It's hard to know where to begin with the Cole-Hamiltons, an old Tyrone family. The
Hon. Arthur Cole-Hamilton was born on 8 August 1750. He was the son of the 1st Lord Mountflorence; and married Letitia Hamilton, d
aughter of Claud Hamilton, in
1780. He died in 1810.
The Hon. Arthur Cole-Hamilton was baptised with the name of Arthur Cole. He held the office of High Sheriff of County Fermanagh in 1778.
1 He held the office of Member of Parliament (M.P.).
1 He lived at Skea in County Fermanagh.
So the Cole-Hamiltons are related distantly to the subsequent Dukes of Abercorn and Earls of Enniskillen.
Major Arthur Willoughby Cole-Hamilton (1806-1891) held the office of High Sheriff of County Tyrone in 1830. He held the office of Justice of the Peace for County Tyrone; and Deputy Lieutenant of County Tyrone. He gained the rank of Major in the service of the Royal Tyrone Fusiliers Militia. He lived at Beltrim Castle, near Gortin in County Tyrone.
In 1872 the Cole-Hamiltons owned 16,811 acres in the county.
The present Beltrim Castle is a modern building and the only part of the original castle which remains standing is a gable wall which is, at present, no part of the modern building.
I understand that Beltrim is now part of the Blakiston-Houston Estate.
Richard Patrick Blakiston-Houston was born on 25 July, 1948;
educated at Eton. He held the office of Justice of the Peace for County Down and Deputy Lieutenant of County Down. He was registered as a Professional Associate, Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (A.R.I.C.S.) in 1972 and held the office of High Sheriff of County Down in 1989. He lived in 2003 at Beltrim Castle; and the Roddens, Ballywalter, County Down.
Interestingly, the Blakiston-Houston family are seemingly related to General Sam Houston, after which Houston in Texas was named.
Orangefield Park in east Belfast was the family home of the Houston family in the 18th century. The head of the family, John Holmes Houston, was a partner in the Belfast Banking Company and lived at Orangefield House with his family.
The family home was situated at the end of what is now Houston Park and the estate itself extended to almost 300 acres.
John and Eliza's daughter, Mary Isabella, was born in 1793 and later married Richard Bayly Blakiston. The two families joined names, leaving J Blakiston-Houston in charge of the Orangefield estate from 1857. In 1934, the Blakiston-Houston family offered Belfast Corporation (now the council) part of the Orangefield estate to develop as a public park. The corporation, although keen to buy the land, felt that the price was too high. After lengthy negotiations, they bought part of the site in 1938 for £20,000. Development work was put on hold due to World War II and plans for the park were only drawn up in 1947.