Home Coming Events Youth More Information Photos Magazine Outreach Graveyard Links Map E-Mail

 

The Earl Bishop of Derry  (Mitred Earl) - Frederick Augustus Hervey

Frederick Augustus Hervey was born 1st August, 1730 as the third son of an old Suffolk family who were at the time very often occupied at Court. His grandparents took him in hand and virtually reared him until he went to Westminster school at the age of eleven. Six years later he joined Corpus Christi College in Cambridge. In 1748 he entered Lincoln's Inn to study law. Three years later he left Cambridge without having taken his expected degree. The next year 1752 saw his marriage to Elizabeth Davers from a rival neighbouring estate.

After two years of marriage he decided to switch from the Law to the Church. He was a clever and cultured individual. By 1763 he had been appointed as chaplain to King George III and immediately spent some time in Italy furthering his children's education. With help from his younger brother George (2nd Earl of Bristol and Lord Lieutenant of Ireland) Frederick became Bishop of Cloyne, Co. Cork in 1767.

Less than one year passed during which he set in train a vast drainage project when he was transferred to the See of Derry, at 38 years of age, with not a little help from the King. He was active and spent a vast fortune on road-building and agricultural advancement. By all accounts he was a hard working bishop. As well as constructing property in Londonderry, he had built the magnificent residences at Downhill in 1775 and at Ballyscullion in 1787. 

He became the Fourth Earl of Bristol in  1779 on the successive deaths of his two elder brothers and amassed considerable property. At the same time he  managed to spend much time on the continent collecting works of art for these residences and his family seat at Ickworth in Suffolk. He usually travelled at high speed in his own Great Coach with vast entourages and regularly took over large hotels in Germany and Italy in particular. Many of them re-named in his honour and to this day still retain the Hotels Bristol titles. 

He appears to have had a sudden row with Elizabeth his wife whilst out driving in the Ickworth region  in 1782. No further mention of her appears in any of his papers - although it is known that she died on 19th December 1800 in Ickworth where she is buried.

The Ballyscullion house was built in the shape of a crescent and, reputedly, had a window for every day of the year. None of these windows afforded a good view of the ruins of the old church on Church Island so he had a spire added on to the end of the church to give it height. The spire is there to this day, having survived a wing-tip collision from an American plane flying out of Creagh airfield at Toome during World War II. His continental absences meant in fact that he never lived in his new house and when he died in Albano in Italy he bequeathed it to his nephew. However the government's 'Window Tax' made this grand house a total impractibility for him. It was subsequently demolished only a few years after the bishop's death. Some pieces of its ruins remain in the woods at Ballyscullion but the Portico was rescued by the Bishop of Down. It now forms part of the facade of St Georges Church in Belfast's High Street having been taken there first by horse and cart and then transferred to become, reputedly, the first barge cargo brought to Belfast from Lough Neagh by the, then, new Lagan Canal Navigation.

As bishop he is known to have been very much in favour of complete religious equality and opposed the national system of tithes. In 1782 he became deeply involved in the Irish Volunteer movement. He was noticeable by his prominence at their convention held in Dublin in 1783. He was courting disaster and with the Irish authorities breathing down his neck he caught himself on and in time he steered clear of local politics.

In 1798 he was given a custodial sentence by the French and spent eighteen months in jail in Milan where he, at some risk, prised classified military information from his guards and had it sent to England for the use of the British Admiralty.

On July 8 1803 he died in Italy of a severe attack of gout and was later interred in Ickworth church in Suffolk.

The present Earl or Marquess of Bristol resides in Monaco.

More on the Earl Bishop>>