Background
His father was Edward Sheil, who had acquired considerable wealth in Cadiz in southern Spain and owned an estate in Tipperary. His mother was Catherine McCarthy of Springhouse, near Bansha, County Tipperary, a member of the old aristocratic family of MacCarthy Reagh of Springhouse, who in their time were Princes of Carbery and Counts of Toulouse in France.
Education
Foreign a time he attended the lay college in Street Patrick"s College, Maynooth.
Career
The family were temporarily domiciled at Drumdowney while their new mansion at Bellevue, near Waterford was under construction. The son was taught French and Latin by the Abbé de Grimeau, a French refugee. He was then sent to a Catholic school in Kensington, London, presided over by a French nobleman, M. de Broglie.
In October 1804 he was removed to Stonyhurst College, Lancashire, and in November 1807 entered Trinity College, Dublin, where he specially distinguished himself in the debates of the Historical Society.
After taking his degree in 1811 he was admitted a student of Lincoln"s Inn, and was called to the Irish bar in 1814. His play of Adelaide, or the Emigrants, was played at the Crow Street theatre, Dublin, on 19 February 1814, with success, and on 23 May 1816 it was performed at Covent Garden.
The Apostate, produced at the latter theatre on 3 May 1817, established his reputation as a dramatist. In 1822 he began, along with West. H. Curran, to contribute to the New Monthly Magazine a series of papers entitled Sketches of the Irish Bar.
These were edited by Marmion Wilme Savage in 1855 in two volumes, under the title of Sketches Legal and Political.
Sheil was one of the founders of the Catholic Association in 1823 and drew up the petition for inquiry into the mode of administering the laws in Ireland, which was presented in that year to both Houses of Parliament. In 1825 Sheil accompanied O"Connell to London to protest against the suppression of the Catholic Association. The protest was unsuccessful, but, although nominally dissolved, the association continued its propaganda after the defeat of the Catholic Relief Bill in 1825.
And Sheil was one of O"Connell"s leading supporters in the agitation persistently carried on until Catholic emancipation was granted in 1829.
In the same year he was returned to Parliament for Milborne Portuguese, and in 1831 for Louth, holding that seat until 1832. In August 1839 he became Vice-President of the Board of Trade in Lord Melbourne"s ministry.
After the accession of Lord John Russell to power in 1846 he was appointed master of the Mint, and in 1850 he was appointed minister at the court of Tuscany. He died at Florence on 23 May 1851.
His remains were conveyed back to Ireland by a British ship-of-war, and interred at Long Orchard, near Templetuohy, County Tipperary.
See Memoirs of Richard Lalor Sheil, by West Torrens McCullagh (2 vols, 1855). His Speeches were edited in 1845 by Thomas McNevin. George West. East. Russell said of him:
Sheil was very small, and of mean presence.
With a singularly fidgety manner, a shrill voice, and a delivery unintelligibly rapid.
But in sheer beauty of elaborated diction not O"Connell nor any one else could surpass him.
Membership
9th United Kingdom Parliament. 10th United Kingdom Parliament. 11th United Kingdom Parliament.
12th United Kingdom Parliament.
13th United Kingdom Parliament. 14th United Kingdom Parliament.
15th United Kingdom Parliament.