Robert Marshall (Irish judge)
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Robert Marshall (c.1695–1774) was an Irish judge. He is remembered chiefly as co-executor and legatee of Esther Vanhomrigh, the beloved "Vanessa" of Jonathan Swift, although he was not a close friend of hers; indeed it is possible that they never met.[1]: 141
He was born in Clonmel, County Tipperary, son of John Marshall, styled as a "gentleman" and his wife Catherine.[1]: 209 He was educated at Clonmel Free School and Kilkenny College, entered Middle Temple in 1718 and was called to the Irish Bar in 1723. His father committed suicide in Clonmel in 1717.
He moved house several times before buying a country house at Monkstown, Dublin. In 1741 he married a great heiress, Mary Wooley, daughter of Benjamin Wooley of East Sheen, near London, who is said to have brought him a dowry of £30,000.[1]: 209 She died childless in 1743. He outlived her by thirty years, despite his own increasing ill-health, which led to frequent visits to England in hope of a cure. He was buried in Christ Church Cathedral, Waterford.[1]: 209
He purchased a house at the at that time fashionable number 20 Dominick Street in 1758 from the painter and property developer Robert West.[2]
