CARLOW '98

Carlow County - Ireland Genealogical Projects (IGP TM)


Sir Edward Crosbie
Apprehension, Trial & Execution

Source: Mr. J. J. Woods

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The Barrack Yard showing the Court Martial room people were
Sir Edward Crosbie was condemned to death.

INTRODUCTION

Sir Edward Crosbie was from Wicklow and, sometime about the year 1792 he leased the property of Viewmount from Robert Browne of Browne’s Hill, Carlow. The two estates were adjacent to each other, Viewmount being to the left of the avenue going from Carlow with Browne’s Hill on the right.

Sir Edward was of an independent nature and remained aloof from the political scene at that time. Apparently he was highly regarded, particularly by his tenantry as William Farrell in his memoirs stated:  “… he did not approve of making the poor man and his little offspring wretched…. He lived rather a retired life, and was kind and affable to those in the middle and humbler ranks of life…. He seldom associated with those in power….

On the night of May 24, 1798 the rebels, on their way to attack the barracks in Carlow, congregated in the grounds of Viewmount. He was accused by the authorities of being in command of the rebels and of addressing them from the steps of the house prior to their departure for the town. There is a suspicion that this was as a result of a duel some months before in which Sir Edward was challenged to a duel by a son of the Lord Lieutenant for the County, Sir Charles Burton, and Sir Edward.

This coupled with the fact that he was kind and considerate to his tenants and refused to associate or identify with the ascendancy or military classes against the general populace probably made him a target for the more extreme elements of those in power.

A private publication was produced and printed in Bath and then in Dublin in 1802 entitled An Accurate and Impartial Narrative of the Apprehension, Trial & Execution, on the 5th of June, 1798 of Sir Edward William Crosbie, Bart.

(His brother, Richard Crosbie, made the first hot-air balloon flight in Ireland from Ranelagh gardens, in 1785.)

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