In 1802 Corry was dismissed from the Exchequer and replaced by
John Foster (later Lord Oriel), he was awarded, however, £2,000 p.a. in compensation. In 1806 the changes in ownership of the Newry estates altered Corry's position; the lands had passed to a senior line of the
Needham family and Lady Downshire, decided to return his brother General
Francis Needham, 1st Earl of Kilmorey at the general election. Corry did not have the funds needed, in excess of £5000, to purchase a seat elsewhere. However, Lady Downshire was inclined to support the Grenville ministry and came to a formal agreement with Corry to give him £1000 towards his expenses should he be successful in Newry, and, if not, to bring him in for another borough. Corry failed against the Needham interest in Newry, but a seat at
Newport, Isle of Wight, was purchased for him, with £4000 from Lady Downshire, and Corry was appointed to the
Board of Trade. Six months later Grenville's ministry had fallen and there was another general election. Corry stood, again unsuccessfully, for Newry. Corry was unmarried but had a long-term relationship with Jane Symms, Corry's residence in Newry was the Abbey Yard, now a school, and
Derrymore House,
Bessbrook, which he had inherited from his father and sold in 1810. It is now the property of the
National Trust. During Corry's life, a road was constructed from near the main entrance of
Derrymore House around
Newry and linked up with the Dublin Road on the southern side of the town primarily for Corry's use. This road subsequently became known as "The Chancellor's Road," as a result of Corry's term as the
Irish Chancellor of the Exchequer. A local legend has it that the road was constructed after an incident in which Corry's
stagecoach was stoned while passing through
Newry by people angry at an unpopular
window tax he had introduced. The road has retained this name but it was cut in half by the Newry by-pass in the mid-1990s, however as a result of works associated with the new A1 dual carriageway the two-halves of the road have now been reconnected. He died at his house in Merrion Square, Dublin and is buried in
St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin. == References ==