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William Proby, 5th Earl of Carysfort

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Arms of Proby: Ermine, on a fess gules a lion passant or
William Powell FrithAn English Merrymaking a Hundred Years Ago. One of the many paintings purchased by the 5th Earl of Caryfort

William Proby, 5th Earl of Carysfort KP (18 January 1836 – 4 September 1909), known as William Proby until 1872, was a British peer.

Carysfort was the fourth son and youngest child of Admiral Granville Proby, 3rd Earl of Carysfort, and his wife Isabella (née Howard), who died only four days after his birth. He was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge.[1] He was commissioned as a Captain in the part-time Wicklow Militia on 16 May 1861, retiring on 26 March 1872.[2]

He served as High Sheriff of Wicklow in 1866 and as Lord-Lieutenant of County Wicklow from 1890 to 1909 and was made a Knight of the Order of St Patrick in 1874. In 1872 he succeeded his elder brother in the earldom and entered the House of Lords.

He owned almost 26,000 acres in Counties Wicklow, Northampton, Dublin and Kildare.[3]

Lord Carysfort married Charlotte Mary, daughter of Reverend Robert Boothby Heathcote, in 1860. The marriage was childless. He died in September 1909, aged 73, when all his titles became extinct. The Countess of Carysfort died in 1918.

Notes

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  1. ^ "Proby, the Hon. William (PRBY855W)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  2. ^ Maj E.B. Evans, An Outline of the History of The County Wicklow Regiment of Militia, published by the Officers of the County Wicklow Militia, 1885, pp. 43–4.
  3. ^ The great landowners of Great Britain and Ireland

References

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Honorary titles
Preceded by Lord Lieutenant of Wicklow
1890–1909
Succeeded by
Peerage of Ireland
Preceded by Earl of Carysfort
1872–1909
Extinct