Stephen Moore, 2nd Earl Mount Cashell (19 March 1770 – 27 October 1822), styled Lord Kilworth between 1781 and 1790, was an Anglo-Irish politician.
Moore was the eldest son of Stephen Moore, 1st Earl Mount Cashell, and Lady Helena Rawdon, daughter of John Rawdon, 1st Earl of Moira. He became known by the courtesy title Lord Kilworth after his father was elevated to an earldom in 1781.[1] He was returned to the Irish House of Commons for Clonmel in May 1790, but was forced to resign his seat after only a few days on the death of his father.[2] As the holder of an Irish peerage, Lord Mount Cashell was not allowed an automatic seat in the English House of Lords on the formation of the Union in 1800. However, in 1815 he was elected an Irish Representative Peer, replacing the deceased Earl of Westmeath, and was able to take his seat in the House of Lords.[3]
Marriage and children
Lord Mount Cashell married Lady Margaret King, daughter of Robert King, 2nd Earl of Kingston, in 1791. Margaret's mother, Caroline FitzGerald, daughter of Richard FitzGerald M.P., had educated her children by hiring governesses, including the proto-feminist Mary Wollstonecraft. In 1794 George King, 3rd Earl of Kingston, Margaret's eldest brother, married Lady Helena Moore, Stephen's sister. Lord Mount Cashell acquired numerous other siblings-in-law, doubly closely bonded through the two marriages, including Henry, Edward, and Robert King.
The couple had seven children. The second son, Robert, was born in 1793.[4] The third son, Edward Moore, became a Canon of Windsor Cathedral. The eldest daughter, Helena, was born in March 1795.[5] One of the younger daughters, Jane Elizabeth, married in 1819 William Yates Peel, from the political and merchant family.[6]
The Grand Tour, and marital separation
In December 1801 the Cashells embarked on a grand tour as a group of "nine Irish adventurers", including the diarist Catherine Wilmot. Wilmot wrote extensive letters home, some of which were published in 1920 as An Irish peer on the continent (1801–1803) being a narrative of the tour of Stephen, 2nd earl Mount Cashell, through France, Italy, etc.[7] These describe much detail of the Cashells' life and habits, including their lavish entertaining, especially during the first nine months in Paris. In the French capital they met Napoleon, the radical English parliamentarian Charles James Fox and, "up half a dozen flights of stairs, in a remote part of the town", Thomas Paine.[8]
In June 1802 the Cashells had another son, Richard Francis Stanislaus Moore, and Wilmot records that its godparents were William Parnel, "the Polish Countess Myscelska", and the American minister (presumably Robert Livingston, who was in post 1801–1804).
The resumption of war in Europe in March 1803 found the party in Florence. In 1804 they decamped to what they assumed was the relative safety of Rome. In Rome they were in the company of the Swiss painter, and founding member of the Royal Academy in London, Angelica Kaufmann; the epicure Lord Bristol, Bishop of Derry (who, in the Volunteer crisis of 1783 is said to have imagined himself King of Ireland);[9] the Cardinal Duke of York, brother to the Young Pretender, Charles Edward Stuart; and the Pope, Pius VII, who in his gardens "very gallantly pull’d a hyacinth and gave it to Lady Mount Cashell’.[8]
While in Rome, Margaret was introduced to George William Tighe (1776–1837) of Rosanna, Ashford, County Wicklow, an Anglo-Irish gentleman with an interest in agriculture and, in contrast to Stephen, with social and political views similar to her own. The two were instantly attracted and soon embarked on an affair, which in 1805 led to Stephen leaving her in Germany and returning to Ireland with their children. Women in her position, wishing to leave an unhappy marriage, had few rights, decades prior to legal reform in the passage of the Custody of Infants Act 1839, Matrimonial Causes Act 1857, and Married Women's Property Act 1884. Stephen and Margaret were legally separated in November 1812. He allowed her £800 a year and a settlement of her accumulated debts, but no contact with their children, and she never saw them again.[10]
Death and succession
Lord Mount Cashell died in October 1822, aged 52, and was succeeded in the earldom by his eldest son, Stephen. The Countess Mount Cashell, who had left him circa 1803 for George William Tighe (by whom she had two more daughters, Lauretta and Nerina), died in January 1835.[1]
References
- 1 2 thepeerage.com Stephen Moore, 2nd Earl Mountcashell
- ↑ leighrayment.com Irish House of Commons, 1692–1800[usurped]
- ↑ leighrayment.com Representative peers - Ireland[usurped]
- ↑ Todd, Janet (2004). Rebel daughters : Ireland in conflict 1798. London: Penguin. p. 145. ISBN 0141004894.
- ↑ Todd, Janet (2004). Rebel daughters: Ireland in conflict 1798. London: Penguin. p. 145. ISBN 0141004894.
- ↑ George Peel, ‘Peel, William Yates (1789–1858)’, rev. M. C. Curthoys, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 18 May 2017
- ↑
- 1 2 Smith, Janet Adam (25 June 1992). "Irish Adventurers". London Review of Books. Vol. 14, no. 12. ISSN 0260-9592. Retrieved 10 December 2021.
- ↑ Chamberlain, George Ashton (1913). "Frederic Hervey: The Earl-Bishop of Derry". The Irish Church Quarterly. 6 (24): (271–286), 273. doi:10.2307/30067555. ISSN 2009-1664. JSTOR 30067555.
- ↑ MacDonald, Sarah (3 December 2017). "When Mary Shelley met Lady Margaret". The independent. Retrieved 24 June 2021.