbenkian Museum.
Elizabeth Conyngham (née Denison), Marchioness Conyngham (1769–1861) by George Chinnery, English, 1774-1852.
Maria Conyngham (died 1843), daughter of 1st Marquess of Slane by Sir Thomas Lawrence courtesy of Metropolitan museum.
Francis Nathaniel Conyngham (1797-1876) 2nd Marquess of Slane, County Meath, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.
Edward Cooke, (1755-1820), Under-Secretary of State for Ireland Date: 1799 Engraver William Ward the Elder, English, 1766-1826 After William Cuming, Irish, 1769-1852.
Arthur Cooper, b. 1716, of Coopershill, County Sligo.
Sarah Cooper née Carleton (born around 1718), wife of Arthur Cooper (b. 1716) of Coopershill, County Sligo. Daughter of Guy Cathcart Carleton of Fermanagh and Mary Brooke of Brookeborough, County Fermanagh.
Arthur Brooke Cooper (c. 1775-1854) of Coopershill, County Sligo.

Timothy William Ferres also tells us of the Coote family. Charles Coote (1581-1642), 1st Baronet of Castle Cuffe, Queen’s County (Laois): “The Peerage” website tells us that in 1600 he went to Ireland as Captain of 100 Foot under 8th Lord Mountjoy, Queen Elizabeth I’s Lord Deputy of Ireland. He fought in the siege of Kingsale in 1602. He held the office of Provost Marshal of Connaught between 1605 and 1642, for life. He held the office of General Collector and Receiver of the King’s Composition Money for Connaught in 1613, for life. He held the office of Vice-President of Connaught in 1620. He was appointed Privy Counsellor (P.C.) in 1620. He was created 1st Baronet Coote, of Castle Cuffe, Queen’s Co. [Ireland] on 2 April 1621. He held the office of Custos Rotulorum of Queen’s County in 1634. He held the office of Member of Parliament (M.P.) for Queen’s County [Ireland] in 1639. Before 1641 he held Irish lands, mostly in Conaught, worth £4,000 a year. He held the office of Governor of Dublin in 1641. In 1642 he helped relieve Birr, King’s County (now County Offaly), during the Uprising by the Confederation of Kilkenny, his successful operations there and elsewhere in the area, which was called Mountrath, suggesting the title by which his son was ennobled.

Sir Charles Coote (1581-1642) 1st Baronet of Castle Cuffe, Queens County By David Keddie – Own work, Public Domain, https//:commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=42005305.jpg

He married Dorothea, youngest daughter and co-heir of Hugh Cuffe, of Cuffe’s Wood, County Cork, and had issue, Charles (c.1610 –1661) 1st Earl of Mountrath;
Chidley (d. 1688) of Killester, Co Dublin and Mount Coote, County Limerick;
RICHARD (1620-83) 1st Baron Coote of Colloony, County Sligo, ancestor of the EARL OF BELLAMONT (1st Creation);
Thomas, of Coote Hill;
Letitia (married Francis Hamilton, 1st Bt of Killaugh, co. Cavan).

Charles Coote 1st Earl of Mountrath (c.1610 –1661), 2nd Baronet, ca. 1642, before he was ennobled, Circle of William Dobson. By Christina Keddie – Own work, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=42002789

Charles Coote (c.1610 –1661), 1st Earl of Mountrath married first, Mary Ruish, who gave birth to his heir, Charles Coote (d. 1672) 2nd Earl of Mountrath, Queen’s County. The 1st Earl of Mountrath, Queen’s County, also had the titles 1st Baron Coote of Castle Cuffe, in Queen’s Co. [Ireland] and 1st Viscount Coote of Castle Coote, Co. Roscommon [Ireland].

Charles Coote (c.1610 –1661), 1st Earl of Mountrath married secondly Jane Hannay, and she had a son Richard (1643-1700), who married Penelope, daughter of Arthur Hill of Hillsborough, County Down. Their daughter Penelope Rose married Charles Boyle (d. 1732) 2nd Viscount Blesington. Another daughter, Jane (d. 1729) married William Evans, 1st and last Baronet of Kilcreene, County Kilkenny.

Charles Coote, 2nd Earl of Mountrath married Alice, daughter of Robert Meredyth of Greenhills, County Kildare. His daughter Anne (d. 1725) married Murrough Boyle, 1st Viscount Blesington (d. 1718). His son Charles (1656-1709) succeeded as 3rd Earl of Mountrath, and he was father to the 4th, 5th and 6th Earls.

Charles Coote (d. 1715) 4th Earl of Mountrath, c. 1710 by Charles Jervas. He died unmarried.
Diana Coote (1696-1766), Countess of Mountrath, wife of 6th Earl, 1746 by Thomas Hudson, National Gallery of Ireland NGI293.

The son of Algernon Coote (1689-1744) 6th Earl of Mountrath, Charles Henry Coote (d. 1802) 7th Earl of Mountrath had no legitimate male issue and the earldom and its associated titles created in 1660 died with him. The barony of Castle Coote passed according to the special remainder to his kinsman, Charles Coote. The baronetcy of Castle Cuffe also held by the Earl passed to another kinsman, Sir Charles Coote, 9th Baronet.

Charles Henry Coote (1794-1864) 9th Baronet of Castle Cuffe, Queens County, By John Hoppner, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=42004929

Let us return now to Charles Coote (1581-1642), 1st Baronet of Castle Cuffe, Queen’s County (Laois) and trace the line of his younger son, RICHARD COOTE (1620-83), for his hearty concurrence with his brother, SIR CHARLES, 2nd Baronet, in promoting the restoration of CHARLES II, was rewarded with the dignity of a peerage of the realm; the same day that his brother was created Earl of Mountrath, Richard Coote was created, in 1660, Baron Coote, of Colloony.

In 1660, Richard was appointed Major to the Duke of Albemarle’s Regiment of Horse; and the same year he was appointed one of the commissioners for executing His Majesty’s declaration for the settlement of Ireland. He was, in 1675, appointed one of the commissioners entrusted for the 49 Officers. In 1676, the 1st Baron resided at Moore Park, County Meath, and Piercetown, County Westmeath. He married Mary, second daughter of George, Lord St. George, and had issue: RICHARD (1636-1701) his successor;
Thomas (d. 1741)
Lætitia (married Robert Molesworth, 1st Viscount Molesworth of Swords); Mary (married William Stewart, 1st Viscount Mountjoy); Catherine (married Ferdinando Hastings); Elizabeth (married Lt.-Gen. Richard St. George).

Following his decease, in 1683, he was interred at Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin. He was succeeded by his eldest son,

RICHARD, 2nd Baron (1636-1701), Governor of County Leitrim, 1689, Treasurer to the Queen, 1689-93, MP for Droitwich, 1689-95, who was, in 1688, one of the first to join the Prince of Orange. In 1689, he was attainted in his absence by the Irish Parliament of JAMES II. His lordship was created, in 1689, EARL OF BELLAMONT, along with a grant of 77,000 acres of forfeited lands.

Richard Coote (1636-1700/01) 1st Earl Bellomont By Samuel Smith Kilburn (d. 1903) – New York Public Library digital library http//:digitalgallery.nypl.org/nypldigital/id?423861, Public Domain, https//:commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=13014278

Richard 1st Earl of Bellomont was Governor of Massachusetts, 1695, and Governor of New York, 1697-1701. The King had sent Lord Bellomont to New York to suppress the “freebooting.” Unfortunately he was responsible for outfitting the veteran mariner William Kidd, who turned into “Captain Kidd,” who terrorised the merchants until his capture in 1698.

According to Cokayne “he was a man of eminently fair character, upright, courageous and independent. Though a decided Whig he had distinguished himself by bringing before the Parliament at Westminster some tyrannical acts done by Whigs at Dublin.”

The 1st Earl of Bellomont wedded, in 1680, Catharine, daughter and heir of Bridges Nanfan, of Worcestershire, and had issue, NANFAN (1681-1708) his successor as 2nd Earl of Bellomont, and RICHARD (1682-1766), who succeeded his brother.

NANFAN, 2nd Earl (1681-1708) married Lucia Anna van Nassau (1684-1744), daughter of Henry de Nassau, Lord Overkirk, in 1705/6 at St Martin-in-the-Fields Church, London. Nanfan died at Bath, Somerset, from palsy, without male issue, when the family honours devolved upon his brother, RICHARD, 3rd Earl (1682-1766), who, in 1729, sold the family estate of Colloony, County Sligo, for nearly £17,000.

In 1737, he succeeded his mother to the estates of Birtsmorton, Worcestershire. Macaulay described him as “of eminently fair character, upright, courageous and independent.” On his death the earldom expired. 

The last Earl was succeeded in the barony of Coote by his first cousin once removed, CHARLES, 5th Baron (1736-1800), KB PC, son of Charles Coote [1695-1750] High Sheriff of County Cavan, 1719, MP for Granard, 1723-27, Cavan County, 1727-50MP for County Cavan, 1761-6, who was son of the HON THOMAS COOTE (c. 1655-1741) a Justice of the Court of the King’s Bench of Ireland, younger son of the 1st Baron. This Thomas’s daughter Elizabeth married Mervyn Pratt (1687-1751) of Cabra Castle.

Charles Coote (1736-1800) 1st Earl of Bellamont (3rd creation) By Joshua Reynolds – Public Domain, https//:commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=4796126.jpg, National Gallery of Ireland NGI 216

Sir Charles succeeded his cousin, Richard, in 1766, as 5th Baron Coote; and was created, in 1767, EARL OF BELLAMONT (3rd creation). His lordship was created a baronet, in 1774, designated of Donnybrooke, County Dublin, with remainder to his natural son, Charles Coote, of Dublin.

SIR CHARLES COOTE (1736-1800), KB PC, of Coote Hill (afterwards renamed Bellamont Forest) had an illegitimate son, Charles Coote (1765-1857) who despite his illegitimacy became 2nd Baronet of Bellamont). Charles 1st Earl married, in 1774, the Lady Emily Maria Margaret FitzGerald, daughter of James, 1st Duke of Leinster, and had issue, Charles, Viscount Coote (died age seven, 1778-86); Mary; Prudentia; Emily; Louisa. Following his death in 1800, the titles became extinct as he left no legitimate male issue, though he was succeeded in the baronetcy according to the special remainder by his illegitimate son Charles, 2nd Baronet.

Finally, let us return now to Charles Coote (1581-1642), 1st Baronet of Castle Cuffe, Queen’s County (Laois) and trace the line of his son Chidley Coote (d. 1668). Chidley lived in Mount Coote, County Limerick (later called Ash Hill, a section 482 property, see my entry). He had a son, Chidley (d. 1702) who married Catherine Sandys. They had a daughter Catherine (d. 1725) who married Henry Boyle 1st Earl of Shannon. Another daughter, Anne, married Bartholomew Purdon, MP for Doneraile and later Castlemartyr of County Cork. They had a son Reverend Chidley Coote (1678-1730) who inherited Ash Hill in County Limerick. He married Jane Evans (d. 1763) and it was their grandson Charles Henry Coote (1754-1823) who succeeded as 2nd Baron Castle Coote in 1802. He was the son of Reverend Charles Coote (1713-1796) and Grace Tilson (d. 1766). Another son was Lt.-Gen. Sir Eyre Coote (1762-1823).

Major General Eyre Coote (1762-1823), Governor of Jamaica, 1805 by engraver Antoine Cordon after J.P.J. Lodder, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland. He was son of Reverend Charles Coote (1713-1796) and Grace Tilson (d. 1766).
Eyre Coote (1726-1783) attributed to Henry Robert Morland, c. 1763, National Portrait Gallery of London NPG124. He was the son of Reverend Chidley Coote (1678-1730) who inherited Ash Hill in County Limerick and Jane Evans (d. 1763).
Lieutenant General Sir Eyre Coote (1726-1783) Commander-in-Chief in the East Indies (1777-1783) by John Thomas Seton, courtesy of the British Library. He was the son of Reverend Chidley Coote (1678-1730) who inherited Ash Hill in County Limerick and Jane Evans (d. 1763).

Reverend Chidley Coote (1678-1730) who inherited Ash Hill and Jane Evans (d. 1763) had a daughter Elizabeth who married John Bowen. Reverend Childley Coote and Jane Evans’s son Robert (d. 1745) inherited Ash Hill and married his cousin Anne Purdon, daughter of Bartholomew Purdon and Anne Coote. Robert Coote and Anne Purdon’s grandson was Charles Henry Coote (1792-1864) who succeeded as 9th Baronet of Castle Cuffe, Queen’s County, who married Caroline Elizabeth Whaley (d. 1871), daughter of John Whaley (d. 1847) of Dublin.

Caroline Elizabeth Coote née Whaley (d. 1871), daughter of John Whaley (d. 1847) of Dublin courtesy of wikitree, uploaded by Desmond William Kelly Lynch SD. She married Charles Henry Coote (1792-1864) who succeeded as 9th Baronet of Castle Cuffe, Queen’s County.
Charles Eyre Coote (1801-1858), third son of Chidley Coote (1776-1843) and Anne Hewitt, by James Butler Brenan RHA (1825-1889) courtesy Whyte’s Sept 2003.
James Corry (c. 1643-1718), MP, Colonel by Thomas Pooley courtesy of National Trust Castle Coole. He was the father of John Corry, MP (d. 1726).
Colonel John Corry, MP (1666–1726), attributed to Thomas Pooley, courtesy of National Trust Castle Coole, County Fermanagh.
Elizabeth Corry (1715-1791) (?) later Mrs Archibald Hamilton (d. 1752) and finally Mrs James Leslie of Leslie Hill, County Antrim, possibly by Anthony Lee courtesy of National Trust Castle Coole. She was the daughter of Colonel John Corry, MP (1666–1726).
Sarah Corry (1709-1779) later Mrs Galbraith Lowry Corry, by Anthony Lee courtesy of National Trust, Castle Coole, County Fermanagh. She was the daughter of Colonel John Corry, MP (1666–1726).
Martha Leslie née Corry (1704/5-1759) possibly by Anthony Lee courtesy of National Trust Castle Coole. She married Edmund Leslie, MP, of Leslie House, County Antrim. She was the daughter of Colonel John Corry, MP (1666–1726).
Probably Edmund Corry né Leslie (d. after 1764), MP by Irish school; or else Leslie Corry (1712-1740/41), MP, courtesy of National Trust Castle Coole. Edmund Leslie married Martha Corry, and added Corry to his surname to become Edmund Leslie-Corry.
Mary Armar née Corry (1710-1774) Mrs Margetson Armar by Anthony Lee courtesy of National Trust Castle Coole. She was the daughter of Colonel John Corry, MP (1666–1726).
Pole Cosby and his Daughter Sarah, by James Latham, portrait courtesy of Gallery of the Masters website. Sarah (b. 1730) married, first, Arthur Upton (1715-1768) of Castle Upton in County Antrim, after his first wife Sophia Ward had died, and secondly, Robert Maxwell (d. 1779) 1st and last Earl of Farnham. https://www.galleryofthemasters.com/l-folder/latham-james-pole-cosby.html
The Archers, John Dyke Acland and Dudley Alexander Sydney Cosby (1732-1774), 1st Baron Sydney and Stradbally, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.
Mrs. Sydney Cosby, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland. Could it be Emily Ashworth (d. 1863), wife of Sydney Cosby (1807-1840)?
General William Cosby (c. 1690-1736) by Charles Jervas 1710, Governor of New York, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.
Anne Boyle née Courteney, Countess of Cork and Orrery (1742-1785) Engraver James Watson, Irish, c.1740-1790 After Hugh Douglas Hamilton, Irish, 1740-1808, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland. She married Edmund Boyle 7th Earl of Cork, 7th Earl of Orrery.
Portrait Of A Lady traditionally identified as Caroline Courtenay Née Smith-Barry, courtesy of Whyte’s Sept 2007, daughter of James Smith-Barry (1746-1801) of Fota House, County Cork, she married George Courtenay of Ballyedmond House, County Cork (no longer exists).
Mary Creighton (or Crichton) née Hervey, Countess of Erne, with her daughter Lady Caroline Creighton (or Crichton), later Lady Wharncliffe by Hugh D Hamilton courtesy of Christie’s 2004. Mary was daughter of Frederick Augustus Hervey 4th Earl of Bristol, Bishop of Derry, who built Downhill in Derry, and she married John Creighton (or Crichton) 1st Earl Erne of Crom Castle.
Henrietta Paulet née Crofts, Duchess of Bolton (1682-1730) daughter of James Crofts (Scott), 1st and last Duke of Monmouth, illegitimate son of King Charles II. She married Charles Paulet, 2nd Duke of Bolton.
I think this is Jane Crosbie (c. 1713-1753), who married Thomas Mahon (1701-1782) of Strokestown, County Roscommon. She’s the daughter of Maurice Crosbie, 1st Baron Brandon.
Arabella Crosbie (d. 1813) who married Edward Ward (1753-1812) of Castle Ward, County Down, by Anna Maria Frances Blackwood Price, courtesy of National Trust, Castle Ward. William Crosbie 1st Earl of Glandore, County Cork, son of 1st Baron Brandon.
James Cuffe, 1st Baron Tyrawley, (1748-1821), Barrack-Master General and First Commissioner of the Board of Works in Ireland Date 1802 by Engraver John Raphael Smith, English, 1752-1812 After William Cuming, Irish, 1769-1852, courtesy of National Gallery of Ireland.
A portrait of Jane Cuffe (1719-1806), daughter of James Cuffe of Ballinrobe, County Mayo, wife of George Jackson (1717-1789) of Enniscoe, County Mayo.
Elizabeth Cuffe (1719-1794) who married Thomas Pakenham, 1st Baron Longford. She became Countess of Longford in her own right, through her father Michael Cuffe (1694-1744), who was heir to Ambrose Aungier, 2nd and last Earl of Longford (1st creation). 

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marquess_of_Donegall

[2] http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/2016/03/castletown-house.html

[3] http://lordbelmontinnorthernireland.blogspot.com/search/label/County%20Londonderry%20Landowners