James Wandesford Butler, 1st Marquess of Ormonde (15 July 1774 â 18 May 1838), was an Irish nobleman, landowner, and politician. He served as the Member of Parliament for County Kilkenny from 1801 until the death of his older brother in 1820, which resulted in his succession as the 19th Earl of Ormonde. He was made a Knight in the Order of St Patrick in 1821.
James Butler was born at Kilkenny Castle on 15 July 1774 as the second son of John Butler, 17th Earl of Ormonde, and his wife, the heiress Frances Susan Elizabeth Wandesford, who was the only surviving child of John Wandesford, 1st Earl Wandesford. He attended Eton College from 1783 until 1790.
In 1790 Butler enlisted as a Cornet in the 14th King's Hussars Regiment. He retired from his regiment with the rank of Major in 1802. He later served as a Lieutenant-Colonel in the Kilkenny Militia from 1806 until his death, and was promoted to Colonel in 1820.
He served a Member of Parliament for Kilkenny City in the Irish House of Commons in 1796 (he never took his seat and resigned after 3 months) and served then for County Kilkenny until the Act of Union in 1801. He sat subsequently for the Irish county constituency of County Kilkenny and was member of the UK House of Commons from 1801, sitting as a Whig.
Butler also served as Mayor of Kilkenny from 1808-09 and 1814-15.
The death of his older brother Walter Butler, 1st Marquess of Ormonde in 1820 resulted in his succession as 19th Earl of Ormonde. As a peer he was a Moderate Tory, and voted in support of the Reform Bill during the early 1830s. Ormonde was a well-known advocate for the Irish people with his first speech at Westminster condemning the Irish Window tax and defending the right of Irish landowners.
Following his brother's death, James inherited some ã450,000 in debts. As a result, the Ormonde Estates in Derbyshire were sold at auction on Thursday 27 November 1824. The Sutton Hall Estate, including the Manor House, some 5,500 acres of land, and several coal mines generated some ã5,800 in rents alone; this estate was sold for ã216,000 to the Manchester Spinner John Arkwright Esq.
The Chilcote Estate, comprising 1,320 acres generating ã2,200 annually, was sold to a Mr Robinson of Kingston, Surrey, for ã87,000. The adjacent Cottage Park Farm, comprising 281 acres, was sold to a solicitor, Mr Cookney of Holborn (acting on behalf the brewer H. Worthington Esq). The combined proceeds of the sales were approximately ã450,000.
Despite the disposal of the family's extensive estates in England, upon his elder brother's death James become one of the largest landowners in Ireland, and enjoyed an annual income of over ã20,000 from his Irish estates.
Having joined the fashionable society in London, he became a companion of the Prince Regent. Subsequently, at the Prince's coronation as George IV, he was created a Peer of the United Kingdom, as Baron Ormonde, of Llanthony, in the county of Monmouth.
In 1825 the Marquessate of Ormonde was recreated for James; the previous creation of the title had become extinct upon the death of his elder brother. As the Marquessate was created in the Peerage of Ireland, he continued to sit in the United Kingdom House of Lords as Baron Ormonde.
He served as Lord Lieutenant of County Kilkenny from 1831 until 1838, and was a Militia Aide-de-camp to King William IV from 1830 to 1837, and Queen Victoria from 1837 until his death.
Lord Ormonde's grandson, James Butler, 3rd Marquess of Ormonde, is recorded as having written to the-then Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Benjamin Disraeli, regarding the restoration of the Dukedom of Ormonde in October 1868. In the letter, the Third Marquess claimed that in 1825 his grandfather James Butler, 19th Earl of Ormonde had been advised by Prime Minister Lord Liverpool to apply for the restoration of the Dukedom of Ormonde, with the caveat that he would first need to apply to be elevated from the rank of Earl to Marquess. An application was duly made, and James, 19th Earl of Ormond was granted the title Marquess of Ormonde in 1825. The 3rd Marquess believed that Lord Liverpool's loss of the Office of Prime Minister in 1827 frustrated this plan, and the 1st Marquess took no further action towards applying for the restoration of the Dukedom.
He married Grace Louisa Staples, daughter of Rt. Hon. John Staples and Hon. Henrietta Molesworth (daughter of Richard Molesworth, 3rd Viscount Molesworth) on 12 October 1807. They had five sons and five daughters:
In 1827, the London residence of Lord and Lady Ormonde was recorded as being 14 Weymouth Street, Westminster. Several of their children suffered from Epilepsy, which was attributed to the sudden deaths of their second son Lord Walter Butler, who died suddenly at his home, No. 16 South Frederick Street, Dublin, in 1861, and their fourth son Lord Charles Butler, who died at his mother's residence, Marlay House, Dublin, after a series of seizures in 1857.
Lord Ormonde died at O'Dienne's Hotel in Dublin on 22 May 1838 after a fortnight-long illness. The Marchioness of Ormonde, their eldest son Lord Ossory and Lord Walter Butler were at his bedside when he died. Lord Ossory succeeded to the Marquessate of Ormonde and the family's extensive estate in Ireland.
He was survived by his wife Louisa by twenty-two years. During her widowhood she rebuilt Garryricken House, the demense of which formed part of the Ormonde Estates in County Kilkenny. In August 1857 she vacated the house and took a new residence Marlay House near Dublin which remainded as her primary residence until her death in 1860.