Thomas Dongan (1634-1715)

Thomas Dongan (1634-1715) December 14, 2009

Thomas Dongan, 2nd Earl of Limerick was a member of Irish Parliament, Royalist military officer during the English Civil War, and governor of the Province of New York. He is noted for having called the first representative legislature in New York, and for granting the province’s Charter of Liberties. He was born in Castletown Kildrought. He was the youngest son of Sir John Dongan, Baronet, Member of the Irish Parliament. As Catholics, his family faced persecution after the overthrow of Charles I and fled to France. While in France, he served in an Irish regiment with Turenne. He continued to stay in France after the Restoration and achieved the rank of colonel in 1674. After the Treaty of Nijmegen ended the French-Dutch War in 1678, Dongan returned to England in obedience to the order that recalled all English subjects fighting in service to France. James, Duke of York, who had served as a fellow officer of Dongan’s in French army, arranged to have him granted a pension and high-ranking commission in the army and designated for service in Flanders. That same year, he was appointed Lieutenant-Governor of Tangiers. In 1682, James, who had become the Lord Proprietor of the Province of New York after it was acquired from the Dutch, appointed Dongan as provincial governor (1684-1688) and granted him an estate on Staten Island. On October 14, 1683, he convened the first-ever representative assembly in New York history, which convened at Fort James. In 1698, his brother William, Earl of Limerick, died with issue. Because of his service to the Crown as a military officer and as provincial governor, he was granted his brother’s title and a portion of his brother’s forfeited estates by a special Act of Parliament for his relief. (From Wikipedia)

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