Catalogue of the High Sheriffs of the County of Leitrim from the Year 1605 to the Year 1800

LEITRIM, as a county, dates back, as well I can discover, to the year 1569, the eleventh year of the reign of Queen Elizabeth. According to Sir Richard Bolton in Harris’s Hibernica, a statute was passed in that year (11th Eliz., ch. 9) dividing the province of Connaught into seven counties, of which Leitrim was one; and it has always continued in that province. Up to 1569, the areas now known as Leitrim and Cavan were called West and East Brefni, and sometimes the country of the O’Rourkes. Some authorities give 1584 as the year of the actual formation of the county. In that year Sir John Perrot, the Queen’s Deputy in Ireland, marched into Connaught, and formed the province into shireland.

The office of Sheriff (A.-S. scir geréfa, the reeve or governor of a shire) is of purely British origin. It is very old, dating back to Saxon times. A statute, passed as long ago as the time of Edward II, effected radical changes in the manner of the choosing of this officer, doing away with the popular election. Ever since the enactment of this statute the custom, at least in England, has been for the Lord Chancellor, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, and the Judges of the Common Law courts to meet in the Court of Exchequer on the morrow of All Souls’ Day, and there and then to nominate three persons for each county to the Crown. The monarch in council afterwards appoints one of the three, and this is known as the pricking of the sheriffs. The custom still obtains, and on it the Irish procedure is modelled.

Whether the original practice of popular election of sheriffs or that formulated by the statute of Edward II was the practice first introduced into Ireland seems doubtful. At all events the answer to the complaint presented to King Edward III in 1342, that sheriffs were elected “contrary to the statute,” reads as follows:—

…it is the king’s intention that the people of each county elect each year in the Exchequer before the Chancellor, Treasurer, and others of the Council, a sufficient person who is resident, and has whereof to answer to the king in the same county for the office of sheriff, and that they remain in office one year.

This complaint (No. XX) is found among the petitions presented on behalf of the Parliament of Ireland to the king just named.

Until this country was marked out into shireland there could have been no introduction of sheriffs.

There is a tradition, which has no documentary corroboration, that in the tenth year of the reign of King John certain portions of Ireland were divided into administrative units, corresponding in some measure to English counties, and that sheriffs were appointed; but, according to Mr. Berry, from whom I have quoted this, the Magna Charta Hiberniæ, 1 Henry III, is the earliest extant enactment dealing with sheriffs in Ireland.[1]

Another very old enactment, known as the Statute of Sheriffs, which had been passed in England in 1316, was transmitted by King Edward II to the Chancellor of Ireland in 1324. It may be found in the Red Book of the Exchequer.

A sheriff continues in office for one year only, and this limitation seems as old as the office itself. Now and then it has occurred that he served a second term: but he cannot be compelled to do so. The office is not only gratuitous, but compulsory. In virtue of it, the holder, during his year, ranks first in the county, and takes precedence even of noblemen. In conveying complaints of the Irish Parliament as to the grievances under which the country suffered, addressed in 1641 to King Charles I, the Commissioners state:—

The office of sheriff is one of great trust and importance, and should only be given to people who have estates and positions in the various counties, and not to persons of mean position, not residents, to whom shrievalties have recently been given…

No doubt such men as Con O’Rourke, who was High Sheriff of Leitrim that very year, were here aimed at. Unless the election were, as originally, by popular suffrage, it is not easy to see how he and some others of the “mere Irish” could have attained the position.

The High Sheriffs of the county of Cork have been traced by Mr. Berry from the year 1254 to the Restoration. From that period forward an almost complete list for the same county was compiled by another writer. For no other Irish county, as far as I am aware, has any such list yet appeared, though records are becoming yearly more accessible. If Leitrim were not formed into shireland till 1584, it could have had no such officer before that date. The Memoranda Roll, Hil. 21 Eliz. (1579), seems to corroborate this. It contains letters patent for sheriffs for twenty-one counties of Ireland, but Leitrim is not mentioned amongst them. Hence, very probably the list here given approaches completion.

The credit of having drawn up the following catalogue, which sheds a good deal of light on the earlier history of the county, is to be almost wholly ascribed to the late Arthur Harrison, Esq. Mr. Harrison, a highly respected gentleman, and a most efficient officer, was for thirty-two years (ending with 1895) sub-sheriff of Leitrim. His death took place soon after his relinquishment of office. The catalogue of sheriffs, which begins in 1605, and extended to the year 1869, is most carefully compiled.

In the list of High Sheriffs, in the earlier years, there are indeed many gaps: but from 1655 to 1800, with the insignificant omission of two years, 1691 and 1692, all the names have been ascertained. In the Evidence Chamber of Kilkenny Castle is preserved a list, returned by the Judges in 1644, of three names in each county, from which one was to be selected for the Shrievalty for the ensuing year. The list is written on vellum. The fact that three names are given in each instance is a proof, if proof were needed, that the custom at present obtaining is very ancient. For “Leytrim” the three names are—

Robertus Parcke ar̃.
*Jacobus Ringe ar̃.
Willelmus Parcke ar̃.

An asterisk placed before the name of one of the three, as in the second instance, indicates the gentleman chosen.[2]

In the so-called Diary of Sir Frederick Hamilton of Manorhamilton (first published in London in 1643), under date February 24th, there is a long description of a petty battle fought on that day, I am convinced, at Moragh, at the foot of Benbo mountain. “Mulmurry MacTernan (chiefe of that name), a justice of the peace who had beene sheriffe of this county,” was among those slain and stripped.[3] This gentleman’s name, accordingly, should fill up one of the gaps in the list before 1643. The family to which he belonged has been long and honourably connected with the country.

Though Mr. Harrison, the compiler of the catalogue, had exceptional opportunities, it must have cost him a vast deal of time and labour. It was printed for private circulation forty years ago, and all the copies, save one, seem to have disappeared. Indeed, except the one before me, kindly lent by Thomas Corscadden, Esq., J.P., who in 1903 was High Sheriff of the county, I know of no other, nor have I ever heard or found a trace of another.

The spelling of the proper names of persons and places is that given in the county records. For some notes on the family of Reynolds or MacRannals, members of which enjoyed the highest positions in the county in the earliest recorded years, I would refer the reader to vol. xxxv. (1905), page 139, of this Journal. A brief account of the O’Rourkes, another of the old Irish county families, and of their insignia, may also be found in vol. xxxvi., pp. 136, 317, and 424.

In his very elaborate roll, Mr. Harrison, in addition to the High Sheriffs and Members of Parliament, assigns a column each to three other county officers, namely, the Foreman of the Grand Jury, the Sub-Sheriff, and the Lieutenant of the County and Custos Rotulorum.

As to the foremen of the Grand Jury, they were, as is to be expected, the men who acted as High Sheriffs in previous or succeeding years, or who then, before, or after represented the county in Parliament. The earliest name is that of Richard Cunningham, who was foreman at the Spring Assizes of 1778. Then Robert Clements, Spring, 1780; and Thomas Tenison, Summer, 1780; Right Honourable Henry Thomas, Clements, M.P., 1781–2; Right Honourable Owen Wynne, 1782–3. The last gentleman’s name, alone of all I have noticed, is not found in any of the other lists.

Assuming that sub-sheriffs were appointed at all, Mr. Harrison was not quite so successful in tracing their names. Mr. William West in 1793 is the first of them. Mr. West also filled the post in 1795, and again in 1798. The High Sheriff of 1797, Mr. Cullen of Skreeny, Manorhamilton, had a Mr. Pat Whittaker as his sub-officer. From 1799 till 1813 (exclusive) various members of the Lloyd family served as sub-sheriffs, except that in 1801 Christopher James Nesbitt, in 1807 Thomas Church, and in 1808 Michael Ganly, held the post.

LIST OF HIGH SHERIFFS, COUNTY LEITRIM.

Years Name of High Sheriffs
1605 Sir Ralph Sidley
1606 Cola O’Kelly
1609 William Farrell
1613 John Reynolds,[4] Loughscur Castle
1620 Humphrey Reynolds, Loughscur Castle
1621 Same
1623 Same
1624 Henry Crofton, Mohill
1639 John Blundell, Port
1640 Same
1641 Con O’Rourke,[5] Castle Car, Manorhamilton
1642 Same
1645 James Ringe
1655 Sir George St. George, Knt., Carrick-on-Shannon
1656 Robert Parke, Newtown Castle,[6] Dromahair
1657 James King, Charlestown, Co. Roscommon
1658 Edward Crofton, Mohill
1659 Owen Wynne, Lurganboy and Hazelwood
1660 Henry Crofton, Mohill
1661 William St. George, Carrick-on-Shannon
1662 Henry Crofton, Mohill
1663 Owen Wynne, Lurganboy and Hazelwood
1664 James Bathurst
1665 Walter Jones, Headford
1666 William St. George, Carrick
1667 Bryan Cunningham, Port
1668 Robert Parke, M.P., Newtown Castle
1669 James Reynolds, Loughscur
1670 Robert Birchall, Lishugh, Roscommon; also Blackrock
1671 Sir John Hume, Bart.
1672 James Nesbitt, Aughey, Dromod
1673 Robert Drury
1674 William Parke, Newtown Castle
1675 Captain Edward Nicholson, Cummin or Knocknaray, Sligo
1676 Daniel Gahon
1677 Sir Arthur Gore, Bart., Newtown Gore, Mayo
1678 Henry Crofton, Mohill
1679 Bryan Cunningham, Port
1680 James Nesbitt (second time)
1681 Isaac Fletcher, Jamestown
1682 William Jones, Headford
1683 Henry Crofton, Mohill (cf. 1660 and 1662)
1684 Martin Armstrong, Carrickmakeegan
1685 Theophilus Jones, Headford
1686 James Wynne, Lurganboy and Hazelwood
1687 Alexander McDonnell
1688 Philip Reilly
1689 Hugh O’Rourke, Cloncorrick Castle
1692 Theophilus Jones, Headford
1693 Same
1694 Daniel Gahan
1695 William Parsons, Garadice
1696 Morgan Cunningham, Port
1697 James Nesbitt, Aughry, Dromod
1698 Thomas Crofton, Mohill
1699 William Lawder, Drumalague and Bonnybeg
1700 William Gore, Woodford
1701 Edward Johnston, Edergold and Friarstown
1702 Sir George St. George, Knt., Carrick
1703 Same
1704 William Lawder, Bonnybeg
1705 Frederick Lawder, Corr, co. Cavan
1706 William Lawder, Bonnybeg
1707 Morgan Cunningham, Port
1708 John Carleton, Tooman
1709 Chidley Coote, Jamestown
1710 Sir Ralph Gore, Bart., M.P., Belle Isle, co. Fermanagh
1711 Thomas Judge
1712 William Lawder,[7] Bonnybeg
1713 James Lawder, Kilmore, Roscommon, and Scrabbagh
1714 Thomas Crofton, Mohill
1715 John Nesbitt, Aughry, Dromod
1716 Henry Nesbitt, Aughamore, Dromod
1717 Gilbert King, M.P., Charlestown, Roscommon
1718 Walter Jones, Headford
1719 Arthur Lawder, Bonnybeg
1720 Josias Campbell, Mount Campbell
1721 William Parsons, Garadice
1722 John Rynd, Dartry, Kinlough
1723 Launcelot Lawder,[8] Kilclare and Bonnybeg
1724 Owen Wynne, junr., Hazelwood, Sligo
1725 Bryan Cunningham, Port
1726 Martin Armstrong, Carrickmakeegan
1727 Bolton Jones, Drumard
1728 John King, Charlestown, Roscommon
1729 Cairncross Nesbitt, Aughamore, Rooskey
1730 John Irwin, Drumsilla
1731 John Peyton, Laheen
1732 Matthew Nesbitt, Derrygraster, Dromod
1733 Robert Johnstone, Aghadonoane, Kinlough
1734 William Gore, Woodford
1735 James Lawder, Scrabbagh and Kilmore
1736 Samuel Campbell, Mount Campbell
1737 Hugh Crofton, Mohill
1738 Edward Carleton, Tooman
1739 John Phibbs, Ballintogher, Sligo
1740 Launcelot Lawder, Kiltubrid and Cloverhill
1741 Thomas Harris, Ballyoghter
1742 Boothe Gore, Artarmon, Sligo; and Newtown Castle
1743 James West, Carnlough, Longford
1744 Arthur Ellis, Ballyheady, Cavan
1745 Humphrey Galbraith, Carrigallen
1746 Matthew Nesbitt, Derrygraster, Dromod
1747 Cairncross Nesbitt, Aughamore, Rooskey
1748 Patrick Cullen, Skreeny, Manorhamilton
1749 Alexander Percy, Garradice
1750 Richard Gore, Ward House
1751 John Peyton, Laheen
1752 Robert Spence, Portmelville
1753 George Johnston, Aughacashel and Sheemore
1754 John Carleton, Tooman
1755 John Nesbitt, Aughry, Dromod
1756 Richard Cunningham, Port
1757 Thomas Crofton, Mohill
1758 Acheson Irwin, Drumsilla
1759 Robert Clements,[9] Loughrynn and Dublin
1760 Theophilus Jones, Headford
1761 Hugh Lyons, Ladystown, co. Westmeath; and Belhavel
1762 Morgan Crofton, Mohill
1763 Thomas Tenison, Kilronan Castle
1764 Rt. Hon. Nathaniel Clements, Manorhamilton and Dublin
1765 Henry Nesbitt, Lismoyle
1766 Robert Whitelaw, Drummeen and Grange
1767 Gilbert King, Minkill
1768 John Crofton, Larga House, Mohill
1769 Henry Seely, Grouse Lodge, Drumkeeran
1770 William Irwin, Cloncorick Castle
1771 John O’Brien, Drumhallow, Cloone
1772 Johnston Moreton, Lisnatullagh and Liscarban
1773 Right Hon. Theophilus Clements, Ashfield, Cavan
1774 William Gore, Carrigallen and Bath
1775 John Gore, Woodford
1776 Roger Parke, Dunally, co. Sligo
1777 Thomas Dickson, Tawly, Kinlough
1778 Arthur Cooper, Greenalish, Sligo
1779 Robert Percival, Knightsbrook, co. Meath
1780 Peter La Touche, Belview, co. Wicklow
1781 Duke Crofton, Mohill House and Lakefield
1782 Patrick Cullen, Skreeny, Manorhamilton
1783 James Johnston, Oakfield House, Kinlough
1784 Richard St. George, Carrick-on-Shannon
1785 William Shanly, Willyfield
1786 Wm. Parsons Percy, Garradice
1787 Colonel John Peyton, Laheen
1788 Launcelot Lawder, Clover Hill
1789 Patrick Carter, Drumlease
1790 Henry Clements, Killimann and Fort Henry, Cavan
1791 Wm. O’Brien, Aughavass and Drumsilla
1792 Thomas Tenison, Drumhirk
1793 Hugh Crofton, Mohill
1794 Wm. Rowley, Mount Campbell, Drumsna
1795 Walter Jones, Headford and Ballinamore
1796 Nathaniel, Viscount Clements, Dublin and Killadoon
1797 Francis Nesbitt Cullen, Skreeny, Manorhamilton
1798 Matthew Nesbitt, Derrygraster or Derrycarne
1799 Robert Johnston, Oakfield (now Kinlough) House
1800 Duke Crofton, jun., Lakefield

Notes

Edited by the Rev. Joseph Meehan, C.C., Member.

Submitted October 6, 1908.

Footnotes:

  1. Journal, vol. xxxv., p. 39. [↵]
  2. Journal, R.H.A.A., vol. ii., p. 334. [↵]
  3. The portion of the entry bearing upon the point runs as follows:—”In the meane time our souldiers boyes stripped neare thirty of their best men, of the Counties of Sligo and Leitrim, of which number was Mulmurry MacTernan (chiefe of that name), a justice of the peace who had beene sheriffe of this county, who with his eldest sonne and heire and his sonne-in-law, Carberry O’Trower, Chiefe of that name, Cormac MacMurray, Farlisse O’Degannon, Bryan O’Rourke, and John O’Creau, all of them that are named are prime gentlemen of these two counties, besides, and many of their common souldiers were killed, whereof is made small reckoning amongst them.” [↵]
  4. John Reynolds was a captain in the Elizabethan army, who died in 1632. He built Lough Scur Castle about the year 1570, and is locally known as Seaghan na-g-Ceann, or John of the Heads. [↵]
  5. This Con O’Rourke was captured by Sir Frederick Hamilton of Manorhamilton, and hanged on January 30th, 1642. The hanging took place in view of his brother, Colonel Owen O’Rourke, of Dromahair, who appeared before Sir Frederick’s castle with 1,500 or 1,600 men. The latter refused all exchange of prisoners. Under date January 6th, 1642, in Hamilton’s Diary, Con O’Rourke is referred to as “the then sheriffe.” Many of the O’Rourkes were educated at Oxford. [↵]
  6. This castle, now in ruins, is very beautifully situated on the shores of Lough Gill. Clanrickarde, writing to Ormonde under date 9th July, 1649, speaks of it as “a place though not so famous in print, yet of equal strength to this forte.” He wrote from “Sligo Campe,” which had just been betrayed by a Scotchman—Colonel Henderson. [↵]
  7. William Lawder, who was four times High Sheriff, died in 1714. He is buried in the family vault in Templeport. [↵]
  8. Launcelot Lawder, son of William, died, without issue, before 1754. His wife, Susanna, eldest daughter of William Slack, lived till 1774. [↵]
  9. The Clements family is an old one, of French origin. They came over to Ireland most probably in the time of Cromwell; but there is little or no trace of them in Irish affairs till the opening of the eighteenth century. The founder of the Irish branch of the family was Robert, High Sheriff of Leitrim in 1759. The High Sheriff of 1773 was his youngest brother. He represented the borough of Cavan in the Irish Parliament in 1789. The same borough was represented by their uncle, Theophilus Clements, in 1716, 1723, and 1725; and by their father, Nathaniel, from 1763 till his death in 1777. The latter was Cashier, or Teller, of the Irish Exchequer; and, on the death of the Right Hon. Luke Gardiner, he succeeded him as Deputy Vice Treasurer of Ireland. Robert, born in 1732, was M.P. for Donegal. In 1783 he was created Lord Baron Leitrim of Manorhamilton; in 1793, Viscount; and, two years later, Earl of Leitrim. Robert’s father was High Sheriff of Leitrim in 1764, and M.P. for the county from 1768 till 1775. [↵]