Joseph Henry Blake, 3rd Bt. Wallscourt

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Joseph Henry Blake, 3rd Baron Wallscourt

Birthdate:
Death: May 27, 1849 (51)
Immediate Family:

Son of Henry James Blake and Anne French
Husband of Elizabeth Blake, Baroness of Wallscourt
Father of Erroll Augustus Joseph Henry Blake, 4th Baron Wallscourt; Elizabeth Frederica Blake and Elizabeth Nina Blake
Brother of Honoria Blake

Managed by: Private User
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About Joseph Henry Blake, 3rd Bt. Wallscourt

Succeeded as the 3rd Baron Wallscourt, of Ardfry, co. Galway [I., 1800] on 11 October 1816.

Children of Joseph Henry Blake, 3rd Baron Wallscourt and Elizabeth Lock:
Hon. Henry Joseph Blake b. 22 Sep 1823, d. Mar 1828
Hon. William Richard Blake b. 6 May 1825, d. 6 Apr 1829
Hon. Elizabeth Frederica Blake b. 26 Feb 1827
Hon. Elizabeth Nina Blake b. 12 Dec 1830, d. 21 Jul 1890
Erroll Augustus Blake, 4th Baron Wallscourt b. 22 Aug 1841, d. 22 Jul 1918


Joseph Henry Blake, 3rd Baron Wallscourt - Wikipedia

Joseph Henry Blake, 3rd Baron Wallscourt (2 June 1797 – 28 May 1849) was an Irish nobleman and pioneering socialist.

Blake (one of The Tribes of Galway) was the eldest son of Colonel Henry James Blake, younger brother of Joseph Blake, 1st Baron Wallscourt. He grew up on the Ardfry estate near in Maree, where his father was the estate agent. He was educated at Eton before joining the 85th Regiment of Foot at the age of 15. When, at 18, he unexpectedly inherited the Ardfry estate and the Wallscourt title on the death of his first cousin, he abandoned his military career.

t was during subsequent travels in Europe, according to Wallscourt, that he was first impressed by "some of the theories, then much debated, for lifting the labourer into the position of partner with the capitalist." Following a visit to the co-operative commune at Ralahine in County Clare–about 40 miles from his home–he attempted to implement socialist theories on his own estate. The results, evidently, were mixed, but he persisted until his early death of cholera in Paris.

In the last years of his life, Wallscourt joined the Irish Confederation, but, while he supported the French revolutionaries of 1848, he could not be convinced that armed revolution was a practical proposition in the famine-stricken Ireland of that time.

Sources
- Cunningham, John. Lord Wallscourt of Ardfry (1797-1849): an early Irish socialist, Journal of the Galway Archaeological & Historical Society, vol.57 (2005), pp. 90–112.