THE VISCOUNTS HARBERTON OWNED 453 ACRES IN COUNTY KILDARE
JOHN PRINCE, Vicar of Berry Pomeroy, in his famous work, The Worthies of Devon (1701), says of the family of POMEROY that "this great progeny had their "dwelling" at the Castle of Berry Pomeroy, near Totnes, Devon, "from the Norman Conquest unto the days of KING EDWARD VI, which is upward of 500 years.
The name in several ages was severally written, as de Pomerio, de Pomeri, de la Pomerai and then Pomeroy. The first so called in England was RALPH DE LA POMERAI, who came in with WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR, and was greatly assistant to him in obtaining this kingdom; for which reason he conferred upon him a noble estate, no less than fifty-eight lordships in Devonshire, as Sir William Dugdale tells us in his Baronage of England."
In the House of De La Pomerai, by Edward B Powley (1943), the descent is traced of the Pomeroy family from the above-mentioned RALPH, through a succession of the Baronial Lords of Berry Pomeroy, to SIR THOMAS POMEROY, who sold Berry Pomeroy to the Duke of Somerset in 1548.
ROBERT POMEROY, of Ingsdon Manor (now Ilsington), Devon, married Elizabeth, only daughter and heir of John Beaumont, of Ingsdon, and died in 1517, leaving issue,
ST CLEER POMEROY, of Ingsdon, who wedded Joanna Young, who was living in 1533, and had issue,
JOHN POMEROY, of Ingsdon, who died 1532-3, leaving by his wife Elizabeth a son,
HUGH POMEROY, who was under age in 1533, when his wardship and marriage were committed to Sir Philip Champernon.
He married twice, and had issue by his first wife,
JOHN POMEROY, who espoused Mary, daughter of Arthur Secombe, and had issue,
THE VERY REV ARTHUR POMEROY DD, who went to Ireland, 1672, as Chaplain to the Lord Lieutenant, Arthur Capel, Earl of Essex, and obtained the Deanery of Cork.
He married Elizabeth, second daughter of Sir Richard Osborne, of Ballintaylor, County Waterford, and died in 1710, having had surviving issue a daughter, Mary, m to Sir Richard Cox Bt, Lord Chancellor of Ireland, and a son,
THE VEN. JOHN POMEROY, Archdeacon of Cork, 1717, who wedded Elizabeth, daughter of Edmund Donellan, of Cloghan, County Roscommon, and died having had,
ARTHUR;John.
The elder son,
ARTHUR POMEROY (1723-98) was elevated to the Peerage, 1783, by the title (derived from the town of Harberton, Devon, the land barony having come into the family of Pomeroy by marriage with the heiress of the De Valletorts in 1207), of Baron Harberton, of Carbery, and advanced to the dignity of a viscountcy, 1791, as VISCOUNT HARBERTON.
His lordship, High Sheriff of County Kildare, 1752, MP for Kildare, 1761-83, wedded, in 1747, Mary, daughter and heir of Henry Colley, of Castle Carbery, County Kildare, and niece of Richard, 1st Lord Mornington, by whom he had, with other issue,
HENRY, his successor;ARTHUR JAMES, 3rd Viscount;JOHN, 4th Viscount.
His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son,
HENRY, 2nd Viscount (1749-1829), MP for Strabane, 1776-97, who espoused, in 1778, Mary, daughter of Nicholas Grady, of Grange, County Limerick, by whom he had one son, Henry (1778-1804).
His lordship was succeeded by his brother,
ARTHUR JAMES, 3rd Viscount (1753-1832), who married, in 1800, Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Kinsley, of Dublin.
His lordship dsp 1832, and was succeeded by his brother,
JOHN, 4th Viscount (1758-1833), in holy orders, Prebendary of St Patrick's, Dublin, who wedded, in 1785, Esther, eldest daughter and co-heir of James Spencer, and had issue,
JOHN JAMES, his successor;Arthur William (Rev);George Francis;Spencer Stewart;Henry;William Knox;Elizabeth Esther.
His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son,
JOHN JAMES, 5th Viscount (1790-1862), who espoused, in 1822, Caroline, sixth daughter of the Rev Sir John Robinson Bt, and had issue,
John (1828-30);Arthur James (1831-40);JAMES SPENCER, his successor;Mary Ann; Esther Caroline.
His lordship was succeeded by his only surviving son,
JAMES SPENCER, 6th Viscount (1836-1912), who married, in 1861, Florence Wallace, only daughter of WILLIAM WALLACE LEGGE, of Malone House, Belfast, and had issue,
ERNEST ARTHUR GEORGE, his successor;RALPH LEGGE, 8th Viscount.
His lordship was succeeded by his elder son,
ERNEST ARTHUR GEORGE, 7th Viscount (1867-1944), who wedded, in 1932, Fairlie, daughter of Colonel Charles D'Oyly Harmar, of Ramridge, Andover.
His lordship dsp 1944, and was succeeded by his brother,
RALPH LEGGE, 8th Viscount (1874-1956), OBE, who espoused, in 1907, Mary Katherine, only daughter of Arthur William Leatham, of Smallfield Place, Smallfield, Surrey, and had issue,
HENRY RALPH MARTYN, his successor;THOMAS DE VAUTORT, 10th Viscount;Robert William (twin), father of 11th Viscount;Rosamund Mary.
His lordship was succeeded by his eldest son,
HENRY RALPH MARTYN, 9th Viscount (1908-80), who died unmarried, and was succeeded by his brother,
THOMAS DE VAUTORT, 10th Viscount (1910-2004), who married firstly, in 1939, Nancy Ellen, daughter of C A Penoyer; secondly, in 1950, Paula Stafford, daughter of Wilfred Sydney Baker; and thirdly, in 1978, Wilhelmine, daughter of Heinrich Wahl.
His lordship dsp, and was succeeded by his nephew,
HENRY ROBERT, 11th Viscount (1958-), who wedded, in 1990, Caroline Mary, daughter of Jeremy Grindle, and has issue,
PATRICK CHRISTOPHER, born in 1995;Hugh William, Born 1997.
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| Image credit: Raymond Potterton, Auctioneers |
NEWBURY HALL, or Newberry Hall, Carbury, County Kildare, is, Mark Bence-Jones in his Burke's Guide to Country Houses, remarks,
A Palladian house of red brick with stone facings.It was built in the 1760s for Arthur Pomeroy, afterwards 1st Viscount Harberton, probably to the design of the amateur architect, Nathaniel Clements.The centre block comprises two storeys over a basement with an attic storey above the cornice which has windows in the garden front, but not in the entrance front.
The entrance front comprises three bays; a pedimented breakfront with Diocletian window above tripartite fan-lighted doorway with baseless pediment.The roof parapet has urns.The centre block is linked to two-storey wings or pavilions, each with one bay on either side of a three-sided bow, by curved sweeps with roundheaded rusticated doors and windows.
Garden front (Image: NLI)
The garden front of the centre block is of one bay on either side of a curved central bow.The house was purchased ca 1840 by Edward Woolstenholme and then by William Pilkington, a prominent Dublin publisher.The Robinson family bought Newbury Hall and estate in 1911.























