Edmond Pery

Civic Inheritance

Edmond Pery successfully asserted a remarkable inherited privilege in 1677 when he claimed two votes in Limerick’s common council. The right was traced through the Sexten family to the former priors of St Mary’s, whose religious property and privileges had passed into private ownership following the dissolution of the monasteries. Pery argued that succession to those lands carried political rights as well as rents and property. His achievement gave the family an unusual position within Limerick’s civic government, where elections for the mayor and common councillors shaped the distribution of authority among merchants, aldermen and established urban families.

Estates United

The landed inheritance that later sustained the Pery family’s influence in Limerick was assembled through a succession of marriages connecting the Sexten, Pery, Stacpole, Twigg and Wray families. Susannah Sexten, who died in 1671, was the only daughter of Edmond Sexten and eventually inherited the property of his grandson, another Edmond. Her marriage to Edmond Pery of Croom brought the Sexten estates into the Pery family. Those lands included former religious property in and around Limerick, giving their descendants wealth, rents and a territorial position that would profoundly influence the city’s later development.

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