The Rt Hon. Henry Maxwell, 7th Baron Farnham, K.P. (9 August 1799 – 20 August 1868), was an Irish peer, a Member of Parliament, an evangelical Orangeman and County Cavan landowner. During the hunger years of late 1820s and late 1840s, he was much reviled for evicting tenants and for offering relief only on condition of conversion to Protestantism.
In Parliament, Maxwell voted against Catholic relief, against parliamentary reform, and against provision for the Irish poor through tax on absentee landowners[1]
Honours notwithstanding, Maxwell was regarded even in official circles as a particularly unfortunate example of an absentee. In 1823, Robert Peel, then Home Secretary, commented that "such men as Mr. Henry Maxwell, drawing enormous sums from Irish livings, and leading a profligate life at Boulogne, are the real enemies of the establishment".[1]
Evicting and evangelizing landlord
In 1827, the liberal lawyer George Ensor was asked James Warren Doyle, the Roman CatholicBishop of Kildare and Leighlin, to investigate claims of hundreds of tenants converting to Protestantism on the Farnham estate. Ensor's reports assured the bishop that, such as they were, the conversions were a case of "souperism" and would not survive the then near-famine conditions in the area.[2]
Maxwell, meanwhile, moved a resolution for establishing a subscription for the loyalist Brunswick Club at the county meeting in Cavan and was prominent in Protestant activities there and in Dublin, where he had become secretary of the Orange Order.[1]
In the Great Famine from 1845, the estate again accused of souperism—Maxwell (now Lord Farnham) was opening his soup kitchens only to those who would abjure their Catholic faith and take Anglican communion in the establishedChurch of Ireland. He also was seen to continue with evictions.[3]
Death and commemoration
Maxwell was killed with his wife, and about 30 others, in the Abergele rail disaster in August 1868. They in the front carriage of the London to Holyhead express at Chester when it collided with a goods train carrying petroleum. Their incinerated remains, only identifiable from their pocket watches.[4] He was succeeded in his title and estates by his brother, himself a former Conservative Member for Cavan, Somerset Richard (1803–84).
A statue in his honour was erected in Cavan, funded by a levy exacted on his tenants by his younger brother and heir. It now stands outside Cavan County Council offices.
^Whelan, I. (1995) "The Stigma of Souperism" In Cathal Póirtéir (ed.) The Great Irish Famine, Thomas Davis Lecture Series. Dublin: Mercier Press, p. 180. ISBN978-1856351119