Walter Hussey Burgh Explained

Walter Hussey Burgh
Honorific Suffix:SL
Order1:Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer
Term Start1:2 July 1782
Term End1:1783
Monarch1:George III
Primeminister1:The Marquess of Rockingham
The Earl of Shelburne
Predecessor1:James Dennis
Successor1:Barry Yelverton
Order2:Prime Serjeant of Ireland
Term Start2:June 1782
Term End2:July 1782
Primeminister2:The Marquess of Rockingham
Predecessor2:James Browne
Successor2:Thomas Kelly
Term Start3:24 July 1777
Term End3:1779
Primeminister3:Lord North
Predecessor3:James Dennis
Successor3:James Browne
Office4:Member of Parliament for Dublin University
Term Start4:1776
Term End4:1782
Alongside4:Richard Hely-Hutchinson and John FitzGibbon
Predecessor4:Philip Tisdall
Successor4:Lawrence Parsons
Term Start5:1769
Term End5:1776
Alongside5:William de Burgh
Birth Name:Walter Hussey
Birth Place:County Kildare, Ireland
Death Place:Armagh, Ireland
Residence:Donore House, Naas
Alma Mater:Trinity College Dublin (BA)
Nationality:Irish
Party:Irish Patriot Party
Children:6

Walter Hussey Burgh SL (; ; 1742 – 1783) was an Irish statesman, barrister and judge who sat in the Irish House of Commons, served as Prime Serjeant (1777–79, 1782) and Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer (1782–83). He was considered to be one of the most outstanding orators of his time.[1]

Background

Hussey Burgh was born in County Kildare, son of Ignatius Hussey, barrister, of Donore House, near Naas, and his second wife, Elizabeth Burgh. Elizabeth was the daughter of the statesman and architect, Colonel Thomas de Burgh, and his wife Mary Smyth. Thomas Burgh designed some of the most notable Irish buildings of his era, including Trinity College Library.[1] Walter adopted the extra surname Burgh as a condition of inheriting the Burgh estate at Drumkeen, County Limerick, from his uncle, Richard Burgh. Another influential family connection was Anthony Foster, one of Burgh's predecessors as Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer: both of Foster's wives were members of the Burgh family.

Career

Hussey Burgh was educated at Mr. Young's school in Abbey Street, Dublin, and then at Trinity College Dublin, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1762; he was an accomplished classical scholar, and had some reputation as a poet. After studying at the Temple, he was called to the Bar in 1769 and, within a few years, became one of its leaders: the speed of his rise to the top was described as unprecedented. He entered the Irish House of Commons in the same year, sitting first for Athy (1769–76) and later for the University of Dublin (1776–82). He was a member of the popular drinking club, the Monks of the Screw.

In Parliament, he was a close associate of Henry Grattan, and a supporter of Grattan's "free trade" programme; he became legendary for his oratory in support of the Irish Patriot Party. At the same time, he prided himself on his independence of mind, preferring not to pledge support for any particular policy until he had examined its merits. He acquired, as his patron, Philip Tisdall (the immensely influential Attorney General for Ireland) who called him "the most promising of the rising young men".[2]

At Tisdall's request, Hussey Burgh was appointed Prime Serjeant (1777) and made a member of the Privy Council of Ireland. He resigned the office in 1779, in protest at the continuing restrictions on free trade, after making his celebrated speech "England has sown her laws as dragon's teeth". Friends said that he was too independent to be happy as a Government spokesman: cynics said that his failure to get a peerage explained much of his dissatisfaction. After the removal of the restrictions, he agreed to accept office again and was re-appointed Prime Serjeant in June 1782. A month later, in July 1782 he was appointed Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer, but he died the following year while holding the assizes in Armagh, reportedly from gaol fever.[3]

Speeches

Hussey Burgh was regarded as one of the greatest Irish orators of his time, but his speeches survive only in fragments. Memorable sayings of Burgh include:

Character

Hussey Burgh seems to have been universally liked: "mild, moderate and patriotic...friendly to a fault, and disinterested to a weakness...honest without affluence and ambitious without corruption".[4]

His principal fault, it was generally agreed, was his extravagance: he lived in considerable state, and liked to be driven to Court in a carriage with six horses and three outriders. He also undertook extensive rebuilding of Donore House. As a result of his improvidence, his early death left his children in serious financial difficulty, until Henry Grattan persuaded the House of Commons to vote them a pension.[5]

Family

In 1767, Walter Hussey married his second cousin, Anne de Burgh (died 1782), daughter of Thomas Burgh and Anne Downes, and sister of the statesman William de Burgh. They had one son and five daughters, including Catherine (1770–1840), who married Sir John Macartney, 1st Baronet, and Mary (died 1820), who married Richard Griffith. Their descendants included Arthur Hill Griffith, the politician Hussey Burgh Macartney, first Dean of Melbourne, and John Arthur Macartney, a colonist of Queensland.

See also

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Burgh, Walter Hussey. Burgh, Walter Hussey. 7. 329.
  2. Book: Hart, A.R. . History of the Kings Serjeants-at-law in Ireland . Four Courts Press . Dublin . 2000.
  3. Book: Ball, F. Elrington . The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921 . John Murray . London . 1926.
  4. Book: Barrington, Jonah . Personal Sketches of his own time . London . 1869.
  5. Book: Webb, Alfred . A Compendium of Irish Biography . 1878.