Maurice FitzGerald, 18th Knight of Kerry explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
Maurice FitzGerald, 18th Knight of Kerry
Order1:Knight of Kerry
Term Start1:5 December 1781
Term End1:7 March 1849
Monarch1:George III, George IV, William IV, Queen Victoria
Predecessor1:Robert FitzGerald
Successor1:Peter George FitzGerald
Order2:Member of Parliament for Kerry
Term Start2:1801
Term End2:1831
Predecessor2:Created
Successor2:Frederick William Mullins
Daniel O'Connell
Order3:Member of Parliament for Tralee
Term Start3:1806
Term End3:1807
Predecessor3:George Canning
Successor3:Samuel Boddington
Birth Date:1774 12, df=yes
Party:Irish Whig
Spouse:Maria la Touche
Cecilia Maria Knight
Children:10
Parents:Robert FitzGerald
Catherine Sandes

Sir Maurice FitzGerald, 18th Knight of Kerry (29 December 1774 – 7 March 1849) was an hereditary knight and an Irish Whig politician.

Early life

Sir Maurice FitzGerald was born on 29 December 1774 to Robert FitzGerald, 17th Knight of Kerry (1717–1781) and his third wife, Catherine Sandes, the daughter of Lancelot Sandes.[1] Upon his father's death in 1781, the seven-year-old Maurice assumed the title of Knight of Kerry.

Sir Maurice inherited the Fitzgerald family estates in County Kerry, which included residences and lands at Ballinruddery near Listowel, and Glanleam House on Valentia Island.[2] Sir Maurice developed the famous Valentia slate quarry on the island. The blue-coloured slate was especially in demand for billiard tables. It was also widely sought as a roofing slate given its attractive blue shade, and was used on roofs of some of the most famous buildings of the day, such as the Paris Opera House, Westminster Abbey, St Paul's Cathedral[3] and the new Palace of Westminster.[4]

Sir Maurice was an enthusiastic botanist, recognised the unique potential of the island's microclimate for sub-tropical plants and laid out a fifty-acre garden, using species just introduced from South America. His efforts won him great acclaim at the time and today his gardens have matured into dense woodlands.[5]

In the Spring of 1848, English poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson paid a visit to the 18th Knight of Kerry on Valentia Island, having procured a letter of introduction from Sir Maurice's cousin, the Limerick poet Aubrey Thomas de Vere. In a footnote in his father's memoir, Tennyson's eldest son Hallam Tennyson includes a letter from Bewicke Blackburne who was supervising Valencia Island's quarry at that time. Here Bewicke includes many interesting details of Tennyson's visit to Valentia, and comments about Sir Maurice (Hallam Tennyson, Tennyson, A Memoir, 1898, pp. 1:291-292). In addition, Aubrey T. de Vere also describes his cousin Sir Maurice in Hallam's memoir: "Alfred Tennyson's desire to see cliffs and waves revived, and we sent him to our cousin, Maurice FitzGerald, Knight of Kerry, who live at Valentia where they are seen at their best. . . . The next morning he pursued his way alone to Valencia. He soon wrote that he had enjoyed it. He had found there the highest waves that Ireland knows, cliffs that at one spot rise to the height of 600 feet, tamarisks and fuchsias that no sea winds can intimidate, and the old 'Knight of Kerry,' who, at the age of nearly 80, preserved the spirits, the grace and the majestic beauty of days gone by -- as chivalrous a representative of Desmond's great Norman House as it had ever put forth in those times when it fought side by side with the greatest Gaelic Houses, for Ireland's ancient faith, and the immemorial rights of its Palatinate." (de Vere qtd. in H. Tennyson, 1898, p. 1:291).

Blackburne writes of Sir Maurice at the time of Tennyson's visit that: "[No one] will hardly have forgotten the old Knight of Kerry, the owner of the Island, his dignified presence and his redolence of Grattan and John Philpot Curran and Castlereagh and the Irish Parliament in which he sat for many years" (Blackburne qtd. in H. Tennyson, 1898, p. 1:292fn).

Career

Sir Maurice FitzGerald represented County Kerry in the Irish House of Commons from 1795 until the Act of Union in 1801. He sat also for Tralee in 1800. Travelling in Belgium during the Waterloo Campaign of 1815, he brought news of the impending Battle of Waterloo from Ghent to London.[6] He was appointed joint Civil Lord of the Admiralty from 1834 to 1835.

Personal life

On 5 November 1801, FitzGerald married Maria la Touche, the daughter of the Right Hon. David la Touche of Marlay in Dublin. Maria's brother was Peter La Touche (1775–1830), a Member of Parliament in 1802–1806.[7] Together, they had 10 children:[8]

After Maria's death in 1829, he married the widow, Cecilia Maria Knight, who died in 1859.[8]

Sources

(Ireland)

Notes and References

  1. Web site: ThePeerage - Robert FitzGerald, 17th Knight of Kerry . 30 May 2009 .
  2. Web site: Burke's Peerage . 2022-08-16 . burkespeerage.com . en.
  3. Web site: Kingdom of Kerry . 16 August 2022 . Kingdom of Kerry/Valentia Slate . 16 August 2022 . KingdomOfKerry.com.
  4. Web site: Hickey . Donal . 2013-02-18 . Valentia slate to take pride of place at Westminster . 2022-08-16 . Irish Examiner . en.
  5. News: 2021-05-10 . Glanleam House - Hidden Ireland . Hidden Ireland . 2022-08-16 . en-GB.
  6. Book: Cathcart, Brian. The News from Waterloo. London. Faber. 2016. 978-0-571-31526-0. The Green Knight.
  7. Web site: LATOUCHE, Peter (?1775-1830), of Bellevue, co. Wicklow.. History of Parliament Online. 2012-12-07.
  8. Book: Foster. J.. The Royal Lineage of our Noble and Gentle Families. 1886. Рипол Классик. 9785871806173. en.
  9. Visitation of Ireland