Thomas Dongan, 2nd Earl of Limerick

Thomas Dongan, (pronounced "Dungan")[1] 2nd Earl of Limerick (1634 – 14 December 1715), was a member of the Irish Parliament, Royalist military officer during the English Civil War, and Governor of the Province of New York. He is noted for having called the first representative legislature in New York, and for granting the province's Charter of Liberties.

The 2nd Earl of Limerick
Portrait of Dongan from Castleton Manor, Staten Island
5th Colonial Governor of New York
In office
August, 1683  11 August 1688
MonarchCharles II
James II & VII
Preceded byEdmund Andros
Succeeded byEdmund Andros (as Governor-General of the Dominion of New England)
Personal details
Born1634
Castletown Kildrought, Kingdom of Ireland
Died14 December 1715(1715-12-14) (aged 81)
London, England
Signature

Biography

Early life

He was born in 1634 into an old Gaelic Norman (Irish Catholic) family in Castletown Kildrought (now Celbridge), County Kildare, in the Kingdom of Ireland, the seventh and youngest son of Sir John Dongan, Baronet, Member of the Irish Parliament, and his wife Mary Talbot, daughter of Sir William Talbot, 1st Baronet and Alison Netterville.[2] As Stuart supporters, after the overthrow of King Charles I, the family went to King Louis XIV's France, although they managed to hold on to at least part of their Irish estates. His family gave their name to the Dongan Dragoons, a premier military regiment.

Career

While in France, he served in an Irish regiment with Turenne. He stayed in France after the Restoration and achieved the rank of colonel in 1674.[3]

After the Treaty of Nijmegen ended the French-Dutch War in 1678, Dongan returned to England in obedience to the order that recalled all English subjects fighting in service to France. Fellow officer James, Duke of York, arranged to have him granted a high-ranking commission in the army designated for service in Flanders and a pension.[4] That same year, he was appointed Lieutenant-Governor of Tangiers, which had been granted to England as part of the dowry of Catherine of Braganza. He served as part of the Tangier Garrison which defended the settlement.

Governor of New York

In September 1682, James, Lord Proprietor of the Province of New York, appointed Dongan as Vice-admiral in the Navy and provincial governor (1683–1688) to replace Edmund Andros[5] "Dongan's long service in the French army had made him conversant with the French character and diplomacy and his campaigns in the Low Countries had given him a knowledge of the Dutch language."[6] James also granted him an estate on Staten Island. The estate eventually became the town of Castleton; later, another section of the island was named Dongan Hills in honour of Dongan.

Dongan landed in Boston on August 10, 1683, crossed Long Island Sound, and passed through the small settlements in the eastern part of the island and he made his way to Fort James, arriving on August 25. In October, Rev. Henry Selyns, reported to the Amsterdam Classis, "...our new governor has at last arrived. his excellency is a person of knowledge refinement and modesty. I have had the pleasure of receiving a call from him and I have the privilege of calling on him whenever I desire."[6]

At the time of his appointment, the province was bankrupt and in a state of rebellion. Dongan was able to restore order and stability. On 14 October 1683, he convened the first-ever representative assembly in New York history at Fort James. The New York General Assembly, under the wise supervision of Dongan, passed an act entitled "A Charter of Liberties". It decreed that the supreme legislative power under the Duke of York shall reside in a governor, council, and the people convened in general assembly; conferred upon the members of the assembly rights and privileges making them a body coequal to and independent of the British Parliament; established town, county, and general courts of justice; solemnly proclaimed the right of religious liberty; and passed acts enunciating certain constitutional liberties, e.g. taxes could be levied only by the people met in general assembly; right of suffrage; and no martial law or quartering of the soldiers without the consent of the inhabitants.[3]

Dongan soon incurred the ill will of William Penn who was negotiating with the Iroquois for the purchase of the upper Susquehanna Valley. Dongan went to Albany, and declared that the sale would be "prejudicial to His Highness's interests". The Cayugas sold the property to New York with the consent of the Mohawk. Years later, when back in England and in favor at the Court of James, Penn would use his influence to prejudice the king against Dongan.[6]

Statue of Thomas Dongan in Dongan Park adjacent to Dongan Place, Poughkeepsie, NY, dedicated June, 1930 by NY Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt.

On 22 July 1686 Governor Dongan granted Albany a municipal charter. Almost identical in form to the charter awarded to New York City just three months earlier, the Albany charter was the result of negotiations conducted between royal officials and Robert Livingston and Pieter Schuyler. The charter incorporated the city of Albany, establishing a separate municipal entity in the midst of the Van Rensselaer Manor.[7]

Dongan established the boundary lines of the province by settling disputes with Connecticut on the East, with the French Governor of Canada on the North, with Pennsylvania on the South, thus marking out the present limits of New York State.[3] Regarding Canada, it was necessary to secure the friendship of the Iroquois. This became the subject of a deal of correspondence between Dongan and his counterpart to the north. "...[C]ertainly our rum doth as little hurt as your brandy and in the opinion of Christians is much more wholesome."[1] Dongan journeyed to the Iroquois nation, and convened assembly with them, garnering support, and approval. He was called "corlur" by the Iroquois Chief, a term from the Irish language "Coṁairleoir," used in Parliamentary deference to the Speaker, and meaning "advisor."

James later consolidated the colonial governments of New York, New Jersey and the United Colonies of New England into the Dominion of New England and appointed Edmund Andros, the former Governor-General of New York, as Governor-General. Dongan transferred his governorship back to Andros on 11 August 1688.[5]

Dongan was to execute land grants establishing several towns throughout New York State including the eastern Long Island communities of East Hampton and Southampton. These grants, called the Dongan Patents, set up Town Trustees as the governing bodies with a mission of managing common land for common good. The Dongan Patents still hold force of law and have been upheld by the US Supreme Court with the Trustees—rather than town boards, city councils or even the State Legislature—still managing much of the common land in the state.

In 1698, his brother William, Earl of Limerick, died without issue. Because of his service to the Crown as a military officer and as provincial governor, he was granted his brother's title in the Peerage of Ireland and a portion of his brother's forfeited estates by a special Act of Parliament for his relief. In 1709, Lord Limerick sold his 2,300-acre property at Celbridge to William Conolly.

Death

He lived in London for the last years of his life and died on 14 December 1715. He was buried in Old St. Pancras churchyard, London.[8]

References

  1. Abbott Lawrence Rotch; American Antiquarian Society Library; Samuel Swett Green; Victor Hugo Paltsits; Andrew McFarland Davis; Edward Channing; Franklin Bowditch Dexter; George Lyman Kittredge; William Babcock Weeden; Charles Henry Lincoln; Roger Sherman (1907). Colonel Thomas Dongan, governor of New York. p. 336.
  2. Cokayne 1893, p. 82, line 5: "Thomas (Dongan) EARL OF LIMERICK &c. [I.], yr. br. of he above earl. and on whom this Earldom and he Viscountcy of Dongan of Clane were entailed under the spec. rem. in their respective creations, was b. 1654 and appears, notwithstanding the attainder of 1691, to have assumed in 1698 and been generally allowed the peerage [I.]."
  3. Driscoll, John T. "Thomas Dongan." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 5. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1909. 6 Jun. 2014
  4. Kenyon, J.P. The Popish Plot 2nd Edition 2000 Phoenix Press p. 117
  5. The Memorial History of the City of New York, page 400 (appointment)and 453 (supersession)
  6. Phelan, Thomas P. "Thomas Dongan, Catholic Colonial Governor of New York". Records of the American Catholic Historical Society of Philadelphia, vol. 22, no. 4, 1911, pp. 207–237. JSTOR
  7. "The Dongan Charter", New York State Museum
  8. Wauchope, Piers. "Dongan, Thomas, second earl of Limerick (1634–1715)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 6 June 2014

Pages 141 – 151 reference Gov. Thomas Dongan.

Government offices
Preceded by
Anthony Brockholls (acting)
Governor of the Province of New York
1683–88
Succeeded by
Francis Nicholson
as Lieutenant Governor of the Dominion of New England for New York and the Jerseys
Peerage of Ireland
Preceded by
William Dongan
Earl of Limerick
1698–1715
Extinct
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