Patrick Trant
Sir Patrick Trant (c. 1640 – 1694), known as Sir Patrick Trant, 1st Baronet between 1686 and 1691, was an Anglo-Irish politician and Jacobite.
Trant was the son of Richard Trant. He operated from London as an agent to Barbados and the Leeward Islands for Sir William Stapleton, 1st Baronet. In 1684 he was an Irish Commissioner of Excise and in 1686 he was knighted by James II of England. That same year he was created a baronet, of Portarlington in the Baronetage of Ireland and served a year as High Sheriff of Kildare.[1] By this time he had amassed an estate of over 10,500 acres (4,200 ha) in Ireland.
Following the Glorious Revolution, Trant remained loyal to James II. He was the Member of Parliament for Queen's County in the Irish House of Commons in the Patriot Parliament of 1689.[2] On 10 April 1690, Trant was appointed a tax assessor for County Kildare and the Queen's County.[3] Following the conclusion of the Williamite War in Ireland, Trant was attainted by William III of England, losing his baronetcy and entire estate. A patent which would have made Trant a baron in the Jacobite peerage as Lord Maryborough was found in Dublin, waiting to be signed by the now-exiled James II. Trant died three years later in France having fled to the country with James II.[4]
Trant married Helen Nagle, a relative of Sir Richard Nagle, and they had five sons and three daughters. His brother, Dominick, married a sister of Sir Stephen Rice.
References
[edit]- ^ John Burke, Bernard Burke, 'Trant, of the Queen's County' in A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland (1844), p.615.
- ^ O'Hart, John, The Irish Parliament of King James the Second in 1689, Irish Pedigrees: or the Origin and Stem of the Irish Nation (5th Ed., 1892), Volume 2. Retrieved 1 February 2023.
- ^ John D'Alton, Illustrations, Historical and Genealogical: Of King James's Irish Army List (1689) (1855), p.30 (Retrieved 2 November 2022).
- ^ Ulster Journal of Archaeology Volume 3, p.63