The ‘scion of a minor landed family in Mallow’, Daunt was a descendant of Thomas Daunt of Owlpen, Gloucestershire, whose son, Thomas, acquired Tracton Abbey, co. Cork in 1595. Daunt’s grandfather, William, acquired a 600 acre estate at Kilcasan in 1712.
Having come under the influence of both his tutor and a neighbouring gentry family (and relatives of his mother), the Conners (or O’Connors) of Connerville, Daunt broke with family tradition and converted to Catholicism about 1827-8, being received into the church by Father Theobald Mathew.
With the assistance of his kinsman, Feargus O’Connor, Daunt defeated the entrenched interest of the Jephson family and secured his return for Mallow at the 1832 general election ‘with infinite cleverness’. The overturn of the sitting Liberal member was regarded as ‘perhaps the most extraordinary of all the extraordinary instances of Daniel O’Connell’s influence’ at this election. Daunt reciprocated by speaking at the hustings during O’Connor’s triumph at the County Cork election, where he denounced the complacency of the Whig aristocracy and the self-declared ‘moderates’ of the county.
After attending the first meeting of O’Connell’s National Council, 18 Jan. 1833, Daunt was admitted to the Society of Irish Volunteers when, denying that he sought ‘the subversion of the aristocratic order’ in Ireland, he nevertheless denounced absenteeism as the principal drain on the country’s capital.
Returning to his role as country gentleman, Daunt married Ellen Hickey, who was said to be a daughter of one of his labourers, in July 1839.
Regarded as a man ‘of practical ability, exact method and considerable information’, Daunt carried the legacy of repeal into subsequent political movements.
Daunt died at his home, Kilcascan Castle, co. Cork in June 1894 and was succeeded by his son, Achilles Thomas (b. 1849), an author of boys’ literature. Extracts from his journal (covering the years 1842-3, 1845-88) were published as A Life Spent for Ireland by his daughter Alice in 1896.
