| BARONETAGE | ||||||
| Last updated 07/11/2017 | ||||||
| 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 | ||||||
| VALCKENBURG of Middleing,Yorks | ||||||
| 20 Jul 1642 | E | 1 | Matthew Valckenburg | 4 Apr 1644 | ||
| 1644 | 2 | John Anthony van Valckenburg | 1 Sep 1679 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Sep 1679 | ||||||
| VANACKER of London | ||||||
| 31 Jan 1701 | E | See "Sambrooke" | ||||
| VAN COLSTER of Amsterdam,Holland | ||||||
| 28 Feb 1645 | E | 1 | Joseph van Colster | c Apr 1665 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c Apr 1665 | ||||||
| VANDEN-BEMPDE-JOHNSTONE | ||||||
| of Hackness Hall,Yorks | ||||||
| 6 Jul 1795 | GB | 1 | Richard Vanden-Bempde-Johnstone | 21 Sep 1732 | 14 Jul 1807 | 74 |
| For details of the special remainder included | ||||||
| in the creation of this baronetcy,see the note | ||||||
| at the foot of this page | ||||||
| MP for Weymouth 1790-1796 | ||||||
| 14 Jul 1807 | 2 | John Vanden-Bempde-Johnstone | 28 Aug 1799 | 24 Feb 1869 | 69 | |
| MP for Yorkshire 1830-1832 and | ||||||
| Scarborough 1832-1837 and 1841-1869 | ||||||
| For further information on the death of this MP, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 24 Feb 1869 | 3 | Harcourt Vanden-Bempde-Johnstone | 3 Jan 1829 | 1 Mar 1916 | 87 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Derwent (qv) in 1881 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged | ||||||
| VANDEPUT of Twickenham,Middlesex | ||||||
| 7 Nov 1723 | GB | 1 | Peter Vanderput | c 1688 | 25 Aug 1748 | |
| 25 Aug 1748 | 2 | George Vandeput | c 1717 | 17 Jun 1784 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 17 Jun 1784 | ||||||
| VANDERBRANDE of Cleverskirke,Holland | ||||||
| 9 Jun 1699 | E | 1 | John Peter Vanderbrande | c 1713 | ||
| c 1713 | 2 | Cornelius Vanderbrande | after 1713 | |||
| to | Presumably extinct on his death | |||||
| after 1713 | ||||||
| VANE-FLETCHER of Hutton,Cumberland | ||||||
| 27 Jun 1786 | GB | See "Fletcher-Vane" | ||||
| VANE-TEMPEST of Long Newton,Durham | ||||||
| 13 Jul 1782 | GB | 1 | Henry Vane | c 1725 | 7 Jun 1794 | |
| 7 Jun 1794 | 2 | Henry Vane-Tempest | 7 Aug 1813 | |||
| to | MP for Durham 1794-1800 | |||||
| 7 Aug 1813 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| VAN FREISENDORF of Hirdech,Sweden | ||||||
| 4 Oct 1661 | E | 1 | John Frederick van Freisendorf | |||
| Nothing further is known of this baronetcy | ||||||
| VAN LORE of Tylehurst,Berks | ||||||
| 3 Sep 1628 | E | 1 | Peter van Lore | c 1580 | c 1645 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1645 | ||||||
| VANNECK of Putney,Surrey | ||||||
| 14 Dec 1751 | GB | 1 | Joshua Vanneck | 6 Mar 1777 | ||
| 6 Mar 1777 | 2 | Gerard Vanneck | c 1743 | 22 May 1791 | ||
| MP for Dunwich 1768-1790 | ||||||
| 22 May 1791 | 3 | Joshua Vanneck | 31 Dec 1745 | 15 Aug 1816 | 70 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Huntingfield (qv) in 1796 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remains merged,although,as at | ||||||
| 30/06/2014,the baronetcy does not appear in | ||||||
| the Official Roll of the Baronetage | ||||||
| VAN NOTTEN-POLE of Todenham House,Gloucs | ||||||
| 28 Jul 1791 | GB | See "Pole" | ||||
| VAN TROMP of Holland | ||||||
| 23 Apr 1675 | E | 1 | Cornelius Martinus van Tromp | c 1630 | 29 May 1691 | |
| to | On his death the baronetcy is presumed to | |||||
| 29 May 1691 | have become either extinct or dormant | |||||
| VASSAR-SMITH of Charlton Park,Gloucs | ||||||
| 10 Jul 1917 | UK | 1 | Richard Vassar Vassar-Smith | 11 Jul 1843 | 2 Aug 1922 | 79 |
| 2 Aug 1922 | 2 | John George Lawley Vassar-Smith | 10 Dec 1868 | 2 May 1942 | 73 | |
| 2 May 1942 | 3 | Richard Rathborne Vassar-Smith | 24 Nov 1909 | 12 Aug 1995 | 85 | |
| 12 Aug 1995 | 4 | John Rathborne Vassar-Smith | 23 Jul 1936 | |||
| VAUGHAN of Nannau,Merioneth | ||||||
| 28 Jul 1791 | GB | 1 | Robert Howell Vaughan | c 1738 | 13 Oct 1792 | |
| 13 Oct 1792 | 2 | Robert Williames Vaughan | 29 Mar 1768 | 22 Apr 1843 | 75 | |
| MP for Merioneth 1792-1836 | ||||||
| 22 Apr 1843 | 3 | Robert Williames Vaughan | 23 Jun 1803 | 29 Apr 1859 | 55 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 29 Apr 1859 | ||||||
| VAUGHAN-MORGAN of Outwood,Surrey | ||||||
| 29 Jan 1960 | UK | 1 | John Kenyon Vaughan-Morgan | 2 Feb 1905 | 26 Jan 1995 | 89 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Reigate [L] (qv) in 1970 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1995 | ||||||
| VAVASOUR of Haselwood,Yorks | ||||||
| 24 Oct 1628 | E | 1 | Thomas Vavasour | before 1636 | ||
| before 1636 | 2 | Walter Vavasour | after 1666 | |||
| after 1666 | 3 | Walter Vavasour | c 1644 | 16 Feb 1713 | ||
| 16 Feb 1713 | 4 | Walter Vavasour | c 1659 | May 1740 | ||
| May 1740 | 5 | Walter Vavasour | 13 Apr 1766 | |||
| 13 Apr 1766 | 6 | Walter Vavasour | 16 Jan 1744 | 3 Nov 1802 | 58 | |
| 3 Nov 1802 | 7 | Thomas Vavasour | c 1745 | 20 Jan 1826 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 20 Jan 1826 | ||||||
| VAVASOUR of Killingthorpe,Lincs | ||||||
| 22 Jun 1631 | E | 1 | Charles Vavasour | Feb 1644 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Feb 1644 | ||||||
| VAVASOUR of Copmanthorpe,Yorks | ||||||
| 17 Jul 1643 | E | 1 | William Vavasour | 18 Feb 1659 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 18 Feb 1659 | ||||||
| VAVASOUR of Spaldington,Yorks | ||||||
| 20 Mar 1801 | UK | 1 | Henry Vavasour | 15 Mar 1813 | ||
| 15 Mar 1813 | 2 | Henry Maghull Mervin Vavasour | 19 Jul 1768 | 4 Jan 1838 | 69 | |
| 4 Jan 1838 | 3 | Henry Mervin Vavasour | 17 Jun 1814 | 9 Dec 1912 | 98 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 9 Dec 1912 | For further information on this baronet,and a | |||||
| listing of those baronets who have reached their | ||||||
| centenaries,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| VAVASOUR of Haslewood,Yorks | ||||||
| 14 Feb 1828 | UK | 1 | Edward Marmaduke Stourton Vavasour | 6 May 1786 | 15 Mar 1847 | 60 |
| 15 Mar 1847 | 2 | Edward Marmaduke Vavasour | 17 jan 1815 | 23 Aug 1885 | 70 | |
| 23 Aug 1885 | 3 | William Edward Joseph Vavasour | 28 Nov 1846 | 18 Nov 1915 | 68 | |
| 18 Nov 1915 | 4 | Leonard Pius Vavasour | 22 Sep 1881 | 14 Sep 1961 | 79 | |
| 14 Sep 1961 | 5 | Geoffrey William Vavasour | 5 Sep 1914 | 28 Jul 1997 | 82 | |
| 28 Jul 1997 | 6 | Eric Michel Joseph Marmaduke Vavasour | 3 Jan 1953 | |||
| VERDIN of The Brockhurst,Cheshire | ||||||
| 24 Jul 1896 | UK | 1 | Joseph Verdin | 4 Jan 1838 | 28 Dec 1920 | 82 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 28 Dec 1920 | ||||||
| VERNATTI of Carleton,Yorks | ||||||
| 7 Jun 1634 | NS | 1 | Philibert Vernatti | c Jun 1643 | ||
| c Jun 1643 | 2 | Philibert Vernatti | after 1678 | |||
| to | On his death the baronetcy is presumed to | |||||
| after 1678 | have become dormant | |||||
| VERNER of Verners Bridge,Armagh | ||||||
| 22 Jul 1846 | UK | 1 | William Verner | 25 Oct 1782 | 20 Jan 1871 | 88 |
| MP for co.Armagh 1832-1868 | ||||||
| 20 Jan 1871 | 2 | William Verner | 4 Apr 1822 | 10 Jan 1873 | 50 | |
| MP for co.Armagh 1868-1873 | ||||||
| For information on his daughter,Alice Emily, and | ||||||
| her involvement in the Bagot Will Case of 1878-80, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 10 Jan 1873 | 3 | William Edward Hercules Verner | 11 Jan 1856 | 8 Jun 1886 | 30 | |
| 8 Jun 1886 | 4 | Edward Wingfield Verner | 1 Oct 1830 | 21 Jun 1899 | 68 | |
| MP for Lisburn 1863-1873 and co.Armagh | ||||||
| 1873-1880 | ||||||
| 21 Jun 1899 | 5 | Edward Wingfield Verner | 22 Nov 1865 | 1 Nov 1936 | 70 | |
| 1 Nov 1936 | 6 | Edward Derrick Wingfield Verner | 28 May 1907 | 27 Mar 1975 | 67 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 27 Mar 1975 | ||||||
| VERNEY of Middle Claydon,Bucks | ||||||
| 16 Mar 1661 | E | 1 | Ralph Verney | 12 Nov 1613 | 24 Sep 1696 | 82 |
| MP for Aylesbury 1640 and 1640-1645 | ||||||
| and Buckingham 1681-1690 | ||||||
| 24 Sep 1696 | 2 | John Verney | 5 Nov 1640 | 23 Jun 1717 | 76 | |
| He was subsequently created Viscount | ||||||
| Fermanagh (qv) in 1703 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1791 | ||||||
| VERNEY of Claydon House,Bucks | ||||||
| 3 Dec 1818 | UK | 1 | Harry Calvert | 3 Sep 1826 | ||
| 3 Sep 1826 | 2 | Harry Verney | 8 Dec 1801 | 12 Feb 1894 | 92 | |
| MP for Buckingham 1832-1841,1857-1874 | ||||||
| and 1880-1885 and Bedford 1847-1852 | ||||||
| PC 1885 | ||||||
| 12 Feb 1894 | 3 | Edmund Hope Verney | 6 Apr 1838 | 8 May 1910 | 72 | |
| MP for Buckingham 1885-1886 and 1889-1891 | ||||||
| For further information on this baronet, see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of the page containing details | ||||||
| of the MPs for Buckingham | ||||||
| 8 May 1910 | 4 | Harry Calvert Williams Verney | 7 Jun 1881 | 23 Dec 1974 | 93 | |
| MP for Buckingham Dec 1910-1918 | ||||||
| For further information on this baronet, see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of the page containing details | ||||||
| of the MPs for Buckingham | ||||||
| 23 Dec 1974 | 5 | Ralph Bruce Verney | 18 Jan 1915 | 17 Aug 2001 | 86 | |
| 17 Aug 2001 | 6 | Edmund Ralph Verney | 28 Jun 1950 | |||
| VERNEY of Eaton Square,London | ||||||
| 16 Jul 1946 | UK | 1 | Sir Ralph Verney | 25 May 1879 | 22 Feb 1959 | 79 |
| 22 Feb 1959 | 2 | John Verney | 30 Sep 1913 | 2 Feb 1993 | 79 | |
| 2 Feb 1993 | 3 | John Sebastian Verney | 30 Aug 1945 | |||
| VERNON of Hodnet,Salop | ||||||
| 23 Jul 1660 | E | 1 | Henry Vernon | 16 Dec 1606 | 11 Apr 1676 | 69 |
| MP for Shropshire 1660 and West Looe | ||||||
| 1661-1676 | ||||||
| Apr 1676 | 2 | Thomas Vernon | 5 Feb 1683 | |||
| 5 Feb 1683 | 3 | Richard Vernon | 22 Jun 1678 | 1 Oct 1725 | 47 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1 Oct 1725 | ||||||
| VERNON of Hanbury Hall,Worcs | ||||||
| 23 Jul 1885 | UK | 1 | Harry Foley Vernon | 11 Apr 1834 | 1 Feb 1920 | 85 |
| MP for Worcestershire East 1861-1868 | ||||||
| 1 Feb 1920 | 2 | Bowater George Hamilton Vernon | 12 Sep 1865 | 14 Jun 1940 | 74 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 14 Jun 1940 | For further information on this baronet, see the | |||||
| note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| VERNON of Shotwick Park,Cheshire | ||||||
| 24 Jan 1914 | UK | 1 | William Vernon | 13 Dec 1835 | 24 Jun 1919 | 83 |
| 24 Jun 1919 | 2 | John Herbert Vernon | 12 Jul 1858 | 13 Jun 1933 | 74 | |
| 13 Jun 1933 | 3 | William Norman Vernon | 19 Apr 1890 | 12 Apr 1967 | 76 | |
| 12 Apr 1967 | 4 | Nigel John Douglas Vernon | 2 May 1924 | 4 Sep 2007 | 83 | |
| 4 Sep 2007 | 5 | James William Vernon | 2 Apr 1949 | |||
| VESEY of Abbey Leix,Queen's Co. | ||||||
| 28 Sep 1698 | I | 1 | Thomas Vesey | 1673 | 6 Aug 1730 | 57 |
| 6 Aug 1730 | 2 | John Denny Vesey | 25 Jul 1761 | |||
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Knapton (qv) in 1750. The 2nd Baron was | ||||||
| created Viscount de Vesci (qv) in 1776 | ||||||
| with which title the baronetcy remains | ||||||
| merged | ||||||
| VESTEY of Bessemer House,Camberwell | ||||||
| 21 Jun 1913 | UK | 1 | William Vestey | 21 Jan 1859 | 10 Dec 1940 | 81 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Vestey (qv) in 1922 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| VESTEY of Shirley,Surrey | ||||||
| 27 Jun 1921 | UK | 1 | Edmund Hoyle Vestey | 3 Feb 1866 | 18 Nov 1953 | 87 |
| 18 Nov 1953 | 2 | John Derek Vestey | 4 Jun 1914 | 29 Jun 2005 | 91 | |
| 29 Jun 2005 | 3 | Paul Edmund Vestey | 15 Feb 1944 | |||
| VILLIERS of Brooksby,Lincs | ||||||
| 19 Jul 1619 | E | 1 | William Villiers | c 1575 | 12 Jun 1629 | |
| 12 Jun 1629 | 2 | George Villiers | Feb 1620 | 1682 | 62 | |
| 1682 | 3 | William Villiers | 9 Jan 1645 | 27 Feb 1712 | 67 | |
| to | MP for Leicester 1698-1701 | |||||
| 27 Feb 1712 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| VINCENT of Stoke d'Abernon,Surrey | ||||||
| 26 Jul 1620 | E | 1 | Francis Vincent | c 1568 | 1640 | |
| MP for Surrey 1626 | ||||||
| 1640 | 2 | Anthony Vincent | 1594 | 1642 | 48 | |
| 1642 | 3 | Francis Vincent | c 1621 | c May 1670 | ||
| MP for Dover 1661-1670 | ||||||
| c May 1670 | 4 | Anthony Vincent | c 1645 | Sep 1674 | ||
| Sep 1674 | 5 | Francis Vincent | 12 Apr 1646 | 10 Feb 1736 | 89 | |
| MP for Surrey 1690-1695 and 1710-1713 | ||||||
| 10 Feb 1736 | 6 | Henry Vincent | c 1685 | 10 Jan 1757 | ||
| MP for Guildford 1728-1734 | ||||||
| 10 Jan 1757 | 7 | Francis Vincent | c 1717 | 22 May 1775 | ||
| MP for Surrey 1761-1775 | ||||||
| 22 May 1775 | 8 | Francis Vincent | 11 Oct 1747 | 17 Aug 1791 | 43 | |
| 17 Aug 1791 | 9 | Francis Vincent | 24 Jul 1780 | 17 Jan 1809 | 28 | |
| 17 Jan 1809 | 10 | Francis Vincent | 3 Mar 1803 | 6 Jul 1880 | 77 | |
| MP for St.Albans 1831-1835 | ||||||
| 6 Jul 1880 | 11 | Frederick Vincent | 8 Jan 1798 | 9 Jan 1883 | 85 | |
| 9 Jan 1883 | 12 | William Vincent | 20 Sep 1834 | 16 Feb 1914 | 79 | |
| 16 Feb 1914 | 13 | Francis Erskine Vincent | 24 May 1869 | 28 Aug 1935 | 66 | |
| 28 Aug 1935 | 14 | Anthony Francis Vincent | 30 Jun 1894 | 24 Feb 1936 | 41 | |
| 24 Feb 1936 | 15 | Frederick d'Abernon Vincent | 12 Feb 1852 | 2 Mar 1936 | 84 | |
| 2 Mar 1936 | 16 | Edgar Vincent | 19 Aug 1857 | 1 Nov 1941 | 84 | |
| He had previously been created Viscount | ||||||
| D'Abernon (qv) in 1926 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1941 | ||||||
| VINCENT of Watton,Norfolk | ||||||
| 18 Jan 1937 | UK | 1 | Sir Percy Vincent | 3 Sep 1868 | 22 Jan 1943 | 74 |
| 22 Jan 1943 | 2 | Lacey Eric Vincent | 13 Jan 1902 | 21 Oct 1963 | 61 | |
| 21 Oct 1963 | 3 | William Percy Maxwell Vincent | 1 Feb 1945 | |||
| VINER of London | ||||||
| 10 May 1666 | E | 1 | Robert Viner | 1631 | 2 Sep 1688 | 57 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 2 Sep 1688 | For further information on this baronet, | |||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| VITUS of Limerick | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1677 | E | 1 | Ignatius Vitus | c 1626 | 21 Aug 1694 | |
| to | Baronetcy forfeited | |||||
| 11 May 1691 | ||||||
| VIVIAN of Truro,Cornwall | ||||||
| 19 Jan 1828 | UK | 1 | Richard Hussey Vivian | 28 Jul 1775 | 20 Aug 1842 | 67 |
| He was subsequently created Baron Vivian | ||||||
| (qv) in 1841 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| VIVIAN of Singleton,Glamorgan | ||||||
| 13 May 1882 | UK | 1 | Henry Hussey Vivian | 6 Jul 1821 | 28 Nov 1894 | 73 |
| He was subsequently created Baron Swansea | ||||||
| (qv) in 1893 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 | ||||||
| VYNER of London | ||||||
| 18 Jun 1661 | E | 1 | Thomas Vyner | 15 Dec 1588 | 11 May 1665 | |
| 11 May 1665 | 2 | George Vyner | c 1639 | 5 Jul 1673 | ||
| 5 Jul 1673 | 3 | Thomas Vyner | 21 Jun 1664 | 3 May 1683 | 18 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| May 1683 | ||||||
| VYVYAN of Trelowarren,Cornwall | ||||||
| 12 Feb 1645 | E | 1 | Richard Vyvyan | c 1613 | 3 Oct 1665 | |
| MP for Penrhyn 1640, Tregony 1640-1644 | ||||||
| and St.Mawes 1663-1665 | ||||||
| 3 Oct 1665 | 2 | Vyell Vyvyan | 20 May 1639 | 24 Feb 1697 | 57 | |
| MP for Helston 1679-81 | ||||||
| 24 Feb 1697 | 3 | Richard Vyvyan | c 1677 | 12 Oct 1724 | ||
| MP for Mitchell 1701-1702 and | ||||||
| Cornwall 1703-1708 and 1712-1713 | ||||||
| 12 Oct 1724 | 4 | Francis Vyvyan | 29 Sep 1698 | 29 Dec 1745 | 47 | |
| Dec 1745 | 5 | Richard Vyvyan | 11 May 1731 | 20 Oct 1781 | 50 | |
| 20 Oct 1781 | 6 | Carew Vyvyan | 11 Jan 1737 | 4 Oct 1814 | 77 | |
| 4 Oct 1814 | 7 | Vyell Vyvyan | 12 Jul 1767 | 27 Jan 1820 | 52 | |
| 27 Jan 1820 | 8 | Richard Rawlinson Vyvyan | 6 Jun 1800 | 15 Aug 1879 | 79 | |
| MP for Cornwall 1825-1831, Okehampton | ||||||
| 1831-1832, Bristol 1832-1837 and Helston | ||||||
| 1841-1857 | ||||||
| 15 Aug 1879 | 9 | Vyell Donnithorne Vyvyan | 16 Aug 1826 | 27 May 1917 | 90 | |
| 27 May 1917 | 10 | Courtenay Bourchier Vyvyan | 5 Jun 1858 | 15 Nov 1941 | 83 | |
| 15 Nov 1941 | 11 | Richard Philip Vyvyan | 21 Nov 1891 | 15 May 1978 | 86 | |
| 15 May 1978 | 12 | John Stanley Vyvyan | 20 Jan 1916 | 6 Oct 1995 | 79 | |
| 6 Oct 1995 | 13 | Ralph Ferrers Alexander Vyvyan | 21 Aug 1960 | |||
| The special remainder to the baronetcy of Vanden-Bempde-Johnstone created in 1795 | ||||||
| From the "London Gazette" of 20 June 1795 (issue 13789, page 646):- | ||||||
| 'The King has been pleased to grant the Dignity of a Baronet of the Kingdom of Great Britain to | ||||||
| Richard Bempde Johnstone, of Hackness Hall in the North Riding of the County of York, Esq; | ||||||
| with Remainder to his Brother Charles Johnstone, of Haverfordwest, Esq; and his Issue Male.' | ||||||
| Sir John Vanden-Bempde-Johnstone, 2nd baronet | ||||||
| Sir John died from injuries received in a hunting accident. According to the London 'Standard' | ||||||
| of 26 February 1869:- | ||||||
| 'It is with great regret we record the death of [Sir John Johnstone], which took place between | ||||||
| nine and ten o'clock yesterday morning at his residence in Belgrave-Square. Sir John, who was | ||||||
| an enthusiastic sportsman, was out with Mr. Lowndes' hounds, at Bletchley, on Saturday last, | ||||||
| when, in taking a drop fence, by some means he lost his saddle, and came down a crash on his | ||||||
| shoulder, sustaining severe location and serious internal injury. Mr. Deans, surgeon, of | ||||||
| Bletchley, was immediately sent for, and without delay arrived on the scene. On examination | ||||||
| he pronounced the injuries to be of a very serious nature. After the skilful attention of the | ||||||
| above gentleman Sir John became somewhat composed, and it was thought advisable that he | ||||||
| should be removed to London. Accordingly he was conveyed by rail to his town residence, | ||||||
| accompanied by Mr. Deans, arriving about 11 o'clock on Saturday night. He was placed under | ||||||
| the care of Messrs. Prescott, Hewitt and Leggett, who, assisted by Mr. Deans, used every | ||||||
| exertion to mitigate his sufferings, but without avail.' | ||||||
| Sir Henry Mervin Vavasour, 3rd baronet | ||||||
| The following article appeared in "The Washington Post" on 6 January 1913:- | ||||||
| 'Much money changed hands on the death last week of old Sir Henry Mervin Vavasour, of | ||||||
| Spaldington, at the age of nearly 99. For some two or three years ago the fact was brought | ||||||
| to light that neither the British peerage nor yet its baronetage had ever produced a | ||||||
| centenarian. Sir Henry Vavasour was thereupon discovered to be the very oldest baronet, | ||||||
| and was found to be so hale and vigorous that numerous bets were made, not only in his | ||||||
| native county of Yorkshire, but also in London clubland, that he would safely pass the | ||||||
| hundredth milestone. | ||||||
| 'Indeed, the wagers for and against this probability assumed altogether phenomenal proportions, | ||||||
| and many of the bettors endeavored to protect themselves by taking out insurance at Lloyds, | ||||||
| both against and in favor of his dying before he reached the century mark. | ||||||
| 'Now the bettors and Lloyds have been called upon to settle up, since the old baronet has been | ||||||
| gathered to his fathers within a little more than twelve months of the goal, his baronetcy | ||||||
| becoming extinct.' | ||||||
| Whilst it was true that at the time of the writing of the above article no peer had ever reached | ||||||
| 100 years, my records show that four baronets had already achieved this feat. The following | ||||||
| baronets are those who have reached their centenaries:- | ||||||
| Sir John Morres, 3rd baronet (29 August 1620-26 October 1720) | ||||||
| Sir Patrick Grant, 4th baronet (c 1655-10 April 1755) | ||||||
| Sir Robert Grierson, 5th baronet (c 1737-8 August 1839) | ||||||
| Sir Moses Montefiore, 1st baronet (24 October 1784-28 July 1885) | ||||||
| Sir Fitzroy Donald Maclean, 10th baronet (18 May 1835-22 November 1936) | ||||||
| Sir Brooke de Malpas Grey-Egerton, 13th baronet (19 August 1845-5 Nov 1945) | ||||||
| Sir James Swinburne, 9th baronet (28 February 1858-30 March 1958) | ||||||
| Sir Harry Platt, 1st baronet (7 October 1886-20 December 1986) | ||||||
| Sir Alexander Frank Philip Christison, 4th baronet (17 November 1893-21 December 1993) | ||||||
| Sir Jack Wolfred Ashford Harris, 2nd baronet (23 July 1906-26 August 2009) | ||||||
| Dame Anne Maxwell Macdonald, baronetess [11th in line] (8 September 1906-21 April 2011) | ||||||
| Sir Richard Michael Keane, 6th baronet (29 January 1909-28 December 2010) | ||||||
| Sir Gilbert Simon Heathcote, 9th baronet (21 September 1913-15 April 2014) | ||||||
| Sir Roger Moon, 6th baronet (17 Nov 1914-16 Oct 2017) | ||||||
| Sir Daniel Patrick FitzGerald, 4th baronet (28 Jun 1916-9 Aug 2016) | ||||||
| Sir Hereward Wake, 14th baronet (7 Oct 1916- | ||||||
| Alice Emily Verner (12 April 1853-9 July 1908), daughter of Sir William Verner, | ||||||
| 2nd baronet | ||||||
| Alice Verner was a central figure in a remarkable trial which held the attention of the British and | ||||||
| Irish public between 1878 and 1880. The contemporary newspapers devoted a very large | ||||||
| amount of space to the case, to the extent that I have been forced to limit myself to mere | ||||||
| summaries of the case which appeared in Australian papers of the time. A good précis of the | ||||||
| trial was published in "The Singleton Argus and Upper Hunter General Advocate" on 7 August | ||||||
| 1878:- | ||||||
| 'After a trial which has lasted for twenty-two days the Bagot case has ended in a verdict which | ||||||
| sets aside a will and hands a great property over to a disinherited child........ | ||||||
| 'The object of the trial was to set aside the will of Christopher Neville Bagot, who died on May | ||||||
| 23 last year [1877]. The youngest son of an Irish country gentleman who lived in Roscommon, | ||||||
| he emigrated to Australia in 1844, and becoming a grazier, he amassed a great fortune. | ||||||
| Returning to his native country a few years ago, he bought a large estate for more than a | ||||||
| hundred thousand pounds. His family connections as well as his wealth brought him into good | ||||||
| society. He was also a man of exceptionally rigorous intellect, and, in spite of his toilsome life | ||||||
| in Australia, he retained the cultivated tastes of his youth. On the other hand, he had, it is | ||||||
| said, met with some accidents during his work in the bush; his personal habits were not favour- | ||||||
| able to health; he certainly drank very hard after his return to this country, and, all events, he | ||||||
| was crippled and paralytic. | ||||||
| 'During a visit to London in July, 1873, he met at dinner Miss Alice Emily Verner, the eldest | ||||||
| daughter of the late Sir William Verner, of Churchill in the County of Armagh. She was 22 [20] | ||||||
| years of age when she met Mr. Bagot, and he was 50 [46]. He was so charmed with her that | ||||||
| we are told that he asked her to marry him a week after they had met. She did not give him a | ||||||
| definite answer at the time, but she says that she was attached to him, in spite of his | ||||||
| enfeebled state. During the courtship he became intimate with her family. He went to the | ||||||
| Continent with them. She drove about with him, received presents from him, and, in company | ||||||
| with her sister, attended supper parties which he gave at his hotel in London. | ||||||
| 'The friendship went on till the July of 1874, when Miss Verner says that she agreed to marry | ||||||
| Mr. Neville Bagot. He wished, however, to be married privately, and she gives a strange | ||||||
| account of the manner and the place in which the ceremony was conducted. Meeting him by | ||||||
| appointment in the streets, she drove with him in a closed carriage for half-an-hour to some | ||||||
| part of the town which she cannot identify and went to a kind of office on the first floor of | ||||||
| some house, where she found two men, who made her and her companion sign their names in a | ||||||
| book. That was the "preliminary" part of the ceremony. Making another appointment with those | ||||||
| persons, Mr. Neville Bagot brought her back again, and one of the men read a very small part | ||||||
| of the marriage service out of the Prayer Book, asked some questions, and thus completed the | ||||||
| marriage ceremony. Mrs. Bagot believed the place to be registrar's office, but she cannot find | ||||||
| it, and there is no record of such a marriage in any of the registrars' books. | ||||||
| 'Some time afterwards she was alarmed, she says, by hearing Mr. Neville Bagot say, in a fit of | ||||||
| drunken raving, that there had been no marriage at all; and, as she was soon to give birth to | ||||||
| a child, she was anxious to put the legality of the union beyond a doubt. He agreed that they | ||||||
| should be married by special license; he gave her £30 to pay for it, and, after she had attemp- | ||||||
| ted to carry her application direct to the Archbishop of Canterbury, the license was obtained | ||||||
| on August 8, 1875. She was married the same night, between 9 and 10, at the house of her | ||||||
| family in Eaton Square. The legality of that union is not disputed. | ||||||
| 'On October 22, or a little more than two months after the wedding, she gave birth, at | ||||||
| Tunbridge Wells, to the son whose claims have been made the subject of the litigation in | ||||||
| Dublin. The child was afterwards virtually disinherited on the ground that Mr. Neville Bagot was | ||||||
| not his father, and, as the Bagot family profited by his loss, it was all-important for them to | ||||||
| make good that contention. One of them, Mr. Bernard Bagot, declared that his brother, the | ||||||
| testator, had emphatically denied that there had been any private marriage - the inference | ||||||
| being that the lady had been the mistress of Mr. Neville Bagot, and that if she had been the | ||||||
| mistress of one man she might have been the mistress of more. But its is very difficult to | ||||||
| reconcile such a denial with a statement made by Mr. Neville Bagot himself in more than one | ||||||
| of the letters which he wrote immediately after the public ceremony. He said that the marriage | ||||||
| had taken place some time before, and had for family reasons been concealed at the wish of | ||||||
| Miss Verner. | ||||||
| 'The defendants tried to show, by means of some extraordinary conditions which she had | ||||||
| signed on the eve of the public marriage, that Mr. Neville Bagot had doubted her purity. She | ||||||
| unquestionably did sign a written stipulation that she would always accompany her husband, | ||||||
| that she would keep no secrets from him, that she would "give up and cut" all her "fast and | ||||||
| tipsy acquaintances and lovers and admirers," that she would cease to write to them and to | ||||||
| receive letters and presents from them. Such a document does show that her ways had not | ||||||
| been altogether pleasant to her husband. But it is incredible, as the Judge said, that Mr. | ||||||
| Neville Bagot would have married a lady who was soon to become a mother if he had not | ||||||
| believed himself to be the father of the child. Medical evidence respecting his state of health | ||||||
| was adduced on both sides, but it was so contradictory that it may be safely disregarded. | ||||||
| We need not, however, go to conjecture for proof that he believed the child to be his, since | ||||||
| the evidence showed beyond a doubt that was overjoyed when it was born, that he was | ||||||
| proud of the likeness which observers traced between it and himself, and that he made it the | ||||||
| heir of his estates. On August 16, 1875, two months before the child was born, he made a | ||||||
| will, leaving to it his landed property. | ||||||
| 'At this stage begins one of the darkest parts of the whole story, and sometimes we can do | ||||||
| little else than grope for the truth amid a dense cloud of sworn contradictions. Down to March | ||||||
| 13, 1876, or for about five months after the birth of the child, Mr. Neville Bagot believed it to | ||||||
| be his; but only four days later he displayed a sudden change of conviction. In two wills, one | ||||||
| dated April 15, and the other September 7, 1876, he expressed that change by bequeathing | ||||||
| his estates to his brother, John Bagot, and by directing that no more than the first £200 a year, | ||||||
| and then £450 should be allotted for the support of Mrs. Bagot's son till he should reach the | ||||||
| age of thirty, when he should receive £10,000. Mrs. Bagot herself was to have £1,000 a year. | ||||||
| 'What was the cause of the sudden and extraordinary change of belief which led him to set | ||||||
| aside the old will? Was it justified by any fact which had come to his own knowledge? No | ||||||
| evidence of the slightest value was adduced to show that he had been deceived by Mrs. Bagot, | ||||||
| and the judge therefore presumed that the paternity of the child was beyond reasonable doubt. | ||||||
| Was Mr. Neville Bagot, then, likely to be the victim of a delusion? That he was naturally a man | ||||||
| of vigorous intellect is certain; but Sir Richard Graves McDonnell, late Governor of South | ||||||
| Australia, testified that, although he had a clear head when dealing with public affairs, he was | ||||||
| liable to extravagant personal antipathies. He was apt to lose self-control when talking about | ||||||
| persons. His habits were also such as would weaken the strongest intellect in the world, and | ||||||
| cloud the clearest brain. Although paralytic, and forced to wheel himself from one room to | ||||||
| another, he would, if we may trust the evidence of a waiter at one of the hotels where he | ||||||
| stayed, drink a pint of iced champagne in the forenoon, have sherry, and sometimes another | ||||||
| pint of champagne, at lunch; sherry every day before he drove out, champagne and sherry at | ||||||
| dinner, and whisky and hot water before he went to bed. Thus enfeebled by disease that he | ||||||
| was always drunk. It was no wonder that [when] he was subject to wild fits of rage and drink, | ||||||
| he could easily be misled by stronger minds than his own; and the contention of the plaintiff | ||||||
| was that the delusion as to the paternity of the child was planted in the first place by his | ||||||
| brother, Bernard Bagot. | ||||||
| 'That gentleman is the central figure of one very dramatic scene. He had come to visit Neville | ||||||
| Bagot after the drawing up of the will which gave the estates to the child. At an hotel after | ||||||
| dinner he was seen, if we may trust one of the witnesses, to take a paper off the chimney of | ||||||
| an adjoining bedroom, and place it on the top of a jug of hot water in order to open the seal | ||||||
| with the steam. Then he read the inclosed documents and sealed them again. Presently Mr. | ||||||
| Neville Bagot came in and asked for his will. Mr. Bernard Bagot answered that it was in the | ||||||
| bedroom, and he pretended to go for it; but the witness saw him take it out of his side pocket | ||||||
| and bring it in to his brother, who locked it in a tin box. The inference of the plaintiff was that | ||||||
| Mr. Bernard Bagot had opened the will to ascertain its contents, and that, on finding all the | ||||||
| landed property left to her son, he had deliberately tried to make his brother repudiate the | ||||||
| paternity of the child. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Bernard Bagot himself, of course, tells a very different story. He knew what the will | ||||||
| contained, and he opened it merely to give his brother an opportunity of completing some | ||||||
| forgotten formality. Be the truth what it may, Mr. Neville Bagot's household was speedily | ||||||
| disturbed by scandalous scenes. He denied that the child was his, and called the mother | ||||||
| opprobrious names. She retorted by demanding the authority for his accusations, and, when | ||||||
| he would not give it, she called him a "liar." Her theory is that her husband's [mind] was poison- | ||||||
| ed by the letters which he received from Bernard Bagot and John Bagot, and by their talk with | ||||||
| him when they were his guests. She says that she was sometimes kept away from him; that | ||||||
| she was not allowed to enter his room, and that she would remain crying in the passage | ||||||
| outside. On one occasion, she adds, when the vigilance of the brothers had been relaxed, she | ||||||
| got into the sick man's room through the window, and he then said that it was not he who had | ||||||
| shut her out. A nurse who had tended him in his last hours declared that he made exclamations | ||||||
| implying that he had wronged both his wife and his child. | ||||||
| 'The defendants retort by making accusations against Mrs. Bagot. They say that she neglected, | ||||||
| disobeyed, and insulted her husband. She enraged him, they assert, by her extravagance, and | ||||||
| by going about with men whom he did not know. Nay, an attempt was made to show that her | ||||||
| conduct was open to the worst construction when she and her sister dined with two officers | ||||||
| at an hotel in Chester. The climax of the insinuations was that she had tried to poison her | ||||||
| husband. The attempt to substantiate these charges, however, conspicuously failed. | ||||||
| 'The result of the quarrels was a deed of separation from him, drawn up at his desire; and, | ||||||
| when she went to ask him why he wanted her to go away, Mr. John Bagot, she says, gave | ||||||
| her a push, knocked her down with her head against the fender, and then, with the help of a | ||||||
| doctor who was present, dragged her out of the room so violently as to tear the sleeves from | ||||||
| her dress. At another time, she declares, he showed her a photograph, and remarked, "That's | ||||||
| your successor." She adds that he set spies to watch her, and that he himself dogged her | ||||||
| footsteps to find evidence against her. A good deal of that evidence was irrelevant or | ||||||
| unproved, and some of it was directly met by sworn denials; but, to a certain extent, it did | ||||||
| tend to show that an attempt had been made to oust her from the household for reasons which | ||||||
| could not be substantiated. | ||||||
| 'The real question for the jury, however, was whether Mr. Neville Bagot had been the victim of | ||||||
| a delusion, practically amounting to insanity, in so far as he believed that Mrs. Bagot's child | ||||||
| was not his. If that question was to be answered in the affirmative, it was of comparatively | ||||||
| little importance to trace the origin of the delusion. The jury might hold either that it had | ||||||
| sprung from Mr. Neville Bagot's own excited mind, or that, in good or bad faith, it had been | ||||||
| implanted by others. The jury have affirmed that he did show himself incapable of making a | ||||||
| will in so far as he fancied he was not the father of his wife's child. That verdict must have | ||||||
| been confidently expected by most calm readers of the evidence, and it commands the agree- | ||||||
| ment of the judge. | ||||||
| 'The result is that the will is set aside, and that the young child becomes the heir of the landed | ||||||
| estates and a great part of the personalty. The plaintiff, Mrs. Neville Bagot, on the other hand, | ||||||
| gains little by the verdict. She has been fighting the battle of her son, and it ends an extra- | ||||||
| ordinary trial. But it not unlikely that, in spite of the enormous cost entailed by the presentation | ||||||
| of the evidence, and by the twenty-two days' litigation, an attempt will be made to secure | ||||||
| another trial, and that the less irrelevant parts of much astonishing evidence may be heard | ||||||
| over again.' | ||||||
| And so it proved, as reported in "The Maitland Mercury and Hunter River General Advertiser" on | ||||||
| 26 July 1879:- | ||||||
| 'The Court of Appeal, on June 5, delivered judgment in the will case of Bagot v. Bagot. The suit | ||||||
| had been instituted by Alice Emily Bagot, daughter of the late Sir William Verner, and widow of | ||||||
| Christopher Neville Bagot, for the purpose of having the will of her late husband, dated Sept- | ||||||
| ember, 1876, pronounced invalid. The defendants to the suit were Bernard W. Bagot and Arthur | ||||||
| Holmes, executors of deceased. The jury in the Probate Court found the testator was of | ||||||
| unsound mind as regarded the paternity of his child, whom he disinherited by the will, and after | ||||||
| 23 days' trial Judge Warren made an order declaring the will invalid. The defendants moved for | ||||||
| a new trial, which was refused by Judge Warren, and from this refusal the present appeal was | ||||||
| brought. The Lord Chancellor [of Ireland], after stating the facts of the case at great length, | ||||||
| delivered the unanimous judgment of the Court that, alike upon the nature of the case and | ||||||
| conduct of the trial, the verdict found by the jury upon the issue of capacity, and the verdict | ||||||
| directed by the judge upon the issue of knowledge and approval of the contents of the | ||||||
| instruments, could not be maintained. The costs of the motion in the court below and of the | ||||||
| appeal must be borne by Mrs. Bagot.' | ||||||
| Eventually, in August 1880, the case came to a close when the two opposing parties reached | ||||||
| a compromise. According to a report in the "Sydney Morning Herald" of 23 September 1880:- | ||||||
| 'The case of Bagot v. Bagot, which occupied the attention of the public so long, was brought | ||||||
| to a close on August 2 on a motion before Chief Registrar Pilkington, Q.C., at the Probate | ||||||
| Office, Dublin. Mr. James Murphy, Q.C., on behalf of the defendants, Bernard William Bagot, | ||||||
| brother of the deceased and executor to his will, and Joseph Arthur Holmes, the co-executor, | ||||||
| applied for an order pursuant to three several consents that the issues of fact to be tried in | ||||||
| the Queen's Bench Division by a special jury of the City of Dublin be discharged, and that the | ||||||
| defence and other pleadings filed by the plaintiff, Alice Emily Roberts, widow of the testator | ||||||
| [she had since re-married], to try the validity of the will, dated September 7, 1876, of the late | ||||||
| Christopher Neville Bagot, her husband, be withdrawn, and the defendants as executors be at | ||||||
| liberty to obtain probate of the will in common form. They further sought an order that upon | ||||||
| such grant of administration Mr. George Morris, of Well Park, county Galway, who had been | ||||||
| appointed administrator pendente lite [pending litigation] of the personal estate, should be | ||||||
| discharged as such administrator, and the security entered into by himself and his brother, | ||||||
| Chief Justice [Michael] Morris [later Baron Killanin], in £15,000, be vacated, the defendants | ||||||
| undertaking to pay him anything due in respect of £1,000, the amount of his remuneration, | ||||||
| and any balance due in respect to his costs, Mr. Morris to hand over to them the lease of | ||||||
| the house and demesne of Aughrane, executed to John Lloyd Neville Bagot, and the keys of | ||||||
| the books and presses there, and also the six cases of plate deposited by him in the Provincial | ||||||
| Bank, Dublin. It was also sought to discharge the receiver pendente lite, Mr. Joseph Arthur | ||||||
| Holmes, one of the defendants, without accounting his security bonds to be cancelled. Mr. | ||||||
| Pilkington, Q.C., made the order required, the framing of which was settled, with the assistance | ||||||
| of the counsel present.' | ||||||
| Sir Bowater George Hamilton Vernon, 2nd baronet [UK 1885] | ||||||
| Sir George's obituary in "The Times" of 19 June 1940 reads:- | ||||||
| 'Sir George Vernon, Bt., died at Hanbury Hall, Worcestershire, on June 14. | ||||||
| 'Bowater George Hamilton Vernon was born on September 12, 1865, the eldest son of Sir Harry | ||||||
| Vernon, 1st baronet, and Lady Georgina Vernon, who was the youngest daughter of the tenth | ||||||
| Earl of Haddington. He was educated at Eton and at Brasenose College, Oxford. During the | ||||||
| South African War he served with Rimington's Guides, afterwards joining the Worcestershire | ||||||
| Yeomanry. In 1920 he succeeded to the baronetcy created of Hanbury Hall in 1885. He spent | ||||||
| many years farming in Argentina, and was keenly interested in agriculture and in everything | ||||||
| connected with the life and welfare of the parishes in which he was a landowner. He married | ||||||
| in 1905 Doris, younger daughter of Mr. James Allan, of Shrawley Wood House, Worcestershire, | ||||||
| who survives him.' | ||||||
| Although "The Times" obituary simply states that Sir George had died, he had in reality shot | ||||||
| himself. Sir George appears to have been a man of principle, as is demonstrated by two | ||||||
| interesting glimpses into Vernon's character appeared in the Press. Firstly, from the London | ||||||
| "Daily Mail" of 15 June 1940:- | ||||||
| 'Sir George Vernon, 74-years-old baronet, owner of 5,000 acres, was found shot yesterday | ||||||
| with a revolver near his body, in a bedroom at his Worcestershire home, Hanbury Hall, near | ||||||
| Droitwich. There is no heir to the title. | ||||||
| Sir George was until two years ago chairman of Droitwich County Bench. He resigned after | ||||||
| Worcestershire Quarter Sessions had allowed the appeal of a motorist sentenced by the magis- | ||||||
| trates to four months; imprisonment for dangerous driving involving a fatal accident. In | ||||||
| resigning, he said: "It is no good my trying to be severe at Droitwich if decisions are reversed | ||||||
| at Worcester." | ||||||
| Secondly, from the London "Telegraph" of 18 June 1940:- | ||||||
| 'Sir George Vernon, 74, who shot himself at Hanbury Hall, near Droitwich, Worcestershire, was | ||||||
| buried yesterday at Shrawley Wood, Worcestershire, without service or ceremony. Six years ago | ||||||
| he told a Worcestershire tithe payers' meeting that as a protest against the tithe system he | ||||||
| would not be buried in the local churchyard. He stated that he had given instructions that his | ||||||
| burial was to take place in unconsecrated ground in a wood, and declared: "No parson is going | ||||||
| to read any service over me." | ||||||
| 'The coffin was taken in a farm lorry from Hanbury to Shrawley, a distance of 14 miles. The | ||||||
| grave was near an old summer-house in which Sir George Spent some of his time. Only | ||||||
| employees attended the burial.' | ||||||
| Sir Robert Viner, 1st and only baronet | ||||||
| The following biography of Sir Robert Viner appeared in the October 1970 issue of the Australian | ||||||
| monthly magazine "Parade." Note that the article uses the alternative spelling of Viner's name, | ||||||
| which I have left unaltered. | ||||||
| 'One evening in the 1670s when London's Lord Mayor, Sir Robert Vyner, was entertaining King | ||||||
| Charles II in great state, the Merry Monarch decided that his wine-bibbing host was becoming | ||||||
| somewhat too familiar. Tactfully the King decided to leave the party before Sir Robert | ||||||
| committed some indiscretion that could not be pardoned, even from a Lord Mayor in his cups. | ||||||
| Stealing unobtrusively from the table, Charles made his way to the coach waiting for him in the | ||||||
| courtyard of the Guildhall. He had just reached the coach when a figure reeled out of the gloom | ||||||
| in pursuit, a hand clutched his arm and a hoarse voice roared in his ear: "Sire, you shall stay | ||||||
| and take the other bottle." Recognising the Lord Mayor's flushed features, Charles said good- | ||||||
| humouredly: "He that's drunk is as good as a king." Then he allowed himself to be led back to | ||||||
| the banquet. | ||||||
| 'However, the king had more reason than his customary good nature for being indulgent to the | ||||||
| magnificent Sir Vyner. There was one thing, the matter of some 400,000 golden guineas (about | ||||||
| $10 million in present-day [1970] money) already owed to Vyner by the King and his ministers. | ||||||
| There was also His Majesty's future debts to be provided for, the greedy little hands of his | ||||||
| mistresses to be satisfied and the other pleasures of the court of Whitehall to be financed. On | ||||||
| top of all (though of rather less importance to King Charles) was the fact that even the pay of | ||||||
| England's army and navy sometimes depended on the Vyner coffers. | ||||||
| 'History records many more outwardly splendid and peacock characters than Vyner - great | ||||||
| nobles, politicians, courtesans and poets - in the reign of Charles II. But Sir Robert Vyner was a | ||||||
| unique figure of his age. He was the Rothschild of Stuart England, the financier to a kingdom, | ||||||
| the shrewd man with the moneybags behind the glittering State pageant. Unlike the | ||||||
| Rothschilds, however, Vyner tasted fully the truth of the old adage about the folly of putting | ||||||
| trust in princes. He died bankrupt and ruined after King Charles's Government repudiated its | ||||||
| debts, falling with a crash that shook the credit of the City of London to its foundations. | ||||||
| 'Robert Vyner, the goldsmith's apprentice who was destined for such a meteoric career, was | ||||||
| born in Warwickshire in 1631. The younger son of an ancient family in the county, he was sent | ||||||
| to London as a youth and apprenticed to his goldsmith uncle, Thomas Vyner. Thomas Vyner | ||||||
| thrived greatly during Cromwell's regime when he was Lord Mayor of London [1653-1654], | ||||||
| Controller of the Mint and one of the leading bankers to the Puritan Government. The | ||||||
| Restoration of 1660 brought no change in the Vyner fortunes, for Charles II, arriving penniless | ||||||
| from his European exile, urgently needed money to maintain the new royalist regime. The only | ||||||
| way to satisfy the demands of his ministers, favourites and mistresses was to turn to the | ||||||
| financiers of London. This he proceeded to do on a staggering scale. | ||||||
| 'By now the 30-year-old Robert Vyner had already set up a flourishing business of his own and | ||||||
| was competing in wealth and influence with his famous uncle. In those days "goldsmith" meant | ||||||
| much more than a mere dealer in plate and jewellery, and members of the powerful Goldsmiths | ||||||
| Company were the equivalent of the big trading banks of today. Their vaults were the strong- | ||||||
| rooms where wealthy Londoners deposited their coin, bullion and valuables and to earn interest. | ||||||
| In turn, the goldsmiths financed merchant ventures, trading fleets and the needs of govern- | ||||||
| ment from military expeditions down to the king's personal loans. | ||||||
| 'No other monarch ever borrowed on such a scale as the pleasure-loving Charles II. And no | ||||||
| other London financier rocketed to such power and eminence as Robert Vyner. The momentous | ||||||
| friendship between the monarch and the young goldsmith began within a few months of the | ||||||
| king's return. Preparations for his coronation had begun when it was realised that not a single | ||||||
| item of the ancient royal regalia of England could be found. Crowns, sceptre, orb, gem- | ||||||
| encrusted robes and all the other Crown jewels had either been pawned by Charles I during the | ||||||
| Civil War or broken up and sold by the victorious Parliament. Robert Vyner was commissioned to | ||||||
| make an entirely new set of regalia costing £30,000 - the foundation of the enormous royal | ||||||
| debt that was to pile up over the years. | ||||||
| 'For all his hard-headed pursuit of profits, Vyner was a charming, cultivated man with a zest for | ||||||
| high living and deep drinking that instantly appealed to Charles II. In 1661 he was appointed | ||||||
| royal goldsmith and the king's private banker. He was allotted apartments in Whitehall Palace, a | ||||||
| favour never shown to a London merchant before. In return, Vyner advanced the ministry | ||||||
| £30,000 to pay the army in Ireland, having shrewdly made a deal securing the loan on the Irish | ||||||
| customs and excise duties. However, what really launched Robert Vyner on his golden flood of | ||||||
| fortune was his marriage in June 1665 to a wealthy widow, Lady Mary Hyde, who brought him a | ||||||
| dowry of more than £100,000. | ||||||
| 'Backed by this money and his unrivalled credit as a merchant banker, Vyner plunged into the | ||||||
| business of royal moneylender on a scale that staggered contemporaries. At times he was | ||||||
| almost financing the English Government singe-handed - from lending money to build ships and | ||||||
| raise regiments down to providing jewels for the pretty necks of the king's mistresses. His most | ||||||
| spectacular intervention came during the disasters of the Dutch War in 1667 when the enemy | ||||||
| fleet inflicted the crowning humiliation of burning British shipping in the Thames. With its sailors | ||||||
| mutinous and unpaid, its ships unprepared and its morale at the lowest ebb, the Royal Navy | ||||||
| was almost bankrupt when Vyner came to the rescue. | ||||||
| 'The goldsmith's usual practice was to borrow money from the big London merchants and guild | ||||||
| companies at about six per cent and charge his royal customer at least 10 per cent. Now, | ||||||
| drawing on every resource he could muster, he advanced the Treasury the then vast sum of | ||||||
| £300,000 to meet the expenses of the navy, army and the king's personal debts. Not long | ||||||
| afterwards he offered the even more sensational amount of £800,000 for the right to collect | ||||||
| the poll tax throughout Britain. The corrupt and inefficient royal officials had estimated that the | ||||||
| tax would not produce much more than half that amount if they collected it themselves. | ||||||
| 'Vyner's moneylending and tax-farming coups were calculated risks on a grand scale. But, as | ||||||
| long as his credit was unshaken and the Government honoured its obligations, the profits were | ||||||
| dazzling. The grateful monarch created his financier a baronet. Sir Robert Vyner was now his | ||||||
| intimate friend, confidant and often his boon drinking crony. Vyner's counting house having | ||||||
| been burned down in the Great Fire in 1666, Charles allowed his friend to store his hoard of | ||||||
| coin, bullion, plate and jewels in one of the towers of Windsor Castle. | ||||||
| 'When Sir Robert Vyner became Lord Mayor in 1674 he was at the peak of his fortunes as one | ||||||
| of the richest and most powerful citizen London had ever known. He had an enormous, | ||||||
| rambling town house in Lombardy Street, where he lived in luxury that princes would have | ||||||
| envied, as well as suites of apartments in Whitehall Palace and Windsor Castle. Outside London | ||||||
| in Middlesex was his magnificent country mansion of Swakeleys. "No man in England lived in | ||||||
| greater plenty," Samuel Pepys recoded in his diary after inspecting the sumptuous furniture, | ||||||
| paintings and gardens. Londoners had never seen such spectacular lord mayoral feasts, | ||||||
| processions and pageants as those staged during Sir Robert Vyner's regime at the Guildhall. | ||||||
| King Charles was a frequent banquet guest. The food and wine, he explained genially, were | ||||||
| better and more plentiful than he could afford at Whitehall - especially the wine from the Vyner | ||||||
| cellars. | ||||||
| 'At this time it was calculated that the total royal debt to the City of London had reached the | ||||||
| colossal figure of about £1 million sterling or something like $20 million in modern [1970] times. | ||||||
| About half of it was owed to Sir Robert Vyner, who in turn had borrowed huge sums from his | ||||||
| merchants and goldsmiths to satisfy the king's insatiable demands. The Court swallowed money | ||||||
| like a bottomless pit. Nothing, it seemed, could keep pace with Charles's spending. For several | ||||||
| years there were sinister signs of the coming crash that was to shake the credit of the city to | ||||||
| its foundations. Interest on the royal loans lagged far in arrears or remained unpaid altogether. | ||||||
| Vyner had a struggle to meet his commitments to his own worried band of creditors. | ||||||
| 'Then came the final thunderbolt. The king's ministers calmly announced the repudiation of | ||||||
| every penny of the debt in exchange for a system of annuities for His Majesty's creditors. | ||||||
| Vyner's annuity was fixed at £26,000, an amount that made it utterly impossible for him to | ||||||
| meet his debts let alone maintain his princely style of living. In March 1683 the former dictator | ||||||
| of the London money market was forced to call a meeting of his creditors and beg them to | ||||||
| enter into some arrangement. However, there were many jealous rivals glad to see the "lord | ||||||
| of Lombard Street" dragged down. A year later Vyner was declared bankrupt and much of his | ||||||
| estate was broken up and sold. | ||||||
| 'Though owning only a shadow of his former fortune, Vyner remained on friendly terms with the | ||||||
| new king, James II, who succeeded his spendthrift brother Charles in 1685. It was among the | ||||||
| royal household at Windsor Castle that the magnificent and fallen Sir Robert Vyner died on | ||||||
| September 2, 1688.' | ||||||
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