Thomas Pleasants (1729-1818) was a merchant, property developer and philanthropist in Dublin, Ireland, after whom Pleasants Street in Dublin 8 is named.
Thomas Pleasants | |
---|---|
Born | 1729 |
Died | 1818 (aged 88–89) |
Nationality | Irish |
Life
editPleasants was born in County Carlow in 1729, son of William Pleasants and his wife Grace Edwards. His grandfather was Thomas Pleasants, alderman of Dublin.[1]
His grandfather had leased a large piece of land near Capel Street from Dublin Corporation, which Pleasants inherited some time after his grandfather's death in 1729. His initial income derived from this property, though he also had dealings with his cousins the Pasleys, who were wine merchants at 9 Abbey Street.[1]
He married in 1787 Mildred Daunt, second daughter of George Daunt, surgeon in Mercer's Hospital.[2]
He and his wife (died 1814) were buried in the churchyard of St Bride's Church.[3]
Donations
editAmong his donations were over £12,000 in 1814 for the erection of a large stove-house near Cork Street for poor weavers in the Liberties, £8,000 for the building of the Meath Hospital, and his own house (67 Camden Street) for the provision of a girls' school and orphanage, along with £1,200 per annum to run it and extra money provided for dowries for the girls (only applied to Protestants, though) to marry. Pleasant's Asylum for Female Orphans on Camden Street was founded in 1818 and closed in 1949. Pleasants donated his large library and a large sum of money to the Royal Dublin Society.[2]
References
edit- ^ a b Thomas Pleasants
- ^ a b O'Donovan, Life by the Liffey. Dublin, 1986, p. 53
- ^ St. Bride's Cemetery