Alexander Stewart (1699–1781)
Alexander Stewart (1699 – 22 April 1781) was an Irish landowner who grew rich by inheriting a fortune at the death of Robert Cowan, a former governor of Bombay. His son Robert became the 1st Marquess of Londonderry.
Alexander Stewart | |
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Born | 1699 Ballylawn Castle |
Died | 2 April 1781 |
Spouse(s) | Mary Cowan |
Issue | |
Father | William Stewart |
Birth and origins
Alexander was born in 1699[1] or 1700[2] at Ballylawn Castle,[3] near Manorcunningham in County Donegal. He was the second son of William Stewart and his wife. His father had his lands consolidated by Charles I under the name of Stewart's Court,[4] raised a Williamite troop of horse in the run-up to the Siege of Derry[5] and was therefore known as Colonel William Stewart.[6]
Alexander's grandfather is not known by name, but Alexander was a great-grandson of Charles Stewart, whose father John[7][8] was given land at Ballylawn in County Donegal in the plantation of Ulster, built Ballylawn Castle on that land, and held fishing rights in Lough Swilly.[9][10][lower-alpha 1] John Stewart is likely to have been a younger son of the Stewarts of Garlies in Galloway, Scotland.[8]
Alexander's mother, whose first name is unknown, was a daughter of William Stewart of Fort Stewart, near Ramelton, County Donegal.[14] The Stewart family background was Scots-Irish and Presbyterian.
He appears below as the younger of two brothers:
- Thomas (died 1740), inherited Ballylawn and pursued a military career but died childless in 1740;[15] and
- Alexander (1699–1781).
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Alexander, as a younger son, went into commerce with an apprenticeship at Belfast and became a successful merchant in the Baltic trade.[16] He also became an elder in the First Presbyterian Church in Rosemary Street, Belfast.[17]
Marriage and children
Alexander Stewart married on 30 June 1737 in Dublin a cousin, Mary Cowan,[18][19] daughter of John Cowan, alderman of Londonderry and his wife Anne Stewart, daughter of Alexander Stewart of Ballylawn, and sister of the former Governor of Bombay, Robert Cowan, who had died on 21 February 1737 in London.
Alexander and Mary had seven children:
Brother's death and succession
In 1740 his elder brother, Thomas, died and Alexander inherited the Ballylawn estate.
Cowan inheritance
He then acquired the rights to Robert Cowan's substantial estate. Being now rich, Stewart retired from business in 1743, and used the money from the Cowan inheritance to become a substantial landowner in County Down by buying estates at Comber and Newtownards in 1744.[27][28]
Mount Stewart
Around 1750 Alexander Stewart rebuilt a house called Mount Pleasant on his estate near Newtownards and renamed it Mount Stewart.[29] In 1780 Stewart commissioned the Temple of the Winds at Mount Stewart from James "Athenian" Stuart. This is an octagonal neo-classical building that was completed by his son Robert after his death.[30]
In 1755 he was left the property of William Bruce (1702–1755), a Dublin bookseller from Killyleagh, which he divided between Bruce's relations.[31]
In politics
In 1759 the member of the Parliament of Ireland for the city of Londonderry, William Scott, was raised to the bench. Initially William Hamilton was elected to succeed him, but the election was declared void. Alexander Stewart was returned in his place in April 1760, but he was also declared not duly elected. Eventually Hamilton represented the constituency from May 1760 until his death later that year.[32]
Death and timeline
Stewart died on 2 April 1781 and was succeeded by his eldest son Robert.[33][34]
The Stewart family papers are preserved in the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland.[35]
Timeline | ||
---|---|---|
Age | Date | Event |
0 | 1699 | Born.[1] |
15 | 1714, 1 Aug | Accession of King George I, replacing Queen Anne.[36] |
38 | 1737, 30 Jun | Married Mary Cowan.[19] |
44 | 1743 | Bought 60 townlands in County Down.[27] |
61 | 1760, 25 Oct | Accession of King George III, replacing King George II.[37] |
82 | 1781, 2 Apr | Died.[33] |
Notes
- There are two townlands called Ballylawn in county Donegal: one in Raymoghie Parish, Raphoe Barony, near Manorcunningham;[11] the other in Moville Upper Parish, Inishowen East Barony.[12] The castle stood in the one near Manorcunningham, but Bew by error placed it near Moville[13]
- Burke 1869, p. 704, left column, line 8: "ALEXANDER STEWART, Esq., of Mount Stuart, co. Down, M.P. for Londonderry, b. 1699 ..."
- Debrett 1828, p. 634, line 31: "ALEXANDER b. 1700, who represented the city of Londonderry in parliament and purchased ..."
- Hyde 1933, p. 9: "Alexander Stewart, Castlereagh's paternal grandfather, was born at Ballylawn in 1700."
- Debrett 1828, p. 634, line 9: "WILLIAM STEWART, of Ballylawn-castle, co. Donegal, esq., who gad a grant from Charles I of the manor of Stewart's Court ..."
- Bew 2012, p. 6, last line: "His son, Colonel William Stewart, had raised a troop of horse during the siege of Londonderry by James II in 1689 ...
- Graham 1841, p. 292: "He raised a troop of horse at his own expense for the defence of Londonderry in 1689."
- Burke 1869, p. 704, left column, line 3: "JOHN STEWART, Esq., of Ballylawn Castle (the first of the family that settled in Ireland), received a grant of land from JAMES I., in the co. Donegal and was s. by his eldest son CHARLES STEWART, Esq., whose great-grandson ALEXANDER of Mount Stewart ..."
- Johnston 1906, p. 80: "ALEXANDER STEWART of Ballylawn and Mount Stewart, great-great-grandson of John Stewart of Ballylawn castle said to be a cadet of Garlies ..."
- Hyde 1933, p. 7: "... built a castle on the estate, which he called Stewart's Court and exercised the manorial rights of free fishing in Lough Swilly ..."
- https://www.duchas.ie/en/cbes/4493734/4415074/4529491
- "Ballylawn Townland, near Manorcunningham, Co. Donegal". Retrieved 8 September 2018.
- "Ballylawn Townland, near Moville, Co. Donegal". Retrieved 3 March 2019.
- Bew 2012, p. 6, penultimate line: "In fact his [i.e. Castlereagh's] Irish ancestors could be firmly traced back a further three generations to the Plantation of Ireland in the mid-sixteenth century, during which time Alexander's grandfather (known as Alexander Macaulay) obtained a plot of land at Ballylawn, near the town of Moville in County Donegal, in the north-west of Ireland."
- Debrett 1828, p. 634, line 20: "... he [William Stewart] m. the da. of William Stewart of Fort Stewart, co. Donegal ..."
- Debrett 1828, p. 634, line 26: "THOMAS, the eldest, succeeded at Ballylawn Castle and served as captain in Mountjoy's regiment; m. Mary 2nd da. of Bernard Ward, esq., (ancestor of the viscounts Bangor) by Mary sister of Michael Ward, bishop of Derry, and d. without issue, 1740, was succeeded by his only brother ..."
- Bew 2012, p. 7, line 4: "As a young man he served an apprenticeship in a trading house in the port of Belfast ..."
- Bew 2012, p. 9, line 13: "Alexander Stewart was also an elder in Belfast's First Presbyterian Church ..."
- Hyde 1933, p. 11, Note 1: "they were married in Dublin (June 30, 1737) ..."
- Bew 2012, p. 7, line 10: "The family's financial fortunes were given a significant boost when Alexander married his cousin Mary Cowan on 30 June 1737."
- Debrett 1828, p. 634, line 51: "Anne, b. 27 Sept. 1738, d. 21 April 1781."
- Debrett 1828, p. 634, line 39: "ROBERT, first marquess."
- Debrett 1828, p. 634, line 40: "William, b. 11 April 1741, d. in 1742."
- Debrett 1828, p. 634, line 52: "Francis, b. 26 Oct. 1742."
- Debrett 1828, p. 634, line 41: "William, b. 3 July 1744, d. 1762."
- Debrett 1828, p. 634, line 42: "4. ALEXANDER, b. 26 March 1746, m. 2 Oct. 1791, Mary Moore, 3d da. of Charles, marquess of Drogheda (by Anne, eldest da. of Francis Seymour, 1st marquess of Hertford,) and d. Aug. 1831 ..."
- Debrett 1828, p. 634, line 53: "Mary, b. 15 April 1747, d. young."
- Bew 2012, p. 7, line 16: "Alexander retired from business and bought into the landed gentry in 1743, with the acquisition of sixty townlands and a large estate in County Down ..."
- Watt, Dr Neil. "Mary Cowan".
Her trustees invested, in 1744, a portion of her fortune thought to be in the region of £42000, consisting of East India Company Stock, in 'two extensive manors in County Down, Newtownards and Comber, comprising in all sixty townships, which were for sale and might be expected to yield a satisfactory return on capital investment.'
- Bew 2012, p. 7, line 21: "The family home which was built on the grounds was called Mount Stewart, an adaptation from the locations's former name, Mount Pleasant ..."
- Bew 2012, p. 7, line 29: "... the Temple of the Winds, an octagonal neo-classical building commissioned by Alexander Stewart."
- Benson 2004, p. 336: "He left his property to Alexander Stewart of Newtownards, co. Down, the father of the first marquess of Londonderry, for distribution to his relatives."
- House of Commons 1878, p. 659: "William Hamilton, esq., in place of William Scott, Justice of the King's Bench."
- Debrett 1828, p. 634: "... [Alexander Stewart] d. 2 April 1781 ..."
- Burke 1869, p. 704, left column, line 40: "He was s. at his decease, in 1781, by his eldest son, THE RIGHT HON. ROBERT STEWART ..."
- "Stewart, Vane-Tempest- family, Marquesses of Londonderry, The National Archives". Retrieved 8 September 2018.
- Smyth 1839, p. xiii, line 23: "George I. / [Accession] / 1 August, 1714"
- Smyth 1839, p. xiii, line 25: "George III. / [Accession] / 25 October, 1760"
References
- Benson, C. J. (2004), "Bruce, William (1702–1755)", in Matthew, Henry Colin Gray.; Harrison, Brian (eds.), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, 8, New York: Oxford University Press, p. 336, ISBN 0-19-861411-X
- Bew, John (2012), Castlereagh: A Life, Oxford: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-993159-0
- Burke, Bernard (1869), A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire (31st ed.), London: Harrison – The 31st Edition gives Stewarts as ancestors whereas the 99th Edition gives Tempests and Vanes.
- Debrett, John (1828), Peerage of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, 2 (17th ed.), London: F. C. and J. Rivington – Scotland and Ireland
- Graham, Rev. John (1841), Ireland Preserved; or the Siege of Londonderry and the Battle of Aughrim with Lyrical Poetry and Biographical Notes (2nd ed.), Dublin: Hardy and Walker
- House of Commons (1878), Return. Members of Parliament – Part II. Parliaments of Great Britain, 1705–1796. Parliaments of the United Kingdom, 1801–1874. Parliaments and Conventions of the Estates of Scotland, 1357–1707. Parliaments of Ireland, 1599–1800., London: H. M. Stationery Office (for William Hamilton MP)
- Hyde, H. Montgomery (1933), The Rise of Castlereagh, London: MacMillan
- Johnston, G. Harvey (1906), The Heraldry of the Stewarts (PDF), Edinburgh: Johnston
- Smyth, Constantine (1839), Chronicle of the Law Officers of Ireland, London: Henry Butterworth (for Table of reigns)