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THE O'KEEFEE HAIR FOUND.

A SMALL TRADISMiN FALLS UEIR TO £5,000,000. The Limerick correspondent of the Cork Constitution says :—A few months a«o I informed you of the wonderful luck of the Limerick Buckleys in being discovered as the true heir 3 of about £250,000 in Australia, left to them by a poor boy, who, a criminal! left this city some forty years ago. Iu Clare a poor shoemaker was also discovered as the heir to about £100,000; but these chance hits of fortune "pale their ineffectual fires " before the latest case of " good luck." Yesterday Mr. D. P. McCarthy, a native of Cork, architect, of Barriogton-street, re ceived a letter signed G. A. Stanley, New Square, Lincoln's Inn, informing him as follows : —" I am directed to inform you that the first instalment of the O'Keeffe legacy has come to hand in your favour for £500,000. The whole or the greater portion of' the £5,000,000 left by the deceased wiil come to you, except the portion allotted to your brothers, about which the Crown will decide." Mr. McCarthy received the intimation with great equanimity and quiet thank fulness that his first cousin, Charles Robert O'Keeffe, late of Allahabad, India, who died a bachelor, hud left him such a splendid fortune, which made him a millionaire five times repeated. The parents of the deceased Mr. O'Keeffe resided in Cork, and carried on a respectable business there as general merchants. His father and mother had occasion to visit London, and there, contrary to all expectation, his mother was suddenly confined in a hotel, and gave birth to the. founder of the colossal fortuue. Both Mr. O'Keeffe's parents died before he reached his majority. He had one brother and one sister, but both are dead. The brother died in Australia, to which he emigrated many years ago, and his sif-ter died in Cork The chief heir in L'merick was often invited by the livemillionnaire to go out to India, but he had to decline the tempting offer in consequence of a naturally delicate constitution, unfitted to stand the torrid zone. He had also to decline a similar < ffer from the deceased's brothers to go out to Australia, to both of whom he stood in the relationship of first cousin, the mothers of the heir and the deceased being sisters. After a time spent in Cork with his father, and while yet only about eighteen years of age, Mr. O'Keeffe made his way to India, where he enlisted as a private soldier. Here, in this new sphere of life, his old habits never forsook him. ' He studied men, manners, but, above all, busi. ness. By assuidity and good conduct he at last received a commission, but he did not retain it long, behoving that commerce was

his real forte. Service in the East during the year 1842 naturally suggested to his mind that he could make money by engaging in the opium traffic and other great branches of trade carried on in the East, and so he went into the opium trade, some said as an agent of the East India Company, others on his own accouat. Be this as it may, by close attention to business and good luck he soon acquired a colossal fortune, which will astonish many a modern Croesus — five millions of money in ready cash, and an income of £150,000 from landed and other property ! Mr. O'Keeffe died, unmarried, in February, 1876, when Messrs. Carrington and Whigley, solicitors, of Calcutta, advertised for heirs, of which, apparently, there was no lack -no fewer than 175 applicants putting in claims as the next of kin of the deceased ; but they were all put aside on investigation in favour of Mr. McCarthy, of Limerick, who has four brothers, each of whom will come in for a twenty-Sfth part of the mouey and estate, but Mr. McCarthy will be the recipient of the great bulk of the fortune. The first intimation Mr. McCarthy had of deceased's death was through Mr. Maurice Lenihan, J.P., of the Limerick Reporter, handing him a paper in which the heirs were advertised for. Mr. McCarthy at once placed his case as heir in the hands of Mr. Isaac Butt, member for the city, who, having interested himself on Mr. McCarthy's account, has had a good deal to do with the successful recognition of the latter's claims as the real heir ot this immense property in conjunction with his four brothers, Mr. McCarthy being the eldest. The heir is a very industrious and energetic man, and had just completed the building of a terrace of houses on his own account, which he named Barrington Terrace, when the letter "On Her Majesty's service" proclaimed to him his unprecedented good fortune. His father is an independent farmer residing at Abbeyfeale, where his mother died, and all the family are in comfortable or even independent circumstances. The heir served his time in Cork, where he was born, with the building firm of Messrs. Dickson and Taylor. At an early age he started business for himself in Newcastle West, and after several years of close application to business was selected as architect to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners up to the period of the disestablishment of the Irish Church. Since theu he has resided and carried on his business in Limerick with accustomed good business habits, and was in receipt of a competence, if not more. Mr. McCarthy has a family of ten young children.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH18780622.2.37

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume XV, Issue 5179, 22 June 1878, Page 6

Word Count
910

THE O'KEEFEE HAIR FOUND. New Zealand Herald, Volume XV, Issue 5179, 22 June 1878, Page 6

THE O'KEEFEE HAIR FOUND. New Zealand Herald, Volume XV, Issue 5179, 22 June 1878, Page 6