John Plunkett, 17th Baron of Dunsany

John William Plunkett, 17th Baron of Dunsany (31 August 1853 – 16 January 1899), whose seat was Dunsany Castle, County Meath, Ireland, was the second[1] son of Edward Plunkett, 16th Baron of Dunsany (1808–1889), and Lady Anne Constance Dutton (1816–1858).

John William Plunkett received a Bachelor of Arts Degree from Trinity College, Dublin (1877). He studied at Trinity College, Cambridge (B.A., 1878; M.A., 1881).[2] He was Lieutenant R.N. Artillery Volunteers and a Conservative Party Member of Parliament for the Thornbury (or Southern) division of Gloucestershire from 1886 to 1892. He proved his right to vote at the elections of Representative Peers (Ireland) 1890 and Representative Peers (Ireland) 1893-99.

John William married on 3 April, 1877, at St George's, Hanover Square, London, England, his second cousin, Ernle Elizabeth Louisa Maria Grosvenor Burton (later Ernle-Erle-Drax), the only daughter and heir to Colonel Francis Augustus Plunkett Burton, Coldstream Guards, by Sarah Frances Elizabeth, younger daughter and coheir of John Samuel Wanley Sawbridge-Erle-Drax, of Charborough Park, Dorset. Her paternal grandmother, the Hon. Anna Maria Plunkett, wife of Admiral James Ryder Burton, was a sister of her husband's paternal grandfather, Edward Wadding Plunkett, 13th Baron of Dunsany. In addition, Ernle, Lady Dunsany, was descended via her maternal line from James Drax, a young Englishman who, with a few hundred pounds, had sailed from the Port of London for Barbados in the late 1620s. There he had made a fortune developing sugar and slave-trading into a hugely profitable business. Just before the turn of the seventeenth century, the family returned to England and purchased an estate in Dorset. Lady Dunsany inherited Charborough Park in 1905. Her unusual Christian name, Ernle, was inherited from an ancestress, Elizabeth Ernle (1697-1759), wife of Henry Drax, Esq., who was the daughter and eventual heiress of Sir Edward Ernle, 3rd Baronet, P.C., M.P., (1673-1729) of Maddington, Wiltshire, by his wife, Frances (d. 1728) only daughter and heir of Lieutenant General Thomas Erle (1650-1720), of Charborough House, the source of a further barrel of her surname.

John William and Ernle Elizabeth had two sons, Edward John Moreton Drax, 18th Baron of Dunsany and Admiral The Honourable Sir Reginald Aylmer Ranfurly Plunkett-Ernle-Erle-Drax (Charborough Park was left to Reginald, who changed his name to include Drax, the family who had formerly owned it, as well as including references to the Ernle and Erle families from which various of his mother's legacies to him came).

Lady Dunsany was a cousin of Sir Richard Burton, the great traveller, scholar, writer, and translator of the "Arabian Nights." Her son and heir, Edward, may have inherited his imaginative streak from the Burton family.

John William was an exceptional sportsman, and was reputed to have been the best marksman in England. He was deeply interested in mechanical things and developed his own X-Ray machine, which was in operation in Dunsany Castle before his death in 1899.[3] The Dunsany version of the Röntgen ray machine was given to Sevenoaks Hospital in 1918. He had acquired the right to drive the Irish Mail Train and regularly took charge of the branch line train from Dublin to Drumree, near Dunsany. He was also responsible for having the first Irish telephone system installed in Dunsany Castle.

The 17th Baron of Dunsany died after a short illness on 16 January 1899 at Dunsany Castle, aged forty-five years.

His widow, who by Royal Licence, 20 December 1905, assumed the names of Plunkett-Ernle-Ernle-Drax, died at her residence, Dunstall Priory, Shoreham, near Sevenoaks, Kent, England, on 28 February 1916.

References

  1. ^ His elder brother, Hon. Randal Edward Sherborne Plunkett, MP for West Gloucestershire 1874–1880, died unmarried on 25 December 1883, at Madeira, aged 35.
  2. ^ Plunkett, John William in Venn, J. & J. A., Alumni Cantabrigienses, Cambridge University Press, 10 vols, 1922–1958.
  3. ^ Röntgen delivered his seminal paper on the subject in Berlin in 1895.

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Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
Edward Stafford Howard
Member of Parliament for Thornbury
18861892
Succeeded by
Charles Colston
Peerage of Ireland
Preceded by
Edward Plunkett
Baron of Dunsany
1889–1899
Succeeded by
Edward Plunkett