Abraham Creighton, 2nd Earl Erne
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Abraham Creighton, 2nd Earl Erne (10 May 1765 – 10 June 1842), was an Irish peer and politician. He was the elder son of The 1st Earl Erne, by his first wife, Catherine Howard. Between 1790 and 1798, he represented
Lifford Lifford (, historically anglicised as ''Liffer'') is the county town of County Donegal, Ireland, the administrative centre of the county and the seat of Donegal County Council, although the town of Letterkenny is often mistaken as holding this ...
in the
Irish House of Commons The Irish House of Commons was the lower house of the Parliament of Ireland that existed from 1297 until the end of 1800. The upper house was the Irish House of Lords, House of Lords. The membership of the House of Commons was directly elected, ...
. In
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, he was a member of the
Kildare Street Club The Kildare Street Club is a historical member's club in Dublin, Ireland, at the heart of the Anglo-Irish Protestant Ascendancy. The club remained in Kildare Street between 1782 and 1977, when it merged with the Dublin University Club to becom ...
.Thomas Hay Sweet Escott, ''Club Makers and Club Members'' (1913),
pp. 329–333
/ref> In November 1798, Abraham was declared insane. He was then incarcerated in Brooke House,
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, for the next forty years. On his father's death in 1828, Abraham became the second Earl, although still incarcerated and officially insane. He died in 1842, within months of the death of his father's second wife,
Lady ''Lady'' is a term for a woman who behaves in a polite way. Once used to describe only women of a high social class or status, the female counterpart of lord, now it may refer to any adult woman, as gentleman can be used for men. "Lady" is al ...
Mary Hervey, daughter of The 4th Earl of Bristol,
Church of Ireland The Church of Ireland (, ; , ) is a Christian church in Ireland, and an autonomy, autonomous province of the Anglican Communion. It is organised on an all-Ireland basis and is the Christianity in Ireland, second-largest Christian church on the ...
Bishop of Derry The Bishop of Derry is an episcopal title which takes its name after the monastic settlement originally founded at Daire Calgach and later known as Daire Colm Cille, Anglicised as Derry. In the Catholic Church it remains a separate title, but in ...
. Lord Erne was unmarried and without descendants. The title and the estates including
Crom Castle Crom Castle ( Irish: ''Caisleán na Croime'') is a country house on the shores of Upper Lough Erne in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland. It is the seat of the Earls Erne. Standing within the Crom Estate and a formal garden, the castle is bui ...
passed to his nephew John Creighton, the third Earl. The third Earl subsequently changed the spelling of the family name to Crichton, which spelling is maintained to this day by the Earl of Erne.


Notes

{{DEFAULTSORT:Erne, Abraham Creighton, 2nd Earl 1765 births 1848 deaths Irish MPs 1790–1797 Members of the Parliament of Ireland (pre-1801) for County Donegal constituencies Earls Erne