An Irish Tory squire, who was once described by Daniel O’Connell as ‘an utter incapable, who could not read three words of English’, Bateman provided a brief hiatus in the post-reform domination of the radical borough of Tralee by the Liberator’s family.
Bateman was descended from an East Anglian officer of Cromwell’s army, who had settled in Ireland about 1654. Subsequently granted considerable estates in Kerry by Charles II, Rowland Bateman became customs collector at Tralee and high sheriff of the county in 1669, and his family settled at Oak Park in 1697.
Bateman was born in Dublin, but inherited more than 11,000 acres in county Kerry from his father and in the 1820s built a large mansion at Oak Park, just one mile from Tralee. He was an active magistrate and served as high sheriff of Kerry in 1820.
As an extensive local proprietor, Bateman was brought forward for Tralee in the Denny interest at the 1837 general election.
Bateman had pronounced Orange sympathies, and in September 1837 was said to have proposed a toast at the County Club to ‘The Battle of the Diamond – hell and damnation to Lord Mulgrave and all Radicals of his feeling’.
Bateman twice offered briefly for Tralee as the candidate of the County Club at the 1841 and 1847 general elections, but did not appear at the hustings.
Bateman died at his residence in Leslie Park Road, Croydon in October 1863. His personal effects were sworn at under £1,500, and he is thought to have left a daughter.
