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Thomas de Burgh
Trinity college library.jpg
Old Library Building, Trinity College, Dublin
Surveyor General of Ireland
In office
1700–1730
Preceded by William Robinson
William Molyneux
Succeeded by Edward Lovett Pearce
Lieutenant-General of the Ordnance
In office
1705–1713
Preceded by Chidley Coote
Succeeded by Richard Molesworth
Member of Parliament for Naas
In office
1713–1730
Serving with Theobald Bourke
Preceded by Alexander Gradon
James Barry
Succeeded by Thomas Burgh
John Bourke
Personal details
Born
Thomas Burgh

1670 (1670)
Died 18 December 1730(1730-12-18) (aged 59–60)
Nationality British
Spouse
Mary Smyth
(m. 1700)
Children 9, including:
Thomas Burgh
Richard Burgh
Parents Rt Rev Ulysses Burgh
Mary Kingsmill
Relatives Ulysses Burgh, 2nd Baron Downes (grandson)
Alma mater Trinity College, Dublin
Military career
Allegiance United Kingdom United Kingdom
Service/branch  British Army
Years of service 1688–1730
Rank
  • Lieutenant (1688)
  • Captain (1692)
  • Lieutenant-Colonel (1706)
  • Colonel (1706)
Unit Lord Lovelace's Regiment of Foot
Commands held
  • Irish Engineers
  • Royal Regiment of Foot
  • Brasier's Regiment of Foot
Battles/wars

Colonel Thomas de Burgh (English: /dˈbɜːr/; D’-ber; 1670 – 18 December 1730), always named in his lifetime as Thomas Burgh, was an Anglo-Irish military engineer, architect, and Member of the Parliament of Ireland who served as Surveyor General of Ireland (1700–1730) and designed a number of the large public buildings of Dublin including the old Custom House (1704–6), Trinity College Library (1712–33), Dr Steevens' Hospital (1719), the Linen Hall (1722), and the Royal Barracks (1701 onwards).

Early life

Thomas Burgh was the son of Rt Rev Ulysses Burgh (d. 1692) of Drumkeen, County Limerick, who was Dean of Emly and later Bishop of Ardagh. His mother was Mary, daughter of William Kingsmill of Ballibeg, County Cork. His brothers, Richard Burgh of Dromkeen and Drumrusk and William Burgh of Bert House, Athy, were both Members of the Irish Parliament.

Thomas was educated at Delany's school in Dublin, and Trinity College, Dublin, where he matriculated on 22 November 1685 and left without taking a degree. Prior to the outbreak of the 1688 wars he is likely to have left Ireland for London with his father. He returned to Ireland in the army of King William III, as a lieutenant in Lord Lovelace's Regiment of Foot, and served at the Siege of Limerick. This may have been followed by a brief spell in the Irish Engineers from 1691. In any case, de Burgh was commissioned as a Captain in 1692 in the Royal Regiment of Foot. In this capacity, he served in the Low Countries at the Battles of Steenkerke (1692) and Landen (1693), and as an engineer at the siege of Namur (1695). During this time, he absorbed the ideas of the Dutch engineer Menno van Coehoorn (1641–1740). In 1697, he became Third Engineer on the Irish establishment.

In 1700, Burgh replaced the Surveyor General of Ireland, William Robinson, and, one year later, also became Barracks Overseer in Ireland. Under his command, the building of barracks was expanded and the rebuilding of Dublin Castle (begun under Robinson) was completed. The Royal House at Chapelizod (County Dublin) and Chichester House in Dublin were repaired as well as numerous coastal fortifications.

As well as a Colonel of the Engineers (Lieutenant-Colonel, 11 April 1706), Burgh held a Captain's commission in Brasier's Regiment of Foot from 1707 to 1714.

Public life

In 1704, Burgh was admitted as a freeman of the City of Dublin in recognition of his work in enriching Dublin's architecture. He was later admitted to the Dublin Philosophical Society. He served as Member of Parliament for Naas from 1713 to 1730 and as a government minister. He was appointed High Sheriff of Kildare in 1712, Governor of the Royal Hospital Kilmainham in 1707 and served as a Trustee of Dr Steevens' Hospital from 1717 to 1730.

From 1705 to 1714, he was Lieutenant-General of the Ordnance for Ireland, an appointment which (held with that of Surveyor General) made him the most influential officer in the Irish Board of Ordnance. In this role, he was responsible for overseeing the construction and renovation of all military buildings in Ireland as well as other public works. De Burgh had his commission successively renewed over the 27 years following his appointment as Surveyor General in 1700.

Architect

De Burgh was responsible for the design of several public buildings in Dublin:

  • The Custom House (1704–6), (superseded by James Gandon's Custom House in 1791 further downriver)
  • Trinity College Library (1712–33)
  • Dr Steevens' Hospital (1719)
  • Linen Hall (1722)
  • Royal Barracks (1701 onwards)
  • The Armoury, Dublin Castle
  • Chapelizod House
  • St. Luke's Church, Dublin
  • Collegiate School Celbridge
  • Ballyburley House

Burgh was also responsible for the building of several churches, including St Mary's Church in Dublin 1 (now a Popular Café Bar & Restaurant) and St Werburgh's (1715). He is known to have built a number of private houses, most of which no longer exist, including the O'Brien family house at Dromoland, County Clare, in about 1719.

His own country house at Oldtown near Naas, County Kildare, was the only building into which he introduced Palladian ideas. He acquired the land in 1696 and the house was built thirteen years later. His architectural style was otherwise "restrained" and notable mainly for massing on different planes, using a central five-bay front crowned by a large pediment, and arcading on the ground floor. Oldtown remained the family home, although a fire destroyed the original main house and a wing in the 1950s. He also designed Kildrought House in nearby Celbridge.

He worked on several engineering projects, including improvements to Dublin Harbour and the proposed Newry Canal, although this was not built until after his death. Burgh published a pamphlet entitled "A method to determine the areas of right-lined figures universally, very useful for ascertaining the contents of any survey" (Dublin, 1724).

In 1728 Burgh lost the commission to build the new Parliament House in Dublin to Edward Lovett Pearce (1699–1733), who succeeded de Burgh as Surveyor General on his death, after an illness, in 1730.

Family

Burgh was married to Mary, a daughter of Rt Rev William Smyth, Bishop of Kilmore, on 10 July 1700. They had five sons and four daughters. His townhouse was in Dawson Street (now rebuilt) and his country estate was at Oldtown in County Kildare. He also owned lucrative collieries in County Antrim.

Their children were:

  • Thomas Burgh (1707–1759), succeeded his father as MP for Naas
  • Colonel Theobald Burgh (b. 1709)
  • Ulysses Burgh (died 1742)
  • Rev John Burgh (died 1767), vicar of Donaghmore, County Monaghan
  • Richard Burgh (died 1762), a barrister of Drumkeen, County Limerick, succeeded his brother as MP for Naas; he left much of his property to his sister Elizabeth's son Walter Hussey, who took the name Walter Hussey Burgh
  • Mary, who married a cousin, also named Thomas Burgh
  • Dorothea, who married as his second wife Rt Hon Anthony Foster (1705–1779), Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer in 1749
  • Catherine (died 1797), who married Rev John Alcock, Dean of Ferns
  • Elizabeth (1705–1757), who married Ignatius Hussey, and was mother of the Rt Hon Walter Hussey Burgh MP PC (1742–1783), Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer, a leading member of the Irish Patriot Party and a noted orator.

Surname

In 1848, Thomas Burgh's grandson Ulysses Burgh, 2nd Baron Downes was allowed to change the family surname to "de Burgh" by Royal Licence.

See also

  • House of Burgh, an Anglo-Norman and Hiberno-Norman dynasty founded in 1193
  • de Burgh, surname

Gallery

Parliament of Ireland
Preceded by
Alexander Gradon
James Barry
Member of Parliament for Naas
1713–1730
With: Theobald Bourke
Succeeded by
Thomas Burgh
John Bourke
Honorary titles


Preceded by
Sir Kildare Borrowes
High Sheriff of Kildare
1712–14
Succeeded by
Brabazon Ponsonby
Political offices
Preceded by
William Robinson
William Molyneux
Surveyor General of Ireland
1700–1730
Succeeded by
Edward Lovett Pearce
Preceded by
Chidley Coote
Lieutenant-General of the Ordnance
1705–1713
Succeeded by
Richard Molesworth
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