Nathaniel Sneyd

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nathaniel_Sneyd an entity of type: Thing

Nathaniel Sneyd (c. 1767 – 31 July 1833) was an Irish politician, landowner and businessman He was a Member of the Parliament of Ireland representing the Carrick constituency from 1794 to 1800 and was High Sheriff of Cavan in 1795. He briefly represented the Cavan County Parliament of Ireland constituency which was succeeded after the Union with Great Britain in 1800 by the Cavan Westminster constituency, which he represented from 1801 until 1826. In general election of 1806 he contested two constituencies for Parliament, winning both and choosing to represent Cavan over Enniskillen. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Nathaniel Sneyd
xsd:integer 37889649
xsd:integer 1078603862
rdf:langString Francis Saunderson 1801–1806
rdf:langString Henry Maxwell 1824–1826
rdf:langString Hon. Nathaniel Clements 1794–1798
rdf:langString John Maxwell-Barry 1806–1824
rdf:langString William Gore 1798–1800
rdf:langString Member of Parliament for Cavan
rdf:langString Member of Parliament for Carrick
rdf:langString Member of Parliament for Enniskillen
rdf:langString Member of Parliament for Cavan County
xsd:integer 1794 1795 1800 1801 1806
rdf:langString Nathaniel Sneyd (c. 1767 – 31 July 1833) was an Irish politician, landowner and businessman He was a Member of the Parliament of Ireland representing the Carrick constituency from 1794 to 1800 and was High Sheriff of Cavan in 1795. He briefly represented the Cavan County Parliament of Ireland constituency which was succeeded after the Union with Great Britain in 1800 by the Cavan Westminster constituency, which he represented from 1801 until 1826. In general election of 1806 he contested two constituencies for Parliament, winning both and choosing to represent Cavan over Enniskillen. In Cavan, Sneyd lived in Ballyconnell and owned plantation lands around Bawnboy. From 1800, he was president of the Bawnboy Farming Society, the first founded in County Cavan. In 1801 he was appointed Custos Rotulorum of Cavan. On 29 July 1833, in Westmoreland Street, Dublin, Nathaniel Sneyd was shot in the head by a madman, John Mason, who had a grudge against the firm of wine merchants Sneyd, French and Barton, where Sneyd was senior partner. Sneyd died of his wounds two days later. He had two memorials, one in Cavan and a life-size neo-classical recumbent effigy in the crypt of Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin. The sculptor Thomas Kirk represented Sneyd lying dead with a female figure weeping over him.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5552

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