[go: up one dir, main page]

Stephen Moore, 3rd Earl Mount Cashell

Stephen Moore, 3rd Earl Mount Cashell (20 May 1792 – 10 October 1883), styled Lord Kilworth until 1822, was an Anglo-Irish aristocrat and politician who spent much of his life in what is now Canada.

Caricature by Spy published in Vanity Fair in 1883

Background and education

edit

Lord Kilworth was born in Dublin, Ireland, the son of Stephen Moore, 2nd Earl Mount Cashell and Margaret King, daughter of Robert King, 2nd Earl of Kingston. His mother's views on the education and treatment of children had been formed by her time as a pupil of Mary Wollstonecraft. He was a graduate of Trinity College, Cambridge.[1]

Career

edit

Lord Mount Cashell spent some time in Switzerland and married in 1819 Anna Marie Wyse/Wyss (c. 1793–1876) of Bern. The couple then lived for a time in Frankfurt, Germany and had four daughters and three sons.

In 1826 he was elected an Irish representative peer and was able to take a seat in the House of Lords.[2]

In 1833 the family left Europe for British North America and settled in Lobo Township in the London District, Upper Canada (later Lobo Township in Middlesex County, Ontario). Using the services of an agent Lord Mount Cashell purchased 1,000 acres (4.0 km2) from the estate of the late Captain John Matthews, an Upper Canadian politician and former officer in the Royal Artillery who had come to British North America in the retinue of Governor-General Charles Lennox, 4th Duke of Richmond. Settling on the former Matthews' estate Mount Cashell built – by Upper Canadian standards – a large home for his family and servants. During his time in Upper Canada (later Canada West and then Ontario), he sometimes ran foul of local authorities by asserting his rights as an elected representative peer in the Irish Peerage. Local folklore indicates that Mount Cashell had the propensity to use a pistol to shoot at flies who infiltrated his home. On 1 October 1865, Mount Cashell's lawyer, H.C.R. Becher, based in nearby London, Ontario, confided in his diary that "The Earl of Mountcashell dines with me often. He is a troublesome client, rather amusing as a guest at first, but in the main a bore." Various members of the family travelled between Britain and the lands in British North America and Mount Cashell's daughter-in-law, Jane Dance, wife of the Hon. George F. Moore and daughter of George Mainwaring Dance, Esq died at the Lobo property in 1868 and was buried in a local cemetery.[3]

In 1847 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society.[4]

By 1870 the family had wound up its dealings in the country and returned to Britain. Mount Cashell was said, when between 85 and 90, to have been engaged to marry a Miss Kennedy.[1] He died ín Paddington, London, aged 91 in October 1883 and was succeeded by his son Stephen Moore, 4th Earl Mount Cashell (1825–1889) who was in turn succeeded by his younger brother Charles William Moore, 5th Earl Mount Cashell (1826–1898).

References

edit
  1. ^ a b "Kilworth (Stephen), Lord (KLWT810L)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  2. ^ leighrayment.com Representative Peers - Ireland[usurped]
  3. ^ Lobo Township Heritage Group. The Heritage of Lobo, 1820-1990 (Ilderton, Ontario: Lobo Township Heritage Group, 1990), 275-279.
  4. ^ "Library Archive". Royal Society. Retrieved 29 November 2012.
  • Lobo Township Heritage Group. The Heritage of Lobo, 1820-1990 (Ilderton, Ontario: Lobo Township Heritage Group, 1990), 275–279.
  • Illustrated London News 27 October 1883.
Peerage of Ireland
Preceded by Earl Mount Cashell
1822–1883
Succeeded by
Stephen Moore
Political offices
Preceded by Representative peer for Ireland
1826–1883
Succeeded by