Arthur Price, Bishop of Cashel

Arthur Price, Bishop of Cashel

“Arthur Price” (1678-9 – 1752) was Church of Ireland Archbishop of Cashel from 1744 until his death. Previously he had been Church of Ireland Bishop of Clonfert (1724 – 1730), Ferns (1730 – 1734) and Meath (1734 – 1744).

Childhood and Patronage

Arthur was the son of Samuel Price, vicar of Kildrought and Straffan in the diocese of Dublin and, from 1672, prebendary of Kildare. Arthur Price entered Trinity College Dublin, on 2 April 1696, aged seventeen, and was elected a scholar in 1698. He graduated BA in 1700 and DD on 16 April 1724. After taking holy orders he was successively curate of St Werburgh's Church, Dublin, and vicar of Celbridge, Feighcullen, and Ballybraine. His father’s friendship with a favourite of the conquering English King William III, [William Conolly|William "Speaker" Conolly] (1662-1729), placed him in the way of the political patronage vital for advancement in the established church at the time. Arthur became William Conolly's chaplain and was named prebendary of Donadea on 4 April 1705. Arthur was appointed canon and archdeacon of Kildare on 19 June 1715. A few months later Conolly was elected as speaker of the Irish House of Commons, confirming his position as chief undertaker now that the Whigs had returned to power in London. On 31 March 1721 Price became dean of Ferns and Leighlin. Two years later he received the benefice of Louth in Armagh.He granted leases of some of the most valuable holdings to Price. In 1724 when Price was Dean of Ferns, but on his way to further promotions, had a fine stone house erected close by the old house of his father in Oakley Park in the recently renamed Celbridge. At the time of Conolly’s ascendancy, as his speakership coincided with the Lord Lieutenancy of Charles Fitzroy, Duke of Grafton, Price was appointed to the see of Clonfert on 1 May 1724, a promotion that was described as “highly provocative” by the Irish chancellor, Alan Brodrick (1st Viscount Midleton), a former friend of Conolly’s who resented Conolly's emergence as chief manager or ‘undertaker’ of the government's parliamentary business.

Guinness Connection

Price took over the Kildrought town brewery in 1722 and placed his land steward Richard Guinness in charge of production of "a brew of a very palatable nature". After his death in 1752, Dr Price's estate bequeathed £100 to Richard's son, the 27-year-old Arthur Guinness to help him expand the brewery, first in 1755 on a new site in Leixlip and from 1759 in St James’s Gate in Dublin. Some of the blocked up doors from the original Price-Guinness brewery can still be seen on the perimeter walls of the Catholic church forecourt in Celbridge.

Four Times a Bishop

After Conolly’s death in 1729 Price was translated from Clonfert on 26 May 1730, to the see of Ferns and Leighlin, where he had served as dean. On 2 February 1734 he was transferred to Meath, “on account of his loyalty to George II and his service to the House of Lords.”While bishop of Meath he began to build an Episcopal residence at Ardbraccan to the design of Richard Castle but he left the diocese before it was completed, and the house remained unfinished for 40 years with the Bishops living in one of the wings. Eventually it was completed in the 1770s by Bishop Henry Maxwell.

Archbishopric and Death

In May 1744 Dr Price succeeded Theophilus Bolton as archbishop of Cashel and initiated the dismantling of the old and rapidly decaying cathedral which had been judged incapable of restoration. Proceedings were initiated by act of council, 10 July 1749 and construction of a new cathedral authorised. In 1747 he was made vice-chancellor of Trinity College Dublin.Price died in 1752 and was buried in the churchyard of St John's, the parish church at Cashel. In 1783 a new cathedral building was completed on the site of St John's.

References

*A History of Celbridge by Tony Doohan (Celbridge Community Council 1984).
*Cashel & Emly Heritage by Walter G. Skehan (1994)
*Journal of the Kildare Archaeological Society Volume II: 201-203
*The Diocese of Meath in the Eighteenth Century by Patrick Fagan (2001) ISBN 978-1851826162


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