seamus dubhghaill

Promoting Irish Culture and History from Little Rock, Arkansas, USA


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Death of Thomas Eyre, Surveyor General of Ireland

Thomas Eyre, an Irish military engineer, dies in Dublin on February 22, 1772, while attending a session of the Irish House of Commons from an apoplectic fit.

Eyre is born around 1720, the second son of Colonel Samuel Eyre of Eyreville, County Galway, a descendant of Colonel John Eyre, who accompanies General Ludlow to Ireland in 1651 and acquires large estates in County Galway, including the Manor of Eyrecourt.

Eyre is that rare man whose military and engineering training occurs entirely in the Americas before he assumes the significant office of Surveyor General of Ireland in 1752. In 1738, he joins the regiment of James Oglethorpe, the founder of the Province of Georgia, and sails to the colony. As a cadet in Oglethorpe’s Regiment, he is sent to the colony’s interior as an agent to the Cherokee Indians. He rises from the rank of cadet to be sub-engineer for Georgia and the Province of South Carolina and in 1740 he is commissioned an ensign. He learns engineering from Major William Cook, the Regiment’s Engineer, and he marries Cook’s daughter Anne, who has accompanied her father to Georgia. The date of the wedding is not documented, but occurs by 1743, by which date both Eyre and Cook have returned to London. In the last two years of his tour of duty, Eyre serves also as the Sub-engineer for South Carolina and Georgia.

In 1744, Eyre is commissioned a lieutenant and joins Trelawney’s Regiment of Foot, headed by Edward TrelawneyGovernor of Jamaica. He serves in Jamaica and at Roatán (Rattan) and is in charge of Roatán’s defences until 1748, when the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle ends the War of the Austrian Succession and returns the island to Spain. He is promoted to captain in 1748. For the four years after his departure from Roatán and before his resignation from Trelawney’s Regiment, little is known about his activities until he retires from active duty in 1752.

On August 31, 1752, Eyre is appointed Surveyor General of Ireland, having purchased the office from Arthur Jones-Nevill. Joseph Jarratt works as his deputy in this role. He undertakes works at the Royal Barracks in Dublin, but the condition of the barracks is criticised by the Commissioners of the Ordnance for Ireland. As Surveyor General, he is also involved in harbour works at Dún Laoghaire, and is responsible for the rebuilding of the State Apartments at Dublin Castle. In 1763, the office of Surveyor General is abolished, and he is transferred to the new post of Chief Engineer of the Ordnance.

Eyre resigns his commission in 1766 and becomes member of the Irish House of Commons for Thomastown (1761-68) and Fore (1768-1772). He dies on February 22, 1772, from an apoplectic fit brought on by the sudden death of a much loved daughter, at Parliament House, Dublin, while attending a session of the House.


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Birth of Edward Michael Conolly, Member of Parliament

Edward Michael Conolly, an Irish Member of Parliament, is born Edward Michael Pakenham on August 23, 1786.

Conolly is the son of Admiral Sir Thomas Pakenham by his wife Louisa, daughter of John Staples and niece of Thomas Conolly of Castletown. His father is the fourth son of Thomas Pakenham, 1st Baron Longford, and his wife Elizabeth, 1st Countess of Longford. Catherine Pakenham, later the Duchess of Wellington, is his first cousin.

He adopts the surname Conolly by Royal Licence on August 27, 1821, following the death of his great-aunt Lady Louisa Conolly.

Conolly lives at Castletown House in County Kildare, which he inherits from his great-aunt Louisa, and “Cliff House” in County Donegal. He represents Donegal in the Parliament of the United Kingdom from the 1831 United Kingdom general election until his death, and is a lieutenant-colonel in the Donegal Militia. The Conolly residence “Cliff House” on the banks of the River Erne between Belleek, County Fermanagh, and Ballyshannon, County Donegal, is demolished as part of the Erne Hydroelectric scheme, which constructs the Cliff and Cathaleen’s Fall hydroelectric power stations. Cliff hydroelectric power station is constructed on the site of “Cliff House” and is commissioned in 1950.

On May 20, 1819, Conolly marries Catherine Jane, daughter of Chambré Brabazon Ponsonby-Barker. They have six sons and four daughters, including an eldest son, Chambré Brabazon, who dies in 1835; Thomas, who succeeds his father as MP for Donegal; Arthur Wellesley, who dies at the Battle of Inkerman while serving as a captain in the 30th (Cambridgeshire) Regiment of FootJohn Augustus, who also serves in the Crimean War and is awarded the Victoria Cross for his actions at Sevastopol as a lieutenant in the 49th (Princess Charlotte of Wales’s) (Hertfordshire) Regiment of Foot; Richard, who serves as Secretary of Legation at the Embassy of the United Kingdom in China; Louisa Augusta, who marries Wellington William Robert Rowley, 3rd Baron Langford, and dies of drowning in 1853; and Mary Margaret, who marries Henry Bruen.

Conolly dies in London on January 4, 1849.

(Pictured: Castletown House, Celbridge, County Kildare)