Matthew Corbally | |
Office: | Member of Parliament for Meath |
Term Start: | 10 June 1842 |
Term End: | 25 November 1870 |
Predecessor: | Daniel O'Connell Henry Grattan |
Alongside: | Edward McEvoy (1855–1871) Frederick Lucas (1852–1855) Henry Grattan (1842–1852) |
Successor: | Edward McEvoy John Martin |
Term Start2: | 4 February 1840 |
Term End2: | 9 July 1841 |
Predecessor2: | Morgan O'Connell Henry Grattan |
Alongside2: | Henry Grattan |
Successor2: | Daniel O'Connell Henry Grattan |
Birth Date: | April 1797 |
Restingplace: | Saint Colmcille's Church, Skryne, County Meath |
Nationality: | Irish |
Party: | Liberal |
Otherparty: | Independent Irish (1852–1859) Whig (before 1852) |
Children: | Mary Margaret Stourton, Baroness Stourton |
Parents: | Elias Corbally, Mary Keogh |
Residence: | Corbalton Hall, County Meath |
Matthew Elias Corbally (April 1797 – 25 November 1870)[1] was an Irish Liberal, Whig and Independent Irish Party politician.[2]
Corbally was the son of Elias Corbally and Mary née Keogh.[1] He married Matilda Margaret Preston, daughter of Jenico Preston, 12th Viscount Gormanston (1775–1860) and Margaret Southwell, in 1842. They had one child, Mary Margaret Corbally (1845–1925), who married Alfred Stourton, Baron Mowbray, Segrave and Stourton and had ten children. They lived at Corbalton Hall in County Meath.[3] Corbally and his wife are buried in a sealed vault at Saint Colmcille's Church, Skryne.[4]
He was educated by Rev. Richard Norris in Drogheda, and then at Trinity College Dublin.[5]
Corbally was first elected unopposed as a Whig-Radical MP for Meath at a by-election in 1840[6] but he did not stand for re-election at the next general election in 1841. When Daniel O'Connell was elected for both Meath and County Cork a by-election was called at which Corbally was again elected as a Whig unopposed.[2] [7] He then held the seat for the remainder of his life in 1870, joining the Independent Irish Party shortly after the general election in 1852 and joining the Liberal Party when it was formed in 1859.[8] He was a supporter of the abolition of tithes, reform of corporations, and reform of the ballot, and was opposed to privileges being given to the Bank of Ireland.
Corbally was also a Justice of the Peace and, in 1838, he was High Sheriff of Meath.[9] He was also a captain in the Royal Meath Regiment.[10]