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Frederick Trench, 3rd Baron Ashtown

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Frederick Oliver Trench, 3rd Baron Ashtown (2 February 1868 – 20 March 1946) was an Anglo-Irish landowner and opponent of the United Irish League.

Biography

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Frederick Oliver Trench was the eldest son of Frederick Sydney Charles Trench (heir apparent to the 2nd Lord Ashtown) and Anne Le Poer Trench (eldest daughter of the 3rd Earl of Clancarty of Garbally). At the age of twelve, he became the 3rd Baron Ashtown and inherited a vast estate and reputedly over a million pounds. Some of his County Galway estate was located in Killimordaly. According to valuation records he was landlord for the following townlands: Caraunbeg, Caraunmore, Creevagh, Dooghloon, Gortnaboha and Island. He owned 43,000 acres in England and Ireland.[1]

Ashtown was educated at Eton College. On 11 January 1894, he married Violet Grace Cosby, the youngest daughter of Col. Robert Ashworth Godolphin Cosby of Stradbally Hall, Queen's County. Ashtown was a hard-line Unionist; in 1906-10 he edited a monthly publication, Grievances from Ireland, which denounced all political expressions of Irish nationalism as treasonable. His hunting lodge at Ballymacarbry, County Waterford, was damaged by bombs and arson in 1907 and destroyed by the Irish Republican Army during the War of Independence.[2] Article in Daily Sketch from 1924 provides limited detail of appearance in Dublin Magistrates Court when bail refused and committed on charges "when two boys gave evidence". No further detail. Reference also found online to Bankruptcy in 1912 and "exclusion from Irish Peerage". Date unspecified.

He had been elected an Irish representative peer in 1908. He died in 1946.

See also

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References

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  • Kieran Jordan (ed.), Kiltullagh Killimordaly As the Centuries Passed: A History from 1500-1900, Kiltullagh/Killimordaly Historical Society (2000), ISBN 0-9538684-0-0
Peerage of Ireland
Preceded by Baron Ashtown
1880–1946
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Representative peer for Ireland
disqualified due to bankruptcy
1908–1915
Succeeded by