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Dominick Geoffrey Edward 
Browne
1901 - 2002


Dominick Geoffrey Edward 
Browne
, Daily Telegraph Lord Oranmore and Browne (Filed: 10/08/2002) The 4th Lord Oranmore and Browne, who has died aged 100, is believed to hold the record as the longest-serving member of the House of Lords, having taken his seat in 1927 and been evicted under the Government's reforms of 1999. He earned the unspoken admiration of many by never speaking in the chamber, and was better known for his three marriages, particularly to the heiress Oonagh Guinness and to the actress Sally Gray. It was also his misfortune to be associated in the public memory with the tragic deaths in traffic accidents of first his parents in 1927, and then of his son Tara Browne, an icon of the Swinging Sixties, almost 40 years later. Dominick Geoffrey Edward Browne was born in Dublin on October 21 1901, heir to the Irish peerages of Oranmore and Browne of Carrabrowne Castle, Co Galway, and Castle Mac Garrett, Co Mayo. He was descended from a mayor and MP for Galway who was knighted in 1635 but lost most of his lands to Cromwell's insurgents; an MP and Middle Temple barrister in the next generation retrieved the 2,000 acres after the Restoration of Charles II. The first Lord Oranmore and Browne was a 19th-century Whig MP who rebuilt Castle Mac Garrett, and the second an Irish representative peer in the Lords. The third was an Irish senator and one of the last knights of the Order of St Patrick, who was given the United Kingdom barony of Mereworth, which carried the right to sit in the Lords. Young Dominick divided his early years between Castle Mac Garrett, which was set in 3,000 acres containing some of the oldest trees in Ireland, Mereworth Castle in Kent, and London. He was the youngest page at the coronation of King George V, and sent to Eton. His return from Castle Mac Garrett for the summer half of 1916 was delayed because of the Easter Rebellion. After Christ Church, Oxford, he served briefly in the Grenadier Guards, earning a reputation as a fine shot. When his parents were involved in their accident at Southborough, Kent, in 1927 Dominick knew that peers were supposed to be buried in lead coffins. He therefore ordered one from a local undertaker, whose men managed to get it upstairs to receive the body. Unfortunately, they found it too heavy to carry downstairs and put it into a service lift; the ropes broke, sending the casket crashing through the basement. On the death of his mother two days later, the hearse with her coffin caught fire, and another vehicle had to be ordered. In 1930 Oranmore and Browne sold the Mereworth estate and concentrated on running Castle Mac Garrett, which had been spared from being razed during the Troubles because it was occupied by the Free State Army before being returned to the family. This gave him a chance to take up flying, practising on a twin-engined Cutty-Sark machine which could alight on land or water. But with an estate that had a staff of 150 there was always trouble making ends meet. In 1933, Oranmore and Browne was involved in a rates dispute, in which a collector briefly seized some cattle. Two years later a serious fire broke out in the castle. Oranmore and Browne headed a party of local farmers and peasants who formed a human chain to carry buckets of water from the nearby river Roe, but furniture, paintings and other possessions were destroyed. 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 with the Local Defence Force in Co Mayo. The castle was known for its shooting and fishing, and Oranmore and Browne also showed tourists around himself, at five shillings a time. By 1961, he could no longer afford to live there. In a last ditch attempt to hang on, he conceived a scheme of "arm-chair farming", which involved moving pigs into the castle, and rearing them in the drawing rooms and boudoirs. The idea was that a sow reared in such a setting would command about 90 guineas on the market, a profit of about £55. "Not a bad investment," commented Oranmore and Browne's nephew, Michael Mordaunt-Smith, who was masterminding operations. Oranmore and Browne had high hopes that this would attract swarms of American pig owners to the castle to inspect developments. But not long afterwards, the castle was compulsorily taken over by the Land Commission, which sold it to become a home for the elderly. Oranmore and Browne married three times, first Mildred Helen, daughter of Thomas Egerton, a cousin of the Duke of Sutherland; they had two sons and three daughters (one of whom died aged 13). They divorced in 1936, so he could marry Oonagh Guinness, one of the "Golden Guinness girls"; she was a considerable heiress in her own right and the owner of Luggala, a fairytale Gothic lodge in the Wicklow mountains. They had three sons, the eldest of whom is Garech Browne, the pony-tailed squire of Luggala, a guardian of Irish lore and founder of The Chieftains. The second son died after a week. The third was Tara Browne, a friend of John Lennon who drove his Lotus Elan into a lamp-post in Redcliffe Square, London, in 1966. Tara was the subject of the Beatles' song A Day in the Life, which contained the verse: He blew his mind out in a car He didn't notice that the lights had changed A crowd of people stood and stared They'd seen his face before, Nobody was really sure if he was from the House of Lords. After divorcing Oonagh in 1950, Oranmore and Browne married Constance Vera Stevens, the actress Sally Gray who had been trained as a dancer by Fred Astaire and starred in the films Dangerous Moonlight (1940) and Green for Danger (1946). The marriage remained a secret until the couple attended the Coronation in 1953. Oranmore and Browne retained clear memories to the end. When he recently received a letter about a local church, he recalled his father's story of the incumbent with a lisp who used to end his sermons, "God shave the Queen". His 100th birthday was celebrated with a family party at the Ritz. He was glad to receive a telegram from the President of Ireland, but disappointed by the card from the Queen, which had a large photograph of her on the front and seemed to him undignified. "Horrible," he muttered as he stuffed it back into the envelope. After reading the Telegraph's obituary of the screenwriter Ivan Moffat last Saturday, he remarked: "Everyone seems to be dead." Lord Oranmore and Browne, who died on Thursday, is succeeded as 5th baron by his eldest son, the poet Dominick Browne, who was born in 1927. Ã Copyright of Telegraph Group Limited 2003. Terms & Conditions of reading. Commercial information. Privacy Policy.

Born: Dublin, Ireland 21st Oct 1901 Baptised:
Died: 7th Aug 2002Buried:
Family:
Browne

Titles:

Ancestors
[ Patrilineage | Matrilineage | Earliest Ancestors | Force | Force2 | Set Relationship | Relationship | Options ]

1.
Dominick Geoffrey Edward 
Browne
(
Egerton
,
Guinness
,
hidden
) 1901 - 2002
2.
Geoffrey Henry 
Browne-Guthrie
1861 - 1927
4.
Geoffrey Dominick Augustus Frederick Guthrie 
Browne
(
Guthrie
) 1819 - 1900
5.
Christina 
Guthrie
(
Browne
) 1835 - post 1881
   
 

Siblings


1.
F/? 
Browne
* ante 1910

Spouses



1. 5th Feb 1925, div. 1936
Mildred Helen 
Egerton
(
Browne
,
hidden
) 1903 - 1980
2. 29th Apr 1936, div. 1950
Oonagh 
Guinness
(
Kindersley
,
Browne
) 1910 - 1995
3. 1st Dec 1951
hidden

Descendants
[ Options ]

a.
Mildred Helen 
Egerton
(
Browne
,
hidden
) 1903 - 1980
1.
hidden
2.
Brigid Verena 
Browne
1927 - 1941
3.
hidden
4.
hidden
5.
hidden
b.
Oonagh 
Guinness
(
Kindersley
,
Browne
) 1910 - 1995
6.
hidden
7.
M/? 
Browne
1943 - 1943
8.
Tara 
Browne
1945 - 1966
Sources

Timeline


21st Oct 1901Born (birth) Dublin, Ireland
5th Feb 1925Married
Mildred Helen 
Egerton
(
Browne
,
hidden
) 1903 - 1980 (marriage)
1927
Dominick Geoffrey Edward 
Browne
(
Egerton
,
Guinness
,
hidden
) 1901 - 2002 inherited the title
Oranmore and Browne
  [B]
29th Apr 1936Married
Oonagh 
Guinness
(
Kindersley
,
Browne
) 1910 - 1995 (marriage)
1936Divorced
Mildred Helen 
Egerton
(
Browne
,
hidden
) 1903 - 1980 (divorce)
1950Divorced
Oonagh 
Guinness
(
Kindersley
,
Browne
) 1910 - 1995 (divorce)
1st Dec 1951Married
hidden
(marriage)
7th Aug 2002Died (death)
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