In 1852,
Sir Benjamin Lee Guinness, 1st Baronet (1798–1868), heir to the Guinness brewery fortune and father of Arthur Guinness, "acquired several Connacht estates that were up for sale in the
Encumbered Estates' Court. He bought the Ashford Estate from the
Baron Oranmore and Browne, the Doon Estate from Sir Richard O'Donnell, the Cong Estate from Alexander Lambert, part of the Rosshill Estate from Lords Charlemont and Leitrim, and parts of Connemara from Christopher St George. In 1859, he bought Kylemore from a banking consortium. With these purchases, Sir Benjamin Guinness became landlord to 670 tenants, 316 of whom rented at less than £5 per annum. With his father’s death in 1868, Sir Arthur Guinness, 2nd Baronet and oldest son and heir, continued in his father’s footsteps, purchasing vast swaths of
County Galway. "He bought the Elwood estate of Strandhill, just across the river from Ashford, Cong, in 1871, and Lord Kilmaine sold him the Inishdoorus islands on
Lough Corrib, and lands in the
barony of Ross, part of Nymphsfield near Cong in 1875. William Burke of Lisloughry was his agent". When Sir Arthur's acquisitions were combined with those of his father, total acreage for the Ashford Estate was 33,298, with the result that the future Lord Ardilaun owned most of County Galway between Maam (Maum) Bridge and
Lough Mask. Owning 31,000 acres recently bought by his father or himself in Counties
Galway and
Mayo, Lord Ardilaun, as he became in 1880, was placed in a difficult and unusual position during the
Land War of the 1880s. Tenant farmers had started
rent strikes and
boycotting against
absentee landlords who cared little about their estates. In contrast, Ardilaun lived at
Ashford Castle for much of the year, and invested heavily in his lands, but was forced to sell land from the 1880s and saw two of his bailiffs assassinated in what became known as the
Lough Mask Murders, in January 1882. His attempt to preserve the landscape at Muckross, near
Killarney,
County Kerry, from 1899 for aesthetic reasons was under challenge as soon as 1905. With the Digby family, he was a joint owner of the
Aran Islands that were compulsorily purchased by the
Congested Districts Board (CDB) in 1916. ==Philanthropy==