- Robert Barnewall, 12th Baron Trimlestown
Robert Barnewall, 12th Baron Trimlestown ("c."1704 –
6 December ,1779 ) was a prominentAnglo-Irish landowner , active in theRoman Catholic cause.Life
Robert was the eldest son of
John Barnewall, 11th Baron Trimlestown (1672-1746). Robert's mother, John's wife, was Mary or Margaret (died 1771), daughter of Sir John Barnewall. Robert had two younger brothers, all three being educated privately. Robert travelled abroad extensively in his youth, studyingbotany andmedicine .O'Brien (2004)]Barnewall returned home to
Tremblestown Castle ("sic") inIreland in 1746 when he inherited his title and quickly became known for his stylish living and hospitality, extending to generous help to local poor people.By 1746, Catholics in Ireland were wholly disenfranchised by a series of acts of policy of the
British government ("see "). Barnewall saw himself as an inheritor of theHiberno-Norman establishment but, by the mid eighteenth century, agitation in the Catholic cause had shifted from the gentry to the risingmerchant andprofession al classes. Thus, in 1759, Barnewall split with the mercantile Catholics and mounted his own reform campaign but with little initial success. An offer that Catholics enlist in thearmed forces was rebuffed in 1762, a humiliation compounded when his son Thomas converted toProtestant ism.Barnewall's return to politics in 1775 was marked by a more conciliatory approach to his fellow Catholics and he was crucial to a successful project to develop an
oath of allegiance acceptable to the Catholic laity. Barnewall soon assumed the authority to speak for the entire Irish Catholic cause, including the "Catholic Committee ".With the British government engaged by the
American Revolutionary War , Barnewall renewed his earlier offer of enlistment. The renewed offer was timely. The British government'sQuebec Act of 1774, which had granted concessions to Catholics inQuebec , had been condemned by the revolutioniaries, and the Irish Catholic community was experiencing a wave of pro-British establishment enthusiasm. However, such patriotic fervour itself roused Protestant hostility inDublin . Barnewall's intervention to moderate Catholic passion was admired both by the British government and his Catholic following.His health deteriorating, his final political act was to head the list of signatories to the Catholic address of loyalty to the new
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland John Hobart, 2nd Earl of Buckinghamshire in 1777. Barnewall died in Dublin and was buried atTremblestown .Personal life
He married three times:
#Margaret (died "c."1740), daughter of James Rochfort ofLaragh ,County Kildare ;
#Elizabeth, daughter of John Colt ofBrightlingsea (in or before 1757); and
#Anne (died 1831), the fifth daughter of William Hervey fromLondon .He appears to have had four children, though two died very young.Two surviving sons, Thomas, and Mathias, adhered to the
Anglican Church of Ireland .References
Bibliography
*O'Brien, G. (2004) " [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/63654 Barnewall, Robert, styled twelfth Baron Trimleston (c.1704–1779)] ", "
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography ", Oxford University Press, accessed9 August 2007 ODNBsub
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