A former officer in the British army, Charles O’Connell had married Daniel O’Connell’s second daughter, Catherine, to whom he was a distant cousin, in October 1832.
O’Connell responded enthusiastically to the National Political Union’s invitation to attend a National Council in Dublin in January 1833. As a member of his father-in-law’s ‘Household Brigade’, he consistently opposed the government’s Irish coercion bill and voted for the first reading of the Irish Church temporalities bill, 11 Mar. 1833.
O’Connell was among those who disagreed with the Liberator on the issue of postponing a discussion of repeal in the House, and as early as January 1834 reports circulated ‘that this truly honest and well-meaning country gentleman’ was ‘heartily sick of his senatorial labours’.
Thereafter O’Connell ‘out built himself’ in the construction of a ‘splendid mansion’ at the centre of reclaimed bog-land at Bahoss, county Kerry, incurring financial liabilities after having.
