Adam's Country House Collections Day II - 10th October 2023
46 358 ROBERT LUCIUS WEST (C.1774 - 1850) Portrait of William Hoare, of Humewood standing in a Wicklow Landscape Oil on canvas, 195 x 124cm Literature: The Knight of Glin and James Peill, Irish Furniture , Yale 2007, illustrated frontispiece € 20,000 - 30,000 William Hoare Hume, here depicted as a self-assured regency buck standing in a Wicklow landscape, most- ly owned by himself, belies a troubled inheritance. In the autumn of 1798, his father Captain William Hume (b.1747) having pursued a vigorous campaign against the insurgent General Holt, with the loss of many men of The Humewood Calvary was himself killed in a skirmish in the Glen of Imaal. His son, like his father, was accused of a certain sym- pathy with the rebels but carried on a guerilla warfare against the wily Michal Dwyer and his band. He cornered them at Derrymuck, killing most and the six survivors were hanged in the square at Baltinglass, Dwyer having made his escape. In 1803 Dwyer offered to surrender on terms but only to William Hoare Hume whom he trusted. Hume dashed off to get the sanction of the Lord Lieutenant and got back to Humewood to find local land - owners, Saunders, Stafford , Beresford had formed a lynch mob to execute Dwyer. Hume at personal risk, es- corted Dwyer to Kilmainham Gaol, from whence he was deported with his family to Australia as per the terms of the agreement with Hume. As for Hume he rebuilt Humewood as an elegant regen- cy house; had his horses painted by Ferneley and mar- ried a rich wife, Charlotte Anna Dick (1804) but died in 1815 aged 43.
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