CROMWELL, Vere Essex (1625-87)

CROMWELL, Vere Essex (1625–87)

suc. nephew 11 Apr. 1682 as 7th Bar. CROMWELL and 4th earl of Ardglass [I]

First sat 19 May 1685; last sat 22 Nov. 1686

b. 2 Oct. 1625, 2nd s. of Thomas Cromwell (d. 1653), 4th Bar. Cromwell, earl of Ardglass [I], and Elizabeth Meverell (d.1653), da. of Robert Meverell of Ilam, Staffs.; bro. of Wingfield Cromwell, 5th Bar. Cromwell. educ. Stone School, Staffs.; Finglass, co. Dublin; TCD, fell. com. 20 Mar. 1638. m. 1672, Catherine, da. of James Hamilton of Newcastle, co. Down, wid. of General Richard Price of Greencastle, co. Down,1 1 da. d. 26 Nov. 1687; will pr. 24 Jan. 1688 in prerogative court [I].

Trustee, 1649 officers’ arrear of pay, 1662.2

Capt. of horse [I], 1660; lt.-col. Forbes’ regt. 1670; maj. and capt. Ossory’s horse 1685; col. 1686 [I].3

PC [I] Apr. 1682-d.4

Dep. lt. Staffs. Aug. 1683-d.5

Corp. of Horsebreeders, co. Down 1685.6

Associated with: Throwleigh Manor, Staffs.; Lecale, Ardglass, co. Down.7

Like his father and brother, Cromwell pursued a military career and rose to the rank of colonel of horse in the royalist army during the conflict in Ireland and England in the 1640s. He then served under the command of James Butler, then marquess of Ormond [I] (later duke of Ormond), against the Irish rebels and later the parliamentary army. In October 1666 Charles II officially reversed a declaration of treason issued by Parliament against him, Ormond and others.8

Known by his civil war rank of colonel, by February 1661 Cromwell was captain of a troop of horse, serving in the regiment of George Monck, duke of Albemarle. When mutiny broke out in the garrison at Carrickfergus, co. Antrim, in 1666, Colonel Cromwell was sent for to help suppress it. By August 1670 he was listed as lieutenant-colonel of the regiment of Sir Arthur Forbes. In September 1672 he was attached to the regiment of Edward Conway, 3rd Viscount Conway. He continued to be listed as the commander of a troop of horse until the end of the reign.9

Cromwell’s marriage in 1672 to Catherine Hamilton reinforced his connections to Ormond, whose sister, Mary Butler, was married to one of the Hamilton family. In November 1673, during the viceroyalty of Arthur Capell, earl of Essex, he was authorized to collect arms from the Catholics of co. Down.10 In October 1675 he was commissioned, along with Richard Boyle, earl of Burlington, and others, to represent and secure the arrears of the ’49 Officers in Ireland, another indication of his good standing.11

After his succession in 1682 Cromwell was more generally known by his Irish rather than his English title. On 17 Apr. 1682 the king issued a warrant to Ormond to swear Ardglass as a member of the Irish privy council.12 In June 1682 he was in Dublin, where Captain Fitzherbert hoped that ‘things will be fairly accommodated by the treaty proposed. You have so much justice on your side that surely my Lord Chancellor [Boyle], will not let it go on to law.’13 This may have been related to what became a long-running and contentious legal dispute with Denny and Henry Muschamp. At the beginning of November 1682 Richard Butler, earl of Arran [I], wrote from Dublin to Ormond that ‘the complaints’ of Ardglass ‘in his business with Mr Muschamp’ were likely to prove difficult, especially as Ardglass accused the local clergy of acting inappropriately in their capacity as justices of the peace and because Archbishop Boyle was active on Muschamp’s side.14 On 27 Nov. Arran added of Ardglass that

[his] heart is broke, and no man without concern (who has any good nature in him) can see so brave a man as he has shown himself to be in such a desponding condition as he is, and with good reason, for he is decrepit in body, disturbed in mind, and cannot get one able lawyer to plead for him.15

By March 1683 Ardglass intended to take his accusations to England and to use the English legal system. On 28 July he approached Arran for an extension of his leave from the army in order to attend the continuing chancery suit against Denny and Henry Muschamp.16

In August 1683 Ardglass was made a deputy lieutenant of Staffordshire. Following his accession, James II reappointed him to the Irish privy council and in May he was again commissioned as a deputy lieutenant in Staffordshire. Also in May 1685 the lords justices were instructed to pay him an annuity of £400 p.a. on the Irish establishment.17

In July 1685 Ormonde informed Archbishop Boyle that Ardglass had petitioned the privy council in England for the arrest of Muschamp until he had performed the chancery decree in his favour.18 In response the archbishop pointed out

that the sending for a subject, out of this kingdom, upon a proceeding in chancery, in England, wherein both the parties, and the matter, … do all belong to this Kingdom, is without a precedent, and may be of sadder consequence to the … liberty of all the inhabitants … but especially of the Nobility, than can be easily foreseen.19

Ardglass first attended the House of Lords on the opening day of James II’s Parliament, 19 May 1685. He was present on 29 days of the session before its adjournment on 2 July, and he attended the further adjournment of the House on 4 August. When the session resumed on 9 Nov. 1685, he was present on all 11 days before the prorogation of 20 November. In all he sat for just over 95 per cent of the session.

In January 1686 Ardglass was named to be colonel of a regiment of horse in the Irish army, made vacant by the promotion of James Butler, styled earl of Ossory [I], the future 2nd duke of Ormond, to the foot regiment which had belonged to Richard Butler, earl of Arran [I].20 On 14 Jan. 1686 he attended the trial of Henry Booth, 2nd Baron Delamer, and found him not guilty.21 He also attended the prorogation on 22 Nov. 1686.

Ardglass’ attitude to James II’s policies is hard to establish. About May 1687 one commentator thought him a possible supporter; three other lists, including one probably drawn up after his death, indicated that he was opposed to the repeal of the Test Act. He continued to command his regiment of horse in Ireland until his death in 1687, surviving the reorganization of the Irish army by Richard Talbot, earl of Tyrconnell [I].22 That Ardglass, a Protestant, was able to maintain his command during Tyrconnell’s Catholicizing of the Irish army suggests that he was considered sufficiently competent and well connected at court and in Ireland to maintain his position.

Ardglass died at Booncastle, co. Down, on 26 Nov. 1687 and was buried on 29 Dec. at the Abbey in Downpatrick. He died without male issue and the peerage became extinct, although his daughter, Elizabeth, was widely (if incorrectly) assumed to have become Baroness Cromwell.23 His widow later married Nicholas Price of co. Down. The family’s lands passed to the Southwell family in or about 1711 through Elizabeth Cromwell’s marriage to Edward Southwell.

A.C./S.N.H.

  • 1 CP, xiv. 33.
  • 2 HMC Ormonde, ii. 239.
  • 3 CSP Ire. 1625–70, p. 389; Bodl. Carte 41, f. 282; C. Dalton, Irish Army Lists 1661–85, p. 73; CSP Dom. 1685, p. 76; CSP Dom.1686–7, p. 20.
  • 4 CSP Dom. 1682, p. 170; CSP Dom. 1685, p. 59.
  • 5 CSP Dom. 1683 (July-Sept.), 267; CSP Dom. 1685, p. 160.
  • 6 CSP Dom. 1685, p. 418.
  • 7 PRO NI, T.646 (13); Add. 9750.
  • 8 CSP Ire. 1666–9, p. 225.
  • 9 Ibid., pp. 110–11; Dalton, Irish Army Lists, 4, 19, 73, 85, 148.
  • 10 HMC Ormonde, ii. 339.
  • 11 CSP Dom. 1675–6, pp. 364–5.
  • 12 CSP Dom. 1682, p. 170.
  • 13 NLI, Ardglass letters, MS 2260/9.
  • 14 HMC Ormonde, n.s. vi. 472.
  • 15 HMC Ormonde, n.s. vi, 483–4, 540; PRO NI, T.802 (2–6).
  • 16 HMC Ormonde, n.s. vi. 540; vii. 15, 88.
  • 17 CSP Dom. 1683 (July–Sept.), p. 267; 1685, pp. 59, 160, 164.
  • 18 HMC Ormonde, n.s. vii. 345–6.
  • 19 Bodl. Carte 40, ff. 426–7.
  • 20 CSP Dom. 1685, p. 20; Morrice, Ent’ring Bk, iii. 99.
  • 21 State Trials, xi. 593.
  • 22 CSP Dom. 1671–2, p. 254; 1672–3, p. 70; 1686–7, pp. 215–18; HMC Ormonde, n.s. v. 528.
  • 23 Add. 9750; NLI, MS 2260; Luttrell, Brief Relation, vi. 425; CP, i. 194n.