| BARONETAGE | ||||||
| Last updated 01/03/2022 | ||||||
| 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 | ||||||
| BOYNTON of Barmston,Yorks | ||||||
| For information on the ghost of Burton Agnes Hall, | ||||||
| home of the Boynton baronets, see the note at | ||||||
| the foot of this page | ||||||
| 15 May 1618 | E | 1 | Sir Matthew Boynton | 26 Jan 1591 | 12 Mar 1647 | 56 |
| MP for Hedon 1620 and Scarborough | ||||||
| 1645-1647 | ||||||
| 12 Mar 1647 | 2 | Francis Boynton | c 1618 | 9 Sep 1695 | ||
| 9 Sep 1695 | 3 | Griffith Boynton | 8 Dec 1664 | 22 Dec 1731 | 67 | |
| 22 Dec 1731 | 4 | Francis Boynton | 17 Nov 1677 | 16 Sep 1739 | 61 | |
| MP for Hedon 1734-1739 | ||||||
| 16 Sep 1739 | 5 | Griffith Boynton | 24 May 1712 | 18 Oct 1761 | 49 | |
| 18 Oct 1761 | 6 | Griffith Boynton | 22 Feb 1745 | 6 Jan 1778 | 32 | |
| MP for Beverley 1772-1774 | ||||||
| 6 Jan 1778 | 7 | Griffith Boynton | 17 Jul 1769 | 10 Jul 1801 | 31 | |
| 10 Jul 1801 | 8 | Francis Boynton | 28 Mar 1777 | 19 Nov 1832 | 55 | |
| 19 Nov 1832 | 9 | Henry Boynton | 22 Mar 1778 | 28 Aug 1854 | 76 | |
| 28 Aug 1854 | 10 | Henry Boynton | 2 Mar 1811 | 25 Jun 1869 | 58 | |
| 25 Jun 1869 | 11 | Henry Somerville Boynton | 23 Jun 1844 | 11 Apr 1899 | 54 | |
| 11 Apr 1899 | 12 | Griffith Henry Boynton | 31 May 1849 | 19 Oct 1937 | 88 | |
| 19 Oct 1937 | 13 | Griffith Wilfrid Norman Boynton | 30 May 1889 | 10 Mar 1966 | 76 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 10 Mar 1966 | ||||||
| BRABAZON of Newpark,Mayo | ||||||
| 16 Dec 1797 | I | 1 | Anthony Brabazon | c 1750 | 3 Jul 1803 | |
| 3 Jul 1803 | 2 | William John Brabazon | 24 Oct 1840 | |||
| to | MP for Mayo 1835-1840 | |||||
| 24 Oct 1840 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BRACEWELL-SMITH of Keighley,Yorks | ||||||
| 28 Nov 1947 | UK | 1 | Sir Bracewell Smith | 29 Jun 1884 | 12 Jan 1966 | 81 |
| MP for Dulwich 1932-1945 | ||||||
| 12 Jan 1966 | 2 | George Bracewell Smith | 5 Nov 1912 | 18 Sep 1976 | 63 | |
| 18 Sep 1976 | 3 | Guy Bracewell Smith | 12 Dec 1952 | 1983 | 30 | |
| 1983 | 4 | Charles Bracewell Smith | 13 Oct 1955 | |||
| BRADFORD of South Audley Street,Westminster | ||||||
| 24 Jul 1902 | UK | 1 | Sir Edward Ridley Colborne Bradford | 27 Jul 1836 | 13 May 1911 | 74 |
| 13 May 1911 | 2 | Evelyn Ridley Bradford | 16 Apr 1869 | 14 Sep 1914 | 45 | |
| 14 Sep 1914 | 3 | Edward Montagu Andrew Bradford | 30 Nov 1910 | 1 Apr 1952 | 41 | |
| For information on the death of this baronet, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 1 Apr 1952 | 4 | John Ridley Evelyn Bradford | 14 Sep 1941 | 23 Dec 1954 | 13 | |
| For information on the death of this baronet, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 23 Dec 1954 | 5 | Edward Alexander Slade Bradford | 18 Jun 1952 | |||
| BRADFORD of Mawddwy,Merioneth | ||||||
| 26 Jan 1931 | UK | 1 | Sir John Rose Bradford | 7 May 1863 | 7 Apr 1935 | 71 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 7 Apr 1935 | ||||||
| BRADSHAIGH of Haigh,Lancs | ||||||
| 17 Nov 1679 | E | 1 | Roger Bradshaigh | 14 Jan 1628 | 31 Mar 1684 | 56 |
| MP for Lancashire 1660 | ||||||
| 31 Mar 1684 | 2 | Roger Bradshaigh | c 1649 | 17 Jun 1687 | ||
| MP for Wigan 1679 and Lancashire 1685- | ||||||
| 1687 | ||||||
| 17 Jun 1687 | 3 | Roger Bradshaigh | 29 Apr 1675 | 25 Feb 1747 | 71 | |
| MP for Wigan 1695-1747 | ||||||
| 25 Feb 1747 | 4 | Roger Bradshaigh | c 1710 | c 1779 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1779 | ||||||
| BRADSTREET of Castilla,Dublin | ||||||
| 14 Jul 1759 | I | 1 | Simon Bradstreet | 1693 | 26 Apr 1762 | 68 |
| 26 Apr 1762 | 2 | Simon Bradstreet | 22 Mar 1728 | 16 Dec 1773 | 45 | |
| 16 Dec 1773 | 3 | Samuel Bradstreet | Oct 1738 | 2 May 1791 | 52 | |
| 2 May 1791 | 4 | Simon Bradstreet | 25 Nov 1772 | 25 Oct 1853 | 80 | |
| 25 Oct 1853 | 5 | John Valentine Bradstreet | 23 Sep 1815 | 21 Nov 1889 | 74 | |
| 21 Nov 1889 | 6 | Edward Simon Bradstreet | 24 Aug 1820 | 30 Mar 1905 | 84 | |
| 30 Mar 1905 | 7 | Edward Simon Victor Bradstreet | 27 May 1856 | 13 Jan 1924 | 67 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Jan 1924 | ||||||
| BRADY of Hazelbrook,Dublin | ||||||
| 19 Jan 1869 | UK | 1 | Maziere Brady | 20 Jul 1796 | 13 Apr 1871 | 74 |
| Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer [I] | ||||||
| 1840-1846.Lord Chancellor [I] 1846-1852, | ||||||
| 1853-1858 and 1859-1866. PC [I] 1839 | ||||||
| 13 Apr 1871 | 2 | Francis William Brady | 22 Jul 1824 | 26 Aug 1909 | 85 | |
| 26 Aug 1909 | 3 | Robert Maziere Brady | 13 Dec 1854 | 22 Sep 1909 | 54 | |
| 22 Sep 1909 | 4 | William Longfield Brady | 16 Jul 1864 | 7 Apr 1927 | 62 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 7 Apr 1927 | ||||||
| BRAHAM of New Windsor,Berks | ||||||
| 16 Apr 1662 | E | 1 | Richard Braham | c 1613 | Apr 1676 | |
| to | MP for Windsor 1641 and 1661-1677 | |||||
| Apr 1676 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BRAIN of Reading,Berks | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1954 | UK | 1 | Walter Russell Brain | 23 Oct 1895 | 29 Dec 1966 | 71 |
| He was subsequently created Baron Brain | ||||||
| (qv) in 1962 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| BRAITHWAITE of Poston,Hereford | ||||||
| 18 Dec 1802 | UK | 1 | John Braithwaite | 3 Feb 1739 | Aug 1803 | 64 |
| Aug 1803 | 2 | George Charles Boughton | 3 Dec 1762 | 9 Mar 1809 | 46 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 9 Mar 1809 | ||||||
| BRAITHWAITE of Burnham,Somerset | ||||||
| 28 Jan 1954 | UK | 1 | Joseph Gurney Braithwaite | 24 May 1895 | 25 Jun 1958 | 63 |
| to | MP for Hillsborough 1931-1935, Holderness | |||||
| 25 Jun 1958 | 1939-1950 and Bristol NW 1950-1955 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| BRAMHALL of Rathmullen,Meath | ||||||
| 31 May 1662 | I | 1 | Thomas Bramhall | 1667 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1667 | ||||||
| BRAMWELL of Hyde Park Gate,London | ||||||
| 25 Jan 1889 | UK | 1 | Frederick Joseph Bramwell | 7 Mar 1818 | 30 Nov 1903 | 85 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 30 Nov 1903 | ||||||
| BRASSEY of Apethorpe,Northants | ||||||
| 29 Nov 1922 | UK | 1 | Henry Leonard Campbell Brassey | 7 Mar 1870 | 22 Oct 1958 | 88 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Brassey of Apethorpe (qv) in 1938 with | ||||||
| which title the baronetcy remains | ||||||
| merged | ||||||
| BRENTON of London | ||||||
| 24 Dec 1812 | UK | 1 | Jahleel Brenton | 22 Aug 1770 | 3 Apr 1844 | 73 |
| 3 Apr 1844 | 2 | Lancelot Charles Lee Brenton | 16 Feb 1807 | 13 Jun 1862 | 55 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Jun 1862 | ||||||
| BRERETON of Hanford,Cheshire | ||||||
| 10 Mar 1627 | E | 1 | William Brereton | 1604 | 7 Apr 1661 | 56 |
| MP for Cheshire 1628-1629 | ||||||
| 7 Apr 1661 | 2 | Thomas Brereton | 1632 | 7 Jan 1674 | 41 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 7 Jan 1674 | ||||||
| BRICKWOOD of Portsmouth,Hants | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1927 | UK | 1 | Sir John Brickwood | 23 Jun 1852 | 12 Feb 1932 | 79 |
| For further information on this baronet,see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 12 Feb 1932 | 2 | Rupert Redvers Brickwood | 18 Feb 1900 | 29 Apr 1974 | 74 | |
| 29 Apr 1974 | 3 | Basil Graeme Brickwood | 21 May 1923 | 16 May 2006 | 82 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 16 May 2006 | ||||||
| BRIDGEMAN of Great Lever,Lancs | ||||||
| 7 Jun 1660 | E | 1 | Orlando Bridgeman | 30 Jan 1609 | 25 Jun 1674 | 65 |
| MP for Wigan 1640-1642. Lord Keeper | ||||||
| 1667-1672 | ||||||
| 25 Jun 1674 | 2 | John Bridgeman | 16 Aug 1631 | 24 Aug 1710 | 79 | |
| 24 Aug 1710 | 3 | John Bridgeman | 9 Aug 1667 | 21 Jul 1747 | 79 | |
| 21 Jul 1747 | 4 | Orlando Bridgeman | 2 Jul 1695 | 25 Jul 1764 | 69 | |
| MP for Shrewsbury 1723-1727 | ||||||
| 25 Jul 1764 | 5 | Henry Bridgeman | 7 Sep 1725 | 5 Jun 1800 | 74 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Bradford (qv) in 1794. The 2nd Baron | ||||||
| was created Earl of Bradford in 1815 | ||||||
| with which title the baronetcy remains | ||||||
| merged | ||||||
| BRIDGEMAN of Ridley,Cheshire | ||||||
| 12 Nov 1673 | E | 1 | Orlando Bridgeman | 9 Dec 1649 | 20 Apr 1701 | 51 |
| MP for Horsham 1669-1679 | ||||||
| 20 Apr 1701 | 2 | Orlando Bridgeman | 27 Apr 1678 | 5 Dec 1746 | 68 | |
| MP for Coventry 1707-1710, Calne 1715- | ||||||
| 1722, Lostwithiel 1724-1727, Bletchingley | ||||||
| 1727-1734 and Dunwich 1734-1738 | ||||||
| [see note below] | ||||||
| c Jun 1738 | 3 | Francis Bridgeman | Aug 1713 | c Dec 1740 | 27 | |
| to | Extinct on his death (but see note below) | |||||
| c Dec 1740 | ||||||
| Modern scholarship appears to suggest that Sir Orlando Bridgeman | ||||||
| (the 2nd Baronet) faked his death in an attempt to avoid his creditors. | ||||||
| In the mid 1730s, Bridgeman had begun to build a new house at Bowood | ||||||
| Park, near Calne in Wiltshire. As a result, he appears to have gone deeply | ||||||
| into debt, to the extent that proceedings were commenced against him in | ||||||
| the Chancery Courts in 1737. | ||||||
| Bridgeman had previously held office as Clerk of the household of the | ||||||
| Prince of Wales between 1716 and 1727 and had been a Lord of Trade | ||||||
| between 1727 and 1737. It is probably therefore reasonable to assume | ||||||
| that, via the influence of friends at Court, he was appointed Governor of | ||||||
| Barbados in 1737 in an effort to improve his financial position and | ||||||
| possibly also to remove him from the reach of his creditors. | ||||||
| However, he never proceeded to Barbados. Instead, he disappeared. | ||||||
| He left his clothes by the side of the Thames and wrote farewell letters | ||||||
| to his family and also to King George II. Some weeks later, on 10 June | ||||||
| 1738, a body "supposed to be him, though disfigured by lying so long | ||||||
| under water", was found in the river at Limehouse. John Stonehouse, the | ||||||
| British MP who "disappeared" from a Miami beach in 1974 appears to | ||||||
| have taken a leaf from Bridgeman's book. | ||||||
| In the diary of John Perceval, 1st Earl of Egmont under 30 Oct 1738 | ||||||
| (published by the Historical Manuscripts Commission in 1923) | ||||||
| there is the following entry | ||||||
| "Sir Orlando Bridgeman who, instead of going to his government of | ||||||
| Barbados conferred on his last winter, made his escape (as he hoped) | ||||||
| from the world, to avoid his creditors, by pretending to make himself away, | ||||||
| and accordingly gave it out that he had drowned himself, was ferreted out | ||||||
| of his hole by the reward advertised for whoever should discover him, and | ||||||
| seized in an inn at Slough, where he had ever since concealed himself." | ||||||
| According to the "Gentleman's Magazine" (p. 668 for 1746) Bridgeman | ||||||
| apparently died in Gloucester gaol and was buried 5 Dec 1746 (as opposed | ||||||
| to 1745 as mentioned in Cokayne) in St Nicholas's, Gloucester. | ||||||
| If indeed Sir Orlando did survive until 1745 or 1746, then his son Francis did not | ||||||
| succeed to the baronetcy and the baronetcy became extinct in 1745 or 1746, | ||||||
| not circa December 1740 as shown above. | ||||||
| BRIDGES of Goodnestone,Kent | ||||||
| 19 Apr 1718 | GB | 1 | Brook Bridges | 12 Aug 1679 | 16 Mar 1728 | 48 |
| 16 Mar 1728 | 2 | Brook Bridges | 12 Mar 1709 | 23 May 1733 | 24 | |
| 17 Sep 1733 | 3 | Brook Bridges | 17 Sep 1733 | 4 Sep 1791 | 57 | |
| MP for Kent 1763-1774 | ||||||
| 4 Sep 1791 | 4 | Brook William Bridges | 22 Jun 1767 | 21 Apr 1829 | 61 | |
| 21 Apr 1829 | 5 | Brook William Bridges | 2 Jun 1801 | 6 Dec 1875 | 74 | |
| MP for Kent East 1852 and 1857-1868 | ||||||
| He was created Baron Fitzwalter (qv) | ||||||
| in 1868 | ||||||
| 6 Dec 1875 | 6 | Brook George Bridges | 12 Oct 1802 | 1 Apr 1890 | 87 | |
| 1 Apr 1890 | 7 | Thomas Pym Bridges | 22 Oct 1805 | 28 Feb 1895 | 89 | |
| 28 Feb 1895 | 8 | George Talbot Bridges | 10 May 1818 | 27 Nov 1899 | 81 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 27 Nov 1899 | ||||||
| BRIGGS of Haughton,Salop | ||||||
| 12 Aug 1641 | E | 1 | Morton Briggs | c 1587 | c 1650 | |
| c 1650 | 2 | Humphrey Briggs | c 1615 | 21 May 1691 | ||
| May 1691 | 3 | Humphrey Briggs | c 1650 | 31 Jan 1700 | ||
| 31 Jan 1700 | 4 | Humphrey Briggs | c 1670 | 8 Dec 1734 | ||
| MP for Shropshire 1701, Bridgnorth | ||||||
| 1702-1710 and Wenlock 1716-1727 | ||||||
| 8 Dec 1734 | 5 | Hugh Briggs | c 1684 | 27 Oct 1767 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 27 Oct 1767 | ||||||
| BRIGGS of Briggs Dayrell,Barbados | ||||||
| 27 Nov 1871 | UK | 1 | Thomas Graham Briggs | 30 Sep 1833 | 11 Oct 1887 | 54 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 11 Oct 1887 | ||||||
| BRIGHT of Badsworth,Yorks | ||||||
| 16 Jul 1660 | E | 1 | John Bright | 14 Oct 1619 | 13 Oct 1688 | 68 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Oct 1688 | ||||||
| BRINCKMAN of Burton,Yorks | ||||||
| 30 Sep 1831 | UK | 1 | Theodore Henry Lavington Broadhead | |||
| (Brinckman from July 1842) | 17 Jan 1798 | 9 Feb 1880 | 82 | |||
| MP for Yarmouth 1821-1826 | ||||||
| The notice in the London Gazette [issue 3999, | ||||||
| page 253] recording the creation of this baronetcy | ||||||
| shows it as being "of Burton, or Monk-Bretton, in | ||||||
| the county of York." The Official Roll of the | ||||||
| Baronetage shows it as "of Burton" whereas | ||||||
| Burke's shows it as "of Monk Bretton" | ||||||
| 9 Feb 1880 | 2 | Theodore Henry Brinckman | 12 Sep 1830 | 7 May 1905 | 74 | |
| MP for Canterbury 1868-1874 | ||||||
| 7 May 1905 | 3 | Theodore Francis Brinckman | 26 May 1862 | 8 Sep 1937 | 75 | |
| For further information on this baronet, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 8 Sep 1937 | 4 | Theodore Ernest Warren Brinckman | 21 May 1898 | 26 Jul 1954 | 56 | |
| 26 Jul 1954 | 5 | Roderick Napoleon Brinckman | 27 Dec 1902 | 16 Apr 1985 | 82 | |
| 16 Apr 1985 | 6 | Theodore George Roderick Brinckman | 20 Mar 1932 | 26 Jul 2020 | 88 | |
| 26 Jul 2020 | 7 | Theodore Jonathan Brinckman | 19 Feb 1960 | |||
| BRISBANE of Brisbane,Ayr | ||||||
| 1836 | UK | 1 | Thomas Makdougall Brisbane | 23 Jul 1773 | 27 Jan 1860 | 86 |
| to | Governor of NSW 1821-1825 | |||||
| 27 Jan 1860 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BRISCO of Crofton Place,Cumberland | ||||||
| 11 Jul 1782 | GB | 1 | John Brisco | 15 May 1739 | 27 Dec 1805 | 66 |
| 27 Dec 1805 | 2 | Walter Brisco | 17 May 1778 | 1 Oct 1862 | 84 | |
| 1 Oct 1862 | 3 | Robert Brisco | 17 Sep 1808 | 23 Dec 1884 | 76 | |
| 23 Dec 1884 | 4 | Musgrave Horton Brisco | 11 Aug 1853 | 19 Dec 1909 | 56 | |
| 19 Dec 1909 | 5 | Hylton Ralph Brisco | 24 Sep 1871 | 29 Jan 1922 | 50 | |
| For further information on the death of this | ||||||
| baronet,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 29 Jan 1922 | 6 | Aubrey Hilton Brisco | 11 Dec 1873 | 16 Jun 1957 | 83 | |
| 16 Jun 1957 | 7 | Hylton Musgrave Campbell Brisco | 5 Dec 1886 | 8 Jan 1968 | 81 | |
| 8 Jan 1968 | 8 | Donald Gilfrid Brisco | 15 Sep 1920 | 24 Jun 1995 | 74 | |
| 24 Jun 1995 | 9 | Campbell Howard Brisco | 11 Dec 1944 | |||
| BRISCOE of Bourn Hall,Cambs | ||||||
| 12 Jul 1910 | UK | 1 | John James Briscoe | 6 Dec 1836 | 1 May 1919 | 82 |
| 1 May 1919 | 2 | Alfred Leigh Briscoe | 26 Apr 1870 | 13 May 1921 | 51 | |
| 13 May 1921 | 3 | John Charlton Briscoe | Apr 1874 | 28 Feb 1960 | 85 | |
| 28 Feb 1960 | 4 | John Leigh Charlton Briscoe | 3 Dec 1911 | 7 Feb 1993 | 81 | |
| 7 Feb 1993 | 5 | John James Briscoe | 15 Jul 1951 | 3 Jul 1994 | 42 | |
| For information on the death of this baronet, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 4 Nov 1994 | 6 | John Geoffrey James Briscoe | 4 Nov 1994 | |||
| BRISE of Spains,Essex | ||||||
| 31 Jan 1935 | UK | See "Ruggles-Brise" | ||||
| BROADBENT of Longwood,Yorks and Brook Street | ||||||
| 10 Aug 1893 | UK | 1 | William Henry Broadbent | 23 Jan 1835 | 10 Jul 1907 | 72 |
| 10 Jul 1907 | 2 | John Broadbent | 16 Oct 1865 | 27 Jan 1946 | 80 | |
| 27 Jan 1946 | 3 | William Francis Broadbent | 29 Nov 1904 | 29 Mar 1987 | 82 | |
| 29 Mar 1987 | 4 | George Walter Broadbent | 23 Apr 1935 | 20 May 1992 | 57 | |
| 20 May 1992 | 5 | Andrew George Broadbent | 26 Jan 1963 | |||
| BROADBRIDGE of Wargrave Place,Berks | ||||||
| 22 Nov 1937 | UK | 1 | Sir George Thomas Broadbridge | 13 Feb 1869 | 17 Apr 1952 | 83 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Broadbridge (qv) in 1945 with which | ||||||
| title the baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| BROADHEAD of Burton,Yorks | ||||||
| 30 Sep 1831 | UK | See "Brinckman" | ||||
| BROADHURST of Manchester, Lancs | ||||||
| 4 Feb 1918 | UK | 1 | Edward Tootal Broadhurst | 19 Aug 1858 | 2 Feb 1922 | 63 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 2 Feb 1922 | ||||||
| BROCKLEBANK of Greenlands,Cumberland | ||||||
| and Springwood,Lancs | ||||||
| 22 Jul 1885 | UK | 1 | Thomas Brocklebank | 1814 | 8 Jun 1906 | 91 |
| 8 Jun 1906 | 2 | Thomas Brocklebank | 1 Mar 1848 | 12 Jan 1911 | 62 | |
| 12 Jan 1911 | 3 | Aubrey Brocklebank | 12 Jul 1873 | 19 Apr 1929 | 55 | |
| 19 Apr 1929 | 4 | Thomas Aubrey Lawies Brocklebank | 23 Oct 1899 | 15 Sep 1953 | 53 | |
| 15 Sep 1953 | 5 | John Montague Brocklebank | 3 Sep 1915 | 13 Sep 1974 | 59 | |
| 13 Sep 1974 | 6 | Aubrey Thomas Brocklebank | 29 Jan 1952 | |||
| BROCKLEHURST of Swythamley Park,Staffs | ||||||
| and Stanhope Terrace,Hyde Park,London | ||||||
| 27 Aug 1903 | UK | 1 | Philip Lancaster Brocklehurst | 12 Oct 1827 | 10 May 1904 | 76 |
| 10 May 1904 | 2 | Philip Lee Brocklehurst | 7 Mar 1887 | 28 Jan 1975 | 87 | |
| 28 Jan 1975 | 3 | John Ogilvy Brocklehurst | 6 Apr 1926 | 9 May 1981 | 55 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 9 May 1981 | ||||||
| BRODIE of Boxford,Suffolk | ||||||
| 30 Aug 1834 | UK | 1 | Benjamin Collins Brodie | 9 Jun 1783 | 19 Oct 1862 | 79 |
| 19 Oct 1862 | 2 | Benjamin Collins Brodie | 5 Feb 1817 | 24 Nov 1880 | 63 | |
| 24 Nov 1880 | 3 | Benjamin Vincent Sellon Brodie | 19 Jun 1862 | 20 Jan 1938 | 75 | |
| 20 Jan 1938 | 4 | Benjamin Collins Brodie | 6 Mar 1888 | 2 Aug 1971 | 83 | |
| 2 Aug 1971 | 5 | Benjamin David Ross Brodie | 29 May 1925 | 1 Jan 2021 | 95 | |
| 1 Jan 2021 | 6 | Alan Ross Brodie | 1960 | |||
| BRODIE of Idvies,Forfar | ||||||
| 28 Mar 1892 | UK | 1 | Thomas Dawson Brodie | 26 Dec 1832 | 6 Sep 1896 | 63 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 6 Sep 1896 | ||||||
| BROGRAVE of Hamells,Herts | ||||||
| 18 Mar 1663 | E | 1 | Thomas Brograve | 4 Jun 1670 | ||
| Jun 1670 | 2 | John Brograve | 31 Mar 1664 | 11 Jul 1691 | 27 | |
| Jul 1691 | 3 | Thomas Brograve | 25 Mar 1670 | 6 Jul 1707 | 37 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 6 Jul 1707 | ||||||
| BROGRAVE of Worstead House,Norfolk | ||||||
| 28 Jul 1791 | GB | 1 | Berney Brograve | 10 Oct 1726 | c 1797 | |
| c 1797 | 2 | George Berney Brograve | 4 Feb 1772 | 1 Jun 1828 | 56 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1 Jun 1828 | ||||||
| BROKE of Nacton,Suffolk | ||||||
| 21 May 1661 | E | 1 | Robert Broke | c 1630 | 25 Feb 1694 | |
| to | MP for Suffolk 1685-1687 | |||||
| 25 Feb 1694 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BROKE-MIDDLETON of Broke Hall,Suffolk | ||||||
| 2 Nov 1813 | UK | 1 | Philip Bowes Vere Broke | 8 Sep 1776 | 2 Jan 1841 | 64 |
| 2 Jan 1841 | 2 | Philip Broke | 15 Jan 1804 | 24 Feb 1855 | 51 | |
| 24 Feb 1855 | 3 | George Nathaniel Broke (Broke-Middleton | ||||
| to | from 1860) | 26 Apr 1812 | 14 Jan 1887 | 74 | ||
| 14 Jan 1887 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BROMFIELD of Southwark,Surrey | ||||||
| 20 Mar 1661 | E | 1 | John Bromfield | c 1610 | c 1666 | |
| c 1666 | 2 | Edward Bromfield | c 1631 | 17 Feb 1704 | ||
| 17 Feb 1704 | 3 | Charles Bromfield | c 1672 | 6 Sep 1733 | ||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became either | |||||
| 6 Sep 1733 | extinct or dormant | |||||
| BROMHEAD of Thurlby Hall,Lincs | ||||||
| 19 Feb 1806 | UK | 1 | Gonville Bromhead | 20 Sep 1758 | 18 May 1822 | 63 |
| 18 May 1822 | 2 | Edward ffrench Bromhead | 26 Mar 1789 | 14 Mar 1855 | 65 | |
| 14 Mar 1855 | 3 | Edmund de Gonville Bromhead | 22 Jan 1791 | 25 Oct 1870 | 79 | |
| 25 Oct 1870 | 4 | Benjamin Parnell Bromhead | 22 Oct 1838 | 31 Jul 1935 | 96 | |
| For further information on this baronet, see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 31 Jul 1935 | 5 | Benjamin Denis Gonville Bromhead | 7 May 1900 | 18 Mar 1981 | 80 | |
| 18 Mar 1981 | 6 | John Desmond Gonville Bromhead | 21 Dec 1943 | |||
| BROMLEY of East Stoke,Notts | ||||||
| 31 Oct 1757 | GB | 1 | George Smith | c 1714 | 5 Sep 1769 | |
| 5 Sep 1769 | 2 | George Smith (Bromley from 1778 to 1803 | ||||
| and Pauncefote-Bromley 1803 to 1808) | 18 Aug 1753 | 17 Aug 1808 | 54 | |||
| 17 Aug 1808 | 3 | Robert Howe Bromley | 28 Nov 1778 | 8 Jul 1857 | 78 | |
| 8 Jul 1857 | 4 | Henry Bromley | 6 Dec 1816 | 21 Sep 1895 | 78 | |
| 21 Sep 1895 | 5 | Henry Bromley | 6 Aug 1849 | 11 Mar 1905 | 55 | |
| 11 Mar 1905 | 6 | Robert Bromley | 4 Jan 1874 | 13 May 1906 | 32 | |
| 13 May 1906 | 7 | Maurice Bromley-Wilson | 27 Jun 1875 | 7 Nov 1957 | 82 | |
| 7 Nov 1957 | 8 | Sir Arthur Bromley | 8 Aug 1876 | 12 Jan 1961 | 84 | |
| 12 Jan 1961 | 9 | Rupert Howe Bromley | 31 Dec 1910 | 13 Jun 1966 | 55 | |
| 13 Jun 1966 | 10 | Rupert Charles Bromley | 2 Apr 1936 | 23 May 2018 | 82 | |
| 23 May 2018 | 11 | Charles Howard Bromley | 31 Jul 1963 | |||
| BROOKE of Norton Priory,Cheshire | ||||||
| 12 Dec 1662 | E | 1 | Henry Brooke | c 1611 | 1664 | |
| MP for Cheshire 1654-1656 | ||||||
| 1664 | 2 | Richard Brooke | c 1635 | Feb 1710 | ||
| Feb 1710 | 3 | Thomas Brooke | c 1664 | 1737 | ||
| 1737 | 4 | Richard Brooke | c 1719 | 6 Jul 1781 | ||
| 6 Jul 1781 | 5 | Richard Brooke | c 1753 | 6 Mar 1795 | ||
| 6 Mar 1795 | 6 | Richard Brooke | 18 Aug 1785 | 11 Nov 1865 | 80 | |
| 11 Nov 1865 | 7 | Richard Brooke | 13 Dec 1814 | 3 Mar 1888 | 73 | |
| 3 Mar 1888 | 8 | Richard Marcus Brooke | 26 Oct 1850 | 9 Oct 1920 | 69 | |
| 9 Oct 1920 | 9 | Richard Christopher Brooke | 8 Aug 1888 | 1 Feb 1981 | 92 | |
| 1 Feb 1981 | 10 | Richard Neville Brooke | 1 May 1915 | 9 Dec 1997 | 82 | |
| 9 Dec 1997 | 11 | Richard David Christopher Brooke | 23 Oct 1938 | 24 Oct 2012 | 74 | |
| 24 Oct 2012 | 12 | Richard Christopher Brooke | 10 Jul 1966 | |||
| BROOKE of Colebrooke,Fermanagh | ||||||
| 3 Jan 1764 | I | 1 | Arthur Brooke | 1726 | 7 Mar 1785 | 58 |
| to | PC [I] 1770 | |||||
| 7 Mar 1785 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BROOKE of Oakley,Northants | ||||||
| 20 Jun 1803 | UK | See "De Capell-Brooke" | ||||
| BROOKE of Colebrooke,co.Fermanagh | ||||||
| 7 Jan 1822 | UK | 1 | Henry Brooke | 30 May 1770 | 24 Mar 1834 | 63 |
| 24 Mar 1834 | 2 | Arthur Brinsley Brooke | 1797 | 21 Nov 1854 | 57 | |
| MP for Fermanagh 1840-1854 | ||||||
| 21 Nov 1854 | 3 | Victor Alexander Brooke | 5 Jan 1843 | 27 Nov 1891 | 48 | |
| 27 Nov 1891 | 4 | Arthur Douglas Brooke | 7 Oct 1865 | 27 Nov 1907 | 42 | |
| 27 Nov 1907 | 5 | Basil Stanlake Brooke | 9 Jun 1888 | 18 Aug 1973 | 85 | |
| He was subsequently created Viscount | ||||||
| Brookeborough (qv) in 1952 with which | ||||||
| title the baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| BROOKE of Armitage Bridge,Yorks | ||||||
| 4 Aug 1899 | UK | 1 | Thomas Brooke | 31 May 1830 | 16 Jul 1908 | 78 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 16 Jul 1908 | ||||||
| BROOKE of Summerton,co.Dublin | ||||||
| 12 Oct 1903 | UK | 1 | George Frederick Brooke | 13 Aug 1849 | 21 Aug 1926 | 77 |
| 21 Aug 1926 | 2 | Francis Hugh Brooke | 10 Nov 1882 | 4 Nov 1954 | 71 | |
| 4 Nov 1954 | 3 | George Cecil Francis Brooke | 30 Mar 1916 | 27 Dec 1982 | 66 | |
| 27 Dec 1982 | 4 | Francis George Windham Brooke | 15 Oct 1963 | |||
| BROOKE of Almondbury,Yorks | ||||||
| 13 Sep 1919 | UK | 1 | John Arthur Brooke | 22 Mar 1844 | 12 Jul 1920 | 76 |
| 12 Jul 1920 | 2 | Robert Weston Brooke | 10 Aug 1885 | 24 Aug 1942 | 57 | |
| 24 Aug 1942 | 3 | John Weston Brooke | 26 Sep 1911 | 19 Jul 1983 | 71 | |
| 19 Jul 1983 | 4 | Alistair Weston Brooke | 12 Sep 1947 | |||
| BROOKE-PECHELL of Paglesham,Essex | ||||||
| 1 Mar 1797 | GB | See "Pechell" | ||||
| BROOKES of York,Yorks | ||||||
| 15 Jun 1676 | E | 1 | John Brookes | c 1635 | 18 Nov 1691 | |
| MP for Boroughbridge 1679-1681 | ||||||
| 18 Nov 1691 | 2 | James Brookes | c 1675 | 28 Aug 1742 | ||
| 28 Aug 1742 | 3 | Job Brookes | 26 Jan 1770 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 26 Jan 1770 | ||||||
| BROOKS of Manchester,Lancs | ||||||
| 4 Mar 1886 | UK | 1 | William Cunliffe Brooks | 30 Sep 1819 | 9 Jun 1900 | 80 |
| to | MP for Cheshire East 1869-1885 and | |||||
| 9 Jun 1900 | Altrincham 1886-1892 | |||||
| For further information on this baronet,see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| BROOKS of Crawshaw Hall,Lancs | ||||||
| and Whatton House,Leics | ||||||
| 9 Feb 1891 | UK | 1 | Thomas Brooks | 15 May 1825 | 5 Feb 1908 | 82 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Crawshaw (qv) in 1892 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| BROOKSBANK of Healaugh Manor,Yorks | ||||||
| 15 Sep 1919 | UK | 1 | Edward Clitherow Brooksbank | 24 Nov 1858 | 24 Nov 1943 | 85 |
| 24 Nov 1943 | 2 | Edward William Brooksbank | 15 Jun 1915 | 28 Mar 1983 | 67 | |
| 28 Mar 1983 | 3 | Edward Nicholas Brooksbank | 4 Oct 1944 | |||
| BROTHERTON of Wakefield,Yorks | ||||||
| 27 Jun 1918 | UK | 1 | Edward Allen Brotherton | 1 Apr 1856 | 21 Oct 1930 | 74 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Brotherton (qv) in 1929 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until its | ||||||
| extinction in 1930 | ||||||
| BROUGHTON of Broughton,Staffs | ||||||
| 10 Mar 1661 | E | 1 | Bryan Broughton | 23 May 1618 | 30 Jul 1708 | 90 |
| 30 Jul 1708 | 2 | Thomas Broughton | c 1648 | c 1710 | ||
| c 1710 | 3 | Bryan Broughton | 19 Sep 1677 | 12 Sep 1724 | 46 | |
| MP for Newcastle under Lyme 1715-1724 | ||||||
| 12 Sep 1724 | 4 | Bryan Broughton (Broughton-Delves from 1727) | 6 Jan 1718 | 11 Aug 1744 | 26 | |
| MP for Wenlock 1741-1744 | ||||||
| 11 Aug 1744 | 5 | Bryan Broughton-Delves | Apr 1740 | 16 Jan 1766 | 25 | |
| 16 Jan 1766 | 6 | Thomas Broughton | c 1744 | 23 Jul 1813 | ||
| 23 Jul 1813 | 7 | John Delves Broughton | 17 Aug 1769 | 9 Aug 1847 | 77 | |
| 9 Aug 1847 | 8 | Henry Delves Broughton | 10 Jan 1777 | 3 Nov 1851 | 74 | |
| 3 Nov 1851 | 9 | Henry Delves Broughton | 22 Jun 1808 | 26 Feb 1899 | 90 | |
| For further information on this baronet,see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 26 Feb 1899 | 10 | Delves Louis Broughton | 1 Jun 1857 | 15 Apr 1914 | 56 | |
| 15 Apr 1914 | 11 | Henry John Delves Broughton | 10 Sep 1888 | 5 Dec 1942 | 54 | |
| 5 Dec 1942 | 12 | Evelyn Delves Broughton | 2 Oct 1915 | 5 Jan 1993 | 77 | |
| For information on the death of this baronet's | ||||||
| son and heir,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 5 Jan 1993 | 13 | David Delves Broughton | 7 May 1942 | 13 May 2021 | 79 | |
| 13 May 2021 | 14 | Geoffrey Delves Broughton | 7 Aug 1962 | |||
| BROUN of Colstoun,Haddington | ||||||
| For information on the "Colstoun Pear" see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 16 Feb 1686 | NS | 1 | Patrick Broun | c 1630 | 1688 | |
| 1688 | 2 | George Broun | 1718 | |||
| 1718 | 3 | George Broun | 1734 | |||
| 1734 | 4 | Alexander Broun | 1750 | |||
| 1750 | 5 | Alexander Broun | 1776 | |||
| 1776 | 6 | Richard Broun | 13 Dec 1781 | |||
| 13 Dec 1781 | 7 | James Broun | 12 Mar 1768 | 30 Nov 1844 | 76 | |
| 30 Nov 1844 | 8 | Richard Broun | 22 Apr 1801 | 10 Dec 1858 | 57 | |
| For further information on this baronet,see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 10 Dec 1858 | 9 | William Broun | Jul 1804 | 10 Jun 1882 | 77 | |
| 10 Jun 1882 | 10 | William Broun | 18 Dec 1848 | 23 Oct 1918 | 69 | |
| 23 Oct 1918 | 11 | James Lionel Broun | 1875 | 8 Aug 1962 | 87 | |
| 8 Aug 1962 | 12 | Lionel John Law Broun | 25 Apr 1927 | 10 Aug 1995 | 68 | |
| 10 Aug 1995 | 13 | William Windsor Broun | 11 Jul 1917 | 17 Mar 2007 | 89 | |
| 17 Mar 2007 | 14 | Wayne Hercules Broun | 23 Jan 1952 | |||
| BROWN of Barbados,West Indies | ||||||
| 17 Feb 1664 | NS | 1 | James Brown | c 1670 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1670 | ||||||
| BROWN of London | ||||||
| 14 Dec 1699 | E | 1 | William Brown | c 1720 | ||
| c 1720 | 2 | John Brown | c 1738 | |||
| c 1738 | 3 | ----------- Brown | c 1760 | |||
| to | Presumably extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1760 | ||||||
| BROWN of Edinburgh,Midlothian | ||||||
| 24 Feb 1710 | GB | 1 | Robert Brown | 1720 | ||
| to | Presumably extinct on his death | |||||
| 1720 | ||||||
| BROWN of Westminster,London | ||||||
| 11 Mar 1732 | GB | 1 | Robert Brown | 5 Oct 1760 | ||
| MP for Ilchester 1734-1747 | ||||||
| 5 Oct 1760 | 2 | James O'Hara Brown | c 1721 | 21 Apr 1784 | ||
| 21 Apr 1784 | 3 | William Augustus Brown | 23 May 1764 | 20 Oct 1830 | 66 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 20 Oct 1830 | For further information on this baronet,see | |||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| BROWN of Richmond Hill,Lancs | ||||||
| 24 Jan 1863 | UK | 1 | William Brown | 30 May 1784 | 3 Mar 1864 | 79 |
| MP for Lancashire South 1846-1859 | ||||||
| 3 Mar 1864 | 2 | William Richmond Brown | 16 Jan 1840 | 10 May 1906 | 66 | |
| 10 May 1906 | 3 | Melville Richmond Brown | 13 Oct 1866 | 20 Feb 1944 | 77 | |
| 20 Feb 1944 | 4 | Charles Frederick Richmond Brown | 6 Dec 1902 | 9 Jul 1995 | 92 | |
| 9 Jul 1995 | 5 | George Francis Richmond Brown | 3 Feb 1938 | |||
| BROWN of Broome Hall,Surrey | ||||||
| 5 Jan 1903 | UK | See "Pigott-Brown" | ||||
| BROWNE of Walcot,Northants | ||||||
| 21 Sep 1621 | E | 1 | Robert Browne | c 1624 | ||
| c 1624 | 2 | Thomas Browne | 16 Apr 1635 | |||
| 16 Apr 1635 | 3 | Robert Browne | c 1662 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1662 | ||||||
| BROWNE of Molahiffe,Kerry | ||||||
| 16 Feb 1622 | I | 1 | Valentine Browne | 7 Sep 1633 | ||
| 7 Sep 1633 | 2 | Valentine Browne | 25 Apr 1640 | |||
| 25 Apr 1640 | 3 | Valentine Browne | 1638 | 1694 | ||
| 1694 | 4 | Nicholas Browne | Apr 1720 | |||
| Apr 1720 | 5 | Valentine Browne | 1695 | 30 Jun 1736 | 40 | |
| 30 Jun 1736 | 6 | Thomas Browne | 1726 | 9 Sep 1795 | 69 | |
| 9 Sep 1795 | 7 | Valentine Browne | Jan 1754 | 3 Oct 1812 | 58 | |
| He was subsequently created Earl of | ||||||
| Kenmare (qv) in 1801 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until its | ||||||
| extinction in 1952 | ||||||
| BROWNE of Kishack,Dublin | ||||||
| 30 Mar 1622 | I | 1 | Richard Browne | 1642 | ||
| 1642 | 2 | Silvester Browne | 8 May 1657 | |||
| 8 May 1657 | 3 | Richard Browne | c 1682 | |||
| to | Presumably extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1682 | ||||||
| BROWNE of Bettesworth (now Betchworth) | ||||||
| Castle, Surrey | ||||||
| 7 Jul 1627 | E | 1 | Ambrose Browne | 16 Aug 1661 | ||
| MP for Surrey 1628-1629, 1640 and | ||||||
| 1640-1648 | ||||||
| 16 Aug 1661 | 2 | Adam Browne | c 1626 | 3 Nov 1690 | ||
| to | MP for Surrey 1661-1679 and 1685-1687 | |||||
| 3 Nov 1690 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BROWNE of The Neale,co.Mayo | ||||||
| 21 Jun 1636 | NS | 1 | John Browne | 1670 | ||
| 1670 | 2 | George Browne | May 1698 | |||
| May 1698 | 3 | John Browne | c 1712 | |||
| c 1712 | 4 | George Browne | c 1684 | 8 May 1737 | ||
| 8 May 1737 | 5 | John Browne | 2 Oct 1762 | |||
| 2 Oct 1762 | 6 | George Browne | c 1725 | 9 Sep 1765 | ||
| 9 Sep 1765 | 7 | John Browne | 1730 | 7 Jun 1794 | 63 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Kilmaine (qv) in 1789 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| BROWNE of Stanford,Northants | ||||||
| 30 Jun 1641 | E | See "Cave-Browne-Cave" | ||||
| BROWNE of Deptford,Kent | ||||||
| 1 Sep 1649 | E | 1 | Richard Browne | c 1605 | 12 Feb 1683 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 12 Feb 1683 | ||||||
| BROWNE of Kiddington,Oxon | ||||||
| 1 Jul 1659 | E | 1 | Henry Browne | c 1639 | early 1689 | |
| early 1689 | 2 | Charles Browne | c 1667 | 20 Dec 1751 | ||
| 20 Dec 1751 | 3 | George Browne | c 1694 | 20 Jun 1754 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 20 Jun 1754 | ||||||
| BROWNE of London | ||||||
| 22 Jul 1660 | E | 1 | Richard Browne | 24 Sep 1669 | ||
| MP for Wycombe 1645-1648, London 1656- | ||||||
| 1658,1659 and 1660 and Ludgershall | ||||||
| 1661-1669 | ||||||
| 24 Sep 1669 | 2 | Richard Browne | c 1628 | 23 Sep 1684 | ||
| MP for Wycombe 1660 | ||||||
| Sep 1684 | 3 | Richard Browne | c 1656 | 1689 | ||
| 1689 | 4 | John Browne | 1701 | |||
| 1701 | 5 | Thomas Browne | by 1680 | c Jul 1739 | ||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became either | |||||
| c Jul 1739 | extinct or dormant | |||||
| BROWNE of Caversham,Oxon | ||||||
| 10 May 1665 | E | 1 | John Browne | c 1631 | c 1680 | |
| c 1680 | 2 | Anthony Browne | 23 Dec 1688 | |||
| 23 Dec 1688 | 3 | John Browne | c 1692 | |||
| c 1692 | 4 | George Browne | 20 Feb 1730 | |||
| 20 Feb 1730 | 5 | John Browne | 21 Jan 1775 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 21 Jan 1775 | ||||||
| BROWNE of Palmerston,Ireland | ||||||
| 8 Dec 1797 | I | 1 | John Edmond Browne | 1 Oct 1748 | 5 Sep 1835 | 86 |
| 5 Sep 1835 | 2 | John Edmond de Beauvoir | 10 Dec 1794 | 29 Apr 1869 | 74 | |
| MP for Windsor 1835 | ||||||
| 29 Apr 1869 | 3 | Charles Manley Browne | 1 Mar 1806 | 5 Sep 1890 | 84 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 5 Sep 1890 | ||||||
| The ghost of Burton Agnes Hall, home of the Boynton baronets | ||||||
| Burton Agnes Hall, an Elizabethan manor house in the East Riding of Yorkshire, was built by Sir | ||||||
| Henry Griffith around 1610. From him it descended to Frances Griffith, who married Sir Matthew | ||||||
| Boynton, 1st baronet. On the death of the 11th Boynton baronet in 1899, the house passed to | ||||||
| his daughter, who had married Thomas Wickham and who adopted the additional name of | ||||||
| Boynton, and thence to her son Marcus Wickham Boynton. On his death in 1989, he willed the | ||||||
| estate to Simon Cunliffe-Lister, son of the Earl of Swinton. At present the house is owned by | ||||||
| the Burton Agnes Preservation Trust. | ||||||
| The house is famous for its ghost. The following account is taken from the Hall's website:- | ||||||
| 'The ghost of Katherine (Anne) Griffith, who died at Burton Agnes Hall in 1620, is reputed to | ||||||
| have haunted the Queen's State Bedroom. Anne Griffith was the youngest of the three sisters | ||||||
| whose portrait hangs in the Inner Hall, daughters of Sir Henry Griffith who built the Hall. The | ||||||
| story is that Anne had watched the building of the new house and could talk and think of | ||||||
| nothing else; it was to be the most beautiful house ever built. When it was almost finished | ||||||
| Anne went one afternoon to visit the St. Quintons at Harpham about a mile away, but near St. | ||||||
| John's Well was attacked and robbed by ruffians. She was brought home to Burton Agnes but | ||||||
| was so badly hurt that she died a few days afterwards. | ||||||
| 'Sometimes delirious, sometimes sensible, she told her sisters that she could never rest unless | ||||||
| part of her could remain in 'our beautiful home as long as it shall last.' She made them promise | ||||||
| that when she was dead her head should be severed and preserved in the Hall forever, and to | ||||||
| pacify her, her sisters agreed. However when Anne died, she was buried in the churchyard. | ||||||
| 'Then the ghost walked and scared the life out of everybody. Remembering Anne's dying words, | ||||||
| the sisters took counsel with the vicar and eventually agreed that the grave should be opened. | ||||||
| The skull was brought into the house and so long as it was undisturbed, the Hall was peaceful | ||||||
| and untroubled. Many attempts have been made to get rid of it. Once it was thrown away, | ||||||
| another time it was buried in the garden, but always the ghost walked with tremendous noise | ||||||
| and upheaval. The skull is still in the house, built into one of the old walls, probably in the Great | ||||||
| Hall. Nobody knows for sure just where it is but now she can watch over 'her beautiful home.' | ||||||
| This version of the story of the ghost appeared in the Lismore "Northern Star" of 10 November | ||||||
| 1913:- | ||||||
| 'A strange ghost story is told concerning Burton Agnes Hall, a grand old place near Bridlington, | ||||||
| and the ancestral seat of the Boyntons. Burton Agnes, on the death of the late baronet, Sir | ||||||
| Henry, in 1899, passed to his only daughter, now Mrs. Wickham-Boynton. Years ago the estate | ||||||
| was inherited by three sisters who, being wealthy, decided to rebuild their own home. Inigo | ||||||
| Jones, it is said, was the architect, and Rubens is reported to have assisted with the | ||||||
| decorations. An absorbing interest was taken in the building by the youngest sister, Anne | ||||||
| Griffith, but one day she was brutally assaulted by a tramp, and subsequently died. She made | ||||||
| her sisters promise that her head should be removed at her death and kept in the house. They | ||||||
| forgot to do as she had wished, with the result that the most appalling noises were heard in | ||||||
| the house. In their perplexity the two sisters consulted the vicar, telling him of their sister's | ||||||
| dying request. He agreed that it ought to be carried out, so the body was unearthed, and the | ||||||
| head removed to the house. The noises at once ceased. Various generations from time to time | ||||||
| tried to get rid of the head, but always the hideous noises recommenced, and continued until | ||||||
| the gruesome relic was brought back. At last Sir Henry Boynton had the head cemented in the | ||||||
| wall of the great hall, behind a beautifully carved screen, and the haunting and manifestations | ||||||
| have, it is said, entirely ceased.' | ||||||
| There are any number of variations of the story. In one of these, one of the maids, who did not | ||||||
| believe the story of the skull, is said to have wrapped it up in a cloth, and then thrown it into | ||||||
| the back of a passing wagon. The wagon immediately stopped, and, no matter how hard they | ||||||
| were urged, the horses were unable to move the wagon an inch, and the wagon remained still | ||||||
| until the skull was restored. | ||||||
| Sir Edward Montagu Andrew Bradford, 3rd baronet [UK 1902] | ||||||
| "The Times" of 2 April 1952:- | ||||||
| 'Major Sir Edward Bradford was fatally injured yesterday when thrown from his horse at the | ||||||
| Dumfriesshire Hunt point-to-point races at Lockerbie. He died almost immediately. | ||||||
| 'Major Sir Edward Bradford, who was 41, had been stationed with the Cameronians (Scottish | ||||||
| Rifles) at Winston Barracks, Lanark. He hunted regularly with the Dumfriesshire and was well- | ||||||
| known as a point-to-point rider.' | ||||||
| Sir John Ridley Evelyn Bradford, 4th baronet | ||||||
| The following report appeared in 'The Manchester Guardian' on 28 December 1954:- | ||||||
| 'A verdict of accidental death was recorded by the Mid-Oxfordshire coroner, Mr. Harold Franklin, | ||||||
| at an inquest on Friday on Sir John Ridley Evelyn Bradford, aged 13, who was killed on Thursday | ||||||
| when the tractor he was driving overturned at his home, Marylands Farm, Chislehampton. The | ||||||
| coroner said that he accepted the fact that the boy was bounced off his seat or otherwise lost | ||||||
| control of the machine. | ||||||
| 'Several witnesses said that he was a highly competent tractor driver, and his mother, Mrs. | ||||||
| Alison Davies, said he could manage the tractor better than her husband or their man. When | ||||||
| she returned from the village shop she saw the tractor lying in a ditch with her son beneath it. | ||||||
| She thought it must have bounced on ground which was rather rough. He must have lost his | ||||||
| balance and put his foot on the wrong brake. | ||||||
| 'Dr. R.H. Cowdell, assistant pathologist at the Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford, said that the boy | ||||||
| broke his neck and death must have happened instantly. | ||||||
| 'Dr. J.O.F. Davies, the boy's stepfather and senior administrative medical officer of the Oxford | ||||||
| Regional Hospital Board, said: "I saw him drive a tractor countless times. He was better than | ||||||
| any of us." | ||||||
| Sir John Brickwood, 1st baronet | ||||||
| Sir John was the son of Harry Brickwood, a Portsmouth brewer. He carried on his father's | ||||||
| business and retained the posts of Chairman and Managing Director until his death in 1932. | ||||||
| He was knighted in 1904 and created a baronet in the 1927 Birthday Honours. He married | ||||||
| three times - (1) on 10 January 1881 to Eliza, daughter of William Miller, by whom he had | ||||||
| a daughter, of whom more later. His first wife died 27 February 1889; (2) on 30 September | ||||||
| 1893 to Jessie Eliza, daughter of John Cooper, by whom he had two sons, Arthur Cyril, who | ||||||
| died 15 April 1915, and Rupert Redvers, who succeeded him as 2nd baronet. His second wife | ||||||
| died 17 April 1917; and (3) on 8 January 1922, to Isabella Janet Gibson, daughter of James | ||||||
| Gordon. She survived him and died in 1967. | ||||||
| Although not mentioned in "Burke's Peerage," I understand that, by his third wife, he had four | ||||||
| sons, of which the three eldest were born before their marriage, thus rendering them | ||||||
| illegitimate and unable to succeed to the baronetcy. On the death of his half-brother, the | ||||||
| 2nd baronet, in 1974, the baronetcy passed to Sir Basil Graeme Brickwood, the youngest of | ||||||
| Sir John's four sons by his third marriage, who was the only one of the sons of Sir John and | ||||||
| Isabella who had been born after their marriage. | ||||||
| The 1st baronet's daughter mentioned above married, on 2 February 1907, Franz Wachendorff, | ||||||
| who was described as a "Forest Master." She, together with her 11-year-old son, Hans, were | ||||||
| drowned in the River Elbe on 7 July 1923. | ||||||
| Sir Theodore Francis Brinckman, 3rd baronet | ||||||
| Whenever I attend a wedding, I always heave a quiet sigh of relief when the minister's | ||||||
| question as to whether anyone can show just cause as to why the wedding should not take | ||||||
| place goes unanswered. I am therefore grateful that I did not attend the wedding of | ||||||
| Theodore Brinkman and his second wife on 27 April 1895, which was reported in 'The Times' of | ||||||
| 29 April 1895 as follows:- | ||||||
| 'On Saturday the marriage of Mr. Theodore Brinckman, son of Sir Theodore Brinckman, with | ||||||
| Miss Linton, the stepdaughter of Lord Aylesford, at St. Mark's Church, North Audley Street, | ||||||
| was made the occasion of a series of remarkable interruptions. The marriage was announced | ||||||
| some months ago to take place on Saturday, and on this being made known to certain | ||||||
| members of the English Church Union it was decided that an attempt should be made to | ||||||
| stop the ceremony. The ground of this action was based upon the fact that in July, 1894, | ||||||
| Mrs. Brinckman filed a petition for divorce against her husband, which he did not defend, | ||||||
| and the Divorce Court granted a decree nisi, which was not made absolute until January of | ||||||
| the present year. Shortly afterwards the engagement of the respondent to Miss Linton was | ||||||
| made public, and forthwith a number of well-known Churchmen petitioned the Bishop of | ||||||
| London to stop the wedding from being held in a consecrated church. They based their | ||||||
| objections on the undefended divorce suit, maintaining that the marriage should be legalised | ||||||
| before a registrar in order that a serious offence should not be made against the law of the | ||||||
| Church. To that petition and subsequent appeals the Bishop of London declined to reply, | ||||||
| with the result that the objectors at a special meeting decided to enter a public protest | ||||||
| against the marriage being solemnized in a consecrated church. On the doors of St. Mark's | ||||||
| Church being opened on Saturday, a large number of members of the English Church Union | ||||||
| entered the building, taking seats in the gallery, among them being the Duke of Newcastle, | ||||||
| Father Black, and the Rev. H. Washington, of St. Saviour's, Pimlico. When the bridal party | ||||||
| had taken their places before the Rev. Ker Gray at the chancel, Father Black rose and | ||||||
| protested against the marriage of the parties. This declaration caused the greatest excite- | ||||||
| ment among those present in the church, several cries of "Shame" and "Disgraceful" being | ||||||
| raised. The Rev. Ker Gray, for the time ignoring the interruption, recited that portion of the | ||||||
| marriage service which says "If any man can show just cause why they may not lawfully | ||||||
| be joined together, let him now speak or else hereafter forever hold his peace," Father | ||||||
| Black then again rose, loudly exclaiming that he, as a clerk in holy orders, protested | ||||||
| against the solemnization of the marriage, alluding to the fifth rubric of the service. By this | ||||||
| time the commotion was intense, frequent expressions of sympathy with the unfortunate | ||||||
| bride being raised. The Rev. Ker Gray turned angrily towards Father Black with the remark, | ||||||
| "Sir, I am here by the Bishop's mandate, and I refuse to hear another word from you." | ||||||
| The rev. gentleman then continued the marriage ceremony, but he had scarcely spoken | ||||||
| ten words before Father Black rose and continued his protest. He was received with hisses | ||||||
| and groans. During the reading of the document the Rev. Ker Gray had continued with the | ||||||
| service. After entering the above protest Father Black and his party left the church amidst | ||||||
| a remarkable demonstration of disapproval. Outside there was a strong body of police, but | ||||||
| the protesting party were loudly hissed by the crowd that had left the church.' | ||||||
| Another, doubtless sensationalised, account has the bride fainting on the altar steps and | ||||||
| police entering the church to forcibly remove the protestors. The bride was then revived | ||||||
| and the ceremony brought to an end as quickly as possible. Unfortunately, the marriage | ||||||
| ended in divorce in 1912. For further information regarding Sir Theodore's first wife, see | ||||||
| the note under the baronetcy of Houston. | ||||||
| Sir Hylton Ralph Brisco, 5th baronet | ||||||
| Sir Hylton disappeared from a P & O liner somewhere near Colombo, Ceylon [now Sri Lanka] | ||||||
| in late January 1922. According to a report in the 'Manchester Guardian' of 3 February 1922 | ||||||
| "On the arrival of the P & O liner Narkunda here [Colombo] it was found that one of the | ||||||
| passengers, Sir Hylton Ralph Brisco, was missing. He had seemed quite cheerful on the | ||||||
| journey to Bombay, but subsequently had remained in his cabin and was believed to be | ||||||
| suffering from insomnia. When the steward took a cup of milk to his cabin a few hours before | ||||||
| the vessel reached Colombo, he found Sir Hylton Brisco was missing. A search on board failed | ||||||
| to reveal his whereabouts and it is feared that he has been drowned.' | ||||||
| In May 1922, the executors of Sir Hylton's will sought leave before the Probate, Divorce and | ||||||
| Admiralty Division of the High Court to presume Sir Hylton's death. The applicant stated in | ||||||
| evidence that Sir Hylton had had trouble with his wife (they had divorced the previous year) | ||||||
| and in January 1922 he had left London to travel to Sydney. On 30 January, when the liner | ||||||
| was off Colombo, he was found to be missing. A search was made, but no trace of him could | ||||||
| be found; his clothes were in his cabin and only his pyjamas were missing. It was thought that | ||||||
| he had gone on deck and accidentally overbalanced and fallen into the sea. After hearing all of | ||||||
| the evidence, the judge gave leave to presume Sir Hylton's death on or after 29 January 1922. | ||||||
| Sir John James Briscoe, 5th baronet | ||||||
| According to 'The Times' of 4 July 1994 "Sir James Briscoe was killed in a crash in his 1903 | ||||||
| Vauxhall yesterday. Sir James, 42, was taking part in a week-long car rally based at Malvern | ||||||
| in Hereford and Worcester when his car and a recovery vehicle crashed head-on. The father | ||||||
| of two, from Swainsthorpe, Norfolk, is thought to have died instantly." | ||||||
| At the time of his death, his wife was pregnant. She gave birth to a son four months after her | ||||||
| husband's death, and this son became the 6th baronet from the moment of his birth. | ||||||
| Sir Benjamin Parnell Bromhead, 4th baronet | ||||||
| Although Sir Benjamin Bromhead lost both arms in a single battle, he continued to command | ||||||
| a Sikh regiment in India in the last years of the 19th century. On his death, 'The Times' of | ||||||
| 2 August 1935 contained the following obituary:- | ||||||
| 'Colonel Sir Benjamin Parnell Bromhead, the oldest English baronet*, died on Wednesday night | ||||||
| at his home, Thurlby Hall, Lincolnshire, at the age of 96. He was the head of a family with a | ||||||
| centuries long tradition of Army service. His inherited bravery made it almost impossible to | ||||||
| restrain him in Service days from rushing into the thick of fighting in the Indian Frontier wars. | ||||||
| * the Scottish baronet, Sir Fitzroy Maclean, was 17 months older | ||||||
| 'The latter half of his long life was spent in a maimed condition which would have led most men | ||||||
| of his ample means to give up every public interest and live in seclusion. In the Sikkim | ||||||
| Expedition of 1888 he was desperately wounded, losing his right arm and the elbow joint of his | ||||||
| left arm, and only escaping the loss of a leg as by a "miracle." Outstripping his Sikh sepoys, he | ||||||
| was just in time to reach a pass before the enemy, who momentarily halted, until they saw | ||||||
| that he was alone, and then they cut him down. His men came to the rescue only just in time. | ||||||
| For this service he was made C.B. | ||||||
| 'Born on October 22, 1838, he was the second of the fours soldier sons of Major Sir Edmund | ||||||
| Bromhead (1791-1870), who lost an eye at Waterloo, and grandson of Lieutenant-General Sir | ||||||
| Gonville Bromhead, who was at Quebec with Wolfe. The baronetcy of the United Kingdom, of | ||||||
| which Sir Benjamin was the fourth holder, dates from 1806, and the family has been established | ||||||
| in Lincolnshire since the beginning of the twelfth century. A maternal ancestor of Sir Benjamin | ||||||
| was Edmund Gonville, founder in 1348 of Gonville Hall, Cambridge, which on enlargement by | ||||||
| Dr. John Caius in 1557 became Gonville and Caius College. | ||||||
| 'Sir Benjamin's elder brother, Captain Edward Bromhead, died in Bombay a year before his | ||||||
| father. The two younger brothers were both in The South Wales Borderers. Colonel C[harles] | ||||||
| J[ames] Bromhead, C.B., who commanded the regiment, died in 1922. The youngest brother, | ||||||
| Major Gonville Bromhead, who died when the regiment was in India in 1891, will be remembered | ||||||
| for the valour which won him the V.C. at Rorke's Drift. | ||||||
| 'When Sir Benjamin was gazetted to the 30th Foot at Delhi in January, 1859, the regiment, | ||||||
| then consisting of 10 companies, was scattered in different parts of Delhi and its neighbour- | ||||||
| hood for the purposes of pacification after the Mutiny. After a few years he was transferred to | ||||||
| the Indian Staff Corps, and had long service first with the 40th Bengal Native Infantry and | ||||||
| then with the 32nd Sikh Pioneers, completing his military career in its command. He fought in | ||||||
| the Afghan War of 1878-1880 (being in both the Bazar Valley expeditions), in Egypt in 1882, | ||||||
| and in several of the Indian frontier wars of his period. His last active service was in command | ||||||
| of the 32nd Sikh Pioneers in the Hazara, or Black Mountain, expedition of 1891. His regiment | ||||||
| was in support o0f the 4th Sikhs, a portion of whom were holding the village of Ghazikhot, on | ||||||
| the Indus. This company was severely attacked one dark night by Hindustani fanatics, who | ||||||
| rushed on them and killed many with their swords and daggers. Hearing sounds of fighting | ||||||
| Bromhead ordered his men to fall in, and not waiting for the whole regiment to form up dashed | ||||||
| on ahead with the leading company, supported the Sikhs, and saved them from extermination. | ||||||
| 'After completing his regimental command Bromhead, on the recommendation of Lord Roberts, | ||||||
| was appointed Governor of the Aitchison Chiefs' College at Lahore. Here he came in close | ||||||
| contact with all the ruling chiefs and nobles of the Punjab, and advised them as to the bringing | ||||||
| up and education of their boys. He inspired in all great confidence, respect, and affection, and | ||||||
| no British officer of his time was better known among all classes of people in the Punjab. By | ||||||
| the Sikhs he was held in special affection, speaking their language as he did very fluently. For | ||||||
| years after giving up the command of the 32nd Sikh Pioneers he was regarded as the "Father | ||||||
| of the Regiment," and to the very last was always spoken of by the old Indian officers and | ||||||
| men as "the Colonel-Sahib." An element in the great influence over the Sikhs of his eminent | ||||||
| son-in-law, Field-Marshal Sir William Birdwood, was his relationship by marriage to this fine | ||||||
| officer of the old school. Sir Benjamin retired from India early in 1897. | ||||||
| Before losing his arms he was known as one of the best small-game shots in India, and there | ||||||
| were few parts of Northern India and Kashmir where he had not penetrated after game of all | ||||||
| kinds. As a younger man he would spend many happy days in the desert north of Bikanir with | ||||||
| his two riding camels and one or two faithful Indian servants. His closing years were happily | ||||||
| spent at his ancestral home , Thurlby Hall, near Lincoln. He retained his activity to the end, | ||||||
| strolling in the grounds after breakfast and then taking long motoring drives. Two years ago | ||||||
| he had his first air trip in a passenger-carrying machine at a display at Lincoln. His comment | ||||||
| was that "it was not thrilling enough." | ||||||
| Sir William Cunliffe Brooks, 1st and only baronet | ||||||
| On Sir William's death, the "Weekly Irish Times" of 30 June 1900 published the following, under | ||||||
| the heading of "An Eccentric Millionaire":- | ||||||
| 'The death of Sir William Cunliffe Brooks, the great Manchester banker, has removed a notable | ||||||
| figure on Deeside. The dead baronet of Glentana was perhaps the nearest approach to a Count | ||||||
| of Monte Cristo in real life that we have had for many a day. The visitor to Aboyne district is | ||||||
| often puzzled with the quaint inscriptions over roadside walls. If an apt quotation flashed | ||||||
| through the baronet's mind at a particular spot he jotted it down, and presently he had a stone | ||||||
| erected at the place bearing the inscription. His donations to objects in which he was | ||||||
| interested were on a princely scale. His letters on such occasions were quaintly worded: they | ||||||
| invariably ran - "Much pleasure have I in enclosing my cheque per £1,000." In correspondence | ||||||
| he invariably used crayon pencils of different colours. Thus, when in good humour he employed | ||||||
| green; when displeased he changed it to blue, and when really angry and obdurate he used a | ||||||
| fiery red, so that sight of the address usually prepared his officials for the nature of the | ||||||
| contents of the letter.' | ||||||
| Sir Henry Delves Broughton, 9th baronet | ||||||
| The following article appeared in the New Zealand 'Bruce Herald' on 30 May 1899:- | ||||||
| 'Of the many thousands who cross and recross Waterloo Bridge, very few doubtless were | ||||||
| aware that the two dismal-looking houses abutting upon the Surrey side of the river, and in | ||||||
| close contiguity to the old shot tower, were tenanted by an old and wealthy but yet | ||||||
| eccentric, baronet. | ||||||
| 'It was in the garret of one of these houses - No. 2, Waterloo Road - that the late Sir Henry | ||||||
| Delves Broughton died recently, at the advanced age of 91 years. Besides being one of the | ||||||
| oldest, he was probably one of the most eccentric members of the baronetage. For years, it | ||||||
| is said, he never crossed the threshold of the house in which he elected to live the life of a | ||||||
| recluse. He passed his time almost exclusively in the room in which he was found dead. The | ||||||
| cause of his death was senile decay. There was no one with him when he died, but a doctor | ||||||
| had seen him the day before and during the few weeks previously, so that there was no | ||||||
| necessity for an inquest. | ||||||
| 'From the window of his garret the aged baronet was able to command an extensive view of | ||||||
| the river and surrounding locality, but one of the things which seemed to afford him especial | ||||||
| delight was to paper the walls over and over again with pictures cut from the various | ||||||
| illustrated papers. A dressing gown was the chief article of attire. | ||||||
| 'He lived frugally. His meals were served and placed outside his room at stated intervals. No | ||||||
| servant, it is said, entered the room for years. He had a strong aversion to medical men, | ||||||
| and any business had to be transacted with the baronet on one side and his interrogator on | ||||||
| the other side of the partly opened door. | ||||||
| 'Still, with all his peculiarities, there are those who will miss the late baronet. He was rich | ||||||
| and he was generous to many old dependants. To the blind paper seller who stands on the | ||||||
| bridge close to the house he was also a friend. And yet it is stated that he had a distrust of | ||||||
| members of his own sex, and always gave strict instructions against the admission of any | ||||||
| male, except members of his own family, to the house. | ||||||
| 'The rent roll of this eccentric baronet amounted to £30,000 a year, and he has left | ||||||
| personalty to the amount of about £150,000. According to Debrett there are two family | ||||||
| seats: Doddington Park, Nantwich and Broughton Hall, Staffordshire, and the baronet was | ||||||
| the patron of five livings.' | ||||||
| John Evelyn Delves Broughton, son of Sir Evelyn Delves Broughton, 12th baronet | ||||||
| John, the two-year-old son and heir of Sir Evelyn, died after falling into an ornamental pond | ||||||
| in the grounds of his father's house, as reported by The Times on 14 September 1964:- | ||||||
| 'John Evelyn Delves, aged two, heir of Sir Evelyn Delves Broughton, and Lady Broughton, of | ||||||
| Doddington Park, near Nantwich, Cheshire, was found drowned on Saturday in a shallow | ||||||
| ornamental pool which was being built in the garden of his home. The boy was heir to a | ||||||
| baronetcy dating back to 1660 [1661]. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Giles Tedstone, farm manager to Sir Evelyn, said today "Sir Evelyn and Lady Broughton | ||||||
| had been having tea with their children and friends on the lawn, and the children wandered | ||||||
| off afterwards to play. Lady Broughton missed young John a couple of minutes later and he | ||||||
| was found in the pool. | ||||||
| "Artificial respiration was tried and Sir Evelyn then drove the boy to hospital but it was all too | ||||||
| late. The pool was only 18 inches deep and has now been filled in." | ||||||
| 'Lady Broughton is expecting another baby in a few months' time. They have two daughters | ||||||
| aged five and three.' | ||||||
| The Times, 15 September 1964:- | ||||||
| 'The son and heir of Sir Evelyn and Lady Broughton, of Doddington Park, near Nantwich, | ||||||
| Cheshire, who was found lying dead in an ornamental pool at his home was not drowned, it was | ||||||
| stated at today's inquest at Nantwich on John Evelyn Delves Broughton, aged two. | ||||||
| 'Dr. John Heppleston, pathologist, said that a post-mortem showed that death was due to a | ||||||
| blockage of the windpipe by food, caused by vomiting which had followed immersion in water. | ||||||
| Questioned by Sir Evelyn, Dr. Heppleston said it was possible that the boy slipped or fell | ||||||
| into the water, and the shock made him vomit. He could have been dead within part of a | ||||||
| second. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Leonard Culey, West Cheshire deputy coroner, recording a verdict of accidental death, | ||||||
| said by a chance in a million the shock of the water made the boy sick and he asphyxiated. | ||||||
| It was a case that could not have been foreseen.' | ||||||
| The baronets of Broun of Colstoun and the Colstoun Pear | ||||||
| One of the ancestors of the ancient house of Broun of Colstoun married the daughter of Hugo | ||||||
| de Gifford, who was also known as the Warlock of Gifford, famous for his supposed powers of | ||||||
| necromancy. As they were proceeding to the church, the wizard lord stopped the bridal | ||||||
| procession beneath a pear-tree and, plucking one its pears, he gave it to his daughter, telling | ||||||
| her that he had no dowry to give her, but that as long as she kept that gift, good fortune | ||||||
| would never desert her or her descendants. This event was supposed to have happened | ||||||
| around the year 1270. Ever since that time, the Broun family has carefully preserved the pear | ||||||
| in a silver box. | ||||||
| The fruit was said to have remained as fresh as the day it was picked until at some point during | ||||||
| either the 16th or 17th centuries (sources differ), a pregnant lady of the family, who had | ||||||
| conceived an intense longing for some fruit which was out of season, attempted to eat the | ||||||
| pear. The pear immediately turned to stone, but with the bite-mark clearly apparent. Following | ||||||
| this incident a period of litigation ensued, as the result of which the family lost two of its best | ||||||
| farms on its estates. | ||||||
| Sir Richard Broun, 8th baronet | ||||||
| The patents of baronets created in Scotland prior to 1633 contain a covenant that ".....at | ||||||
| whatever time, and so soon as, the Eldest Son and Apparent Heir-male of the said (name of the | ||||||
| baronet), or the Eldest Son and Apparent Heir-male of whatsoever Heirs-male succeeding to | ||||||
| him, shall attain the age of twenty-one years, that they, and every one of them respectively | ||||||
| by Us, our Heirs, and Successors, shall be inaugurated Knights whenever they, or any of them, | ||||||
| shall require that Order without any Fees, or expense whatever." | ||||||
| The patents of baronets of Scotland created after 1633 contain either the wording above, or | ||||||
| the following general clause - "We give, grant, and confer, on the said (name of baronet), and | ||||||
| his Heirs-male, for ever, the title, dignity, order and honour of Knight-Baronet......" | ||||||
| On 28 June 1633, the Parliament of Scotland passed a law confirming this privilege. Furthermore, | ||||||
| by warrant dated 10 May 1636, addressed to the Chancellor of Scotland, King Charles I | ||||||
| stated that ".......We will that you knight the eldest sons of all and every of such Baronets who | ||||||
| being the perfect age of twenty one years should desire the same, without putting them to any | ||||||
| charges or expenses....." | ||||||
| Seeking to take advantage of this privilege, in July 1836, Richard Broun, eldest son and heir to | ||||||
| the baronetcy of Broun of Colstoun, made formal application to the Lord Chamberlain requesting | ||||||
| that he be presented to the King in order that he might be knighted. His application contained | ||||||
| references to the covenants outlined above which rendered it compulsory for the Crown to | ||||||
| grant the knighthood. However, the request was rejected, on the grounds that the patent | ||||||
| which had created the Broun baronetcy in 1686 did not contain any clause authorising an | ||||||
| eldest son and heir to claim the honour of knighthood. | ||||||
| Broun refused to accept that decision, pointing out that his right to knighthood was enshrined | ||||||
| in the 1633 Act of the Scottish Parliament, and that this statute had been ratified as part of | ||||||
| the Act of Union in 1707. The authorities remained unmoved, however, and the matter dragged | ||||||
| on for a number of years until June 1842 when, at a meeting of the Baronetage, a unanimous | ||||||
| resolution was passed that, the constitution of the Baronetage having been broken, the | ||||||
| baronets directed that Broun vindicate the privilege by henceforth assuming the honour of | ||||||
| knighthood. As soon as the resolution had been passed, Broun rose and addressed the meeting | ||||||
| and formally assumed his knighthood, throwing the responsibility for his doing so upon the Lord | ||||||
| Chamberlain. | ||||||
| In later life. Broun was instrumental in founding the 'London Necropolis and National Mausoleum | ||||||
| Company,' which established a cemetery at Brookwood, near Woking. For a time, Brookwood | ||||||
| was the largest cemetery in the world, and today remains the largest cemetery in the United | ||||||
| Kingdom, with nearly 250,000 people buried there. | ||||||
| See also the note relating to the Cotter baronetcy. | ||||||
| Sir William Augustus Brown, 3rd baronet [GB 1732] | ||||||
| The following brief entry is recorded in the listing of deaths in the Annual Register for 1794:- | ||||||
| 'At Knightsbridge, Lady Browne, relict of the late Sir James Browne. Her son, Sir William, in the | ||||||
| Guards, and nephew of General Browne, having long been insane, and living in the house with | ||||||
| her, in the absence of his keeper, took up a coal-scuttle and dashed his mother's brains out.' | ||||||
| Copyright © 2020 Maltagenealogy.com | ||||||