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was erected and paid for by
Viscount FitzWilliam. Verschoyle also oversaw the transformation of adjoining land into a girls school and she donated personal funds to assist in the running of it each year. In 1826, she oversaw the construction of the parish school. In 1816, FitzWilliam died and the
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of
Merrion and managed a significant and valuable estate. In 1816, the estate was estimated to be worth £14,000 per year and over 1,275 acres in size. Typical work for an agent included the negotiation of leases, selection of new tenants, collecting rents from existing tenants and ensuring the
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Once retired
Verschoyle focused on her charities. She worked to establish a new convent using money bequeathed to her by Fitzwilliam to build a convent school and gave more from her own funds to pay for the school chaplain. She was patron of the school and invited the
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With the loss of the
Parliament in Dublin in 1801 there were economic difficulties in the city. However, the estate value continued to rise. Verschoyle was able to convince FitzWilliam to donate land for a church in
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made rents particularly difficult to college. Though
Verschoyle had some ideas on how to adjust the leases to reduce periods when rent was almost impossible to collect, the rebellion and the
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Barbara Fagan took over the family business at some point after her mother died, certainly by 1796. The
Catholic Fagan married a Protestant merchant, Richard Verschoyle of the
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franchise rights of freeholders. This made the role an inherently political one considering the changes the country was undergoing during the late 1700s.
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The couple had no children and
Verschoyle remained working for the FitzWilliam estate until her husband's death in 1827. The couple lived in
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Verschoyle died in Dublin on 25 January 1837. There is a small memorial to her in the church recording her role in its erection.
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The FitzWilliam estate at this time was undergoing significant development in the
Merrion street and surrounding area.
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When her father died in 1761, her mother continued running both businesses until her own death in
October 1789.
357:"Turtle Bunbury - Writer and Historian: Published Works - Features: Ballintemple: Ancient World, Ancient Fish"
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187:. Verschoyle continued in her role as agent until her husband died. At that point, she retired.
91:, Verschoyle was the sixth daughter of eight in the family. Her father was a land agent for the
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to run it. They were in
Stanhope street in Dublin and they took over the school in
474:"The multi-Centred Metropolis: The Social Topography of Eighteenth-Century Dublin"
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The passing of the 1793 relief act and the uncertain economic conditions. The
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in 1751 to Joseph and Margaret (Mottley) Verschoyle. His paternal lineage was
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estate in Dublin and brewer for the brewery on Usher's Island in Dublin.
225:"Walker's Hibernian Magazine, Or, Compendium of Entertaining Knowledge"
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79:(died 25 January 1837), was a land agent and philanthropist in Dublin.
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Born Barbara Fagan in the early 1750s to Bryan and Elizabeth Fagan in
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In 1750, there were believed to be about 35 breweries in the city.
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436:"SPROULE, SAMUEL [1] - Dictionary of Irish Architects"
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339:"Irish Architectural & Decorative Studies Volume II"
279:"Findlaters - Chapter 4 - Findlater's Mountjoy Brewery"
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509:The Path of Mercy: The Life of Catherine McAuley
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395:"Pistol-handled cutlery in this family's silver"
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148:Richard FitzWilliam, 7th Viscount FitzWilliam
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263:. In McGuire, James; Quinn, James (eds.).
375:"History of Number 11 Fitzwilliam Square"
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267:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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506:Mary C. Sullivan (7 February 2012).
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169:Church of the Assumption Booterstown
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583:19th-century Irish philanthropists
481:Proceedings of the British Academy
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459:discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk
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304:"Mount Merrion House, Co.Dublin"
119:Her husband was born in Donore,
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472:Sheridan-Quantz, Edel (2001).
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265:Dictionary of Irish Biography
146:She worked very closely with
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70:Land agent and philanthropist
16:Land agent and philanthropist
512:. CUA Press. pp. 354–.
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183:estate passed to his heir,
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573:People from County Dublin
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138:on the estate in Dublin.
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578:19th-century Irish women
568:18th-century Irish women
538:Parish of the Assumption
453:Archives, The National.
259:McElroy, Martin (2009).
77:Barbara Fagan Verschoyle
455:"The Discovery Service"
416:. Royal Irish Academy.
412:Cullen, Frank (2015).
343:Irish Georgian Society
308:humphrysfamilytree.com
211:References and sources
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361:www.turtlebunbury.com
322:"The End of the Line"
261:"Verschoyle, Barbara"
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127:. He died in 1827 in
540:. 3 September 2016.
136:Mount Merrion House
131:, Sussex, England.
363:. 2 November 2021.
283:www.findlaters.com
198:Sisters of Charity
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160:Acts of Union 1800
25:Barbara Verschoyle
519:978-0-8132-1873-1
227:. R. Gibson. 1789
180:Italianate church
114:Verschoyle family
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534:"Our Story"
487:: 265–295.
414:Dublin 1847
176:Booterstown
93:FitzWilliam
59:Nationality
552:Categories
440:www.dia.ie
202:Sandymount
83:Early life
231:21 August
204:in 1831.
493:19694102
129:Brighton
125:Huguenot
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191:Legacy
142:Career
108:Family
89:Dublin
477:(PDF)
418:JSTOR
378:(PDF)
325:(PDF)
62:Irish
514:ISBN
489:PMID
233:2023
47:Died
31:Born
485:107
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