On 2 December 1697, he was consecrated Bishop of Cloyne, spending much of his time on an unsuccessful legal campaign to regain episcopal lands lost in prior decades.[2] In 1702, he became Bishop of Raphoe in Ulster, one of the more valuable sees; in 1714, Archbishop King described it as 'worth near £1,200...(but) full of Dissenters and Papists'. A contemporary complained in the eleven years he served as bishop, Pooley 'hardly resided eighteen months.'[6]
As a bishop, Pooley sat in the Irish House of Lords and spoke against the 1703 Popery Act. He specifically objected to the requirement office holders abjure or deny the claim of the Catholic Stuart exiles, and avoided doing so himself until 1710.[7] As a result, he was briefly deprived of his bishopric before having it restored in September 1710.[8] He was briefly held in Dublin Castle in 1709 for protesting against a Parliamentary session being scheduled on a Holy day.[2]
Pooley was responsible for restoring St. Michan's Church, Dublin, described as being in a 'ruinous condition' in the 1680s, and the expansion of St Eunan's Cathedral. His will left £200 for a building programme, which was not completed until years after his death. Most of it was replaced in the late 19th century, apart from a baptismal font installed in 1706, which can still be seen.[9]
He died in Dublin on 16 October 1712, and was buried in St. Michan's.[2]
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Bray, GL (2006). Records of Convocation XVII: Ireland, 1690-1869: Both Houses: 1690-1702; Upper House: 1703-1713. Woodbridge Boydell Press. ISBN978-1-843832331.
Doyle, Thomas (1997). "Jacobitism, Catholicism and the Irish Protestant Elite, 1700-1710". Eighteenth-Century Ireland / Iris an Dá Chultúr. 12: 28–59. JSTOR30071383.
Fryde, Edmund Boleslav; Greenway, D.E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I. (1986). Handbook of British chronology. Offices of the Royal Historical Society : University College. OCLC989682481.
Mant, Richard (1840). History Of The Church Of Ireland: From The Revolution To The Union Of The Churches Of England And Ireland, January 1, 1801 (2015 ed.). Palala. ISBN978-1342559333.
Rowan, Alistair (1979). North West Ulster: The Counties of London Derry, Donegal, Fermanagh and Tyrone. Yale University Press. ISBN978-0300096675.
Ware, Sir James (1739). The Whole Works Concerning Ireland Rev. and Improved, Volume 1. E Jones.
Leslie, J. B.; Fawcett, F. W.; Crooks, D. W. T. (1999). Clergy of Derry and Raphoe. Belfast: Ulster Historical Foundation. ISBN9780901905871.