Sir Harcourt Lees, 2nd Baronet
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The Reverend The Reverend is an style (manner of address), honorific style most often placed before the names of Christian clergy and Minister of religion, ministers. There are sometimes differences in the way the style is used in different countries and c ...
Sir Harcourt Lees (29 November 1776 – 7 March 1852 in Blackrock, near
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) was an Irish clergyman and political
pamphleteer Pamphleteer is a historical term for someone who creates or distributes pamphlets, unbound (and therefore inexpensive) booklets intended for wide circulation. Context Pamphlets were used to broadcast the writer's opinions: to articulate a polit ...
on behalf of Protestant Ascendancy in Ireland. He is best known for his strongly worded pamphlets attacking
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.


Life

Harcourt Lees was the eldest son of Sir John Lees, Bt. (created 1804), by Mary, eldest daughter of Robert Cathcart of Glandusk,
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. He graduated B.A. at
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,
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, in 1799, and proceeded M.A. in 1802. His father saw service in Germany under the
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, and had been private secretary to
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during his administration of Ireland, where he was secretary to the post-office from 1784 until his death in 1811. Sir Harcourt Lees took holy orders, and was preferred to the rectory and vicarage in the Parish of
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, a parish partially in County Monaghan and partially in
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.Terence Dooley, ''The Murders at Wildgoose Lodge'', pps. 39-43. Four Courts Press,
Dublin Dublin (; , or ) is the capital and largest city of Republic of Ireland, Ireland. On a bay at the mouth of the River Liffey, it is in the Provinces of Ireland, province of Leinster, bordered on the south by the Dublin Mountains, a part of th ...
, 2007.
He was collated to the prebend of Fennor in the church of Cashel 21 November 1800, and to that of Tullycorbet in the church of Clogher in 1801. He resigned both stalls in July 1806. He died at Blackrock, near Dublin, on 7 March 1852. Harcourt Lees succeeded his father as second Baronet in 1811. He married, in or about October 1812, Sophia, daughter of Colonel Lyster of Grange,
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, by whom he had four sons and four daughters. His fourth son was
William Nassau Lees William Nassau Lees (1825–1889) was a British Army officer in India, known as an orientalist. Life The fourth son of Sir Harcourt Lees, Bart., he was born on 26 February 1825, and educated at Nut Grove and at Trinity College, Dublin, but to ...
. Lees was succeeded by his eldest son, Sir John Lees, who died 19 June 1892, and whose eldest son, Harcourt James, was the fourth baronet.


Works

Lees published several pamphlets, chiefly in support of Protestant ascendency. They are distinguished by extreme animation of style. * ''The Antidote, or Nouvelles à la Main. Recommended to the serious attention of the Right Hon. W. C. Plunket and other advocates of unrestricted civil and religious liberty,'' Dublin, 1819, 8vo; reprinted with a supplement entitled ‘L’Abeja, or a Bee among the Evangelicals,’ Dublin, 1820, 8vo. * ''Strictures on the Rev. Lieutenant Stennett’s Hints to Sir Harcourt Lees by the Anti-Jacobin British Review for September; to which is prefixed A Short Introduction, containing a most important Letter from a Gentleman educated and intended for the Popish Priesthood,'' Dublin, 1820, 8vo. * ''The Mystery: being a short but decisive counter-reply to the few friendly hints of the Rev. Charles B. Stennett, at present an officiating priest in the Religious College of Maynooth, and late a lieutenant of grenadiers in the North York Regiment of Militia,'' Dublin, 1820, 8vo; 14th edit. 1821. * ''A Letter to Mr. Wilberforce, containing some Reflections on a late Address of Lord John Russell’s and the Past and Present Conduct of the Whigs,'' Dublin, 1820. * ''An Address to the King’s Friends throughout the British Empire on the present Awful and Critical State of Great Britain, containing just and necessary Strictures on a late Speech of Henry Brougham, esq., in the House of Lords in defence of the Queen,'' Dublin, 1820, 8vo; 11th edit. 1821. * ''A Cursory View of the Present State of Ireland,'' Dublin, 1821, 8vo. * ''Nineteen Pages of Advice to the Protestant Freemen and Freeholders of the City of Dublin, containing Observations on the Speeches and Conduct of a late Aggregate Meeting in Liffey St. Chapel, the first of June; recommended to the deep and serious consideration of every Protestant in Ireland,'' Dublin, 1821, 8vo. * ''Most Important. Trial of Sir Harcourt Lees, Bart. Before Chief Justice B4 and Serjeant Flummery on Saturday, the 11 January 1823, by a jury of Special-Dust Churchmen, on charges of Barratry and Eavesdropping,'' Dublin, 8vo. * ''Theological Extracts selected from a late Letter written by a Popish Prelate to his Grace the Archbishop of Dublin, with Observations on the same, and a well-merited and equally well-applied literary flagellation of the titular shoulders of this mild and humble Minister of the Gospel; with a complete exposure of his friend the Pope and the entire body of holy impostors,'' Dublin, n.d.


Arms


References

;Attribution {{DEFAULTSORT:Lees, Harcourt Irish activists Baronets in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom 1776 births 1852 deaths People from Blackrock, Dublin Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge Irish people of Scottish descent 18th-century Irish Anglican priests 19th-century Irish Anglican priests