Sir John Lees, 1st Baronet
Sir John Lees, 1st Baronet (c. 1737– 3 September 1811) was Secretary of the Irish Post Office and Black Rod in Ireland.[1]
John Lees | |
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Sir John Lees portrait by Gilbert Stuart painted between 1787 and 1793 | |
Born | 1737 |
Died | September 3, 1811 73–74) | (aged
Burial place | Carrickbrennan Churchyard |
Occupation | under-secretary of the War Department in Ireland Secretary of the Irish Post Office |
Years active | 1767–1811 |
Family
John Lees was born about 1737, probably at Cumnock in Ayrshire, the son of Adam Lees and his wife Agnes Goldie.[1] He had married Mary, the eldest daughter of Robert Cathcart of Glandusk and together they had six sons Harcourt Lees (born 1 October 1777), 2nd Baronet, John Cathcart, barrister-at-law, Townsend (born 3 August 1779), Edward Smith Lees (born 30 March 1783), joint secretary, with his father, in the Irish Post Office and later, in Scotland, as secretary to the Postmaster General for Scotland, William Eden (born 5 August 1784), Thomas Orde (born 3 Jun 1788) and a daughter, Charlotte[2] though Bayley Butler mentions two daughters and observes that Lees son's are named after people connected to his life.[3]:139
Lees' wife, Mary, died suddenly in November 1805 and he died on 3 November 1811. The Gentleman's Magazine wrote that Lees was worth £250,000 at his death[3]:140 though other sources suggest £100,000.[4]:130 Unfortunately, his will was destroyed during the Four Courts fire in 1922.[3]:140 The family are buried in Carrickbrennan Churchyard,[5] and there is a mural tablet to his memory in Monkstown Church.[3]:140
Career
Lees served with distinction in an administrative capacity in the British Army in Germany under the command of the Marquis of Granby during the Seven Years' War. He was employed in 1767 as a secretary by The Marquess Townshend when the latter was appointed Lord Lieutenant of Ireland and continued in the same post for his successor, the first Earl Harcourt.
In 1774 he was appointed Secretary of the Post Office in Ireland for the first time which was hardly more than a sinecure[3]:138 by paying John Walcot, his predecessor an annuity and paying £812 to Walcot's predecessor, Barham. That position only lasted until 1781 when he was promoted to under-secretary of the War Department in Ireland.[6]:34[7]:221
Lees second tenure as secretary to the Irish Post Office was officially made in 1784 and lasted until his death in 1811.[6]:34 Between him and his fourth son Edward Smith, who at the age of 18, by a patent dated 23 March 1801, was jointly appointed with his father as Secretary of the Irish Post Office,[8] they essentially administered the Irish post office for almost 50 years. Father and son were rather enterprising in their post office work, such as encouraging improvements to the post roads and a better Penny Post system, opening new letter offices, they organised more frequent postal deliveries, and introduced mail coaches on all the main roads in Ireland.[6]:34[1] Lees also developed the mail boat system by starting an express service over the Irish Sea that his friends supplemented by using the service.[6]:34
Their control was mainly due to the system whereby they were accountable only to the joint Postmasters General of Ireland, who being nobles were infrequently involved in the day-to-day running of the organisation. They were seldom seen together and a single signatures was required for any authorisation,[6]:34 unlike the signature of both Postmasters General in London.
Despite the improvements made, there was much fraud and corruption within the post office. While Lees salary of £432 was supplemented by £1,500 by the distribution of newspapers and appointments.[6]:35
From 1780 to 1781 he held the post of Black Rod in Ireland in the Irish House of Commons.[1]
In 1788 he was elected a member of the Dublin Society proposed by Sir William Newcomen and Lodge Morres.[9] He was a Protestant conservative and an ally of Speaker Foster's in demanding severe punishments during the 1798 rebellion.
On 30 September 1800 Lees was presented with his freedom of the city of Cork in a silver box.[10]
His son, Edward Smith Lees, solely held the position in his own right upon his father's death until he was transferred to the same position in Edinburgh,[11][12] following investigations and reports into fraud and mismanagement in Ireland.
Blackrock House
He became wealthy and acquired several parcels of sea-front land ranging from 50 ft x 50 ft to 19 acres, between Maretimo House, Lord Cloncurry's house, in Blackrock, a Dublin suburb, and the Martello Tower at Seapoint.[3]:139 In 1774 Lees built Blackrock House, one of the few 18th-century mansions built with red brick and with some fine features such as a two-storey red brick porch, a large coach-house, stable yard and gate-lodge. The house is still standing, although currently divided into flats.[13][14] The building was described thus in 1825 by his eldest brother Harcourt Lees:
It stands in a beautiful situation at the upper end of the town. There is something heavy however in the external appearance of the place, the lofty gates lined with sheet iron, trebly barred and closed at all hours indicating something like fear or uneasiness in the mind of the man who deems them necessary.[3]:140
In 1785 when the balloonist Richard Crosbie flew from the Duke of Leinster's lawn he came down in the sea and when rescued by the Dunleary barge was landed at Blackrock House. Crosbie was entertained by Lord Rutland, the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, who rented the house as his temporary summer residence. The house was therefore sometimes known as Rutland House or the Lord Lieutenant's Lodge. Other frequent visitors were distinguished people and nobility,[3]:140 such as the Marquis of Buckingham, who like Lord Rutland was a Lord Lieutenant of Ireland.[14]
A more tragic event took place in mid-November 1807 when two troop ships sunk in Dublin Bay. They were carrying troops bound for the Napoleonic war and were caught in gale-force winds and heavy snow after leaving Dublin Port. The storm carried them as far a Bray Head and back to Dunleary. Later a longboat was launched with the master, the captain Robert Jones, seamen and passengers when the ship was wrecked off Sir John's house. Thirty-seven troops from the packet boat Prince of Wales were drowned nearby and it has been suggested the men may have been deliberately locked below deck while the ship's captain and crew escaped. The captain was imprisoned but no trial account was found.[15] The bodies from the shipwreck were recovered and laid out for the inquest in the coach house of Blackrock House and buried in the small Merrion Graveyard, in Booterstown.[3]:140[16]
Upon Lees' death his eldest son, Harcourt Lees inherited Blackrock House[14] and in turn his son, also called John Lees became its owner.[2] The Kingstown extension to the Dublin and Kingstown Railway, completed in 1837, runs along the seafront of the property.[17]
Baronage
On 23 June 1804 he was created a Baronet 'of Blackrock in the County of Dublin'.[2][18] He was succeeded by his eldest son Harcourt,[2] a well-known anti-catholic political pamphleteer.[1][19]
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See also
References
- "Portraits of Sir John Lees". Boris Winitski Fine Art. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
- Burke, Bernard (1858). Dictionary of the Peerage and Bartonage of the British Empire: Burke's Peerage 20th edition. London: Bernard Burke. p. 599.
- Bayley Butler, Beatrice (1953). "John and Edward Lees: Secretaries of the Irish Post Office, 1774-1831". Dublin Historical Record. Old Dublin Society. 13 (3/4): 138–150. JSTOR 30103817. Retrieved 2 December 2020. (JSTOR subscription required)
- Dixon, Frederick (1970). "Irish Postal History". Dublin Historical Record. Dublin: Old Dublin Society. 23 (4 July 1970): 127–136. ISSN 0012-6861. JSTOR 30103868. Retrieved 2 December 2020. (JSTOR subscription required)
- Scudds, Colin (2009). "Guided Walk for the Old Dublin Society of Carrickbrennan Graveyard, Monkstown". Dublin Historical Record. 62 (1): 24–26. JSTOR 27806806. (JSTOR subscription required)
- Reynolds, Mairead (1983). A History of The Irish Post Office. Dublin: MacDonnell Whyte Ltd. p. 34. ISBN 0-9502619-7-1.
- Joyce, Herbert (1893). The History of the Post Office from its Establishment down to 1836. London: Richard Bentley & Son.
- Commissioners of Inquiry into Collection and Management of Revenue in Ireland and Great Britain: nineteenth report (Post Office Revenue - Ireland), House of Commons, 22 June 1829, p. 15, retrieved 4 October 2016
- "Sir John Lees". Royal Dublin Society. Archived from the original on 2016-04-08. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
- Brunicardi, Niall (1987). John Anderson, Entrepreneur. Fermoy: Eigse Books. p. 13. ISBN 0907568157.
- Dood, Charles R. (1846). The Peerage, Bartonetage and Knightage of Great Britain and Ireland. London: Whittaker & Co. pp. 238–239.
- Campbell–Smith, Duncan (2011). Masters of The Post. London: Allen Lane. p. 116. ISBN 978-1-846-14324-3.
- Pearson, Peter (1998). Between the Mountains and the Sea: Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown County. Dublin: O'Brien Press. ISBN 978-0-86278-977-0.
- "Blackrock House". YouWho.ie. 2020. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
- Bourke, Edward J. (2008). "The sinking of the Rochdale and the Prince of Wales". Dublin Historical Record. Dublin: Old Dublin Society. 61 (2 Autumn 2008): 130–131. ISSN 0012-6861. JSTOR 27806786. Retrieved 2 December 2020.
- Blacker, Beaver H. (1860). Brief sketches of the parishes of Booterstown and Donnybrook, in the county of Dublin. Dublin: George Herbert. p. 52.
- Lewis, Samuel (1837). A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland. London: S Lewis & Co. Retrieved 19 December 2020.
- "No. 15712". The London Gazette. 19 June 1804. pp. 764–765.
- "Lees, Harcourt (LS796H)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Burke's Peerage. 1959.
Baronetage of the United Kingdom | ||
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New creation | Baronet (of Blackrock) 1804–1811 |
Succeeded by Harcourt Lees |