| BARONETAGE | ||||||
| Last updated 15/10/2023 | ||||||
| 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 | ||||||
| BROWNLOW of Belton,Lincs | ||||||
| 26 Jul 1641 | E | 1 | John Brownlow | c 1594 | 23 Nov 1679 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 23 Nov 1679 | ||||||
| BROWNLOW of Humby,Lincs | ||||||
| 27 Jul 1641 | E | 1 | William Brownlow | c 1595 | 1666 | |
| MP for Lincolnshire 1653 | ||||||
| 1666 | 2 | Richard Brownlow | 30 Aug 1668 | |||
| 30 Aug 1668 | 3 | John Brownlow | 26 Jun 1659 | 16 Jul 1697 | 38 | |
| MP for Grantham 1689-1697 | ||||||
| 16 Jul 1697 | 4 | William Brownlow | 5 Nov 1665 | 6 Mar 1701 | 35 | |
| MP for Peterborough 1689-1698 and | ||||||
| Bishops Castle 1698-1700 | ||||||
| 6 Mar 1701 | 5 | John Brownlow | 16 Nov 1690 | 27 Feb 1754 | 63 | |
| He was subsequently created Viscount | ||||||
| Tyrconnel (qv) in 1718 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until its | ||||||
| extinction in 1754 | ||||||
| BROWNRIGG of London | ||||||
| 9 Mar 1816 | UK | 1 | Robert Brownrigg | 8 Feb 1758 | 27 May 1833 | 75 |
| 27 May 1833 | 2 | Robert William Colebrooke Brownrigg | 29 Jul 1817 | 6 Aug 1882 | 65 | |
| 6 Aug 1882 | 3 | Henry Moore Brownrigg | 17 Oct 1819 | 28 Jan 1900 | 80 | |
| 28 Jan 1900 | 4 | Douglas Egremont Robert Brownrigg | 25 Jul 1867 | 14 Feb 1939 | 71 | |
| 14 Feb 1939 | 5 | Nicholas Gawen Brownrigg | 22 Dec 1932 | 28 Sep 2018 | 85 | |
| 28 Sep 2018 | 6 | Michael Gawan Brownrigg | 11 Oct 1961 | |||
| BRUCE of Stenhouse,Clackmannan | ||||||
| 26 Jun 1629 | NS | 1 | William Bruce | Feb 1630 | ||
| Feb 1630 | 2 | William Bruce | 19 Aug 1621 | c 1660 | ||
| c 1660 | 3 | William Bruce | Mar 1682 | |||
| Mar 1682 | 4 | William Bruce | Mar 1721 | |||
| Mar 1721 | 5 | Robert Bruce | c 1760 | |||
| c 1760 | 6 | Michael Bruce | 1 Nov 1795 | |||
| 1 Nov 1795 | 7 | William Bruce | 17 Nov 1827 | |||
| 17 Nov 1827 | 8 | Michael Bruce | 31 Mar 1798 | 14 Dec 1862 | 64 | |
| 14 Dec 1862 | 9 | William Cuningham Bruce | 20 Sep 1825 | 29 May 1906 | 80 | |
| 29 May 1906 | 10 | William Waller Bruce | 27 Sep 1856 | 23 Mar 1912 | 55 | |
| 23 Mar 1912 | 11 | Michael William Selby Bruce | 27 Mar 1894 | 26 May 1957 | 63 | |
| 26 May 1957 | 12 | Francis Michael Ian Bruce | 3 Apr 1926 | 28 Feb 2021 | 95 | |
| 28 Feb 2021 | 13 | Michael Ian Richard Bruce | 10 Dec 1950 | |||
| BRUCE of Balcaskie,Scotland | ||||||
| 21 Oct 1668 | NS | 1 | William Bruce | 1 Jan 1710 | ||
| 1 Jan 1710 | 2 | John Bruce | 19 Mar 1710 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 19 Mar 1710 | ||||||
| BRUCE of Dublin | ||||||
| 23 Dec 1812 | UK | 1 | Stewart Bruce | c 1764 | 19 Mar 1841 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 19 Mar 1841 | ||||||
| BRUCE-CLIFTON of Downhill,co.Londonderry | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1804 | UK | 1 | Henry Hervey Aston Bruce | 1822 | ||
| 1822 | 2 | James Robertson Bruce | 4 Sep 1788 | 22 Apr 1836 | 47 | |
| 22 Apr 1836 | 3 | Henry Hervey Bruce | 22 Sep 1820 | 8 Dec 1907 | 87 | |
| MP for Coleraine 1862-1874 and 1880-1885 | ||||||
| Lord Lieutenant Londonderry 1877-1907 | ||||||
| PC [I] 1889 | ||||||
| 8 Dec 1907 | 4 | Hervey Juckes Lloyd Bruce | 5 Oct 1843 | 8 May 1919 | 75 | |
| 8 May 1919 | 5 | Hervey Ronald Bruce | 9 Dec 1872 | 18 May 1924 | 51 | |
| For further information on the death of this | ||||||
| baronet,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 18 May 1924 | 6 | Hervey John William Bruce | 29 Jun 1919 | 20 Jun 1971 | 51 | |
| 20 Jun 1971 | 7 | Hervey James Hugh Bruce (Bruce-Clifton | 3 Sep 1952 | 7 Feb 2010 | 57 | |
| from 1997) | ||||||
| 7 Feb 2010 | 8 | Hervey Hamish Peter Bruce-Clifton | 20 Nov 1986 | |||
| BRUCE-GARDNER of Frilford,Berks | ||||||
| 12 Feb 1945 | UK | 1 | Charles Bruce-Gardner | 6 Nov 1887 | 1 Oct 1960 | 72 |
| 1 Oct 1960 | 2 | Douglas Bruce Bruce-Gardner | 27 Jan 1917 | 25 Nov 1997 | 80 | |
| 25 Nov 1997 | 3 | Robert Henry Bruce-Gardner | 10 Jun 1943 | 6 Sep 2017 | 74 | |
| 6 Sep 2017 | 4 | Edmund Thomas Peter Bruce-Gardner | 28 Jan 1982 | |||
| BRUCE-HOPE of Craighall,Fife | ||||||
| 19 Feb 1628 | NS | See "Hope" | ||||
| BRUDENELL of Deene,Northants | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1611 | E | 1 | Thomas Brudenell | 16 Sep 1663 | ||
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Brudenell of Stonton (qv) in 1628 with | ||||||
| which title the baronetcy then merged. | ||||||
| Currently the baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| with the Marquessate of Ailesbury | ||||||
| BRUNNER of Druids Cross,Lancs | ||||||
| and Winnington Old Hall,Cheshire | ||||||
| 27 Jul 1895 | UK | 1 | John Tomlinson Brunner | 8 Feb 1842 | 1 Jul 1919 | 77 |
| MP for Northwich 1885-1886 and 1887-1909 | ||||||
| PC 1906 | ||||||
| 1 Jul 1919 | 2 | John Fowler Leece Brunner | 24 May 1865 | 16 Jan 1929 | 63 | |
| MP for Leigh 1906-1910,Northwich 1910-1918 | ||||||
| and Southport 1923-1924 | ||||||
| 16 Jan 1929 | 3 | Felix John Morgan Brunner | 13 Oct 1897 | 2 Nov 1982 | 85 | |
| 2 Nov 1982 | 4 | John Henry Kilian Brunner | 1 Jun 1927 | 18 Nov 2015 | 88 | |
| 18 Nov 2015 | 5 | Nicholas Felix Minturn Brunner | 16 Jan 1960 | |||
| BRUNTON of Stratford Place,London | ||||||
| 17 Jul 1908 | UK | 1 | Sir Thomas Lauder Brunton | 14 Mar 1844 | 16 Sep 1916 | 72 |
| 16 Sep 1916 | 2 | James Stopford Lauder Brunton | 11 Oct 1884 | 25 Jul 1943 | 58 | |
| 25 Jul 1943 | 3 | Edward Francis Lauder Brunton | 10 Nov 1916 | 1 Jan 2007 | 90 | |
| 1 Jan 2007 | 4 | James Lauder Brunton | 24 Sep 1947 | |||
| BRYDGES of Wilton,Hereford | ||||||
| 17 May 1627 | E | 1 | Giles Brydges | c 1573 | 12 Sep 1637 | |
| MP for Tewkesbury 1621-1622 and | ||||||
| Herefordshire 1625-1629 | ||||||
| 12 Sep 1637 | 2 | John Brydges | 1623 | 21 Feb 1652 | ||
| 21 Feb 1652 | 3 | James Brydges | Sep 1642 | 16 Oct 1714 | 72 | |
| He subsequently succeeded to the Barony | ||||||
| of Chandos (qv) in 1676 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged. Later merged | ||||||
| with Dukedom of Chandos until its | ||||||
| extinction in 1789 | ||||||
| BRYDGES of Boultibrook,Hereford | ||||||
| 9 Oct 1807 | UK | See "Jones-Brydges" | ||||
| BRYDGES of Denton Court,Kent | ||||||
| 27 May 1815 | UK | 1 | Samuel Egerton Brydges | 30 Nov 1762 | 8 Sep 1837 | 74 |
| MP for Maidstone 1812-1818 | ||||||
| 8 Sep 1837 | 2 | John William Egerton Brydges | 8 Nov 1792 | 15 Feb 1858 | 65 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 15 Feb 1858 | ||||||
| BUCHAN-HEPBURN of Smeaton | ||||||
| Hepburn,Haddington | ||||||
| 6 May 1815 | UK | 1 | George Buchan-Hepburn | 26 Jun 1819 | ||
| 26 Jun 1819 | 2 | John Buchan-Hepburn | 17 Jun 1776 | 8 Oct 1833 | 57 | |
| 8 Oct 1833 | 3 | Thomas Buchan-Hepburn | 30 Sep 1804 | 17 Dec 1893 | 89 | |
| MP for Haddingtonshire 1838-1847 | ||||||
| 17 Dec 1893 | 4 | Archibald Buchan-Hepburn | 12 Mar 1852 | 17 May 1929 | 77 | |
| 17 May 1929 | 5 | John Karslake Thomas Buchan-Hepburn | 20 Mar 1894 | 8 Feb 1961 | 66 | |
| 8 Feb 1961 | 6 | Ninian Buchan Archibald John Buchan- | ||||
| Hepburn | 8 Oct 1922 | 22 Feb 1992 | 69 | |||
| 22 Feb 1992 | 7 | John Alistair Trant Kidd Buchan-Hepburn | 27 Jun 1931 | 1 Feb 2022 | 90 | |
| 1 Feb 2022 | 8 | John James Christopher Thomas Buchan-Hepburn | 1 Dec 1992 | |||
| BUCHANAN of Burgh St Peters,Norfolk | ||||||
| 21 Nov 1775 | GB | See "Leith-Buchanan" | ||||
| BUCHANAN of Dunburgh,Stirling | ||||||
| 14 Dec 1878 | UK | 1 | Sir Andrew Buchanan | 7 May 1807 | 12 Nov 1882 | 75 |
| PC 1863 | ||||||
| 12 Nov 1882 | 2 | James Buchanan | 7 Aug 1840 | 16 Oct 1901 | 61 | |
| 16 Oct 1901 | 3 | Eric Alexander Buchanan | 19 Aug 1848 | 29 Jul 1928 | 79 | |
| 29 Jul 1928 | 4 | Charles James Buchanan | 16 Apr 1899 | 25 May 1984 | 85 | |
| 25 May 1984 | 5 | Andrew George Buchanan | 21 Jul 1937 | |||
| Lord Lieutenant Nottingham 1991- | ||||||
| BUCHANAN of Lavington,Sussex | ||||||
| 6 Feb 1920 | UK | 1 | James Buchanan | 16 Aug 1849 | 9 Aug 1935 | 85 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Woolavington (qv) in 1922 with which | ||||||
| title the baronetcy then merged until | ||||||
| its extinction in 1935 | ||||||
| BUCHANAN-JARDINE | ||||||
| of Castle Milk,Dumfries | ||||||
| 20 Jul 1885 | UK | 1 | Robert Jardine | 24 May 1825 | 17 Feb 1905 | 79 |
| MP for Ashburton 1865-1868, Dumfries | ||||||
| 1868-1874 and Dumfries-shire 1880-1892 | ||||||
| 17 Feb 1905 | 2 | Robert William Buchanan Jardine | 21 Jan 1868 | 30 Jan 1927 | 59 | |
| 30 Jan 1927 | 3 | John William Buchanan-Jardine | 7 Mar 1900 | 5 Nov 1969 | 69 | |
| 5 Nov 1969 | 4 | Andrew Rupert John Buchanan-Jardine | 2 Feb 1923 | 24 Aug 2010 | 87 | |
| 24 Aug 2010 | 5 | John Christopher Rupert Buchanan-Jardine | 20 Mar 1952 | |||
| BUCK of Hamby Grange,Lincs | ||||||
| 22 Dec 1660 | E | 1 | John Buck | c 1669 | ||
| c 1669 | 2 | William Buck | c 1655 | 15 Aug 1717 | ||
| 15 Aug 1717 | 3 | Charles Buck | c 1692 | 20 Jun 1729 | ||
| 20 Jun 1729 | 4 | Charles Louis Buck | 31 Jan 1722 | 7 Jun 1782 | 60 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 7 Jun 1782 | ||||||
| BUCKLEY of Mawddwy,Merioneth | ||||||
| 11 Dec 1868 | UK | 1 | Edmund Buckley | 16 Apr 1834 | 21 Mar 1910 | 75 |
| MP for Newcastle uner Lyme 1865-1878 | ||||||
| 21 Mar 1910 | 2 | Edmund Buckley | 7 May 1861 | 20 Jan 1919 | 57 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 20 Jan 1919 | ||||||
| BUCKWORTH-HERNE-SOAME | ||||||
| of Sheen,Surrey | ||||||
| 1 Apr 1697 | E | 1 | John Buckworth | 18 Oct 1662 | 12 Jun 1709 | 46 |
| 12 Jun 1709 | 2 | John Buckworth | 5 Apr 1700 | 3 Jan 1759 | 58 | |
| MP for Weobly 1734-1741 | ||||||
| 3 Jan 1759 | 3 | Everard Buckworth | 23 Apr 1704 | 2 Feb 1779 | 74 | |
| 2 Feb 1779 | 4 | John Buckworth | 8 Jul 1726 | 10 Jun 1801 | 74 | |
| 10 Jun 1801 | 5 | Everard Buckworth-Herne | 12 Nov 1732 | 15 Jul 1814 | 81 | |
| 15 Jul 1814 | 6 | Buckworth Buckworth-Herne-Soame | 17 Apr 1762 | 21 Jan 1822 | 59 | |
| 21 Jan 1822 | 7 | Peter Buckworth-Herne-Soame | 24 Apr 1793 | 25 Feb 1860 | 66 | |
| 25 Feb 1860 | 8 | John Buckworth-Herne-Soame | 21 Jun 1794 | 4 Feb 1888 | 93 | |
| 4 Feb 1888 | 9 | Charles Buckworth-Herne-Soame | 29 May 1830 | 25 Mar 1906 | 75 | |
| 25 Mar 1906 | 10 | Charles Buckworth-Herne-Soame | 18 Sep 1864 | 25 Aug 1931 | 67 | |
| 25 Aug 1931 | 11 | Charles Burnett Buckworth-Herne-Soame | 26 Sep 1894 | 20 Apr 1977 | 82 | |
| For further information on this baronet, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 20 Apr 1977 | 12 | Charles John Buckworth-Herne-Soame | 28 May 1932 | 28 Jul 2013 | 81 | |
| 28 Jul 2013 | 13 | Richard John Buckworth-Herne-Soame | 17 Aug 1970 | |||
| BULKELEY of Penrhyn,Carnarvon | ||||||
| 17 Jun 1661 | E | See "Williams-Bulkeley" | ||||
| BULKELEY of Dunlaven,Wicklow | ||||||
| 9 Dec 1672 | I | 1 | Richard Bulkeley | 7 Sep 1634 | 17 Mar 1685 | 50 |
| 17 Mar 1685 | 2 | Richard Bulkeley | 17 Aug 1660 | 7 Apr 1710 | 49 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 7 Apr 1710 | ||||||
| BULL of Hammersmith,London | ||||||
| 25 Nov 1922 | UK | 1 | William James Bull | 29 Sep 1863 | 23 Jan 1931 | 67 |
| MP for Hammersmith 1900-1918 and | ||||||
| Hammersmith South 1918-1929. PC 1918 | ||||||
| For further information on this baronet, see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of the page containing details of | ||||||
| MPs for Hammersmith | ||||||
| 23 Jan 1931 | 2 | Stephen John Bull | 11 Oct 1904 | 9 Mar 1942 | 37 | |
| 9 Mar 1942 | 3 | George Bull | 19 Jun 1906 | 9 Sep 1986 | 80 | |
| 9 Sep 1986 | 4 | Simeon George Bull | 1 Aug 1934 | |||
| BULLER of Lupton House,Devon | ||||||
| 13 Jan 1790 | GB | 1 | See "Yarde-Buller" | |||
| BULLER of Trenant Park,Cornwall | ||||||
| 3 Oct 1808 | UK | 1 | Edward Buller | 24 Dec 1764 | 15 Apr 1824 | 59 |
| to | MP for East Looe 1802-1820 | |||||
| 15 Apr 1824 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BULLER of Dilhorne,Staffs | ||||||
| 20 Jan 1866 | UK | See "Manningham-Buller" | ||||
| BULLOCK of Crosby,Lancs | ||||||
| 26 Jan 1954 | UK | 1 | Harold Malcolm Bullock | 10 Jul 1890 | 20 Jun 1966 | 75 |
| to | MP for Waterloo 1923-1950 and Crosby | |||||
| 20 Jun 1966 | 1950-1953 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| BULLOUGH of Kinloch Castle,Oban | ||||||
| 21 Jan 1916 | UK | 1 | Sir George Bullough | 28 Feb 1870 | 26 Jul 1939 | 69 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 26 Jul 1939 | ||||||
| BUNBURY of Stanney Hall,Cheshire | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1681 | E | 1 | Thomas Bunbury | 22 Aug 1682 | ||
| 22 Aug 1682 | 2 | Henry Bunbury | c 1657 | 20 Dec 1687 | ||
| 20 Dec 1687 | 3 | Henry Bunbury | 29 Nov 1676 | 12 Feb 1733 | 56 | |
| MP for Chester 1701-1727 | ||||||
| 12 Feb 1733 | 4 | Charles Bunbury | 9 Feb 1708 | 10 Apr 1742 | 34 | |
| MP for Chester 1733-1742 | ||||||
| 10 Apr 1742 | 5 | William Bunbury | c 1710 | 11 Jun 1764 | ||
| 11 Jun 1764 | 6 | Thomas Charles Bunbury | May 1740 | 31 Mar 1821 | 80 | |
| MP for Suffolk 1761-1784 and 1790-1812 | ||||||
| 31 Mar 1821 | 7 | Henry Edward Bunbury | 4 May 1778 | 13 Apr 1860 | 81 | |
| MP for Suffolk 1830-1832 | ||||||
| 13 Apr 1860 | 8 | Charles James Fox Bunbury | 4 Feb 1809 | 18 Jun 1886 | 77 | |
| 18 Jun 1886 | 9 | Edward Herbert Bunbury | 8 Jul 1811 | 5 Mar 1895 | 83 | |
| MP for Bury St.Edmunds 1847-1852 | ||||||
| 5 Mar 1895 | 10 | Henry Charles John Bunbury | 9 Jan 1855 | 18 Dec 1930 | 75 | |
| 18 Dec 1930 | 11 | Charles Henry Napier Bunbury | 19 Jan 1886 | 24 Jun 1963 | 77 | |
| 24 Jun 1963 | 12 | John William Napier Bunbury | 3 Jul 1915 | 28 Aug 1985 | 70 | |
| 28 Aug 1985 | 13 | Michael William Bunbury | 29 Dec 1946 | |||
| BUNBURY of Aughre,Tyrone | ||||||
| 30 Aug 1787 | I | See "Richardson-Bunbury" | ||||
| BUNCE of Otterden,Kent | ||||||
| May 1660 | E | 1 | James Bunce | c 1600 | 13 Dec 1670 | |
| 13 Dec 1670 | 2 | John Bunce | 24 Jan 1630 | 1683 | 53 | |
| 1683 | 3 | John Bunce | c 1659 | 1687 | ||
| 1687 | 4 | James Bunce | c 1710 | |||
| c 1710 | 5 | John Bunce | c 1720 | |||
| c 1720 | 6 | James Bunce | 15 Aug 1741 | |||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became either | |||||
| 15 Aug 1741 | extinct or dormant | |||||
| BURBIDGE of Littleton Park,Middlesex | ||||||
| 25 Jan 1916 | UK | 1 | Richard Burbidge | Mar 1847 | 31 May 1917 | 70 |
| 31 May 1917 | 2 | Richard Woodman Burbidge | 7 Dec 1872 | 3 Jun 1945 | 72 | |
| 3 Jun 1945 | 3 | Richard Grant Woodman Burbidge | 23 Jun 1897 | 2 Feb 1966 | 68 | |
| 2 Feb 1966 | 4 | John Richard Woodman Burbidge | 5 Oct 1930 | 31 May 1974 | 43 | |
| 31 May 1974 | 5 | Herbert Dudley Burbidge | 13 Nov 1904 | 31 Mar 2001 | 96 | |
| 31 Mar 2001 | 6 | Peter Dudley Burbidge | 20 Jun 1942 | 18 Dec 2019 | 77 | |
| 18 Dec 2019 | 7 | John Peter Burbidge | 1 Apr 1977 | |||
| BURDETT of Bramcote,Warwicks | ||||||
| 25 Feb 1619 | E | 1 | Thomas Burdett | 3 Aug 1585 | c 1647 | |
| c 1647 | 2 | Francis Burdett | 10 Sep 1608 | 30 Dec 1696 | 88 | |
| 30 Dec 1696 | 3 | Robert Burdett | 11 Jan 1640 | 18 Jan 1716 | 76 | |
| MP for Warwickshire 1679-1681 and | ||||||
| Lichfield 1689-1698 | ||||||
| 28 May 1716 | 4 | Robert Burdett | 28 May 1716 | 13 Feb 1797 | 80 | |
| MP for Tamworth 1748-1768 | ||||||
| 13 Feb 1797 | 5 | Francis Burdett | 25 Jan 1770 | 23 Jan 1844 | 73 | |
| MP for Boroughbridge 1796-1802, | ||||||
| Middlesex 1802-1804 and 1805-1806, | ||||||
| Westminster 1807-1837 and Wiltshire | ||||||
| North 1837-1844 | ||||||
| 23 Jan 1844 | 6 | Robert Burdett | 26 Apr 1796 | 7 Jun 1880 | 84 | |
| 7 Jun 1880 | 7 | Francis Burdett | 23 Mar 1813 | 31 May 1892 | 79 | |
| 31 May 1892 | 8 | Francis Burdett | 5 Jul 1869 | 13 Apr 1951 | 81 | |
| to | On his death the baronetcy became | |||||
| 13 Apr 1951 | dormant | |||||
| BURDETT of Burthwaite,Yorks | ||||||
| 25 Jul 1665 | E | 1 | Francis Burdett | 29 Sep 1642 | c 1719 | |
| c 1719 | 2 | Francis Burdett | 2 Aug 1675 | 11 Sep 1747 | 72 | |
| 11 Sep 1747 | 3 | Hugh Burdett | 18 Nov 1715 | 8 Sep 1760 | 44 | |
| 8 Sep 1760 | 4 | Charles Burdett | 22 May 1728 | 19 Jul 1803 | 75 | |
| 19 Jul 1803 | 5 | Charles Wyndham Burdett | 19 Jul 1771 | Dec 1839 | 68 | |
| Dec 1839 | 6 | Charles Wentworth Burdett | 26 Sep 1806 | 25 Aug 1848 | 41 | |
| 25 Aug 1848 | 7 | Charles Wentworth Burdett | 4 Nov 1835 | 22 May 1892 | 56 | |
| For further information on this baronet, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 22 May 1892 | 8 | Charles Grant Burdett | 1875 | 20 Nov 1918 | 43 | |
| 20 Nov 1918 | 9 | Charles Coventry Burdett | 1902 | 2 Jun 1940 | 37 | |
| 2 Jun 1940 | 10 | Henry Aylmer Burdett | 28 Nov 1881 | 23 Aug 1943 | 61 | |
| 23 Aug 1943 | 11 | Savile Aylmer Burdett | 24 Sep 1931 | 5 Jul 2017 | 85 | |
| 5 Jul 2017 | 12 | Crispin Peter Burdett | 8 Feb 1967 | |||
| BURDETT of Dunmore,Carlow | ||||||
| 11 Jul 1723 | I | See "Weldon" | ||||
| BURDON-SANDERSON of Banbury Road | ||||||
| 10 Aug 1899 | UK | 1 | John Scott Burdon-Sanderson | 21 Dec 1828 | 23 Nov 1905 | 76 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 23 Nov 1905 | ||||||
| BURGES of East Ham,Essex | ||||||
| 4 May 1793 | GB | See "Smith-Burges" | ||||
| BURGES of Burghfield,Berks | ||||||
| 21 Oct 1795 | GB | see "Lamb" | ||||
| BURGOYNE of Sutton,Beds | ||||||
| 15 Jul 1641 | E | 1 | John Burgoyne | 29 Jan 1591 | 9 Oct 1657 | 66 |
| MP for Warwickshire 1645-1648 | ||||||
| 9 Oct 1657 | 2 | Roger Burgoyne | 10 Mar 1618 | 16 Sep 1677 | 59 | |
| MP for Bedfordshire 1640 and 1641-1648 | ||||||
| and Warwickshire 1656-1658 | ||||||
| 16 Sep 1677 | 3 | John Burgoyne | c 1651 | 9 Apr 1709 | ||
| 9 Apr 1709 | 4 | Roger Burgoyne | 1716 | |||
| 1716 | 5 | John Burgoyne | c 1705 | 1716 | ||
| 1716 | 6 | Roger Burgoyne | 23 Apr 1710 | 31 Dec 1780 | 70 | |
| MP for Bedfordshire 1735-1747 | ||||||
| 31 Dec 1780 | 7 | John Burgoyne | 21 Sep 1739 | 23 Sep 1785 | 46 | |
| 23 Sep 1785 | 8 | Montagu Roger Burgoyne | 2 May 1773 | 11 Nov 1817 | 44 | |
| For further information about this baronet, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 11 Nov 1817 | 9 | John Montagu Burgoyne | 17 Oct 1796 | 17 Mar 1858 | 61 | |
| 17 Mar 1858 | 10 | John Montagu Burgoyne | 23 Oct 1832 | 19 Mar 1921 | 88 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 19 Mar 1921 | ||||||
| BURGOYNE of the Army | ||||||
| 18 Apr 1856 | UK | 1 | Sir John Fox Burgoyne | 24 Jul 1782 | 7 Oct 1871 | 89 |
| to | Field Marshal 1868 | |||||
| 7 Oct 1871 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BURKE of Glinsk,Galway | ||||||
| 2 Aug 1628 | I | 1 | Ulick Burke | c 1594 | c 1660 | |
| c 1660 | 2 | Edmund Burke | c 1686 | |||
| c 1686 | 3 | Ulick Burke | 1708 | |||
| 1708 | 4 | John Burke | c 1722 | |||
| c 1722 | 5 | Festus Burke | c 1730 | |||
| c 1730 | 6 | Theobald Burke | c 1740 | |||
| c 1740 | 7 | Henry Burke | 15 Mar 1748 | |||
| 15 Mar 1748 | 8 | Ulick Burke | 11 Apr 1759 | |||
| 11 Apr 1759 | 9 | Henry John Burke | Apr 1814 | |||
| Apr 1814 | 10 | John Ignatius Burke | 19 Mar 1784 | 1845 | 61 | |
| 1845 | 11 | Joseph Burke | 31 Jan 1786 | 30 Oct 1865 | 79 | |
| 30 Oct 1865 | 12 | John Lionel Burke | 26 Nov 1818 | 21 Jul 1884 | 65 | |
| 21 Jul 1884 | 13 | Theobald Hubert Burke | 25 Mar 1833 | 4 Apr 1909 | 76 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 4 Apr 1909 | ||||||
| BURKE of Marble Hill,co.Galway | ||||||
| 5 Dec 1797 | I | 1 | Thomas Burke | 1813 | ||
| 1813 | 2 | John Burke | c 1782 | 14 Sep 1847 | ||
| MP for co.Galway 1830-1832 | ||||||
| 14 Sep 1847 | 3 | Thomas John Burke | 7 Jun 1813 | 9 Dec 1875 | 62 | |
| MP for co.Galway 1847-1865 | ||||||
| 9 Dec 1875 | 4 | John Charles Burke | 7 Feb 1858 | 16 Aug 1880 | 22 | |
| 16 Aug 1880 | 5 | Henry George Burke | 30 Dec 1859 | 20 Jan 1910 | 50 | |
| 20 Jan 1910 | 6 | Thomas Mallachy Burke | 8 Jan 1864 | 19 Dec 1913 | 49 | |
| 19 Dec 1913 | 7 | Gerald Howe Burke | 17 Nov 1893 | 30 Dec 1954 | 61 | |
| 30 Dec 1954 | 8 | Thomas Stanley Burke | 20 Jul 1916 | 2 Apr 1989 | 72 | |
| 2 Apr 1989 | 9 | James Stanley Gilbert Burke | 1 Jul 1956 | |||
| BURNABY of Broughton Hall,Oxon | ||||||
| 31 Oct 1767 | GB | 1 | William Burnaby | c 1710 | c 1777 | |
| c 1777 | 2 | William Chaloner Burnaby | 1746 | 19 Feb 1794 | 47 | |
| 19 Feb 1794 | 3 | William Crisp Hood Burnaby | c 1788 | 1 Aug 1853 | ||
| 1 Aug 1853 | 4 | William Edward Burnaby | Jul 1824 | 19 Aug 1881 | 57 | |
| 19 Aug 1881 | 5 | Henry Burnaby | 1829 | 1914? | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1914? | For further information on this baronet, | |||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| BURNE-JONES of Rottingdean,Sussex | ||||||
| 4 May 1894 | UK | 1 | Edward Coley Burne Burne-Jones | 28 Aug 1833 | 17 Jun 1898 | 64 |
| 17 Jun 1898 | 2 | Philip Burne-Jones | 2 Oct 1861 | 21 Jun 1926 | 64 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 21 Jun 1926 | ||||||
| BURNETT of Leys,Kincardine | ||||||
| 21 Apr 1626 | NS | 1 | Thomas Burnett | 1653 | ||
| 1653 | 2 | Alexander Burnett | by May 1663 | |||
| by May 1663 | 3 | Thomas Burnett | after 1656 | Jan 1714 | ||
| MP for Scotland 1707-1708 | ||||||
| Jan 1714 | 4 | Alexander Burnett | 1758 | |||
| 1758 | 5 | Robert Burnett | 1759 | |||
| 1759 | 6 | Thomas Burnett | May 1783 | |||
| May 1783 | 7 | Robert Burnett | 20 Dec 1755 | 5 Jan 1837 | 81 | |
| 5 Jan 1837 | 8 | Thomas Burnett | 22 Aug 1778 | 16 Feb 1849 | 70 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Kincardine 1847-1849 | ||||||
| 16 Feb 1849 | 9 | Alexander Burnett | 1789 | 20 Mar 1856 | 66 | |
| 20 Mar 1856 | 10 | James Horn Burnett | 22 Jun 1801 | 17 Sep 1876 | 75 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Kincardine 1863-1876 | ||||||
| 17 Sep 1876 | 11 | Robert Burnett | 28 Aug 1833 | 15 Jan 1894 | 60 | |
| 15 Jan 1894 | 12 | Thomas Burnett | 27 Nov 1840 | 25 Jan 1926 | 85 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Kincardine 1920-1926 | ||||||
| 25 Jan 1926 | 13 | James Lauderdale Gilbert Burnett | 1 Apr 1880 | 13 Aug 1953 | 73 | |
| 13 Aug 1953 | 14 | Alexander Edwin Burnett | 26 Apr 1881 | 9 May 1959 | 78 | |
| to | On his death the baronetcy became | |||||
| 9 May 1959 | dormant | |||||
| BURNETT of Selborne House,Surrey | ||||||
| 17 Oct 1913 | UK | 1 | Sir David Burnett | 22 Aug 1851 | 7 Jul 1930 | 78 |
| 7 Jul 1930 | 2 | Leslie Trew Burnett | 22 Sep 1884 | 17 Jul 1955 | 70 | |
| 17 Jul 1955 | 3 | David Humphery Burnett | 27 Jan 1918 | 19 May 2002 | 84 | |
| 19 May 2002 | 4 | Charles David Burnett | 18 May 1951 | |||
| BURNEY of Preston Candover,Hants | ||||||
| 27 Jan 1921 | UK | 1 | Sir Cecil Burney | 15 May 1858 | 5 Jun 1929 | 71 |
| Admiral of the Fleet 1920 | ||||||
| 5 Jun 1929 | 2 | Charles Dennistoun Burney | 28 Dec 1888 | 11 Nov 1968 | 79 | |
| MP for Uxbridge 1922-1929 | ||||||
| 11 Nov 1968 | 3 | Cecil Denniston Burney | 8 Jan 1923 | 19 Apr 2002 | 79 | |
| 19 Apr 2002 | 4 | Nigel Dennistoun Burney | 6 Sep 1959 | |||
| BURNS of Wemyss Bay,Renfrew | ||||||
| 24 Jun 1889 | UK | 1 | George Burns | 10 Dec 1795 | 2 Jun 1890 | 94 |
| 2 Jun 1890 | 2 | John Burns | 24 Jun 1829 | 12 Feb 1901 | 71 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Inverclyde (qv) in 1897 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until its | ||||||
| extinction in 1957 | ||||||
| BURRARD of Walhampton,Hants | ||||||
| 3 Apr 1769 | GB | 1 | Harry Burrard | 1707 | 12 Apr 1791 | 83 |
| MP for Lymington 1741-1778 | ||||||
| 12 Apr 1791 | 2 | Harry Burrard (Burrard-Neale from 1795) | 16 Sep 1765 | 7 Feb 1840 | 74 | |
| MP for Lymington 1790-1802, 1806-1807, | ||||||
| 1812-1823 and 1832-1835 | ||||||
| 7 Feb 1840 | 3 | George Burrard | 6 Apr 1769 | 17 May 1856 | 87 | |
| 17 May 1856 | 4 | George Burrard | 13 Oct 1805 | 7 Sep 1870 | 64 | |
| MP for Lymington 1828-1832 | ||||||
| For information on the death of this baronet, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 7 Sep 1870 | 5 | Harry Burrard | 13 Oct 1818 | 15 Apr 1871 | 52 | |
| 15 Apr 1871 | 6 | Harry Paul Burrard | 5 Sep 1846 | 19 Dec 1933 | 87 | |
| 19 Dec 1933 | 7 | Sidney Gerald Burrard | 12 Aug 1860 | 16 Mar 1943 | 82 | |
| 16 Mar 1943 | 8 | Gerald Burrard | 17 Jan 1888 | 22 Feb 1965 | 77 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 22 Feb 1965 | ||||||
| BURRARD of Lymington,Hants | ||||||
| 12 Nov 1807 | UK | 1 | Harry Burrard | 1 Jun 1755 | 18 Oct 1813 | 58 |
| 18 Oct 1813 | 2 | Charles Burrard | 2 Mar 1793 | 12 Jul 1870 | 77 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 12 Jul 1870 | ||||||
| BURRELL of Knipp,Sussex | ||||||
| 15 Jul 1766 | GB | 1 | Merrick Burrell | 3 Apr 1699 | 6 Apr 1787 | 88 |
| MP for Great Marlow 1747-1754, Grampound | ||||||
| 1754-1768, Haslemere 1774-1780 and | ||||||
| Great Bedwyn 1780-1784 | ||||||
| 6 Apr 1787 | 2 | Peter Burrell | 16 Jun 1754 | 29 Jun 1820 | 66 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Gwydir (qv) in 1796 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until the | ||||||
| extinction of both titles in 1915 | ||||||
| BURRELL of Valentine House,Essex | ||||||
| 31 May 1774 | GB | 1 | Charles Raymond | 22 Apr 1713 | 24 Aug 1788 | 75 |
| 24 Aug 1788 | 2 | William Burrell | 10 Oct 1732 | 20 Jan 1796 | 63 | |
| MP for Haslemere 1768-1774 | ||||||
| 20 Jan 1796 | 3 | Charles Merrik Burrell | 24 May 1774 | 4 Jan 1862 | 87 | |
| MP for New Shoreham 1806-1862 | ||||||
| 4 Jan 1862 | 4 | Percy Burrell | 10 Feb 1812 | 19 Jul 1876 | 64 | |
| MP for New Shoreham 1862-1876 | ||||||
| 19 Jul 1876 | 5 | Walter Wyndham Burrell | 26 Oct 1814 | 24 Jan 1886 | 71 | |
| MP for New Shoreham 1876-1885 | ||||||
| 24 Jan 1886 | 6 | Charles Raymond Burrell | 29 Mar 1848 | 6 Sep 1899 | 51 | |
| 6 Sep 1899 | 7 | Merrik Raymond Burrell | 14 May 1877 | 22 Dec 1957 | 80 | |
| 22 Dec 1957 | 8 | Walter Raymond Burrell | 11 Dec 1903 | 4 May 1985 | 81 | |
| 4 May 1985 | 9 | John Raymond Burrell | 20 Feb 1934 | 29 May 2008 | 74 | |
| 29 May 2008 | 10 | Charles Raymond Burrell | 27 Aug 1962 | |||
| BURROUGHS of Castle Bagshaw,Wicklow | ||||||
| 1 Dec 1804 | UK | 1 | William Burroughs | c 1753 | 1 Jun 1829 | |
| to | MP for Enniskillen 1802-1806,Colchester | |||||
| Jun 1829 | 1817-1818 and Taunton 1818-1819 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| BURROWS of Cavendish Square, Middlesex | ||||||
| and Springfield, Isle of Wight | ||||||
| 19 Mar 1874 | UK | 1 | George Burrows | 28 Nov 1801 | 12 Dec 1887 | 86 |
| 12 Dec 1887 | 2 | Frederick Abernethy Burrows | 30 Dec 1846 | 9 Nov 1904 | 57 | |
| 9 Nov 1904 | 3 | Ernest Pennington Burrows | 11 Jul 1851 | 4 Aug 1917 | 66 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 4 Aug 1917 | ||||||
| BURTON of Stockerston,Leics | ||||||
| 22 Jul 1622 | E | 1 | Thomas Burton | c 1580 | 4 Sep 1655 | |
| Sep 1655 | 2 | Thomas Burton | by 1618 | 3 Apr 1659 | ||
| 3 Apr 1659 | 3 | Thomas Burton | 4 Jul 1657 | 14 Nov 1705 | 48 | |
| Nov 1705 | 4 | Charles Burton | by 1688 | c 1750 | ||
| to | Presumably extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1750 | For further information on this baronet,see | |||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| BURTON of the City of Dublin | ||||||
| 2 Oct 1758 | I | 1 | Sir Charles Burton | 1702 | 6 Jun 1775 | 72 |
| 6 Jun 1775 | 2 | Charles Burton | Apr 1812 | |||
| Apr 1812 | 3 | Charles Burton | 17 May 1779 | 6 Jan 1830 | 50 | |
| 6 Jan 1830 | 4 | Charles Burton | 17 May 1842 | |||
| 17 May 1842 | 5 | Charles William Cuffe Burton | 13 Jan 1823 | 2 Oct 1902 | 79 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 2 Oct 1902 | ||||||
| BURTON-CHADWICK of Bidston,Cheshire | ||||||
| 3 Jul 1935 | UK | 1 | Sir Robert Burton Chadwick (Burton-Chadwick | |||
| from 1936) | 20 Jun 1869 | 21 May 1951 | 81 | |||
| MP for Barrow in Furness 1918-1922 and | ||||||
| Wallasey 1922-1931 | ||||||
| 21 May 1951 | 2 | Robert Burton-Chadwick | 22 Jun 1911 | 28 Aug 1983 | 72 | |
| 28 Aug 1983 | 3 | Joshua Kenneth Burton-Chadwick | 1 Feb 1954 | |||
| BUSWELL of Clipston,Northants | ||||||
| 7 Jul 1660 | E | 1 | George Buswell | c 1625 | 6 Mar 1668 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 6 Mar 1668 | ||||||
| BUSWELL of Clipston,Northants | ||||||
| 5 Mar 1714 | GB | 1 | Eusebius Buswell | 1681 | by 1741 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| by 1741 | ||||||
| BUTCHER of Danesfort,Kerry | ||||||
| 28 Jun 1918 | UK | 1 | John George Butcher | 15 Nov 1853 | 30 Jun 1935 | 81 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Danesfort (qv) in 1924 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until the | ||||||
| extinction of both titles in 1935 | ||||||
| BUTCHER of Holland,Lincs | ||||||
| 22 Jul 1960 | UK | 1 | Sir Herbert Walter Butcher | 12 Jun 1901 | 11 May 1966 | 64 |
| to | MP for Holland with Boston 1937-1966 | |||||
| 11 May 1966 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BUTLER of Cloughgrenan,co.Carlow | ||||||
| 16 Aug 1628 | I | 1 | Thomas Butler | c 1640 | ||
| c 1640 | 2 | Edmund Butler | c 1650 | |||
| c 1650 | 3 | Thomas Butler | by 1649 | c Feb 1703 | ||
| c Feb 1703 | 4 | Pierce Butler | 1670 | 17 Apr 1732 | 61 | |
| PC [I] 1712 | ||||||
| 17 Apr 1732 | 5 | Richard Butler | 1701 | 25 Nov 1771 | 70 | |
| 25 Nov 1771 | 6 | Thomas Butler | 1735 | 7 Oct 1772 | 37 | |
| 7 Oct 1772 | 7 | Richard Butler | 14 Jul 1761 | 16 Jan 1817 | 55 | |
| MP for Carlow County 1801-1802 | ||||||
| 16 Jan 1817 | 8 | Thomas Butler | 23 Oct 1783 | 9 Nov 1861 | 78 | |
| 9 Nov 1861 | 9 | Richard Pierce Butler | 4 Mar 1813 | 21 Nov 1862 | 49 | |
| 21 Nov 1862 | 10 | Thomas Pierce Butler | 16 Dec 1836 | 9 Mar 1909 | 72 | |
| 9 Mar 1909 | 11 | Richard Pierce Butler | 28 Sep 1872 | 25 Mar 1955 | 82 | |
| 25 Mar 1955 | 12 | Thomas Pierce Butler | 18 Sep 1910 | 9 Apr 1994 | 83 | |
| 9 Apr 1994 | 13 | Richard Pierce Butler | 22 Jul 1940 | |||
| BUTLER of Polestown,Kilkenny | ||||||
| 8 Jul 1645 | I | 1 | Walter Butler | c May 1650 | ||
| c May 1650 | 2 | Richard Butler | c 1679 | |||
| c 1679 | 3 | Walter Butler | c 1678 | 8 Oct 1723 | ||
| 8 Oct 1723 | 4 | Edmund Butler | c 1708 | c Oct 1762 | ||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became either | |||||
| c Oct 1762 | extinct or dormant | |||||
| BUTLER of Old Park,Devizes,Wilts | ||||||
| 28 Jan 1922 | UK | 1 | Robert Reginald Frederick Butler | 19 Jun 1866 | 19 Nov 1933 | 67 |
| 19 Nov 1933 | 2 | Reginald Thomas Butler | 27 Apr 1901 | 22 Mar 1959 | 57 | |
| 22 Mar 1959 | 3 | Reginald Michael Thomas Butler | 22 Apr 1928 | 1 Jul 2012 | 84 | |
| 1 Jul 2012 | 4 | Reginald Richard Michael Butler | 3 Oct 1953 | |||
| BUTLER of Edgbaston,Warwicks | ||||||
| 29 Jan 1926 | UK | 1 | William Waters Butler | 14 Dec 1866 | 5 Apr 1939 | 72 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 5 Apr 1939 | ||||||
| BUTLIN of Harley Street, St.Marylebone | ||||||
| 28 Jun 1911 | UK | 1 | Henry Trentham Butlin | 24 Oct 1845 | 24 Jan 1912 | 66 |
| 24 Jan 1912 | 2 | Henry Guy Trentham Butlin | 7 Jan 1893 | 16 Sep 1916 | 23 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 16 Sep 1916 | ||||||
| BUTT of Westminster,London | ||||||
| 25 Jul 1929 | UK | 1 | Sir Alfred Butt | 20 Mar 1878 | 8 Dec 1962 | 84 |
| MP for Balham and Tooting 1922-1936 | ||||||
| 8 Dec 1962 | 2 | Alfred Kenneth Dudley Butt | 7 Jul 1908 | 10 Feb 1999 | 90 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 10 Feb 1999 | ||||||
| BUTTON of Alton,Wilts | ||||||
| 18 Mar 1622 | E | 1 | William Button | c 1584 | 16 Jan 1655 | |
| MP for Morpeth 1614 and Wiltshire | ||||||
| 1628-1629 | ||||||
| 16 Jan 1655 | 2 | William Button | c 1614 | 8 Mar 1660 | ||
| 8 Mar 1660 | 3 | Robert Button | 1622 | c 1679 | ||
| c 1679 | 4 | John Button | 29 Nov 1712 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 29 Nov 1712 | ||||||
| BUXTON of Shadwell Lodge,Norfolk | ||||||
| 25 Nov 1800 | GB | 1 | Robert John Buxton | 27 Oct 1753 | 7 Jun 1839 | 85 |
| MP for Thetford 1790-1796 | ||||||
| 7 Jun 1839 | 2 | John Jacob Buxton | 13 Aug 1788 | 13 Oct 1842 | 54 | |
| MP for Great Bedwyn 1818-1832 | ||||||
| 13 Oct 1842 | 3 | Robert Jacob Buxton | 13 Mar 1829 | 20 Jan 1888 | 58 | |
| to | MP for Norfolk South 1871-1885 | |||||
| 20 Jan 1888 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| BUXTON of Belfield,Dorset | ||||||
| 30 Jul 1840 | UK | 1 | Thomas Fowell Buxton | 1 Apr 1786 | 19 Feb 1845 | 58 |
| MP for Weymouth & Melcombe Regis 1818-1837 | ||||||
| 19 Feb 1845 | 2 | Edward North Buxton | 16 Sep 1812 | 11 Jun 1858 | 45 | |
| MP for Essex South 1847-1852 and Norfolk | ||||||
| East 1857-1858 | ||||||
| 11 Jun 1858 | 3 | Thomas Fowell Buxton | 26 Jan 1837 | 28 Oct 1915 | 78 | |
| MP for Kings Lynn 1865-1868. Governor of South | ||||||
| Australia 1895-1899 | ||||||
| 28 Oct 1915 | 4 | Thomas Fowell Victor Buxton | 8 Apr 1865 | 31 May 1919 | 54 | |
| For information on the death of this baronet, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 31 May 1919 | 5 | Thomas Fowell Buxton | 8 Nov 1889 | 28 Oct 1945 | 55 | |
| 28 Oct 1945 | 6 | Thomas Fowell Victor Buxton | 18 Aug 1925 | 14 Nov 1996 | 71 | |
| 14 Nov 1996 | 7 | Jocelyn Charles Roden Buxton | 8 Aug 1924 | 25 Apr 2014 | 89 | |
| 25 Apr 2014 | 8 | Crispin Charles Gerard Buxton | 29 Mar 1958 | |||
| BUZZARD of Munstead Grange,Surrey | ||||||
| 25 Jun 1929 | UK | 1 | Sir Farquhar Buzzard | 20 Dec 1871 | 17 Dec 1945 | 73 |
| 17 Dec 1945 | 2 | Anthony Wass Buzzard | 28 Apr 1902 | 10 Mar 1972 | 69 | |
| 10 Mar 1972 | 3 | Anthony Farquhar Buzzard | 28 Jun 1935 | |||
| BYASS of Port Talbot,Glamorgan | ||||||
| 30 Jan 1926 | UK | 1 | Sidney Hutchinson Byass | 24 Jul 1862 | 18 Feb 1929 | 66 |
| 18 Feb 1929 | 2 | Geoffrey Robert Sidney Byass | 30 Sep 1895 | 29 Oct 1976 | 81 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 29 Oct 1976 | ||||||
| BYNG of Southill,Bedford | ||||||
| 15 Nov 1715 | GB | 1 | George Byng | 27 Jan 1663 | 17 Jan 1733 | 69 |
| He was subsequently created Viscount | ||||||
| Torrington (qv) in 1721 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged | ||||||
| BYRNE of Nether Tabley,Cheshire | ||||||
| 17 May 1671 | E | See "Leicester" | ||||
| Sir Hervey Ronald Bruce, 5th baronet | ||||||
| At the inquest into the death of Sir Hervey, evidence was given that he was probably dazed | ||||||
| by the vivid lightning while he was watching an electrical storm from the Middle Parade in | ||||||
| Eastbourne. Temporarily blinded, he stumbled over a seat support, which caused him to pitch | ||||||
| over a railing, falling a distance of 15 feet onto the lower Parade, landing on his head. The fall | ||||||
| caused a fracture of his skull and laceration of the brain, and he subsequently died in hospital. | ||||||
| The following report on the inquest appeared in the London "Telegraph" of 21 May 1924:- | ||||||
| 'An inquest was held at Eastbourne yesterday concerning the death, on Sunday evening, of | ||||||
| Major Sir Hervey Bruce, Bt., who had been staying for some time at 3, Chatsworth-gardens. | ||||||
| 'Evidence of identification was given by the Rev. Francis Courtney Bruce, a relative of the late | ||||||
| baronet, who, he said, had served in the Highland Light Infantry and the Irish Guards. | ||||||
| 'Ernest Gillespie said he saw Sir Hervey Bruce walking along the lower parade, and afterwards | ||||||
| mounting the steps near the pier to the upper promenade. A minute or two later, Sir Hervey | ||||||
| passed on to the concrete projection on which garden seats are arranged. He caught hold of | ||||||
| a seat as though trying to move it, and, stumbling at the same instant, he pitched over the | ||||||
| iron railings on to the brick parade below. | ||||||
| 'Raymond Low, an hotel waiter, who was sitting near, deposed that Sir Hervey seemed to trip | ||||||
| over the leg of the seat, and, finding himself falling, caught hold of the seat, which he pulled | ||||||
| over without, however, saving himself. | ||||||
| 'Police-constable Winter said that he found the deceased lying face downwards; he was | ||||||
| unconscious and apparently only just alive. The distance of the fall was about thirteen feet, | ||||||
| and the railing was 2ft 6in high. There was a storm at the time, and the lightning was very vivid. | ||||||
| 'Dr. Kenneth Millward, house surgeon at the Princess Alice Hospital, said that Sir Hervey | ||||||
| expired about ten minutes after his admission to that institution. There was fracture of the base | ||||||
| of the skull and laceration of the brain. The nose also was broken. Sir Hervey had evidently | ||||||
| fallen on to his head. | ||||||
| The Coroner, in returning a verdict of accidental death, said that the fall was not a great one, | ||||||
| but as Sir Hervey Bruce was a big, heavy man the fatal result was not surprising.' | ||||||
| Sir Charles Burnett Buckworth-Herne-Soame, 11th baronet | ||||||
| Not all titled people live in stately homes and enjoy massive incomes.....the following story | ||||||
| which appeared in the Daily Mail on 9 October 1931 illustrates the point:- | ||||||
| 'The only surviving male member of a famous old Surrey family, Sir Charles Burnett Buckworth- | ||||||
| Herne-Soame, can claim the distinction of being the only baronet in Great Britain who has been | ||||||
| out of work and in receipt of unemployment pay. | ||||||
| 'Sir Charles, who is thirty-six years of age, has been living at Sheen Cottage, Coalbrookdale, | ||||||
| Shropshire, so named after Sheen in Surrey, where the first baronet was born three centuries | ||||||
| ago. The present holder succeeded to the title on the death of his father, Sir Charles | ||||||
| Buckworth-Herne-Soame, a prominent Midlands solicitor, who was sixty-eight years of age. | ||||||
| 'The new baronet signed on at Ironbridge employment exchange the day after succeeding to | ||||||
| the title, and received 13s. in out-of-work pay. He walked over a mile in the rain for the | ||||||
| purpose of signing on. Apart from his unemployment pay he had nothing more in the way of | ||||||
| income than 10s. per week disability pension in respect of war wounds. His father met with an | ||||||
| accident some years ago, and had to give up his practice as a solicitor. | ||||||
| 'The new baronet has worked as a labourer in various capacities. He has broken stones in a | ||||||
| quarry, and has acted as foreman of a gang of navvies on road work. Then his job as general | ||||||
| labourer for the Office of Works at the restoration of Buildwas Abbey came to an end. He has | ||||||
| been living with Lady Buckworth-Herne-Soame, a pretty brunette, in their six-roomed cottage, | ||||||
| Lady Soame doing all the housework, including washing, and digging the garden. | ||||||
| 'The new baronet, before he was wounded in the war, was a keen footballer. He is today a | ||||||
| champion of ex-Service men's rights and is a member of the committee of the Coalbrookdale | ||||||
| branch of the British Legion. It was while interesting himself in the case of an ex-Service man | ||||||
| that he met his wife, whose father is another official of the British Legion. | ||||||
| 'Coalbrookdale has not regarded him as Sir Charles Buckworth-Herne-Soame, eleventh baronet, | ||||||
| but as Charlie, one of themselves, "who has worked up at Buildwas Abbey." I sat with Sir | ||||||
| Charles, the unemployed labourer, in the small living room of his cottage (writes a correspond- | ||||||
| ent) and he talked to me about his affairs. His voice drones with the characteristic accent of | ||||||
| a Shropshire lad. "The title," he said, "means nothing to me. Indeed, it has been a handicap. | ||||||
| I have worked as a labourer, and my pay was a general labourer's wage of 113/4d. an hour. It | ||||||
| used to be a shilling an hour until they cut us down by a farthing. We could manage quite well | ||||||
| on that amount, for there is only my wife and myself. We have no family, and if we do not have | ||||||
| any children the title will become extinct with me. | ||||||
| "Naturally, I have been glad of the unemployment pay. I have no false pride, for it is all that is | ||||||
| coming in from the outside." I asked the new baronet if he would continue holding the title. Sir | ||||||
| Charles said: "I can do nothing else, although it is not much use having a title without the | ||||||
| necessary money to back it up." | ||||||
| A further story appeared 27 years later, and little appears to have changed in the intervening | ||||||
| period. The Daily Mail of 9 July 1958:- | ||||||
| Sir Charles Burnett Buckworth-Herne-Soame was weeding the flower garden at his cottage. | ||||||
| "It's true I've dropped my title to become a working man," said the 63-year-old eleventh | ||||||
| baronet. So I learned the secret his mates and fellow villagers have kept for 20 years. Every- | ||||||
| body calls him Charlie in Coalbrookdale, near Shrewsbury. | ||||||
| 'He earns £11 a week, turning a wheel that sprays water on to the coal on a conveyor belt at | ||||||
| the Buildwas power station. And the man whose lineage and coat of arms are featured in | ||||||
| Shrewsbury Museum has joined the Union of Municipal and General Workers. | ||||||
| 'Every day, in a boiler suit, he cycles from Sheen Cottage to work. Shifts: 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. or | ||||||
| 3 p.m. to 10 p.m. He is on holiday this week. At home. "Of course it's true that I work for a | ||||||
| living," he said. "Why not? I like being a working man. I like my job. I like my mates." | ||||||
| 'The title dates from the early 18th century. The villagers still call Sir Charles's wife Lady | ||||||
| Soame. Said Percy Seed, landlord of the Grove Tavern: "I'm glad to say Charlie pops in for a | ||||||
| pint of mild most nights. He plays dominoes and darts and we're all his pals. His son Charles | ||||||
| plays for the local darts team and his daughter Mary is a steel welder. They're a nice family." | ||||||
| 'Twenty-six-year-old Charles John, who will be 12th baronet some day, is a labourer on a | ||||||
| building estate and is married to a local girl. "We're proud of the title," he said, "but Dad thinks | ||||||
| more of his union card than his family crest." | ||||||
| Sir Charles Wentworth Burdett, 7th baronet | ||||||
| After a military career as a lieutenant in the 52nd regiment, and later in the 2nd | ||||||
| Staffordshire Militia, Burdett left England in the 1860s and went to New Zealand, where he | ||||||
| took part in the 'Maori Wars' of that decade. Some reports state that Sir Charles 'came to | ||||||
| grief in England' and was compelled to leave the army. | ||||||
| After the wars were over, information on Burdett is scarce, but he appears to have eked | ||||||
| out a hand to mouth existence by 'stripping bark from trees, cooking for bushmen, and | ||||||
| doing odd jobs about squatters' stations.' | ||||||
| In early November 1888, Sir Charles got himself into trouble and was punished very harshly | ||||||
| for what seems to have been an extremely minor offence. According to the New Zealand | ||||||
| newspaper, the 'Marlborough Express' of 10 November 1888:- | ||||||
| 'Sir Charles Burdett was charged with stealing two roses valued at two pence, the property | ||||||
| of the Mayor, Councillors, and burgesses of Auckland. The baronet, who presented a | ||||||
| venerable and dilapidated appearance, pleaded "not guilty." The evidence showed that a | ||||||
| constable met a person carrying a bunch of roses, and asked where he got them. Sir | ||||||
| Charles gave conflicting answers, and was arrested, charged with stealing from Albert Park, | ||||||
| from which the flowers had been missed. A search proved that roses had been recently | ||||||
| plucked, and the footmarks left in the soil corresponded exactly with the aristocratic boot | ||||||
| of the accused. The roses were identified by an expert as being the same variety as those | ||||||
| missed from the park. The accused argued that nobody saw him take them. He was found | ||||||
| guilty, and sentenced to fourteen days hard labour.' | ||||||
| In a reaction to this sentence a petition was sent to the New Zealand government praying | ||||||
| for a remission of the sentence. One newspaper commented that 'thefts of flowers from | ||||||
| gardens continue, but the thieves now take the precaution of taking off their boots.' For | ||||||
| its part, the government enquired of the justices the reason for the sentence and the | ||||||
| justices replied that, Sir Charles being an educated man, they thought it right to make an | ||||||
| example of him. | ||||||
| The newspapers weighed into the debate and were polarised in their attitude. A typical | ||||||
| editorial was that of the 'Marlborough Express' of 21 November 1888:- | ||||||
| 'Considerable attention has been directed to the case of Sir Thomas [sic] Burdett, of | ||||||
| Auckland, who was convicted recently of stealing two roses, and sent to gaol for fourteen | ||||||
| days. Some journals took up the case of the baronet very warmly, and a petition was sent | ||||||
| to the Colonial Secretary on his behalf. Other journals criticised unfavourably what they | ||||||
| chose to term the maudlin pity that was extended to the aristocratic thief. Both sides | ||||||
| appear to have taken an extreme view of the case. Sir Charles Burdett, though aged, drunk, | ||||||
| a baronet, and anything else that might be pleaded in mitigation of sentence, was a thief. | ||||||
| He stole two roses that belonged to somebody else, and he was not forced by hunger to | ||||||
| steal, nor did he take a loaf or a joint. He simply stole two roses, and by no process of | ||||||
| ingenious reasoning could such an act be construed otherwise than as a theft. That being | ||||||
| so, it remained to the Bench to adjudge the proportion of punishment the offence called | ||||||
| for. Fourteen days is usually given for the theft of some more useful article than a flower; | ||||||
| for the act of picking a flower is hardly such strong evidence of a felonious disposition as | ||||||
| the theft of say a knife, or a shilling, or a brooch. On the whole, one should think a 24 | ||||||
| hours' term should meet the case. The Auckland Bench erred on the wrong side in reference | ||||||
| to the baronet's antecedents, which they took too strongly to accentuate his criminality; | ||||||
| the other side err in the opposite direction, in holding that his position and antecedents | ||||||
| should palliate his offence and mitigate his sentence. We should say - put antecedents and | ||||||
| position aside, and regard the man as a flower-stealer, and then deal with him. That being | ||||||
| so, we take exception to the sentence as illogically harsh, and not in keeping with the | ||||||
| ordinary course of justice.' | ||||||
| In August 1890, Sir Charles was admitted to the Costley Home for the Aged Poor in | ||||||
| Auckland. According to Burke's Peerage, Sir Charles was already dead by that time, since | ||||||
| it gives a date of death of March 1890. This date is, however, incorrect, since newspaper | ||||||
| reports record that he died in the Costley Home on 22 May 1892. | ||||||
| He was succeeded by his son, Sir Charles Grant Burnett, whose later occupation was given | ||||||
| in various newspapers as a 'gum digger.' In an earlier version of this note I assumed that | ||||||
| a 'gum digger' was slang for a dentist, but I subsequently received an email from Mike | ||||||
| Leach, a retired New Zealand history teacher, who advised me that a 'gum digger' was a | ||||||
| person who searched for lumps of kauri gum, a fossilized resin which was used in the | ||||||
| production of varnish. The gum was primarily found in the northern section of the North | ||||||
| Island of New Zealand and was a major source of income for the local population, many of | ||||||
| whom were migrants from Dalmatia, on the east coast of the Adriatic Sea. Because the | ||||||
| soil in which the lumps of gum were to be found was often swampy in nature, the diggers | ||||||
| wore rubber boots which became known as "gum boots." This name is still used throughout | ||||||
| Australia and New Zealand for what are known in England as "Wellingtons." My thanks to | ||||||
| Mike for enabling me to correct my egregious error. | ||||||
| Sir Montagu Roger Burgoyne, 8th baronet [E 1641] | ||||||
| In 1817, Sir Montagu Burgoyne was prosecuted by his local churchman under a long disused | ||||||
| Act of Elizabeth I which imposed monetary penalties for failure to attend divine worship. He | ||||||
| brought his action in a fashion in which he could, if successful, keep a share of any fines levied | ||||||
| against Sir Montagu. A close reading of the following report reveals that the plaintiff in this | ||||||
| case appears to have been an ignorant and grasping opportunist who was motivated by the | ||||||
| chance of monetary gain. I would be surprised if anyone, having read the note below, does not | ||||||
| have complete sympathy for Sir Montagu. | ||||||
| The case was heard before Baron [of the Exchequer Sir Robert] Graham [1744-1836]. The | ||||||
| report of the trial is taken from "The Annual Register" for 1817, and has been edited, in the | ||||||
| interest of reducing its length, by eliminating some extraneous matter:- | ||||||
| 'Bedfordshire Lent Assizes-The Rev. Edward Drake Free, Clerk, v. Sir Montague Roger Burgoine | ||||||
| 'This was an action of a very novel as well as of a very extraordinary description, and excited a | ||||||
| considerable degree of interest throughout the country. Dr. Free, who is Rector of Sutton, | ||||||
| appeared in Court, dressed in his canonicals, and was prepared to take part in the conduct of | ||||||
| his own cause. The Court throughout was crowded almost to suffocation. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Daniels proceeded to open the pleadings: he stated that this was a qui tam action [this | ||||||
| is short for "qui tam pro domino rege quam pro se ipso in hac parte sequitur." A qui tam writ is | ||||||
| one whereby a private individual who assists a prosecution can receive all or part of any | ||||||
| penalty imposed. The use of this writ in the United Kingdom was largely eliminated by the | ||||||
| passing of the Common Informers Act 1951], brought by the Rev. Dr. Free, under the statute | ||||||
| of the 23rd of Elizabeth, to recover penalties from the defendant, for neglecting to attend | ||||||
| divine worship, in the parish church of Sutton, in this county, or in any other place of public | ||||||
| prayers for 19 months, whereby he became liable to pay a fine of £20 per month, amounting | ||||||
| in the whole to £380. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Jamesson said, it became his duty to detail to the Court and Jury the particulars of this | ||||||
| case. The plaintiff was Rector of the parish of Sutton, and the defendant was lord of the manor | ||||||
| in which the said parish was situated. The action was brought, as stated by his learned friend, | ||||||
| to recover penalties under the statute of Elizabeth, for non-attendance at divine worship at | ||||||
| his parish church, thereby, and in consequence of his example, spreading contagion around the | ||||||
| country in which he resided. It was his wish to abstain altogether from a statement of the circ- | ||||||
| umstances under which this action had been brought; he should, therefore, confine himself to | ||||||
| the simple observation, that the plaintiff, in coming forward as the accuser of the defendant, | ||||||
| was solely actuated by a desire to enforce the laws for the observance of religious worship.The | ||||||
| statute under which this action was brought was the 23rd of Elizabeth, by the fifth section of | ||||||
| which it was enacted, that all persons in England absenting themselves from divine worship, | ||||||
| either at their own parish church, or some other place appointed for public prayer, for one | ||||||
| month, forfeited a penalty of £20. This penalty was equally divided into three parts, one of | ||||||
| which went to the Queen, another to the poor of the parish, and the third to the informer. He | ||||||
| should be enabled to prove, in this case, that the defendant had absented himself from his | ||||||
| parish church for nineteen months; and having done so, he should be entitled to a verdict for | ||||||
| the full amount of the penalties, or in all events for twelve months, which was the period within | ||||||
| which the statute required the action to be brought. Witnesses were then called to prove the | ||||||
| case. | ||||||
| 'Mrs. Margarete Johnstone deposed as follows:- I resided at the parish of Sutton on the 2nd of | ||||||
| April, 1815. I attended the church every Sunday from that day to the first Sunday in April, | ||||||
| 1816. I know the person of Sir Montague Burgoyne, and during all that period I never saw him | ||||||
| come to church. I am quite sure I attended church every Sunday. I sometimes Sir Montague | ||||||
| on horseback. In cross-examination, she said she was servant to Dr. Free, and had been so | ||||||
| for four years. | ||||||
| 'John Northfield, parish-clerk of Sutton, corroborated the testimony of the last witness. He saw | ||||||
| Sir Montague come to church in April, 1816. He sometimes saw him coursing during the year | ||||||
| 1815. Mr. Jamesson here closed his case. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Sergeant Blosset said, if this was the plaintiff's case, his client was entitled to a verdict, | ||||||
| as no evidence had been offered of Sir Montague Burgoyne living in the parish of Sutton. Mr. | ||||||
| Baron Graham, however, considered this to be a mere oversight, and recalling the witnesses, | ||||||
| they proved the fact alluded to. Mr. Sergeant Blosset now addressed the jury on the part of | ||||||
| the defendant. He said, that however unwilling he might be to trespass on the Court by any | ||||||
| very extended observations on this case, yet he could not help remarking that the assertion | ||||||
| made by Dr. Free, that he had stood forward as the champion of the Church of England and of | ||||||
| the clergy, was not borne out by the facts. When a reverend gentleman came forward into a | ||||||
| Court of Justice in his canonicals, and in the character of an informer, to support a qui tam | ||||||
| action, upon a statute which, although unrepealed, had been in disuse for upwards of one | ||||||
| hundred and fifty years, he rather apprehended he would not be hailed by those whose | ||||||
| interests he professed to represent, as a person likely to reflect much credit upon their sacred | ||||||
| character. That such conduct was consistent with the true spirit of the Christian religion, he | ||||||
| believed no man of liberal feelings would allow. With regard to the statute on which this action | ||||||
| was brought, he was willing to admit that it remained unrepealed; but, at the same time, it was | ||||||
| proper to remark, that it originated in causes of a political nature, and was by no means | ||||||
| applicable to times like the present. Its operations were meant only to apply to Roman Catholics | ||||||
| and Dissenters, at a period when the Church of England might be considered as in danger. The | ||||||
| principles of toleration which had since been disseminated, however, and the firm foundation | ||||||
| upon which the Church of England had been established, were such, that no man possessing | ||||||
| the slightest claims to liberality would venture to put the construction upon the statute which | ||||||
| it had received from the reverend plaintiff in this case. | ||||||
| 'Without entering on the construction of the statute, he should be enabled to meet the plaintiff | ||||||
| in the most conclusive manner: for, in the first instance, he should be enabled to prove, that | ||||||
| for several months of that period during which the servant of the reverend plaintiff had so | ||||||
| positively sworn that she had regularly attended Sutton church, no divine service had been | ||||||
| performed in the church at all: he meant the months of June, July, August, and part of Sept- | ||||||
| ember; during which months the plaintiff had so shamefully neglected his duties that he had | ||||||
| received admonition from the bishop of the diocese. He should also prove, that at other periods, | ||||||
| the reverend plaintiff was so inattentive to the performance of the religious service of his | ||||||
| church, that his parishioners were constantly in a state of uncertainty as to the hour at which | ||||||
| service was to commence, or whether it would be performed at all. Independent of this, it was | ||||||
| no very pleasant thing for the defendant, when he did go to church, to hear a sermon delivered | ||||||
| which, instead of inculcating divine truths, was made the vehicle of personal abuse to himself. | ||||||
| With these facts before them, the jury would be able to form a pretty correct judgment of the | ||||||
| motives of this action. | ||||||
| 'The next ground on which he rested with confidence, on the goodness of his own cause, he | ||||||
| derived from the statute of Elizabeth itself; for by the statute of the 1st of Elizabeth, which | ||||||
| was embraced by the 23rd, it was enacted, that where the defendant in a qui tam action,such | ||||||
| as that now before the Court, could assign a reasonable excuse for absenting himself from | ||||||
| public worship, and should afterwards conform to his religious duties, the action should be | ||||||
| quashed. On this head of defence he should be enabled to prove that Sir Montague Burgoyne, | ||||||
| who was a general in the British service, had returned from Gibraltar in 1814, in a most precar- | ||||||
| ious state of health, and had continued thus afflicted down to the present day, a circumstance | ||||||
| which he hoped, in addition to the uncertainty of the performance of church service at Sutton, | ||||||
| would be considered a sufficient excuse for his non-attendance. | ||||||
| 'With regard to his sentiments on the subject of religion, those would be best proved by the | ||||||
| evidence he would adduce to its being his invariable practice to read the church prayers to his | ||||||
| family every Sunday, when capable from the state of his health so to do; and if unable himself | ||||||
| to perform that duty, to call upon Lady Burgoyne to read for him. He should also prove that | ||||||
| prayers were frequently read in his house by the Rev. Dr. Hughes, in his occasional visits to his | ||||||
| family. | ||||||
| 'There was another ground on which he was still more decidedly entitled to a verdict. This was | ||||||
| to be found in the statute of the 1st James II, c.4, whereby it was enacted, that any person | ||||||
| offending against the statute of Elizabeth, by a non-attendance of divine worship, became | ||||||
| exonerated from all consequences, by conforming to the rules of his church before judgment | ||||||
| was obtained, and declaring himself publicly to be a faithful son of the Church of England. This | ||||||
| Sir M. Burgoyne had done in the presence of the bishop of the diocese himself, and was there | ||||||
| ready again to declare openly in court, his high veneration for, and accordance in, all the | ||||||
| principles of the Christian religion. | ||||||
| 'Evidence was then called to support the defendant's case. Lawrence Coxall, churchwarden of | ||||||
| the parish of Sutton, proved, that Sutton church had been shut up from the 25th of June to | ||||||
| 3rd of September. Thomas Brown, the other churchwarden, corroborated the testimony of the | ||||||
| last witness, and proved that the church had been farther shut from the 15th of September to | ||||||
| the 5th of November, no service having been performed. Dr. M'Garth, a medical gentleman, | ||||||
| proved the precarious state of Sir Montague Burgoyne's health from his return from Gibraltar to | ||||||
| the present moment, and the danger of his going to church at particular stages of his disorder. | ||||||
| Lucy Carrington, nurse in Sir Montague's family, bore testimony to her master or mistress | ||||||
| invariably reading prayers to the family on the Sunday when they did not go to church. The | ||||||
| Rev. Dr. Hughes occasionally visited Sir Montague's family for weeks together, and always read | ||||||
| prayers to the family when they did not go to church. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Baron Graham being of opinion that a reasonable excuse for the non-attendance of the | ||||||
| defendant at his parish church had been proved, Mr. Sergeant Blosset did not call any more | ||||||
| witnesses. Mr. Baron Graham summed up the evidence. His Lordship abstained from making any | ||||||
| remark upon the motives by which the plaintiff had been actuated in this action; but at the | ||||||
| same time remarked, that no liberal mind could have construed the statute of Elizabeth in the | ||||||
| manner in which it had been construed by him. He left it for the Jury to say, whether a reason- | ||||||
| able excuse had not been proved for the non-attendance of the defendant at church, and | ||||||
| whether, in other respects, the case of the plaintiff had not received a complete answer. | ||||||
| 'The Jury without hesitation found the defendant - Not Guilty.' | ||||||
| Sir Henry Burnaby, 5th baronet | ||||||
| In February 1914, the 'London Gazette' published a Supplement which contained the 'Roll | ||||||
| of the Baronets of England, Ireland, Scotland [Nova Scotia], Great Britain and the United | ||||||
| Kingdom' which had been prepared in conformity with the Royal Warrant dated 8 February | ||||||
| 1910. | ||||||
| A note appended to the baronetcy of Burnaby of Broughton Hall says "No information can | ||||||
| be obtained by the Registrar as to Sir Henry Burnaby. It is not known whether he is alive." | ||||||
| On 27 January 1915, the following report appeared in the 'Chicago Daily Tribune':- | ||||||
| 'Official news has at length been received in England of the death of old Sir Henry Burnaby, | ||||||
| at the age of nearly 90, in some remote portion of Spain. For a number of years Sir Henry, | ||||||
| fifth holder of a baronetcy created in the middle of the eighteenth century in favour of | ||||||
| Admiral Sir William Burnaby of Broughton Hall, Oxfordshire, captain general and governor of | ||||||
| Jamaica, and who reinstated in Pensacola the colonists who had been driven thence by the | ||||||
| Spaniards, has been regarded as missing. | ||||||
| 'He was formerly in the royal navy, but resigned as far back as 1852, on marrying at Madrid | ||||||
| Donna Carmen Maria Torrente. He thereupon settled down in Spain, and from that time | ||||||
| forth ceased to hold any kind of communication with the land of his birth. He never took the | ||||||
| trouble of drawing the small naval pension to which he was entitled, and it was only by | ||||||
| mere chance that last fall it was ascertained that he had died a few weeks previously in a | ||||||
| small Andalusian townlet, without issue.' | ||||||
| At one point my listings showed a date of death of Sir Henry Burnaby of 18 September 1894, | ||||||
| but I can no longer recall the source of this date. On the basis of the note included in the | ||||||
| Supplement to the London Gazette, it seems more likely that the date of 1914 inferred in | ||||||
| the 'Chicago Daily Tribune' report is closer to the mark, and I have according used this date, | ||||||
| subject to a question mark. | ||||||
| Sir George Burrard, 4th baronet | ||||||
| Sir George drowned while bathing at Lyme Regis. The following report appeared in the | ||||||
| 'Hampshire Advertiser' on 14 September 1870:- | ||||||
| 'Sir George, it appears, hired a bathing machine on the Lyme Regis coast, on Wednesday | ||||||
| morning, about 9 o'clock. He could swim, and after the machine had been pushed into the water | ||||||
| he went about 100 yards sideways from it. There was rather a surf, but the sea was not very | ||||||
| rough. The bathing woman lost sight of him and raised an alarm. Four boats put out to rescue | ||||||
| him, and she ran for a doctor. His body was found among the breakers in seven feet of water, | ||||||
| and brought to shore. Mr. E. Linsell, a visitor at Lyme, stated at the inquest that he saw Sir | ||||||
| George floating on his back like a good swimmer. He heard him shout, but not as if in distress. | ||||||
| It was also stated that from the time Sir George went out to the recovery of his body was only | ||||||
| about fifteen minutes. He was quite dead when recovered. "Accidental death" was the verdict | ||||||
| of the jury.' | ||||||
| Sir Charles Burton, 4th baronet [E 1622] | ||||||
| In "The Proceedings of the Old Bailey" for 7 September 1722, there is the following entry:- | ||||||
| 'Sir Charles Burton, Bart. of St. Gregory, was indicted for privately stealing out of the Shop | ||||||
| of Joseph Ward, a Cornelian Seal set in Gold, value 15s on the 12th of July last. It appeared | ||||||
| that the prisoner cheapened a Seal at Mr. Ward's Shop, but could not agree upon the price. | ||||||
| Mrs. Kirton missing a Seal, and observing a Handkerchief in his Hand, desired him to shake it. | ||||||
| which he did, holding one corner of it fast; but she took it from him, and the Seal dropt out. | ||||||
| The prisoner in his Defence said, he knew not how the Seal came there, unless she put it | ||||||
| there. Some of his Neighbours gave him the Character of a civil Gentleman, come of a good | ||||||
| Family in Lincolnshire, but lately, by Misfortunes, reduc'd. Guilty to the value of 4s and 10d.' | ||||||
| Sir Charles was initially sentenced to be transported, but at the next Sessions in October 1722, | ||||||
| this judgment was reversed, and the Court ordered that Sir Charles "be privately whipt." | ||||||
| Sir Thomas Fowell Victor Buxton, 4th baronet | ||||||
| This report of Sir Victor's death appeared in the Launceston [Tasmania] "Daily Telegraph" on | ||||||
| 5 September 1919:- | ||||||
| 'The death occurred in England recently, in tragic circumstances, of Sir Victor Buxton, Bart., | ||||||
| (a son of the late Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton, a former Governor of South Australia), who | ||||||
| succumbed as the result of a motor accident. He had been attending a presentation of | ||||||
| decorations at Chelmsford, and was motoring home to his residence, Wanliss Park, Waltham | ||||||
| Abbey. When within a few hundred yards of the Park, something went wrong with the motor, | ||||||
| Lady Buxton, who was with her husband, alighted and walked the remaining distance home. | ||||||
| Sir Victor drove on through the park with the chauffeur, and near the house attempted to | ||||||
| change into another seat. He stumbled, and, losing his balance, fell out. He clung to the door | ||||||
| of the car for a moment, but had to release his hold, and fell beneath the car, part of which | ||||||
| passed over his left leg, causing a compound fracture. Sir Victor was carried home, and on | ||||||
| the following day was removed to hospital, where alarming symptoms developed. His leg was | ||||||
| amputated, but after the operation he gradually sank and died. His thoughtfulness was shown, | ||||||
| at the inquest, by the following letter, which he wrote to his chauffeur the day after the | ||||||
| accident. | ||||||
| "You helped me well last night, and I am much obliged to you and others who brought me in | ||||||
| so carefully. The accident was through no fault of yours. I was changing from one seat to | ||||||
| another, and in doing so I lost my balance and fell out. Thanking you - T.F.V. Buxton." | ||||||
| 'Frederick George Bellingham, the chauffeur, said he only entered Sir Victor's service on the | ||||||
| day of the accident. The Coroner returned a verdict of accidental death, and exonerated the | ||||||
| chauffeur. | ||||||
| 'Sir Victor was 55 [sic] and the fourth baronet, his mother being a daughter of the first Earl of | ||||||
| Gainsborough. Having travelled extensively in Africa, he was an authority on native questions | ||||||
| and missions, regarding which he had written notable publications. He was prominently | ||||||
| connected with the Royal Geographical and Zoological Societies. In 1905 he was High Sheriff | ||||||
| of Essex, and he had been a member of the Essex Territorial Force Association and also | ||||||
| Commandant of the 1-2nd Essex Volunteer Regiment. He was a brother of Mr. Noel Buxton | ||||||
| [later 1st Baron Noel-Buxton], ex-M.P. for North Norfolk. His heir is Thomas Fowell Buxton, | ||||||
| born in 1889' | ||||||
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