Hobart-Hampden
Family title
Earl of Buckinghamshire
Estate(s)
Name | Description |
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Hobart-Hampden | There are a number of Irish links to this family beginning with the attendance of Sir John Hobart at the Battle of the Boyne. His grandson, another Sir John, was created Earl of Buckinghamshire in 1746. The 2nd Earl of Buckinghamshire married, as his second wife, Caroline Conolly, daughter of William Conolly of Castletown House, county Kildare. In 1792 Robert, 4th Earl of Buckinghamshire married as his first wife, Margaretta, daughter and co heir of Edmund Bouke of Urrery, county Mayo and widow of Thomas Adderley of Innishannon, county Cork. Lewis refers to the Earl of Buckinghamshire as one of the principal proprietors in the Kilmallock area of county Limerick. In the 1870s the Earl owned over 2,000 acres in the county in the barony of Coshma. C.E. Vandeleur was agent to the 6th Earl in the 1870s. |
Bourke (Oory) | A branch of the Bourkes of Moneycrower or Bunacrower, later Earls of Mayo, settled at Oory [also spelt Urey/Urrey], parish of Tagheen, barony of Clanmorris, county Mayo in the 17th century. They intermarried with other Bourke families and with the Fitzgeralds of Turlough, Kellys of Kelly's Grove and Fiddane and with the Shees of Castlebar. Burke's ''Landed Gentry'' records four generations of Bourkes residing at Oory until the estate was sold in the mid 18th century. Later generations of the family settled in Jamaica and England. One descendant, Eliza Jane Dennis of Jamaica, married James Hewitt Massy Dawson in 1800. By the time of the first Ordnance Survey the Brownes of Brownhall were in possession of Oory and the Nettervilles held Coarsefield, which was probably part of Oory under the Bourkes. One branch of the family lived at Curry in the parish of Mayo in the late 18th century and intermarried with the Brownes of the Neale. Two daughters and co-heiresses married Patrick Kirwan of Claremount and Charles McManus of Barley Hill and appear to have shared the townland of Curry - Curry (McManus) and Curry (Kirwan). |