Abraham Creighton, 2nd Earl Erne

Abraham Creighton, 2nd Earl Erne (10 May 1765 10 June 1842) was an Irish peer and politician.

He was the elder son of the 1st Earl Erne, by his first wife, Catherine Howard. Between 1790 and 1798, he represented Lifford in the Irish House of Commons. In Dublin, he was a member of the Kildare Street Club.[1]

In November 1798 Abraham was declared insane. He was then incarcerated in Brooke House, London, for the next forty years. On his father's death in 1828 Abraham became the second Earl, although still incarcerated and officially insane.

He died in 1842, within months of the death of his father's second wife, Mary Hervey, daughter of Frederick Hervey, Earl of Bristol and Bishop of Derry. He was unmarried and without descendants. The title and the estates including Crom Castle passed to his nephew John Creighton, the third Earl. The third Earl subsequently changed the spelling of the family name to Crichton, which spelling is maintained to this day by the Earl of Erne.

Notes

  1. Thomas Hay Sweet Escott, Club Makers and Club Members (1913), pp. 329–333
Parliament of Ireland
Preceded by
Abraham Creighton
Edward Cooke
Member of Parliament for Lifford
1790–1797
With: Abraham Creighton
Succeeded by
Abraham Creighton
John Creighton
Peerage of Ireland
Preceded by
John Creighton
Earl Erne
1828–1842
Succeeded by
John Crichton
Viscount Erne
1828–1842
Baron Erne
1828–1842
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