Thomas Butler of Garryricken

Irish Jacobite soldier (died 1738) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Colonel Thomas Butler of Garryricken (died 1738), also known as Thomas Butler of Kilcash was an Irish Jacobite soldier. He commanded a regiment, Thomas Butler's foot, during the Williamite War and fought at the Battle of Aughrim in 1691 where he was taken captive. His son John would, de jure, become the 15th Earl of Ormond.

Died1738 (1739)
Issue
Detail
John & others
Quick facts Died, Family ...
Thomas Butler of Garryricken
Detail from the portrait below
Died1738 (1739)
FamilyButler dynasty
SpouseMargaret Burke
Issue
Detail
John & others
FatherWalter Butler
MotherMary Plunkett
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Birth and origins

Thomas was probably born at Garryricken, near Callan, County Kilkenny, as the eldest son of Walter Butler and his wife Mary Plunkett. His father, known as Walter Butler of Garryricken (died 1700), belonged to a cadet branch of the Butler Dynasty, being the son of Richard Butler of Kilcash (died 1701), who was a younger brother of the 1st Duke of Ormond. Thomas's father had built Garryricken House around 1660.[1] The Butler dynasty is an Old English family that descends from Theobald Walter, who had been appointed Chief Butler of Ireland by King Henry II in 1177.[2]

Thomas's mother was the only daughter of Christopher Plunkett, 2nd Earl of Fingall.[3]

More information Family tree ...
Family tree
Thomas Butler with wife, parents, and other selected relatives.[a]
Thomas
Viscount
Thurles

d. 1619
d.v.p.*
Elizabeth
Pointz

1587–1673
Luke
Plunket
1st Earl
of Fingall

d. 1637
James
1st Duke
Ormond

1610–1688
Elizabeth
Preston

1615–1684
Richard
of
Kilcash

1615–1701
Frances
Tuchet
Christopher
Plunket
2nd Earl
of Fingall

d. 1649
Thomas
6th Earl
Ossory

1633–1680
Emilia
von
Nassau

1635–1688
Walter
of
Garryricken

d. 1700
d.v.p.*
Mary
Plunkett
James
2nd Duke
Ormond

1665–1745
Charles
1st Earl
Arran

1671–1758
Thomas
of
Garryricken

d. 1738
Colonel
Margaret
Magennis

1673–1744
John
Butler
John
de jure
15th Earl

d. 1766
Bridget
Stacey
Walter
de jure
16th Earl

1703–1783
Legend
XXXSubject of
the article
XXXEarls and dukes
of Ormond
XXXEarls of
Fingall
*d.v.p. = predeceased his father (decessit vita patris)
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Thomas listed among his brothers
He heads the list of brothers below as the eldest:
  1. Thomas (died 1738)
  2. John, who is known as John of Garryricken and whose son became Walter Butler, 16th Earl of Ormonde[10]
  3. Christopher (1673–1757), who became Roman Catholic Archbishop of Cashel[11]
Thomas's sisters
  1. Mary, who married James Tobin of Kaemshinagh in County Tipperary[12][13]
  2. Frances, who married a Mr. Gould[14]
  3. Lucy (died 1703), who married, April 1697, Sir Walter Butler, 3rd Baronet of Polestown[15]
  4. Helen, who married Maurice FitzGerald of Castle Ishen in County Cork[16][17]

Thomas is known as Thomas Butler of Garryricken or as Thomas Butler of Kilcash[18][19][20][21] because he lived at Kilcash Castle and owned half of the Garryricken Manor;[22] his brother John had the other half and lived at Garryricken House.[23]

Williamite War

He fought for James II during the Williamite War in Ireland, being the colonel of an infantry regiment, known as "Thomas Butler's Foot".[24] Colonel Thomas Butler was taken prisoner at the Battle of Aughrim in 1691.[25]

A 3/4-length painted portrait of Thomas Butler by James Latham, showing a clean-shaven man wearing a white shoulder-ling wig and clad in armour, standing in front of a landscape with a burning towerhouse
Colonel Thomas Butler of Garryricken

Marriage and children

In 1696, he married Margaret Burke, eldest daughter of William Burke, 7th Earl of Clanricarde, widow of Bryan Magennis, Viscount Iveagh.[20] She is remembered by the Irish song Kilcash.[26]

Thomas and Margaret had three sons:

  1. Richard (died 1711), who died of a fall from his horse at Kilcash[27]
  2. Walter, who died of smallpox while at the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture in Paris[28]
  3. John (died 1766), who became the de jure 15th Earl of Ormond and inherited the Ormond estate[29]

—and five daughters:

  1. Mary, who married Bryan Kavanagh, of Borris, County Carlow[30]
  2. Honora (died 1730), who married Valentine Browne, 3rd Viscount Kenmare, in 1720[31]
  3. Hellen, who married firstly Captain Richard Esmond, brother of Sir Laurence Esmond, Baronet, and secondly, Richard Butler of Westcourt[32]
  4. Margaret, who married George Matthew of Thurles, afterward of Thomastown[33]
  5. Catharine, who became the third wife of James Mandeville of Ballydine, and had no issue. She married Richard Pascoe and had issue.[34]

Grandfather's succession

His father, Walter of Garryricken, died in 1700;[35] his grandfather, Richard of Kilcash, followed in 1701. His father therefore predeceased his grandfather by a year. His grandfather's estate was the Garryricken Manor given to him in 1639. The manor's lands were divided between Thomas and his brother John. Thomas received Kilcash while John received Garryricken.

Death, succession, and timeline

Thomas Butler died in 1738.[20] He was succeeded by his son John, who would become the de jure 15th Earl of Ormond in 1658.

More information Timeline, Age ...
Timeline
As his birth date is uncertain, so are all his ages.
AgeDateEvent
01670, estimateBorn,[b] probably at Garryricken House
2–31673Brother Christopher born
14–151685, 6 FebAccession of King James II, succeeding King Charles II[36]
18–191689, 13 FebAccession of William and Mary, succeeding King James II[37]
20–211691, 12 JulTaken prisoner at the Battle of Aughrim
25–261696Married Margaret Magennis[20]
29–301700Father predeceased grandfather.
30–311701Inherited Kilcash at the death of his grandfather
43–441714, 1 AugAccession of King George I, succeeding Queen Anne[38]
67–681738Died[20]
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Notes and references

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