Career
Lord Bandon was a cousin of the Earl of Middleton (who was head of the southern Irish Unionists at the time of the Anglo-Irish War (1919–1921)). He reorganised his various County Cork estates by way of settlement in 1876 and further in 1895 and 1896 including the mortgaging of the lands to his agents Richard Wheeler Doherty, and the appointment of George and John Jones and Doherty as his attorneys. He was appointed High Sheriff of County Cork for 1875.
The family seat of Castle Bernard, near the town of Bandon, County Cork, was one of the last great houses burned during the troubles of the 1920s by an Irish Republican Army party under Sean Hales on 21 June 1921.
lieutenant was burned as a counter-reprisal measure against British policy to burn Irish homes in districts in which the British had declared martial law. Tom Barry, the leader of the local Ireland Republican Army, claimed they burned two "big houses" for every one Irish peasant"s cottage destroyed.
Lord Bandon was also kidnapped and held hostage for six weeks being released on 12 July. The Ireland Republican Army threatened to have him executed if the British went ahead with executing Ireland Republican Army prisoners.
During his captivity, Bandon coolly played cards with his captors, who treated him well.
Tom Barry later stated he believed the kidnapping helped move the British towards the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921 and the cessation of hostilities.