Eaton Stannard

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eaton Stannard

Eaton Stannard (1685–1755) was a leading politician and lawyer in 18th-century Ireland. He was a popular Recorder of Dublin, a very unpopular serjeant-at-law (Ireland), and an experienced parliamentarian who represented Midleton in the Irish House of Commons for many years.[1] He is mainly remembered now as a close friend of Jonathan Swift, whose last known letter was written to him.

He was born in County Cork, son of George Stannard of Ballyhealy, and his wife and cousin Martha Aldworth, daughter of Boyd Aldworth MP. George was the grandson of Captain Robert Stannard of Kilmallock (died 1655). Robert married Martha Travers, daughter of Sir Robert Travers, Judge of the Irish Court of Admiralty and MP for Clonakilty and his second wife Elizabeth Boyle, a cousin of the Earl of Cork.[2] The Stannards and Travers families were part of a wide-reaching network of interrelated landowning families: Eaton himself married one of his Travers cousins, Elizabeth, a great-granddaughter of Sir Robert Travers, while his mother Martha Aldworth was yet another Travers descendant.

Career

Marriage and children

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI