| BARONETAGE | ||||||
| Last updated 21/04/2024 | ||||||
| Names of baronets shown in blue | ||||||
| have not yet proved succession and, as a | ||||||
| result, their name has not yet been placed on | ||||||
| the Official Roll of the Baronetage. | ||||||
| Date | Type | Order | Name | Born | Died | Age |
| Dates in italics in the "Born" column indicate that the baronet was | ||||||
| baptised on that date; dates in italics in the "Died" column indicate | ||||||
| that the baronet was buried on that date | ||||||
| BARRET of Iniscarry,Cork | ||||||
| c 1631 | I | 1 | Andrew Barret | 1648 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1648 | ||||||
| BARRETT of Newburgh,Fife | ||||||
| 2 Oct 1628 | NS | 1 | Edward Barrett,1st Lord Barrett of Newburgh | 2 Jan 1645 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Jan 1645 | ||||||
| BARRETT of Castlemore,Cork | ||||||
| 4 Jul 1665 | I | 1 | William Barrett | c 1640 | 16 Feb 1673 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 16 Feb 1673 | ||||||
| BARRETT-LENNARD of Belhus,Essex | ||||||
| 30 Jun 1801 | UK | 1 | Thomas Barrett-Lennard | 6 Jan 1762 | 25 Jun 1857 | 95 |
| MP for Essex South 1832-1835 | ||||||
| 25 Jun 1857 | 2 | Thomas Barrett-Lennard | 29 Dec 1826 | 17 Jan 1919 | 92 | |
| For further information on this baronet, see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page. | ||||||
| 17 Jan 1919 | 3 | Thomas Barrett-Lennard | 25 Oct 1853 | 19 Sep 1923 | 69 | |
| 19 Sep 1923 | 4 | Richard Fiennes Barrett-Lennard | 17 May 1861 | 6 Sep 1934 | 73 | |
| 6 Sep 1934 | 5 | Thomas Richard Fiennes Barrett-Lennard | 12 Dec 1898 | 28 Dec 1977 | 79 | |
| 28 Dec 1977 | 6 | Hugh Dacre Barrett-Lennard | 27 Jun 1917 | 21 Jun 2007 | 89 | |
| 21 Jun 2007 | 7 | Peter John Barrett-Lennard | 26 Sep 1942 | |||
| BARRIE of Adelphi Terrace,Westminster | ||||||
| 14 Jun 1913 | UK | 1 | James Matthew Barrie | 9 May 1860 | 19 Jun 1937 | 77 |
| to | OM 1922 | |||||
| 19 Jun 1937 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BARRINGTON of Barrington Hall,Essex | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1611 | E | 1 | Francis Barrington | c 1570 | 3 Jul 1628 | |
| MP for Essex 1601-1628 | ||||||
| 3 Jul 1628 | 2 | Thomas Barrington | c Sep 1644 | |||
| MP for Newtown 1621-1629, Essex 1640 | ||||||
| and Colchester 1640-1644 | ||||||
| c Sep 1644 | 3 | John Barrington | 1605 | 24 Mar 1683 | 77 | |
| MP for Newtown 1645-1648,1660 and 1661- | ||||||
| 1679 | ||||||
| 24 Mar 1683 | 4 | John Barrington | 16 Oct 1670 | 26 Nov 1691 | 21 | |
| 26 Nov 1691 | 5 | Charles Barrington | c 1671 | 29 Jan 1715 | ||
| MP for Essex 1694-1705 and 1713-1715 | ||||||
| 29 Jan 1715 | 6 | John Barrington | c 1673 | Aug 1717 | ||
| Aug 1717 | 7 | John Barrington | by 1707 | 4 May 1776 | ||
| MP for Newtown 1729-1734 and 1741-1775 | ||||||
| 4 May 1776 | 8 | Fitzwilliam Barrington | 9 May 1708 | 24 Sep 1792 | 84 | |
| 24 Sep 1792 | 9 | John Barrington | 8 Dec 1752 | 5 Aug 1818 | 65 | |
| MP for Newtown 1780-1796 | ||||||
| 5 Aug 1818 | 10 | Fitzwilliam Barrington | 2 Mar 1755 | 26 Sep 1832 | 77 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 26 Sep 1832 | ||||||
| BARRINGTON of Limerick | ||||||
| 20 Sep 1831 | UK | 1 | Joseph Barrington | 21 Feb 1764 | 10 Jan 1846 | 81 |
| 10 Jan 1846 | 2 | Matthew Barrington | 21 May 1788 | 1 Apr 1861 | 72 | |
| 1 Apr 1861 | 3 | William Hartigan Barrington | 4 Oct 1815 | 14 Jul 1872 | 56 | |
| 14 Jul 1872 | 4 | Croker Barrington | 12 Jul 1817 | 4 Jul 1890 | 72 | |
| 4 Jul 1890 | 5 | Charles Burton Barrington | 1848 | 12 Aug 1943 | 95 | |
| 12 Aug 1943 | 6 | Charles Bacon Barrington | 6 Jun 1902 | 30 Nov 1980 | 78 | |
| 30 Nov 1980 | 7 | Alexander Fitzwilliam Croker Barrington | 19 Nov 1909 | 6 Feb 2003 | 93 | |
| 6 Feb 2003 | 8 | Benjamin Barrington | 23 Jan 1950 | |||
| BARRON of Glenanna,Waterford | ||||||
| 12 Oct 1841 | UK | 1 | Henry Winston Barron | 15 Oct 1795 | 19 Apr 1872 | 76 |
| MP for Waterford 1832-1841,1842-1847,1848-1852, | ||||||
| 1865-1868 and 1869-1870 | ||||||
| 19 Apr 1872 | 2 | Henry Page Turner Barron | 27 Dec 1824 | 13 Sep 1900 | 75 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Sep 1900 | ||||||
| BARROW of Highgrove,Gloucs | ||||||
| 22 Jan 1784 | GB | see "Crawley-Boevey" | ||||
| BARROW of Ulverstone,Lancs | ||||||
| 30 Mar 1835 | UK | 1 | John Barrow | 19 Jun 1764 | 23 Nov 1848 | 84 |
| 23 Nov 1848 | 2 | George Barrow | 22 Oct 1806 | 27 Feb 1876 | 69 | |
| 27 Feb 1876 | 3 | John Croker Barrow | 8 Jul 1833 | 23 Sep 1900 | 67 | |
| 23 Sep 1900 | 4 | Francis Laurence John Barrow | 11 Aug 1862 | 9 Jun 1950 | 87 | |
| For further information on this baronet, see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 9 Jun 1950 | 5 | Wilfred John Wilson Croker Barrow | 28 Dec 1897 | 11 Jan 1960 | 62 | |
| 11 Jan 1960 | 6 | Richard John Uniacke Barrow | 2 Aug 1933 | 16 Feb 2009 | 75 | |
| 16 Feb 2009 | 7 | Anthony John Grenfell Barrow | 24 May 1962 | |||
| BARRY of Dublin | ||||||
| 1 Aug 1775 | I | 1 | Edward Barry | 1696 | 25 Mar 1776 | 79 |
| 29 Mar 1776 | 2 | Nathaniel Barry | c 1725 | Mar 1785 | ||
| Mar 1785 | 3 | Edward Barry | c 1760 | c 1820 | ||
| c 1820 | 4 | Walter Barry | c 1827 | |||
| c 1827 | 5 | Edward Barry | 17 Apr 1836 | |||
| 17 Apr 1836 | 6 | Edward Barry | c 1845 | |||
| c 1845 | 7 | John Barry | 5 May 1891 | |||
| 5 May 1891 | 8 | James Barry | c 1895 | |||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became either | |||||
| c 1895 | extinct or dormant | |||||
| BARRY of St.Leonard's Hill,Berks | ||||||
| and Keiss Castle,Caithness | ||||||
| 22 Feb 1899 | UK | 1 | Francis Tress Barry | 8 Jun 1825 | 28 Feb 1907 | 81 |
| MP for Windsor 1890-1906 | ||||||
| 28 Feb 1907 | 2 | Edward Arthur Barry | 25 Apr 1858 | 23 Jul 1949 | 91 | |
| 23 Jul 1949 | 3 | Claud Francis Barry | 16 Dec 1883 | 25 Oct 1970 | 86 | |
| 25 Oct 1970 | 4 | Rupert Rodney Francis Tress Barry | 6 Dec 1910 | 9 Mar 1977 | 66 | |
| 9 Mar 1977 | 5 | Lawrence Edward Anthony Tress Barry | 1 Nov 1939 | |||
| BARTLETT of Hardington Mandeville,Somerset | ||||||
| 7 Feb 1913 | UK | 1 | Herbert Henry Bartlett | 30 Apr 1842 | 23 Jun 1921 | 79 |
| For information about the disappearance of his | ||||||
| son and heir,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 23 Jun 1921 | 2 | Basil Hardington Bartlett | 15 Sep 1905 | 2 Jan 1985 | 79 | |
| 2 Jan 1985 | 3 | Henry David Hardington Bartlett | 18 Mar 1912 | 13 Sep 1989 | 77 | |
| 13 Sep 1989 | 4 | John Hardington Bartlett | 11 Mar 1938 | 8 Apr 1998 | 60 | |
| 8 Apr 1998 | 5 | Andrew Alan Bartlett | 26 May 1973 | |||
| BARTON of Fethard,Tipperary | ||||||
| 28 Jan 1918 | UK | 1 | Dunbar Plunket Barton | 29 Oct 1853 | 11 Sep 1937 | 83 |
| to | MP for Armagh Mid 1893-1900. Solicitor | |||||
| 11 Sep 1937 | General for Ireland 1898-1900. | |||||
| PC [I] 1918 | ||||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| BARTTELOT of Stopham,Sussex | ||||||
| 14 Jun 1875 | UK | 1 | Walter Barttelot Barttelot | 10 Oct 1820 | 2 Feb 1893 | 72 |
| MP for Sussex West 1860-1885 and | ||||||
| Horsham 1885-1893 PC 1892 | ||||||
| 2 Feb 1893 | 2 | Walter George Barttelot | 11 Apr 1855 | 23 Jul 1900 | 45 | |
| 23 Jul 1900 | 3 | Walter Balfour Barttelot | 22 Mar 1880 | 23 Oct 1918 | 38 | |
| 23 Oct 1918 | 4 | Walter de Stopham Barttelot | 27 Oct 1904 | 16 Aug 1944 | 39 | |
| 16 Aug 1944 | 5 | Brian Walter de Stopham Barttelot | 17 Jul 1941 | |||
| BARWICK of Ashbrooke Grange,Durham | ||||||
| 1 Feb 1912 | UK | 1 | John Storey Barwick | 23 Feb 1840 | 12 Aug 1915 | 75 |
| 12 Aug 1915 | 2 | John Storey Barwick | 4 Aug 1876 | 26 Mar 1953 | 76 | |
| 26 Mar 1953 | 3 | Richard Llewellyn Barwick | 4 Nov 1916 | 16 Jun 1979 | 62 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 16 Jun 1979 | ||||||
| BASS of Rangemoor Hall,Staffs | ||||||
| 17 May 1882 | UK | 1 | Michael Arthur Bass,later [1886] 1st | |||
| Baron Burton | 12 Nov 1837 | 1 Feb 1909 | 71 | |||
| For details of the special remainder included | ||||||
| in the creation of this baronetcy,see the note | ||||||
| at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 1 Feb 1909 | 2 | William Arthur Hamar Bass | 24 Dec 1879 | 28 Feb 1952 | 72 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 28 Feb 1952 | ||||||
| BASSET of Tehidy,Cornwall | ||||||
| 24 Nov 1779 | GB | 1 | Francis Basset,later [1796] 1st Baron de | |||
| to | Dunstanville | 9 Aug 1757 | 14 Feb 1835 | 77 | ||
| 14 Feb 1835 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BASTARD of Kitley,Devon | ||||||
| Sep 1779 | GB | 1 | William Bastard | 1 Sep 1727 | 1782 | 54 |
| Although gazetted in September 1779, the | ||||||
| warrant for creation never passed the Great Seal. | ||||||
| The further descent of the baronetcy, if such | ||||||
| ever existed, is shown in the note at the foot | ||||||
| of this page | ||||||
| BATE of Kilcoran House,Ireland | ||||||
| 17 Apr 1813 | UK | see "Dudley of Kilcoran House,Ireland" | ||||
| BATEMAN of How Hall,Norfolk | ||||||
| 31 Aug 1664 | E | 1 | Thomas Bateman | 29 Sep 1622 | 13 Oct 1685 | 63 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Oct 1685 | ||||||
| BATEMAN of Hartington Hall,Derby | ||||||
| 15 Dec 1806 | UK | 1 | Hugh Bateman | 21 Mar 1756 | 28 Jan 1824 | 67 |
| The letters patent for this creation contain | ||||||
| special remainders "severally to the first and | ||||||
| every other son and sons successively, of | ||||||
| Catherine Juliana Bateman, eldest daughter of | ||||||
| the said Hugh Bateman, and of Ann Amelia | ||||||
| Bateman, another of his daughters, and their | ||||||
| respective heirs male." | ||||||
| 25 Feb 1824 | 2 | Francis Edward Scott | 25 Feb 1824 | 21 Nov 1863 | 39 | |
| He subsequently [1851] succeeded to the | ||||||
| baronetcy of Scott of Great Barr,Staffs | ||||||
| (qv) when the two baronetcies merged | ||||||
| 21 Nov 1863 | 3 | Edward William Dolman Scott | 23 Dec 1854 | 1 Apr 1871 | 16 | |
| 1 Apr 1871 | 4 | Arthur Douglas Bateman Scott | 3 Sep 1860 | 18 Mar 1884 | 23 | |
| 18 Mar 1884 | 5 | Edward Dolman Scott | 12 Feb 1826 | 8 Mar 1905 | 79 | |
| 8 Mar 1905 | 6 | Alexander Fuller-Acland-Hood,later [1911] 1st | ||||
| Baron St.Audries | 26 Sep 1853 | 4 Jun 1917 | 63 | |||
| 4 Jun 1917 | 5 | Alexander Peregrine Fuller-Acland-Hood,2nd | ||||
| Baron St.Audries | 24 Dec 1893 | 16 Oct 1971 | 77 | |||
| 16 Oct 1971 | 6 | Alexander William Fuller-Acland-Hood | 5 Mar 1901 | 6 Feb 1990 | 88 | |
| to | Extinct or dormant on his death | |||||
| 6 Feb 1990 | ||||||
| BATES of Bellefield,Lancs | ||||||
| 13 May 1880 | UK | 1 | Edward Bates | 17 Mar 1816 | 17 Oct 1896 | 80 |
| MP for Plymouth 1871-1880 and 1885-1892 | ||||||
| 17 Oct 1896 | 2 | Edward Percy Bates | 17 Aug 1845 | 31 Dec 1899 | 54 | |
| 31 Dec 1899 | 3 | Edward Bertram Bates | 7 Mar 1877 | 6 Mar 1903 | 25 | |
| 6 Mar 1903 | 4 | Percy Elly Bates | 12 May 1879 | 16 Oct 1946 | 67 | |
| 16 Oct 1946 | 5 | Geoffrey Voltelin Bates | 2 Oct 1921 | 13 Feb 2005 | 83 | |
| 13 Feb 2005 | 6 | Edward Robert Bates | 4 Jul 1946 | 25 Mar 2007 | 60 | |
| 25 Mar 2007 | 7 | James Geoffrey Bates | 14 Mar 1985 | |||
| BATES of Magherabuoy,co.Londonderry | ||||||
| 7 Jun 1937 | UK | 1 | Richard Dawson Bates | 23 Nov 1876 | 10 Jun 1949 | 72 |
| PC [I] 1921 PC [NI] 1922 | ||||||
| 10 Jun 1949 | 2 | John Dawson Bates | 21 Sep 1921 | 12 Jul 1998 | 76 | |
| 12 Jul 1998 | 3 | Richard Dawson Hoult Bates | 12 May 1956 | |||
| BATESON of Killoquin,Antrim | ||||||
| 26 Aug 1789 | I | 1 | Robert Bateson-Harvey | 5 Jun 1825 | ||
| The creation contained the usual remainder to | ||||||
| "the Heirs Male of his Body" but continued "in | ||||||
| default of such issue, to the Heirs Male of his | ||||||
| Father." The second baronet was his nephew. | ||||||
| 5 Jun 1825 | 2 | Robert Bateson | c 1793 | 15 Apr 1870 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 15 Apr 1870 | ||||||
| BATESON of Belvoir Park,Down | ||||||
| 18 Dec 1818 | UK | 1 | Robert Bateson | 13 Mar 1782 | 21 Apr 1863 | 81 |
| MP for co.Londonderry 1830-1842 | ||||||
| 21 Apr 1863 | 2 | Thomas Bateson | 4 Jun 1819 | 1 Dec 1890 | 71 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Deramore (qv) in 1885 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remained merged until it | ||||||
| became dormant in 2006 | ||||||
| BATH of Athcarne,Meath | ||||||
| 7 May 1666 | I | 1 | Luke Bath | 1674 | ||
| 1674 | 2 | Peter Bath | 10 May 1686 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 10 May 1686 | ||||||
| BATHO of Frinton,Essex | ||||||
| 19 Oct 1928 | UK | 1 | Sir Charles Albert Batho | 7 Oct 1872 | 29 Jan 1938 | 65 |
| 29 Jan 1938 | 2 | Maurice Benjamin Batho | 14 Jan 1910 | 12 Jan 1990 | 79 | |
| 12 Jan 1990 | 3 | Peter Ghislain Batho | 9 Dec 1939 | 6 Apr 2024 | 84 | |
| 6 Apr 2024 | 4 | Rupert Sebastian Ghislain Batho | 26 Oct 1967 | |||
| BATHURST of Lechlade,Gloucs | ||||||
| 15 Dec 1643 | E | 1 | Edward Bathurst | c 1603 | 6 Aug 1674 | |
| 6 Aug 1674 | 2 | Edward Bathurst | c 1665 | 21 Mar 1677 | ||
| 21 Mar 1677 | 3 | Edward Bathurst | c 1635 | c 1688 | ||
| c 1688 | 4 | Edward Bathurst | c 1672 | c 1690 | ||
| c 1690 | 5 | Francis Bathurst | c 1676 | c 1738 | ||
| c 1738 | 6 | Laurence Bathurst | c 1780 | |||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became either | |||||
| c 1780 | extinct or dormant | |||||
| BATHURST of Clarendon Park,Wilts | ||||||
| 7 Dec 1818 | UK | See "Hervey-Bathurst" | ||||
| BAXTER of Kilmaron,Fife | ||||||
| 24 Jan 1863 | UK | 1 | David Baxter | 1793 | 13 Oct 1872 | 79 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Oct 1872 | ||||||
| BAXTER of Invereighty,Forfar | ||||||
| 21 Jun 1918 | UK | 1 | Sir George Washington Baxter | 20 Nov 1853 | 26 Nov 1926 | 73 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 26 Nov 1926 | ||||||
| BAYLY of Plas Newydd,Anglesey | ||||||
| 4 Jul 1730 | I | 1 | Edward Bayly | 20 Feb 1684 | 28 Sep 1741 | 57 |
| 28 Sep 1741 | 2 | Nicholas Bayly | 1709 | 9 Dec 1782 | 73 | |
| MP for Anglesey 1734-1741,1747-1761 | ||||||
| and 1770-1774. Lord Lieutenant Anglesey | ||||||
| 1761-1782 | ||||||
| 9 Dec 1782 | 3 | Henry Bayly (Paget from 29 Jan 1770), 10th | ||||
| Lord Paget de Beaudesert | 18 Jun 1744 | 13 Mar 1812 | 67 | |||
| He was created Earl of Uxbridge in 1784 and his | ||||||
| son was created Marquess of Anglesey (qv) in | ||||||
| 1815 with which title the baronetcy remains | ||||||
| merged,although,as at 30/06/2014,the | ||||||
| baronetcy does not appear on the Official Roll | ||||||
| of the Baronetage | ||||||
| BAYLEY of London | ||||||
| 15 Mar 1834 | UK | See "Laurie" | ||||
| BAYNES of Harefield Place,Middlesex | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1801 | UK | 1 | Christopher Baynes | 6 Aug 1755 | 16 Mar 1837 | 81 |
| 16 Mar 1837 | 2 | William Baynes | 28 Nov 1789 | 1 Jan 1866 | 76 | |
| 1 Jan 1866 | 3 | William John Walter Baynes | 5 Jun 1820 | 26 Oct 1897 | 77 | |
| 26 Oct 1897 | 4 | Christopher William Baynes | 14 Sep 1847 | 29 Jul 1936 | 88 | |
| 29 Jul 1936 | 5 | William Edward Colston Baynes | 23 Feb 1876 | 17 Sep 1971 | 95 | |
| 17 Sep 1971 | 6 | Rory Malcolm Stuart Baynes | 16 May 1886 | 29 Apr 1979 | 92 | |
| 29 Apr 1979 | 7 | John Christopher Malcolm Baynes | 24 Apr 1928 | 22 Jan 2005 | 76 | |
| 22 Jan 2005 | 8 | Christopher Rory Baynes | 11 May 1956 | |||
| BAYNING of Bentley Parva,Essex | ||||||
| 24 Sep 1611 | E | 1 | Paul Bayning | 28 Apr 1588 | 29 Jul 1629 | 41 |
| He was subsequently created Baron and | ||||||
| Viscount Bayning (qv) in 1628 with which | ||||||
| titles the baronetcy then merged until | ||||||
| its extinction in 1638 | ||||||
| BAYNTUN-ROLT of Spye Park,Wilts | ||||||
| 7 Jul 1762 | GB | 1 | Edward Bayntun-Rolt | 1710 | 3 Jan 1800 | 89 |
| MP for Chippenham 1737-1780 | ||||||
| 3 Jan 1800 | 2 | Andrew Bayntun-Rolt | c 1740 | 12 Aug 1816 | ||
| to | MP for Weobly 1780-1786 | |||||
| 12 Aug 1816 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BAYNTUN-SANDYS of Miserden Castle,Gloucs | ||||||
| and Chadlington Hall, Oxon | ||||||
| 26 Sep 1809 | UK | 1 | Edwin Bayntun-Sandys | 16 Jul 1774 | 1848 | 73 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1848 | ||||||
| BAZLEY of Hatherop,Gloucs | ||||||
| 30 Nov 1869 | UK | 1 | Thomas Bazley | 27 May 1797 | 18 Mar 1885 | 87 |
| MP for Manchester 1858-1880 | ||||||
| 18 Mar 1885 | 2 | Thomas Sebastian Bazley | 30 Apr 1829 | 6 Jan 1919 | 89 | |
| 6 Jan 1919 | 3 | Thomas Stafford Bazley | 5 Oct 1907 | 14 Apr 1997 | 89 | |
| 14 Apr 1997 | 4 | Thomas John Sebastian Bazley | 31 Aug 1948 | |||
| BEACH of Beverston,Gloucs | ||||||
| 21 Jul 1619 | E | See "Hicks-Beach" | ||||
| BEALE of Maidstone,Kent | ||||||
| 16 Oct 1660 | E | 1 | John Beale | c 1621 | 3 Oct 1684 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 3 Oct 1684 | ||||||
| BEALE of Drumlamford,Ayr | ||||||
| 3 Jul 1912 | UK | 1 | William Phipson Beale | 29 Oct 1839 | 13 Apr 1922 | 82 |
| to | MP for Ayrshire South 1906-1918 | |||||
| 13 Apr 1922 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BEARDMORE of Flichity,Inverness | ||||||
| 22 Jan 1914 | UK | William Beardmore | 16 Oct 1856 | 9 Apr 1936 | 79 | |
| to | He was subsequently created Baron | |||||
| 9 Apr 1936 | Invernairn (qv) in 1921 with which title | |||||
| the baronetcy then merged until its | ||||||
| extinction in 1936 | ||||||
| BEAUCHAMP-PROCTOR of Langley Park,Norfolk | ||||||
| 20 Feb 1745 | GB | see "Proctor-Beauchamp" | ||||
| BEAUCHAMP of Grosvenor Place,London | ||||||
| 27 Jun 1911 | UK | 1 | Edward Beauchamp | 12 Apr 1849 | 1 Feb 1925 | 75 |
| MP for Lowestoft 1906-1910 and 1910-1922 | ||||||
| 1 Feb 1925 | 2 | Brograve Campbell Beauchamp | 5 May 1897 | 25 Aug 1976 | 79 | |
| to | MP for Walthamstow East 1931-1945 | |||||
| 25 Aug 1976 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BEAUCHAMP of Woodborough,Somerset | ||||||
| 4 Oct 1918 | UK | 1 | Frank Beauchamp | 6 Oct 1866 | 17 Jun 1950 | 83 |
| 17 Jun 1950 | 2 | Douglas Clifford Beauchamp | 11 Mar 1903 | 13 Jun 1983 | 80 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Jun 1983 | ||||||
| BEAUMONT of Cole Orton,Leics | ||||||
| 17 Sep 1619 | E | 1 | Thomas Beaumont | 22 May 1625 | ||
| He was subsequently created Viscount | ||||||
| Beaumont of Swords (qv) in 1622 with | ||||||
| which title the baronetcy then merged | ||||||
| until its extinction in 1702 | ||||||
| BEAUMONT of Grace Dieu,Leics | ||||||
| 31 Jan 1627 | E | 1 | John Beaumont | c 1582 | 19 Apr 1627 | |
| Apr 1627 | 2 | John Beaumont | 24 Jun 1607 | Sep 1643 | 36 | |
| Sep 1643 | 3 | Thomas Beaumont | 29 Apr 1620 | 7 Jul 1686 | 66 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 7 Jul 1686 | ||||||
| BEAUMONT of Whitley,Yorks | ||||||
| 15 Aug 1628 | E | 1 | Richard Beaumont | 28 Oct 1631 | ||
| to | MP for Pontefract 1625 | |||||
| 28 Oct 1631 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BEAUMONT of Stoughton Grange,Leics | ||||||
| 21 Feb 1661 | E | 1 | Thomas Beaumont | 11 Aug 1676 | ||
| MP for Leicestershire 1654-1655,1656-1658 | ||||||
| and 1659. | ||||||
| He was created a baronet by Cromwell | ||||||
| 5 Mar 1658 which was disallowed at the | ||||||
| Restoration. | ||||||
| 11 Aug 1676 | 2 | Henry Beaumont | 12 Apr 1638 | 27 Jan 1689 | 50 | |
| MP for Leicester 1679-1689 | ||||||
| 27 Jan 1689 | 3 | Thomas Beaumont | c 1664 | 5 Dec 1690 | ||
| 5 Dec 1690 | 4 | George Beaumont | c 1664 | 9 Apr 1737 | ||
| MP for Leicester 1702-1737 | ||||||
| 9 Apr 1737 | 5 | Lewis Beaumont | c 1673 | 23 Dec 1738 | ||
| 23 Dec 1738 | 6 | George Beaumont | 16 Mar 1726 | 4 Feb 1762 | 25 | |
| 4 Feb 1762 | 7 | George Howland Beaumont | 6 Nov 1753 | 7 Feb 1827 | 73 | |
| MP for Beeralston 1790-1796 | ||||||
| 7 Feb 1827 | 8 | George Howland Willoughby Beaumont | 16 Dec 1799 | 7 Jun 1845 | 45 | |
| 7 Jun 1845 | 9 | George Howland Beaumont | 12 Sep 1828 | 8 Jun 1882 | 53 | |
| 8 Jun 1882 | 10 | George Howland William Beaumont | 10 Mar 1851 | 22 Jun 1914 | 63 | |
| 22 Jun 1914 | 11 | George Arthur Hamilton Beaumont | 18 Jan 1881 | 2 Oct 1933 | 52 | |
| For further information on this baronet, see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 2 Oct 1933 | 12 | George Howland Francis Beaumont | 24 Sep 1924 | 23 Mar 2011 | 86 | |
| to | Dormant on his death | |||||
| 23 Mar 2011 | ||||||
| BECHER of Ballygiblin,Cork | ||||||
| 30 Sep 1831 | UK | See "Wrixon-Becher" | ||||
| BECK of London | ||||||
| 1 Nov 1714 | GB | 1 | Justus Beck | 15 Dec 1722 | ||
| 15 Dec 1722 | 2 | Chamberlayne Beck | Aug 1730 | |||
| Aug 1730 | 3 | Justus Denis Beck | c 1706 | 12 Jan 1764 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 12 Jan 1764 | ||||||
| BECKETT of Leeds,York | ||||||
| 2 Nov 1813 | UK | 1 | John Beckett | 30 Apr 1743 | 18 Sep 1826 | 83 |
| 18 Sep 1826 | 2 | John Beckett | 17 May 1775 | 31 May 1847 | 72 | |
| MP for Haslemere 1826-1832 and Leeds | ||||||
| 1835-1837. PC 1817 | ||||||
| 31 May 1847 | 3 | Thomas Beckett | 1 Jan 1779 | 17 Nov 1872 | 93 | |
| 17 Nov 1872 | 4 | Edmund Beckett | 29 Jan 1787 | 24 May 1874 | 87 | |
| MP for W Riding Yorkshire 1841-1847 and | ||||||
| 1848-1859 | ||||||
| 24 May 1874 | 5 | Edmund Beckett | 12 May 1816 | 29 Apr 1905 | 88 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Grimthorpe (qv) in 1886 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| BECKETT of Kirkdale Manor,Yorks | ||||||
| 28 Jun 1921 | UK | 1 | William Gervase Beckett | 14 Jan 1866 | 24 Aug 1937 | 71 |
| MP for Whitby 1906-1922 and Leeds North | ||||||
| 1923-1929 | ||||||
| 24 Aug 1937 | 2 | Martyn Gervase Beckett | 6 Nov 1918 | 5 Aug 2001 | 82 | |
| 5 Aug 2001 | 3 | Richard Gervase Beckett | 27 Mar 1944 | |||
| BECKWITH of Aldborough,Yorks | ||||||
| For further information on this baronetcy,see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 15 Apr 1681 | E | 1 | Roger Beckwith | 6 Dec 1700 | ||
| 6 Dec 1700 | 2 | Roger Beckwith | 13 Jun 1682 | May 1743 | 60 | |
| May 1743 | 3 | Marmaduke Beckwith | Jan 1687 | c 1780 | ||
| c 1780 | 4 | Jonathan Beckwith | after 1811 | |||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became either | |||||
| after 1811 | extinct or dormant | |||||
| BEDELL of Hamerton,Hunts | ||||||
| 3 Jun 1622 | E | 1 | Capell Bedell | 27 Sep 1602 | by 6 Jan 1643 | |
| to | MP for Hertford 1626 and Huntingdonshire | |||||
| by 6 Jan 1643 | 1628 and Apr 1640 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| BEDINGFIELD of Oxborough,Norfolk | ||||||
| 2 Jan 1661 | E | see "Paston-Bedingfield" | ||||
| BEECHAM of Ewanville,Lancs | ||||||
| 17 Jul 1914 | UK | 1 | Joseph Beecham | 8 Jun 1848 | 23 Oct 1916 | 68 |
| 23 Oct 1916 | 2 | Thomas Beecham | 29 Apr 1879 | 8 Mar 1961 | 81 | |
| CH 1957 | ||||||
| 8 Mar 1961 | 3 | Adrian Welles Beecham | 4 Sep 1904 | 4 Sep 1982 | 78 | |
| 4 Sep 1982 | 4 | John Stratford Roland Beecham | 21 Apr 1940 | 5 Jan 2011 | 70 | |
| 5 Jan 2011 | 5 | Robert Adrian Beecham | 6 Jan 1942 | |||
| BEEVOR of Hethel,Norfolk | ||||||
| 22 Jan 1784 | GB | 1 | Thomas Beevor | 25 Oct 1726 | Jan 1814 | 87 |
| Jan 1814 | 2 | Thomas Beevor | 15 Nov 1753 | 10 Dec 1820 | 67 | |
| 10 Dec 1820 | 3 | Thomas Branthwaite Beevor | 7 Apr 1798 | 6 Apr 1879 | 80 | |
| 6 Apr 1879 | 4 | Thomas Beevor | 23 Aug 1823 | 18 Aug 1885 | 61 | |
| For information on the death of his eldest son | ||||||
| and heir, see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 18 Aug 1885 | 5 | Hugh Reeve Beevor | 31 Oct 1858 | 24 Feb 1939 | 80 | |
| 24 Feb 1939 | 6 | Thomas Lubbock Beevor | 1 Jun 1897 | 29 Apr 1943 | 45 | |
| 29 Apr 1943 | 7 | Thomas Agnew Beevor | 6 Jan 1929 | 21 Jan 2017 | 88 | |
| 21 Jan 2017 | 8 | Thomas Hugh Cunliffe Beevor | 1 Oct 1962 | |||
| BEIT of Tewin Water,Herts | ||||||
| 25 Feb 1924 | UK | 1 | Sir Otto John Beit | 7 Dec 1865 | 7 Dec 1930 | 65 |
| 7 Dec 1930 | 2 | Alfred Lane Beit | 19 Jan 1903 | 12 May 1994 | 91 | |
| to | MP for St.Pancras South East 1931-1945 | |||||
| 12 May 1994 | Extinct or dormant on his death | |||||
| BELASYSE of Newborough,Yorks | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1611 | E | 1 | Henry Belasyse | 14 Jun 1555 | 19 Aug 1624 | 69 |
| Aug 1624 | 2 | Thomas Belasyse | 1577 | 18 Apr 1652 | 74 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Fauconberg (qv) in 1627 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy merged until its | ||||||
| extinction in 1815 | ||||||
| BELL of Rounton Grange,Yorks | ||||||
| and Washington Hall,co.Durham | ||||||
| 21 Jul 1885 | UK | 1 | Isaac Lowthian Bell | 15 Feb 1816 | 20 Dec 1904 | 88 |
| MP for Durham North 1874 and Hartlepool | ||||||
| 1875-1880 | ||||||
| 20 Dec 1904 | 2 | Thomas Hugh Bell | 10 Feb 1844 | 29 Jun 1931 | 87 | |
| Lord Lieutenant N Riding Yorkshire 1906-1931 | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1931 | 3 | Maurice Hugh Lowthian Bell | 29 Mar 1871 | 17 Nov 1944 | 73 | |
| 17 Nov 1944 | 4 | Hugh Francis Bell | 7 Dec 1923 | 6 Aug 1970 | 46 | |
| 6 Aug 1970 | 5 | John Lowthian Bell | 14 Jun 1960 | |||
| BELL of Marlborough Terrace,Govan,Glasgow | ||||||
| 29 Aug 1895 | UK | 1 | James Bell | 16 Jan 1850 | 13 Dec 1929 | 79 |
| 13 Dec 1929 | 2 | John Bell | 19 Aug 1876 | 31 Dec 1943 | 67 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 31 Dec 1943 | ||||||
| BELL of Otterburn Hall,Northumberland | ||||||
| 18 Dec 1905 | UK | See "Morrison-Bell" | ||||
| BELL of Framewood,Bucks | ||||||
| 18 Jul 1908 | UK | 1 | John Charles Bell | 4 Sep 1843 | 2 Feb 1924 | 80 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 2 Feb 1924 | ||||||
| BELL of Mynthurst,Surrey | ||||||
| 25 Nov 1909 | UK | 1 | Henry Bell | 25 May 1848 | 16 Mar 1931 | 82 |
| 16 Mar 1931 | 2 | Eastman Bell | 27 Jul 1884 | 19 Dec 1955 | 71 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 19 Dec 1955 | ||||||
| BELL of Harpford,Devon | ||||||
| 18 Jul 1923 | UK | See "Morrison-Bell" | ||||
| BELLEW of Barmeath,Louth | ||||||
| 11 Dec 1688 | I | 1 | Patrick Bellew | Jan 1716 | ||
| Jan 1716 | 2 | John Bellew | c 1660 | 23 Jul 1734 | ||
| 23 Jul 1734 | 3 | Edward Bellew | c 1695 | Oct 1741 | ||
| Oct 1741 | 4 | John Bellew | 1728 | 2 Nov 1750 | 22 | |
| 2 Nov 1750 | 5 | Patrick Bellew | c 1735 | 5 Mar 1795 | ||
| 5 Mar 1795 | 6 | Edward Bellew | c 1760 | 15 Mar 1827 | ||
| 15 Mar 1827 | 7 | Patrick Bellew | 29 Jan 1798 | 10 Dec 1866 | 68 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Bellew (qv) in 1848 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| BELLEW of Mount Bellew,Galway | ||||||
| 15 Aug 1838 | UK | 1 | See "Grattan-Bellew" | |||
| BELLINGHAM of Hilsington,Westmorland | ||||||
| 30 May 1620 | E | 1 | Henry Bellingham | Oct 1650 | ||
| MP for Westmorland 1625-1626,1640 | ||||||
| and 1640-1645 | ||||||
| Oct 1650 | 2 | James Bellingham | 8 Sep 1623 | 26 Oct 1650 | 27 | |
| to | MP for Westmorland 1646-1648 | |||||
| Oct 1650 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BELLINGHAM of Dublin | ||||||
| 18 Mar 1667 | I | 1 | Daniel Bellingham | c 1620 | 1672 | |
| 1672 | 2 | Richard Bellingham | 21 Oct 1648 | Jun 1699 | 50 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Jun 1699 | ||||||
| BELLINGHAM of Castle Bellingham,co.Louth | ||||||
| 19 Apr 1796 | GB | 1 | William Bellingham | c 1755 | 27 Oct 1826 | |
| MP for Reigate 1784-1789 | ||||||
| 27 Oct 1826 | 2 | Alan Bellingham | 2 Feb 1776 | 26 Aug 1827 | 51 | |
| 26 Aug 1827 | 3 | Alan Edward Bellingham | 8 Oct 1800 | 19 Apr 1889 | 88 | |
| 19 Apr 1889 | 4 | Alan Henry Bellingham | 23 Aug 1846 | 9 Jun 1921 | 74 | |
| MP for co. Louth 1880-1885. Lord | ||||||
| Lieutenant Louth 1911-1921 | ||||||
| 9 Jun 1921 | 5 | Edward Henry Charles Patrick Bellingham | 26 Jan 1879 | 19 May 1956 | 77 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Louth 1921-1922 | ||||||
| 19 May 1956 | 6 | Roger Carroll Patrick Stephen Bellingham | 23 Apr 1911 | 6 Feb 1973 | 61 | |
| 6 Feb 1973 | 7 | Noel Peter Roger Bellingham | 4 Sep 1943 | 7 Jul 1999 | 55 | |
| 7 Jul 1999 | 8 | Anthony Edward Norman Bellingham | 24 Mar 1947 | Aug 2015 | 68 | |
| Aug 2015 | 9 | William Alexander Noel Henry Bellingham | 19 Aug 1991 | |||
| BELLOT of Moreton,Cheshire | ||||||
| 30 Jun 1663 | E | 1 | John Bellot | c 1619 | 14 Jul 1674 | |
| 14 Jul 1674 | 2 | Thomas Bellot | 22 Oct 1651 | Aug 1699 | 47 | |
| MP for Newcastle under Lyme 1679-1681, | ||||||
| 1690-1695 and 1698-1699 | ||||||
| Aug 1699 | 3 | Thomas Bellot | 18 Jul 1679 | 22 Jan 1709 | 29 | |
| MP for Newcastle under Lyme 1705-1706 | ||||||
| and 1708-1709 | ||||||
| 22 Jan 1709 | 3 | John Bellot | after 1679 | 3 Feb 1714 | 37 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 3 Feb 1714 | ||||||
| BELSHES of Clifton Hall,Edinburgh | ||||||
| 17 Jun 1706 | NS | See "Wishart" | ||||
| BEMPDE-JOHNSTONE of Hackness,Yorks | ||||||
| 6 Jul 1795 | GB | See "Vanden-Bempde-Johnstone" | ||||
| BENDISH of Steeple Bumpstead,Essex | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1611 | E | 1 | Thomas Bendish | c 1568 | 26 Mar 1636 | |
| 26 Mar 1636 | 2 | Thomas Bendish | c 1607 | c 1674 | ||
| c 1674 | 3 | John Bendish | c 1630 | 22 Apr 1707 | ||
| 22 Apr 1707 | 4 | Henry Bendish | c 1674 | 4 Sep 1717 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 4 Sep 1717 | ||||||
| BENN of Old Knoll,Surrey | ||||||
| 15 Jul 1914 | UK | 1 | Sir John Williams Benn | 13 Nov 1850 | 10 Apr 1922 | 71 |
| MP for St.George's 1892-1895 and | ||||||
| Devonport 1904-1910 | ||||||
| 10 Apr 1922 | 2 | Ernest John Pickstone Benn | 25 Jun 1875 | 17 Jan 1954 | 78 | |
| 17 Jan 1954 | 3 | John Andrews Benn | 28 Jan 1904 | 19 Dec 1984 | 80 | |
| 19 Dec 1984 | 4 | James Jonathan Benn | 27 Jul 1933 | 3 Oct 2023 | 90 | |
| 3 Oct 2023 | 5 | Robert Ernest Benn | 17 Oct 1963 | |||
| BENN of Rollesby,Norfolk | ||||||
| 17 Jun 1920 | UK | 1 | Ion Hamilton Benn | 31 Mar 1863 | 12 Aug 1961 | 98 |
| MP for Greenwich 1910-1922 | ||||||
| 12 Aug 1961 | 2 | Patrick Ion Hamilton Benn | 26 Feb 1922 | 10 Apr 1992 | 70 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 10 Apr 1992 | ||||||
| BENN of Plymouth,Devon | ||||||
| 26 Jul 1926 | B | 1 | Arthur Shirley Benn | 20 Dec 1858 | 13 Jun 1937 | 78 |
| to | He was subsequently created Baron | |||||
| 13 Jun 1937 | Glenravel in 1936 (qv). Both titles | |||||
| extinct on his death | ||||||
| BENNET of Bechampton,Bucks | ||||||
| 17 Jul 1627 | E | 1 | Simon Bennet | c 1584 | 21 Aug 1631 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 24 Aug 1631 | ||||||
| BENNET of Babraham,Cambs | ||||||
| 22 Nov 1660 | E | 1 | Thomas Bennet | c 1597 | 28 Jun 1667 | |
| 28 Jun 1667 | 2 | Levinus Bennet | 18 Jan 1631 | 5 Dec 1693 | 62 | |
| MP for Cambridgeshire 1679-1693 | ||||||
| 5 Dec 1693 | 3 | Richard Bennet | 15 Jul 1673 | 23 May 1701 | 27 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 23 May 1701 | ||||||
| BENNET of Grubet,Roxburgh | ||||||
| 18 Nov 1670 | NS | 1 | William Bennet | 1710 | ||
| 1710 | 2 | William Bennet | 23 Dec 1729 | |||
| MP for Scotland 1707-1708 | ||||||
| 23 Dec 1729 | 3 | William Bennet | 3 Jan 1733 | |||
| 3 Jan 1733 | 4 | David Bennet | Apr 1741 | |||
| Apr 1741 | 5 | John Bennet | c 1765 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1765 | ||||||
| BENNET of Fife | ||||||
| 28 Jul 1671 | NS | 1 | George Bennet | c 1700 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1700 | ||||||
| BENNETT of Kirklington,Notts | ||||||
| 31 Jul 1929 | UK | 1 | Albert James Bennett | 17 Sep 1872 | 14 Dec 1945 | 73 |
| MP for Mansfield 1922-1923 and Nottingham | ||||||
| Central 1924-1930 | ||||||
| 14 Dec 1945 | 2 | Charles Wilfrid Bennett | 15 Mar 1898 | 25 Apr 1952 | 54 | |
| 25 Apr 1952 | 3 | Ronald Wilfrid Murdoch Bennett | 25 Mar 1930 | 10 Nov 2012 | 82 | |
| 10 Nov 2012 | 4 | Algernon James Bennett | 13 Jan 1962 | |||
| BENSLEY of Marylebone,London | ||||||
| 25 Jun 1801 | UK | 1 | William Bensley | c 1737 | 17 Dec 1809 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 17 Dec 1809 | ||||||
| BENYON of Englefield,Berks | ||||||
| 8 Jul 1958 | UK | 1 | Henry Arthur Benyon | 9 Dec 1884 | 15 Jun 1959 | 74 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 15 Jun 1959 | ||||||
| Sir Thomas Barrett-Lennard, 2nd baronet | ||||||
| The following is extracted from "The Emperor of the United States of America and Other | ||||||
| Magnificent British Eccentrics" by Catherine Caufield (Routledge & Kegan Paul, London 1981) | ||||||
| It is not uncommon for a country squire of ancient lineage to have his own family cemetery, | ||||||
| but in Sir Thomas Barrett-Leonard's neatly laid out burial grounds at Belhus in Essex, the | ||||||
| plots were reserved exclusively for animals. Funeral services for the dogs, cats and horses | ||||||
| who made up a major part of Sir Thomas' entourage were conducted by the vicar of nearby | ||||||
| Aveley. A footman bearing aloft a miniature coffin, led Sir Thomas in a long white gown, and | ||||||
| the vicar to the graveside for the solemn rites. | ||||||
| Sir Thomas' love of animals was not restricted to pets. Workers on the estate were under | ||||||
| orders to keep a fresh bowl of water in the corn rick for the rats, and it was strictly | ||||||
| forbidden to harm any members of Belhus' thriving rodent population. If a rat had to be | ||||||
| disturbed at all, it was put in a sack, taken to the edge of the woods and there released. | ||||||
| Unlike many an animal lover, Sir Thomas was kind to humans as well. Rather than disturb his | ||||||
| butler, he often answered the door himself, with the result that many visitors to Belhus | ||||||
| were initially shocked to find themselves admitted to so fine a house by so shabby an | ||||||
| attendant. As the years passed Sir Thomas' interest in his appearance declined, and on | ||||||
| several occasions he received tips from strangers on the estate who mistook him for a | ||||||
| gatekeeper. There were, however, more awkward moments. In 1900 Sir Thomas was the | ||||||
| chairman of the Essex Asylum Committee and while returning from a meeting at a local | ||||||
| institution one evening, he decided to take a short cut through some woods and fields. | ||||||
| He was stopped by a policeman who found his appearance and presence in the area | ||||||
| suspicious. 'Where are you going?' the policeman demanded. 'To Belhus.' 'And where have | ||||||
| you come from?' 'Brentwood Lunatic Asylum.' 'Knew it!' cried the policeman and the | ||||||
| 'escaped patient' was handcuffed and transported back to the Asylum. Finally, after much | ||||||
| discussion, the policeman was persuaded of his error and Sir Thomas was allowed to return | ||||||
| to his study where he could once again indulge in his hobbies of constructing riddles in | ||||||
| Latin and translating nonsense poems into classical Greek. | ||||||
| Sir Francis Laurence John Barrow, 4th baronet | ||||||
| Sir Francis appears to have disappeared from the public's view at some point around 1912, | ||||||
| and his whereabouts were apparently unknown to his family. | ||||||
| On 14 January 1931, the British Broadcasting Corporation included an item in its | ||||||
| transmission, the wording of which was "Will Sir Francis Barrow, baronet, who was last | ||||||
| heard of 18 years ago and whose present whereabouts are unknown, go at once to Cromer | ||||||
| House, Hampton Road, Teddington, where his son, Wilfred J. W. C. Barrow is dangerously ill." | ||||||
| On 21 April 1932, up bobbed Sir Francis, when he appeared at the Registry Office in order | ||||||
| to marry, as his second wife, Edith Townsend. Sir Francis is quoted as saying that he had | ||||||
| renounced the use of his title 20 years earlier and had been living in England during the | ||||||
| whole period of his disappearance. | ||||||
| No doubt the timing behind his re-emergence in April 1932 in order to re-marry was dictated | ||||||
| by the death of his first wife in February 1932. The following article, which appeared in the | ||||||
| Darwin 'Northern Territory Times' on 22 April 1932, is of interest:- | ||||||
| 'Nineteen years of unfulfilled hope for the return of her vanished husband were ended by | ||||||
| the death of Lady Barrow, wife of Sir Francis Barrow, at her home at Ravenscourt Park, | ||||||
| Hammersmith, W. | ||||||
| 'Sir Francis, a baronet, and descendant of the Sir John Barrow who in the 18th century was | ||||||
| for many years Secretary to the Admiralty, and founder of the Royal Geographical Society, | ||||||
| left his home 19 years ago, and has never been heard of again. | ||||||
| 'Sir Francis was born in 1862 and married in 1890. | ||||||
| 'Lady Barrow always hoped that one day he would communicate with his family. "I feel | ||||||
| convinced that he is alive and in England," she used to say. "Something tells me that he | ||||||
| will come back." | ||||||
| 'In January 1931, when her son, Mr. William John Wilson Croker Barrow, was seriously ill at | ||||||
| his home at Teddington, Middlesex, an S.O.S. was broadcast asking Sir Francis, last heard of | ||||||
| 18 years ago, and whose whereabouts are unknown, to go to him. There was no response, | ||||||
| but a few days after the broadcast it was said that a man strongly resembling Sir Francis | ||||||
| had denied his identity to people who approached him.' | ||||||
| Sir Herbert Henry Bartlett, 1st baronet and his son, Hardington Arthur Bartlett | ||||||
| Michael De-la-Noy, in his book "The Honours System" (Allison & Busby, London, 1985), when | ||||||
| discussing the future of the baronetage, states that "At least two baronets in recent times | ||||||
| have gone missing, Sir Herbert Bartlett, in 1921, in best Agatha Christie style, by vanishing | ||||||
| overnight during a crossing from Dover to Ostend......." | ||||||
| However, this was not the case at all, and the purpose of this note, therefore, is to correct | ||||||
| this error. It was Sir Herbert's son and heir who disappeared in this manner in 1920, rather | ||||||
| than 1921, as is shown in the following report which appeared in 'The Times' on 20 January | ||||||
| 1920:- | ||||||
| 'Mr. Hardington Bartlett, the son and heir of Sir Herbert H. Bartlett, Bt., at one time chairman | ||||||
| of the firm of Perry and Co., contractors, was, it is feared, swept overboard from the Belgian | ||||||
| steamer, Pieter de Coninck, on Sunday week [11 January 1920] and drowned. | ||||||
| 'It was known that Mr. Bartlett left Dover in the Pieter de Coninck. He was seen on board by | ||||||
| several friends and was talking to one a few moments before the vessel was swept by a | ||||||
| gigantic wave. From that time nothing has been heard of him. On Tuesday last a messenger | ||||||
| arrived from Belgium to ask whether he had sailed as he was not on board the Pieter de | ||||||
| Coninck when it reached Ostend. Mrs. Hardington Bartlett, her son, and Mr. Norman Bartlett, a | ||||||
| brother, immediately left for Ostend. They returned on Friday after making every inquiry | ||||||
| possible. | ||||||
| A further report in 'The Times' on 16 March 1920 states that:- | ||||||
| 'Presumption of Death in the Estate of Hardington Arthur Bartlett, presumed deceased (before | ||||||
| the Rt. Hon. Sir Henry Duke, President [of the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division]) - | ||||||
| 'This was a motion by Mrs. Irene Bartlett for leave to swear that the death of her husband, Mr. | ||||||
| Hardington Arthur Bartlett, occurred on or since January 11, 1920. | ||||||
| Mr. Bartlett, who was the eldest surviving son of Sir Herbert Henry Bartlett, Bt., and was | ||||||
| managing director of Messrs. Perry and Co., of Victoria-street, was washed overboard from the | ||||||
| Belgian packet boat S.S. Pieter de Coninck on that date. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Glazebrook said that on January 11 last Mr. Bartlett embarked at Dover in the S.S. Pieter | ||||||
| de Coninck, bound for Ostend, with the object of going to Brussels on business in connexion | ||||||
| with certain reconstruction schemes which his firm had arranged to carry out. While on the | ||||||
| voyage the vessel encountered sever weather, and was swept by a heavy sea. Mr. Bartlett | ||||||
| and a number of other passengers were swept overboard. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Glazebrook read the affidavit of Mr. Abraham Lazarus Freeman, another passenger. He said: | ||||||
| "When about halfway across to Ostend the vessel was struck by a very heavy sea, which | ||||||
| appeared to envelop it. It seemed for some seconds that the vessel was submerged under a | ||||||
| raging sea, and that I was being swept away with everything movable on deck. I found as | ||||||
| the vessel righted herself that I had been caught, as were a few other passengers, by the | ||||||
| bulwarks round the vessel's side. A short time before the occurrence I saw Mr. Bartlett | ||||||
| going towards the bows of the vessel, and I am convinced that when the vessel was struck | ||||||
| and heeled over he had not the least possible chance to escape from being swept | ||||||
| overboard into the sea." | ||||||
| 'The President granted leave to the applicant to swear that Mr. Bartlett died on January 11 | ||||||
| last.' | ||||||
| The special remainder to the baronetcy of Bass created in 1882 | ||||||
| From the "London Gazette" of 12 May 1882 (issue 25106, page 2221):- | ||||||
| 'The Queen has been pleased to direct Letters Patent to be passed under the Great Seal | ||||||
| granting the dignity of a Baronet of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland unto | ||||||
| Michael Arthur Bass, of Rangemore Hall, in the parish of Tatenhill, in the county of Stafford, | ||||||
| Esq. and the heirs male of his body lawfully begotten; with remainder in default of such issue | ||||||
| male to Hamar Alfred Bass, of Needwood House, in the parish of Rolleston, in the said county | ||||||
| of Stafford, Esq. brother of the said Michael Arthur Bass, and the heirs male of his body lawfully | ||||||
| begotten.' | ||||||
| The Bastard baronetcy gazetted in September 1779 | ||||||
| In "The Complete Baronetage" this baronetcy is shown as having been gazetted in September | ||||||
| 1779, but the warrant for the creation of the baronetcy never passed the Great Seal. In Burke's | ||||||
| "Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies," the relevant entry reads:- | ||||||
| "William Bastard, esq., of Kitley, descended from a very ancient Devonshire family, having during | ||||||
| the war with France rendered essential service to government by conducting from Plymouth to | ||||||
| Exeter a large number of French prisoners confined in the arsenal of the former place, for the | ||||||
| removal of whom no troops could be spared from the garrison, already insufficient for the | ||||||
| defence of the place, was created a Baronet by King George III. The title was gazetted in 1779, | ||||||
| but has never been adopted. Had it been assumed by the family, Edmund Pollexfen Bastard, | ||||||
| esq., of Kitley, in Devon, late M.P. for that county, would be the baronet [in 1838]." | ||||||
| If the baronetcy ever came into existence, which is highly doubtful, its descent would have | ||||||
| been as follows:- | ||||||
| 2. The 1st baronet's son, John Pollexfen Bastard (18 Sep 1756-4 April 1816). He was MP for | ||||||
| Truro 1783-1784 and Devon 1784-1816. | ||||||
| 3. The 2nd baronet's brother, Edmund Bastard (7 Feb 1758-10 Jun 1816). He was MP for | ||||||
| Dartmouth 1787-1812. | ||||||
| 4. The 3rd baronet's son, Edmund Pollexfen Bastard (12 Jul 1784-8 Jun 1838). He was MP for | ||||||
| Dartmouth 1812-1816 and Devon 1816-1830. | ||||||
| On his death the baronetcy, if ever such existed, would have become extinct. | ||||||
| Sir George Arthur Hamilton Beaumont, 11th baronet | ||||||
| Under the heading of "Baronet who ran a fruit shop," the following article appeared in the | ||||||
| London "Daily Mail" on 3 October 1933:- | ||||||
| 'Sir George Beaumont, the sporting baronet, of Cole Orton Hall, Leicestershire, died yesterday | ||||||
| at Stork House, Lambourn, Berkshire, where he was taken ill while staying with Capt. O. Bell, | ||||||
| the racehorse trainer. He was 52 years of age. | ||||||
| 'Early this year Sir George, a descendant of one of the oldest families in the land, surprised the | ||||||
| inhabitants of the villages near his home by calling from door to door selling garden produce at | ||||||
| considerably less than the market price. | ||||||
| 'Most of his customers were his own tenants, and, as he himself described it, "It was good | ||||||
| going. I stood in the van and encouraged the people to buy. The gardener took the money." | ||||||
| 'Everything sold was from Sir George's own garden, and he said: "I don't expect to make a | ||||||
| profit, but I do expect to pay for the gardener and the garden." | ||||||
| 'A few weeks later - in May - girls wearing overalls in Sir George's racing colours, French grey | ||||||
| and scarlet, served customers in the shop he had bought at Coalville, Leicestershire, for the | ||||||
| sale of fruit, flowers, and vegetables. | ||||||
| 'In this venture Sir George took into partnership his eight-years-old son and heir, George | ||||||
| Howland Francis Beaumont, and he flew his own flag over the shop, which was officially opened | ||||||
| by Mr. Frank Hodges, former secretary of the Miners' Federation. | ||||||
| 'Sir George, who was a major in the King's Royal Rifle Corps, served in the war from 1914 to | ||||||
| 1918 and was twice wounded. Once known as "the bachelor baronet," he married, ten years | ||||||
| ago, Miss Renee Northey, daughter of General Sir E[dward] Northey, a former Governor of | ||||||
| Kenya Colony.' | ||||||
| The Beckwith baronetcy created in 1681 | ||||||
| Sir Roger Beckwith, the first baronet, shot himself in December 1700, and was succeeded by | ||||||
| his oldest surviving son, another Sir Roger Beckwith. The 1st baronet's eldest son, Arthur, is | ||||||
| said to have died shortly before his father, "beyond the seas." | ||||||
| In an attempt to discover news of Arthur Beckwith, the following notice appeared in 'The | ||||||
| London Gazette' of 16 January 1701:- | ||||||
| 'Whereas Sir Roger Beckwith, of Aldborough in Yorkshire, Baronet, lately deceased, hath left | ||||||
| a considerable Estate to his eldest Son, Arthur Beckwith, Esq., who has not been heard of for | ||||||
| several years last past, but as is supposed went to Sea; These are to desire any Person that | ||||||
| can give Information of the said Arthur Beckwith, Esq., whether living or dead, That they would | ||||||
| be pleased to give notice thereof to Sir Wm. Caley, of Brompton in Yorkshire, Bar. or to Francis | ||||||
| Wyvill, in York, Esq., who are appointed Trustees of the said Arthur Beckwith's Estate, that (if | ||||||
| living) he may be acquainted with his Father's Death, and come and take Possession of the | ||||||
| Estate fallen to him.' | ||||||
| No results appear to have been achieved by this notice, since the next son, Sir Roger, | ||||||
| succeeded to the baronetcy. Like his father before him, the second baronet shot himself in | ||||||
| May 1743. | ||||||
| Thomas Edward Beevor (9 May 1854-6 August 1879), eldest son of Sir Thomas Beevor, | ||||||
| 4th baronet [GB 1784] | ||||||
| Thomas Beevor, eldest son and heir of his father, the 4th baronet, committed suicide in Denver, | ||||||
| Colorado in August 1879. The following report appeared in the Denver "Republican" of 7 | ||||||
| August 1879:- | ||||||
| 'Shortly before noon yesterday, Coroner M'Hatton was notified that a young English gentleman | ||||||
| had been found dead in his bed at Charpiot's Hotel. Having secured a jury, the coroner at once | ||||||
| proceeded to the designated place, and found the story to be but too true. There, lying upon | ||||||
| the bed in room 18, was found the body of Thomas Edward Beevor, of Norfolk, England, the | ||||||
| limbs drawn up, and foam issuing from the mouth. | ||||||
| 'The deceased gentleman had two friends here - John T. Carter and Ferdinand De la Kethulle. | ||||||
| He had been suffering considerably from Bright's disease of late years, but was thought, under | ||||||
| the care of Dr. Lathrop, to be improving. On Wednesday afternoon, for the first time in the | ||||||
| experience of his friends, he was observed to be somewhat gloomy and downcast. He was | ||||||
| naturally of a cheerful disposition, and did not usually give way to attacks of melancholy. But | ||||||
| on this occasion his friends could not but observe that through his assumed cheerfulness he | ||||||
| was very downhearted. Wednesday evening was passed by the three friends in company in | ||||||
| the rooms occupied by Carter and De la Kethulle, and at about ten o'clock, those gentlemen | ||||||
| having gone to bed, Beevor turned down the gas and retired to his own room. All these | ||||||
| gentlemen are late risers, and when Carter and Kethulle came down to breakfast yesterday | ||||||
| morning, between ten and eleven o'clock, they noticed that their friend Beevor was not yet | ||||||
| come; and after waiting some time, resolved to go up and awaken him. Upon knocking at the | ||||||
| door of his room there was no answer, when a shade of suspicion may have, perhaps, crossed | ||||||
| their minds. There is a window to the room which Beevor occupied, and, pulling up the | ||||||
| curtain, they saw their friend lying on one side, his body almost nude, his limbs drawn up, and | ||||||
| foam in considerable quantities about his mouth. Thinking that perhaps he was ill, Dr. Lathrop, | ||||||
| his attending physician, was sent for. When the doctor arrived, and entrance was forced | ||||||
| through the window, and poor Beevor was found a corpse. The shock was terrible. So far had | ||||||
| they considered their comrade from the grim embrace of death, that this sudden disclosure | ||||||
| was almost paralysing. | ||||||
| 'In making an examination of the corpse and its surroundings, a letter, neatly folded and add- | ||||||
| ressed to Mr. Carter, was found. It reads as follows:- | ||||||
| "My Dear Jack - Thirty-six hours ago I signed my own death warrant: for twenty-four hours I | ||||||
| kept up my spirits, but the last twelve, as you have more than once noticed, I turned a little | ||||||
| blue. Philosopher I believed myself to be, but still I am fond of life and living, and it is hard, I | ||||||
| find, to make one's mind up to cut oneself off from a world which, though far from perfect, is, | ||||||
| after all, a very lovable world. Hardest of all, to leave old friends like yourself, staunch, true, | ||||||
| and tried, from the first to the bitter end. I don't want, at this late hour, when the curtain is | ||||||
| about to fall on the last act of the drama of a mis-spent life, to eulogise, but I speak truth | ||||||
| when I say I feel leaving you - yes! I feel it deeply. As for that good hearted soul Kethulle, | ||||||
| who would let me live on his ranch, ride his horses, eat his food and never show that I had | ||||||
| outlived my welcome, may he have the happiness and good fortune he deserves. Tell Boodle | ||||||
| and Huntingdon that in my last hours I thought of them as of my best friends. Telegraph the | ||||||
| event to Roche, at the Clarendon, and arrange with Roche about my bills. I owe him about | ||||||
| 160 dols. He can draw on Sir Thomas, if Sir Thomas knows, and I imagine he will duly receive. | ||||||
| The rest I leave to you. Goodbye, dear old fellow, and in the aftertime think as kindly as you | ||||||
| can of your old friend, | ||||||
| TOM E. BEEVOR" | ||||||
| 'The writing was in a bold, legible hand, and gave in itself no index to the fearful deed its | ||||||
| author was at the time contemplating. Overwhelmed with sorrow and grief, the sad truth slowly | ||||||
| dawned upon the minds of these faithful friends, and in a few minutes the whole house was | ||||||
| startled by the terrible announcement. | ||||||
| The coroner was notified, and, arriving a short time elater, began a casual survey of the room. | ||||||
| A small bottle of morphine, with a quantity of the deadly poison still remaining, was found. This | ||||||
| told the terrible story. Satisfied beyond doubt, the officer took the remains in charge and | ||||||
| conveyed them to Mr. Walley's undertaking rooms. Here an inquest was held which, though | ||||||
| brief, was sufficient to show the true state of affairs. | ||||||
| 'Dr. Lathrop testified to having seen the deceased at about eight o'clock on the evening | ||||||
| previous; knew his name to be Thomas Beevor, and had been treating him for three months | ||||||
| past for Bright's disease of the kidneys. The doctor having made an examination of the body, | ||||||
| gave as his opinion that death was caused by a dose of morphine, administered by the hand | ||||||
| of deceased himself; he had known Beevor very well, but never heard him express disgust with | ||||||
| life, or anything that would lead to the suspicion of his intention to take his own life. | ||||||
| 'Mr. John Carter, one of the friends of the deceased, was examined by the coroner, in the | ||||||
| presence of the jury, but could throw little or no light upon the case. He had known the | ||||||
| deceased for about twelve years. At the time of his death he was 26 years old. He had recently | ||||||
| returned from a trip to Leadville, whither he had gone on a sight-seeing tour. When he went | ||||||
| out of Carter's room on the evening previous he had noticed nothing peculiar in his actions or | ||||||
| manner and did not suspect that he had any other difficulty than the troublesome Bright's | ||||||
| disease. The witness knew of no reason whatever for the act. He had thought his friend [was] | ||||||
| improving in health. His father was Sir Thomas Beevor of Norfolk, England, who had been | ||||||
| supplying him with funds since his coming to America. The witness said that the deceased had | ||||||
| intended going to Leadville again in a few days. | ||||||
| 'So ended the case. It was clearly a case of suicide, and the coroner's jury after a slight delib- | ||||||
| eration rendered a verdict that the deceased had come to his death from a dose of morphine | ||||||
| administered by his own hand.' | ||||||
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