Aeneas Coffey was born circa 1780, likely in Ireland—either
County Dublin or
County Wicklow—or possibly in
Calais,
France, to Irish parents. He was the son of Andrew Coffey, a distinguished Dublin city water engineer trained under James Dinwiddie, who installed much of Dublin's cast-iron water piping. Though details about Aeneas Coffey's early education are scarce, he is believed to have attended some classes at
Trinity College Dublin before entering the excise service around 1800 as a gauger. In 1808, he married Susanna Logie and the two had four sons: Aeneas, Philip, William and Andrew. Coffey's excise career advanced steadily: from sub-commissioner of Inland Excise and Taxes at Drogheda (1813–1815), to surveyor of excise for Clonmel and Wicklow (1815–1816), then Cork (1816). By 1818, he was acting Inspector General of Excise for Ireland, a post officially confirmed in Dublin by 1820. His time in Donegal was marked by conflict, including a violent attack by illicit distillers in 1810, reflecting the tense relationship between excisemen and communities reliant on moonshining. Coffey resigned as Inspector General in March 1824 and soon invested in land, purchasing 800 acres in County Kildare in 1828. Post-resignation, he turned to the distilling business, managing Dublin distilleries and patenting his innovative continuous column still in 1830. By the mid-1830s, Coffey relocated to London, maintaining a Dublin office until 1856, while his still design gained international adoption, particularly in Scotland. Coffey died on 26 November 1852 in
Bromley,
Middlesex, England. == Customs and excise career ==