Earlscliffe residents 1850 to 1901
Captain William Bunbury McClintock
We
believe that the house at Earlscliffe was built around 1844
[1] with one of the earliest known occupiers being
Royal Navy Captain William Bunbury McClintock around 1850.
[2] [3]
As a Lieutenant in the Royal Navy, Bunbury McClintock had sailed on HMS
Samarang and had sailed the coast of South America with Charles Darwin
[4] in the 1830s. During this time Bunbury McClintock
secured the first post on HMS Samarang for one of his young cousins,
Francis Leopold McClintock, the arctic explorer who later discovered the
Prince of Wales Island and
Prince Patrick Island and also discovered the fate of the explorer Franklin
who had perished looking for the Northwest Passage [5]
Captain William Bunbury McClintock later became MP for Carlow
[6] and built the house and gardens at Lisnavagh in
County Carlow shortly after his marriage to Pauline Stronge in 1842.
[7]
We believe that the Captain owned Earlscliffe in 1864 but unfortunately he
passed away in 1866. His wife continued to own Earlscliffe for some years until
her death in 1876. [4] In Turtle Bunbury's excellent
website exploring the history of the Bunbury family, it is mentioned that living
at Earlscliffe was good for the health of the Captain's wife.
[8]
The house was put up for auction in 1877. [9] It is
not known who bought the house at this time, but around 1886 Earlscliffe house
was owned by the Knox family [10]. We are uncertain as
to who the Knox family were, except that a daughter of theirs lived at another
house nearby on Ceanchor Road (Couleen) until she was in her 80s in the
1950s.[11] The Knox family put the house up for
auction in the summer of 1895. [12]
In August 1896 the house was purchased by John Randal Plunkett (who also had
a property at 33 Merrion Square South). [13]
Again, we are uncertain as to who the family were. However, they didn't stay
long as the house was put up for rent in June 1901 [14]
and in October 1901 Earlscliffe was sold to Professor John Pentland Mahaffy,
soon to be Provost of Trinity College Dublin.[15]
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Disclaimer. Parts of the data found in these history pages has been
derived from sources currently available on the internet. In researching the
previous owners of Earlscliffe, certain assumptions have been made as to the
validity of this internet data. If you believe that some of this data is
inaccurate, please use the contacts page to let us
know.
- [1] A sale notice for Earlscliffe in the Irish Times July 6 1895 mentions
that it is "held as to part for 143 years from 1st November 1944, under a
lease dated 15th December 1847, and a reversionary lease dated 1st May
1895..."
- [2] National Register of Archives, Record Reference D/4132/G/, NRA
catalogue reference NRA 40262 McClintock-Bunbury
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/nra/searches/pidocs.asp?P=P42634
- [3] Thom's Irish Almanac & Official Directory~1864, as listed in "Extracts
From Various Trade Directories 1834 To 1910"
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~chrisu/howth5.htm
- [4]
http://www.turtlebunbury.com/family/bunburyfamily_lisnavagh/bunburyfamily_lisnavagh_captainwilliam.html
. Turtle Bunbury, a descendent of the Captain's family, has confirmed that
Pauline Strong died in 1876. This fits in with the entry in [2] above which
states that the last date that she is known to have lived at Earlscliffe was
in that year. Turtle has a well laid out and fascinating site about the many
generations of the Bunburys and is well worth a visit. See
http://www.turtlebunbury.com
- [5] As related in the book "The Arctic Fox - Francis Leopold McClintock,
Discoverer of the fate of Franklin", David Murray, 2004. Cork: The Collins
Press, ISBN 1-55002-523-6
- [6] The House Of Commons Constituencies - County Carlow,
http://www.angeltowns.com/town/peerage/ccommons2.htm
- [7] Family History, Stronge Of Tynan Abbey, Co. Armagh
http://www.turtlebunbury.com/history/history_family/hist_family_stronge.htm
- [8]
http://www.turtlebunbury.com/family/bunburyfamily_lisnavagh/bunburyfamily_lisnavagh_captainwill3.html
- [9] An advert in the "The Freeman's Journal", May 1 1877 describes
Earlscliffe as a "charming residence with ornamental grounds and garden, the
whole comprising 4a. 3r. 29p" and that the "present proprietor has expended a
considerable sum in valuable and judicious improvements".
- [10] Thom's Irish Almanac & Official Directory~1886, as listed in
"Extracts From Various Trade Directories 1834 To 1910"
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~chrisu/howth7.htm
- [11] As told by Olive Stanley Clarke to David Robinson in the 1980s.
- [12] The house was advertised in the Irish Times July 6 1895 pg 9.
Earlscliffe was described as a "first class Residence, in perfect order,
with every residential attraction, situated on the sunny side of Howth, facing
Kingstown, and adjoining the sea shore, standing upon about five acres.
Immediate possession." It also said that the "climate on the south
slope of Howth is well know for salubrity, being well protected from north and
east winds. Earlscliffe occupies the choicest position on the south slope of
Howth, the most enviable marine residential position in the County of Dublin."
- [13] Thom's Irish Almanac & Official Directory~1897, as listed in
"Extracts From Various Trade Directories 1834 To 1910"
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~chrisu/howth9.htm
- [14] Irish Times June 15, 1901, pg 11
- [15] A History of the County Dublin, Francis Elrington Ball, originally
published in six volumes (1902-1920). Volume 5, Chapter 9 "As a Packet Station
and After"
http://www.chaptersofdublin.com/books/ball1-6/Ball5/ball5.9.htm
This page was last updated on
04-Jun-2009 .
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