John Skeffington, 2nd Viscount Massereene (December 1632 – 21 June 1695) was an Anglo-Irish politician, official, and peer. He was one of the leading Presbyterians in Ireland during his lifetime.[1]
In 1680, Skeffington was appointed captain of Lough Neagh, in part owing to his expenditure in improving the fortifications at Antrim Castle. An enthusiastic persecutor of the Irish Roman Catholic clergy, he alleged in 1681 that many soldiers in the Irish Army were either Catholics or married to Catholics. In the aftermath of the Rye House Plot in 1683, Skeffington came under pressure from the Duke of Ormond to conform to the established Church of Ireland, but Skeffington refused. James II of England excluded Skeffington from the Irish Privy Council upon his accession in 1685.[1]
Three days after the outbreak of the Williamite War in Ireland, on 15 March 1689 Skeffington fled his Antrim Castle home; the following day the castle was captured by Jacobite forces who looted £3,000 of the viscount's possessions. After time in Derry and Scotland, he was in London by September 1689 where he was where he was one of a committee chosen by Irish Protestant exiles to represent their concerns to the English Williamite government. He was attainted by James II's brief Patriot Parliament. Skeffington returned to Ireland following the war, where he died in 1695. He had been readmitted to the Irish Privy Council by William III of England in 1692. He was succeeded in his title by his son, Clotworthy Skeffington.[1][4]
References
^ abcdeBergin, John (October 2009). "Skeffington, John". Dictionary of Irish Biography. Retrieved 12 February 2023.