| BARONETAGE | ||||||
| Last updated 20/04/2025 | ||||||
| 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 | ||||||
| CLAY of Fulwell Lodge,Middlesex | ||||||
| 30 Sep 1841 | UK | 1 | William Clay | 15 Aug 1791 | 13 Mar 1869 | 77 |
| MP for Tower Hamlets 1832-1857 | ||||||
| 13 Mar 1869 | 2 | William Dickason Clay | 21 Dec 1828 | 14 Oct 1876 | 47 | |
| 14 Oct 1876 | 3 | George Clay | 14 Aug 1831 | 30 Jun 1878 | 46 | |
| 30 Jun 1878 | 4 | Arthur Temple Felix Clay | 9 Dec 1842 | 18 Mar 1928 | 85 | |
| 18 Mar 1928 | 5 | George Felix Neville Clay | 24 Nov 1871 | 11 Nov 1941 | 69 | |
| 11 Nov 1941 | 6 | Henry Felix Clay | 8 Feb 1909 | 8 Jun 1985 | 76 | |
| 8 Jun 1985 | 7 | Richard Henry Clay | 2 Jun 1940 | 28 Nov 2020 | 80 | |
| 28 Nov 2020 | 8 | Charles Richard Clay | 18 Dec 1965 | |||
| CLAYTON of Marden,Surrey | ||||||
| 13 Jan 1732 | GB | 1 | William Clayton | 28 Dec 1744 | ||
| MP for Bletchingley 1715-1744 | ||||||
| 28 Dec 1744 | 2 | Kenrick Clayton | c 1713 | 10 Mar 1769 | ||
| MP for Bletchingley 1734-1769 | ||||||
| 10 Mar 1769 | 3 | Robert Clayton | c 1740 | 10 May 1799 | ||
| MP for Bletchingley 1768-1783 and 1 | ||||||
| 1787-1796 and Surrey 1783-1784 | ||||||
| 10 May 1799 | 4 | William Clayton | 16 Apr 1762 | 26 Jan 1834 | 71 | |
| 26 Jan 1834 | 5 | William Robert Clayton | 28 Aug 1786 | 19 Sep 1866 | 80 | |
| MP for Great Marlow 1832-1842 | ||||||
| 19 Sep 1866 | 6 | William Robert Clayton | 3 Aug 1842 | 7 Oct 1914 | 72 | |
| 7 Oct 1914 | 7 | Gilbert Augustus Clayton-East | 25 Apr 1846 | 26 Sep 1925 | 79 | |
| 26 Sep 1925 | 8 | George Frederick Lancelot Clayton East | 3 Sep 1872 | 27 Apr 1926 | 53 | |
| 27 Apr 1926 | 9 | Robert Alan Clayton East (Clayton-East-Clayton | ||||
| from 22 Jan 1932) | 7 Apr 1908 | 1 Sep 1932 | 24 | |||
| For further information on this baronet,see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 1 Sep 1932 | 10 | Harold Dudley Clayton | 28 Jan 1877 | 19 Oct 1951 | 74 | |
| 19 Oct 1951 | 11 | Arthur Harold Clayton | 14 Oct 1903 | 6 Aug 1985 | 81 | |
| 6 Aug 1985 | 12 | David Robert Clayton | 12 Dec 1936 | 22 Apr 2021 | 84 | |
| 22 Apr 2021 | 13 | Robert Philip Clayton | 8 Jul 1975 | |||
| CLAYTON of Adlington,Lancs | ||||||
| 19 May 1774 | GB | 1 | Richard Clayton | c 1745 | 29 Apr 1828 | |
| 29 Apr 1828 | 2 | Robert Clayton | 1746 | 10 Aug 1839 | 93 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 10 Aug 1839 | ||||||
| CLAYTON-EAST of Hall Place,Berks | ||||||
| 17 Aug 1838 | UK | 1 | East George Clayton-East | 9 Apr 1794 | 6 Mar 1851 | 56 |
| 6 Mar 1851 | 2 | Gilbert East | 13 Nov 1823 | 12 Aug 1866 | 42 | |
| For further information on the death of this | ||||||
| baronet,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 12 Aug 1866 | 3 | Gilbert Augustus Gilbert East (Clayton-East | ||||
| from 1870) | 25 Apr 1846 | 26 Sep 1925 | 79 | |||
| 26 Sep 1925 | 4 | George Frederick Lancelot Clayton-East | 3 Sep 1872 | 27 Apr 1926 | 53 | |
| 27 Apr 1926 | 5 | Robert Alan Clayton-East (Clayton-East- | ||||
| to | Clayton from 22 Jan 1932) | 7 Apr 1908 | 1 Sep 1932 | 24 | ||
| 1 Sep 1932 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| For further information on this baronet,see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| CLEMENT of Bromham,Sussex | ||||||
| 15 May 1661 | E | See "Ashburnham-Clement" | ||||
| CLERE of Ormesby,Norfolk | ||||||
| 26 Feb 1621 | E | 1 | Henry Clere | c 1599 | 22 Aug 1622 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 22 Aug 1622 | ||||||
| CLERK of Penicuik,Midlothian | ||||||
| 24 Mar 1679 | NS | 1 | John Clerk | 10 Mar 1722 | ||
| 10 Mar 1722 | 2 | John Clerk | 8 Feb 1676 | 4 Oct 1755 | 78 | |
| MP for Scotland 1707-1708 | ||||||
| 4 Oct 1755 | 3 | James Clerk | c 1710 | 6 Feb 1783 | ||
| 6 Feb 1783 | 4 | George Clerk | 29 Jan 1784 | |||
| 29 Jan 1784 | 5 | John Clerk | 1798 | |||
| 1798 | 6 | George Clerk | 19 Nov 1787 | 23 Dec 1867 | 80 | |
| MP for Midlothian 1811-1820, Stamford | ||||||
| 1838-1847 and Dover 1847-1852. PC 1845 | ||||||
| 23 Dec 1867 | 7 | James Clerk | 17 Jul 1812 | 17 Nov 1870 | 58 | |
| 17 Nov 1870 | 8 | George Douglas Clerk | 17 May 1852 | 30 Nov 1911 | 59 | |
| 30 Nov 1911 | 9 | George James Robert Clerk | 4 Oct 1876 | 21 Nov 1943 | 67 | |
| 21 Nov 1943 | 10 | John Dutton Clerk | 30 Jan 1917 | 25 Oct 2002 | 85 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Midlothian 1972-1992 | ||||||
| 25 Oct 2002 | 11 | Robert Maxwell Clerk | 3 Apr 1945 | |||
| Lord Lieutenant of Midlothian 2013- | ||||||
| CLERKE of Hitcham,Bucks | ||||||
| 13 Jul 1660 | E | 1 | John Clerke | c 1622 | 7 Oct 1667 | |
| 7 Oct 1667 | 2 | William Clerke | 9 Jul 1643 | 6 Sep 1678 | 35 | |
| 6 Sep 1678 | 3 | William Clerke | c 1662 | 1699 | ||
| 1699 | 4 | John Clerke | after 1683 | 20 Feb 1727 | ||
| MP for Haslemere 1710-1713 | ||||||
| 20 Feb 1727 | 5 | William Clerke | c 1738 | |||
| c 1738 | 6 | Francis Clerke | 12 Jul 1682 | 12 Feb 1769 | 86 | |
| 12 Feb 1769 | 7 | Francis Carr Clerke | 24 Oct 1748 | 15 Oct 1778 | 29 | |
| 15 Oct 1778 | 8 | William Henry Clerke | 25 Nov 1751 | 10 Apr 1818 | 66 | |
| 10 Apr 1818 | 9 | William Henry Clerke | 13 Sep 1793 | 16 Feb 1861 | 67 | |
| 16 Feb 1861 | 10 | William Henry Clerke | 17 Nov 1822 | 8 Feb 1882 | 59 | |
| 8 Feb 1882 | 11 | William Francis Clerke | 16 Jan 1856 | 27 Jul 1930 | 74 | |
| 27 Jul 1930 | 12 | John Edward Longueville Clerke | 29 Oct 1913 | 1 Oct 2009 | 95 | |
| 1 Oct 2009 | 13 | Francis Ludlow Longueville Clerke | 25 Jun 1953 | |||
| CLERKE of Launde Abbey,Leics | ||||||
| 18 Jun 1661 | E | 1 | Clement Clerke | 10 Dec 1693 | ||
| Dec 1693 | 2 | Talbot Clerke | c 1708 | |||
| c 1708 | 3 | Clement Clerke | c 1715 | |||
| c 1715 | 4 | Talbot Clerke | 16 Feb 1724 | |||
| 16 Feb 1724 | 5 | Talbot Clerke | c 1719 | 21 Nov 1732 | ||
| 21 Nov 1732 | 6 | Talbot Clerke | 10 Jul 1759 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 10 Jul 1759 | ||||||
| CLERKE of Duddlestone,Salop | ||||||
| 26 Oct 1774 | GB | 1 | Philip Jennings Clerke | 1722 | 14 Jan 1788 | 65 |
| to | MP for Totnes 1768-1788 | |||||
| 14 Jan 1788 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| CLIFFORD of the Navy | ||||||
| 4 Aug 1838 | UK | 1 | Augustus William James Clifford | 26 May 1788 | 8 Feb 1877 | 88 |
| MP for Bandon Bridge 1818-1820 and 1831-1832 | ||||||
| and Dungarvan 1820-1822 | ||||||
| 8 Feb 1877 | 2 | William John Cavendish Clifford | 12 Oct 1814 | 11 Apr 1882 | 67 | |
| 11 Apr 1882 | 3 | Robert Cavendish Spencer Clifford | 3 Nov 1815 | Jan 1892 | 76 | |
| Jan 1892 | 4 | Charles Cavendish Clifford | 7 Jan 1821 | 22 Nov 1895 | 74 | |
| to | MP for Isle of Wight 1857-1865 and | |||||
| 22 Nov 1895 | Newport IOW 1870-1885 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| CLIFFORD of Flaxbourne,New Zealand | ||||||
| 16 Jul 1887 | UK | 1 | Sir Charles Clifford | 1 Jan 1813 | 27 Feb 1893 | 80 |
| 27 Feb 1893 | 2 | George Hugh Charles Clifford | 10 Oct 1847 | 17 Apr 1930 | 82 | |
| 17 Apr 1930 | 3 | Charles Lewis Clifford | 17 Jul 1885 | 13 Sep 1938 | 53 | |
| 13 Sep 1938 | 4 | Walter Lovelace Clifford | 20 May 1852 | 26 May 1944 | 92 | |
| 26 May 1944 | 5 | Lewis Arthur Joseph Clifford | 9 Apr 1896 | 8 Dec 1970 | 74 | |
| 8 Dec 1970 | 6 | Roger Charles Joseph Gerrard Clifford | 28 May 1910 | 5 Jul 1982 | 72 | |
| 5 Jul 1982 | 7 | Roger Joseph Clifford | 5 Jun 1936 | 31 Mar 2025 | 88 | |
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| CLIFFORD-CONSTABLE of Tixall,Staffs | ||||||
| 22 May 1815 | UK | 1 | Thomas Hugh Clifford (Clifford-Constable | |||
| from 1821) | 4 Dec 1762 | 25 Feb 1829 | 66 | |||
| 25 Feb 1829 | 2 | Thomas Aston Clifford-Constable | 3 May 1806 | 23 Dec 1870 | 64 | |
| MP for Hedon 1830-1832 | ||||||
| 23 Dec 1870 | 3 | Frederick Augustus Talbot Clifford- | ||||
| to | Constable | 30 Jun 1828 | 24 Oct 1894 | 66 | ||
| 24 Oct 1894 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| CLIFTON of Clifton,Notts | ||||||
| 22 May 1611 | E | 1 | Gervase Clifton | c Sep 1587 | 28 Jun 1666 | 78 |
| MP for Nottinghamshire 1614-1625,1628- | ||||||
| 1629 and 1661-1666, Nottingham 1626, | ||||||
| East Retford 1640-1646 and Nottinghamshire | ||||||
| 1661-1666 | ||||||
| 28 Jun 1666 | 2 | Gervase Clifton | c 1612 | 14 Jan 1675 | ||
| 14 Jan 1675 | 3 | William Clifton | 7 Apr 1663 | 8 Jun 1686 | 23 | |
| MP for Nottinghamshire 1685-1686 | ||||||
| 8 Jun 1686 | 4 | Gervase Clifton | c 1666 | 6 Mar 1731 | ||
| 6 Mar 1731 | 5 | Robert Clifton | 1690 | 7 Dec 1762 | 72 | |
| MP for East Retford 1727-1741 | ||||||
| 7 Dec 1762 | 6 | Gervase Clifton | 31 May 1744 | 26 Sep 1815 | 71 | |
| 26 Sep 1815 | 7 | Robert Clifton | Jun 1767 | 29 Apr 1837 | 69 | |
| 29 Apr 1837 | 8 | Juckes Granville Juckes (Juckes-Clifton | ||||
| from 6 Dec 1837) | 1769 | 1 Oct 1852 | 83 | |||
| 1 Oct 1852 | 9 | Robert Juckes-Clifton | 24 Dec 1826 | 30 Mar 1869 | 42 | |
| to | MP for Nottingham 1861-1866 and 1868-1869 | |||||
| 30 Mar 1869 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| CLIFTON of Clifton,Lancs | ||||||
| 4 Mar 1661 | E | 1 | Thomas Clifton | 7 Jul 1628 | 13 Nov 1694 | 66 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Nov 1694 | ||||||
| CLOSE of Mysore,India | ||||||
| 12 Dec 1812 | UK | 1 | Barry Close | Apr 1813 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Apr 1813 | ||||||
| CLOUSTON of Montreal,Canada | ||||||
| 3 Dec 1908 | UK | 1 | Edward Seaborne Clouston | 9 May 1849 | 23 Nov 1912 | 63 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 23 Nov 1912 | ||||||
| COATES of Helperby Hall,Yorks | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1911 | UK | See "Milnes-Coates" | ||||
| COATES of Haypark,Belfast | ||||||
| 15 Jul 1921 | UK | 1 | William Frederick Coates | 1 Mar 1866 | 19 Jan 1932 | 65 |
| 19 Jan 1932 | 2 | Frederick Gregory Lindsay Coates | 19 May 1916 | 23 Jun 1994 | 78 | |
| 23 Jun 1994 | 3 | David Charlton Frederick Coates | 16 Feb 1948 | |||
| COATS of Ferguslie Park,Renfrew | ||||||
| 25 Jun 1894 | UK | See "Glen-Coats" | ||||
| COATS of Auchendrane,Ayr | ||||||
| 7 Dec 1905 | UK | 1 | James Coats | 12 Apr 1834 | 20 Jan 1913 | 78 |
| 20 Jan 1913 | 2 | Stuart Auchincloss Coats | 20 Mar 1868 | 15 Jul 1959 | 91 | |
| MP for Wimbledon 1916-1918 and Surrey East | ||||||
| 1918-1922 | ||||||
| 15 Jul 1959 | 3 | James Stuart Coats | 13 Apr 1894 | 26 Oct 1966 | 72 | |
| 26 Oct 1966 | 4 | Alastair Francis Stuart Coats | 18 Nov 1921 | 13 Oct 2015 | 93 | |
| 13 Oct 2015 | 5 | Alexander James Coats | 6 Jul 1951 | |||
| COBB of Adderbury,Oxon | ||||||
| 9 Dec 1662 | E | 1 | Thomas Cobb | 28 Aug 1627 | 6 Feb 1700 | 72 |
| Feb 1700 | 2 | Edward Cobb | c 1676 | 1744 | ||
| 1744 | 3 | George Cobb | c 1670 | 29 Mar 1762 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 29 Mar 1762 | ||||||
| COCHRANE of Woodbrook,co.Wicklow,Lisgar | ||||||
| Castle,co.Cavan and Kildare Street,Dublin | ||||||
| 8 Oct 1903 | UK | 1 | Henry Cochrane | 21 Dec 1836 | 11 Sep 1904 | 67 |
| 11 Sep 1904 | 2 | Ernest Cecil Cochrane | 12 Sep 1873 | 6 Mar 1952 | 78 | |
| 6 Mar 1952 | 3 | Desmond Oriel Alastair George Weston | ||||
| Cochrane | 22 Oct 1918 | 12 Mar 1979 | 60 | |||
| 12 Mar 1979 | 4 | Henry Marc Sursock Cochrane | 23 Oct 1946 | |||
| COCHRANE of Woodbrook,Wicklow | ||||||
| 10 Feb 1915 | UK | 1 | Stanley Herbert Cochrane | 19 Sep 1877 | 23 Oct 1949 | 72 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 23 Oct 1949 | ||||||
| COCKBURN of Langton,Berwick | ||||||
| 22 Nov 1627 | NS | 1 | William Cockburn | c Dec 1628 | ||
| c Dec 1628 | 2 | William Cockburn | c 1650 | |||
| c 1650 | 3 | William Cockburn | c 1657 | |||
| c 1657 | 4 | Archibald Cockburn | 28 Jun 1705 | |||
| Jun 1705 | 5 | Archibald Cockburn | 16 Nov 1687 | 18 Feb 1710 | 22 | |
| Feb 1710 | 6 | Alexander Cockburn | May 1739 | |||
| May 1739 | 7 | Alexander Cockburn | 30 Apr 1745 | |||
| 30 Apr 1745 | 8 | James Cockburn | c 1729 | 26 Jul 1804 | ||
| MP for Lanark 1772-1784 | ||||||
| 26 Jul 1804 | 9 | James Cockburn | 21 Mar 1771 | 26 Feb 1852 | 80 | |
| Governor of Bermuda 1811-1819 | ||||||
| 26 Feb 1852 | 10 | George Cockburn | 22 Apr 1772 | 19 Aug 1853 | 81 | |
| MP for Portsmouth 1818-1820, Weobly | ||||||
| 1820-1828, Plymouth 1828-1832 and | ||||||
| Ripon 1841-1847 | ||||||
| 19 Aug 1853 | 11 | William Cockburn | 2 Jun 1773 | 30 Apr 1858 | 84 | |
| 30 Apr 1858 | 12 | Alexander James Edmund Cockburn | 24 Dec 1802 | 20 Nov 1880 | 77 | |
| to | MP for Southampton 1847-1856. Solicitor | |||||
| 20 Nov 1880 | General 1850-1851. Attorney General | |||||
| 1851-1852 and 1852-1856. Lord Chief | ||||||
| Justice of the Common Pleas 1856-1859. | ||||||
| Lord Chief Justice 1859-1880. PC 1857 | ||||||
| On his death the baronetcy became dormant | ||||||
| COCKBURN of that Ilk | ||||||
| 24 May 1671 | NS | 1 | James Cockburn | 7 Nov 1628 | 1 Jan 1704 | 75 |
| 1 Jan 1704 | 2 | William Cockburn | 11 Sep 1662 | 11 Jan 1751 | 88 | |
| 11 Jan 1751 | 3 | James Cockburn | 13 Mar 1780 | |||
| 13 Mar 1780 | 4 | William James Cockburn | 9 Jan 1800 | |||
| 9 Jan 1800 | 5 | James Cockburn | 1723 | 9 Jun 1809 | 85 | |
| 9 Jun 1809 | 6 | William Cockburn | 1769 | 19 Mar 1835 | 65 | |
| 19 Mar 1835 | 7 | William Sarsfield Rossiter Cockburn | 11 Jun 1796 | 12 Apr 1858 | 61 | |
| 12 Apr 1858 | 8 | Edward Cludde Cockburn | 10 Jun 1834 | 24 Dec 1903 | 69 | |
| 24 Dec 1903 | 9 | Robert Cockburn | 7 Dec 1861 | 26 Aug 1938 | 76 | |
| 26 Aug 1938 | 10 | James Stanhope Cockburn | 11 Nov 1867 | 1 Apr 1947 | 79 | |
| 1 Apr 1947 | 11 | John Brydges Cockburn | 23 Dec 1870 | 2 May 1949 | 78 | |
| 2 May 1949 | 12 | John Elliot Cockburn | 7 Dec 1925 | 12 Jun 2015 | 89 | |
| 12 Jun 2015 | 13 | Charles Christopher Cockburn | 19 Nov 1950 | |||
| COCKBURN-CAMPBELL of Gartsford,Ross | ||||||
| 6 May 1815 | UK | 1 | Alexander Campbell | 11 Dec 1824 | ||
| to | He obtained a fresh creation in 1821. On his death | |||||
| 11 Dec 1824 | the creation of 1815 became extinct,but the | |||||
| 3 Jul 1821 | UK | 1 | creation of 1821 passed to:- | |||
| 11 Dec 1824 | 2 | Alexander Thomas Cockburn (Cockburn- | ||||
| Campbell from 1825) | 23 Apr 1871 | |||||
| 23 Apr 1871 | 3 | Alexander Cockburn-Campbell | 1843 | 6 Sep 1871 | 28 | |
| 6 Sep 1871 | 4 | Thomas Cockburn-Campbell | 18 Apr 1845 | 27 Sep 1892 | 47 | |
| 27 Sep 1892 | 5 | Alexander Thomas Cockburn-Campbell | 1872 | 1 Jul 1935 | 62 | |
| For further information on this baronet,see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 1 Jul 1935 | 6 | Thomas Cockburn-Campbell | 8 Dec 1918 | 28 Dec 1999 | 80 | |
| 28 Dec 1999 | 7 | Alexander Thomas Cockburn-Campbell | 16 Mar 1945 | |||
| COCKERELL of Sezincote,Gloucs | ||||||
| 25 Sep 1809 | UK | See "Rushout" | ||||
| COCKS of Dumbleton,Gloucs | ||||||
| 7 Feb 1662 | E | 1 | Richard Cocks | c 1602 | 16 Sep 1684 | |
| 16 Sep 1684 | 2 | Richard Cocks | c 1659 | 21 Oct 1726 | ||
| MP for Gloucestershire 1698-1702 | ||||||
| 21 Oct 1726 | 3 | Robert Cocks | c 1660 | 9 Feb 1736 | ||
| 9 Feb 1736 | 4 | Robert Cocks | 4 Apr 1765 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 4 Apr 1765 | ||||||
| COCKS of Dumbleton,Gloucs | ||||||
| 7 Oct 1772 | GB | 1 | Charles Cocks | 29 Jun 1725 | 30 Jan 1806 | 80 |
| He was subsequently created Baron Somers | ||||||
| (qv) in 1784 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| CODDINGTON of Wycollar,Lancs | ||||||
| 17 Feb 1896 | UK | 1 | William Coddington | 12 Dec 1830 | 15 Feb 1918 | 87 |
| to | MP for Blackburn 1880-1906 | |||||
| 15 Feb 1918 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| CODRINGTON of Dodington,Gloucs | ||||||
| 21 Apr 1721 | GB | 1 | William Codrington | 17 Dec 1738 | ||
| MP for Minehead 1737-1738 | ||||||
| 17 Dec 1738 | 2 | William Codrington | 26 Oct 1719 | 11 Mar 1792 | 72 | |
| MP for Beverley 1747-1761 and | ||||||
| Tewkesbury 1761-1792 | ||||||
| 11 Mar 1792 | 3 | William Codrington | c 1737 | 5 Sep 1816 | ||
| 5 Sep 1816 | 4 | William Raimond Codrington | 25 Jan 1805 | 17 Dec 1873 | 68 | |
| 17 Dec 1873 | 5 | William Mary Joseph Codrington | 13 Mar 1829 | 1 Mar 1904 | 74 | |
| 1 Mar 1904 | 6 | William Robert Codrington | 18 Apr 1867 | 7 Nov 1932 | 65 | |
| 7 Nov 1932 | 7 | William Richard Codrington | 22 Apr 1904 | 23 Mar 1961 | 56 | |
| 23 Mar 1961 | 8 | William Alexander Codrington | 5 Jul 1934 | 1 Dec 2006 | 72 | |
| 1 Dec 2006 | 9 | Giles Peter Codrington | 28 Oct 1943 | |||
| CODRINGTON of Dodington,Gloucs | ||||||
| 25 Feb 1876 | UK | 1 | Gerald William Henry Codrington | 9 Oct 1850 | 3 Nov 1929 | 79 |
| 3 Nov 1929 | 2 | Christopher William Gerald Henry | ||||
| Codrington | 6 Oct 1894 | 10 Nov 1979 | 85 | |||
| 10 Nov 1979 | 3 | Simon Francis Bethell Codrington | 14 Aug 1923 | 17 Aug 2005 | 82 | |
| 17 Aug 2005 | 4 | Christopher George Wayne Codrington | 20 Feb 1960 | |||
| COFFIN of Canada | ||||||
| 13 Jun 1804 | UK | 1 | Isaac Coffin | 16 May 1759 | 23 Jul 1839 | 80 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 23 Jul 1839 | ||||||
| COGAN of Greenwich,Kent | ||||||
| 20 Sep 1657 | I | 1 | Andrew Cogan | Oct 1660 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Oct 1660 | ||||||
| COGHILL of Coghill,Yorks | ||||||
| 31 Aug 1778 | GB | 1 | John Coghill | 14 Jul 1732 | 8 Mar 1790 | 57 |
| 8 Mar 1790 | 2 | John Thomas Coghill | 2 Feb 1766 | 21 May 1817 | 51 | |
| 21 May 1817 | 3 | Josiah Coghill Coghill | 1773 | 20 Jun 1850 | 76 | |
| 20 Jun 1850 | 4 | John Joscelyn Coghill | 11 Feb 1826 | 29 Nov 1905 | 79 | |
| 29 Nov 1905 | 5 | Egerton Bushe Coghill | 7 Feb 1853 | 9 Oct 1921 | 68 | |
| 9 Oct 1921 | 6 | Marmaduke Nevill Patrick Somerville | ||||
| Coghill | 18 Mar 1896 | 6 Jan 1981 | 84 | |||
| 6 Jan 1981 | 7 | Joscelyn Ambrose Cramer Coghill | 30 Sep 1902 | 6 Jun 1983 | 80 | |
| 6 Jun 1983 | 8 | Egerton James Nevill Tobias Coghill | 26 Mar 1930 | 23 Sep 2000 | 70 | |
| 23 Sep 2000 | 9 | Patrick Kendal Farley Coghill | 3 Nov 1960 | |||
| COGHILL of Richings,Bucks | ||||||
| 24 Mar 1781 | GB | 1 | John Coghill | 14 Nov 1785 | ||
| to | MP for Newport 1780-1785 | |||||
| 14 Nov 1785 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| COHEN of Highfield,Kent | ||||||
| 19 Dec 1905 | UK | 1 | Benjamin Louis Cohen | 18 Nov 1844 | 8 Nov 1909 | 64 |
| MP for Islington East 1892-1906 | ||||||
| 8 Nov 1909 | 2 | Herbert Benjamin Cohen | 26 Apr 1874 | 23 Apr 1968 | 93 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 23 Apr 1968 | For information on the death of his son and heir, | |||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| COHEN of Honymead,Somerset | ||||||
| 11 Dec 1961 | UK | See "Waley-Cohen" | ||||
| COKAYNE of Ashbourne Hall,Derby | ||||||
| 10 Jan 1642 | E | 1 | Aston Cokayne | 20 Dec 1608 | 18 Feb 1684 | 75 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Feb 1684 | ||||||
| COKE of Longford,Derby | ||||||
| 30 Dec 1641 | E | 1 | Edward Coke | c 1669 | ||
| c 1669 | 2 | Robert Coke | 29 Apr 1645 | 15 Jan 1688 | 42 | |
| MP for Derbyshire 1685-1687 | ||||||
| Jan 1688 | 3 | Edward Coke | 6 Oct 1648 | 26 Aug 1727 | 78 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 26 Aug 1727 | ||||||
| COLBRAND of Boreham,Sussex | ||||||
| 21 Dec 1621 | E | 1 | John Colbrand | 1627 | ||
| 1627 | 2 | James Colbrand | c 1640 | |||
| c 1640 | 3 | Richard Colbrand | 14 Mar 1664 | |||
| Mar 1664 | 4 | Charles Colbrand | 19 Mar 1667 | |||
| Mar 1667 | 5 | Robert Colbrand | 2 Jun 1709 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 2 Jun 1709 | ||||||
| COLBY of Kensington,London | ||||||
| 21 Jun 1720 | GB | 1 | Thomas Colby | c 1670 | 23 Sep 1729 | |
| to | MP for Rochester 1724-1727 | |||||
| 23 Sep 1729 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| COLCLOUGH of Tintern Abbey,Wexford | ||||||
| 21 Jul 1628 | I | 1 | Adam Colclough | c 1590 | 4 Apr 1637 | |
| 4 Apr 1637 | 2 | Caesar Colclough | 23 Nov 1623 | 22 Jun 1684 | 60 | |
| MP for Newcastle-under-Lyme 1661 | ||||||
| 22 Jun 1684 | 3 | Caesar Colclough | c 1650 | 22 Sep 1687 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 22 Sep 1687 | ||||||
| COLE of Brancepath,Durham | ||||||
| 15 Feb 1641 | E | 1 | Nicholas Cole | c 1660 | ||
| c 1660 | 2 | Ralph Cole | 3 Nov 1629 | 9 Aug 1704 | 74 | |
| MP for Durham 1678-1679 | ||||||
| 9 Aug 1704 | 3 | Nicholas Cole | 9 Jun 1685 | 1711 | 26 | |
| 1711 | 4 | Mark Cole | 8 Nov 1687 | 25 Mar 1720 | 32 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Mar 1720 | For further information on this baronet,see | |||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| COLE of Newland,Dublin | ||||||
| 23 Jan 1661 | I | 1 | John Cole | c 1691 | ||
| c 1691 | 2 | Arthur Cole | 1664 | 5 Oct 1754 | 90 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron Ranelagh | ||||||
| (qv) in 1715 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1754 | ||||||
| COLEBROOKE of Gatton,Surrey | ||||||
| 12 Oct 1759 | GB | 1 | James Colebrooke | 21 Jul 1722 | 10 May 1761 | 38 |
| MP for Gatton 1751-1761 | ||||||
| 10 May 1761 | 2 | George Colebrooke | 14 Jun 1729 | 5 Aug 1809 | 80 | |
| MP for Arundel 1754-1774 | ||||||
| 5 Aug 1809 | 3 | James Edward Colebrooke | 7 Jul 1761 | 5 Nov 1838 | 77 | |
| 5 Nov 1838 | 4 | Thomas Edward Colebrooke | 19 Aug 1813 | 11 Jan 1890 | 76 | |
| MP for Taunton 1842-1852, Lanarkshire | ||||||
| 1857-1868 and Lanarkshire North 1868-1885 | ||||||
| Lord Lieutenant Lanarkshire 1869-1890 | ||||||
| 11 Jan 1890 | 5 | Edward Arthur Colebrooke | 12 Oct 1861 | 28 Feb 1939 | 77 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Colebrooke (qv) in 1906 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until its | ||||||
| extinction in 1939 | ||||||
| COLEPEPER of Preston Hall,Kent | ||||||
| 17 May 1627 | E | 1 | William Colepeper | c 1588 | 1651 | |
| 1651 | 2 | Richard Colepeper | 10 Jan 1660 | |||
| Jan 1660 | 3 | Thomas Colepeper | c 1656 | 18 May 1723 | ||
| to | MP for Maidstone 1705-1713 and 1715-1723 | |||||
| 18 May 1723 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| COLEPEPER of Wakehurst,Sussex | ||||||
| 20 Sep 1628 | E | 1 | William Colepeper | c 1651 | ||
| MP for East Grinstead 1640 | ||||||
| c 1651 | 2 | Benjamin Colepeper | c 1670 | |||
| c 1670 | 3 | Edward Colepeper | c 1632 | c 1700 | ||
| c 1700 | 4 | William Colepeper | 23 Nov 1668 | 28 Mar 1740 | 71 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 28 Mar 1740 | ||||||
| COLFOX of Symondsbury,Dorset | ||||||
| 4 Jul 1939 | UK | 1 | William Philip Colfox | 25 Feb 1888 | 8 Nov 1966 | 78 |
| MP for Dorset North 1918-1922 and Dorset | ||||||
| West 1922-1941 | ||||||
| 8 Nov 1966 | 2 | William John Colfox | 25 Apr 1924 | 12 Jul 2014 | 90 | |
| 12 Jul 2014 | 3 | Philip John Colfox | 27 Dec 1962 | |||
| COLLET of St Clere,Kent | ||||||
| 12 Jun 1888 | UK | 1 | Mark Wilks Collet | Sep 1816 | 25 Apr 1905 | 88 |
| 25 Apr 1905 | 2 | Mark Edimann Collet | 12 Jan 1864 | 24 Sep 1944 | 80 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 24 Sep 1944 | ||||||
| COLLETON of London | ||||||
| 18 Feb 1661 | E | 1 | John Colleton | c 1608 | c Mar 1667 | |
| c Mar 1667 | 2 | Peter Colleton | 17 Sep 1635 | 24 Mar 1694 | 58 | |
| MP for Bossiney 1681-1685 and 1689-1694 | ||||||
| 24 Mar 1694 | 3 | John Colleton | Aug 1669 | Sep 1754 | 85 | |
| Sep 1754 | 4 | John Colleton | 1738 | 1778 | 40 | |
| 1778 | 5 | John Snell Colleton | 27 Jan 1775 | Jul 1801 | 26 | |
| Jul 1801 | 6 | James Nassau Colleton | 23 Mar 1752 | 16 Jan 1815 | 62 | |
| 16 Jan 1815 | 7 | James Roupell Colleton | 22 Dec 1783 | 28 Jul 1848 | 64 | |
| 28 Jul 1848 | 8 | Robert Augustus Fulford Graves Colleton | 19 Sep 1824 | 28 Oct 1866 | 42 | |
| 28 Oct 1866 | 9 | Robert Augustus William Colleton | 31 Aug 1854 | 1 Sep 1938 | 84 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1 Sep 1938 | ||||||
| COLLETT of Bridge Ward,London | ||||||
| 1 Nov 1934 | UK | 1 | Sir Charles Henry Collett | Jul 1864 | 23 Nov 1938 | 74 |
| 23 Nov 1938 | 2 | Henry Seymour Collett | 14 Feb 1893 | 6 Jan 1971 | 77 | |
| 6 Jan 1971 | 3 | Ian Seymour Collett | 5 Oct 1953 | |||
| COLLIER of the Navy | ||||||
| 20 Sep 1814 | UK | 1 | George Ralph Collier | 24 Mar 1824 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 24 Mar 1824 | ||||||
| COLMAN of Gatton Park,Surrey | ||||||
| 26 Nov 1907 | UK | 1 | Jeremiah Colman | 24 Apr 1859 | 16 Jan 1942 | 82 |
| 16 Jan 1942 | 2 | Jeremiah Colman | 1 Jan 1886 | 8 Jan 1961 | 75 | |
| 8 Jan 1961 | 3 | Michael Jeremiah Colman | 7 Jul 1928 | 26 Dec 2023 | 95 | |
| 26 Dec 2023 | 4 | Jeremiah Michael Powlett Colman | 23 Jan 1958 | |||
| COLMAN of Reigate,Surrey | ||||||
| 29 Jan 1952 | UK | 1 | Nigel Claudian Dalziel Colman | 1886 | 7 Mar 1966 | 79 |
| to | MP for Brixton 1927-1945 | |||||
| 7 Mar 1966 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| COLQUHOUN of Colquhoun,Dumbarton | ||||||
| 30 Aug 1625 | NS | 1 | See "Grant" | |||
| COLQUHOUN of Luss,Argyllshire | ||||||
| 27 Jun 1786 | GB | 1 | James Colquhoun | 22 Feb 1714 | 16 Nov 1786 | 72 |
| 16 Nov 1786 | 2 | James Colquhoun | 28 Jul 1741 | 23 Apr 1805 | 63 | |
| 23 Apr 1805 | 3 | James Colquhoun | 28 Sep 1774 | 3 Feb 1836 | 61 | |
| MP for Dunbartonshire 1799-1806 | ||||||
| 3 Feb 1836 | 4 | James Colquhoun | 7 Feb 1804 | 18 Dec 1873 | 69 | |
| MP for Dunbartonshure 1837-1841. Lord | ||||||
| Lieutenant Dumbarton 1837-1873 | ||||||
| For further information on the death of this | ||||||
| baronet,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 18 Dec 1873 | 5 | James Colquhoun | 30 Mar 1844 | 18 Mar 1907 | 62 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Dumbarton 1887-1907 | ||||||
| 18 Mar 1907 | 6 | Alan John Colquhoun | 19 Sep 1838 | 14 Mar 1910 | 71 | |
| 14 Mar 1910 | 7 | Iain Colquhoun | 20 Jun 1887 | 12 Nov 1948 | 61 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Dumbarton 1919-1948 | ||||||
| KT 1937 | ||||||
| 12 Nov 1948 | 8 | Ivar Iain Colquhoun | 4 Jan 1916 | 31 Jan 2008 | 92 | |
| 31 Jan 2008 | 9 | Rory Malcolm Colquhoun | 20 Dec 1947 | |||
| COLT of St.James's,Westminster | ||||||
| 2 Mar 1694 | E | 1 | Henry Dutton Colt | c 1646 | 25 Apr 1731 | |
| MP for Newport IOW 1695-1698 and Westminster | ||||||
| 1701-1702 and 1705-1708 | ||||||
| 25 Apr 1731 | 2 | John Dutton Colt | 1725 | 4 May 1809 | 83 | |
| May 1809 | 3 | John Dutton Colt | c 1750 | 29 Jun 1810 | ||
| Jun 1810 | 4 | John Dutton Colt | 8 Oct 1774 | 10 Jan 1845 | 70 | |
| 10 Jan 1845 | 5 | Edward Vaughan Colt | c 1781 | 9 Jun 1849 | ||
| 9 Jun 1849 | 6 | Edward Harry Vaughan Colt | Apr 1808 | 15 Oct 1882 | 74 | |
| 15 Oct 1882 | 7 | Thomas Archer Colt | 6 Nov 1815 | 26 Feb 1893 | 77 | |
| 26 Feb 1893 | 8 | Edward Harry Dutton Colt | 3 Oct 1850 | 23 Jun 1931 | 80 | |
| 23 Jun 1931 | 9 | Henry Archer Colt | 16 Sep 1882 | 10 Feb 1951 | 68 | |
| 10 Feb 1951 | 10 | Edward William Dutton Colt | 22 Sep 1936 | |||
| COLTHURST of Ardrum,co.Cork | ||||||
| 3 Aug 1744 | I | 1 | John Colthurst | by 1720 | 19 Sep 1775 | |
| 19 Sep 1775 | 2 | John Conway Colthurst | c 1743 | 15 Feb 1787 | ||
| 15 Feb 1787 | 3 | Nicholas Colthurst | c 1743 | Jul 1795 | ||
| Jul 1795 | 4 | Nicholas Conway Colthurst | Jan 1789 | 22 Jun 1829 | 40 | |
| MP for Cork 1812-1829 | ||||||
| 22 Jun 1829 | 5 | George Conway Colthurst | 1824 | 24 Sep 1878 | 54 | |
| MP for Kinsale 1863-1874 | ||||||
| 24 Sep 1878 | 6 | George St.John Colthurst | 29 Jun 1850 | 25 Dec 1925 | 75 | |
| 25 Dec 1925 | 7 | George Oliver Colthurst | 24 Aug 1882 | 28 Feb 1951 | 68 | |
| 28 Feb 1951 | 8 | Richard St.John Jefferyes Colthurst | 19 Jul 1887 | 18 Feb 1955 | 67 | |
| 18 Feb 1955 | 9 | Richard la Touche Colthurst | 14 Aug 1928 | 22 Mar 2003 | 74 | |
| 22 Mar 2003 | 10 | Charles St.John Colthurst | 21 May 1955 | |||
| COLYEAR of Holland | ||||||
| 20 Feb 1677 | E | 1 | Alexander Colyear | c 1685 | ||
| c 1685 | 2 | David Colyear | c 1656 | 2 Jan 1730 | ||
| He was subsequently created Earl of | ||||||
| Portmore (qv) in 1703 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1835 | ||||||
| COLYER-FERGUSSON of Spitalhaugh,Peebles | ||||||
| 23 Jan 1866 | UK | 1 | William Fergusson | 20 Mar 1808 | 10 Feb 1877 | 68 |
| 10 Feb 1877 | 2 | James Ranken Fergusson | 10 Aug 1835 | 28 Oct 1924 | 89 | |
| 28 Oct 1924 | 3 | Thomas Colyer Colyer-Fergusson | 11 Jul 1865 | 7 Apr 1951 | 85 | |
| 7 Apr 1951 | 4 | James Herbert Hamilton Colyer-Fergusson | 10 Jan 1917 | 9 Jan 2004 | 86 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 9 Jan 2004 | ||||||
| COMPTON of Hartbury,Gloucs | ||||||
| 6 May 1686 | E | 1 | William Compton | c 1698 | ||
| c 1698 | 2 | William Compton | 5 Jun 1731 | |||
| 5 Jun 1731 | 3 | William Compton | 3 May 1758 | |||
| 3 May 1758 | 4 | William Compton | Jan 1760 | |||
| Jan 1760 | 5 | Walter Abingdon Compton | 29 Aug 1773 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 29 Aug 1773 | ||||||
| COMPTON-THORNHILL of | ||||||
| Riddlesworth Hall,Norfolk | ||||||
| 11 Aug 1885 | UK | 1 | Thomas Thornhill | 26 Mar 1837 | 2 Apr 1900 | 63 |
| MP for Suffolk West 1875-1885 | ||||||
| 2 Apr 1900 | 2 | Anthony John Thornhill (Compton-Thornhill | ||||
| to | from 1902) | 2 Aug 1868 | 17 Mar 1949 | 80 | ||
| 17 Mar 1949 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| CONANT of Lyndon,Rutland | ||||||
| 30 Jun 1954 | UK | 1 | Roger John Edward Conant | 28 May 1899 | 30 Mar 1973 | 73 |
| MP for Chesterfield 1931-1935, Bewdley | ||||||
| 1937-1950 and Rutland and Stamford | ||||||
| 1950-1959 | ||||||
| 30 Mar 1973 | 2 | John Ernest Michael Conant | 24 Apr 1923 | 10 Jan 2024 | 100 | |
| 10 Jan 2024 | 3 | Simond Edward Christopher Conant | 13 Oct 1958 | |||
| CONGREVE of Walton,Staffs | ||||||
| 7 Dec 1812 | UK | 1 | William Congreve | 7 Jul 1742 | 30 Apr 1814 | 71 |
| 30 Apr 1814 | 2 | William Congreve | 20 May 1772 | 16 May 1828 | 55 | |
| MP for Gatton 1812-1816 and Plymouth | ||||||
| 1818-1828 | ||||||
| 16 May 1828 | 3 | William Augustus Congreve | 1827 | 9 Dec 1887? | ||
| to | For further information on this baronet, see the | |||||
| 9 Dec 1887? | note at the foot of this page. | |||||
| Presumably extinct on his death,but see the | ||||||
| note below | ||||||
| CONGREVE of Congreve,Staffs | ||||||
| 30 Jun 1927 | UK | 1 | Geoffrey Cecil Congreve | 19 Jul 1897 | 28 Jul 1941 | 44 |
| to | For information on this creation, see the note at | |||||
| 28 Jul 1941 | the foot of the page containing details of his | |||||
| father's (Sir Walter Norris Congreve) knighthood | ||||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| Sir Gilbert East, 2nd baronet (listed under 'Clayton-East') | ||||||
| Sir Gilbert was drowned in August 1866. The following report is taken from 'The Irish Times' | ||||||
| of 15 August 1866:- | ||||||
| 'Sir Gilbert East lost his life near the pier at Ryde early on Sunday morning under extraordinary | ||||||
| circumstances. He had been in the habit for many years of spending the yachting season at | ||||||
| Ryde, and this year his fine schooner the Lalla Rookh has been out daily during the regattas | ||||||
| on the Solent. She was at her moorings, about 400 yards from the pier head, on Saturday | ||||||
| afternoon, when Sir Gilbert, accompanied by a female companion, came ashore in his own | ||||||
| cutter and spent the evening in Ryde. Between one and two o'clock on Sunday morning he | ||||||
| passed through the toll gates with the same person, as the pierman supposed, to go on board | ||||||
| his yacht. It was high water, and it was raining heavily at the time, and before they could have | ||||||
| got half way down the pier the attention of the few persons at the gate house at that hour | ||||||
| was excited by the piercing shrieks of a woman. Captain Craske, one of the oldest officers of | ||||||
| the Royal Mail Isle of Wight steamboat service, happened to be at the toll house, in the | ||||||
| performance of his duty at the time, and Cousins, the pier watchman, and others ran in the | ||||||
| direction from which the cries proceeded. On reaching the round-house they found a lady in | ||||||
| a state of great excitement, and a voice from the water was distinctly heard crying out, | ||||||
| "Save me! Oh save a drowning man! I'm all right!" Adams, one of the crew of Mr. Hudson's | ||||||
| yacht, the Caroline, who was among the few present, ran to his cutter alongside the slip, | ||||||
| about 250 yards distant, but before he and his mates could get back to the spot whence | ||||||
| the cries came all traces of any person in the water were lost. The search was continued | ||||||
| for some hours, but without avail. Sir Gilbert's companion returned to the toll-house, and | ||||||
| subsequently went off in the cutter of the Lalla Rookh, the crew of which had been awaiting | ||||||
| the arrival of their owner at the pier-gates, but, on seeing him approach, had hastened off | ||||||
| to the pier head, where their boat was moored, and where they had been out of hearing of | ||||||
| the alarm excited by the sad event. It is said that Sir Gilbert was an excellent swimmer, so | ||||||
| that the circumstances of his death appear the more extraordinary.' | ||||||
| Sir Robert Alan Clayton-East-Clayton, 9th baronet | ||||||
| Numerous legends relating to lost cities continue to exist, notwithstanding modern technology | ||||||
| and satellite mapping of the Earth's surface. Many men have lost their lives in searching for | ||||||
| such cities - a good example is the Fawcett Expedition which disappeared in 1925 when seeking | ||||||
| a lost city deep in the uncharted jungles of Brazil. | ||||||
| Lesser known is the 'lost oasis' of Zerzura (or Zarzura), reputed to be hidden in the Sahara | ||||||
| desert near the border between Egypt and Libya. An excellent summary of the various searches | ||||||
| for Zerzura can be found by cutting and pasting the following web address into your browser:- | ||||||
| http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/200206/searching.for.zerzura.htm | ||||||
| Sir Robert took part in one such search in 1932. The following article appeared in the | ||||||
| 'Manchester Guardian' of 11 September 1932:- | ||||||
| 'The very sudden death of Sir Robert Clayton-East-Clayton, which was due, it is believed, to | ||||||
| some germ picked up during his recent visit to the Libyan Desert, recall's the young explorer's | ||||||
| attempt to discover by means of aeroplanes the legendary oasis, Zarzura. [Sir Robert's death | ||||||
| was diagnosed as being caused by acute anterior poliomyelitis - i.e. polio] | ||||||
| 'In the early summer of this year Sir Robert, together with Count de Almasy [the subject of the | ||||||
| film "The English Patient"], established a base at Dakhia, the most westerly of the Egyptian | ||||||
| oases, and from the air reconnoitred the waste of sand that extends from Dakhia for a distance | ||||||
| of some three hundred miles. They saw and photographed a wide wadi (valley) containing a | ||||||
| large amount of sunt (acacia) trees, and as this part of the Libyan Desert is devoid of | ||||||
| vegetation of any kind it is thought that the trees can be accounted for only by the presence | ||||||
| of water rising to or near to the surface, and that the wadi is probably the famous lost oasis | ||||||
| of Zarzura. Unfortunately, the terrific heat and shortage of water made the risk of landing | ||||||
| exceedingly dangerous, and further exploration was postponed until the winter. | ||||||
| 'Whether the oasis actually exists in the form that oases usually take, i.e. a spring flowing to | ||||||
| the surface with dense palm groves, is a very moot point, but the local Arab legends are very | ||||||
| firm on the matter, and all ancient Arab historians speak of a wonderful town set in ideal | ||||||
| surroundings, where a race of men cut off from the outside world have lived since the days of | ||||||
| the Persians.' | ||||||
| Sir Robert had been married only a fortnight when he set off on this expedition. His widow died | ||||||
| a year after his death, on 15 September 1933, when she fell from the cockpit of her aeroplane | ||||||
| just as it was about to leave the ground. | ||||||
| Sir Alexander Thomas Cockburn-Campbell, 5th baronet | ||||||
| The Cockburn-Campbell family have been residents of Western Australia since 1858, when the | ||||||
| second baronet arrived and assumed the position of Superintendent of Police, later becoming | ||||||
| the Resident Magistrate at Albany. The fourth baronet, Sir Thomas, was editor of the "West | ||||||
| Australian" newspaper, and subsequently first President of the Western Australian Legislative | ||||||
| Council. A sufferer from chronic insomnia, he was found unconscious in the Council chamber | ||||||
| and died soon after; at the subsequent inquest he was found to have died from an overdose | ||||||
| of chlorodyne which he taken to induce sleep. | ||||||
| His eldest son, Sir Alexander, the fifth baronet, after a period in government service, lived a | ||||||
| pioneering life in northern Western Australia as a stockman and station manager, and became | ||||||
| known as the "drover baronet." He spent over 30 years in the Northern Territory and the | ||||||
| Kimberleys and became a living legend in those areas. | ||||||
| He married Maude Giles in 1918. Although the entry under this baronet in Burke's Peerage states | ||||||
| that his wife died in 1923, her actual date of death was 12 February 1926 - an article in the | ||||||
| "West Australian" of 14 June 1926 states that "It will be recalled that Sir Alexander lost his wife | ||||||
| under particularly sad circumstances several months ago...." The 1926 date is also confirmed by | ||||||
| her grand-daughter, who I contacted as a courtesy before publishing this note. | ||||||
| The story of her death is indeed a sad one, illustrating the difficulties caused by distance and | ||||||
| isolation in the remote areas of Australia at that time, prior to the founding of the Royal Flying | ||||||
| Doctor Service in 1928. Quoting from an article in the Perth "Mirror" of 27 March 1926 [a further | ||||||
| indication that her death occurred in that year], "Sir Alexander Campbell and Lady Campbell, | ||||||
| with three children, the eldest aged six [sic], reside at Waterloo Station, 164 miles from | ||||||
| Wyndham. Lady Campbell was preparing to leave for Wyndham, to be confined, when she was | ||||||
| suddenly taken ill. A messenger was sent to Wyndham for a doctor, who set out at once on | ||||||
| horseback, but arrived too late. The unfortunate lady died on the following day. From the | ||||||
| time the messenger left and until the doctor arrived at the bedside 11 days had elapsed." | ||||||
| Sir Alexander finally returned to Perth in 1932 to seek treatment for his eyes. He was | ||||||
| suffering from trachoma, known as "sandy blight" in outback Australia. Here he remained until | ||||||
| 1 July 1935, when he was killed by a train at a Perth level-crossing. The following edited report | ||||||
| of the subsequent inquest appeared in the "Kalgoorlie Miner" on 7 August 1935:- | ||||||
| 'The Acting Coroner, Mr. Isaacson, J.P., today [6 August] found that Sir Alexander Cockburn | ||||||
| Campbell, Bart., came by his death, on July 1, through injuries sustained when struck by a | ||||||
| locomotive at the Swan street level crossing, Bassendean [a north-eastern suburb of Perth], | ||||||
| and that there was no blame attachable to anyone...... | ||||||
| 'Leslie Stainer Burge, butcher, said that he was at the Swan street level crossing, Bassendean, | ||||||
| at 8.45 a.m. on July 1, waiting for a train from Bassendean to pass. Witness noticed the | ||||||
| deceased also waiting. The train from Bassendean passed within a minute. As the locomotive | ||||||
| went by the engine-driver pointed ahead to indicate another train, coming from Guildford. The | ||||||
| deceased, however, stepped on to the line as the Bassendean train cleared the crossing. The | ||||||
| whistle sounded as the second train approached, and witness sounded the horn of his car and | ||||||
| shouted warnings to the deceased. The deceased did not appear to hear. He cleared the first | ||||||
| set of rails. Glancing up as he approached the second set, he appeared to have become | ||||||
| confused on seeing the train from Guildford bearing down on him. Had he stood still, witness | ||||||
| said, the deceased would have escaped. The deceased stepped back on to the line he had | ||||||
| already left, and was struck by the engine and hurled against the cattle pit. He appeared to | ||||||
| be dead when witness went to him.' | ||||||
| Nigel Benjamin Cohen, son and heir of Sir Herbert Benjamin Cohen, 2nd | ||||||
| baronet (18 Jan 1908 - 18 Sept 1931) | ||||||
| Nigel Cohen was killed in an air crash in September 1931. The following report appeared in the | ||||||
| 'Manchester Guardian' of 19 September 1931:- | ||||||
| 'An aeroplane crashed from a height of 4,000 feet at New Inn Green, Kent, last night, and the | ||||||
| pilot, Mr, Nigel B. Cohen (23), of Sandy Hatch, Hythe, was killed. It is stated that a wing fell | ||||||
| from the machine. | ||||||
| 'Cohen had previously taken off from the headquarters of the Cinque Ports Flying Club at | ||||||
| Lympne. | ||||||
| 'The machine crashed in a field at New Inn Green about ten yards from the road. AA Patrol Delo, | ||||||
| who was on duty at the crossroads close by, rushed to the machine but found the pilot dead | ||||||
| in the wreckage. He told a reporter that the pilot seemed to race the engine and then dive | ||||||
| from about 4,000 feet. When the 'plane was 2,000 feet up the wing fell off. | ||||||
| 'Mr, K.K. Brown, the Cinque Ports Club instructor, said that he was watching the machine in the | ||||||
| air and saw the wing fall. Parts of the machine were picked up 200 yards from the wreckage | ||||||
| and the engine was completely buried in the ground. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Brown said he considered that the crash was due to the excessive strain upon the | ||||||
| structure of the machine owing to its big dive. | ||||||
| 'An eye-witness of the crash, Mr. F.W. Bryant, told a reporter that he was in a shed in his | ||||||
| garden when he heard the roar of an aeroplane engine. "I looked out and saw the 'plane diving | ||||||
| towards me," he said. "It seemed to be coming straight for me for several seconds, when | ||||||
| suddenly a wing fell off. Then the 'plane toppled over. I rushed away, as I thought it was going | ||||||
| to crash into my garden, but it missed it by about twenty yards." | ||||||
| 'The aeroplane missed the roof of the hotel at the crossroads by inches, and crashed into the | ||||||
| grounds at the rear of the hotel. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Cohen was the eldest son of Sir Herbert Benjamin Cohen, Bart., of Sandy Hatch, Hythe, | ||||||
| Kent. Sir Herbert is a barrister, and is a major (retired) of the 4th West Kent Regiment. Mr. | ||||||
| Nigel Cohen was the heir to the baronetcy.' | ||||||
| Sir Mark Cole, 4th baronet [E 1641] | ||||||
| Sir Mark, together with a number of other men, appears to have formed a vigilante group in | ||||||
| an attempt to keep the streets of London safe. The following account is taken from "A | ||||||
| compleat collection of remarkable tryals of the most notorious malefactors" [London 1718-1721] | ||||||
| 'Sir Mark Cole, Bar., John Reading, Robert Squibb, and Hugh Jones, were all indicted at the Old | ||||||
| Bailey, June 6, 1712, for a Riot and Assault committed on the 11th of March, 1712. The | ||||||
| Evidence was John Bouch, a Watchman in Essex-street, who deposed, that while he was at | ||||||
| his Watch-house, a company of Men came along the Street, and after a while enter'd into a | ||||||
| Consultation, and then two of them singled out, and came to him, and asked him what he did | ||||||
| with that Dog; to which he answer'd, he took care of the Street: whereupon one of them | ||||||
| struck him, and said, d--m me, I'll take care of your Dog and you too; and the Watchman | ||||||
| defending himself, one cry'd stout, as he thought, and presently came up near twenty, with | ||||||
| whom the Watchman skirmish'd, and kept them off for a long time, they intending (as he said | ||||||
| he understood by them) to nail him up in his Watch-house, and roll him about the Street. They | ||||||
| laid at him, some with Swords, and some with Sticks; but he defended himself with his Staff, | ||||||
| till at length they retired, and he pursued them, and by the help of a Constable, and some more | ||||||
| Watchmen, took several of them; among whom (he swore) were the several Defendants; and | ||||||
| that Mr. Salt, the High-Constable, let others go. | ||||||
| 'They, in their Defence, had several Witnesses to prove their design to be otherwise than it | ||||||
| was represented; amongst whom was the aforesaid Mr. Salt, who swore, that being informed | ||||||
| some Gentleman had procured a Justice of the Peace's Approbation, to an Intention of theirs, | ||||||
| to msearch the Streets for Mohocks [a gang which terrorised London streets in the early 18th | ||||||
| century], on the Night they assembled at the Bear-tavern, and he with them, to put design | ||||||
| in execution; and after some Consultation, resolved to go two and two, and to meet at certain | ||||||
| Places of Rendezvous; as in Golden-square, then in Marlborough-street, after in Newport- | ||||||
| street; from thence to Covent-Garden, where they took 13 men out of a Gaming-House, and | ||||||
| afterwards went to Clare-Market, where they heard the Lord Hinchingbrook was in the Round- | ||||||
| House, in the Strand, and the Mohocks in Devereux-Court: and making down that way, found | ||||||
| 3 persons in Pissing-alley [!], knock'd down in a bloody condition; whom he had to Surgeons, | ||||||
| and got them looked after: and as to what was in Essex-Court, he knew not. He said also, | ||||||
| that while they were abroad in Couples, they agreed, upon any Surprize or Attack, to use the | ||||||
| word stiff, (which the Watchman mistook, and called stout) and that their going out was not | ||||||
| to molest, but to preserve the Queen's Peace. They had other witnesses, who were in company | ||||||
| with them, who endeavoured to prove they were not near the Watch-house, and that the | ||||||
| Watchman's Dog barking, one of them threw a Stick at him; upon which the Watchman call'd | ||||||
| him Rogue and Villain; swore he would knock his Brains out, and struck at him with his Staff, | ||||||
| which began the Fray. But upon the full hearing, the Jury found them guilty, and the Court | ||||||
| fined them 3s 4d a-piece.' | ||||||
| Sir James Colquhoun of Luss, 4th baronet | ||||||
| Sir James, together with four of his servants, was lost in a squall on Loch Lomond. The | ||||||
| following report of the incident appeared in 'The Scotsman' of 20 December 1873:- | ||||||
| 'One of the most painful boat accidents which have occurred in the West of Scotland for a long | ||||||
| time happened on Thursday evening on Loch Lomond, when Sir James Colquhoun, Bart., of | ||||||
| Colquhoun and Luss, three of his gamekeepers, and a kennel boy, were drowned by the | ||||||
| swamping of a boat, while making for the shore from the island of Inch Lonaig. Up till last night, | ||||||
| the circumstances of the accident were enveloped in uncertainty, and in all likelihood a probable | ||||||
| guess will be the nearest approach to a knowledge of its causes that will ever be made. The | ||||||
| calamity besides has caused such excitement, not only in Luss, but throughout the surrounding | ||||||
| district, that it is impossible to get any very accurate details of what is actually known to have | ||||||
| occurred. | ||||||
| 'From what we learn, Sir James Colquhoun, accompanied by his brother William, five keepers, | ||||||
| and a boy, left Rossdhu Castle early on the forenoon of Thursday, and proceeded in three boats | ||||||
| to Inch Lonaig. This is one of the largest of the fine wooded islets with which the lower and | ||||||
| more expanded portion of Loch Lomond is studded. It is the most northerly of the group, and | ||||||
| will be remembered by those who have sailed up the loch as the island passed on the right imm- | ||||||
| ediately after the steamer steers away from Luss pier. This small possession of the Colquhoun | ||||||
| family, which lies about three quarters of a mile from the eastern and some five furlongs from | ||||||
| the western shores of the lake, has been used as a deer park by the baronets of Luss for a long | ||||||
| long period, the fine natural forest of old yew trees, which covers one half of its area affording | ||||||
| excellent shelter for the 150 deer that generally occupy the island. The only other inhabitants | ||||||
| are the keepers and patients of an institution for the treatment and cure of "habitual | ||||||
| drunkards." | ||||||
| 'The object of the party was deer-stalking, it being the custom of Sir James during this festive | ||||||
| season to present the poor people in the surrounding neighbourhood with a supply of venison. | ||||||
| After remaining on Inch Lonaig for a few hours, during which time Sir James and his brother | ||||||
| succeeded in killing several deer, the party proceeded to their boats, and at four o'clock in | ||||||
| the afternoon left for the mainland. | ||||||
| 'Sir James, his principal keeper, John Boyd, two watchers, names James Spottiswood and Angus | ||||||
| McDonald; and Thomas Anderson, a kennel boy, occupied the larger boat, in which were placed | ||||||
| the spoils of the chase. Mr Wm. Colquhoun left about the same time in a skiff, and it is said | ||||||
| that before leaving Sir James remarked to his brother that he had better not attempt making | ||||||
| the land in the skiff, but accompany him in the larger boat. Mr Wm. Colquhoun, however, did | ||||||
| not contemplate any danger, and declined his brother's offer, and as the sequel proved, in so | ||||||
| doing probably escaped the fate which overtook the rest of the party. The boat occupied by | ||||||
| the deceased baronet and his unfortunate companions took the lead, and was followed by Mr | ||||||
| William Colquhoun in his skiff. The evening was somewhat dark, and a strong breeze was | ||||||
| blowing, so that in a short time, the two boats lost sight of each other. | ||||||
| 'Sir James, who is said to have been an experienced boatman,, and to know well the course | ||||||
| over which the craft had to be pulled, took the helm, while the keepers and the boy manned | ||||||
| the oars. After leaving Inch Lonaig, another island, Inch Conachan, had to be passed, and it | ||||||
| seems to be a disputed question - and one which, probably, will never be solved, seeing that | ||||||
| none of the boat's crew were saved - which side of the island Sir James steered past. Mr | ||||||
| William Colquhoun seems to be of opinion that his brother must have selected the opposite | ||||||
| course from that which he chose. Be this as it may, the boat with Sir James and his four | ||||||
| keepers must have been struck and upset by one of those sudden squalls so common on the | ||||||
| Highland lochs, and the whole of the occupants have perished. It may be mentioned that Mr | ||||||
| Wm. Colquhoun had considerable difficulty, on account of the squalls, to make the shore in | ||||||
| safety. | ||||||
| 'The first suspicion that the boat had been lost was aroused when two keepers, who left Inch | ||||||
| Lonaig probably three quarters of an hour after the others, went to Rossdhu. Mr Wm. Colquhoun | ||||||
| at once made inquiries if they had not seen the boat occupied by his brother, and their answer | ||||||
| being in the negative, he concluded that some accident had occurred. The two keepers were | ||||||
| at once despatched to search the loch for any trace of the missing boat, but their efforts were | ||||||
| fruitless. By some of the older inhabitants a faint hope was entertained that Sir James, being | ||||||
| caught in a squall, had landed on Inch Conachar, but this hope proved groundless by the boat, | ||||||
| two oars, the deceased baronet's hat, and two deer being found yesterday morning on the | ||||||
| side of the loch, at a point known as Strathcashell Bay. | ||||||
| 'Mr Wyllie, the factor, the Chief Constable of Dumbartonshire, and Mr Craig, Sir James | ||||||
| Colquhoun's agent, were busily engaged yesterday making preparations for operations which will | ||||||
| be commenced today, to drag the loch with the object of recovering the bodies. A steamer will | ||||||
| start early in the morning provided with all the necessaries for dragging the loch, and it is hoped | ||||||
| by this means the whole of the bodies will be recovered. | ||||||
| 'When the news of the melancholy catastrophe got abroad, it is needless to say that the people in the | ||||||
| neighbourhood were thrown into a state of the greatest excitement. Not only had they been | ||||||
| deprived of a good landlord, a man much respected in the district and by those who knew him | ||||||
| personally, but four homes had been rendered desolate by the loss of husbands or sons. At the | ||||||
| little village of Luss the scene presented yesterday was one of the most melancholy character. | ||||||
| Men, women, and children were seen to be mourning over the sad calamity, which so | ||||||
| unexpectedly had carried away Sir James and his four servants. The circumstances of the | ||||||
| accident are all the more heartrending when the time in the year and the philanthropic object | ||||||
| of the mission to the island is recollected. None will mourn Sir James Colquhoun's untimely end | ||||||
| more than the numerous deserving poor of whom at this season he was ever so mindful.' | ||||||
| Sir William Augustus Congreve, 3rd baronet | ||||||
| The following is extracted from the 'Birmingham Daily Post' of 3 March 1882:- | ||||||
| 'We are living amid all the weird mysteries of the medieval times. We have had the mysterious | ||||||
| disappearance of Lord Aberdeen [qv] and the disappearance and reappearance of Sir Roger | ||||||
| Tichborne; and now another lost baronet is likely to give the courts of law the same trouble | ||||||
| as they have had upon former occasions. An advertisement which appears in the columns of | ||||||
| The Times [on 22 February 1882] peremptorily demands information concerning Sir William | ||||||
| Augustus Congreve. The story of this lost baronet is quite as interesting as that of any | ||||||
| "foundling of the forest" over whose adventures we were wont to shed tears when related | ||||||
| by Rosa Matilda [pen-name of Charlotte Dacre (1782-1841), an English author of Gothic | ||||||
| novels]. His grandfather, Sir William Congreve, was the inventor of the Congreve rocket. The | ||||||
| father of the lost baronet, for whom search is now being made, died in 1828. The heir | ||||||
| succeeded to the title at two years of age. When the young man had attained his majority he | ||||||
| bade his family farewell and started on his own independent venture for Australia. It appears | ||||||
| that he must have gone at once into the Bush, as nothing was heard of him till the year 1860, | ||||||
| when he suddenly appeared at Sydney, and announced his intention of going to the Fiji | ||||||
| Islands. The strangest part of the story is in the sequel, which tells us that the younger | ||||||
| brother, who would be heir to the baronetcy, has also disappeared, and every effort made to | ||||||
| discover his whereabouts has proved unavailing. The advertisement, which urges in the | ||||||
| strongest terms a communication of some kind from the missing parties, entreats of anyone | ||||||
| who may have any information to give concerning them to do so at once. As neither of the | ||||||
| individuals were known to have been married, the baronetcy will lapse should no news of them | ||||||
| be obtained.' | ||||||
| On 1 August 1882 the Probate and Divorce Division of the Courts heard a motion for an order | ||||||
| to presume the deaths of both Sir William Augustus Congreve and his younger brother, William | ||||||
| Frederick Congreve. According to a report in the 'Leeds Mercury' of 3 August 1882:- | ||||||
| 'Mr. Bayford, in making the application, said that both of the brothers had disappeared. The | ||||||
| younger brother, William Frederick, was formerly in the navy, but left it in 1851. He travelled | ||||||
| to Africa, and the West Indies and corresponded with his relations. In April, 1860, he wrote | ||||||
| a letter saying he was going to Halifax, New Brunswick [Nova Scotia?], and that was the last | ||||||
| which was heard of him. His Lordship [Sir James Hannen, later Baron Hannen] said that a | ||||||
| peculiarity in the case was that the two brothers had disappeared in two parts of the world. | ||||||
| Mr. Bayford said that there was a further peculiarity in the case, viz., that both of the | ||||||
| brothers appeared to have passed by the feigned name of "William Cooke." Both of them were | ||||||
| entitled to property under their uncle's will. The usual advertisements had appeared in the | ||||||
| newspapers in regard to the younger brother. In respect to the elder brother, Sir William | ||||||
| Augustus Congreve, the matter was more complicated. He left England in 1847 for New | ||||||
| Zealand, where he was occupied in agriculture. He from time to time corresponded, the last | ||||||
| letter being received in 1860. From one of the affidavits he was stated to have also passed | ||||||
| as "William Cook." His Lordship, after looking at the affidavits, said that death might reasonably | ||||||
| be presumed of the younger brother, but the matter must stand over in respect of Sir Wm. | ||||||
| Augustus Congreve.' | ||||||
| The following report appeared in the Melbourne 'Argus' of 12 December 1887:- | ||||||
| 'Sir William Augustus Congreve, Bart., known in the colonies as Captain W.E.B. Gurnett, died | ||||||
| at his residence, Surrey-hills, on Friday. The deceased was born in Kent in 1826, came into | ||||||
| possession of the title on the death of his father, and after seeing active service in the Crimea | ||||||
| as an officer of the 46th Regiment, came to the colonies to accept an appointment under Sir | ||||||
| Geo. Grey. He has been living in retirement in Sydney for several years. His first wife was | ||||||
| Lady Anne Beresford, a cousin of Lord Charles Beresford. He married a second time, seven | ||||||
| years ago, and the eldest of three sons, by the second marriage, succeeds to the title.' | ||||||
| The Congreve baronetcy disappears from the peerage reference works around 1886, when it | ||||||
| no longer appears in Burke's Peerage, although it still appeared in Walford's Peerage until at | ||||||
| least 1883. The 'Argus' article states that he had married Lady Anne Beresford, but this is in | ||||||
| contradiction to all of the evidence. The fact of such a marriage would surely have been | ||||||
| brought out in the hearing to presume leave of the baronet's death. Be that as it may, if the | ||||||
| Argus' article is correct when it states that Congreve left three sons at his death, it may well | ||||||
| be that the Congreve baronetcy still survives, perhaps unknown to its holder. | ||||||
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