| BARONETAGE | ||||||
| Last updated 05/09/2025 | ||||||
| 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 | ||||||
| HARNAGE of Belswardyne,Salop | ||||||
| 28 Jul 1821 | UK | 1 | George Harnage | 5 Jul 1767 | 19 Nov 1836 | 69 |
| 19 Nov 1836 | 2 | George Harnage | 19 Jul 1792 | 10 Mar 1866 | 73 | |
| 10 Mar 1866 | 3 | Henry George Harnage | 24 Jun 1827 | 13 Jan 1888 | 60 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Jan 1888 | ||||||
| HARPUR-CREWE of Calke Abbey,Derby | ||||||
| 8 Sep 1626 | E | 1 | Henry Harpur | c 1585 | 1638 | |
| 1638 | 2 | John Harpur | c 1616 | 1669 | ||
| 1669 | 3 | John Harpur | c 1645 | 1681 | ||
| 1681 | 4 | John Harpur | 23 Mar 1679 | 24 Jun 1741 | 62 | |
| 24 Jun 1741 | 5 | Henry Harpur | c 1708 | 7 Jun 1748 | ||
| MP for Worcester 1744-1747 and Tamworth | ||||||
| 1747-1748 | ||||||
| 7 Jun 1748 | 6 | Henry Harpur | c 1739 | 10 Feb 1789 | ||
| MP for Derbyshire 1761-1768 | ||||||
| 10 Feb 1789 | 7 | Henry Harpur (Harpur-Crewe from 11 Apr 1808) | 13 May 1763 | 7 Feb 1819 | 55 | |
| 7 Feb 1819 | 8 | George Harpur-Crewe | 1 Feb 1795 | 1 Jan 1844 | 48 | |
| MP for Derbyshire South 1835-1841 | ||||||
| 1 Jan 1844 | 9 | John Harpur-Crewe | 18 Nov 1824 | 1 Mar 1886 | 61 | |
| 1 Mar 1886 | 10 | Vauncey Harpur-Crewe | 14 Oct 1846 | 13 Dec 1924 | 78 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Dec 1924 | For further information, see the note at the | |||||
| foot of this page | ||||||
| HARRIES of Tong Castle,Salop | ||||||
| 12 Apr 1623 | E | 1 | Thomas Harries | c 1649 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1649 | ||||||
| HARRIS of Boreatton,Salop | ||||||
| 22 Dec 1622 | E | 1 | Thomas Harris | 27 Jan 1628 | ||
| Jan 1628 | 2 | Paul Harris | 30 Dec 1595 | Jul 1644 | 48 | |
| Jul 1644 | 3 | Thomas Harris | c 1629 | c 1661 | ||
| c 1661 | 4 | George Harris | 31 Oct 1631 | c 1664 | ||
| c 1664 | 5 | Paul Harris | 8 Apr 1634 | 19 Jul 1666 | 32 | |
| Jul 1666 | 6 | Roger Harris | 7 Oct 1601 | 1685 | 83 | |
| 1685 | 7 | Robert Harris | 24 May 1612 | 26 May 1693 | 81 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 26 May 1693 | ||||||
| HARRIS of Stowford,Devon | ||||||
| 1 Dec 1673 | E | 1 | Arthur Harris | c 1650 | 20 Feb 1686 | |
| to | MP for Okehampton 1671-1685 | |||||
| Feb 1686 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| HARRIS of Bethnal Green,London | ||||||
| 14 Jan 1932 | UK | 1 | Percy Alfred Harris | 6 Mar 1876 | 28 Jun 1952 | 76 |
| MP for Harborough 1916-1918 and Bethnal | ||||||
| Green SW 1922-1945. PC 1940 | ||||||
| 28 Jun 1952 | 2 | Jack Wolfred Ashford Harris | 23 Jul 1906 | 26 Aug 2009 | 103 | |
| 26 Aug 2009 | 3 | Christopher John Ashford Harris | 26 Aug 1934 | 22 Apr 2022 | 87 | |
| 22 Apr 2022 | 4 | Andrew Frederick Ashford Harris | 17 Mar 1958 | |||
| HARRIS of Chipping Wycombe,Bucks | ||||||
| 24 Jan 1953 | UK | 1 | Arthur Travers Harris | 13 Apr 1892 | 5 Apr 1984 | 91 |
| Marshal of the RAF 1945 | ||||||
| 5 Apr 1984 | 2 | Anthony Kyrle Travers Harris | 18 Mar 1918 | 6 Sep 1996 | 78 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 6 Sep 1996 | ||||||
| HARRISON of Le Court,Greatham,Hants | ||||||
| 12 Jul 1917 | UK | 1 | Heath Harrison | 1 Oct 1857 | 16 May 1934 | 76 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 16 May 1934 | ||||||
| HARRISON of Eaglescliffe,Durham | ||||||
| 15 Jun 1922 | UK | 1 | Sir John Harrison | 27 Dec 1856 | 14 Feb 1936 | 79 |
| 14 Feb 1936 | 2 | John Fowler Harrison | 8 Feb 1899 | 24 May 1947 | 48 | |
| 24 May 1947 | 3 | John Wyndham Harrison | 13 Jan 1933 | 24 Jun 1955 | 22 | |
| For information on the death of this baronet, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 24 Jun 1955 | 4 | Robert Colin Harrison | 25 May 1938 | 1 Apr 2020 | 81 | |
| 1 Apr 2020 | 5 | John Wyndham Fowler Harrison | 14 Dec 1972 | |||
| HARRISON of Bugbrooke,Northants | ||||||
| 6 Jul 1961 | UK | 1 | James Harwood Harrison | 6 Jun 1907 | 11 Sep 1980 | 73 |
| MP for Eye 1951-1979 | ||||||
| 11 Sep 1980 | 2 | Michael James Harwood Harrison | 28 Mar 1936 | 19 Aug 2019 | 83 | |
| 19 Aug 2019 | 3 | Edwin Michael Harwood Harrison | 20 May 1981 | |||
| HART of Kilmoriaty,Armagh | ||||||
| 17 Jul 1893 | UK | 1 | Sir Robert Hart | 20 Feb 1835 | 20 Sep 1911 | 76 |
| 20 Sep 1911 | 2 | Edgar Bruce Hart | 8 Jul 1873 | 4 Feb 1963 | 89 | |
| 4 Feb 1963 | 3 | Robert Hart | 4 Aug 1918 | 15 Oct 1970 | 52 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 15 Oct 1970 | ||||||
| HART-DYKE of Horsham,Sussex | ||||||
| 3 Mar 1677 | E | 1 | See "Dyke" | |||
| HARTLAND of Middleton Manor,Sussex | ||||||
| 13 Oct 1892 | UK | See "Dixon-Hartland" | ||||
| HARTOPP of Freathby,Leics | ||||||
| 3 Dec 1619 | E | 1 | Edward Hartopp | 1652 | ||
| MP for Leicestershire 1628-1629 | ||||||
| 1652 | 2 | Edward Hartopp | 1608 | 1657 | 49 | |
| 1657 | 3 | John Hartopp | 31 Oct 1637 | 1 Apr 1722 | 84 | |
| MP for Leicestershire 1679-1681 | ||||||
| 1 Apr 1722 | 4 | John Hartopp | 1680 | 13 Jan 1762 | 81 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Jan 1762 | ||||||
| HARTOPP of Freithby,Leics | ||||||
| 12 May 1796 | GB | See "Cradock-Hartopp" | ||||
| HARTSTONGE of Bruff,Limerick | ||||||
| 20 Apr 1681 | I | 1 | Standish Hartstonge | c 1630 | c 1697 | |
| c 1697 | 2 | Standish Hartstonge | c 1672 | 20 Jul 1751 | ||
| 20 Jul 1751 | 3 | Henry Hartstonge | c 1725 | 25 Mar 1797 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 25 Mar 1797 | ||||||
| HARTWELL of Dale Hall,Essex | ||||||
| 26 Oct 1805 | UK | 1 | Francis John Hartwell | 15 Feb 1757 | 28 Jun 1831 | 74 |
| 28 Jun 1831 | 2 | Brodrick Hartwell | 17 Jul 1813 | 11 Dec 1888 | 75 | |
| 11 Dec 1888 | 3 | Francis Houlton Hartwell | 18 Sep 1835 | 23 Sep 1900 | 65 | |
| 23 Sep 1900 | 4 | Brodrick Cecil Denham Arkwright Hartwell | 10 Jul 1876 | 24 Nov 1948 | 72 | |
| For further information on this baronet,see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 24 Nov 1948 | 5 | Brodrick William Charles Elwin Hartwell | 7 Aug 1909 | 14 Dec 1993 | 84 | |
| 14 Dec 1993 | 6 | Francis Anthony Charles Peter Hartwell | 1 Jun 1940 | 27 Feb 2023 | 82 | |
| 27 Feb 2023 | 7 | Timothy Peter Michael Charles Hartwell | 8 Jul 1970 | |||
| HARTY of Prospect House,Dublin | ||||||
| 30 Sep 1831 | UK | 1 | Robert Way Harty | 27 Dec 1779 | 18 Oct 1832 | 52 |
| MP for Dublin 1831 | ||||||
| 18 Oct 1832 | 2 | Robert Harty | 8 Sep 1815 | 3 Jan 1902 | 86 | |
| 3 Jan 1902 | 3 | Henry Lockington Harty | 9 May 1826 | 5 Apr 1913 | 86 | |
| 5 Apr 1913 | 4 | Lionel Lockington Harty | 29 Aug 1864 | May 1939 | 74 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| May 1939 | ||||||
| HARVEY of Killoquin,Antrim | ||||||
| 26 Aug 1789 | I | See "Bateson" | ||||
| HARVEY of Langley Park,Bucks | ||||||
| 28 Nov 1868 | UK | 1 | Robert Bateson Harvey | 17 Nov 1825 | 23 Mar 1887 | 61 |
| MP for Buckinghamshire 1863-1868 and | ||||||
| 1874-1885 | ||||||
| 23 Mar 1887 | 2 | Robert Grenville Harvey | 1 Jul 1856 | 4 Apr 1931 | 74 | |
| to | For further information on the death of this | |||||
| 4 Apr 1931 | baronet,see the note at the foot of this page | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| HARVEY of Crown Point,Norfolk | ||||||
| 8 Dec 1868 | UK | 1 | Robert John Harvey Harvey | 16 Apr 1817 | 19 Jul 1870 | 53 |
| MP for Thetford 1865-1868 | ||||||
| For further information on the death of this | ||||||
| baronet,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 19 Jul 1870 | 2 | Charles Harvey | 25 Feb 1849 | 30 Jan 1928 | 78 | |
| 30 Jan 1928 | 3 | Charles Robert Lambart Edward Harvey | 16 Apr 1871 | 15 Nov 1954 | 83 | |
| 15 Nov 1954 | 4 | Oliver Charles Harvey | 26 Nov 1893 | 29 Nov 1968 | 75 | |
| He had previously been created Baron | ||||||
| Harvey of Tasburgh (qv) in 1954 with which | ||||||
| title the baronetcy then merged,although as at | ||||||
| 30/06/2014 it does not appear on the Official | ||||||
| Roll of the Baronetage | ||||||
| HARVEY of Threadneedle Street,London | ||||||
| 19 Jan 1933 | UK | 1 | Sir Ernest Musgrave Harvey | 27 Jul 1867 | 17 Dec 1955 | 88 |
| 17 Dec 1955 | 2 | Richard Musgrave Harvey | 1 Dec 1898 | 1 Sep 1978 | 79 | |
| 1 Sep 1978 | 3 | Charles Richard Musgrave Harvey | 7 Apr 1937 | |||
| HARVIE-WATT of Bathgate,Linlithgow | ||||||
| 5 Sep 1945 | UK | 1 | George Steven Harvie-Watt | 23 Aug 1903 | 18 Dec 1989 | 86 |
| MP for Keighley 1931-1935 and Richmond | ||||||
| (Surrey) 1937-1959 | ||||||
| 18 Dec 1989 | 2 | James Harvie-Watt | 25 Aug 1940 | |||
| HASTINGS of Redlinch,Somerset | ||||||
| 7 May 1667 | E | 1 | Richard Hastings | 3 Sep 1668 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Sep 1668 | ||||||
| HASTINGS of Willesley Hall,Derby | ||||||
| 28 Feb 1806 | UK | 1 | Charles Hastings | 30 Sep 1823 | ||
| 30 Sep 1823 | 2 | Charles Abney-Hastings | 1 Oct 1792 | 30 Jul 1858 | 65 | |
| to | MP for Leicester 1826-1831 | |||||
| 1858 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| HATCH of Portland Place,London | ||||||
| 2 Dec 1908 | UK | 1 | Ernest Frederick George Hatch | 12 Apr 1859 | 17 Aug 1927 | 68 |
| to | MP for Gorton 1895-1906 | |||||
| 17 Aug 1927 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| For information on the death of his widow, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| HATTON of Long Stanton,Cambs | ||||||
| 5 Jul 1641 | E | 1 | Thomas Hatton | c 1583 | 23 Sep 1658 | |
| MP for Corfe Castle 1621-1622, Malmesbury | ||||||
| 1624-1625 and Stamford 1628-1629 and | ||||||
| 1640 | ||||||
| 23 Sep 1658 | 2 | Thomas Hatton | Jun 1637 | 19 Apr 1682 | 44 | |
| MP for Cambridgeshire 1674-1679 | ||||||
| Apr 1682 | 3 | Christopher Hatton | 26 Sep 1683 | |||
| Sep 1683 | 4 | Thomas Hatton | 15 Mar 1685 | |||
| Mar 1685 | 5 | Christopher Hatton | Oct 1720 | |||
| Oct 1720 | 6 | Thomas Hatton | 23 Jun 1733 | |||
| 23 Jun 1733 | 7 | John Hatton | 1 Jul 1740 | |||
| 1 Jul 1740 | 8 | Thomas Hatton | 14 Sep 1728 | 7 Nov 1787 | 59 | |
| 7 Nov 1787 | 9 | John Hatton | 29 Jul 1811 | |||
| 29 Jul 1811 | 10 | Thomas Dingley Hatton | c 1771 | 19 Sep 1812 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 19 Sep 1812 | For information on the death of this baronet, | |||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| HAVELOCK-ALLAN of Lucknow,India | ||||||
| 22 Jan 1858 | UK | 1 | Henry Marshman Havelock (Havelock-Allan | 6 Aug 1830 | 30 Dec 1897 | 67 |
| from 1880) VC | ||||||
| For details of the special remainder included | ||||||
| in the creation of this baronetcy,see the note | ||||||
| at the foot of this page | ||||||
| MP for Sunderland 1874-1881 and Durham | ||||||
| Southeast 1885-1892 and 1895-1897 | ||||||
| For further information on this baronet and VC | ||||||
| winner,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 30 Dec 1897 | 2 | Henry Spencer Moreton Havelock-Allan | 30 Jan 1872 | 28 Oct 1953 | 81 | |
| MP for Bishop Auckland 1910-1918 | ||||||
| 28 Oct 1953 | 3 | Henry Ralph Moreton Havelock-Allan | 31 Aug 1899 | 4 Nov 1975 | 76 | |
| 4 Nov 1975 | 4 | Anthony James Allan Havelock-Allan | 28 Feb 1904 | 11 Jan 2003 | 98 | |
| 11 Jan 2003 | 5 | Anthony Mark David Havelock-Allan | 4 Apr 1951 | |||
| HAWKESWORTH of Hawkesworth,Yorks | ||||||
| 6 Dec 1678 | E | 1 | Walter Hawkesworth | 22 Nov 1660 | 21 Feb 1683 | 22 |
| 21 Feb 1683 | 2 | Walter Hawkesworth | 17 Mar 1735 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 17 Mar 1735 | ||||||
| HAWKEY of Woodford,Essex | ||||||
| 5 Jul 1945 | UK | 1 | Sir (Alfred) James Hawkey | 12 Sep 1877 | 22 May 1952 | 74 |
| 22 May 1952 | 2 | Roger Pryce Hawkey | 25 Jun 1905 | 11 Nov 1975 | 70 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 11 Nov 1975 | ||||||
| HAWKINS of Kelston,Somerset | ||||||
| 25 Jul 1778 | GB | 1 | Caesar Hawkins | 10 Jan 1711 | 13 Feb 1786 | 75 |
| 13 Feb 1786 | 2 | Caesar Hawkins | c 1781 | 10 Jul 1793 | ||
| 10 Jul 1793 | 3 | John Caesar Hawkins | 9 Feb 1782 | 9 Nov 1861 | 79 | |
| 9 Nov 1861 | 4 | John Caesar Hawkins | 27 Jan 1837 | 18 Jan 1929 | 91 | |
| 18 Jan 1929 | 5 | John Scott Caesar Hawkins | 12 Jun 1875 | 11 Feb 1939 | 63 | |
| 11 Feb 1939 | 6 | Villiers Godfrey Caesar Hawkins | 18 Aug 1890 | 14 Feb 1955 | 64 | |
| 14 Feb 1955 | 7 | Humphry Villiers Caesar Hawkins | 10 Aug 1923 | 23 Apr 1993 | 69 | |
| 23 Apr 1993 | 8 | Howard Caesar Hawkins | 17 Nov 1956 | 2 Apr 1999 | 42 | |
| 2 Apr 1999 | 9 | Richard Caesar Hawkins | 29 Dec 1958 | |||
| HAWKINS of Trewithan,Cornwall | ||||||
| 28 Jul 1791 | GB | 1 | Christopher Hawkins | 29 May 1758 | 6 Apr 1829 | 70 |
| to | MP for Mitchell 1784-1799, Grampound | |||||
| 6 Apr 1829 | 1800-1807, Penrhyn 1818-1820 and St.Ives | |||||
| 1821-1828 | ||||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| HAWKINS-WHITSHED | ||||||
| of Killincarrick,Wicklow | ||||||
| 16 May 1834 | UK | 1 | James Hawkins-Whitshed | 1762 | 28 Oct 1849 | 87 |
| 28 Oct 1849 | 2 | St.Vincent Keene Hawkins-Whitshed | 28 Jul 1801 | 13 Sep 1870 | 69 | |
| 13 Sep 1870 | 3 | St.Vincent Bentinck Hawkins-Whitshed | 12 Feb 1837 | 9 Mar 1871 | 34 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 9 Mar 1871 | ||||||
| HAWLEY of Buckland,Somerset | ||||||
| 14 Mar 1644 | E | 1 | Francis Hawley | c 1608 | 22 Dec 1684 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron Hawley | ||||||
| (qv) in 1646 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1790 | ||||||
| HAWLEY of Leybourne Grange,Kent | ||||||
| 14 May 1795 | GB | 1 | Henry Hawley | 12 Nov 1745 | 20 Jan 1826 | 80 |
| 20 Jan 1826 | 2 | Henry Hawley | 20 Oct 1776 | 29 Mar 1831 | 54 | |
| 29 Mar 1831 | 3 | Joseph Henry Hawley | 27 Oct 1814 | 20 Apr 1875 | 60 | |
| 20 Apr 1875 | 4 | Henry James Hawley | 14 Jul 1815 | 5 Oct 1898 | 77 | |
| 5 Oct 1898 | 5 | Henry Michael Hawley | 25 Mar 1848 | 2 Jul 1909 | 61 | |
| 2 Jul 1909 | 6 | Henry Cusack Wingfield Hawley | 23 Dec 1876 | 18 Nov 1923 | 46 | |
| 18 Nov 1923 | 7 | David Henry Hawley | 13 May 1913 | 19 Mar 1988 | 74 | |
| 19 Mar 1988 | 8 | Henry Nicholas Hawley | 26 Nov 1939 | 10 Jan 2015 | 75 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 10 Jan 2015 | ||||||
| HAWORTH of Dunham Massey,Cheshire | ||||||
| 3 Jul 1911 | UK | 1 | Arthur Adlington Haworth | 22 Aug 1865 | 31 Aug 1944 | 79 |
| MP for Manchester South 1906-1912 | ||||||
| 31 Aug 1944 | 2 | Arthur Geoffrey Haworth | 5 Apr 1896 | 7 Apr 1987 | 91 | |
| 7 Apr 1987 | 3 | Philip Haworth | 17 Jan 1927 | 3 Sep 2019 | 92 | |
| 3 Sep 2019 | 4 | Christopher Haworth | 1951 | |||
| HAY of Smithfield,Peebles | ||||||
| 20 Jul 1635 | NS | 1 | James Hay | 1654 | ||
| 1654 | 2 | John Hay | c 1659 | |||
| c 1659 | 3 | James Hay | 1652 | c 1683 | ||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became dormant | |||||
| c 1683 | ||||||
| 9 Nov 1805 | 4 | James Hay | 21 Oct 1810 | |||
| Served as heir 1805 | ||||||
| 21 Oct 1810 | 5 | John Hay | 15 Jan 1755 | 23 May 1830 | 75 | |
| 23 May 1830 | 6 | John Hay | 3 Aug 1788 | 1 Nov 1838 | 50 | |
| MP for Peebles 1831-1837 | ||||||
| 1 Nov 1838 | 7 | Adam Hay | 14 Dec 1795 | 18 Jan 1867 | 71 | |
| MP for Lanark 1826-1830 | ||||||
| 18 Jan 1867 | 8 | Robert Hay | 8 May 1825 | 29 May 1885 | 60 | |
| 29 May 1885 | 9 | John Adam Hay | 5 May 1854 | 4 May 1895 | 40 | |
| 4 May 1895 | 10 | Duncan Edwyn Hay | 25 Sep 1882 | 7 Dec 1965 | 83 | |
| 7 Dec 1965 | 11 | Bache McEvers Athole Hay | 24 Sep 1892 | 2 Apr 1966 | 73 | |
| to | Dormant on his death | |||||
| 2 Apr 1966 | ||||||
| HAY of Park,Wigtown | ||||||
| 25 Aug 1663 | NS | 1 | Thomas Hay | c 1680 | ||
| c 1680 | 2 | Charles Hay | 1662 | 1737 | 75 | |
| 1737 | 3 | Thomas Hay | c 1730 | 1777 | ||
| 1777 | 4 | Thomas Hay | 30 Apr 1794 | |||
| 30 Apr 1794 | 5 | James Hay | c 1775 | 1794 | ||
| 1794 | 6 | William Hay | 1793 | 7 Oct 1801 | 8 | |
| 7 Oct 1801 | 7 | John Hay | 29 Aug 1799 | 15 Jun 1862 | 62 | |
| 15 Jun 1862 | 8 | Arthur Graham Hay | 5 Jun 1839 | 18 Nov 1889 | 50 | |
| 18 Nov 1889 | 9 | Lewis John Erroll Hay | 17 Nov 1866 | 14 May 1923 | 56 | |
| 14 May 1923 | 10 | Arthur Thomas Erroll Hay | 13 Apr 1909 | 4 Feb 1993 | 83 | |
| 4 Feb 1993 | 11 | John Erroll Audley Hay | 3 Dec 1935 | 9 Jul 2020 | 84 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| to | ||||||
| 9 Jul 2020 | ||||||
| HAY of Linplum,Haddington | ||||||
| 26 Mar 1667 | NS | 1 | James Hay | 1704 | ||
| 1704 | 2 | Robert Hay | c 1673 | 20 Dec 1751 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 20 Dec 1751 | ||||||
| HAY of Alderston,Peebles | ||||||
| 22 Feb 1703 | NS | 1 | John Hay | 1706 | ||
| 1706 | 2 | Thomas Hay | 26 Nov 1769 | |||
| 26 Nov 1769 | 3 | George Hay-Makdougall | 24 Feb 1777 | |||
| 24 Feb 1777 | 4 | Henry Hay-Makdougall | c 1750 | 13 Apr 1825 | ||
| 13 Apr 1825 | 5 | Thomas Hay | 1832 | |||
| 1832 | 6 | James Douglas Hamilton Hay | 28 Dec 1800 | 30 Jul 1873 | 72 | |
| 30 Jul 1873 | 7 | Hector Maclean Hay | 28 Mar 1821 | 15 Sep 1916 | 95 | |
| 15 Sep 1916 | 8 | William Henry Hay | 30 May 1867 | 3 Jul 1927 | 60 | |
| 3 Jul 1927 | 9 | Edward Hamilton Hay | 30 May 1870 | 1936 | 66 | |
| 1936 | 10 | Frederick Baden-Powell Hay | 24 Jun 1900 | 20 Jun 1985 | 84 | |
| 20 Jun 1985 | 11 | Ronald Nelson Hay | 9 Jul 1910 | 6 Apr 1988 | 77 | |
| 6 Apr 1988 | 12 | Ronald Frederick Hamilton Hay | 1941 | |||
| HAY of Park,Wigtown | ||||||
| 27 Apr 1798 | GB | See "Dalrymple-Hay" | ||||
| HAYES of Drumboe Castle,Donegal | ||||||
| 27 Aug 1789 | I | 1 | Samuel Hayes | 1737 | 21 Jul 1807 | 70 |
| 21 Jul 1807 | 2 | Samuel Hayes | Feb 1773 | 16 Sep 1827 | 54 | |
| 16 Sep 1827 | 3 | Edmund Samuel Hayes | 2 Jul 1806 | 30 Jun 1860 | 53 | |
| MP for Donegal 1831-1860 | ||||||
| 30 Jun 1860 | 4 | Samuel Hercules Hayes | 3 Feb 1840 | 7 Nov 1901 | 61 | |
| 7 Nov 1901 | 5 | Edmund Francis Hayes | 1850 | 27 Jan 1912 | 61 | |
| to | For information on the death of his widow, | |||||
| 27 Jan 1912 | see the note at the foot of this page | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| HAYES of Westminster,London | ||||||
| 6 Feb 1797 | GB | 1 | John Macnamara Hayes | 1750 | 19 Jul 1809 | 59 |
| 19 Jul 1809 | 2 | Thomas Pelham Hayes | 18 Nov 1794 | 5 Sep 1851 | 56 | |
| 5 Sep 1851 | 3 | John Warren Hayes | 12 Aug 1799 | 23 Jan 1896 | 96 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 23 Jan 1896 | ||||||
| HAYTER of South Hill Park,Berks | ||||||
| 19 Apr 1858 | UK | 1 | William Goodenough Hayter | 28 Jan 1792 | 26 Dec 1878 | 86 |
| MP for Wells 1837-1865. Judge Advocate | ||||||
| General 1847 PC 1848 | ||||||
| 26 Dec 1878 | 2 | Arthur Divett Hayter | 9 Aug 1835 | 10 May 1917 | 81 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Haversham (qv) in 1906 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until its | ||||||
| extinction in 1917 | ||||||
| HAZLERIGG of Noseley Hall,Leics | ||||||
| 21 Jul 1622 | E | 1 | Thomas Hasilrigg | 1564 | 11 Jan 1629 | 64 |
| MP for Leicestershire 1614 and 1624-1625 | ||||||
| 11 Jan 1629 | 2 | Arthur Hesilrige | 7 Jan 1661 | |||
| MP for Leicestershire 1640 and 1640-1645 | ||||||
| and Leicester 1654-1659 | ||||||
| 7 Jan 1661 | 3 | Thomas Hesilrige | c 1625 | 24 Feb 1680 | ||
| 24 Feb 1680 | 4 | Thomas Hesilrige | 1664 | 11 Jul 1700 | 36 | |
| MP for Leicestershire 1690-1695 | ||||||
| 11 Jul 1700 | 5 | Robert Hesilrige | c 1640 | 22 May 1713 | ||
| 22 May 1713 | 6 | Robert Hesilrige | 19 May 1721 | |||
| 19 May 1721 | 7 | Arthur Hesilrige | 23 Apr 1763 | |||
| 23 Apr 1763 | 8 | Robert Hesilrige | c 1790 | |||
| c 1790 | 9 | Arthur Hesilrige | 1805 | |||
| 1805 | 10 | Thomas Maynard Hesilrige | 24 Apr 1817 | |||
| 24 Apr 1817 | 11 | Arthur Grey Hesilrige (Hazlerigg from 8 Jul 1818) | 24 Oct 1819 | |||
| 24 Oct 1819 | 12 | Arthur Grey Hazlerigg | 20 Oct 1812 | 11 May 1890 | 77 | |
| 11 May 1890 | 13 | Arthur Grey Hazlerigg | 17 Nov 1878 | 25 May 1949 | 70 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Hazlerigg (qv) in 1945 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remains merged,although,as at | ||||||
| 30/06/2014,the baronetcy does not appear on | ||||||
| the Official Roll of the Baronetage | ||||||
| HEAD of Hermitage,Kent | ||||||
| 19 Jun 1676 | E | 1 | Richard Head | c 1609 | 18 Sep 1689 | |
| MP for Rochester 1667-1679 | ||||||
| 18 Sep 1689 | 2 | Francis Head | c 1670 | Aug 1716 | ||
| Aug 1716 | 3 | Richard Head | c 1692 | May 1721 | ||
| May 1721 | 4 | Francis Head | c 1693 | 27 Nov 1768 | ||
| 27 Nov 1768 | 5 | John Head | c 1702 | 4 Dec 1769 | ||
| 4 Dec 1769 | 6 | Edmund Head | 1733 | 21 Nov 1796 | 63 | |
| 21 Nov 1796 | 7 | John Head | 3 Jan 1773 | 4 Jan 1838 | 65 | |
| 4 Jan 1838 | 8 | Edmund Walker Head | 16 Feb 1805 | 28 Jan 1868 | 62 | |
| to | Governor of New Brunswick 1847-1854 and | |||||
| 28 Jan 1868 | Governor General of Canada 1854-1861 | |||||
| PC 1857 | ||||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| HEAD of Rochester,Kent | ||||||
| 14 Jul 1838 | UK | 1 | Francis Bond Head | 1 Jan 1793 | 25 Jul 1875 | 82 |
| 25 Jul 1875 | 2 | Francis Somerville Head | 26 May 1817 | 26 Aug 1887 | 70 | |
| 26 Aug 1887 | 3 | Robert Garnett Head | 18 Mar 1845 | 6 Mar 1907 | 61 | |
| 6 Mar 1907 | 4 | Robert Pollock Somerville Head | 7 Apr 1884 | 21 Jun 1924 | 40 | |
| 21 Jun 1924 | 5 | Francis David Somerville Head | 17 Oct 1916 | 16 Dec 2005 | 89 | |
| 16 Dec 2005 | 6 | Richard Douglas Somerville Head | 16 Jan 1951 | |||
| HEADLAM of Holywell,Durham | ||||||
| 5 Jul 1935 | UK | 1 | Cuthbert Morley Headlam | 27 Apr 1876 | 27 Feb 1964 | 87 |
| to | MP for Barnard Castle 1924-1929 and | |||||
| 27 Feb 1964 | 1931-1935 and Newcastle North 1940-1951 | |||||
| PC 1945 | ||||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| HEALEY of Wyphurst,Surrey | ||||||
| 6 May 1919 | UK | See "Chadwyck-Healey" | ||||
| HEATH of Ashorne Hill,Warwicks | ||||||
| 15 Dec 1904 | UK | 1 | James Heath | 26 Jan 1852 | 24 Dec 1942 | 90 |
| to | MP for Staffordshire North West 1892-1906 | |||||
| 24 Dec 1942 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| HEATHCOAT-AMORY | ||||||
| of Knightshayes Court,Devon | ||||||
| 21 Mar 1874 | UK | 1 | John Heathcoat Heathcoat-Amory | 4 May 1829 | 26 May 1914 | 85 |
| MP for Tiverton 1868-1885 | ||||||
| 26 May 1914 | 2 | Ian Murray Heathcoat-Amory | 16 Apr 1865 | 4 Jan 1931 | 65 | |
| 4 Jan 1931 | 3 | John Heathcoat-Amory | 2 May 1894 | 22 Nov 1972 | 78 | |
| 22 Nov 1972 | 4 | Derick Heathcoat-Amory,1st Viscount Amory | 26 Dec 1899 | 20 Jan 1981 | 81 | |
| 20 Jan 1981 | 5 | William Heathcoat-Amory | 19 Aug 1901 | 27 Aug 1982 | 81 | |
| 27 Aug 1982 | 6 | Ian Heathcoat-Amory | 3 Feb 1942 | |||
| HEATHCOTE of London | ||||||
| 17 Jan 1733 | GB | 1 | Sir Gilbert Heathcote [kt 1702] | 2 Jan 1652 | 25 Jan 1733 | 81 |
| MP for London 1701-1710, Helston 1715- | ||||||
| 1722, Lymington 1722-1727 and St.Germans | ||||||
| 1727-1733. Governor of the Bank of England | ||||||
| 1709-1711 and 1723-1725 | ||||||
| 25 Jan 1733 | 2 | John Heathcote | c 1689 | 5 Sep 1759 | ||
| MP for Grantham 1715-1722 and Bodmin | ||||||
| 1733-1741 | ||||||
| 5 Sep 1759 | 3 | Gilbert Heathcote | c 1723 | 2 Nov 1785 | ||
| MP for Shaftesbury 1761-1768 | ||||||
| 2 Nov 1785 | 4 | Gilbert Heathcote | 6 Oct 1773 | 26 Mar 1851 | 77 | |
| MP for Lincolnshire 1796-1807 and | ||||||
| Rutland 1812-1841 | ||||||
| 26 Mar 1851 | 5 | Gilbert John Heathcote,later [1856] 1st | ||||
| Baron Aveland | 16 Jan 1795 | 6 Sep 1867 | 72 | |||
| 6 Sep 1867 | 6 | Gilbert Henry Heathcote-Drummond- | ||||
| Willoughby,2nd Baron Aveland later [1892] 1st | ||||||
| Earl of Ancaster | 1 Oct 1830 | 24 Dec 1910 | 80 | |||
| MP for Boston 1852-1856 and Rutland | ||||||
| 1856-1867. PC 1880 | ||||||
| 24 Dec 1910 | 7 | Gilbert Heathcote-Drummond-Willoughby,2nd | 29 Jul 1867 | 19 Sep 1951 | 84 | |
| Earl of Ancaster. | ||||||
| MP For Horncastle 1894-1910. Lord | ||||||
| Lieutenant Rutland 1921-1951 | ||||||
| 19 Sep 1951 | 8 | Gilbert James Heathcote-Drummond- | ||||
| Willoughby,3rd Earl of Ancaster | 8 Dec 1907 | 29 Mar 1983 | 75 | |||
| MP for Rutland 1933-1950. Lord | ||||||
| Lieutenant Lincolnshire 1950-1975 | ||||||
| 29 Mar 1983 | 9 | Gilbert Simon Heathcote | 21 Sep 1913 | 15 Apr 2014 | 100 | |
| 15 Apr 2014 | 10 | Simon Robert Mark Heathcote, OBE | 1 Mar 1941 | 29 Aug 2025 | 84 | |
| 29 Aug 2025 | 11 | Alastair Robert Heathcote | 18 Aug 1977 | |||
| HEATHCOTE of Hursley,Hants | ||||||
| 16 Aug 1733 | GB | 1 | William Heathcote | 15 Mar 1693 | 10 May 1751 | 58 |
| MP for Buckingham 1722-1727 and | ||||||
| Southampton 1729-1741 | ||||||
| 10 May 1751 | 2 | Thomas Heathcote | 23 Jul 1721 | 27 Jun 1787 | 65 | |
| 27 Jun 1787 | 3 | William Heathcote | 21 Jun 1746 | 26 Jun 1819 | 73 | |
| MP for Hampshire 1790-1806 | ||||||
| 26 Jun 1819 | 4 | Thomas Freeman-Heathcote | 3 Sep 1769 | 27 Feb 1825 | 55 | |
| MP for Bletchingley 1807-1808 and | ||||||
| Hampshire 1808-1820 | ||||||
| 27 Feb 1825 | 5 | William Heathcote | 17 May 1801 | 17 Aug 1881 | 80 | |
| MP for Hampshire 1826-1831, Hampshire | ||||||
| North 1837-1849 and Oxford University | ||||||
| 1854-1868. PC 1870 | ||||||
| 17 Aug 1881 | 6 | William Perceval Heathcote | 7 Sep 1826 | 29 Oct 1903 | 77 | |
| 29 Oct 1903 | 7 | William Arthur Heathcote | 22 Jul 1853 | 9 Sep 1924 | 71 | |
| 9 Sep 1924 | 8 | Gilbert Redvers Heathcote | 25 Dec 1854 | 6 Nov 1937 | 82 | |
| 6 Nov 1937 | 9 | Francis Cooke Caulfeild Heathcote | 20 Apr 1868 | 11 Sep 1961 | 93 | |
| 11 Sep 1961 | 10 | Leonard Vyvyan Heathcote | 7 Sep 1885 | 24 Jun 1963 | 77 | |
| 24 Jun 1963 | 11 | Michael Perryman Heathcote | 7 Aug 1927 | 13 Apr 2007 | 79 | |
| 13 Apr 2007 | 12 | Timothy Gilbert Heathcote | 25 May 1957 | |||
| HEATON of Mundarrah Towers,Australia | ||||||
| 31 Jan 1912 | UK | See "Henniker-Heaton" | ||||
| HELE of Fleet,Devon | ||||||
| 28 May 1627 | E | 1 | Thomas Hele | c 1595 | 7 Nov 1670 | |
| MP for Plympton Erle 1626,1628-1629,1640 | ||||||
| and 1640-1644 and Okehampton 1661-1670 | ||||||
| 7 Nov 1670 | 2 | Samuel Hele | 18 Jan 1672 | |||
| Jan 1672 | 3 | Henry Hele | Apr 1677 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Apr 1677 | ||||||
| HENDERSON of Fordell,Fife | ||||||
| 15 Jul 1664 | NS | 1 | John Henderson | 1683 | ||
| 1683 | 2 | William Henderson | 1709 | |||
| 1709 | 3 | John Henderson | 28 Dec 1686 | c 1730 | ||
| c 1730 | 4 | Robert Henderson | 19 Oct 1781 | |||
| 19 Oct 1781 | 5 | John Henderson | 8 Jan 1752 | 12 Dec 1817 | 65 | |
| MP for Fifeshire 1780, Dysart Burghs | ||||||
| 1780-1784, Seaford 1785-1786 and Stirling | ||||||
| Burghs 1806-1807 | ||||||
| 12 Dec 1817 | 6 | Robert Bruce Henderson | c 1763 | 3 Aug 1833 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 3 Aug 1833 | ||||||
| HENDERSON of Buscot Park,Berks | ||||||
| 5 Aug 1902 | UK | 1 | Alexander Henderson | 28 Sep 1850 | 17 Mar 1934 | 83 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Faringdon (qv) in 1916 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| HENDERSON-STEWART | ||||||
| of Callumshill,Perth | ||||||
| 28 Mar 1957 | UK | 1 | James Henderson-Stewart | 6 Dec 1897 | 3 Sep 1961 | 63 |
| MP for Fife East 1933-1961 | ||||||
| 3 Sep 1961 | 2 | David James Henderson-Stewart | 3 Jul 1941 | |||
| HENDLEY of Cuckfield,Sussex | ||||||
| 8 Apr 1661 | E | 1 | Walter Hendley | 17 Jul 1675 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Jul 1675 | ||||||
| HENE of Winkfield,Berks | ||||||
| 1 Oct 1642 | E | 1 | Henry Henn | c 1577 | c 1668 | |
| c 1668 | 2 | Henry Hene | c 1632 | c 1675 | ||
| c 1675 | 3 | Henry Hene | 14 Oct 1651 | 16 Jan 1705 | 53 | |
| 16 Jan 1705 | 4 | Richard Hene | c 1675 | c 1710 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1710 | ||||||
| HENLEY of Henley,Somerset | ||||||
| 30 Jun 1660 | E | 1 | Andrew Henley | 7 May 1622 | 17 May 1675 | 53 |
| MP for Portsmouth 1660 | ||||||
| 17 May 1675 | 2 | Robert Henley | by 1655 | 7 Aug 1681 | ||
| MP for Bridport 1679-1681 | ||||||
| 7 Aug 1681 | 3 | Andrew Henley | 14 Sep 1703 | |||
| 14 Sep 1703 | 4 | Robert Henley | 1740 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1740 | ||||||
| HENNESSEY of Winchester | ||||||
| 24 Jan 1927 | UK | 1 | George Richard James Hennessey | 23 Mar 1877 | 8 Oct 1953 | 76 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Windlesham (qv) in 1937 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| HENNIKER of Worlingworth Hall,Suffolk | ||||||
| 15 Jul 1765 | GB | 1 | John Major | 17 May 1698 | 22 Feb 1781 | 82 |
| MP for Scarborough 1761-1768 | ||||||
| For details of the special remainder included | ||||||
| in this creation, see the note at the foot of | ||||||
| this page | ||||||
| 22 Feb 1781 | 2 | John Henniker | 15 Jun 1724 | 18 Apr 1803 | 78 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Henniker (qv) in 1800 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy remains merged,although,as at | ||||||
| 30/06/2014,the baronetcy does not appear on | ||||||
| the Official Roll of the Baronetage | ||||||
| HENNIKER of Newton Hall,Essex | ||||||
| 2 Nov 1813 | UK | 1 | Brydges Trecothic Henniker | 10 Nov 1767 | 3 Jul 1816 | 48 |
| 3 Jul 1816 | 2 | Frederick Henniker | 1 Nov 1793 | 6 Aug 1825 | 31 | |
| 6 Aug 1825 | 3 | Augustus Brydges Henniker | 24 Jan 1795 | 28 Jan 1849 | 53 | |
| 28 Jan 1849 | 4 | Brydges Powell Henniker | 3 Sep 1835 | 12 Jul 1906 | 70 | |
| 12 Jul 1906 | 5 | Frederick Brydges Major Henniker | 12 Aug 1862 | 19 Aug 1908 | 46 | |
| 19 Aug 1908 | 6 | Arthur John Henniker-Hughan | 24 Jan 1866 | 4 Oct 1925 | 59 | |
| MP for Galloway 1924-1925 | ||||||
| 4 Oct 1925 | 7 | Robert John Aldborough Henniker | 26 May 1888 | 19 Feb 1958 | 69 | |
| 19 Feb 1958 | 8 | Mark Chandos Auberon Henniker | 23 Jan 1906 | 18 Oct 1991 | 85 | |
| 18 Oct 1991 | 9 | Adrian Chandos Henniker | 18 Oct 1946 | |||
| HENNIKER-HEATON | ||||||
| of Mundarrah Towers,Australia | ||||||
| 31 Jan 1912 | UK | 1 | Sir John Henniker-Heaton | 18 May 1848 | 8 Sep 1914 | 66 |
| MP for Canterbury 1885-1910 | ||||||
| 8 Sep 1914 | 2 | John Henniker-Heaton | 19 Apr 1877 | 21 Feb 1963 | 85 | |
| 21 Feb 1963 | 3 | John Victor Peregrine Henniker-Heaton | 15 Jan 1903 | Oct 1971 | 68 | |
| For further information on the death of this | ||||||
| baronet, see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| Oct 1971 | 4 | Yvo Robert Henniker-Heaton | 24 Apr 1954 | |||
| HENRY of Parkwood,Surrey | ||||||
| 7 Feb 1911 | UK | 1 | Charles Solomon Henry | 28 Jan 1860 | 27 Dec 1919 | 59 |
| to | MP for Wellington 1906-1918 and The Wrekin | |||||
| 27 Dec 1919 | 1918-1919 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| HENRY of Campden House Court,London | ||||||
| 6 Nov 1918 | UK | 1 | Sir Edward Richard Henry | 26 Jul 1850 | 19 Feb 1931 | 80 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 19 Feb 1931 | For further information on this baronet,see | |||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| HENRY of Cahore,co.Londonderry | ||||||
| 26 Feb 1923 | UK | 1 | Denis Stanislaus Henry | 7 Mar 1864 | 1 Oct 1925 | 61 |
| MP for Londonderry Co. South 1916-1921. | ||||||
| Solicitor General [I] 1918. Attorney General [I] | ||||||
| 1919-1921. PC [I] 1919 | ||||||
| 1 Oct 1925 | 2 | James Holmes Henry | 22 Sep 1911 | 19 Feb 1997 | 85 | |
| 19 Feb 1997 | 3 | Patrick Denis Henry | 20 Dec 1957 | |||
| HEPBURN of Smeaton,Haddington | ||||||
| 6 May 1815 | UK | See "Buchan-Hepburn" | ||||
| HEPBURN-MURRAY of Glendoich,Perth | ||||||
| 2 Jul 1676 | NS | 1 | Thomas Murray | 1684 | ||
| 1684 | 2 | Thomas Murray | Dec 1701 | |||
| Dec 1701 | 3 | John Murray (Hepburn-Murray from c 1703) | 8 Jan 1714 | |||
| 8 Jan 1714 | 4 | Patrick Hepburn-Murray | 2 Nov 1706 | 5 Apr 1756 | 49 | |
| 5 Apr 1756 | 5 | Alexander Hepburn-Murray | 4 Dec 1754 | c 1774 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1774 | ||||||
| HERBERT of Red Castle,Montgomery | ||||||
| 16 Nov 1622 | E | 1 | Percy Herbert | c 1600 | 19 Jan 1667 | |
| He subsequently succeeded to the Barony | ||||||
| of Powis (qv) in 1656 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1748 | ||||||
| HERBERT of Derrogh,King's Co. | ||||||
| 4 Dec 1630 | I | 1 | George Herbert | c 1650 | ||
| c 1650 | 2 | Edward Herbert | c 1620 | May 1677 | ||
| May 1677 | 3 | George Herbert | c 1673 | Dec 1712 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Dec 1712 | ||||||
| HERBERT of Tintern,Monmouth | ||||||
| 3 Jul 1660 | E | 1 | Thomas Herbert | 4 Nov 1606 | 1 Mar 1682 | 75 |
| 1 Mar 1682 | 2 | Henry Herbert | 19 Mar 1639 | 13 Aug 1687 | 48 | |
| Aug 1687 | 3 | Humphrey Herbert | c 1674 | 28 Jun 1701 | ||
| Jun 1701 | 4 | Thomas Herbert | c 1700 | 13 Mar 1724 | ||
| Mar 1724 | 5 | Henry Herbert | c 1675 | 23 Jan 1733 | ||
| Jan 1733 | 6 | Charles Herbert | 7 Jan 1680 | Apr 1740 | 60 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Apr 1740 | ||||||
| HERBERT of Bromfield,Salop | ||||||
| 18 Dec 1660 | E | 1 | Matthew Herbert | 30 Oct 1668 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Oct 1668 | ||||||
| HERBERT of Llanarth and Treowen,Monmouth | ||||||
| 19 Jul 1907 | UK | 1 | Ivor John Caradoc Herbert | 15 Jul 1851 | 18 Oct 1933 | 82 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Treowen (qv) in 1917 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1933 | ||||||
| HERBERT of Boyton,Wilts | ||||||
| 18 Jul 1936 | UK | 1 | Sidney Herbert | 29 Jul 1890 | 22 Mar 1939 | 48 |
| to | MP for Scarborough and Whitby 1922-1931 | |||||
| 22 Mar 1939 | and Abbey 1932-1939 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| HERBERT of Wilton,Wilts | ||||||
| 1 Mar 1937 | UK | 1 | George Sidney Herbert | 8 Oct 1886 | 30 Jan 1942 | 55 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 30 Jan 1942 | ||||||
| HERMON-HODGE of Accrington,Lancs | ||||||
| 6 Aug 1902 | UK | 1 | Robert Trotter Hermon-Hodge | 23 Sep 1851 | 3 Jun 1937 | 85 |
| He was subsequently created Baron Wyfold | ||||||
| (qv) in 1919 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1999 | ||||||
| Sir Vauncey Harpur-Crewe, 10th and final baronet | ||||||
| The following article appeared in the "Daily Mail" of 19 December 1925:- | ||||||
| 'The most remarkable private collection ever formed of British birds, eggs, animals and moths | ||||||
| was offered for sale in London recently. | ||||||
| 'The collection, which included one of the few great auk's eggs in existence, was formed by a | ||||||
| wealthy and eccentric baronet, the late Sir Vauncey Harpur Crewe, of Calke Abbey, Derbyshire, | ||||||
| who spent between £20,000 and £30,000 in pursuing his hobby all over the British Isles. | ||||||
| 'It included such extreme rarities as the Sacred Glossy Ibis of Egypt, which somehow wandered | ||||||
| to Norfolk, a flamingo, which found its way from North Africa to the Calke Abbey estate, a black | ||||||
| stork, and a specimen of the extremely rare Andalusian Hemipode, a small quail-like bird, which | ||||||
| was captured in Yorkshire in 1865 by two Irish labourers, who sold it to a naturalist for sixpence, | ||||||
| thinking it was a young partridge. | ||||||
| 'A white bat, a white otter, hedgehog, and badger, and a pure white stoat with no black tip to | ||||||
| its tail, were included among dozens of strangely and curiously marked albino birds and animals." | ||||||
| Sir John Wyndham Harrison, 3rd baronet | ||||||
| Sir John died following an asthma attack in June 1955. The following report of the subsequent | ||||||
| inquest into his death appeared in 'The Manchester Guardian' on 28 June 1955:- | ||||||
| 'A verdict of death by natural causes was recorded at the inquest at Loughborough last night | ||||||
| on Sir John Wyndham Harrison, Bt., on Nunthorpe, near Middlesbrough. Sir John, an engineering | ||||||
| student who was in the middle of his final examinations at the Loughborough College of | ||||||
| Technology, collapsed and died in his hostel room on Friday evening. He was 22. | ||||||
| 'Mr Hugh Robert William Hughes, a fellow student, said that Sir John suffered from asthma and | ||||||
| had been "pretty bad" during the last few weeks. On Friday he saw Sir John leaning out of his | ||||||
| window breathing heavily. When he ran out to call the matron, he heard a crash, and, on going | ||||||
| back to the room, found Sir John on the floor. | ||||||
| 'Dr E. M. Ward, senior group pathologist, Leicester Hospitals, said that death was due to | ||||||
| bronchial asthma. Sir John's heart had been beginning to fail and Dr Ward thought that "if he | ||||||
| had not died on Friday he would not have had a long life ahead of him." | ||||||
| Sir Brodrick Cecil Denham Arkwright Hartwell, 4th baronet | ||||||
| Sir Brodrick first appeared in the newspapers in 1907, when his name was associated with a | ||||||
| scandal that appears to have attracted far more attention in Australia and New Zealand than | ||||||
| it did in England. The following edited report, which was published under the headline of "The | ||||||
| Bold Bad Baronet elopes to Australia," appeared in the 'New Zealand Truth' on 4 May 1907:- | ||||||
| '……during the last week the cables have informed us of a …. matrimonial bust-up which is | ||||||
| likely to create as great interest in this country as it already has in England, It is scarcely | ||||||
| likely, however, that these fugitive lovers will…..rush off to the newspapers with information | ||||||
| as to their doings and their whereabouts. They are more likely to follow the example of Brer | ||||||
| Rabbit and "lay low and say nuffin'." But they are carrying on, nevertheless, in a most brazen | ||||||
| fashion, for the baronet's lady friend is travelling under the name of "Lady Hartwell." and the | ||||||
| pair are now living as man and wife in Sydney. The story is an interesting one, and, as the | ||||||
| juvenile reporter puts it, "interesting developments are expected shortly." | ||||||
| 'All the parties move in very high society. Engineer-Lieutenant Edgar Warner Chamberlain, of | ||||||
| the torpedo-destroyer Foyle, is suing in the English Divorce Court for a dissolution of his | ||||||
| marriage on the ground of his wife's adultery with Sir Brodrick Hartwell, as bold and as bad a | ||||||
| baronet as is to be found in England or upon the melodramatic stage. It was stated in court | ||||||
| that the guilty couple had eloped to Australia. The divorce judge declared that he was quite | ||||||
| satisfied as to the adultery having taken place but he adjourned the pronouncing of the decree | ||||||
| nisi pending further proof of the wronged husband's marriage to his faithless spouse. | ||||||
| 'The petitioner, Lieutenant Chamberlain, is not unknown in Australia. He was formerly on H.M.S. | ||||||
| Goldfinch, a screw surveying vessel which at one time was on the Australian station. He | ||||||
| became a lieutenant in January, 1899, and is now attached to the Foyle, a torpedo destroyer | ||||||
| belonging to the second cruiser squadron of the Atlantic Fleet. | ||||||
| 'It is stated that his wife is an Australian lady to whom he was married three or four years ago, | ||||||
| the issue being one child, a boy. Chamberlain is said to be a nephew of General Sir Neville | ||||||
| Chamberlain, K.C.B., who was private secretary to Lord Roberts during the South African War | ||||||
| [but whose major claim to fame is that he invented the game of snooker while serving in India | ||||||
| in 1875], and is a very "big bug" in military circles. The general resides at "Oatlands," | ||||||
| Castleknock, county Dublin [where he was Inspector-General of the Royal Irish Constabulary]. | ||||||
| Lieutenant Chamberlain's depot was Plymouth, and presumably his wife resided in that | ||||||
| neighbourhood while her officer husband was cruising about the Atlantic. | ||||||
| 'Sir Brodrick Hartwell appears to be a particular chum of the husband. Sir Brodrick Cecil Denham | ||||||
| Arkwright Hartwell, Baronet, is one of the "landed gentry" of England. His family is a very old | ||||||
| one, but he is only the fourth baronet of the existing creation…..Brodrick the Bart was the only | ||||||
| son of Edward Hughes Hartwell a retired captain of the Royal Navy, who was British Consul in | ||||||
| South Italy, and who died in 1895. The present co-respondent was born in July, 1876, and is | ||||||
| consequently not yet 31 years of age. His uncle, the third baronet, Sir Francis Houlton Hartwell, | ||||||
| died in 1900, leaving a widow, Lady Emma Jane, who resides at Courtfield Gardens, London, and | ||||||
| is a grand dame in West End society circles. He also left three daughters. Failing male issue, | ||||||
| the title descended to his nephew, the present fugitive. For two years Sir Brodrick….enjoyed his | ||||||
| and estates, the latter being very extensive, in single blessedness. | ||||||
| 'But In July, 1902, he took to himself a wife, in the charming person of Mdlle. Georgette | ||||||
| Madeleine, the daughter of Mons. Georges Pilon-Fleury, a French gentleman residing at Djenan- | ||||||
| es-Saka, El Biar, Algiers and as a result there was born to them in June, 1903, a daughter | ||||||
| who was named Leila Ruth Madeleine. The heir presumptive to the title is Lieutenant Barry | ||||||
| Hartwell, of the 7th Gurkha Rifles of the Indian Army. Sir Brodrick has also seen military service, | ||||||
| for he was a lieutenant in the Leicestershire Regiment during the South African campaign. | ||||||
| 'But he appears to have preferred the charms of Venus to the attractions of Mars, for soon | ||||||
| after his marriage he retired from the Army and "settled down" to country life on his estates in | ||||||
| Essex. Dale Hall, Colchester, is the name of his seat, and old country people may remember the | ||||||
| residence as one of the most picturesque Elizabethan buildings extant. Sir Brodrick also has a | ||||||
| place in Germany [Guernsey?] and possibly it was in that Anglo-French island that he met his | ||||||
| (former) Georgette. It is interesting to note that the fugitive baronet's family motto is "Sorte | ||||||
| sua Contentus" which being translated, means "content with his lot." Sir Brodrick has evidently | ||||||
| reason to be content with his lot so far as having the good things of the earth without the | ||||||
| necessity of working for them, but whether he is, and how, long he will continue to be, content | ||||||
| with his lot in an amorous sense remains to be seen. | ||||||
| 'His deserted wife is already following the example set by Lieutenant Chamberlain, and is | ||||||
| seeking a divorce. But in order to give her erring and errant husband a run for his money she | ||||||
| has agents on his track. Private enquiry agents already have the case in hand, and Sir Brodrick | ||||||
| and his companion may anticipate a lively time. | ||||||
| 'The Australian history of the fugitive lovers possesses several uncommon features. Exactly | ||||||
| when the baronet's desertion of his wife and daughter, and his flight with Mrs. Chamberlain, | ||||||
| took place is not generally known. It was, however, probably during the latter part of last year, | ||||||
| for in December [1906] he turned up in Sydney, being accompanied by the lady who passes as | ||||||
| "Lady Hartwell." Whether it arose from love of adventure or in order to arouse enthusiasm and | ||||||
| admiration on the part of his companion or to prevent the course of love becoming stale, flat | ||||||
| and uninteresting, Sir Brodrick became bitten by the microbe of South Island treasure | ||||||
| hunting. In partnership with one John Henry Broadwood, he purchased the schooner, Stanley, | ||||||
| 84 tons, a well known N.S.W. coaster, and the vessel was fitted out, regardless of expense, as | ||||||
| a private yacht. It was given out that the baronet, his wife and his partner intended to | ||||||
| proceed upon a cruise among the South Sea Islands, and the vessel duly "cleared" at Sydney | ||||||
| two days before Christmas Day. But whether "content with his lot or not," Sir Brodrick evidently | ||||||
| wanted more, because the actual object of the expedition was to seek for sunken treasure. | ||||||
| 'Twenty three years ago the ship Ramsay of the Blackwall line, was wrecked on the Middleton | ||||||
| Reef, off the north coast of Queensland, while on a voyage from Brisbane to London. The | ||||||
| greater part of her cargo consisted of wool, which was salved. But she also carried a large | ||||||
| shipment of copper, and it was with the idea of recovering some of the now valuable mineral | ||||||
| that Hartwell and his party set out. When the Stanley, which was under the command of | ||||||
| Captain Henderson, a well-known Sydney mariner, arrived at the Middleton Reef, the first | ||||||
| experience was not the finding of the treasure, but the discovery of the castaway crew of | ||||||
| the barque Annasona, which was wrecked there in January last while on a voyage, in ballast, | ||||||
| from the west coast of South America to Sydney. The baronet and his associates took the | ||||||
| shipwrecked sailors on board the trim little schooner, and conveyed them to Lord Howe Island, | ||||||
| whence they were later on carried to Sydney. Having performed this act of common sea | ||||||
| humanity, the owners of the Stanley once more headed for Middleton Reef, and began the | ||||||
| search for the copper. They succeeded in finding the wreck of the Ramsay, which was lying | ||||||
| in seven fathoms of water, and partly on the reef. But there was no trace of the copper | ||||||
| shipment. | ||||||
| 'The schooner encountered very severe weather during March. On the 26th a S.E. gale arose, | ||||||
| which by the 28th increased to hurricane force. So heavy was the weather that Captain | ||||||
| Henderson states that he never experienced anything like it since the memorable Cawarra gale | ||||||
| [on 12 July 1866, when the Cawarra was wrecked off Newcastle; only 1 out of the 61 aboard | ||||||
| was saved]. However, the Stanley proved staunch. The heavy chain and anchor held on to the | ||||||
| reef, and the little ship escaped with the loss of a few fathoms of chain and the lifeboat, which | ||||||
| was smashed to atoms. | ||||||
| 'The Stanley returned to Sydney on Friday, April 5, and the papers of that city duly record her | ||||||
| arrival in the following words:- "Stanley, schooner, private yacht, Captain Henderson, from a | ||||||
| South Sea cruise. Passengers - Sir Brodrick Cecil Denham Arkwright Hartwell, Bart., Lady | ||||||
| Hartwell, and Mr. John Henry Broadhurst, Master agent." Thus the lady who, until the decree | ||||||
| of divorce is pronounced, will be Mrs. E.W. Chamberlain, is travelling as "Lady Hartwell." What | ||||||
| will be the end of it? Will the baronet marry, when he can, the lady with whom he became | ||||||
| infatuated? Or will he, as often happens in such cases, tire of her and desert her?' | ||||||
| Notwithstanding the newspaper's dire prediction, after his wife had successfully divorced him in | ||||||
| 1907, Sir Brodrick married his lover on 16 May 1908, and remained married to her for over 40 | ||||||
| years. | ||||||
| During this period, his name continued to appear in the newspapers. Firstly, in July 1913, he | ||||||
| was bankrupted; in 1923 and 1924, during the American Prohibition period, Sir Brodrick was | ||||||
| engaged in raising money from investors in order to finance the smuggling of alcohol into | ||||||
| America, for which the Prime Minister, Ramsay Macdonald, described him as a 'disgraceful | ||||||
| blot,' but in 1925, after a shipment was seized by American prohibition officers, this venture | ||||||
| collapsed and he was again forced into bankruptcy. | ||||||
| Sir Robert Grenville Harvey, 2nd baronet | ||||||
| Sir Robert committed suicide in April 1931. This report of the subsequent inquest appeared in | ||||||
| the Gloucester "Citizen" on 7 April 1931:- | ||||||
| "A verdict of suicide whilst comparatively insane was returned at the inquest today on Sir | ||||||
| Robert Grenville Harvey, Bart., of Langley Park, Bucks., who was found shot dead in bed, | ||||||
| following a severe attack of influenza, to which the tragedy was attributed by the widow. | ||||||
| "The inquest was held at Langley Park, Buckinghamshire, the pretty moat-encircled house where | ||||||
| Sir Robert, who was 74 years of age, had lived so long. Sir Robert had just returned from a | ||||||
| fishing visit to Scotland, and on reaching home was found to be suffering from influenza. | ||||||
| Accordingly, he remained in bed, and was alone on Saturday afternoon, when Lady Harvey and | ||||||
| other members of the household were startled to hear a pistol shot. On entering Sir Robert's | ||||||
| room he was found dead with a pistol by his side. Sir Robert had been a magistrate for Bucking- | ||||||
| hamshire since 1887, and was a noted sportsman and collector of antiques. | ||||||
| "The inquest was held in the drawing room. Lady Harvey was present, but sat behind a screen. | ||||||
| It was explained that she was very ill. Lady Harvey's depositions were read by the Coroner. On | ||||||
| Saturday about 11 a.m., the depositions stated, Sir Robert went to his room. When Lady Harvey | ||||||
| saw him later he said he felt "so ill," but he refused to have a doctor. Later in the afternoon she | ||||||
| returned to the room, but did not speak to him, as she thought he was asleep. At five o'clock | ||||||
| a communication was made to her by the doctor. Lady Harvey's statement concluded, "I am | ||||||
| convinced this is all caused the influenza that Sir Robert had." | ||||||
| "Edmund George Mendham, who for 23 years had been butler in Sir Robert's family, was the next | ||||||
| witness. He showed great emotion. At 4.30 on Saturday, on Lady Harvey's instructions, he took | ||||||
| tea up to Sir Robert. "I went to the bedside, and found he was lying on his left side in a pool of | ||||||
| blood. The revolver was lying on the bed." Sir Robert had for many years kept a loaded revolver | ||||||
| hanging on the head of the bedstead. | ||||||
| Dr. A.M. Amsler said that he last saw Sir Robert shortly before Christmas, and then and on | ||||||
| previous occasions he had noticed that Sir Robert had been remarkably depressed. Very | ||||||
| frequently influenza led to depression and loss of balance. | ||||||
| "Police Inspector Westmore said that a book on big game hunting was lying on the bed in a | ||||||
| position which indicated that Sir Robert had been reading it. | ||||||
| "The Coroner recorded a verdict of suicide during temporary insanity." | ||||||
| Sir Robert John Harvey Harvey, 1st baronet | ||||||
| Sir Robert was the principal of the Norwich Crown Bank which suspended payment in July | ||||||
| 1870. It appears that Sir Robert believed that the French would win the then ongoing | ||||||
| Franco-Prussian War - when they failed to do so, all of the money he had invested in | ||||||
| France was lost. In addition, he had speculated heavily in Spanish and other foreign stocks. | ||||||
| The immediate catalyst for the suspension of payment was the death by suicide of Sir | ||||||
| Robert Harvey. The following account of the inquest into Sir Robert's death appeared in | ||||||
| The Times' on 21 Jul 1870:- | ||||||
| 'The jury having been sworn proceeded to view the body, the Coroner having previously | ||||||
| remarked that there was no doubt that the deceased died from a pistol shot, the pistol | ||||||
| having, in all probability, been fired by his own hand, although this was a point which the | ||||||
| jury would have to investigate. | ||||||
| 'On the return of the jury, Charles Elvin deposed that about a quarter past 3 on Friday | ||||||
| afternoon he saw Sir Robert Harvey going towards a shrubbery in his grounds. Shortly | ||||||
| afterwards witness heard the report of a pistol. Then he saw the Hon. Mr. Lambert run | ||||||
| across the lawn, and heard him call to Mr. Abel. Mr. Abel called to witness and some other | ||||||
| men, and they went to the shrubbery. There they saw the Hon. Mrs. Lambert kneeling by | ||||||
| the side of Sir Robert, who was lying on the ground. Mrs. Lambert called out, "Go and get | ||||||
| a board." Witness and some other men assisted to put Sir Robert on a board. Witness asked | ||||||
| Sir Robert whether they should put him on the board, and Sir Robert shifted himself onto | ||||||
| it. Sir Robert was then brought to the house. He was bleeding on his left side. Sir Robert | ||||||
| said to witness and the other men, "My good fellows, go steadily, or I shall be dead before | ||||||
| you get to the house." Sir Robert also told them to go over the grass, and as they were | ||||||
| going along he more than once told them to stop, as he could not bear the jarring. About | ||||||
| a quarter of an hour before witness heard the report of firearms he saw Mr. and Mrs. | ||||||
| Lambert walking in the grounds. Sir Robert was not walking with them then. Witness looked | ||||||
| about the spot where Sir Robert was found to see if he could discover a pistol, but he did | ||||||
| not find one. | ||||||
| 'Mr. W.P.Nichols, surgeon, deposed, - On Friday last I was summoned to Crown Point [the | ||||||
| name of Sir Robert's estate] by one of the servants of the late Sir R. Harvey, to see his | ||||||
| master, who, to use the expression of the man, "had met with a dreadful accident." I came | ||||||
| down immediately and found Sir R. Harvey lying on a mattress in a room called the Library. | ||||||
| He appeared to me to be fast dying from loss of blood, which was flowing from a wound in | ||||||
| the chest and also from the back. After a short time he revived, and I assisted to take him | ||||||
| to his bedroom, where I believe he now lies dead. Before I removed him I sent for Mr. Cadge, | ||||||
| another surgeon, from Norwich, who agreed with me that he might be taken upstairs | ||||||
| without danger. Sir Robert continued to lose blood more or less from the time of the | ||||||
| occurrence until his death. I was in almost constant attendance upon him from the time of | ||||||
| the occurrence until he died. The external wound in front was small, and was situated on the | ||||||
| left side, two inches in a direct line below the nipple. The posterior wound, also of small size, | ||||||
| was situated about two or three inches from the spinal column, and between the seventh | ||||||
| and eighth rib on the left side. I have no doubt that the wound was the result of a pistol | ||||||
| shot, and I think it was such a wound as would be produced by a weapon held close to the | ||||||
| person. It might have been self-inflicted, and I think it most probable that it was. It is | ||||||
| possible that it was an accident. I think, however, that the wound was self-inflicted. I have | ||||||
| known Sir Robert Harvey from his childhood, and I have known his family for many years. I | ||||||
| know that he inherited a strong tendency towards mental disorder. He himself has always | ||||||
| been during my knowledge of him very excitable, and on any sudden trouble the excitement | ||||||
| would increase. I knew that lately Sir Robert Harvey had been subject to great excitement | ||||||
| from several causes. I had professionally seen him respecting it. I believe there was a great | ||||||
| increase in excitement with him on Friday morning, and upset his reason for a time. The | ||||||
| increased excitement ensued from certain news which he had received. When I saw him on | ||||||
| Friday afternoon, when he had recovered his consciousness, his reason returned in some | ||||||
| degree. This partial return to reason was, I think, brought about by loss of blood. Sir Robert | ||||||
| was never perfectly rational after Friday afternoon for any length of time. As he was | ||||||
| recovering, Sir Robert asked me what he had done. He seemed to recollect something, but | ||||||
| not much, when I explained to him what had occurred. | ||||||
| 'By Mr. Coaks - There was a sudden accession of further trouble on the Friday morning, but | ||||||
| I believe it is quite possible that he was of sound mind on the Thursday. I saw Sir Robert | ||||||
| on the Monday, and he was of sound mind then. I believe the sudden accession of further | ||||||
| trouble on the Friday morning upset his reason. | ||||||
| 'Edward Shield, coachman to the deceased, stated that on Saturday he was asked by Mrs. | ||||||
| Gant, the housekeeper at Crown Point, to go and search for the pistol which Sir Robert was | ||||||
| supposed to have fired. Witness found a pistol about 20 yards from the rosery or shrubbery. | ||||||
| It was a five-chambered revolver. Three chambers were empty. Witness gave the pistol to | ||||||
| Captain Lambert. | ||||||
| 'No further evidence was offered, and the jury proceeded to consider their verdict, which | ||||||
| was as follows - "The jury are of opinion that Sir R. Harvey's death was caused by fire-arms, | ||||||
| discharged by himself while in a state of temporary insanity." | ||||||
| Lady Constance Hatch, widow of Sir Ernest Frederick George Hatch, 1st baronet | ||||||
| Lady Constance was found dying on the footpath beneath the window of her room in her nursing | ||||||
| home. I should point out that, in normal circumstances, she, as a baronet's widow, would be | ||||||
| styled Lady Hatch. However, she was the daughter of the ninth Duke of Leeds, and therefore | ||||||
| entitled to be addressed as Lady Constance. | ||||||
| The inquest was reported in the "Daily Telegraph" of 20 July 1939:- | ||||||
| 'A verdict was recorded at a Paddington inquest yesterday that Lady Constance Hatch, aged | ||||||
| 64, aunt of the Duke of Leeds and widow of Sir Ernest Hatch, took her life while she was of | ||||||
| unsound mind. | ||||||
| She had been a patient at a nursing home in Wimpole-street, and was found dying on the pave- | ||||||
| ment on Tuesday morning. | ||||||
| Lady Alice Susan Godolphin Egerton, of St. James's Court, S.W., said that Lady Constance, her | ||||||
| sister, had been living at the Ashdown Forest Hotel, Sussex, lately. | ||||||
| 'She had never had good health. Some time ago she had an operation on her head and had head- | ||||||
| aches afterward. She lost her only daughter last January. | ||||||
| 'Lady Alice handed the coroner, Mr. W.R.H. Heddy , a letter from her sister's solicitors, which | ||||||
| showed that Lady Constance had no need to worry about her financial position. | ||||||
| Miss Constance Murphy, a nurse, said that Lady Constance slept well except when she had | ||||||
| headaches. | ||||||
| 'PC Donnelly, who found Lady Constance in her nightdress on the footpath outside the nursing | ||||||
| home, said the window of her room on the third floor was wide open, and there were finger- | ||||||
| prints on the inside of the window-frame. | ||||||
| 'On a soot-covered ledge about 7ft below the window were footmarks, "consistent," he said, | ||||||
| "with someone having climbed out of the window and let herself down, holding on to the window- | ||||||
| sill with her hands and with her feet resting on this ledge." | ||||||
| 'Recording a verdict that Lady Constance took her life while not of sound mind, the coroner said: | ||||||
| "I feel there is no doubt that she threw herself from this window or climbed out and let herself | ||||||
| fall." | ||||||
| Sir Thomas Dingley Hatton, 10th baronet | ||||||
| 'The Morning Chronicle' of 21 September 1812:- | ||||||
| 'Saturday se'nnight, Sir Thomas Hatton, Bart., of Long Stanton, was returning home from | ||||||
| Cambridge, in his curricle [a light two-wheeled chaise, usually drawn by two horses], one of | ||||||
| the reins broke, and the horses running away, overturned the carriage, by which Sir Thomas's | ||||||
| skull was fractured, and a servant who was with him dreadfully bruised. We are sorry to add | ||||||
| that Sir Thomas lies without hope of recovery.' | ||||||
| The special remainder to the baronetcy of Havelock created in 1858 | ||||||
| From the "London Gazette" of 19 January 1858 (issue 22085, page 261):- | ||||||
| 'The Queen has been pleased to direct letters patent to be passed under the Great Seal, | ||||||
| granting the dignity of a Baronet of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland unto | ||||||
| Henry Marshman Havelock, Captain in the Army (eldest son of the late Major-General Henry | ||||||
| Havelock, of Lucknow, K.C.B.), and to the heirs male of his body lawfully begotten, with | ||||||
| remainder, in default of issue, to the heirs male lawfully begotten of the body of his father, | ||||||
| the said Major-General Henry Havelock.' | ||||||
| Sir Henry Marshman Havelock-Allan VC, 1st baronet | ||||||
| Havelock (he added the additional name of Allan in 1880) was the son of Major-General Sir | ||||||
| Henry Havelock, one of the heroes of the Indian Mutiny. Born in Cawnpore, he was a Lieutenant | ||||||
| in the 10th Regiment of Foot during the Mutiny. On 16 July 1857, in Cawnpore, the mutineers | ||||||
| were seen to be rallying their last 24 lb gun, when the order was given to advance. Havelock | ||||||
| immediately placed himself, on his horse, in the front line and advanced at walking pace towards | ||||||
| the gun, into the shot being fired from the gun. Finally the gun was rushed and taken by the | ||||||
| soldiers, with Havelock being awarded the Victoria Cross for his courage. | ||||||
| In 1858, he was created a baronet, the honour being awarded to replace the baronetcy which | ||||||
| had been due to be awarded to his late father. He later entered politics and sat in the House of | ||||||
| Commons for Sunderland 1874-1881 and Durham South East 1885-1892 and 1895-1897. | ||||||
| Havelock-Allan later became Colonel of the Royal Irish Regiment, at that time stationed in India. | ||||||
| On 30 December 1897, he was killed by Afridi tribesmen near the Khyber Pass in Afghanistan. | ||||||
| The following report appeared in the "Belfast News-Letter" of 1 January 1898:- | ||||||
| 'Considerable consternation was caused in London yesterday by the announcement that Major- | ||||||
| General Sir Henry Havelock-Allan, V.C., M.P. for South East Durham who recently went for a | ||||||
| trip to India, had been kidnapped or killed on the North Western frontier by the Lakka Khels. | ||||||
| The report was that Sir Henry, who was in the reserve list of British army officers, went up the | ||||||
| Khyber Pass on Wednesday with an escort, which he left yesterday afternoon. As he did not | ||||||
| return search was made, and Sir Henry's horse was found stripped and shot through the jaws. | ||||||
| From this the worst fears were at once entertained that Sir Henry had lost his life, and later | ||||||
| on his body was discovered…….' | ||||||
| As previously noted, Major-General Sir Henry Havelock's son was created a baronet in honour | ||||||
| of his late father. In addition, in the London Gazette (issue 22085, page 261) contains a notice | ||||||
| dated 18 January 1858, which states that "The Queen has been pleased to ordain and declare | ||||||
| that Hannah Shepherd Havelock, the widow of the late Major-General Henry Havelock, Knight | ||||||
| Commander of the Most Honourable Order of the Bath, shall have, hold, and enjoy the same style, | ||||||
| title, place, and precedence to which she would have been entitled had her said husband survived | ||||||
| and been created a Baronet." | ||||||
| Alice, Lady Hayes, widow of Sir Edmund Francis Hayes, 5th baronet [I 1789] | ||||||
| Lady Hayes, together with her sister, was knocked down by a tram when crossing a Sydney | ||||||
| street and suffered fatal injuries. The "Gundagai Independent" of 2 October 1933 reported that:- | ||||||
| 'Alice Lady Hayes, widow of Sir Edmund Hayes, of Ireland, and her sister, Miss Lucy Wilkinson, | ||||||
| were seriously injured on Friday afternoon, when they were struck down by a tram while crossing | ||||||
| William-street, Sydney. | ||||||
| 'Both were thrown heavily to the ground and the tram came to a stop only a few feet past them. | ||||||
| The driver applied the brakes so suddenly that many passengers were jolted from their seats. | ||||||
| 'Lady Hayes and Miss Wilkinson were taken to the Sydney Hospital by the Central District | ||||||
| Ambulance, both semi-conscious. Lady Hayes, who is 70 years of age, is suffering from a probable | ||||||
| fractured skull, fractured nose, ruptured eyeball, lacerations to face, and severe shock. Her sister, | ||||||
| who is 64, received a probable fracture of the skull, fractured left thigh, lacerations and | ||||||
| abrasions. | ||||||
| 'The accident was another link in a chain of misfortune which has befallen the family in recent | ||||||
| months. Mr. Frederick B[ushby] Wilkinson, a solicitor of the firm Wilkinson and Osborne, died just | ||||||
| over two weeks ago [16 September 1933]. Another brother, Mr. E. W. Wilkinson, a solicitor, of | ||||||
| Hay, is seriously ill in Lister Private Hospital. | ||||||
| 'Lady Hayes, a daughter of the late Judge Wilkinson, formerly of Glebe, returned to Sydney from | ||||||
| abroad at the end of February……..Sir Edmund Hayes, fifth and last baronet of Drumboe, Ireland, | ||||||
| died in 1912.' | ||||||
| Lady Hayes's injuries were too extensive to permit her to recover, and she died on 2 October. Her | ||||||
| sister appears to have fully recovered and was soon discharged from hospital. | ||||||
| The special remainder to the baronetcy of Major (later Henniker) created in 1765 | ||||||
| From the "London Gazette" of 6 July 1765 (issue 10537, page 1):- | ||||||
| "The King has been pleased to grant unto John Major, or Worlingworth-Hall in the County of | ||||||
| Suffolk, Esq.; and the Heirs Male of his Body lawfully begotten; and, in Default of such Issue, | ||||||
| to his son-in-law John Henniker, of Newton-Hall in the County of Essex, Esq.; and the Heirs | ||||||
| Male of his Body lawfully begotten, the dignity of a Baronet of the Kingdom of Great Britain.' | ||||||
| Sir John Victor Peregrine Henniker-Heaton, 3rd baronet | ||||||
| Sir Peregrine Henniker-Heaton was a former RAF security officer who became Deputy Provost | ||||||
| Marshal in the Levant in 1945, and was in charge of RAF Police in Palestine during the mandate. | ||||||
| He remained in Palestine until 1948 and, during that time, his car was blown up several times. | ||||||
| He retired in 1958 as a Wing Commander, but continued his involvement with the Middle East, | ||||||
| serving as a member of the Anglo-Arab Association. | ||||||
| He vanished on 5 October 1971, after setting out from his home in Ealing, west London. | ||||||
| Subsequent police searches throughout the country proved fruitless and reports were received | ||||||
| that the baronet had been seen in various places, including New York and Paris. There was also | ||||||
| speculation that he had been murdered because of his connection with security work and the | ||||||
| Middle East. | ||||||
| On Sunday 23 June 1974, his body was found by his son Yvo in a locked lumber room in the | ||||||
| family home in Ealing. Yvo opened the room with a key he found in a desk in the hall and | ||||||
| entered the room to search a cabinet for some gramophone records. "When I opened the door, | ||||||
| it [the room] seemed the same as when I had last seen it. A suit of clothes was on the bed. It | ||||||
| was only when I went into the room and turned around to face the bed that I realized it was | ||||||
| my father." | ||||||
| The subsequent inquest was reported in "The Times" on 5 July 1974:- | ||||||
| 'An open verdict was recorded yesterday by Dr. John Burton, the Hammersmith coroner, at the | ||||||
| inquest on Sir Peregrine Henniker-Heaton, whose body was found at his home two weeks ago. | ||||||
| Dr. Burton said the cause of death was not ascertainable but there was no evidence of violence. | ||||||
| 'Sir Peregrine, the third baronet, vanished in October 1971, after setting out from his home in | ||||||
| Ealing, west London. A police search proved fruitless. His skeleton was found on June 23 in a | ||||||
| tweed suit on a bed in a lumber room, by his son, Mr. Yvo Henniker-Heaton. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Henniker-Heaton told the inquest yesterday that his father had tried to shoot himself in | ||||||
| 1967 and had had to be treated in hospital seven times for drug overdoses. Lady Henniker- | ||||||
| Heaton said the family had not regarded any of the suicide attempts as serious. At the time | ||||||
| of his disappearance Sir Peregrine was worried about his sister, who was in hospital with a brain | ||||||
| tumour. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Henniker-Heaton said six rooms in the house were fitted with Yale locks, one of them being | ||||||
| the lumber room, the key of which had disappeared. He had found it in a hall drawer while | ||||||
| looking for something. | ||||||
| 'He had not looked in there as his father had no reason to go there; his friends had told him | ||||||
| they had seen his father in various places, including New York and Paris. | ||||||
| 'The coroner asked whether it was immediately obvious that something was amiss when he | ||||||
| opened the lumber room. "Not at all," Mr. Henniker-Heaton replied. "When I opened the door, it | ||||||
| seemed the same as when I had last seen it. A suit of clothes was on the bed. It was only | ||||||
| when I went into the room and turned round to face the bed that I realised it was my father." | ||||||
| 'Beside the body he had found a letter written by Sir Peregrine, wrapped in three £5 notes. He | ||||||
| was taking university examinations the month his father disappeared, and thought the money | ||||||
| had been meant to help him. | ||||||
| 'Inspector Ronald Hutchinson said Sir Peregrine's body was found seated on a bed, almost bent | ||||||
| double. To someone casually looking into the room it would have looked like a folded-up suit. | ||||||
| 'Sir Peregrine had been reported missing by his wife, who told the police the house had been | ||||||
| thoroughly searched by herself and her family. There were many reports that Sir Peregrine had | ||||||
| been seen. | ||||||
| 'The coroner suggested to Det Chief Inspector John Wheler that Sir Peregrine's home would | ||||||
| have been taken apart by the police if he had not been a baronet. The reply was: "There is | ||||||
| a popular misconception that there is one law for the titled and one for the working class. | ||||||
| Whilst one respects titles, one does not get unduly influenced by them." | ||||||
| 'Miss Priscilla Henniker-Heaton said she had opened the door of the lumber room one day last | ||||||
| summer but had not entered. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Leonard Banting, a tenant of Sir Peregrine's home, said he lived in the room next to the | ||||||
| lumber room. "It might seem a bit strange but I didn't notice anything," he said. | ||||||
| 'Dr. Burton said the case had attracted a great deal of publicity, and misunderstandings had | ||||||
| arisen. It was not true that the police would march into a house and tear the garden apart | ||||||
| when someone was reported missing. Anyone in such a tragic situation would be treated | ||||||
| inaccurate | ||||||
| "I hope that the facts are now sufficiently well established for everyone to be aware of what | ||||||
| has happened," Dr. Burton added.' | ||||||
| Sir Edward Richard Henry, 1st and only baronet | ||||||
| The following biography of Sir Edward Henry, one of the pioneers of the science of finger- | ||||||
| printing, appeared in the Australian monthly magazine "Parade" in its issue for January 1956:- | ||||||
| 'A meticulously-dressed man of average height with the air of aloof authority that stamps the | ||||||
| responsible Indian civil servant walked through the gates of New Scotland Yard, Thames | ||||||
| Embankment, London, on May 31, 1901. The policeman on duty watched him with a speculative | ||||||
| eye. He was rumoured to be bringing many new-fangled notions to crime detection much to the | ||||||
| amusement and contempt of diehards and old timers. The diehards were soon in retreat. When | ||||||
| Edward Henry slipped into his chair as Assistant-Commissioner in charge of C.I.D., science | ||||||
| struck the Yard with the shattering force of a thunderbolt. Brain superseded brawn on what | ||||||
| ranks as the darkest day for crooks the world over. | ||||||
| 'Edward Henry, later Sir Edward Henry, Bart., worked out the first effective system of fingerprint | ||||||
| classification and founded the fingerprint department which has brought so many criminals to | ||||||
| gaol and the gallows. He established Peel House, where young recruits are trained and tested | ||||||
| in scientific detection. He guided the Yard through the great period of upheaval when mass | ||||||
| mass crime, poverty, squalor and industrial, political and religious hatred were grudgingly giving | ||||||
| way to the more enlightened era of today. His rule was one long struggle against prejudice. | ||||||
| Misguided idealists clamoured it was unsportsmanlike and un-British to use a man's fingerprints | ||||||
| without his permission to convict him of murder or robbery. He had to fight charges of wide- | ||||||
| spread police corruption. In the end he won through to establish the impeccable London police | ||||||
| tradition of today. | ||||||
| 'Edward Richard Henry was born on July 26, 1850, son of an Anglo-Irish doctor. He went | ||||||
| straight from London University College into the Indian Civil Service, being posted to Bengal as | ||||||
| private secretary to the Lieutenant-Governor, Sir Steuart Bayley. He proved his excellence | ||||||
| as assistant magistrate, Secretary to the Board of Revenue and, finally, as Inspector-General | ||||||
| of police. In all roles, he studied the limited use of fingerprints made by his predecessors in | ||||||
| commercial and other transactions. | ||||||
| 'Many years earlier, Mr. (later Sir) William Herschel, a Bengal administrator, had been impressed | ||||||
| by the clear outline of a palm print accidentally left by a road metalling contractor on a contract | ||||||
| he was signing. It solved Hershel's greatest problem. For years natives had been robbing his | ||||||
| pensions department by impersonation and other forms of fraud. From then, he required every | ||||||
| pensioner who could not write to sign his receipt with one or more fingerprints. He quickly | ||||||
| sensed that the scheme was foolproof. The study of fingerprinting was then taken up by | ||||||
| Francis (later Sir Francis) Galton, one of the first to assess that the chance of two fingerprints | ||||||
| being alike was about one in 64,000,000,000. | ||||||
| 'Galton's own plan for "fingerprint directors" was turned down because no one could conceive | ||||||
| how one fingerprint could be found among hundreds of thousands with sufficient speed to be | ||||||
| effective. It was left to Sir Edward Henry to supply the answer. He had already begun to record | ||||||
| fingerprints of Bengal criminals as a means of identification. They were becoming unwieldy and | ||||||
| he was seeking some means of simple and rapid classification. The basic idea came to him | ||||||
| during a solitary ride through the Bengal jungle. He decided to group fingerprints according to | ||||||
| their ridge patterns. Back at his desk, he worked out that ridges followed four main patterns. | ||||||
| Some were like arches, others loops. Some resembled whirlpools. Others included variations | ||||||
| of the three. He called his four patterns arches, loops, whorls and composites, and proceeded | ||||||
| to break them down into sub-patterns till he had a primary classification of 1024 types. | ||||||
| 'In August, 1897, his new system had its first test. The manager of a tea plantation at | ||||||
| Jalpaiguri, Bengal, was found dead with his throat cut. Henry took over himself. In the murder | ||||||
| room he found an almanac with a fingerprint in blood. He checked through his records and found | ||||||
| and found it belonged to a house boy named Charon, who had been previously convicted on a | ||||||
| theft charge brought by the dead man. Charon had been amnestied on Queen Victoria's | ||||||
| Diamond Jubilee. The court, however, was unwilling to demand a man's life on the strength of | ||||||
| of an unproved system. Thus the first murderer to be trapped by fingerprints received only a | ||||||
| gaol sentence on a minor charge of theft. [Although the article states that Charon was the | ||||||
| first murderer to be trapped by fingerprints, it is generally agreed that another follower of the | ||||||
| work of Francis Galton, a Croatian-born Argentinean police official named Juan Vucetich had | ||||||
| achieved the first successful conviction based on fingerprint evidence in Argentina in 1892.] | ||||||
| 'The event, however, caused a furore through the police world. Henry, who had been seconded | ||||||
| to reorganise the police in Pretoria and Johannesburg, was summoned to London to report | ||||||
| before the Belper Committee [a five-man Home Office committee chaired by Lord Belper which | ||||||
| met in 1900 to consider the relative merits of anthropometry - i.e. the Bertillon system as used | ||||||
| in France, and fingerprinting in the identification and conviction of criminals]. The committee | ||||||
| unanimously recommended the adoption of the fingerprint system in England and Wales and the | ||||||
| Home Secretary took the logical step of summoning Edward Henry to Scotland Yard to install it. | ||||||
| Within two months the Central Fingerprint Branch was born. | ||||||
| 'It was none too soon. London was in the grip of a crime wave. The police, who relied mainly on | ||||||
| their "photographic memory," were "hamstrung" by the alibi system. Whenever they dragged in | ||||||
| an "old lag," there were always cronies to swear he was miles away at the time. Time and again, | ||||||
| juries refused to convict and criminals and murderers went free to continue their reign of terror. | ||||||
| 'At first Henry proceeded cautiously. There was much violent criticism of his fingerprints. Some | ||||||
| members of the Government regarded them as an infringement of civil liberty. Several judges | ||||||
| were openly adverse to accepting them as evidence. The shady set were glamorously hostile. | ||||||
| The 1902 Epsom Derby gave him his first flash of publicity. Detectives netted 54 pickpockets | ||||||
| and sneak-thieves on the course. They rushed their fingerprints to Scotland Yard with the | ||||||
| result that the records of 29 were presented to the magistrate next morning, and they were | ||||||
| given longer sentences. | ||||||
| 'Still many law officials and the bulk of the public were unconvinced. It needed a murder case | ||||||
| to prove the effectiveness of Henry's fingerprint department. This came in 1903, soon after | ||||||
| Henry had been promoted Commissioner. An elderly couple named Farrow were found battered | ||||||
| to death at their small oil and colour-shop. Earlier in the morning a milkman and his boy had | ||||||
| seen two men leave the shop hurriedly. The police found a thumb print on the tray of Farrow's | ||||||
| cash box, which had been rifled and thrown aside. They believed the crime had been committed | ||||||
| by local criminals and accordingly hunted all who had vanished from their customary haunts. | ||||||
| Among those pulled in were brothers Alfred and Albert Stratton. The thumbprint from the cash | ||||||
| box corresponded with Alfred's. In view of the general prejudice it was still doubtful if the Old | ||||||
| Bailey jury would convict on thumb-print evidence alone. Fortunately, Albert Stratton panicked | ||||||
| when shown the thumbprint. He admitted he was present but accused his brother, Albert, of | ||||||
| committing the murder. Albert in turn blamed Alfred. Both went to the gallows. | ||||||
| 'Meanwhile, more storm clouds were gathering round Henry. The great British public had grave | ||||||
| misgivings about the new efficiency of the police. They were certainly rounding up crooks, but | ||||||
| there was some uneasiness that their zeal might be violating that nebulous British code known | ||||||
| as "Fair Play." The use of police to disperse rioting workless miners in Wales produced a roar of | ||||||
| protest. Police were accused of assault and wrongful arrest. The crisis came to a head in the | ||||||
| Madame d'Angely case. | ||||||
| 'Madame d'Angely was picked up on April 24, 1906, while allegedly hawking her affections. She | ||||||
| counter-charged with wrongful arrest and perjury by police. Certain newspapers took up the | ||||||
| attack and hammered Edward Henry and his administration. There were charges that the police | ||||||
| were corruptly in league with bookmakers, publicans and harpies who ran houses of ill-fame. | ||||||
| They were charged with brutality. Uproar shook the House of Commons as the Opposition leapt | ||||||
| leapt to the attack. The Government had to concede a Royal Commission. It completely | ||||||
| vindicated Henry. Out of 210,000 arrests in three years only 19 were proved wrongful, and they | ||||||
| were mere drunks. Of houses of ill-fame, none were substantiated. | ||||||
| 'Still times were hot for Henry. He had to mediate when Protestants threatened to break up a | ||||||
| procession of Catholics at Westminster. He took a firm stand when idealists protested strongly | ||||||
| against rough police handling of Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst and her militant suffragettes. In their | ||||||
| drive for votes for women, the suffragettes fought with all the fury of fanatical Dervishes. Henry | ||||||
| ordered the police to do their duty and treat these well-bred furies as ordinary lawbreakers. The | ||||||
| soft-hearted British public were not happy to see them bundled to gaol. It was not playing the | ||||||
| game to treat women roughly, though what the police should do no one would say. The clamour | ||||||
| reached its peak when a burly inspector took Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst in a mighty grip round | ||||||
| the waist and carried her still struggling into captivity. | ||||||
| 'Henry was again under fire when police and troops cornered three burglar anarchists in a | ||||||
| tenement Sidney Street and let them burn to death after a dramatic siege. Misguided critics | ||||||
| said Henry should have allowed the fire brigades to rescue the gunmen, though they had | ||||||
| already murdered three policemen and fired at all who showed themselves during the siege. | ||||||
| 'Sir Edward Henry was fairly notorious, therefore, when, on November 27, 1912, he said good- | ||||||
| night to his sergeant driver and started up the path to his house. As he reached the door, a | ||||||
| man pushed through the shrubbery and demanded a word with him. The man drew a revolver | ||||||
| fired wildly. The third bullet lodged in Henry's stomach. Only an immediate operation saved him. | ||||||
| His assailant, Albert George Bowes, had taken this drastic means of protesting against police | ||||||
| refusal to grant him a taxi-cab licence on the grounds of an earlier conviction for drunkenness. | ||||||
| He was sentenced to 15 years' penal servitude. | ||||||
| 'Still suffering from his wounds, Henry wanted to retire. The world was trembling on the brink | ||||||
| of war and the Government begged him to stay on. He did so till 1918, when a sudden strike | ||||||
| by 6,000 police left many centres unprotected. The police had had a rough deal during the | ||||||
| war. Enlistment thinned their ranks. They had to protect important visitors to London, patrol | ||||||
| special installations, hunt spies and deserters in addition to their normal duties. | ||||||
| 'On August 19, 1918, when it was apparent the war was won, 6,000 left their posts. There | ||||||
| were incidents. Shops were looted, women attacked. Lloyd George himself intervened with | ||||||
| union chiefs to persuade the men back to duty. Henry took this as a personal rebuff. He was | ||||||
| already a tired man of 68. He sent in his resignation again and was thankful when it was | ||||||
| accepted. The King showed appreciation of his services by creating him a baronet. Sir Edward | ||||||
| Henry died on February 21, 1931.' | ||||||
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