
The lost millionaire – the mystery of Glenveagh Castle's missing owner.
It is a mystery which endured now for the best part of a century and no definitive answer has ever been found as to what exactly happened to Kingsley as he was affectionately known by his family.
Porter and his wife Lucy, a wealthy heiress, bought Glenveagh Castle in 1929 from the controversial Captain John George Adair. Adair was despised by locals in Donegal due to his role in the Derryveagh evictions of 1861, where the clearing of his estate of its 224 tenants in the wake of the Great Famine left an indelible mark on the local population.
Indeed, it was said locally that Glenveagh itself was cursed as a result.
READ MORE
Arthur Kingsley Porter was a much different man from Adair. In the United States, he was widely admired as an eminent archaeologist, art historian and Medievalist. His published work on ancient pilgrim roads and early Christian high crosses drew him to Ireland, first to lecture in the Society for Irish Antiquities in Dublin and eventually to Glenveagh.
Lucy and Kingsley wished to live like local people and eventually they built a small two-bedroom cottage on the small island of Inishbofin located between the coast in Magheraroarty and Tory Island.
Porter was fascinated by the local people and wrote plays and poetry while on the island. He fell in love with Inishbofin and wrote of it in his diaries:
'We who live inland know nothing of islands, we never know what the sea is like with its spaces, its storms, its sadness, its exultation. We have never felt its wild winds sweeping unbroken from the rim of the world. We know nothing of islands.'
Porter also had particular fascination with St Colmcille who is closely associated with nearby Gartan. However, all was not as it seemed as the Porters were carrying a dark secret with them.
Kingsley Porter was struggling with his sexuality and suffered from episodes of depression as a result. In an effort to address the cause of his depressive episodes, the Porters visited the English physician and sexologist Dr Havelock Ellis in London.
Ellis recommended that the Porters introduce a young homosexual man named Alan Campbell into their marriage in order to help Kingsley overcome his depressive episodes. Campbell posed at Harvard as Kingsley's assistant and travelled with them to Glenveagh on occasion.
Sadly, Harvard in the 1930s was a dangerous place for gay men. Beginning in the early 1920's Harvard University had begun a purge of homosexual members of faculty as well as students. Under university president Abbott Lawrence Lowell's direction, an ad-hoc tribunal known as the 'secret court' conducted more than 30 behind closed doors interviews with men who were suspected to be homosexual.
Eight students and an assistant professor were subsequently expelled or relinquished of their duties. Kingsley Porter's relationship with Alan Campbell eventually came under scrutiny.
Campbell fled to San Francisco and the resulting pressure on campus, coupled with financial difficulties for the Porters caused them to flee to Donegal to escape what they believed was to be an impending national scandal.
Both Lucy and Kingsley made their way to Inishbofin in mid-July 1933. One evening during a storm on the island, the couple briefly parted in order for Kingsley to prepare his coracle for fishing the next day - he was never seen again.
An inquest was later held in Falcarragh, the first of its kind in Ireland without a body present where it emerged that Kinglsey had arranged for his estate to be left to Lucy in the weeks before his disappearance.
Locals also testified that Kingsley's currach was missing from the island and that a large freight ship had passed by Inishbofin the night of his disappearance. Curiously, during the couple's time living on the island, Kingsley had penned a play about Colmcille sailing on a coracle out to sea away from all his troubles.
Did Kingsley Porter escape to a new life away from his troubles? Was it a simple accident? Or did Kingsley tragically take his own life? Perhaps Adair's curse indeed hung over Glenveagh, which was eventually sold to the Irish State.
Today, a prestigious architectural prize is awarded each year in Porter's memory by Harvard University. On Inishbofin, the ruins of his old cottage still remain.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
44 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Capuchin Day Centre founder Br Kevin Crowley recalled as ‘champion of the poor'
Br Kevin Crowley, who died on Wednesday aged 90 , was remembered as 'a champion of the poor' and a man who 'saved many lives' at the Capuchin Day Centre he founded more than 55 years ago. The centre on Dublin's Bow Street, which provides food, clothing, medical and other care to the city's homeless and destitute, was busy as ever hours after his death was announced. Craig (37), from Dublin, who had just finished lunch of beef stew, potatoes and vegetables, said he had known Br Kevin for about 20 years. 'I wouldn't be alive today if it wasn't for him and this centre ... He saved many lives and he was a big part of my life. He was always welcoming. He'd shake your hand, ask how your day was. That means a lot to a homeless person. When you're homeless 90 per cent of people walk by you, but that man took 40 seconds out of his day to ask, 'how you are doing today?' READ MORE 'I am homeless still, living in a tent ... I would love a place [home]. Here, you can come in the morning; you are not rushed out the door. You can relax, go asleep, have a shower if necessary.' Derek (60) had known the late friar since about 2015. 'I was just made redundant and it was hard. I came in here to get dinners first. Br Kevin would sit down and chat with me. He was more like a father, a lovely man ... It's very sad now that he has passed. I hope I can get to the funeral.' Food bags at the day centre in Dublin's city centre. Photograph: Gareth Chaney/Collins Robert, from Ballymun, who is living in a nearby hostel, said Br Kevin was 'always kind' to him. 'He'd always help me out with clothes, food ... It is so important, especially when you're in and out of homelessness.' Centre director Fr Kevin Kiernan heard of his mentor's death early this morning. 'Like everything, you are expecting it, but then when it comes, there is a shock. Kevin was 90 last February; he was ready. I spoke to him about two weeks ago and he said, 'I am very weak. I just want to go'. He embraced the Lord in death this morning and that's the way he wanted it ... He is a great loss for us, but his vision is still very much alive in the day centre.' Alan Bailey, a retired Garda detective who has volunteered at the centre for more than 50 years, described Br Kevin as a 'champion of the poor who devoted his whole life to the poor'. On the day he died, the centre he founded served more than 650 hot meals and distributed hundreds of food parcels. Br Kevin's remains will repose at St Mary of the Angels Capuchin Church on Church Street from Thursday evening and through Friday, where the public are invited to pay their respects.


Irish Times
7 hours ago
- Irish Times
Population of the Republic grew by nearly a third in 20 years, study finds
The population of the Republic of Ireland grew by nearly a third in 20 years, while the population of Northern Ireland grew by 13 per cent, according to a joint study carried out by statisticians. Between 2002-2022, the population in the Republic increased by 31 per cent and by 13 per cent in Northern Ireland, according to the Central Statistics Office (CSO) and Northern Ireland's Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA). In 2022, the population of the island of Ireland stood at 7.1 million people, an increase of 26 per cent, or 1.5 million people, over the 20 years since 2002 – the first time the island's population has exceeded seven million since 1851. The population of the Republic stands at 5.15 million, accounting for 73 per cent of the all-island population, while the 1.91 million people living in Northern Ireland accounted for 27 per cent of the total. READ MORE However, Northern Ireland's population density is significantly higher than south of the Border, with 141 people living per km², which is almost twice that found in the Republic where just 73 people are found per km². There are differences, too, in the age profile of both parts of island. Half of the population in the Republic are now younger than 38, and half older, while half in Northern Ireland are younger than 40 – compared to a European Union average of 44. In Census 2021/2022, just under half of the population aged 15 and over in each jurisdiction (49 per cent) were either married or separated, with close to two-fifths single in the Republic and 39 per cent in Northern Ireland. However, Northern Ireland has twice the number of people who are divorced, compared to the Republic – 6 per cent compared to 3 per cent, the joint CSO/NISRA survey found. The number of singles in the Republic has remained relatively stable – 43 per cent in 2002, falling slightly to 42 per cent in 2011, and returning to 43 per cent in 2022. The number jumped in 20 years in Northern Ireland, from 34 per cent in 2001 to 39 per cent in 2021.


Irish Times
8 hours ago
- Irish Times
Br Kevin Crowley of Capuchin Day Centre dies aged 90
Brother Kevin Crowley (90), who ministered at the Capuchin Day Centre in Dublin for many decades, has died. Over recent years he had been at Mount Desert Nursing Home in Cork. He had been known throughout the country and beyond as a Brother to the poor, particularly through his work in the Capuchin Day Centre for Homeless People which he founded on Bow Street, Dublin in 1969. Expressing his sincere sympathy to Br Kevin's family and his Capuchin confrères, Archbishop of Dublin Dermot Farrell recalled how Br Kevin had 'devoted his life to the service of the poor. His work with the Capuchin Day Centre staff and volunteers transformed the lives of the poor and marginalised in our city who availed of its services, from misery and despair to hope and love.' His was 'a love that reached out with no questions asked of those who sought assistance. Br Kevin was an authentic follower of St Francis of Assisi,' the Archbishop said. READ MORE Born at Kilcoleman, Enniskeane, Co Cork on February 24th, 1935, Br Kevin was baptised William but following entry to the Capuchin Postulancy in Kilkenny in 1958 and, later, the Novitiate in Rochestown, Co Cork, he received the name Kevin. [ 'He's just a saint, just a pure out and out saint': Founder of Capuchin Day Centre retires ] In 1968, he was asked to take charge of the Clothing Guild in Dublin's Church Street. He quickly realised that much more was required than a clothing distribution unit, so he set up the St Felix soup kitchen and day centre, which initially catered for up to 50 persons daily. From then the numbers just grew and grew. As he recalled in his final interview before leaving Dublin for his native Cork in August 2022, 'I saw the people coming to our church. I saw the people walking the streets. I saw the people looking into dustbins and taking food out of the dustbins'. As a follower of St Francis 'I decided something should be done for them.' It was the beginnings of the Capuchin Day Centre. 'We had no money. Things were very bad. I owed a bill for £1,000, and £1,000 then was a lot of money and I didn't have it. I went down to the oratory, and I do believe in God in a very, very big way, and I said to the Lord 'these are your people and if you want me to feed them you'd better go get the money'. And we never went short of food or money since then.' He recalled how at that time 'I thought the drink was a huge problem, which it was, but then the drug scene came in. The drug scene has taken over completely and is appalling. Only for our medical team we would have had many deaths here on the premises.' He said the centre has gone from about 50 people when it started to now having 200 people for breakfast, 600/700 for lunch from Monday to Saturday. Unsurprisingly a stand-out moment for him over the years was the visit of Pope Francis to the Centre in August 2018. 'The greatest for me was the day they saw the Pope coming up Bow St in the Popemobile and the first thing he did was to come up to the homeless people to greet each and every one of them. And I made it quite clear there were to be no dignitaries whatsoever here.' Present too on that day were two other great allies of the homeless, Alice Leahy and Sr Stanislaus Kennedy. What was most significant for Br Kevin about such visits was that 'the homeless people were being recognised. That was the most important thing for me'. In Rome later that year, addressing Capuchins from around the world, Pope Francis, departed from his prepared speech to say how 'recently in Ireland, I saw your work with the most discarded and I was moved. It is a beautiful thing that … the elderly founder told me, `Here we do not ask where you come from, who you are: you are a child of God'. This is one of your traits. To really understand the persons, by 'smell', unconditionally.' Another regular visit to the centre over the years was President Michael D Higgins. On a visit there in 2016 he said what Br Kevin made possible at the Day Centre was 'the stuff of a real republic'. The remains of Br Kevin will arrive at St Mary of the Angel's, Church St Dublin at 5pm on Thursday evening and will lie in repose there on Friday until 6pm. Following requiem Mass on Saturday at 11am, burial will follow in Dardistown cemetery.