Chapter XXX.
Life of Lord Chancellor Sir Alexander
Fitton, Lord Gatsworth.
(continued from front page)
It is said that James II. employed his Irish Judges in diplomatic missions,
and in England they were received with derision, and nicknamed 'The Potato
Ambassadors.'
Of the Chief Judges who, at this period, presided in the Irish Courts of
Justice, we have a good account. In these judicial decisions no
authenticated act of cruelty or corruption remains on record. The three
powerful Judges, Nugent, Lord Riverstown, Rice, and Daly, remained within
the kingdom, in possession of large properties, and, armed in conscious
innocence, set their personal or political enemies at defiance. Two of the
Judges were Protestants, who had survived the revolution - even one of them
was continued in office by King William. But the great ornament of the Irish
Bench at this time was John Keating, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas; a
great magistrate who, in a slippery or stormy period, exercised official
station with mild manners and untainted integrity. This great man was calm,
patient, and humane in the trial of prisoners; clear, laborious, and
consistent in the discussion of civil suits; faithful to his King and
country in the indulgence of political principle, and attached to God in the
exercise of Christianity. Thus persecuting Protestants charged him with
being a concealed Papist, whilst furious Roman Catholics were confounded at
his firm attachment to the established religion. Connected with no party and
dignifying office by despising its tenure, he equally resisted the
interested views of Clarendon and Tyrconnel. Is it not certain some protest
would have been made by these eminent Judges, had Sir Alexander Fitton been,
in truth, the unworthy person whom Protestant historians have described?
Great allowance must be made for the violence of political writers during
this and the succeeding reigns. That the Irish Roman Catholics, plundered
and oppressed in the previous century, despoiled of their properties during
the time of Cromwell, and looking on the Act of Settlement as obtained by
fraud, and a base return for the sacrifices they had made towards the
Restoration of the Stuart dynasty, should look on James II. as their
Deliverer from the bondage in which they were kept was naturul. They
expected to be placed in those situations of power and emolument from which
they had been debarred by the Act of Queen Elizabeth, which directed 'that
all civil and military officials, lay and clerical, should take the Oath of
Supremacy.' James II., who was an avowed Roman Catholic, was desirous of
showing how much he felt the sufferings of the Irish on account of their
constancy to the creed of their forefathers.
Roman Catholics were commissioned to the army, to the Bench - Catholic
gentlemen were named High Sheriffs in counties; the Corporations, hitherto
exclusively Protestant, were now almost as exclusively Catholic, and the
local magistracy, who so lately scorned to allow a Papist to set beside
them, found, to their dismay, they were outnumbered by the members of the
hated creed. No wonder alarm and dismay fell upon the whole Protestant
population of Ireland. They, who had been accustomed to look upon the
Papists as the helots of the land, only fit to be hewers of wood or drawers
of water, now found all those high offices and places of dignity, which had
been heirlooms in Protestant hands, were grasped greedily, and clutched
firmly by the favourites of the Court. What if the children of the Roman
Catholic nobility and gentry, plundered by the Cromwellian Settlement,
should have their exile in Connaught ended, or return from abroad, and
demand their Restoration! Could the Act of Settlement be repealed? It was
stated that when King James II. sent Lord Clarendon to Ireland in 1685, the
Viceroy declared that the King would preserve the Acts of Settlement and
Explanation, and the Lord Lieutenant instructed the Judges to declare this
as the Magna Charta of Ireland. Would this be adhered to? Soon it was found
it would not. The first intimation of an intention to break this law was a
letter written by Sir Richard Nagle, Attorney-General for Ireland, one of
the most eminent lawyers of the day, who, whilst in England, pointed out
inaccuracies and imperfections in those Acts, and their great injustice.
This was termed the Coventry Letter. Then, when the Earl of Tyrconnel, was
appointed Lord Lieutenant, on his Proclamation, issued February 21, 1686, he
promised to defend the Jaws, liberties, and established religion, but upon
debate at the Privy Council, the Acts of Settlement and Explanation were
omitted, and Tyrconnel so wrought upon the mind of the King, that he
consented to the repeal of the Acts.
This was a blow at the whole Protestant landowners of the kingdom, and had
its irresistible consequence. It alienated the affections of the entire
Protestant population from the King and his Government, and before the
faithless monarch fled from England, the Ulster nobles and gentry were
preparing for civil war.
James II. quitted England on December 23, 1688, and sought shelter at the
Court of Louis XIV., who, in compassion to his fallen state, and hoping by
his means to check the increasing power of his adversary, William of Nassau,
offered him a French army to assert his rights. Among the few magnanimous
deeds or words related of the fugitive King is his reply to this offer: 'No
Sire, I will recover my dominions by the aid of my own subjects, or perish
in the attempt.' He was soon at the head of such Irish troops as were in the
service of France, numbering about 1,200, and with a strong armament sailed
for Ireland from Brest. The progress of King James II., from his landing at
Kinsale to his triumphal entry into Dublin, is little known. I am,
therefore, induced to describe it here. On his landing, March 12, 1688-9, he
was welcomed with shouts and acclamations, bonfires blazed, and windows
gleamed with light. He proceeded next day to Cork, and remained at
Major-General MacCarthys, where he, was joined by Lord Tyrconnel. He
continued at Cork from March 13 to 20, during which time the city kept high
festival in his honour. On Wednesday, March 20, he took his departure from
Cork for Dublin, and lay that night at the Earl of Cork's Castle at Lismore.
It was on this occasion his royal nerves were shaken by being suddenly asked
to look from the window of the tower which overhangs the Blackwater, and he
started back in affright on seeing the sheer depth of the rock on which the
Castle is built. [O'Flanagan's Guide to the Blackwater in Munster, p. 50.]
From Lismore he made the next day's journey to Clonmell. On Friday he rested
at the Duke of Ormond's Castle at Kilkenny, and on Saturday made a short
visit en passant to Sir Maurice Eustace's fine seat of Harristown, near
Kilcullen Bridge. All along his Majesty's route was one continuous
demonstration of loyalty. [At Carlow he received the same tender
demonstrations his grandson Charles Edward did in Scotland, in '45, when the
Jacobite ladies contended for his kisses. - Vide Dublin Magazine,p, 106,
1843.] On Saturday, March 24, about noon, he entered the Irish metropolis.
The streets, from James's Gate to the Dublin Castle, were lined by the
regular troops, and, at the entrance to this portion of the city, called the
Liberties, there was a stage, hung with tapestry, whereon were two harpers
playing. Here a number of Roman Catholic ecclesiastics, in their vestments,
met the King, and forty young ladies, clothed in white, preceded him to the
Castle, scattering flowers upon his path. The houses along the streets
through which the Royal progress lay, displayed great demonstrations of
loyalty. Banners waved from roofs and parapets, tapestry fluttered in the
breeze, and even the humblest dwelling showed a desire to welcome the
Catholic King. At the bounds of the city, the Lord Mayor and Corporation,
with the officers of various guilds, in their robes; Ulster King of Arms,
with the heralds and pursuivants, in tabards and uniforms, swelled the
cortege. Having received the Sword of State, his Majesty handed it to Lord
Tyrconnel, who bore it before the King through the city. The Lord Mayor also
presented the City Sword and Keys, and the Recorder of Dublin, Prime
Serjeant Dillon, read the Address of the Corporation. A line of
coaches-and-six, belonging to the Irish nobility, was followed by a guard of
honour, numbering two hundred Irish cavalry; then followed the Grand Prior,
Fitz James the Duke of Berwick's brother, the State trumpets and drums, with
twenty gentlemen-at-large. The King, preceded by Lord Tyrconnel, bearing the
Sword of State, rode a spirited charger; he wore a suit of plain cinnamon-coloured
cloth, and a black slouching hat; a George being over his shoulder, with a
blue ribbon. He was escorted by the Duke of Berwick, Lord Grnard, Lords
Powis Lord Melford on his right, with their hats on. Close behind rode a
troop of dragoons; then a number of Peers and gentlemen, more guards and
attendants; then coaches of Peers and gentlemen, amongst them the Judges,
who wore their robes, closed the procession.
A startling incident occurred while the King was riding along in this order.
One Flemming, a Scotchman, rushed through the crowd in Skinner's Row, flung
his hat high in the air, and cried aloud, 'Let the King live for ever! '
Then catching his Majesty's hand, fervently kissed it, and ran capering
after his hat. [Dublin Magazine, p. 106. 1843.] As the procession proceeded,
the favourite tune played was 'The King enjoys his own again,' and the
shout, 'God save the King!' was not disturbed by a dissentient voice. As he
approached the Castle, the Roman Catholic Primate, and several other
bishops, and members of various religious orders, met him. The first act of
the King, on dismounting, was to kneel and receive the blessing from the
Roman Catholic Primate.
Thus, in triumph and splendour, James II. entered Dublin. When he rested a
brief space, he repaired to the Castle Chapel, where a Te Deum was sung for
his happy arrival. Then a grand banquet followed in the new banqueting hall,
which Tyrconnel had built.
Next day, a proclamation issued for assembling a Parliament in Dublin on May
7. No Catholic Bishops were summoned, though among the Spiritual Peers were
six Protestant Bishops, including the Primate of the Protestant Church. One
Duke, ten Earls, sixteen Viscounts, and twenty-one Barons, with the six
Bishops, constituted King James's House of Lords. The Commons returned 224
[Vide The Irish Parliament of 1689. Dublin Magazine, p. 113, 1843.] Members.
They met at the King's Inns, on May 7, and the King opened Parliament in
person. He wore his Royal robes with the Crown. The Commons being summoned,
His Majesty delivered the Speech from the throne [Vide the Irish Parliament
of 1689. Dublin Magazine, p. 476, 1843.]:-
'My Lords and Gentlemen,
'The exemplary loyalty which this nation hath expressed to me at a time when
others of my subjects undutifully misbehaved themselves to me, or so basely
deserted me; and your seconding my Deputy as you did in his firm and
resolute asserting my right, in preserving this kingdom for me, and putting
it in a posture of defence, made me resolve to come to you, and to venture
my life with you in defence of your liberties, and my own right. And to my
great satisfaction, I have not only found you ready to serve me, but that
your courage has equalled your zeal. I have always been for Liberty of
Conscience, and against invading any man's property, having still in my
mind, that saying in Holy Writ, Do as you would be done to, for that is the
Law and the Prophets.
'It was this Liberty of Conscience I gave, which my enemies both abroad and
at home dreaded; especially when they saw that I was resolved to have it
established by law in all my dominions, and made them set themselves up
against me, though for different reasons. Seeing that if I had once settled
it, my people (in the opinion of the one) would have been too happy; and I
(in the opinion of the other) too great.
'This Argument was made use of, to persuade their own people to joyn with
them, and too many of my subjects to use me as they have done. But nothing
shall ever persuade me to change my mind as to that; and wheresoever I am
the master, I design (God willing) to establish it by law, and have no other
test or distinction but that of loyalty.
'I expect your concurrence in so Christian a work, and in making laws
against prophaneness and all sorts of debauchery.
'I shall, also, most readily consent, to the making such good and wholesome
laws as may be for the general good of the nation, the improvement of trade,
and the relieving of such as have been injured by the late Acts of
Settlement, as far forth as may be consistent with reason, justice, and the
publick good of my people. And as I shall do my part to make you happy and
rich, I make no doubt (if your assistance, by enabling me to oppose the
unjust designs of my enemies, and to make this nation flourish.
'And to encourage you the more to it, you know with what ardour, generosity,
and kindness, the Most Christian King gave a secure retreat to the Queen, my
son, and Myself, when We were forced out of England, and came to seek for
protection and safety in his dominions; how he embraced my interest, and
gave me such supplies of all sorts as enabled me to come to you, which,
without his obliging assistance, I could not have done; this he did, at a
time when he had so many and so considerable enemies to deal with, and you
see still continues to do so.
'I shall conclude as I have begun, and assure you I am as sensible as you
can desire, of the signal loyalty you have expressed to me, and shall make
it my chief study, as it always has been, to make you and all my subjects
happy.' [This speech corresponds with that given by Lesley, and James's own
memoirs. It is stated to be printed from an authentic manuscript, printed
and sold by E. Rider, Dublin, 1740. The Acts of this Parliament were printed
and sold at his Majesty's printing house, Ormond Quay, and at the College
Arms in Castle Street, 1689. Great pains were subsequently taken to destroy
the original editions of these Acts. They were burnt in the Castle Chamber,
and 500l. penalty imposed on persons retaining copies. One only is said to
be in existence - the Act for raising 20,000l. a month, in the King's Inns
Library. Vide the 'Statutes of 1689' in the Dublin Magazine, p. 29, 1843.]
At the conclusion of the King's Speech, the Lord Chancellor, Lord Gawsworth,
directed the Members of the House of Commons to retire and elect their
Speaker. They obeyed and chose Sir Richard Nagle, with whose abilities and
character we are already familiar. I must add a short notice of this
ornament of the Irish Bar.
Richard Nagle was born on the banks of the Munster Blackwater, and, it is
said, the old Castle of Carrignacunna (now the property of Mr. Foot) was the
home of his childhood. King says he was educated among the Jesuits, and
designed for a clergyman, but, afterwards, studied law, and arrived at great
perfection. We have seen, in the 'Life of Sir Charles Porter,' that he
declined the honour of being a Privy Councillor rather than give up his
practice at the Bar, and Tyrconnel rightly considered him a proper person to
advise the King upon the affairs of Ireland, when he brought him to England
in 1686. Nagle's reputation was so justly high, that this selection on the
part of Tyrconnel was regarded with dismay by parties interested in
maintaining the Act of Settlement intact. It is recorded that 'on being
informed of Nagle's arrival in London, they were so transported with rage,
that they had him immediately sent out of the city.' Upon this Nagle wrote
his celebrated letter from Coventry.[The Irish Parliament of 1689. Dublin
Magazine, p. 119, 1843.]
In this letter, dated Coventry, October 26, 1786, he shows the reasons which
induced the passing of the Acts of Settlement and Explanation, that it was
for their religion the estates of the Irish Catholics were sequestered, and
the hardship of allowing these Acts to remain unrepealed. He was at once
regarded as the ablest man of his party, received the honour of knighthood,
and was made Attorney-General in 1687. [The Nagles of Anakissy, near Mallow,
County Cork, now represented by my talented friend and kinsman, David A.
Nagle, Esq., Town Councillor of Cork, is a branch of the family from which
Sir Richard Nagle traced descent.] Duhigg [History of the King's Inns, p.
236.] bears the following high testimony to his character. 'James's
Attorney-General, Sir Richard Nagle, dignified that situation by exchanging
its usual character for that of a stern, inflexible patriot. He carried
measures similar to those of 1782, and thus paid homage to the excellence of
English law by transferring its full and complete enjoyment to his
countrymen.' On the arrival of James ll. in 1688-9, Sir Richard Nagle was
made Secretary of State, but this could not have been for some time, as he
was undoubtedly Speaker of the House of Commons during the short Session,
commencing May 7, 1689, and ending on July 20, of the same eventful year.
As the proceedings of this Parliament were subsequently declared null and
void, and the Acts passed were burned and of no effect, it is only as
historical events I refer to them. They show how fully men of all creeds and
classes recognised James as their lawful Sovereign, and how blindly attached
were the Irish to a race which so little deserved such devotion.
The Lords who sat in King James ll.'s Irish Parliament at Dublin, May 7,
1689 to November 12, were
Sir Alexander Fitton, Lord Baron of Gawsworth, Lord Chancellor; Dr. Michael
Boyle, Lord Archbishop of Armagh, Primate of all Ireland; Richard Talbot,
Duke of Tyrconnel.
Earls
Nugent Earl of Westmeath.
MacDonel Earl of Antrim.
Barry Earl of Barrymore.
Lambert Earl of Cavan.
MacCarthy Earl of Clancarty.
Power Earl of Tyrone.
Aungier Earl of Longford.
Forbes Earl of Granard,
Dougan Earl of Limerick.
Viscounts
Preston Viscount Gormanston.
Butler Viscount of Mountgarett.
Dillon Viscount of Costello and Gallen.
Netterville Viscount of Dowth
Magennis Viscount of Iveagh.
Sarsfield Viscount of Kilmallock.
Bourk Viscount of Mayo.
Dempsy Viscount of Glanmalier.
Brien Viscount of Clare.
Butler Viscount of Galmoy.
Barnewall Viscount of Kingsland.
Parsons Viscount of Rosse.
Bourk Viscount of Galway.
Brown Viscount of Kenmare.
Cheevers Viscount of Mount Leinster.
Bishops
A. Dopping, Bishop of Meath.
T. Otway, Bishop of Ossory and Kilkenny.
E. Wetenhall, Bishop of Cork and Ross.
S. Digby, Bishop of Limerick and Ardfert.
Barons
Benningham Baron of Athenry.
Courcy Baron of Kinsale.
Fitz Maurice Baron of Kerry.
Fleming Baron of Slane.
St. Laurence Baron of Howth.
Barnewall Baron of Trimblestown.
Plunkett Baron of Dunsany.
Butler Baron of Dunboyne.
Fitzpatrick Baron of Upper Ossory.
Plunkett Baron of Louth.
Bourke Baron of Castle Connell.
Butler Baron of Caher.
Bourke Baron of Brittas.
Blaney Baron of Monaghan.
Malone Baron of Glenmalure.
Maguire Baron of Enniskillen.
Hamilton Baron of Strabane.
Bellew Baron of Duleek.
Bourke Baron of Bophin.
Nugent Baron of Riverstown.
There was, also, a very national House of Commons assembled. The names of
the Members, as given in Archbishop King's work,. and in the Appendix to
Plowden, are unmistakably Irish, With the exception of three - Francis
Plowden and Dr. Stafford, returned for the borough of Bannow; and Luke
Dormer, Member for New Ross. The Members, with six exceptions, are supposed
to have been all Roman Catholics, and Plowden states 'were probably the
fairest representation of the people of Ireland that ever were sent to any
Parliament in that country.' [Hist. Review, vol. i.]
The Roman Catholics now beheld the long-coveted opportunity of regaining
possession of their forfeited estates. Many Members of the House of Commons
remembered their ancestral homes, from which they had been ruthlessly
expelled by the troopers of Cromwell, or the merciless undertakers, who, for
some inconsiderable sum, had become master of the broad lands in which the
forefathers of the Members dwelt. Several were of families whose afflicted
mothers, despairing fathers, and weeping sisters had been transplanted to
the wastes of Clare, or the rock-bound coasts of Connaught, and were ready
to grasp at the chance of again looking upon the pleasant fields in which
they had played in their youth, the forest glades through which they had
hunted in more mature years, and of ejecting in turn those who forcibly,
with the word of God on their lips, but the sword in their hands, offered
the choice of 'Hell or Connaught' to the Irish Papist. These were, no doubt,
the motives which made the now dominant party demand from the King the
repeal of the Acts of Settlement and Explanation. The King could not, for,
if unwilling, he was unable to refuse their demand. Accordingly a, Bill was
prepared, reciting 'the sacrifices which Bill to the Roman Catholics of
Ireland had made for the Royal authority; how the usurper, Oliver Cromwell,
seized and sequestered their estates, and gave them to his soldiers and
adherents; that two Acts of Parliament passed here, one intituled "An Act
for the better execution of his Majesty's gracious declaration for the
Settlement of the Kingdom of Ireland, and satisfaction of the several
interests of adventurers, soldiers, and others his subjects there;" the
other Act, intituled "An Act for Explaining of some doubts arising upon an
Act intituled an Act for the better execution of his Majesty's gracious
declaration for the settlement of his Kingdom of Ireland, and satisfaction
of the several interests of adventurers, soldiers, and others his subjects
there; and for making some alteration of, and additions unto, the said Act
for the more speedily and effectual settlement of the Kingdom;" by which
many of the said Catholic subjects were ousted out of their ancient
inheritances, without being as much as heard, and some were distributed
amongst Cromwell's soldiers and others, who, in justice, could not have the
least pretence, contrary to the peace made in 1648, and contrary to justice
and natural equity. Be it enacted by the King's most excellent Majesty, with
the consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and the Commons in this
present Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, that the
said two several Acts, &c., be and are hereby repealed.'
The Act, which was a very comprehensive one, [A very full transcript is
given in Plowden's Hist. Review, vol. i. Appendix, p. 171.] provided
compensation for innocent purchasers, or incumbrancers, out of the estates
of rebels, and authorised the Lord Chancellor to appoint Commissioners to
inquire and report upon the estates of rebels on August 1, 1688. Such
Commissioners to allot and reprise these, who, on petition, shall be
entitled to claim reprisal.
We can well imagine the dismay and alarm of the settlers during the progress
of this Bill through Parliament. The estates for which their fathers risked
life and limb, for which they conquered or intrigued, which many had bought
with cash, and from which they had expelled the Irish without the least
compunction, were now to be taken from them. They, in their turn, were to be
transplanted, and shoots of the old stem were to grow up in the old soil.
Such opposition as they best could make, they did. An address to King James
on behalf of purchasers, under the Address to Act of Settlement, was
prepared by Chief-Justice Keating [Archbishop King's State of the
Protestants, Appendix, p. 96.] - a most able document. It was on behalf of
purchasers who, 'for great and valuable considerations, have acquired lands
and tenements in this kingdom, by laying out, not only their portions and
provisions made for them by their parents, but also the whole product of
their own industry, and the labour of their youth, together with what could
be saved by a frugal management, in order to make some certain provision for
old age and their families, in purchasing lands and tenements under the
security of divers Acts of Parliament and public declarations from the late
King; and all these accompanied by a possession of twenty-five years.' This
address showed that by the conduct of Charles I. and Charles II. the
Settlement was binding; that the Acts were passed with all the formalities
usual in Acts of Parliament in Ireland; viz., framed by the Chief-Governor
and Council of Ireland, with the advice of the Judges and his Majesty's
Council there: transmitted to England; considered by the Council, before
whom Counsel and agents of the Irish pretending to be the proprietors were
heard; and the Acts of Settlement, having passed both Houses of Parliament,
received the Royal assent, as did in like manner the Act of Explanation.
Dopping, Lord Bishop of Meath, on June 4 1689 in his place in the House of
Lords, delivered a very able of and argumentative speech against the Bill
for repealing these Acts. He contended this Bill unsettled a formal
foundation (upon which this kingdom's peace and flourishing were
superstructed), and designs to erect another in its stead, the success
whereof is dubious and uncertain. He urged it was unjust to turn men out of
their estates without any fault or demerit, to deprive widows of their
jointures, and children of their portions, whose money had been laid out on
the public faith of the nation, declared in two Acts of Parliament, and on
the public faith of his Majesty's Royal brother, expressed in his Letters
Patent. He showed how delusive was the nature of the reprisals promised by
the Bill; that the repeal was neither for the public or the King's good,
that it would not only ruin the kingdom and people, but destroy all public
faith, and was inconvenient in point of time.
Despite all opposition, the Bill passed both Houses, and received the Royal
assent. We are told, indeed, and I believe truly, that James was unwilling
to pass the measure, and Bishop Lesley states, 'As to his carriage in
Ireland, I have heard not a few of the Protestants confess, that they owed
their preservation and safety, next under God, to the clemency of King
James, who restrained all he could the insolence and outrage of their
enemies, of which I can give you some remarkable instances and good
vouchers. I appeal to the Earl of Granard whether Duke Powis did not give
him thanks from King James for the opposition he made in the House of Lords
to the passing of the Act of Attainder, and the Act for the Repeal of the
Act of Settlement; and desired that he, and other Protestant Lords, should
use their endeavours to obstruct them. To which the Lord Granard answered,
"that they were too few to effect that; but if the King would not have them
pass, his way was to engage some of the Roman Catholic Lords to stop them."
To which the Duke replied, "that the King durst not let them know that he
had a mind to have them stopt."'
The representatives of the old inheritors having now the law in their favour,
were not slow to act upon it. The process appointed for the Acts of Repeal
to be administered by Commissioners was too tedious for the eager claimants.
According to Archbishop King, [State of the Protestants, p. 182.] the
following device was adopted to get into possession more speedily. Wherever
the Protestants had let their lands to Catholic tenants, these tenants
forsook the Protestant landlord, and became tenants to the pretended
Catholic proprietors. Several Protestants filed bills in Chancery,
complaining of this as contrary to the Act, which allowed them to keep
possession until May, 1690, which not being yet come, or any Commission
being appointed to execute the Act, they moved for injunctions to quiet the
possessions; but the Chancellor answered, 'That this did not concern
landlords who let their lands, but only such as occupied farms themselves;
and that the Parliament had granted that indulgence to them, only that they
might have time to dispose of their stocks, which not being the case with
those who had tenants, they must go to common law and try their titles.' By
this Equity. means most of the old proprietors got into their estates.
[The notice to quit served on the new proprietor, and also the order to
restore possession to the old, were as follows:-
'County Kildare
By the Lord Lieutenant of the County of Kildare and one of His Majesty's
Most Honourable Privy Council.
'Sir, This is to let you understand that I am authorised to give the
proprietor possession of the land of Ballysannan, &c., according to the Act
of Parliament; and that you may not be surprised therein I give you this
notice.
from, Sir,
'Your loving friend and servant,
'CHARLES WHITE'
'For John Annesly, Esq.'
Second Order.
'Whereas Luke Fitz Gerald, Esq., has proved himself before me to be the
ancient proprietor of the town and land of Ballysannan, and that his
ancestors were possessed of their mansion house there in the year 1641. I do
therefore, in pursuance of his Majesty's orders unto me, appoint the
undernamed persons to give possession of the mansion house there to Luke
Fitz Gerald, Esq. And for so doing, this shall be your warrant.
'Given under my hand and seal this 6th day of May 1690, I do hereby appoint
Captain W. Archbold or Captain J. Dillon, of Athy, to give possession of the
mansion house of Ballysannan.
'CHARLES WHITE'
'To Luke Fitz Geraldn, Esq.'
The following were among the Acts passed by the Parliament of Ireland,
elected in the reign of James II. A.D. 1689:-
'An Act declaring that the Parliament of England cannot bind Ireland, and
against writs of error and appeals to be brought, for removing judgments,
decrees, and sentences in Ireland into England.
'An Act for repealing the Acts of Settlement and Explanation.
'An Act for taking off all incapacities of the natives of the kingdom.
'An Act for repealing the Act for keeping and celebrating the 23rd of
October, as an anniversary thanksgiving in this kingdom.
'An Act for Liberty of Conscience, and repealing such Acts and Clauses in
any Act of Parliament which are inconsistent with the same.
'An Act for repealing an Act entitled " An Act for Confirmation of Letters
Patent, granted to his Grace, James Duke of Ormond."
'An Act for the encouragement of strangers and others to inhabit and plant
in the kingdom of Ireland.
'An Act prohibiting the importation of English, Scotch, or Welsh Coals into
this Kingdom.
'An Act for vesting in his Majesty the Goods of Absentees.
'An Act for the advance and improvement of Trade, and for the encouragement
and increase of Shipping and Navigation.
'An Act for the attainder of divers rebels, and for preserving the interests
of loyal subjects.'
The legality of King James's Parliament was not without defenders. It was
contended the three elements of a legal Parliament, King, Lords, and
Commons, existed in it. The Commons were summoned by writs directed, to the
legal returning officers. In the upper house, the Peers, Spiritual and
Temporal, were summoned, and sat in the usual way. The five new creations of
Peers were made legally and in order. This was the opinion of Mr. Lynch in
his Legal Institutions.
On the other side, it was argued that James was no longer King, when he
issued the proclamation and writs for assembling the Parliament; that the
English Convention Parliament of 1688 gave the Crown to William and Mary;
that the moment William became King of England, he was instantly King of
Ireland, and then Parliament passed a bill of rights - expelled the late
King and his dynasty; limited the crown to Protestants; forbade the King
marrying a Roman Catholic, and limited carrying arms to Protestants;
abolished the oaths of allegiance and supremacy, substituting the oaths of
allegiance and abjuration; gave the crown of England, France, and Ireland to
William and Mary, and the administration exclusively to King William ill.
[Parliament in Ireland, 1689. Dublin Magazine, p. 173, 1843.]
The events which followed William's progress to the Boyne are familiar to
the readers of Irish history. Tyrconnel accompanied James in his flight to
France, and returned to Limerick, where he died suddenly. On his death, the
Lord Chancellor, Chief Baron Rice, and Plowden, assumed the office of Lords
Justices, but their tenure of office was of brief duration.
Lord Chancellor Fitton was succeeded by Sir CHARLES PORTER as Lord
Chancellor in 1691. Fitton was attainted, and it is supposed followed his
Royal Master to France, and died there. Whether the conduct of Fitton before
he was made Chancellor was criminal or innocent, God only can judge, but His
hand fell heavily upon the representatives of the Fittons of Gawsworth. 'In
less than half a century the husbands of its two co-heiresses, James Duke of
Hamilton and Charles Lord Mohun, were slain by each other in a murderous
duel, arising out of a dispute relative to a partition of the Fitton
estates; and Gawsworth itself passed into an unlineal hand by a series of
alienations complicated beyond example in the annals of this county.' [Ormerod's
Cheshire, vol. iii. P. 295.]
Though no doubt the troubled reign of James II. was little favourable to
steady pursuits, the course of law flowed on uninterruptedly amid the crash
of thrones and fall of dynasties. There are nearly a hundred Chancery
decrees made during the reign of James ll. enrolled. I have looked carefully
through those made while Lord Gawsworth held the Seals, but could observe
nothing to mark ignorance of his duty, or incapacity to perform it. He
confirms reports, dismisses bills, decrees in favour of awards, grants
injunctions, with the confidence of an experienced equity judge.