Showing posts with label Liscarroll. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Liscarroll. Show all posts

18 December 2022

The janitor and drinking
earl who gave his name to
two streets in Stony Stratford

Augustus Road and Egmont Avenue in Stony Stratford are reminders of the story of Augustus Perceval, Earl of Egmont (Photographs: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

Patrick Comerford

Two neighbouring streets in Stony Stratford – Augustus Road off Calverton Road, and Egmont Avenue, which leads off Augustus Road – take their names from Augustus Arthur Perceval (1856-1910), 8th Earl of Egmont, whose family once owned the land on which the houses on both streets are built.

Lord Egmont was a colourful if enigmatic figure. He had run away in his teens to become a sailor, married a waitress, was later a fireman and a town hall janitor or caretaker and worked in salt mines and cement factories before inheriting the family titles and estates in Wolverton and Stony Stratford following a series of coincidental deaths of successive family members.

But, in anticipation of inheriting the Perceval family titles and estates, Augustus had borrowed heavily against the family estates in Ireland that were already heavily indebted and being sold off because of the debauched lifestyle who had died half a century earlier.

By the early 20th century, Augustus had effectively lost any grip on his finances and had squandered all he might have inherited before ever getting his hands on it. He was forced to sell off the last estates he had mortgaged or borrowed against. When he sold off the lands between Calverton and Stony Stratford for housing, the developers kindly acknowledged his name when it came to developing Egmont Avenue and Augustus Road.

The Egmont estate in Stony Calverton and Wolverton dated back to 1806, when it was bought by Augustus Perceval’s great-grandfather, Charles George Perceval (1756-1840), 2nd Baron Arden, a half-brother of John James Perceval (1738-1822), 3rd Earl of Egmont.

Calverton Manor … Charles Perceval, Lord Arden, bought large portions of the Calverton estate in 1806 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

For centuries, from the Middle Ages until the Tudor era, Calverton Manor belonged to the de Vere family, Earls of Oxford, and then the Nevil family, who held the title of Lord Latimer, remembered in the name of Latimer estate. From them, the Calverton estate descended to the Percy family, Earls of Northumberland. It was sold to Sir Thomas Bennet, a former Lord Mayor of London, in 1616, and then descended to the Cecil family, Earls of Salisbury.

When James Cecil (1748-1823), Marquess of Salisbury, sold the manors of Calverton and Beachampton, they were bought at an auction in the Cock Hotel in Stony Startford on 18 October 1806 by William Selby Lowndes of Whaddon, while other interests in Calverton bought by Charles Perceval, Lord Arden. Perceval was a half-brother of Spencer Perceval (1762-1812), who would become Prime Minister in 1809 and who was assassinated in the House of Commons in 1812 – the only British prime minister to have been assassinated. They were half-brothers of John James Perceval, 3rd Earl of Egmont.

The Perceval family were extensive and titled landowners in Ireland. They were descended from Sir Richard Percivale or Perceval (1550-1620), who acquired hundreds of thousands of acres of land in Ireland at the beginning of the 17th century, making him one of the largest landowners in Co Cork.

Sir John Perceval (1629-1665), who amassed over 100,000 acres in Co Cork, including Kanturk Castle and Liscarroll Castle, received the title of baronet at the Caroline restoration in 1661. There is a family connection, for this Sir John Perceval was the recipient of extensive correspondence in 1650s from his cousin William Dobbyns about the living conditions and life circumstances of the mapmaker Nicholas Comerford or Comberford in Stepney in the East End of London.

Sir John Perceval’s grandson, also Sir John Perceval (1683-1748), was MP for Cork (1703-1715) until he received a string of Irish peerage titles, becoming the 1st Earl of Egmont. His son, John Perceval (1711-1770), was MP for Dingle, Co Kerry, in the Irish Parliament, and was the father of two half-brothers who bought out the Cecil family’s interest in the estates in the Calverton and Stony Stratford area.

The third earl’s grandson, Henry Perceval (1796-1841), 5th Earl of Egmont, began the process of selling off the family silver to sustain a life of debauchery, marked by his alcoholism and loose living. In his mad scramble for ready cash, this Lord Egmont appointed Sir Edward Tierney from Rathkeale, Co Limerick, as his agent at his Irish estates in 1823, including Liscarroll Castle and thousands of acres around Churchtown, Kanturk and Buttevant in north Cork.

After living a dissolute lifestyle, this Lord Egmont left all his estates in England and Ireland to Tierney, while the family titles passed to his distant cousin, George Perceval (1794-1874), 3rd Lord Arden, who became the sixth earl.

All Saints’ Church, Calverton, rebuilt in 1818-1824 by Charles Perceval (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

His father Charles Perceval, as the 2nd Lord Arden, had bought a portion of Calverton Manor, including the advowson or the right to present or nominate the Rector of Calverton. He exercised this right in 1814 when he presented Dr Butler as a temporary Rector of Calverton, to hold the parish until his son was ‘of a proper age.’ The patronage of the living later descended in the Perceval family to the Earls of Egmont.

Lord Arden commissioned the architect William Pilkington to rebuild All Saints’ Church between 1818 and 1824, on the foundations of the earlier All Hallows’ Church, and the church opened or reopened in October 1818.

Lord Arden was assisted in this work by Dr Butler. Arden also built a new rectory at his own expense, and the foundations of the house were laid in July 1819.

Butler was succeeded in 1821 by Lord Arden’s third son, the Revd the Hon Charles George Perceval (1796-1858), who came to live at Calverton as Rector on 26 March 1821, at the relatively young age of 24.

Charles Perceval was a devout High Churchman and a supporter of the Tractarians. Much of the decoration in the church, the stained glass windows and other embellishments, owes its origins to Perceval.

Many of the Tractarian leaders met in the Rectory at this time, including Edward Bouverie Pusey (1800-1882), John Henry Newman and Edward Manning, and some of the Tracts for the Times were planned if not written at Calverton.

The Revd Charles Perceval of Calverton, was a younger brother of George Perceval (1794-1874), who became the 6th Earl of Egmont in 1841. However, the new earl received not a penny from his ancestral estates.

Sir Edward Tierney had died in 1856 at the age of 76, and his title and his interest in the vast Perceval title had passed to his son, Sir Matthew Edward Tierney (1818-1860), but he left his estates acquired from the Egmonts to his son-in-law, the Revd Sir Lionel Darell (1817-1883).

The sixth earl went to court against Darell to recover the estates in a remarkable case before the Summer Assizes at Cork in 1863. After four days, the case was settled. Egmont recovered Liscarroll Castle and his ancestral estates, but Darell was awarded £125,000 and costs.

Kanturk Castle, Co Cork … given to the National Trust before Augustus Perceval could inherit it, is now in ruins (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2021)

Egmont died on 2 August 1874 and – for want of a male heir – was succeeded by his first cousin’s son, Charles George Perceval (1845-1897), 7th Earl of Egmont, who was born in Calverton Rectory. In 1889, this earl sold the Perceval estates in Co Cork, including Liscarroll Castle, near Buttevant, and 62,500 acres of land, to his tenants under the Ashbourne Land Act in 1895. After the seventh earl died in 1897, his widowed countess donated the majestic ruins of Kanturk Castle to the National Trust in 1900.

The seventh earl, like so many of his immediate predecessors, had no immediate male heir, and so his Irish peerage titles passed to his first cousin’s son Augustus Arthur Perceval (1856-1910), who became 8th Earl of Egmont in the Irish peerage, but without the once grand Irish castles at Kanturk and Liscarroll.

Augustus Perceval was born at Papanui, Canterbury, in New Zealand, in 1856. He ran away from his Royal Navy training ship to become a common sailor. He married Kate Howell, daughter of Warwick Howell of South Carolina, in 1881. The New York Times in a report described as a waitress.

A year after Kate and Augustus married, he joined the fire brigade of Southwark, and by 1887 he was working as a janitor or caretaker at Chelsea Town Hall. He later worked in salt mines in Cheshire, and then in South Africa in a cement factory.

He eventually succeeded to the family titles on 5 September 1897. Those titles were daunting and an impressive if not overpowering list: 8th Earl of Egmont, Co Cork, 8th Viscount Perceval of Kanturk, Co Cork, 8th Baron Perceval of Burton, Co Cork, 7th Lord Lovel and Holland, Baron Lovel and Holland of Enmore, Co Somerset, 4th Baron Arden, of Arden, Co Warwick, and 9th baronet. The runaway sailor and former janitor now had a list of titles that would have suited any Gilbert and Sullivan stage production.

Known among his drinking companions as Gussie, he scandalised his fellow peers regularly. He was arrested for being inordinately intoxicated in Piccadilly while accompanied by a young prostitute. The young woman attempted suicide in her cell and Gussie caused a sensation when he refused to remove his hat when arraigned in court the next morning.

In a risk that never paid off, the new earl borrowed heavily, gambling that he would inherit the vast Perceval estates totalling 120,00 acres. Instead, there was little for him to inherit, and he sold off what was left in a piecemeal manner in the hopes of acquiring a lifestyle commensurate with his new status. Finally, he sold Cowdray Park in Sussex in 1910, shortly before he died. Perhaps the only legacy in property that he could leave was giving his names to Augustus Road and Egmont Avenue, which were developed in the early 1900s.

Egmont Avenue in Stony Stratford is a distant reminder of Augustus Perceval, 8th of Egmont (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

Gussie and Kate had no children: he died at The Hollies, Thames Ditton, Surrey, in 1910 at the age of 54; Kate, the former waitress who survived as the Dowager Countess of Egmont, died in 1926.

The titles continued to struggle to find heirs among members of the Perceval family who were living in suburban Birmingham. Three claimants to the titles came forward in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Two of the claims, by a baker and a derelict, were dismissed by the Master of the Court of Chancery, who instead accepted of a rancher living in Canada, who at first wanted nothing more than to remain a simple farmer, living in a sparsely-furnished, two-room log house in the Rockies.

The Perceval titles eventually died out in 2011 with the death of the 12th Earl of Egmont. Both Liscarroll Castle and Kanturk Castle in Co Cork are elegant but in ruins. All Saints’ Church in Calverton remains a beautiful historical and architectural legacy of the Perceval family. But the only properies left in Stony Stratford as reminders of this family in name are two suburban streets in Stony Startford: Augustus Road and Egmont Avenue, off Calverton Road.

Augustus Road in Stony Stratford is a distant reminder of Augustus Perceval, 8th of Egmont (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

26 July 2022

Praying with the World Church in
Ordinary Time: Tuesday 26 July 2022

‘The field is the world, and the good seed are the children of the kingdom’ (Matthew 13: 38) … fields of green and gold near High Leigh in Hoddesdon (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Patrick Comerford

I am in the High Leigh Conference Centre at Hoddesdon in Hertfordshire this week, taking part in the annual conference of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel). The conference, which began yesterday, has the theme ‘Living Stones, Living Hope.’

In the Calendar of the Church today, we remember Anne and Joachim, Parents of the Blessed Virgin Mary, with a lesser festival (26 July 2022). In the Parish of Saint Mary and Saint Giles, Stony Stratford, and All Saints’ Church, Calverton, the intercessions this week also remember the Revd Charles George Perceval, Rector of Calverton, who was born on 25 December 1796 and died on this day, 26 July 1858, aged 61.

Charles Perceval was the son of an Irish peer, Charles George Perceval, 2nd Baron Arden, of Liscarroll Castle, near Buttevant, and Kanturk Castle, Co Cork. Perceval was a devout High Churchman and a supporter of the Tractarians. Many of the Tractarian leaders met in his Rectory in Calverton, including Edward Bouverie Pusey, John Henry Newman and Edward Manning, and some of the Tracts for the Times were planned if not written in Calverton.

I am continuing my prayer diary each morning this week in this way:

1,Reading the Gospel reading of the morning;

2,a short reflections on the reading;

3, a prayer from the USPG prayer diary, ‘Pray with the World Church.’

The Virgin Mary with her parents, Saint Anne and Saint Joachim, in a mosaic by the Russian artist Boris Anrep (1883-1969) in the Cathedral of Christ the King, Mullingar, Co Westmeath (Photograph: Patrick Comerford; click on images for full-screen views)

Common Worship provides this Gospel reading for the Eucharist on today’s Lesser Festival commemorating Anne and Joachim, Parents of the Blessed Virgin Mary:

Matthew 13: 16-17 (NRSVA):

[Jesus said to his disciples:] 16 ‘But blessed are your eyes, for they see, and your ears, for they hear. 17 Truly I tell you, many prophets and righteous people longed to see what you see, but did not see it, and to hear what you hear, but did not hear it.’

On the other hand, the Church of Ireland lectionary provides this Gospel reading for celebrations of the Eucharist today:

Matthew 13: 36-43 (NRSVA):

36 Then he left the crowds and went into the house. And his disciples approached him, saying, ‘Explain to us the parable of the weeds of the field.’ 37 He answered, ‘The one who sows the good seed is the Son of Man; 38 the field is the world, and the good seed are the children of the kingdom; the weeds are the children of the evil one, 39 and the enemy who sowed them is the devil; the harvest is the end of the age, and the reapers are angels. 40 Just as the weeds are collected and burned up with fire, so will it be at the end of the age. 41 The Son of Man will send his angels, and they will collect out of his kingdom all causes of sin and all evildoers, 42 and they will throw them into the furnace of fire, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth. 43 Then the righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their Father. Let anyone with ears listen!’

Gnasher and Gnipper in the Beano always seemed to be ready to gnash their teeth

Today’s reflection:

In my imagination, when I was a child, not only were the summers long and sunny, but weekend entertainment was simpler and less complicated. The highlights of the weekend seemed to be Dr Who and Dixon of Dock Green, and the weekly editions of the Eagle and the Beano.

I may have been just a little too old (16) for the first appearance of Gnasher (1968), the pet dog of Dennis the Menace in the Beano.

The G- tagged onto the beginning of the name of both Gnasher and his son Gnipper is pronounced silently, just like the silent P at the beginning of Psmith, the Rupert Psmith in so many PG Wodehouse novels.

Most of the Beano speech bubbles for both Gnasher and Gnipper consist of normal English words beginning with the letter ‘N’ with a silent ‘G’ added to the beginning, as in ‘Gnight, Gnight.’

I was a little too old for the introduction of Gnasher. Nonetheless, my friends in my late teens and early 20s loved Gnasher and Gniper, joked about those silent ‘Gs’ and even recalled how as children we had joked about ‘weeping and G-nashing of teeth.’

There is very little to joke about in today’s Gospel reading (Matthew 13: 36-43). The idea of people being thrown into the furnace of fire is not a very appealing image for children, and so to joke about it is a childhood method of coping.

Nor is the idea of people being thrown into the furnace of fire a very inviting image after a week in which we have suffered burning heats and raging heat not only here but across Europe.

It is worth reminding ourselves that throughout history, humanity has stooped to burn what we dislike and what we want to expunge, and we have done it constantly.

We have been burning books as Christians since Saint Athanasius ordered the burning of texts in Alexandria in the year 367.

In the Middle Ages and later, we burned heretics at the stake. The Inquisition burned heretics and Jews in public squares. Heretics were burned publicly as an accompanying theme for the outdoor sermons of San Bernardino da Siena in the early 15th century, along with mirrors, cosmetics, fine dresses, playing cards … even musical instruments, and, of course, books, song sheets, artworks, paintings and sculpture.

In his sermons, the book-burning friar regularly called for Jews and gays to be either isolated from society or eliminated from the human community.

In Florence, the supporters of Savonarola collected and publicly burned thousands of objects, including cosmetics, art, and books in 1497.

More recently, the Nazis staged regular book burnings, especially burning books by Jewish writers, including Thomas Mann, Karl Marx and Albert Einstein.

Extremists of all religious and political persuasions want to burn the symbols and totems of their opponents, whether it is Pastor Terry Jones burning the Quran and effigies of Bill Clinton and Barack Obama in Florida or jihadists burning the Twin Towers in New York.

The limits of our extremists seem to be defined by their inflammatory words.

But who is being burned in this Gospel reading?

Who is doing the burning?

And who will be weeping and gnashing their teeth?

Contrary to many shoddy readings of this Gospel reading, Christians are not asked to burn anyone or anything at all. And, if we have enemies, we are called not to burn them but to live with them, even love them. Judgment is left with God, while we are left to love and to pray.

Too often we think of who might be excluded from God’s plans rather than who is counted in. When we do that, we descend to our greatest depths rather than reaching our potential heights.

Today’s Prayer:

Collect (Common Worship):

Lord God of Israel,
who bestowed such grace on Anne and Joachim
that their daughter Mary grew up obedient to your word
and made ready to be the mother of your Son:
help us to commit ourselves in all things to your keeping
and grant us the salvation you promised to your people;
through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord,
who is alive and reigns with you,
in the unity of the Holy Spirit,
one God, now and for ever.

The theme in the prayer diary of the Anglican mission agency USPG (United Society Partners in the Gospel) this week is ‘The Way Towards Healing,’ looking at the work for peace of the Churches in Korea. This theme was introduced on Sunday by Shin Seung-min, National Council of Churches in Korea.

Tuesday 26 July 2022:

The USPG Prayer Diary invites us to pray today in these words:

Let us pray for the National Council of Churches in Korea, a thriving example of ecumenism, as they work together to promote peace.

Yesterday’s reflection

Continued tomorrow

An icon of Saint Anne with her child, the Virgin Mary, with her child, the Christ Child, in the Church of Saint Eleftherios and Saint Anna in Corfu (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version Bible: Anglicised Edition copyright © 1989, 1995, National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide. http://nrsvbibles.org

17 May 2022

Lady Mary Russell and
Calverton’s clergy couple
with Irish family links

Russell Street in Stony Stratford recalls the generosity of Lady Mary Russell and her husband Canon Richard Norris Russell (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

Patrick Comerford

The Russell Street School and Russell Street off Wolverton Road and running parallel to Stony Stratford’s High Street, recall Lady Mary Russell (1831-1891) and her husband, Canon Richard Norris Russell (1809-1896), charitable benefactors whose generosity benefitted schools and churches in Calverton, Stony Stratford, Wolverton and nearby Beachampton.

Mary and Richard shared interesting Irish family backgrounds and both were members of prominent clerical and political families.

Lady Mary Russell was born Mary Perceval at Calverton Rectory in 1831, where her father, the Revd the Hon Charles George Perceval (1796-1858), lived as the Rector of Calverton; her mother Mary (Knapp) was the only daughter of the Revd Primatt Knapp, Rector of Shenley Mansell.

Mary’s father, Charles Thomas Perceval was born into a very political family. His father and Mary’s grandfather, the Hon Charles George Perceval (1756-1840), was the MP for Launceston (1780-1790), Warwick (1790-1796) and Totnes (1796-1802). In turn, his father, John Perceval, was Earl of Egmont, who inherited vast estates in north Co Cork, while his mother, Catherine (Compton), was made a peeress in Ireland in her own right in 1770 as Baroness Arden, of Lohort Castle, Co Cork.

Charles George Perceval succeeded his mother as 2nd Baron Arden in 1784, but because this was an Irish peerage he was able to hold his seat in the British House of Commons until he was given the additional title of Lord Arden in his own right in 1802. An elder brother of the Prime Minister, Spencer Perceval (1762-1812), was assassinated in the lobby of the House of Commons, the only British Prime Minister to have been assassinated.

Lord Arden bought Calverton Manor from the Marquess of Salisbury in 1806, along with the patronage of the living or the right to nominate the Rectors of Calverton. Lord Arden presented Dr Butler as a temporary Rector of Calverton in 1814, to hold the parish until his son was ‘of a proper age.’

Many of the Tractarian leaders met in Calverton Rectory, where Lady Mary Russell was born in 1831 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

The Revd Charles George Perceval (1796-1858) eventually became the Rector of Calverton on 26 March 1821, at the age of 24. He was a devout High Churchman and a supporter of the Tractarians. Many of the Tractarian leaders met in the Rectory at this time, including Edward Bouverie Pusey (1800-1882), Cardinal John Henry Newman and Cardinal Edward Manning, and some of the Tracts for the Times were planned if not written at Calverton.

Perceval’s only daughter, Mary Perceval, was born at Calverton Rectory in 1831. She married on 12 October 1865 Canon Richard Norris Russell (1809-1896), Rector of Beachampton (1835-1883) and a canon of Christ Church, Oxford (1877-1896). After her brother succeeded as Earl of Egmont, she became known as Lady Mary Russell in 1875.

Canon Richard Norris Russell was born in France on 8 July 1809, but he too was from a prominent Irish family. His father, William Thomas Russell (1778-1867), was a merchant from Limerick, a son of Francis William Russell (1735-1800) and Elizabeth Maunsell Norris (1744-1813).

William Thomas Russell married Louisa Therese Letellier in Saint Giles in the Fields, Holborn, London, on 3 July 1810. Romantic lore in the Russell family says she was a French countess who was rescued by William Russell during the French revolution. The couple later returned to his native Limerick before returning to France where they lived in Toulouse. William died in Toulouse a widower at the age of 89 on 31 January 1867, a little more than a year after his son Richard had married Mary Perceval.

Richard was educated at the Sorbonne in Paris (Bachelor of Letters), and at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge (BA 1832, MA 1835). He was a Fellow of Caius (1833-1836) when he was ordained deacon (Ely 1833) and priest (Lincoln 1834), and when he became Rector of Beachampton in 1835. Richard was 54 when he married Mary Perceval in 1865 and she was 32.

Throughout her life, Lady Mary Russell was generous in her bequests to schools and churches in the Stony Stratford, Wolverton and Calverton areas. The Radcliffe Trust donated the site to build Wolverton End School and School House in 1867, and the church school for the poor, designed by Swinfen Harris, was built in 1871-1873. But the school was financed by Lady Mary Russell of Beachampton, and over 280 pupils attended in the early 1890s.

Lady Mary Russell helped to fund the Wolverton End School, Stony Stratford, until she died in 1891 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

Lady Mary Russell died on 25 April 1891; Canon Richard Russell died on 13 June 1896. There are memorial windows to the couple in the parish church of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary in Beachampton, and Lady Mary also presented the organ.

Their only son, Richard Harold Russell, was a barrister, a Justice of the Peace for Northamptonshire and Buckinghamshire, and was in the Bucks Imperial Yeomanry in South Africa during the Boer War (1898-1901). Their only daughter, Mary Caroline Russell, married the Revd Henry Harington Harris (1853-1936), Rector of Poynings, Sussex (1889-1917).

Meanwhile, Lady Mary Russell’s brother, Charles George Perceval (1845-1897), who was born at Calverton Rectory, eventually succeeded as 7th Earl of Egmont in 1874. Egmont was an Irish peerage, and in 1889 Lord Egmont sold off many of the family estates in north Co Cork, including Liscarroll Castle, near Buttevant. Kanturk Castle was donated to the National Trust by his widow in 1900.

Memories of days past on Russell Street in Stony Stratford (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

16 April 2022

All Saints’ Church, Calverton,
a 200-year-old church built
on mediaeval foundations

All Saints’ Church dates from the 12th century and was rebuilt in 1818 and 1824 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

Patrick Comerford

In the afternoon sunshine that I have been enjoying in Stony Stratford this week, I walked out one day to Calverton just outside Stony Stratford, and enjoyed a short time in the Shoulder of Mutton. It is an appropriate name for an old country pub looking across the fields filled with sheep and new-born lambs, and I enjoyed the view across those fields to Calverton Manor and All Saints’ Church.

The parish of Calverton includes one village, Lower Weald, and two hamlets, Upper Weald and Middle Weald. Lower Weald is the largest of these three settlements, and includes Manor Farm, the parish church and the former parish school.

The name means the ‘farm where calves are reared,’ and in the Domesday Book in 1086 the village was recorded as Calvretone.

Thatched cottages in the village of Lower Weald in Calverton (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

The west side of nearby Stony Stratford was once included with the ecclesiastic parish of Calverton, while the east side was in Wolverton, so that in the past the Manor of Calverton was often called ‘the Manor of Calverton with Stony Stratford.

The manor was sold in 1616 to Sir Thomas Bennet, who had been Lord Mayor of London in 1603. It was extended by his grandson, Sir Simon Bennet, in 1659. The manor is reputedly haunted by the ghost of Simon’s wife, Lady Grace Bennett, who was murdered there in 1694. The Bennet family also owned the nearby Manor of Beachampton.

The fair and market of Stony Stratford were part of the life of the Manor of Calverton until they were separated by an Act of Parliament in the 18th century.

Looking across the fields to Calverton Manor and All Saints’ Church (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

The church in Calverton may be one of the oldest Church foundations in Buckinghamshire. Richard the clerk of Calverton witnessed a deed with Robert de Whitfield, Sheriff of Oxfordshire, in 1182-1185. This may be the earliest reference to the church in Calverton, which was dedicated to All Hallows – the mediaeval equivalent of All Saints. The old Church of All Hallows consisted of a nave, a chancel and a south aisle with an entrance porch.

However, the Christian presence in the area goes back much further, to sometime between the years 600 and 700. Birinus a missionary came to this area to work among the West Saxon people, and decided to settle among them permanently.

Birinus became the first Bishop of Dorchester, organising the parish system in the area. Perhaps the Parish of Calverton was established at this time.

The west door of All Saints’ Church, Calverton (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

The advowson of Calverton was held in 1233 by Isabella de Bolebec, Countess of Oxford and wife of Robert de Vere, 3rd Earl of Oxford. The advowson or living then descended with the manor until the manor was sold in 1806, when the living was sold by the Marquess of Salisbury to Charles George Perceval (1756-1840), 2nd Lord Arden and an elder brother of the Prime Minister, Spencer Perceval (1762-1812). Spencer Perceval was assassinated in the lobby of the House of Commons, the only British Prime Minister to have been assassinated.

Lord Arden presented Dr Butler as a temporary Rector of Calverton in 1814, to hold the parish until his son was ‘of a proper age.’ The patronage of the living later descended in the Perceval family to the Earls of Egmont.

Lord Arden commissioned the architect William Pilkington to rebuild All Saints’ Church between 1818 and 1824, on the foundations of All Hallows’ Church. The church was built in stone in the 12th and 14th century styles, and during this this work some of the old details were re-used. All Saints’ Church opened in October 1818, and includes a chancel, a nave of three bays, a south aisle, a west tower and a south porch.

The south porch of All Saints’ Church (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

Lord Arden’s work was assisted in this work by Dr Butler. Arden also built a new rectory at his own expense, and the foundations of the house were laid in July 1819.

Butler was succeeded in 1821 by Lord Arden’s third son, the Revd the Hon Charles George Perceval (1796-1858), who came to live at Calverton as Rector on 26 March 1821, at the age of 24.

Perceval was a devout High Churchman and a supporter of the Tractarians. Much of the decoration in the church, the stained glass windows and other embellishments, owes its origins to Perceval.

Many of the Tractarian leaders met in the Rectory at this time, including Edward Bouverie Pusey (1800-1882), John Henry Newman and Edward Manning, and some of the Tracts for the Times were planned if not written at Calverton.

Some of the ‘Tracts for the Times’ were planned in the Rectory in Calverton … a new rectory was built in 1819 (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

Perceval’s eldest surviving son, Charles George Perceval (1845-1897), who was born at Calverton Rectory, eventually succeeded as 7th Earl of Egmont in 1874. Egmont was an Irish peerage, and in 1889 Lord Egmont sold off many of the family estates in north Co Cork, including Liscarroll Castle, near Buttevant. Kanturk Castle was donated to the National Trust by his widow in 1900.

More rebuilding took place in the church in Calverton in the 1850s, and further restoration and decorations were carried out in 1871-1872, when the architect was Edward Swinfen Harris. The royal arms, carved in wood and painted, probably date from that restoration. The inscriptions below the arms date from the reign of Edward VII.

The monumental cross in All Saints’ churchyard (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

The chancel arch and the nave arcade are apparently 14th century work reset, and the two-centred tower arch over the modern semi-circular arch may be of the 15th century and rebuilt. All the fittings are modern, there is a ring of six bells, and the plate consists of a chalice, paten and flagon, probably dating from the 17th century, and a modern paten.

A monumental cross in the churchyard is topped by an interesting cross, and has carved representations of the four evangelists encircling the base.

Today, All Saints’ Church, Calverton, is part of the Parish of Stony Stratford and Calverton.

Calverton Manor is a Grade 2* Listed Building and featured in BBC2’s Restoration Home series in 2011.

Calverton Manor featured in BBC 2’s ‘Restoration Home’ series (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

28 March 2022

Saint Mary the Virgin: a former
Gothic Revival church by
Scott in Stony Stratford

The Church of Saint Mary the Virgin on London Road, Stony Stratford … designed in the 1860s by Sir George Gilbert Scott (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

Patrick Comerford

Although Saint Mary and Saint Giles is the Church of England parish church in Stony Stratford, the town had two parish churches for about a century. The ‘Saint Mary’ in the name of Saint Mary and Saint Giles is a reminder of the Church of Saint Mary the Virgin, built as a new church on London Road in 1864.

The part of the toen in the parish of Wolverton was left without a church after the Church of Saint Mary Magdalene burnt down in the Great Fire in Stony Stratford in 1742. For over a century, Saint Giles’ Church in Stony Stratford was the only church serving the parishes of both Wolverton and Calverton.

A new church on London Road was designed in 1863-1865 in the Gothic style by Sir George Gilbert Scott (1811-1878), a prolific architect of the Gothic Revival. When the Church of Saint Mary the Virgin was built, it was still within Wolverton parish. The church was commissioned by the Revd William Pitt Trevelyan (1812-1905), Rector of Calverton, and his cousin, Mary Perceval of Calverton, later Lady Mary Russell.

Her father, the Revd Charles George Perceval (1796-1858), was the Rector of Calverton. Her brother, Charles Perceval (1845-1897), 7th Earl of Egmont, sold their family’s extensive estates in Co Cork in 1889, including Lohort Castle and Liscarroll Castle near Buttevant, once reputed to be the third largest castle in Ireland but now in ruins; his widow donated Kanturk Castle, Co Cork, to the National Trust in 1900.

The architect Sir Gilbert Scott is chiefly associated with the design and renovation of churches and cathedrals. He was inspired by Augustus Pugin to take part in the Gothic Revival, and one of his early works was the Martyrs’ Memorial on St Giles’, Oxford (1841).

Scott designed over 800 buildings, including the Midland Grand Hotel at St Pancras Station, the Albert Memorial and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office in London, Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Glasgow, Saint Mary’s Cathedral, Edinburgh, and King’s College Chapel, London.

While Scott was working on the Church of Saint Mary the Virgin in Stony Stratford, he was extensively renovating the ornate West Front of Lichfield Cathedral (1855-1878). He restored the cathedral to the form he believed it took in the Middle Ages, working with original materials where possible and creating imitations when the originals were not available.

Scott’s church in Stony Stratford was built in stone in the Early English style, with lancet windows, an apse, south porch, nave, aisles and a bellcote. However, some commentators described the church as ‘dullish’.

Scott also built a parish room and a vicarage in 1864. Initially, they were detached but were later joined to the church. The vicarage was an asymmetrical design built in stone, with a window by Farmer to which a later bay was added along with other alterations.

After the church was built, the new parish of Wolverton Saint Mary was formed in 1870, covering that end of Stony Stratford. A Vicarage was built opposite the church, as well as two curates’ houses, now known as ‘Jesuan House,’ and a parish hall.

The priests in the new church were supporters of the Tractarian Movement and the Oxford Movement, and faced vigorous opposition from strong evangelicals. Some of its priests were persecuted for what were regarded as ‘ritual offences’ and one was deprived of his living for these practices.

For a century, the church served the Wolverton Road and London Road area to the south and east of the historic core of Stony Stratford. Many of the houses in this area are terraced housing built in the Victorian and Edwardian periods.

Most of the housing in the Wolverton Road, Queen Street, King Street and Clarence Road area was built for employees of the Wolverton railway works nearby. A tram was built to take workers to and from the factory, and a track was built along Wolverton Road with the terminus at Russell Street. However, by 1926 the tram was outmoded and closed.

After a fire severely damaged Saint Giles Church in Stony Stratford on 26 December 1964, many thought Saint Giles would be closed and Saint Mary the Virgin would become the sole parish church in the town. However, the Diocese of Oxford decided to restore Saint Giles and the congregation of Saint Mary’s were not happy to lose their church with their High Church traditions.

The Diocese of Oxford amalgamated the two parishes, the altar, the reredos by Sir Ninian Comper, and other furnishings were moved from Saint Mary’s Church to Saint Giles, and Saint Giles was re-dedicated as the Church of Saint Mary and Saint Giles on Palm Sunday, 7 April 1968. Saint Mary the Virgin then ceased to be a church and became a community centre.

The Swinfen Harris Church Hall is the former parish hall beside the former church. The hall was built in 1892 by the local architect Edward Swinfen Harris, and is a beautiful listed building on London Road.

The former church and hall were acquired by the Greek Orthodox Community of Milton Keynes in 2010. The two buildings have been has been restored extensively and are used by the Greek Orthodox Church of Saint Ambrosios and Saint Stylianos, the Greek community and the Greek school. The hall is surrounded by extensive grounds and gardens and is available for hire.

A church school was built on the corner of Wolverton Road and London Road for Saint Mary’s Parish. The school was also designed by Edward Swinfen Harris in 1867-1873. The limestone walls are laced with patterns in red brick. When the school closed, the building was converted to the Plough Inn in 1937, and it is now being renovated as a gastropub.

The Swinfen Harris Church Hall, the former parish hall, was designed by Edward Swinfen Harris (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2022)

28 September 2020

How the Tierney brothers
from Rathkeale became
part of Regency court life

Liscarroll Castle, Co Cork … passed briefly in the 19th century with the Perceval estates to the Tierney family from Rathkeale, Co Limerick (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2020)

Patrick Comerford

The fortunes of the Perceval family and the Tierney family became entwined in the Regency period, and following last Friday’s visit to Liscarroll Castle I came across the story of how the vast Perceval estates in north Cork almost passed to the Tierney family who had more humble origins in Rathkeale, Co Limerick.

On the death of George III, on 29 January 1820, the heir to the throne, the Prince Regent, lay seriously ill and his doctors had little hope of his recovery. On the evening of 2 February, his condition suddenly became critical and he was attended by a young doctor from Rathkeale, Matthew Tierney (1776-1845), who had arrived in London from Brighton. George IV recovered and Dr Tierney was credited with saving his life.

Matthew Tierney and his brother Edward (1780–1856) were the sons of John Tierney of Ballyscanlan, near Rathkeale, Co Limerick, a small farmer and weaver, and his wife Mary, daughter of James Gleeson. Matthew was born on 24 November 1776 and Edward was born in June 1780.

As boys, they received a modest education at a local hedge school, and Matthew was apprenticed to a local pharmacist in Rathkeale.

He left for London, swearing never to return to Rathkeale, and found a position as a pharmacist’s assistant. There he attended evening classes at Guy’s Hospital and at Saint Thomas’s Hospital, Southwark studying under Dr Saunders and Dr Babington.

Matthew Tierney became a great friend of Dr Edward Jenner, who had pioneered the vaccine against smallpox. Through Jenner’s influence, Tierney was admitted to study medicine at Glasgow University.

Tierney graduated in medicine in Glasgow in 1802, having selected cowpock as his inaugural essay. In the summer of 1802 he set up his own medical practice in Brighton, where he contributed materially to the formation of a vaccine institution in that town – the first that was established outside London – and he was admitted a Licentiate of the College of Physicians in 1806.

At Brighton, Tierney was introduced by his patron, Frederick Berkeley, 5th Earl of Berkeley, to the Prince Regent and future King George IV, who soon appointed him physician to his household in Brighton. He was appointed physician extraordinary to the Prince of Wales in 1809, and in 1816 he became physician in ordinary to the Prince Regent.

While Tierney was in practise in Brighton, he was credited with saving the life of the Prince Regent. His fame spread, his practice grew, he was much in favour at court, and he was made a baronet on 3 October 1818, with the title of Sir Matthew Tierney and with the designation ‘of Brighthelmstone and of Dover Street.’

Following the accession of King George IV, he was gazetted physician in ordinary to the king, and he continued in the same office with King William IV, who in 1831 made him a knight commander of the Royal Guelphic Order of Hanover.

Meanwhile, Sir Matthew had no sons to succeed to the title of baronet he had received in 1818. He was made a baronet yet again on 5 May 1834, with the same designation but with a provision this time that the title could be inherited by his brother and his brother’s descendants.

Tierney published his Observations on Variola Vaccina, or Cow Pock in 1840.

He died at his residence on the Pavilion Parade, Brighton, on 28 October 1845 and was buried in his family vault at Saint Nicholas’s Rest Garden.

Meanwhile, his brother Edward Tierney, who was born in Limerick in June 1780, was apprenticed to a solicitor in Limerick, was admitted to King’s Inns in 1798, and and was called to the bar ca 1806. When his mother died on 2 February 1809, he was living at 2 Catherine Street, Limerick.

He practised as a solicitor in Dublin and kept in touch with his brother in England.

Sir Matthew Tierney married Harriet Mary Jones, daughter of Henry Jones of Bloomsbury Square, London, in 1808 and in 1812 Edward married her sister, Anna Maria Jones, in Saint George’s Church, Hanover Square, London. By then, Edward Tierney was living in a large house at 48 Thomas Street, Limerick. Each bride had a fortune of more than £20,000.

Sir Matthew’s influence with the King procured for his brother, Edward, the appointment of Crown Solicitor for Ulster with a salary of £10,000 a year. Edward visited his brother on several occasions and in court circles in London and Brighton he was introduced to Bridget Wynn, daughter of Glyn Wynn and Countess of Egmont, the beautiful wife of John Perceval, 4th Earl of Egmont.

When Edward Tierney’s first son was born, Lady Egmont and her son Henry were his sponsors, and he was named Perceval Tierney. Lord Egmont appointed Edward Tierney as his agent at his Irish estates in 1823, including Liscarroll Castle and thousands of acres around Churchtown, Kanturk and Buttevant in north Cork.

Tierney was an able manager and he transformed the estate with great improvements.

John, 4th Earl of Egmont died on 31 December 1835 and was succeeded by his only son, Henry, who was godfather to Edward Tierney’s first son. Henry Perceval (1796-1841), 5th Earl of Egmont, was known for his drunkenness and loose living. He had no heir and when he died in 1841, he left all his estates in England and Ireland to his agent, Edward Tierney, while the family titles passed to his distant cousin, George Perceval (1794-1874), 3rd Lord Arden, who became 6th Earl of Egmont without receiving one penny from his ancestral estates.

Sir Edward Tierney succeeded to his brother’s second title in 1845, and died on 4 June 1856 at the age of 76. The title of baronet passed to his son, Sir Matthew Edward Tierney (1818-1860), as third baronet, but he left his estates to his son-in-law, the Revd Sir Lionel Darell (1817-1883).

The sixth earl went to court against Darrell to recover the estates in a remarkable case before the Summer Assizes at Cork in 1863. After four days, the case was settled. Egmont recovered Liscarroll Castle and his and his ancestral estates, but Darell was awarded £125,000 and costs.

Egmont died on 2 August 1874 and was succeeded by his nephew, Charles George Perceval (1845-1897), 7th Earl of Egmont, who sold the Perceval estates in Co Cork, totalling 62,500 acres, to the tenants under the Ashbourne Land Act in 1895.

Sir Matthew Tierney (1776-1845) and his brother Sir Edward Tierney (1780–1856) were born in Rathkeale, Co Limerick (Photograph: Patrick Comerford)

26 September 2020

Liscarroll Castle, now in
ruins but once the third
largest castle in Ireland

Liscarroll Castle towers above the village of Liscarroll in north Co Cork (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2020)

Patrick Comerford

I have started to learn to take Fridays off. In recent weeks, I have used these opportunities to visit Cahir, Co Tipperary, and Cobh and Spike Island in Co Cork.

So, as the weekend began, two of us decided to return to Liscarroll, Co Cork, which is about 40 minutes or 50 km south of Askeaton, and to Buttevant, to see their mediaeval castles and streetscape.

Liscarroll is near Buttevant, about 3 km south of River Awbeg, and the remains of Liscarroll Castle, a large 13th-century Hiberno-Norman fortress, tower above the village.

Liscarroll takes its name from the O’Carroll Clan, although the village and castle owe its strategic importance to the de Barry or Barry family, who held extensive lands throughout Co Cork after the arrival of the Anglo-Normans, including Castlelyons, Barryscourt and Buttevant.

The sieges of Liscarroll and an important battle there on 3 September 1642 brought to an end to the strategic importance of the castle after 300 years, although there are few accounts of its earlier history.

Liscarroll Castle was built by the Barry family in the 13th century (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2020)

Local accounts say Liscarroll Castle, like many other Anglo-Norman castles in Ireland, was built by to King John. But it seems more likely that the Barry family was involved in building it.

Philip de Barry, who came to Ireland with his uncle Robert FitzStephen, acquired extensive lands in Munster and built many castles. His son, William de Barry, had a grant confirming his father’s lands from King John in 1206.

His son, Robert, and his grandson, David Oge were the founders of monastic houses later in the 13th century at Ballybeg, Buttevant and Cork. David Oge de Barry or his descendants may have built Liscarroll Castle later that century.

The castle became the most important military building in Co Cork in the 13th century the third largest castle of its time in Ireland, after the castles in Trim and Ballintubber.

The castle stands on an outcrop of rock that projects into swampy immediately north of Liscarroll. The outer defensive walls enclose a quadrangular area measuring 62 metres from north to south.

The curtain walls – with an average external height of 8.5 metres – have strong batters below this level at the base, extending outwards from the rock foundation which is exposed in a number of places. In several places, the quarried rock makes the walls look higher and stronger.

Three of the four cylindrical towers that project at each of the towers of the castle remain in a fairly complete state, but of little more than a part of the foundation of the south-west tower is now in position. The castle well was within the south-west tower.

All the towers had basements of two upper storeys, with the main entrances on the first-floor levels, and with timber floors. Circular stairways rose from these entrances to the upper floors and there was a wall-walk or allure about the same level as the present wall tops. Each of the remaining towers has three narrow loops set in wide internal embrasures at the main floor level and the presence of corbels near the top of the south-west tower externally indicates that the walls were once crowned by parapets projections in places.

The south-west tower was roofed between four gables within the allure and all the towers rose a storey in height over the curtains.

There are two other towers both of rectangular form. The smaller projects outwards from the centre of the north curtain. Its thick walls surround a rectangular well-like space locally known as the ‘Hangman’s Hole.’

The largest and most important tower in Liscarroll Castle is the gate building in the centre of the south curtain (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2020)

The largest and most important tower is the gate building in the centre of the south curtain. It measures 12 metres from north to south by 7 metres in width and projects about 2 metres south from the curtains east and west of it.

This may be the lower part of the gate-building, and, although it has been altered, it is typical in some respects of the similar rectangular structures dating from the first half of the 13th century, before wide twin-towered gatehouses came into fashion.

It appears to have had an external gate set in the deep outer recess and a portcullis was set in from the exterior face. A second, strong gate behind the portcullis opened inwards, and there may have been a drawbridge too. Two ‘murder holes’ pierce the main vault just in rear of the outer gate.

While the lower part or the gate-building is ancient, the blocking wall of the inner archway and the whole upper part of the structure appear to be not earlier than about 1500.

Sir Philip Perceval loaned large sums of money to Sir John Barry in the early 17th century and acquired Liscarroll in the foreclosures and confiscations in 1625.

In 1647, 20 years after Perceval had moved to recover the debt, John Barry admitted, ‘I owed Perceval more than my estate or neck is worth. I am certain it was not so when I indebted myself to him.’

Perceval lost Liscarrol Castle again in 1642. On 20 August 1642, during the Confederate War, General Gerald Barry advanced with 7,000 men from Limerick to Liscarroll Castle. But the 80-year-old general was so slow and indecisive that it took him 12 days to take the castle, even though the force that held it was comparatively small.

Murrough O’Brien, Earl of Inchiquin, advanced from Cork with a greatly inferior force, intent on taking the strategically important castle for the Parliamentarians. In the early stages of Inchiquin’s attack, Barry’s force mistakenly thought they had routed their opponents and began looting and pillaging. This gave Inchiquin a critical opportunity to gather his men for a desperate shattered but failed to defeat the Confederate force.

Other attacks over the next few days resulted in the Parliamentarians taking control of Liscarroll. In 1645, the Earl of Castlehaven retook Liscarroll Castle and other castles in the area for the Irish Confederates.

However, in 1650, Sir Hardress Waller, the regicide, of Castletown, Co Limerick, attacked Liscarroll Castle with artillery and blew a gap in the west wall. Despite these sieges and battles, the castle remained in hands of the Perceval family for almost 250 years, and passed to their descendants, the Earls of Egmont, who held it until the end of the 19th century.

The Perceval family held Liscarroll Castle for almost three centuries (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2020)

Sir John Perceval (1683-1748) was MP Co Cork (1705-1715) and first President of Georgia (1732). He became Baron Percival of Burton Park, (1715), Viscount Percival of Kanturk (1722) and Earl of Egmont (1733).

Many of the castle structures were still in existence in 1750.

Another member of this family, Spencer Perceval (1762-1812), was Attorney General, Chancellor of the Exchequer and First Lord of the Treasury before becoming Prime Minister in 1808. Four years later, he was assassinated in the lobby of the House of Commons, the only British Prime Minister to have been assassinated.

Meanwhile, the fortunes of the Perceval family and the Tierney family became entwined in the Regency period. Dr Matthew Tierney from Rathkeale, who had a practice in Brighton, was credited with saving life of the Prince Regent in 1820.

His brother, Edward Tierney, was introduced to the Countess of Egmont, Bridget Wynn, daughter of Glyn Wynn and wife of John Perceval, 4th Earl of Egmont. Lady Egmont and her son Henry later became the sponsor at the baptism of Edwrad Tierney’s son, who was named Perceval Tierney.

Lord Egmont appointed Edward Tierney as the agent for his Irish estates in 1823, including Liscarroll Castle and thousands of acres around Churchtown and Kanturk in north Cork. Tierney was an able manager and he transformed the estate with great improvements.

John, 4th Earl of Egmont died on 31 December 1835 and was succeeded by his only son, Henry, who was godfather of Sir Edward Tierney’s son. But Henry Perceval (1796-1841), 5th Earl of Egmont, was known for his drunkenness and loose living. When he died in 1841, He had no heir and he left all his estates to his agent, Sir Edward Tierney. The family titles passed to his distant cousin, George Perceval (1794-1874), 3rd Lord Arden, who became 6th Earl of Egmont without receiving one penny from his ancestral estates.

Around this time, the castle was the subject of a piece of doggerel written in 1854 by Callaghan Hartstonge Gayner that ends:

Beneath its folds assemble now, and fight with might and main,
That grand old fight to make our land ‘A nation once again,’
And falter not till alien rule in dark oblivion falls,
We’ll stand as freemen yet, beneath those old Liscarroll walls.


‘We’ll stand as freemen yet, beneath those old Liscarroll walls’ (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2020)

Sir Edward Tierney died on 4 June 1856 at the age of 76, and left his estates to his son-in-law, the Revd Sir Lionel Darrell. The sixth earl went to court against Darrell to recover the estates in a remarkable case before the Summer Assizes at Cork in 1863. After four days, the case was settled. Egmont recovered Liscarroll Castle and his and his ancestral estates, but Darrell was awarded £125,000 and costs.

Egmont died on 2 August 1874 and was succeeded by his nephew, Charles George Perceval (1845-1897), 7th Earl of Egmont, who sold the Perceval estates in Co Cork, totalling 62,500 acres, to the tenants under the Ashbourne Land Act in 1895.

An unsuccessful attempt was made to overthrow the west curtain wall in 1920, but it remained standing, although in an unstable state.

The Commissioners of Public Works became the guardians of Liscarroll Castle a National Monument in 1936, and the Office of Public Works has carried out extensive repairs since then.

During this restoration work in the 20th century, a bronze harp-peg was found in a hole in the upper part of the south-west tower. The peg is now in the National Museum of Ireland in Dublin.

Before leaving Liscarroll, we visited the small mediaeval churchyard. Only the gable wall of the mediaeval church survives, and while there are many graves from the 17th and 18th centuries, we could find none belonging to the Perceval and Tierney families.

We continued south to Buttevant, but the story of the Tierney family seemed worth returning to and retelling after the weekend.

The gable wall is all that survives of the mediaeval church in Liscarroll, Co Cork (Photograph: Patrick Comerford, 2020)