Thomas FitzWilliam, 1st Viscount FitzWilliam: Difference between revisions
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In 1608 he narrowly avoided being caught up in the rebellion of Sir [[Cahir O'Doherty]], having stood [[surety]] for the good behaviour of O'Doherty, who had married Thomas's aunt Mary Preston.<ref>Ball, p.12</ref> A messenger arrived at Merrion Castle ordering FitzWilliam to produce the person of O'Doherty; fortunately FitzWilliam was not at home. |
In 1608 he narrowly avoided being caught up in the rebellion of Sir [[Cahir O'Doherty]], having stood [[surety]] for the good behaviour of O'Doherty, who had married Thomas's aunt Mary Preston.<ref>Ball, p.12</ref> A messenger arrived at Merrion Castle ordering FitzWilliam to produce the person of O'Doherty; fortunately FitzWilliam was not at home. |
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He was [[knighted]] the same year, and served as [[Sheriff of County Dublin]] in 1609. In 1610 he received a substantial grant of land in [[County Armagh]]. No doubts seem to have been entertained about his own loyalty to the Crown, except perhaps during the latter part of the English Civil War, In 1629 King [[Charles I of England|Charles I]] created him [[Viscount FitzWilliam]] in recognition of his family's long record of service to the Crown.<ref>Cokayne ''Complete Peerage'' 6 volumes. Reissued 2000 Vol. 5, p. 527</ref> It appears that a good deal was expected in return for the title, and Thomas had to make substantial gifts of money to the King. This put a particular burden on his estates since he was involved in protracted litigation with his numerous brothers and sisters, due to his father's breaking of an [[entail]] on the estates, which benefitted Thomas at the expense of his siblings. Like nearly all of his family he inclined to the [[Roman Catholic]] faith, while adhering in public to the [[Church of Ireland]]; later generations of Fitzwilliams were quite open in their support for the Catholic religion. |
He was [[knighted]] the same year, and served as [[Sheriff of County Dublin]] in 1609. In 1610 he received a substantial grant of land in [[County Armagh]] from the English Crown. No doubts seem to have been entertained about his own loyalty to the Crown, except perhaps during the latter part of the English Civil War, In 1629 King [[Charles I of England|Charles I]] created him [[Viscount FitzWilliam]] in recognition of his family's long record of service to the Crown.<ref>Cokayne ''Complete Peerage'' 6 volumes. Reissued 2000 Vol. 5, p. 527</ref> It appears that a good deal was expected in return for the title, and Thomas had to make substantial gifts of money to the King. This put a particular burden on his estates since he was involved in protracted litigation with his numerous brothers and sisters, due to his father's breaking of an [[entail]] on the estates, which benefitted Thomas at the expense of his siblings. Like nearly all of his family he inclined to the [[Roman Catholic]] faith, while adhering in public to the [[Church of Ireland]]; later generations of Fitzwilliams were quite open in their support for the Catholic religion. |
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==Civil war and last years== |
==Civil war and last years== |
Revision as of 22:33, 12 April 2020
Thomas FitzWilliam, 1st Viscount Fitzwilliam (1581–1650) was an Irish nobleman of the Stuart age. He was born to wealth and privilege, and acquired a peerage, but due to his loyalty to the English Crown he suffered considerable hardship during the English Civil War, and died in poverty.
Background
He was born in Dublin, probably at Merrion Castle, eldest of the five sons of Sir Richard FitzWiliam, Constable of Wicklow, and Jane Preston, daughter of Christopher Preston, 4th Viscount Gormanston.[1] The FitzWilliam family are recorded in Dublin from about 1210, and by the time of Thomas's birth they were among the wealthiest and most influential families in the Pale.
Early career
Thomas was only fourteen when his father died. As a young man he spent some time in London studying law at Gray's Inn. He was knighted in 1605, the year of his marriage.
In 1608 he narrowly avoided being caught up in the rebellion of Sir Cahir O'Doherty, having stood surety for the good behaviour of O'Doherty, who had married Thomas's aunt Mary Preston.[2] A messenger arrived at Merrion Castle ordering FitzWilliam to produce the person of O'Doherty; fortunately FitzWilliam was not at home.
He was knighted the same year, and served as Sheriff of County Dublin in 1609. In 1610 he received a substantial grant of land in County Armagh from the English Crown. No doubts seem to have been entertained about his own loyalty to the Crown, except perhaps during the latter part of the English Civil War, In 1629 King Charles I created him Viscount FitzWilliam in recognition of his family's long record of service to the Crown.[3] It appears that a good deal was expected in return for the title, and Thomas had to make substantial gifts of money to the King. This put a particular burden on his estates since he was involved in protracted litigation with his numerous brothers and sisters, due to his father's breaking of an entail on the estates, which benefitted Thomas at the expense of his siblings. Like nearly all of his family he inclined to the Roman Catholic faith, while adhering in public to the Church of Ireland; later generations of Fitzwilliams were quite open in their support for the Catholic religion.
Civil war and last years
When the Irish Rebellion of 1641 broke out, FitzWilliam, unlike many of the nobility of the Pale, remained loyal to the Crown, despite strong pressure from his mother's family, the Prestons of Gormanston, to join the Irish Confederacy.[4] He was one of only three nobles to offer their assistance in the Royalist defence of Dublin, and a garrison was placed in Merrion Castle. It was betrayed in June 1642 and thereafter FitzWilliam only lived there for short periods. He offered his services to the Lords Justices, but despite his long record of loyalty to the Crown he was rebuffed, apparently on account of his known leanings towards the Roman Catholic religion, and he took no further part in the fighting. He spent some time in England, where the King received him courteously. He was promised an English Earldom, but the promise was not kept. He returned to Ireland, only to discover that he had been outlawed]. In his last years he led an unsettled existence, living sometimes at Merrion Castle, sometimes with his eldest son at Howth, and sometimes in Louth. At times he seems to have been almost destitute, and he wrote to James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde in 1647 asking for repayment of a debt. In 1648 he was promised a pension of £100 a year, but it is unclear if he ever received it.[5]
Due perhaps to the confused conditions of the English Civil War, little seems to be known about the date and place of his death. Even the year has been disputed, but is generally stated to be 1650. He was certainly dead before 1655 when his eldest surviving son Oliver was allowed to inherit a part of the estates, though most of them were not restored until 1663.[6]
Family
In 1605 he married Margaret Plunkett, daughter of Oliver Plunkett, 4th Baron Louth and his wife Frances, who was the daughter of Nicholas Bagenal and Eleanor Griffith, and sister of Henry Bagenal and of Mabel, Countess of Tyrone.[7] They had four sons:
- Richard, who predeceased his father: He married Elizabeth Stanihust but had no children;
- Oliver FitzWilliam, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell, who was married three times but had no children;
- Christopher, who lived mainly in England: he married Jane Brereton of Malpas (whose sister Dorothy was his brother Oliver's first wife) and had one surviving daughter but no son;
- William FitzWilliam, 3rd Viscount FitzWilliam, ancestor of all succeeding Viscounts Fitzwilliam.
Character
His friend James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde described him as a man who was "in every way faithful to his allegiance".[8]