Dominick Geoffrey Edward Browne, 4th Baron Oranmore and Browne, 2nd Baron Mereworth was the longest sitting British peer and legislator.
Background
Dominick Geoffrey Edward Browne in 1901, the eldest son of the 3rd Lord Oranmore and Browne and Lady Olwen Verena Ponsonby, daughter of Edward Ponsonby, 8th Earl of Bessborough. In 1927 he succeeded his father, who died in a car accident in Southborough, Kent, and took his seat in the House of Lords as Baron Mereworth, a United Kingdom peerage (the older barony of Oranmore and Browne, in the Irish peerage, did not entitle its bearer to a seat in the Lords), although he primarily used his Irish title.
Education
He was educated at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford before joining the Grenadier Guards.
Career
Born the He had the rare distinction of sitting in the House of Lords for 72 years, the longest by any peer, and during that time was one of the few peers to have never spoken in the House. In 1930 the English residence of the Browne family, Mereworth Castle, was sold and he went to live in his Irish residence, Castle MacGarrett, in County Mayo. Castle MacGarrett, its 3,000 acres (1,200 ha) and 150 employees gave him the chance to breed race horses and farm on a large scale.
Lord Oranmore was also an aviator.
In 1939, Oranmore and Browne tried to join the British Army, but he was told that, at 38, he would be more useful concentrating on farming. As a result his war service was in neutral Ireland with the Irish reserve force, Local Defence Force, in Company Mayo.
In the early 1950s the castle was acquired by the Irish government"s Irish Land Commission and turned into a nursing home. Lord Oranmore and Browne went to live in London.
Second, 1936, Oonagh Guinness, daughter of Ernest Guinness and an heir to the brewery fortune (marriage dissolved 1950).
Garech Domnagh Browne b. 25 June 1939 An unnamed son b. 28 December 1943, daughter 30 December 1943 Tara Browne b.
4 March 1945, died in 1966 in a car accident Third, 1951, Constance Stevens, an actress with the stage name Sally Gray, famous for her roles on the stage and in various movies in the 1930s and 40s.
Lord Oranmore and Browne died in London on 7 August 2002 at the age of 100.