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Thomas Dongan (judge)


Thomas Dongan (c.1590–1663) was an Irish judge of the seventeenth century. He should not be confused with his great-nephew Thomas Dongan, 2nd Earl of Limerick.

His career was dogged by accusations of recusancy and of disloyalty to the English Crown. He is best remembered as the father of Margaret Dongan, wife of the Dutch scholar Arnold Boate, who commemorated her lovingly in his book The Character of a Truly Virtuous and Pious Woman, and also wrote with affection and respect about her father.

He was the fourth and youngest son of John Dongan of Castletown, County Kildare (died 1592), and his wife Margaret Forster, daughter of Walter Forster. His father died when Thomas was still an infant. His eldest brother Sir Walter Dongan (1579-1626) was created the first of the Dongan Baronets, and was the ancestor of the Earls of Limerick.

Thomas entered Lincoln's Inn in 1615 but was expelled for recusancy. It seems likely that he remained a convinced Roman Catholic all his life (although his son-in-law records that he raised his children as Protestants, and his first wife Grace was also a Protestant), but by 1627 he had at least outwardly conformed to the Church of England, and was readmitted to Lincoln's Inn and called to the English Bar. He married an English wife, Grace Palmer of Nottinghamshire, and remained in England until 1640 when he returned to Ireland, where he was admitted to the King's Inn and called to the Irish Bar.

He acquired considerable wealth, although he was to lose everything he owned during the Irish Rebellion of 1641. He acquired as his patron James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde. Ormonde sent him to the English Court with a recommendation of his loyalty, and he was appointed a justice of the Court of King's Bench (Ireland). By 1648, when the Royalist cause had been utterly defeated in Ireland, he was said to be the only High Court judge still sitting in Dublin. He was also in financial distress, which may explain his decision, which greatly harmed his reputation, to accept office under the new government of Oliver Cromwell. He acted as justice in Leinster and Ulster and sat on the High Court of Justice which tried and condemned Sir Felim O'Neill and other rebels in 1652-3. He gained no permanent benefit from his support for the Cromwelllian regime, and by 1659 he was reduced to such a state of poverty that the King's Inn excused him his fees and let him live free of rent in his chamber there.


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