James Roche, 3rd Baron Fermoy | |
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Born | James Boothby Burke Roche 28 July 1852 Twyford Abbey, Middlesex |
Died | 30 October 1920 Artillery Mansions, Westminster, London |
(aged 68)
Title | 3rd Baron Fermoy |
Tenure | September 1920 – October 1920 |
Known for | Great-grandfather of Diana, Princess of Wales |
Predecessor | Edward Roche |
Successor | Edmund Roche |
Spouse(s) | Frances Ellen Work (divorced 1891) |
Parents |
Edmond Burke Roche Eliza Caroline Boothby |
James Boothby Burke Roche, 3rd Baron Fermoy (28 July 1852 – 30 October 1920) was an Irish peer and a Member of Parliament (MP) in the United Kingdom House of Commons. He was the great-grandfather of Diana, Princess of Wales.
He was born at Twyford Abbey, Middlesex in 1852, the son of Edmond Burke Roche, and his wife Eliza Caroline née Boothby. He was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge.
He visited the United States where he met and married the heiress Frances Ellen Work on 22 September 1880 at Christ Church, New York City. The marriage was not a success and they separated in December 1886. She was granted a divorce on the grounds of desertion on 3 March 1891 at Wilmington, Delaware.
They had four children, twin sons and two daughters:
In 1896 he stood as an Anti-Parnellite Nationalist candidate in the Kerry East by-election for a seat in the Parliament of the United Kingdom. The Nationalists had split into two factions after the party leader, Charles Stewart Parnell was named as co-respondent in a divorce. Roche was supported initially by both the Parnellites and the Anti-Parnellites, until it was revealed that he was himself divorced. During the campaign, Roche denied publicly that he knew of the divorce or that he had deserted his wife and children. Although he went on to win the seat, the opposing Unionist candidate gained the highest vote ever recorded for a Unionist candidate in Kerry East. He served one term and did not stand in the following general election in 1900.