George Cockburn KCH
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George Cockburn KCH (abt. 1763 - 1847)

Gen Sir George Cockburn KCH
Born about in Dublin, Irelandmap
Ancestors ancestors
[sibling(s) unknown]
Husband of — married 24 Feb 1790 in Lismore, County Waterford, Irelandmap
Descendants descendants
Died at about age 84 in Shanganagh Castle, County Dublin, Irelandmap
Problems/Questions
Profile last modified | Created 13 Feb 2020
This page has been accessed 286 times.

Biography

George was born in 1763. He is the son of George Cockburn and Ann Caldwell.

George married his Cousin Elizabeth Riall on 24 February 1790. [1]


COCKBURN, Sir GEORGE (1763–1847), general and pamphleteer, eldest son of George Cockburn, by a sister of Admiral Sir Benjamin Caldwell, G.C.B., was born in Dublin in 1763. He was gazetted an ensign in the 1st, afterwards the Grenadier, guards on 9 May 1781, and in the following year went to Gibraltar, where he acted as aide-de-camp to General Eliott during the famous siege. For his services he was promoted captain-lieutenant into the 105th regiment in 1784, and transferred in the following year to the 65th, which was then quartered in Dublin. His new colonel, the Earl of Harrington, took a great fancy to the young man, and instead of letting him go to Canada with the rest of the regiment in June 1785, he kept him at home for recruiting duties, and sent him to study the Prussian autumn manœuvres. In the following years he went to Austria, France, and in 1788 to Spain for the same reason, and in March 1790 he was promoted captain into the 5th (Royal Irish) light dragoons. In the same year he was made major of the Royal Irish Independent Invalids, and in November 1793 was transferred to the 92nd regiment, of which he purchased the lieutenant-colonelcy in the following month, and soon after went upon half-pay. In 1797 he was promoted colonel, and in 1803 major-general, and from 1806 to 1810 he held a command in the northern district. In April 1810 he was appointed to the command of a division in the army of occupation in Sicily, and took charge of Messina, but his tenure of command was not long, and in November, on the news arriving that he had been promoted lieutenant-general, he had to resign. Before that time, however, he had been present at the defeat of Cavaignac's division when it attempted to land in Sicily, but the chief credit of the action is due to the adjutant-general, James Campbell. Cockburn then proceeded to travel about Sicily, and on his return to England published two elaborate volumes with illustrations, which he called ‘A Voyage to Cadiz and Gibraltar, up the Mediterranean to Sicily and Malta in 1810 and 1811, including a description of Sicily and the Lipari Islands, and an Excursion in Portugal.’ He then settled down at his seat, Shanganah Castle, near Bray, county Wicklow, which he had purchased, and began to devote himself to politics. He began as a violent reformer and an admirer of Cobbett, and erected a column in his grounds in memory of the Reform Bill, which he speedily knocked down when the whigs ceased to please him. In 1821 he was made a K.C.H. by George IV, and in 1837 William IV made him a G.C.H., rather in recognition of his activity as a magistrate than for his military services. In 1843 he published a pamphlet, which was praised at the time, ‘A Dissertation on the State of the British Finances,’ in which he advocated that bank notes should be issued by government and not the Bank of England, and in 1846 he issued a still more curious one, in which he examined such historical puzzles as Hannibal's passage over the Alps, and the authorship of the ‘Letters of Junius,’ which he ascribed, on the testimony of Dr. Parr, to Charles Lloyd. In 1821 Cockburn was promoted general and G.C.H. 1831; when he died at Shanganah Castle, 18 Aug. 1847, he was fourth general in seniority in the British army. Source: [Gent. Mag. November 1847, and Cockburn's own pamphlets.] [2]

Shanganagh Castle, Dublin Road[3]

A country house erected to a design by Sir Richard Morrison (1767-1849) of nearby Walcot (ed. Rowan 1989, 159-60) representing an important component of the domestic built heritage of south County Dublin with the architectural value of the composition, a "toy fort" refronting an eighteenth-century bow-ended house (1769) annotated as "Shanaugh [of] Roberts Esquire" by Taylor and Skinner (1778 pl. 140) A prolonged period of unoccupancy notwithstanding, the elementary form and massing survive intact together with substantial quantities of the original fabric, both to the exterior and to the interior intended as a showcase for Greek and Roman antiquities collected by General Sir George Cockburn (1763-1847) where a bow-ended entrance hall; contemporary joinery; and decorative plasterwork enrichments by James Talbot (fl. 1801-18), all highlight the artistic potential of the composition.

Mount Jerome Cemetery [4] The family Vault of Genl. Sir GEORGE COCKBYRN G.C.H

  • Sir GEORGE COCKBURN Died 18 August 1847 at Shanganah Castle
  • Lady ELIZABETH COCKBURN Died 1851 (Wife of Sir George)
  • MARY COCKBURN (stet) Died 1846 (Daughter of Sir George and Lady Elizabeth)
  • Rev. GEORGE COCKBURN Died 1854 (Son of Sir George and Lady Elizabeth)
  • HERMAN HEYMAN Died 1858 (Grandson of of Sir George and Lady Elizabeth)
  • JOHN MAXWELL CRAWFORD Died 2 March 1858 (Son-in-law of Sir George and Lady Elizabeth))
  • ANNE FRANCES CRAWFORD Died 2 March 1864 (Daughter of Sir George and Lady Elizabeth)
  • PHINEAS CHARLES COCKBURN Died 31 October 1879 (Son of Sir George and Lady Elizabeth)

Sources

  1. Betham's Genealogical Abstracts Prerogative. Marr. Lics. (Phillips Mss.) C. 1744-99. D. 1630-1703.
  2. https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Cockburn,_George_(1763-1847)_(DNB00)
  3. https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/60260146/shanganagh-castle-shanganagh-dun-laoghaire-rathdown
  4. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/199014478/sir_george-cockburn




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Shanganagh Castle
Shanganagh Castle



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Categories: Mount Jerome Cemetery and Crematorium, Harold's Cross, Dublin