Showing posts with label Roscommon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roscommon. Show all posts

Wednesday, 5 September 2018

(344) Balfe of South Park House

The Balfes are said to be an Anglo-Norman family, but first came to prominence in the late 18th century, when Walter Balfe (c.1740-1804) was settled at Heathfield near Castlerea in Co. Roscommon. As Catholics, the Balfes were effectively debarred from many of the professions by the penal laws at this time, and it is not clear how the family accumulated the wealth to rise into the gentry. Moreover, Walter sired no less than ten sons (as well as two daughters), and those who survived to maturity seem to have been provided for, either with land or by being established in an accessible profession or business. About the time that Walter Balfe died in 1804 his eldest son, Michael Balfe (c.1766-1839), bought the South Park (or Southpark) estate adjoining Heathfield, and Heathfield seems to have become the seat of the third son, Nicholas Balfe (d. 1830). John Balfe (d. c.1842), the second son, was settled at Lissadorn near Elphin. Several of the younger sons also acquired minor gentry properties in Roscommon later in life: Edmund Balfe (d. c.1845), who was a solicitor in Dublin, acquired Rockfield; Christopher Balfe (c.1786-1852), who was a flour miller, acquired Curraghmore and James Balfe (c.1791-1840) acquired Runnymede.

Some further mystery attends the family's principal seat of South Park, which is said to have been built in the 1770s by Gen. James Gisborne, an Englishman who pursued a military career in Ireland and became an MP in the Irish Parliament. However, its appearance in photographs suggests it was rebuilt or at least refronted after Michael Balfe bought it in about 1804. The first building would thus have had an unusually short life. Balfe's South Park was also unusually large for a gentry house in the remoter north-west of Ireland, with seven bays and three storeys. Even if the interior decoration was as severely plain as the exterior, a house on this scale would not have come cheap, and one wonders where the money came from. Part of the answer may have been from the merciless exploitation of their tenantry, as in the mid 19th century the family were one of a number identified in letters to the press as notorious landlords, even though this was behaviour more typically attributed to absentee English landowners.

Michael Balfe was married twice. His first wife produced one daughter, who married a Dublin solicitor, but his second wife produced four sons and three daughters. The eldest son, Michael Balfe (1808-38) died without issue the year before his father, and South Park thus passed to the second son, Nicholas Balfe (c.1810-56), and when he also died without issue, was handed on to the third brother, Patrick Joseph Balfe (1817-86), who seems to have lived at Heathfield in his elder brother's lifetime. This was the first generation of the family to benefit from Catholic Emancipation, and several members of the family became closely aligned with Daniel O'Connell, the Irish nationalist politician known as 'The Liberator'; indeed, Michael's daughter Kate married Daniel's son, Morgan O'Connell in 1840, and the wedding festivities were held at South Park. The O'Connells were thereafter frequent visitors to South Park.

Patrick Joseph Balfe (1817-86) had three sons, the youngest of whom, Patrick Joseph Balfe (b. 1857), was the first member of the family whom we know to have emigrated in search of a better life. He had a brief spell in the US Army in 1886-87 and is said to have subsequently established a printing business. His departure is the first sign in the family that the old order in Ireland was collapsing, as the Agricultural Depression, land reform measures, and civil unrest undermined the economic order and sapped the confidence of the landowning class. These pressures were not at first apparent in the career of Patrick's eldest son, Maj. Michael Joseph Balfe (1850-1928), who inherited in 1886. He was an officer in the Roscommon militia and for 25 years Master of the Roscommon Staghounds. Not content with running one hunt, he was also a leading figure in the Roscommon Harriers, and at times the packs of both hunts were kennelled on his estate. He was reckoned an uncommonly good judge of horses, and during the Boer War was commissioned by the British Army to buy horses in Ireland on their behalf for the war effort.  Until the beginning of the 20th century, the estate ran apparently in much the same way as it had done for a century. However, in 1906 most of the estate was sold to the tenants through the Land Commission, and in 1911 he closed up South Park and moved to England. It is said that he feared nationalist reprisals for his activities in the militia and as an agent for the British army. In 1918 the contents of South Park were sold and the house was abandoned. With a ghastly inevitability, the house was burned by nationalist vigilantes on 5 May 1920, and - perhaps because the house was already empty - the destruction of the house did not merit more than a paragraph in the local paper. Major Balfe's sons all emigrated to America or South Africa, and although the eldest son, Michael Edward Joseph Balfe (1887-1919) returned to Ireland, he settled in Co. Cork and did not survive his father. His widow and son lived in a converted coastguard lookout station called Ballinluska House at Myrtleville (Co. Cork), but the son later sold this and moved to Whickham (Co. Durham).



South Park House, Co. Roscommon




South Park House: the front of the house built c.1773 for General Gisborne. Image: Stan Hudgins.




A three storey, seven bay house, said to have been built in about 1773 for Gen. James Gisborne, who came from a Derbyshire family but made a military and political career in Ireland, sitting as an MP in the Irish parliament from 1763 until his death. However, the photograph above suggests a later date of construction is more probable, as the lack of architraves to the windows and the form of the tripartite doorcase and segmental fanlight above it is more typical of c.1800, and it may therefore have been built for Michael Balfe (d. 1839) after he bought the property in about 1804. The five central bays of the front were slightly recessed, and the angles of the outer bays were defined by quoins. The house was occupied by the Balfe family until 1911, when Major Balfe, fearing that his militia commission and his role in supplying horses for military use in the Boer War would make him a target for Irish nationalists despite his Catholic religion, abandoned the house. The contents were sold in 1918 and the house was duly burned down by the republicans in 1920.

Descent: Gen. James Gisborne MP (d. 1778); sold c.1785 to Mr. Corr; ... sold before 1805 to Michael Balfe (d. 1839); to son, Nicholas Balfe (d. 1856); to brother, Patrick Joseph Balfe (1819-86); to son, Maj. Michael Joseph Balfe (1850-1928); burned 1920.


Balfe family of South Park House



Balfe, Walter (c.1740-1804). Son of Michael Balfe and his wife (a Foster of Mount Foster (Co. Galway)), born about 1740. He married 1st, Jane, daughter of Nicholas French of Ashpark (Co. Roscommon), and 2nd, about May/June 1769, her sister Eleanor, and had issue:
(1) Michael Balfe (c.1766-1839) (q.v.);
(2) John Balfe, of Lissadorn (Co. Roscommon); married [forename unknown], daughter of Thomas Smith of Fort Castle (Co. Offaly) and had issue two sons and one daughter; died before 1842;
(3) Nicholas Balfe (d. 1830); died unmarried at Heathfield (Co. Roscommon), 1830;
(4) Patrick Balfe (c.1769-1852), of Dublin; died unmarried; will proved in the PCC, 28 December 1852;
(5) Edmund Balfe (d. c.1845), attorney, of Marlborough St., Dublin and Rockfield; married, 26 September 1804 at St Andrew, Dublin, Elizabeth, youngest daughter of John Dolphin of Turoe (Galway) and had issue one son and two daughters; died in Dublin in 1844 or 1845; his will was proved in 1845;
(6) Walter Balfe (b. c.1777?); an officer in the infantry (Ensign, 1795; Lt., 1795; Capt., 1804); died unmarried, probably before 1823;
(7) George Balfe; died unmarried;
(8) Richard Balfe; died unmarried;
(9) Christopher Balfe (c.1786-1852); flour miller at Ballymoe (Galway); elected to Political Union of Ireland, 1831; lived at Curraghmore (Co. Roscommon); married, 30 March 1834, Frances (k/a Fanny) (c.1800-78), third daughter of Thomas O'Connor of New Garden (Co. Galway), and had issue one son; died aged 66, 23 March 1852;
(10) Catherine Balfe; married, 14 April 1805 at Portpatrick (Wigtowns), John Irwin of Emla (alias Emlaroryboy) (Co. Roscommon), and had issue;
(11) Anne Balfe (c.1790-1844); married 1st, John Taaffe of Annahill (Co. Mayo) and 2nd, 7 January 1830, as his second wife, James Darby Scully (1779-1853) of Rock Abbey Pavilion (Co. Tipperary), son of Jeremiah Darby Scully, but had no issue; died 1844;
(12) James Balfe (c.1791-1840), of Runnymede (later Runnamoat) (Co. Roscommon), born about 1791; JP for Co. Roscommon (from 1829); one of the stewards of the committee for building a new RC church in Roscommon, 1835; married Mary Anne, younger daughter of Edward Martyn of Tulira Castle (Co. Galway), and had issue four daughters; died 5 December 1840; will proved 30 January 1841 and a further grant of administration made 10 August 1863;
(13) Jane Balfe (fl. 1807).
He lived at Heathfield (Co. Roscommon).
He died in 1804; his will was proved in Dublin that year. His first wife died before 1769. His widow was living in 1807.

Balfe, Michael (c.1766-1839). Eldest son of Walter Balfe of Heathfield (Co. Roscommon) and his first wife Jane, daughter of Nicholas French of Frenchpark (Co. Roscommon), born about 1766. He married 1st, Sally, sixth daughter of John Dolphin of Turoe (Co. Galway) and 2nd, 10 July 1806 at St Andrew, Dublin, Alice (d. 1834), daughter of Thomas Smith of Fort Castle, Philipstown (Co. Offaly) and widow of Christopher Taaffe, and had issue:
(1.1) Maria Balfe; married, 16 May 1832 at St Mary's RC Church, Dublin, Jeremiah John Murphy QC (c.1804-78), a Master in Chancery in Ireland, and had issue one daughter;
(2.1) Michael Balfe (1808-38), baptised at Castlerea, 4 January 1809; married 1st, 9 May 1832 at St Andrew, Dublin, Sarah (d. 1833), daughter of Thomas Redington of Rye Hill (Galway) and 2nd, 1 August 1835 at St Andrew, Dublin, Catherine (d. 1861), eldest daughter of Bernard Mullins JP of Fitzwilliam Square, Dublin and Ballyeigan (Co. Offaly), but had no issue; died in Dublin, 2 January 1838;
(2.2) Nicholas Balfe (c.1810-56), born about 1810; elected to Political Union of Ireland, 1831; married, 16 November 1832 at St Nicholas Without, Dublin, Jane alias Joanna, daughter of Andrew Ennis of Roebuck (Co. Dublin) but had no issue; died at Southpark, 15 June 1856;
(2.3) Anne Balfe (c.1812-51), born about 1812; married, 23 November 1840 at Castlerea, Patrick Breen JP (d. 1889) of Castlebridge House (Co. Wexford) and had issue at least one daughter; died 18 February 1851;
(2.4) Sarah Balfe (1816-71), baptised at Castlerea, 6 August 1816; married, 2 March 1840 at Castlerea, Thomas Blake (d. 1865) of Glenloe Abbey (Co. Galway); died 25 December 1871;
(2.5) Patrick Joseph Balfe (1817-86) (q.v.);
(2.6) Catherine (k/a Kate) Mary Balfe (1819-91), baptised at Castlerea, 12 March 1819; married, 23 July 1840 at Castlerea, Morgan O'Connell (1804-85), the colourful period of whose life was then behind him, and who served as MP for Co. Meath 1832-40 and Assistant Registrar of Deeds for Ireland, 1840-68; he was the second son of Daniel O'Connell QC MP ("The Liberator") of Dennynane Abbey (Co. Kerry); they had no issue; she died 17 February 1891;
(2.7) James Joseph Balfe (c.1823-72), born about 1823; secretary to Roscommon Grand Jury; lived at Acres House (Co. Roscommon); married, 18 April 1859 at Oran Catholic Church, Arabella Matilda Mary, daughter of Charles Hawkes of Brierfield (Co. Roscommon) and had issue two sons and five daughters; died aged 49, 21 July 1872;
He purchased South Park House before 1805. After his death it passed in turn to his sons Nicholas (d. 1856) and Patrick (d. 1886).
He died at 12 Merrion St., Dublin, May 1839. His first wife died before 1806. His second wife died in August 1834.

Balfe, Patrick Joseph (1817-86). Third son of Michael Balfe (c.1766-1839) and his second wife Alicia, daughter of Thomas Smith of Fort Castle, Philipstown (Co. Offaly) and widow of C. Taaffe, baptised at Castlerea, 20 September 1817. JP for Co. Roscommon; High Sheriff of Co. Roscommon, 1858; an officer in the Roscommon Militia (Capt., 1855). He married, 5 November 1845, Anna Mary (c.1832-84), second daughter of William MacDermott of Springfield (Co. Galway), and had issue:
(1) Annie Mary Balfe (d. 1894); married, 14 June 1869 at Castlerea, Charles Edward Hawkes JP (c.1848-98) of Brierfield (Co. Roscommon), son of Charles E. Hawkins, and had issue; died 7 March 1894;
(2) Maj. Michael Joseph Balfe (1850-1928) (q.v.);
(3) Katie Mary Saviour Balfe (c.1852-84); married, 26 February 1875 at St Andrew RC Church, Dublin, as his second wife, Cornelius Alexander Keogh (d. 1884?), son of Cornelius Alexander Keogh DL JP of Oakport (Co. Roscommon) and Geevagh (Co. Sligo) and had issue two sons and three daughters; died 10 August 1884;
(4) Alice Mary Maud Balfe (c.1853-1931); a nun of the Holy Child Convent, St. Leonards on Sea (Sussex); died Jan-Mar 1931;
(5) Nicholas Dominick Joseph Balfe (1854-1935) of Rook Wood, Rathfarnham (Co. Dublin), born 5 August 1854; an officer in the Connaught Rangers (Capt.); married, April 1894, Margaret, daughter of Sir Patrick Hackett, and had issue four daughters; died September 1935;
(6) Patrick Joseph Balfe (b. 1857), born 1 June and baptised at Castlerea, 11 June 1857; emigrated to America before 1886; an officer in US Army, 1886-87; developed a large printing business in America; married and had issue; his date of death is unknown;
(7) Mary Josephine Ignatius Balfe (1862-1927), born 31 July 1862; a nun of the Holy Child Convent, St. Leonards on Sea (Mother Mary Ignatius); died 25 January 1927.
He inherited Heathfield House from his father in 1839 and South Park House from his elder brother in 1856.
He died 9 December 1886. His wife died 5 September 1884.

Balfe, Maj. Michael Joseph (1850-1928). Eldest son of Patrick Joseph Balfe (1819-86) and his wife Anna Mary, second daughter of William MacDermott of Springfield (Co. Galway), born 10 June and baptised at Boyounagh (Galway), 14 June 1850. JP and DL for Co. Roscommon. High Sheriff of Co. Roscommon, 1875 and 1890. An officer in the Roscommon Militia, later the 5th Battn., Connaught Rangers (Lt., 1872; Capt., 1875; Maj., 1886; retired 1887). In 1881 he was accidentally shot by his brother-in-law, Charles Hawkes, and received serious but not fatal injuries. Master of the Roscommon Staghounds for 25 years and for a time also of the Mid-Roscommon Harriers. During the Boer War he had a commission to buy horses for the British Army; in the First World War he lived in England. He married, 29 July 1885 at St Andrew RC Church, Dublin, Kathleen (k/a Kitty) (1851-1934), fourth daughter of John O'Connell MP DL ("The Young Liberator"), and had issue:
(1) Alice Elizabeth Mary Angela Balfe (1886-1938), born 2 October 1886; died unmarried at Queenstown, Cape Province (South Africa), 1 January 1938 and was buried in South Africa;
(2) Michael Edward Joseph Balfe (1887-1919) (q.v.);
(3) Maurice O'Connell Francis Balfe (1888-1975), born 2 December 1888; educated at St Augustine's College, Ramsgate (Kent); emigrated to South Africa, 1902; an officer with the Transvaal Mounted Police (South Africa) and later a gold mine worker; married, 31 August 1924 at Brakpan, Transvaal, Cornelia Sophia (b. 1904), daughter of Andries John Stephen Horn of Witpoort, Brakpan, and had issue one son and three daughters; died 1975;
(4) James Morgan Balfe (1889-1967), born 8 October 1889; emigrated to New York (USA) in 1920 and became a naturalised American citizen, 1925; married, 18 October 1925, Ellen Jane (1889-1973), daughter of James Reilly of Mullaghland, Kells (Co. Meath), and had issue one son; died 16 September 1967;
(5) Kathleen Mary Balfe (1891-1935), born 13 December 1891; a keen horsewoman during her family's years in Co. Roscommon; accompanied her parents to England during the First World War; died unmarried, 14 December 1935 and was buried with her parents.
He inherited South Park from his father in 1886, but sold much of the estate to the tenants in 1906. He vacated South Park in 1911; the contents of the house were sold in 1918, and the abandoned house was burned in 1920.
He died 16 June 1928 and was buried in Deansgrange Cemetery, Blackrock (Co. Dublin). His widow died 20 November 1934 and was buried with her husband; her will was proved 26 August 1935 (estate £89).

Balfe, Michael Edward Joseph (1887-1919). Eldest son of Maj. Michael Joseph Balfe (1850-1928) and his wife Kathleen, fourth daughter of John O'Connell DL, born 13 October 1887 at South Park and baptised at Castlerea, 17 October 1887. Joined the Civil Service as a temporary boy clerk, 1904, went to South Africa in 1908, but returned to Ireland to farm. He married, 27 June 1911 at St Finbarr RC Church, Cork, Harriette Mary (1892-1969), only daughter of Richard John Galwey of Ardsallagh (Co. Cork), merchant, and had issue:
(1) Edward Richard Gallwey Balfe (1912-2001), born in Cork, 26 June 1912; educated at Presentation College, Bray; lived at Ballinluska House, Myrtlefield (Co. Cork) and later at Whickham (Northbld/Co. Durham); died 20 January 2001; will proved 2 February 2001;
(2) Dr. James Maurice Balfe (1915-95), born in Cork, 28 January 1915; educated at Presentation College, Bray and Royal College of Surgeons (LRCP; LRCSI); medical practitioner; lived at Hinckley (Leics); married, 25 July 1944, Grace Elizabeth (1916-2004), nurse, daughter of Florence O'Sullivan of Barnaderg, Tuam (Galway), and had issue four sons; died Apr-Jun 1995;
(3) Mariquita Cecilia Balfe (1913-85), born at Cork, 26 October 1913, of 'Ballinluska', Two Mile House, Naas (Co. Kildare); died unmarried, 10 June 1985; will proved 7 August 1985.
He seems to have purchased or rented Ballinluska House, a former coastguard look-out station on the coast of Co. Cork.
He died in the lifetime of his father, 30 May 1919 and was buried at Castlerea. His widow died 1 April 1969.


Sources


Burke's Irish Family Records, 1976, pp. 54-56; Roscommon Messenger, 31 March 1906, 6 April 1918 and 8 May 1920.


Location of archives


No significant accumulation is known to survive.


Coat of arms


None was recorded or used at the time, but in 1931 a descendant of Walter Balfe obtained a grant of arms for all Walter's descendants.


Notes about missing information and help wanted with this entry


As so often with Irish families, especially Catholic ones, the relative weakness of the surviving early sources for Ireland means that there are many gaps in the basic genealogical information. If anyone knows more, from family papers or sources I have not discovered, I should be most grateful for additional information.

I would also be most grateful for any additional photographs of South Park House, or further light on its date of construction.


Revision and acknowledgements


This post was first published 5 September 2018 and updated 1 May 2021.

Friday, 8 March 2013

(11) Achmuty alias Auchmuty of Brianstown and Kilmore House

Auchmuty of Brianstown
This family traces its descent from Capt. Arthur Auchmuty (1600-98), a descendant of an ancient Scottish family of that name from Fife, who settled at Brianstown (Co. Longford) in the reign of Charles I.  The family name is spelled in a remarkable variety of forms, including Ahmuty, Achmuty, Auchmuty and Aghmooty. Brianstown was rebuilt as a two-storey Georgian house in 1731, by Samuel Achmuty (d. 1766).  The estate passed from father to son until the mid 19th century, when on the death of Thomas Gordon Achmuty without male issue, it passed to his daughter Bridget Domvile Achmuty, who married Capt. Henry Musters (of the Chaworth-Musters of Annesley and Colwick family).  The Musters seem to have sold up in the early 20th century, probably soon after the death of J.G. Musters in 1917.

Dr. Arthur Auchmuty (d. 1749), the brother of the builder of Brianstown, married Mary, the daughter and eventual sole heiress of James Lawder of Kilmore House (Roscommon). Either he or his son, Thomas Auchmuty (d. 1775) inherited Kilmore through this connection, and like Brianstown it descended through the generations, passing to James Auchmuty (d. 1809) and then to his brother, another Dr. Arthur Auchmuty (1769-1845), who as a naval surgeon amputated Lord Nelson's right arm in 1797. Dr. Auchmuty had no sons, and the estate passed to his younger daughter, Judith (d. c.1864), who married Horatio Nelson Lawder (d. 1877) and thus carried the estate back to the family from which it had come more than a century before. Their son, Arthur Auchmuty Lawder (d. 1882), was the last member of the family to own the estate, which was sold after his death, apparently to John Jones (d. 1906) who had been the family's agent at Kilmore and resident in the house after Horatio Nelson Lawder built a more modern residence at Aghamore (Leitrim).


Brianstown (Longford)

Brianstown House today, following early 20th century rebuilding. © National Inventory of Architectural Heritage
The original house on the site (possibly built c.1640 or c.1654) was rebuilt in 1731 as a two-storey five bay house on a basement for Samuel Achmuty, whose arms and motto are in the tympanum above the door.  It was gutted by fire in 1922 and rebuilt in the 1930s as a single storey above the basement, with a narrow entrance set between two small windows and held together by a border of raised quoins.  Similar quoins frame the windows of the outer bays, and the top storey had them too.  A high hipped roof was pierced by two dormer windows.  The house looked very much like Barretstown (Kilkenny), and was on the cusp between the Dutch-inspired Beaulieu tradition and the 18th century Palladian classicism  that was reaching Ireland in the 1730s.

Descent: Arthur Auchmuty (1600-98); to grandson, Thomas Achmuty (d. 1712); to son, Samuel Achmuty (d. 1766); to son, Thomas Achmuty (d. 1772?); to son, Samuel Achmuty, lieutenant-colonel of the Longford militia (d. 1829); to son Thomas Gordon Achmuty (d. after 1850); to daughter, Margaret Domvile Achmuty (d. 1883), first wife of Capt. Henry Musters (1812-96); to son John George Musters (1844-1917)... Andrew McHugh (fl. 2011). 


Kilmore House (alias Aghaward), Kilmore, Roscommon

Kilmore House (Aghaward) marked on the 6" OSI map
The house, known also as Aghaward in the mid 19th century, is said to have been built in about 1630 for the Rt. Rev. Edward King, Bishop of Elphin, but its external appearance suggests it may be rather later in date, and could perhaps have been built for James Lawder, who married Deboragh Doherty of Kilmore shortly before 1709. The house has a regular four-bay two storey front with a narrow round-headed doorway and narrow side-lights; at the northern end there is a short return wing which may represent the survival of an earlier building.  

The house descended in the 18th century to the Auchmutys, through the marriage of the first Dr. Arthur Auchmuty to Mary, the daughter and eventually sole heiress of James Lawder. Another branch of the Lawder family continue to live at another house in Kilmore called Lowfield until the murder of a later James Lawder during a burglary there in 1779. This has sometimes caused confusion as to when the Auchmutys acquired the property.  The estate was sold c.1884, after the death of Arthur Auchmuty Lawder, and the house has since been modernised and is used as a farmhouse.

Descent: James Lawder (fl. 1709); to daughter Mary, wife of Dr. Arthur Auchmuty; to son, Thomas Auchmuty (d. 1775); to son, Dr. Arthur Auchmuty (1769-); to daughter, Alicia Jane, wife of Robert Ross Auchmuty RN (d. 1844); to sister, Judith Marcella (fl. 1842), wife of James Lawder; to son, Arthur Auchmuty Lawder (d. by 1884); sold to John Jones (1831-1906); to son, Dr. Bolton Charles Jones (d. 1942), who sold to Thomas Gilfillan (fl. 1921); to son, Thomas Gilfillan (d. 1989); to son, Joe Gilfillan (fl. 2017).

Auchmuty of Brianstown


Achmuty, Capt. Arthur (c.1600-98). Possibly the son of John Achmuty; born c.1600.  Assisted the defence of Castle Forbes against the Irish rebels, 1641.  He married Martha (parentage unknown) and had issue:
(1) Arthur Achmuty (d. 1696) (q.v.)
(2) Capt. John Achmuty MP (?1649-1722) of Newtown Flood (Longford); married Isabella, daughter of Rev. James Stirling, rector of Temple Michael, and had issue five sons and two daughters;
(3) Catherine Achmuty; married William Lawder esq. (d. 1715) of Bunnybeg (Leitrim).
He settled at Brianstown in the reign of King Charles I.
He died in 1698 at an advanced age.

Achmuty, Arthur (d. 1696).  Elder son of Capt. Arthur Achmuty (c.1600-98) and his wife Martha.  He married Elizabeth, daughter of David Rhynd of Enniskillen, merchant, and had issue:
(1) Thomas Achmuty (1679-1712) (q.v.);
(2) Margaret Achmuty; married Anthony Jessop esq. of Doory Hall, Ballymahon (Longford);
(3) Martha Achmuty; married Capt. Deane;
(4) Isabella Achmuty; married Morgan Galbraith esq.;
(5) Jane Achmuty; married Francis Fetherston esq.;
(6) Elizabeth Achmuty; married  Lt. Carruthers.
He died in the lifetime of his father in 1696.

Achmuty, Thomas (1679-1712).  Son of Arthur Achmuty (d. 1696) and his wife Elizabeth, daughter of David Rhynd of Enniskillen, merchant, born 1679.  He married Dorcas, daughter of Samuel Towneley of Moygne Hall (Cavan) by his wife Dorcas, daughter and co-heir of Roger Moygne, and had issue:
(1) Samuel Achmuty (d. 1766) (q.v.);
(2) John Achmuty; died at sea;
(3) Thomas Achmuty (d. 1758); married 9 February 1732, Ann King and had issue two daughters (one of whom married John Daniel (1734-90) and was ancestor of the Tyssen-Amherst family, Barons Amherst of Hackney); died 7 February 1758;
(4) Towneley Achmuty of Dublin (d. 1758); married 1st, Margaret French, and had issue three sons and one daughter; married 2nd, Letitia Wetherall, and had further issue two sons and one daughter;
(5) Arthur Achmuty MD (d. 1749) of Shervogne [for whom see below, under Auchmuty of Kilmore House].
He inherited Brianstown from his grandfather in 1698.
He died in 1712.

Achmuty, Samuel (1700-66).  Eldest son of Thomas Achmuty (d. 1712) and his wife Dorcas, daughter of Samuel Towneley of Moygne Hall (Cavan); born 1700.  He married 1st, Mary (d. 1761), eldest daughter of John King of Charlestown (Roscommon), grandson of Rt. Rev. Edward King, \Bishop of Elphin, and 2nd, 15 October 1763, Sarah Handcock (d. 1787), and had issue:
(1.1) Thomas Achmuty (d. 1762) (q.v.);
(1.2) Elizabeth Achmuty; married, as his first wife, Sir Ralph Fetherston, 1st bt. (d. 1780) but had no issue;
(1.3) Frances Achmuty; married 1st, 1761, Robert Hanley and 2nd, Capt. Francis Piers;
(1.4) Dorcas Achmuty; married 1766, John Bomford/Bombard esq. of Dublin;
(1.5) Col. Arthur Achmuty (1729-93); governor of Dynapore; married 1766 at Calcutta, Ursula de Cruz and had issue six sons and three daughters;
(1.6) Judith Achmuty (d. 1829), married her cousin, Thomas Achmuty (d. 1757) [for whom see below, under Auchmuty of Kilmore House];
(1.7) Rev. Samuel Achmuty (1740-1800); vicar of Ballymahon; married 1st, his cousin, Susannah Maria (1742-90), daughter of Francis Savage, and had issue two sons and four daughters; married 2nd, Sarah King (d. 1799); died 9 May 1800.
He inherited Brianstown from his father in 1712 and rebuilt the house.
He died 18 January 1766 in Jervis St., Dublin. His wife died 2 September 1761.

Achmuty, Thomas (d. 1762). Eldest son of Samuel Achmuty (d. 1766) and his first wife Mary, daughter of John King of Charlestown (Roscommon).  Captain, 27th Regiment of Foot.  He married Isabella (d. 1777), daughter and heir of Col. Archibald Gordon (who was a scion of the Earls of Huntly and was killed at the taking of Havanna in 1762) and had issue:
(1) Samuel Achmuty (1755-1829) (q.v.).
He died in the lifetime of his father in August 1762. His widow died in 1777.

Achmuty, Samuel (1755-1829). Son of Thomas Achmuty (d. 1762) and his wife Isabella, daughter of Col. Archibald Gordon, born 1755. An officer in the 2nd Regiment of Horse (Cornet, 1773) and later Lt-Col. of the Longford militia; JP; High Sheriff of Co. Longford, 1789.  He married February 1777, Elizabeth Domvile Savage (b. 1758), only daughter of Francis Savage esq. of Ballygawly, Co. Sligo by his second wife Bridget, daughter of Rear-Adm. Christopher Pocklington, and had issue:
(1) Thomas Gordon Achmuty (1778-c.1851) (q.v.);
(2) Gen. Sir Samuel Benjamin Achmuty* (1780-1868), born 28 April 1780; an officer in the army (Ensign, 1797; Lt. by 1800; Capt., 1805; Maj., 1813; Br. Lt-Col. 1814; Col., 1831; Maj-Gen. 1841; Lt-Gen. 1848; Gen. 1860); appointed KCB, 1857 and GCB, 1861; married, 1817, Mary Buchanan (d. 1869); died at Pau (France), 30 April 1868;
(3) Francis Achmuty (d. 1788);
(4) Archibald Gordon Achmuty (b. & d. 1785);
(4) Lt. Charles Achmuty (c.1788-1810), an officer in the army (Cornet, 1808); died at Coimbra (Portugal);
(5) Anna Maria Auchmuty;
(6) Isabella Gordon Achmuty;
(7) Elizabeth Domvile Achmuty.
He inherited Brianstown from his grandfather in 1766 and came of age in 1776.
He died 16 February 1829.
* Care is needed to distinguish this officer from his distant kinsman, Lt-Gen. Sir Samuel Auchmuty (1756-1822).

Auchmuty, Thomas Gordon (1778-c.1851).  Eldest son of Lt-Col. Samuel Achmuty (1755-1829) and his wife Elizabeth Domvile, daughter of Francis Savage esq. of Ballygawly (Sligo), born 1778. An officer in the army (Lt., 1799; retired after 1811) and later Captain of the Killashee Infantry Yeomanry; JP and DL for Co. Longford; High Sheriff of Co. Longford 1824. He married, 2 Sept. 1811 in Worcester, Bridget Domvile Pocklington (d. 1873), seventh daughter of Charles Pocklington esq (who assumed the name of Domvile under the will of the Rt. Hon Sir Compton Domvile, bt) and sister of Sir Compton Domvile of Santry Court (Co. Dublin), and had issue:
(1) Margaret Domvile Auchmuty (c.1813-83) (q.v.).
He inherited Brianstown from his father in 1829.
He died in about 1851*. His widow died at Brianstown, 2 August 1873.
* Some sources state that he died in about 1844, and the will of a Thomas Gordon Auchmuty was proved in that year: however, his address was in County Derry, and newspaper references to an assault on Thomas Auchmuty at Brianstown in 1851 make it more likely that he survived to the 1850s. He was dead by 1857, when Col. Henry Musters was 'of Brianstown'.

Auchmuty, Margaret Domvile (1812-83). Only child of Thomas Gordon Achmuty (1778-c.1851) and his wife Bridget Domvile, seventh daughter of Charles Pocklington (later Domvile), born 5 July and baptised at Matlock (Derbys), 7 July 1812. She married, 28 May 1839 at Newtownforbes, Col. Henry Musters (1813-96), third son of John Musters of Colwick Hall (Notts) and had issue:
(1.1) Auchmuty Henry Musters (1843-83); secretary to the Grand Jury for Co. Longford; died 20 September 1883; administration of goods granted 15 February 1884 and 11 May 1901 (effects £137);
(1.2) John George Musters (1844-1917) (q.v.);
(1.3) Charles Ralph Auchmuty Musters (1846-71); an officer in the Royal Marines (2nd Lt. 1865; Lt. 1867); died in a climbing accident in Norway, 28 September 1871; adminstration of goods granted 11 May 1901 (effects £5);
(1.4) Caroline Alicia Victoria Musters (1849-98), born 28 June and baptised 29 July 1849; married 1st, 20 June 1874 and 68 St Stephen's Green, Dublin (by special licence), as his second wife, Capt. the Hon. Thomas Oliver Westenra Plunkett (1838-89), son of  Thomas Oliver Plunkett, 12th Baron Louth, but had no issue; married 2nd, 4 July 1892, her cousin Annesley Horace Packe (1866-1950), civil servant, son of Capt. Horatio Packe RN; died 30 July 1898; will proved 1 October 1898 (estate £10,406).
She and her husband succeeded to the Brianstown estate in Co. Longford on the death of her father c.1855.
She died at Brianstown, 14 January 1883. Her widower married 2nd, 2 August 1883, Maria Eliza (d 1892), daughter of John Atkinson of Dublin and widow of Patrick Plunket (d. 1859)  and died in Jersey, 11 May 1896.

Musters, John George (1844-1917) of Brianstown (Longford).  Second son of Col. Henry Musters (1813-96) and his first wife, Margaret Domville (d. 1856), daughter and heir of Thomas Gordon Auchmuty of Brianstown; born 26 October 1844. An officer in the Royal Navy (Cdr. by 1888; Capt. by 1910). He married 1st, 29 November 1888 at St Mary, Donnybrook (Co. Dublin), Edith Elizabeth (c.1864-1910), daughter of Frederick Manders, and 2nd, 5 June 1912 at Horbury (Yorks), Mary Elizabeth, daughter of John Kennedy, bank manager, and had issue:
(1.1) John Domvile Auchmuty Musters (1892-1979) (q.v.). 
He inherited Brianstown from his father in 1896.
He died 16 November 1917 at Brianstown. His first wife died 25 November 1910. His widow died 16 December 1954; her will was proved in Dublin, 1 March 1955 and in London, 5 April 1955 (estate in Ireland, £2,961 and in England, £346).

Musters, John Domvile Auchmuty (1892-1979). Only son of John George Musters (1844-1917) and his first wife, Edith Elizabeth, daughter of Frederick Manders, born 10 December 1892. A submarine commander in the Royal Navy (entered service, 1905; midshipman,, 1910; Sub-Lt., 1913; Lt., 1915; Lt-Cdr., 1923; Cdr., 1929; retired as Capt., 1944) who was awarded the DSC in the First World War. He married 1st, 27 February 1915 at St Michael & All Angels, Portsmouth (Hants) (div.), Olga Gertrude Helena (1894-1987), daughter of Cdr. Benjamin Barnes RN; 2nd, Oct-Dec 1936 (div.), Julia Enid (1901-77), daughter of Gerard Walter Matthew, and 3rd, Apr-Jun 1946, Lucy Theodosia Gascoigne (1901-80), daughter of Edmund Henry Fowle and widow of Giles Robert Pretor-Pinney (1897-1942), and had issue:
(1.1) John Vivian Auchmuty Musters (1917-2013), born 7 May 1917; an officer in the Royal Navy (Cdr.), who served in the Second World War; married, 11 September 1943, Ann Rosemary, daughter of Capt Leonard Garbett, CBE, RN, of Stretton Grandison (Herefs), by and had issue, two sons and two daughters; died aged 95 in Nelson (New Zealand), 10 February 2013;
(1.2) Patrick Thorvald Auchmuty Musters (1923-2003), born 4 March 1923; educated at Imperial Service College, Windsor; an officer in the Royal Artillery and Royal Marines (Maj.); awarded DFC; married, 24 March, 1948, Nancy Stella (1924-2015), daughter of Allan Havelock-Allan (1874-1949), and had issue one son and three daughters; died at Market Overton (Rutland), 3 April 2003;
(1.3) Rodney Michael Auchmuty Musters (1924-2005), born 20 September 1924; educated at Imperial Service College, Windsor; an officer in the Royal Marines; died 21 September 2005 and was buried at Haycombe Cemetery, Bath, 12 April 2006;
He inherited Brianstown from his father in 1917 but sold it soon afterwards; it burnt down in 1926.
He died at Gloragh House, Ashford (Co. Wicklow), 25 January 1979, and was buried at Nun's Cross (Co. Wicklow); his will was proved in London, 13 November 1979 (estate in England & Wales, £3,817). His first wife died 16 December 1987; her will was proved 12 July 1988 (estate under £70,000). His second wife died at Egloskerry (Cornw.), 12 June 1977; her will was proved 8 September 1977 (estate £94,218). His widow died 2 August 1980; her will was proved 17 June 1981 (estate in England & Wales £15,242).

Auchmuty of Kilmore House


Auchmuty, Dr. Arthur (d. 1749). Youngest son of Thomas Achmuty (1679-1712) of Brianstown [for whom, see above] and his wife Dorcas, daughter of Samuel Towneley of Moygne Hall (Cavan). Doctor of Medicine. He married Mary, daughter and eventually sole heir of James Lawder of Kilmore (Roscommon), and had issue:
(1) Thomas Auchmuty (d. 1775) (q.v.);
(2) Deborah Auchmuty;
(3) Elizabeth Auchmuty.
He lived at Shervoge (Longford). Either he or his son inherited Kilmore House from his wife's family.
His will was proved in 1749. His wife's date of death is unknown.

Auchmuty, Thomas (d. 1775). Only son of Dr. Arthur Auchmuty (fl. 1712) and his wife Mary, daughter of James Lawder of Kilmore (Roscommon). He married, 17 November 1757, his cousin Judith (d. 1829), daughter of Samuel Achmuty of Brianstown, and had issue:
(1) James Auchmuty (d. 1809); married Marcella (who m2, November 1811, Richard Chaplin of Woodburn, Carrickfergus (Down)), daughter of James Lawder Kelly esq. of Churchborough (Roscommon) but had no issue; died 6 February 1809; will proved in the Prerogative Court of Ireland, 1810;
(2) Sidney Eliza Auchmuty; married, 1797, John Kirkwood and had issue;
(3) Letitia Forbes Auchmuty; married, 1794, Mark Anthony Tisdall of Dublin, barrister-at-law;
(4) Dr. Arthur Auchmuty (1769-1845) (q.v.).
Either he or his father inherited Kilmore House from his mother's family, but he lived chiefly in Dublin. After his death, the estate passed to his two sons in turn.
He died 5 June 1775. His widow died in 1829.

Auchmuty, Dr. Arthur (1769-1845). Younger son of Thomas Auchmuty (d. 1775) and his wife Judith, daughter of Samuel Achmuty of Brianstown, born 29 September 1769. There is some suggestion that he was trained as a surgeon at Edinburgh, but his name does not appear on the official list of medical graduates of that university. He was a surgeon in the Royal Navy for fifteen years from 1796 and in 1797 he amputated Lord Nelson's arm after he had been wounded; a sword given to him by the Admiral to commemorate this event was treasured in the family for several generations; the saw with which the deed was performed is now in the National Maritime Museum. JP for Roscommon and Leitrim. He married 1st, 26 June 1801, Emily, daughter of James Lawder Kelly esq. of Churchborough (Roscommon), and 2nd, 6 February 1812 at St Anne, Dublin, Harriet Bourne (c.1767-1871), and had issue:
(1.1) Alicia Jane Auchmuty (c.1807-73); married, 27 August 1822, Lt. Robert Ross Auchmuty RN (1789-1844) and had issue three sons and three daughters; died 10 January 1873; will proved 12 September 1873 (effects under £100)
(2.1) Judith Marcella Auchmuty (d. c.1864) (q.v.).
He inherited Kilmore House from his elder brother c.1806. 
He died at Kilmore House, 30 January 1845. His first wife died between 1809 and 1812. His widow died at Aghamore, reputedly aged 104, on 27 December 1871.

Auchmuty, Judith Marcella (d. c.1864). Daughter of Dr. Arthur Auchmuty (1769-1845) and his second wife, Harriet Bourne. She married, 21 September 1842 at Kilmore, Horatio Nelson Lawder JP DL, and had issue:
(1) Arthur Auchmuty Lawder (d. 1882) (q.v.);
(2) Christopher Richard Lawder (d. 1891); died 9 January 1891; administration granted to his sister, 27 July 1891 (effects £438);
(3) Harriet Alice Lawder (fl. 1891); married, March 1866, Thomas Whelan, sub-inspector of constabulary.
Her husband inherited Kilmore House in her right on the death of her father in 1845. He may have abandoned the house for a new one at Aghamore (Leitrim), on which it was said in 1884 that he had spent £2,500.
She died in about 1864. Her husband married 2nd, 9 May 1866, Barbara Mary, daughter of John Whelan of Rath (Wicklow) and 3rd, Katherine Louisa (d. 1900), fourth daughter of Dr. David Brereton MD of Dublin (who m2, Thomas Ievers of Dingle (Kerry)) and died 1 August 1877; administration of his goods was granted 24 August 1877 and again 12 June 1882.

Lawder, Arthur Auchmuty (d. 1882). Elder son of Horatio Nelson Lawder of Kilmore House and his wife Judith Marcella, younger daughter of Dr. Arthur Auchmuty (1769-1845) of Kilmore House, born after 1842. An officer in the Leitrim Rifle Regiment of Militia (Lt., 1865). He married, 10 May 1877 at St Stephen, Dublin, Martha Maria (b. 1858), youngest daughter of John Whelan of Rath (Wicklow), and had issue:
(1) Esther Lawder (b. 1878), born 27 June 1878.
He inherited Aghamore and Kilmore House from his parents; both were apparently sold in 1884 after his death.
He died at Maryborough (Co. Leix), 9 April 1882.

Sources

Burke's Landed Gentry, 1850, p.2; M. Bence-Jones, A guide to Irish country houses, 2nd edn, 1988, p. 47; Casey & Rowan, The buildings of Ireland: North Leinster, 1993, p. 437; http://www.bomford.net/IrishBomfords/Chapters/Chapter14/Chapter14.htm#14.10.4 _The_Achmuty_Family_; http://www.buildingsofireland.ie/niah/search.jsp?type=record&county=LF&regno=13401305;

Location of archives


Achmuty of Brianstown: miscellaneous deeds and family papers, 1696-1920 (Wiltshire & Swindon History Centre, 1040/100-102).


Coat of arms

Auchmuty of Brianstown and Kilmore House: Argent, a broken spear bendwise between two spur rowels of six points, azure, pierced of the field.


Can you help?

Here are a few notes about information and images which would help to improve the account above. If you can help with any of these or with other additions or corrections, please use the contact form in the sidebar to get in touch.
  • Can anyone supply a photograph of Kilmore House in Co. Roscommon? This needs to be carefully distinguished from many other houses of the same name.
  • Can anyone provide additional information about the genealogy of this family?


Revision and acknowledgements


This account was first published 8 March 2013, revised 11th May 2014, extended to cover the Auchmutys of Kilmore House, 21 February 2017, and updated 20 August 2020 and 14-15 July 2021. I am grateful to Annette Miller for additional information and to Dart Montgomery for a correction.