| BARONETAGE | ||||||
| Last updated 02/07/2025 | ||||||
| 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 | ||||||
| WAECHTER of Ramanest,Surrey | ||||||
| 13 Feb 1911 | UK | 1 | Harry Waechter | 6 Jun 1871 | 20 May 1929 | 57 |
| 20 May 1929 | 2 | Harry Leonard d'Arcy Waechter | 22 May 1912 | 1985 | 73 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1985 | For further information on this baronet, see | |||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| WAKE of Clevedon,Somerset | ||||||
| 5 Dec 1621 | E | 1 | Baldwin Wake | c 1627 | ||
| c 1627 | 2 | John Wake | c 1663 | |||
| c 1663 | 3 | William Wake | Jan 1698 | |||
| Jan 1698 | 4 | John Wake | 1660 | 1714 | 54 | |
| 1714 | 5 | Baldwin Wake | 1748 | |||
| 1748 | 6 | Charles Wake-Jones | Jan 1755 | |||
| Jan 1755 | 7 | William Wake | Sep 1765 | |||
| Sep 1765 | 8 | William Wake | 1742 | 29 Oct 1785 | 43 | |
| MP for Bedford 1774-1784 | ||||||
| 29 Oct 1785 | 9 | William Wake | 5 Apr 1768 | 28 Jan 1846 | 77 | |
| 28 Jan 1846 | 10 | Charles Wake | 21 Nov 1791 | 23 Sep 1864 | 72 | |
| 23 Sep 1864 | 11 | William Wake | 1823 | 13 Apr 1865 | 41 | |
| 13 Apr 1865 | 12 | Hereward Wake | 6 Jul 1852 | 5 Jan 1916 | 63 | |
| 5 Jan 1916 | 13 | Hereward Wake | 11 Feb 1876 | 4 Aug 1963 | 87 | |
| 4 Aug 1963 | 14 | Hereward Wake | 7 Oct 1916 | 11 Dec 2017 | 101 | |
| 11 Dec 2017 | 15 | Hereward Charles Wake | 22 Nov 1952 | |||
| WAKEFIELD of Saltwood,Kent | ||||||
| 16 Feb 1917 | UK | 1 | Charles Cheers Wakefield | 12 Dec 1859 | 15 Jan 1941 | 81 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Wakefield (qv) in 1930 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1941 | ||||||
| WAKEFIELD of Kendal,Westmorland | ||||||
| 10 Mar 1962 | UK | 1 | Edward Birkbeck Wakefield | 24 Jul 1903 | 14 Jan 1969 | 65 |
| MP for Derbyshire West 1950-1962 | ||||||
| 14 Jan 1969 | 2 | Edward Humphrey Tyrrell Wakefield | 11 Jul 1936 | |||
| WAKELEY of Liss,Hants | ||||||
| 30 Jun 1952 | UK | 1 | Sir Cecil Pembry Grey Wakeley | 5 May 1892 | 5 Jun 1979 | 87 |
| 5 Jun 1979 | 2 | John Cecil Nicholson Wakeley | 27 Aug 1926 | 10 Mar 2012 | 85 | |
| 10 Mar 2012 | 3 | Nicholas Jeremy Wakeley | 17 Oct 1957 | |||
| WAKEMAN of Beckford,Gloucs | ||||||
| 15 Feb 1661 | E | 1 | George Wakeman | c 1690 | ||
| to | Patent never sealed - Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1690 | ||||||
| WAKEMAN of Perdiswell Hall,Worcs | ||||||
| 20 Feb 1828 | UK | 1 | Henry Wakeman | 27 Feb 1753 | 23 Apr 1831 | 78 |
| 23 Apr 1831 | 2 | Offley Penbury Wakeman | 17 May 1799 | 21 Sep 1858 | 59 | |
| 21 Sep 1858 | 3 | Offley Wakeman | 15 Nov 1850 | 9 Feb 1929 | 78 | |
| 9 Feb 1929 | 4 | Offley Wakeman | 19 Oct 1887 | 17 Sep 1975 | 87 | |
| 17 Sep 1975 | 5 | Offley David Wakeman | 6 Mar 1922 | 24 Feb 1991 | 68 | |
| 24 Feb 1991 | 6 | Edward Offley Bertram Wakeman | 31 Jul 1934 | 25 Nov 2008 | 74 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 25 Nov 2008 | ||||||
| WALDEGRAVE of Hever Castle,Kent | ||||||
| 1 Aug 1643 | E | 1 | Edward Waldegrave | c 1568 | c 1650 | |
| c 1650 | 2 | Henry Waldegrave | 1598 | 10 Oct 1658 | 60 | |
| 10 Oct 1658 | 3 | Charles Waldegrave | c 1684 | |||
| c 1684 | 4 | Henry Waldegrave | 1661 | 24 Jan 1689 | 37 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Waldegrave (qv) in 1686 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| WALDIE-GRIFFITH | ||||||
| of Munster Grillach,Londonderry | ||||||
| 20 Apr 1858 | UK | 1 | Richard John Griffith | 20 Sep 1784 | 22 Sep 1878 | 94 |
| 22 Sep 1878 | 2 | George Richard Waldie-Griffith | 31 Jan 1820 | 8 May 1889 | 69 | |
| 8 May 1889 | 3 | Richard John Waldie-Griffith | 24 Apr 1850 | 24 Jul 1933 | 83 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 24 Jul 1933 | ||||||
| WALEY-COHEN of Honymead,Somerset | ||||||
| 11 Dec 1961 | UK | 1 | Bernard Nathaniel Waley-Cohen | 29 May 1914 | 3 Jul 1991 | 77 |
| 3 Jul 1991 | 2 | Stephen Harry Waley-Cohen | 22 Jun 1946 | |||
| WALKER of Bushey Hall,Herts | ||||||
| 28 Jan 1680 | E | 1 | George Walker | c 1643 | 1690 | |
| 1690 | 2 | Walter Walker | by 1703 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| by 1703 | ||||||
| WALKER of Castleton,Monmouth | ||||||
| 28 Mar 1835 | UK | See "Forestier-Walker" | ||||
| WALKER of Oakley House,Suffolk | ||||||
| 19 Jul 1856 | UK | 1 | Baldwin Wake Walker | 6 Jan 1802 | 12 Feb 1876 | 74 |
| 12 Feb 1876 | 2 | Baldwin Wake Walker | 24 Sep 1846 | 28 Jun 1905 | 58 | |
| 28 Jun 1905 | 3 | Francis Elliot Walker | 9 Mar 1851 | 27 Jul 1928 | 77 | |
| 27 Jul 1928 | 4 | Baldwin Patrick Walker | 10 Sep 1924 | 6 Jun 2005 | 80 | |
| 6 Jun 2005 | 5 | Christopher Robert Baldwin Walker | 25 Oct 1969 | |||
| WALKER of Sand Hutton,Yorks | ||||||
| and Beachampton,Bucks | ||||||
| 9 Dec 1868 | UK | 1 | James Walker | 30 May 1803 | 8 Oct 1883 | 80 |
| 8 Oct 1883 | 2 | James Robert Walker | 19 Oct 1829 | 12 Jun 1899 | 69 | |
| MP for Beverley 1860-1865 | ||||||
| 12 Jun 1899 | 3 | James Heron Walker | 23 May 1865 | 25 Nov 1900 | 35 | |
| 25 Nov 1900 | 4 | Robert James Milo Walker | 19 Mar 1890 | 11 Feb 1930 | 39 | |
| 11 Feb 1930 | 5 | James Heron Walker | 7 Apr 1914 | 9 Jan 2003 | 88 | |
| 9 Jan 2003 | 6 | Victor Stewart Heron Walker | 8 Oct 1942 | |||
| WALKER of Pembroke House,Dublin | ||||||
| 12 Jul 1906 | UK | 1 | Samuel Walker | 19 Jun 1832 | 13 Aug 1911 | 79 |
| MP for co.Londonderry 1884-1885. Solicitor- | ||||||
| General [I] 1883-1885. Attorney-General [I] | ||||||
| 1885. Lord Chancellor [I] 1892-1895. | ||||||
| PC [I] 1885 | ||||||
| 13 Aug 1911 | 2 | Alexander Arthur Walker | 21 Jan 1857 | 24 Nov 1932 | 75 | |
| 24 Nov 1932 | 3 | Cecil Edward Walker | 6 Aug 1882 | 2 Jul 1964 | 81 | |
| 2 Jul 1964 | 4 | Hugh Ronald Walker | 13 Dec 1925 | 10 Jan 2004 | 78 | |
| 10 Jan 2004 | 5 | Robert Cecil Walker | 26 Sep 1974 | 28 Feb 2006 | 31 | |
| 28 Feb 2006 | 6 | Roy Edward Walker | 10 Aug 1977 | |||
| WALKER-OKEOVER of Gateacre,Lancs | ||||||
| and Osmaston Manor,Derby | ||||||
| 12 Feb 1886 | UK | 1 | Andrew Barclay Walker | 15 Dec 1824 | 27 Feb 1893 | 68 |
| 27 Feb 1893 | 2 | Peter Carlaw Walker | 7 May 1854 | 15 Oct 1915 | 61 | |
| 15 Oct 1915 | 3 | Ian Peter Andrew Munro Walker (Walker-Okeover | ||||
| from 20 Aug 1956) | 30 Nov 1902 | 20 Feb 1982 | 79 | |||
| Lord Lieutenant Derbyshire 1951-1977 | ||||||
| 20 Feb 1982 | 4 | Peter Ralph Leopold Walker-Okeover | 11 Jul 1947 | 6 Nov 2003 | 56 | |
| 6 Nov 2003 | 5 | Andrew Peter Monro Walker-Okeover | 22 May 1978 | |||
| WALKER-SMITH of Broxbourne,Herts | ||||||
| 18 Jul 1960 | UK | 1 | Derek Colclough Walker-Smith,later [1983] | |||
| Baron Broxbourne [L] | 13 Apr 1910 | 22 Jan 1992 | 81 | |||
| 22 Jan 1992 | 2 | John Jonah Walker-Smith | 6 Sep 1939 | 9 Mar 2024 | 84 | |
| 9 Mar 2024 | 3 | Daniel Derek Walker-Smith | 26 Mar 1980 | |||
| WALLACE of Craigie Wallace,Ayr | ||||||
| c 1638 | NS | 1 | Hugh Wallace | c 1600 | c 1660 | |
| to | He resigned the baronetcy in 1659 | |||||
| 1659 | ||||||
| WALLACE of Craigie,Ayr | ||||||
| 8 Mar 1670 | NS | 1 | Thomas Wallace | 26 Mar 1680 | ||
| 26 Mar 1680 | 2 | William Wallace | by 1665 | 25 Jan 1700 | ||
| Jan 1700 | 3 | Thomas Wallace | 27 Jan 1665 | 21 Jan 1728 | 62 | |
| 21 Jan 1728 | 4 | Thomas Wallace | Feb 1702 | 18 Aug 1770 | 68 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 18 Aug 1770 | ||||||
| WALLACE of Hertford House,London | ||||||
| 24 Nov 1871 | UK | 1 | Richard Wallace | 21 Jun 1818 | 20 Jul 1890 | 72 |
| to | MP for Lisburne 1873-1885 | |||||
| 20 Jul 1890 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| For further information on this baronet, see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of this page. | ||||||
| WALLACE of Terreglestown,Kircudbright | ||||||
| 25 Jan 1922 | UK | 1 | Sir Matthew Gemmill Wallace | 24 Oct 1854 | 5 Feb 1940 | 85 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 5 Feb 1940 | ||||||
| WALLACE of Studham,Beds | ||||||
| 8 Jun 1937 | UK | 1 | Sir Cuthbert Sidney Wallace | 20 Jun 1867 | 24 May 1944 | 76 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 24 May 1944 | ||||||
| WALLER of Newport,co.Tipperary | ||||||
| 1 Jun 1780 | I | 1 | Robert Waller | c 1736 | 27 Jul 1780 | |
| Jul 1780 | 2 | Robert Waller | c 1768 | 1826 | ||
| 1826 | 3 | Charles Townshend Waller | c 1770 | 1 Jun 1830 | ||
| 1 Jun 1830 | 4 | Edmund Waller | Jul 1797 | 9 Mar 1851 | 53 | |
| 9 Mar 1851 | 5 | Edmund Arthur Waller | 16 Mar 1846 | 22 Oct 1888 | 42 | |
| 22 Oct 1888 | 6 | Charles Waller | 8 Jun 1835 | 25 May 1912 | 76 | |
| 25 May 1912 | 7 | William Edgar Waller | 22 Nov 1863 | 16 Apr 1943 | 79 | |
| 16 Apr 1943 | 8 | Roland Edgar Waller | 11 Jan 1892 | 20 May 1958 | 66 | |
| 20 May 1958 | 9 | Robert William Waller | 16 Jun 1934 | 12 Dec 2000 | 66 | |
| 12 Dec 2000 | 10 | John Michael Waller | 14 May 1962 | |||
| WALLER of Goffies Park,Cornwall | ||||||
| 30 May 1815 | UK | 1 | Jonathan Wathen Waller | 6 Oct 1769 | 1 Jan 1853 | 83 |
| 1 Jan 1853 | 2 | Thomas Wathen Waller | 24 Jun 1805 | 29 Jan 1892 | 86 | |
| 29 Jan 1892 | 3 | George Henry Waller | 2 Sep 1837 | 9 Feb 1892 | 54 | |
| 9 Feb 1892 | 4 | Francis Ernest Waller | 11 Jun 1880 | 25 Oct 1914 | 34 | |
| 25 Oct 1914 | 5 | Wathen Arthur Waller | 6 Oct 1881 | 26 Apr 1947 | 65 | |
| 26 Apr 1947 | 6 | Edmund Waller | 24 Oct 1871 | 7 Aug 1954 | 82 | |
| 7 Aug 1954 | 7 | John Stanier Waller | 27 Jul 1917 | 22 Jan 1995 | 77 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 22 Jan 1995 | ||||||
| WALROND of Bradfield,Devon | ||||||
| 24 Feb 1876 | UK | 1 | John Walrond Walrond | 1 Mar 1818 | 23 Apr 1889 | 71 |
| MP for Tiverton 1865-1868 | ||||||
| 23 Apr 1889 | 2 | William Hood Walrond | 26 Feb 1849 | 17 May 1925 | 76 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron Waleran | ||||||
| (qv) in 1905 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction in 1966 | ||||||
| WALSH of Little Ireland,Waterford | ||||||
| Jul 1645 | I | 1 | James Walsh | c 1580 | c 1650 | |
| c 1650 | 2 | Robert Walsh | c 1690 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1690 | ||||||
| WALSH of Dublin | ||||||
| 24 Feb 1775 | I | See "Johnson-Walsh" | ||||
| WALSH of Aramthwaite,Cumberland | ||||||
| 14 Jun 1804 | UK | 1 | John Benn-Walsh | 10 Feb 1759 | 7 Jun 1825 | 66 |
| 7 Jun 1825 | 2 | John Benn Walsh | 9 Dec 1798 | 3 Apr 1881 | 82 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Ormathwaite (qv) in 1868 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until its | ||||||
| extinction in 1984 | ||||||
| WALSHAM of Knill Court,Herts | ||||||
| 30 Sep 1831 | UK | 1 | John James Walsham | 6 Jun 1805 | 10 Aug 1874 | 69 |
| 10 Aug 1874 | 2 | John Walsham | 29 Oct 1830 | 10 Dec 1905 | 75 | |
| 10 Dec 1905 | 3 | John Scarlett Walsham | 15 Oct 1869 | 14 Feb 1940 | 70 | |
| 14 Feb 1940 | 4 | John Scarlett Warren Walsham | 29 Nov 1910 | 22 Oct 1992 | 81 | |
| 22 Oct 1992 | 5 | Timothy John Walsham | 26 Apr 1939 | 14 Jul 2011 | 72 | |
| 14 Jul 2011 | 6 | Gerald Percy Robert Walsham | 7 Feb 1939 | 29 Sep 2019 | 80 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 29 Sep 2019 | ||||||
| WALTER of Saresden,Oxon | ||||||
| 16 Aug 1641 | E | 1 | William Walter | c 1604 | 23 Mar 1675 | |
| MP for Weobly 1628-1629 | ||||||
| 23 Mar 1675 | 2 | William Walter | c 1635 | 5 Mar 1694 | ||
| 5 Mar 1694 | 3 | John Walter | c 1674 | 11 Jun 1722 | ||
| MP for Appleby 1694-1695 and 1697-1701 | ||||||
| and Oxford 1706-1722 | ||||||
| 11 Jun 1722 | 4 | Robert Walter | 29 Aug 1680 | 20 Nov 1731 | 51 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 20 Nov 1731 | ||||||
| WALTON of Rushpool,Yorks | ||||||
| 11 Jul 1910 | UK | 1 | Joseph Walton | 19 Mar 1849 | 8 Feb 1923 | 73 |
| to | MP for Barnsley 1897-1922 | |||||
| 8 Feb 1923 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| WANDESFORD of Kirklington,Yorks | ||||||
| 5 Aug 1662 | E | 1 | Christopher Wandesford | 14 Feb 1628 | Feb 1687 | 59 |
| Feb 1687 | 2 | Christopher Wandesford | 19 Aug 1656 | 15 Sep 1707 | 51 | |
| He was subsequently created Viscount | ||||||
| Castlecomer (qv) in 1707 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until its | ||||||
| extinction in 1784 | ||||||
| WARBURTON of Arley,Cheshire | ||||||
| 27 Jun 1660 | E | 1 | George Warburton | c 1622 | 18 May 1676 | |
| 18 May 1676 | 2 | Peter Warburton | c 1698 | |||
| c 1698 | 3 | George Warburton | 1 Jun 1675 | 23 Jun 1743 | 68 | |
| MP for Cheshire 1702-1705 and 1710-1722 | ||||||
| 23 Jun 1743 | 4 | Peter Warburton | c 1708 | 18 Nov 1774 | ||
| 18 Nov 1774 | 5 | Peter Warburton | 27 Oct 1754 | 14 May 1813 | 58 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 14 May 1813 | ||||||
| WARD of Bexley,Kent | ||||||
| 19 Dec 1660 | E | 1 | Edward Ward | c 1618 | 2 Sep 1684 | |
| Sep 1684 | 2 | Edward Ward | c 1641 | 18 Mar 1686 | ||
| Mar 1686 | 3 | Thomas Ward | 20 Jan 1692 | |||
| Jan 1692 | 4 | Edward Ward | 2 Aug 1719 | |||
| Aug 1719 | 5 | Edward Ward | 2 Mar 1737 | |||
| 2 Mar 1737 | 6 | Edward Ward | 1721 | 7 Apr 1742 | 20 | |
| 7 Apr 1742 | 7 | Randall Ward | 8 May 1762 | |||
| 8 May 1762 | 8 | Edward Ward | c 1770 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1770 | ||||||
| WARD of Killagh,Down | ||||||
| 9 Dec 1682 | I | 1 | Robert Ward | c 1610 | 1691 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1691 | ||||||
| WARD of Wellington,New Zealand | ||||||
| 20 Jun 1911 | UK | 1 | Sir Joseph George Ward | 26 Apr 1856 | 8 Jul 1930 | 74 |
| Prime Minister of New Zealand 1906-1912 | ||||||
| and 1928-1930. PC 1907 | ||||||
| 8 Jul 1930 | 2 | Cyril Rupert Joseph Ward | 22 Sep 1884 | 10 Nov 1940 | 56 | |
| 10 Nov 1940 | 3 | Joseph George Davidson Ward | 17 Sep 1909 | 4 Aug 1970 | 60 | |
| 4 Aug 1970 | 4 | Joseph James Laffey Ward | 11 Nov 1946 | 17 Dec 2021 | 75 | |
| 17 Dec 2021 | 5 | Joseph James Martin Ward | 20 Feb 1971 | |||
| WARD of Wilbraham Place,Chelsea | ||||||
| 20 Jan 1914 | UK | 1 | Sir Edward Willis Duncan Ward | 17 Dec 1853 | 11 Sep 1928 | 74 |
| 11 Sep 1928 | 2 | Edward Simons Ward | 11 Jul 1882 | 21 Jul 1930 | 48 | |
| For further information on the death of this | ||||||
| baronet,see the note at the foot of the page | ||||||
| containing details of the peerage of Dufferin & Ava | ||||||
| 21 Jul 1930 | 3 | Melvill Willis Ward | 25 May 1885 | Sep 1973 | 88 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Sep 1973 | ||||||
| WARD of Blyth,Northumberland | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1929 | UK | 1 | Albert Lambert Ward | 7 Nov 1875 | 21 Oct 1956 | 80 |
| to | MP for Hull NW 1918-1945 | |||||
| 21 Oct 1956 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| WARDE of Barham Court,Kent | ||||||
| 11 Sep 1919 | UK | 1 | Charles Edward Warde | 20 Dec 1845 | 12 Apr 1937 | 91 |
| to | MP for Medway 1892-1918 | |||||
| 12 Apr 1937 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| WARDLAW of Pitreavie,Fife | ||||||
| 5 Mar 1631 | NS | 1 | Henry Wardlaw | 1565 | 5 Apr 1637 | 71 |
| 5 Apr 1637 | 2 | Henry Wardlaw | 2 Mar 1653 | |||
| 2 Mar 1653 | 3 | Henry Wardlaw | 24 Mar 1618 | by May 1654 | ||
| by May 1654 | 4 | Henry Wardlaw | 4 Mar 1680 | |||
| 4 Mar 1680 | 5 | Henry Wardlaw | 19 Oct 1648 | c May 1683 | 34 | |
| c May 1683 | 6 | Henry Wardlaw | 1674 | by Oct 1709 | ||
| by Oct 1709 | 7 | Henry Wardlaw | 1705 | c 1720 | ||
| c 1720 | 8 | George Wardlaw | 1675 | c 1730 | ||
| c 1730 | 9 | Henry Wardlaw | 1739 | |||
| 1739 | 10 | David Wardlaw | 1678 | c 1750 | ||
| c 1750 | 11 | Henry Wardlaw | Feb 1782 | |||
| Feb 1782 | 12 | David Wardlaw | 13 Apr 1793 | |||
| 13 Apr 1793 | 13 | John Wardlaw | 1 Jan 1823 | |||
| 1 Jan 1823 | 14 | William Wardlaw | 1794 | c 1830 | ||
| c 1830 | 15 | Alexander Wardlaw | c 1790 | 1833 | ||
| 1833 | 16 | William Wardlaw | c 1791 | 23 Dec 1863 | ||
| 23 Dec 1863 | 17 | Archibald Wardlaw | 23 Jan 1793 | 29 Jan 1874 | 80 | |
| 29 Jan 1874 | 18 | Henry Wardlaw | 22 Mar 1822 | 13 Apr 1897 | 75 | |
| 13 Apr 1897 | 19 | Henry Wardlaw | 8 Feb 1867 | 4 Feb 1954 | 86 | |
| 4 Feb 1954 | 20 | Henry Wardlaw | 31 Aug 1894 | 19 Apr 1983 | 88 | |
| 19 Apr 1983 | 21 | Henry John Wardlaw | 30 Nov 1930 | 8 May 2005 | 74 | |
| 8 May 2005 | 22 | Henry Justin Wardlaw | 10 Aug 1963 | |||
| WARING of Foots Cray Place,Kent | ||||||
| 31 May 1919 | UK | 1 | Samuel James Waring | 19 Apr 1860 | 9 Jan 1940 | 79 |
| He was subsequently created Baron Waring | ||||||
| (qv) in 1922 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction in 1940 | ||||||
| WARING of St Bartholomews,London | ||||||
| 29 Jan 1935 | UK | 1 | Sir Holburt Jacob Waring | 3 Oct 1866 | 10 Feb 1953 | 86 |
| 10 Feb 1953 | 2 | Alfred Harold Waring | 14 Feb 1902 | 16 Mar 1981 | 79 | |
| 16 Mar 1981 | 3 | Alfred Holburt Waring | 2 Aug 1933 | 19 Jul 2021 | 87 | |
| 19 Jul 2021 | 4 | Michael Holburt Waring | 3 Jan 1964 | |||
| WARMINGTON of Pembridge Gardens | ||||||
| 28 Jul 1908 | UK | 1 | Cornelius Marshall Warmington | 1 Jun 1842 | 12 Dec 1908 | 66 |
| MP for Monmouthshire West 1885-1895 | ||||||
| 12 Dec 1908 | 2 | Marshall Denham Warmington | 3 Nov 1871 | 2 Aug 1935 | 63 | |
| 2 Aug 1935 | 3 | Marshall George Clitheroe Warmington | 26 May 1910 | 5 Feb 1995 | 84 | |
| 5 Feb 1995 | 4 | Marshall Denham Malcolm Warmington | 5 Jan 1934 | 23 Nov 1996 | 62 | |
| 23 Nov 1996 | 5 | David Marshall Warmington | 14 Feb 1944 | 13 Sep 2005 | 61 | |
| 13 Sep 2005 | 6 | Rupert Marshall Warmington | 17 Jun 1969 | |||
| WARNER of Parham,Suffolk | ||||||
| 16 Jul 1660 | E | 1 | John Warner | c 1640 | 21 Mar 1705 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 21 Mar 1705 | ||||||
| WARNER of Brettenham Park,Suffolk | ||||||
| 9 Jul 1910 | UK | 1 | Thomas Courtenay Theydon Warner | 19 Jul 1857 | 15 Dec 1934 | 77 |
| MP for Somerset North 1892-1895 and | ||||||
| Lichfield 1896-1923. Lord Lieutenant | ||||||
| Suffolk 1910-1934 | ||||||
| 15 Dec 1934 | 2 | Edward Courtenay Thomas Warner | 4 Jan 1886 | 2 Oct 1955 | 69 | |
| 2 Oct 1955 | 3 | Edward Courtenay Henry Warner | 3 Aug 1922 | 8 Apr 2011 | 88 | |
| 8 Apr 2011 | 4 | Philip Courtenay Thomas Warner | 3 Apr 1951 | |||
| WARRE of Hastercombe,Somerset | ||||||
| 2 Jun 1673 | E | 1 | Francis Warre | c 1659 | 1 Dec 1718 | |
| to | MP for Bridgwater 1685-1695 | |||||
| 1 Dec 1718 | and 1699-1700 and Taunton 1701-1715 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| WARREN of Little Marlow,Bucks | ||||||
| 1 Jun 1775 | GB | 1 | John Borlase Warren | 2 Sep 1753 | 27 Feb 1822 | 68 |
| to | MP for Great Marlow 1774-1784, Nottingham | |||||
| 27 Feb 1822 | 1797-1800 and Buckingham 1807 | |||||
| PC 1802 | ||||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| WARREN of Warren's Court,co.Cork | ||||||
| 7 Jul 1784 | I | 1 | Robert Warren | 20 Aug 1723 | 1811 | 87 |
| 1811 | 2 | Augustus Louis Carre Warren | 1754 | 30 Jan 1821 | 66 | |
| 30 Jan 1821 | 3 | Augustus Warren | 17 May 1791 | 28 Apr 1863 | 71 | |
| 28 Apr 1863 | 4 | John Borlase Warren | 13 Sep 1800 | 4 Dec 1863 | 63 | |
| 4 Dec 1863 | 5 | Augustus Riversdale Warren | 24 Aug 1833 | 1 Apr 1914 | 80 | |
| 1 Apr 1914 | 6 | Augustus Riversdale John Blennerhasset | ||||
| Warren | 11 Mar 1865 | 28 Aug 1914 | 49 | |||
| 28 Aug 1914 | 7 | Augustus George Digby Warren | 23 Oct 1898 | 20 Jan 1958 | 59 | |
| 20 Jan 1958 | 8 | Thomas Richard Pennefather Warren | 12 Sep 1885 | 8 Dec 1961 | 76 | |
| 8 Dec 1961 | 9 | Brian Charles Pennefather Warren | 4 Jun 1923 | 24 Jun 2006 | 83 | |
| to | Dormant on his death | |||||
| 24 Jun 2006 | ||||||
| WARRENDER of Lochend,East Lothian | ||||||
| 2 Jun 1715 | GB | 1 | George Warrender | c 1658 | 4 Mar 1722 | |
| MP for Edinburgh 1715-1722 | ||||||
| 4 Mar 1722 | 2 | John Warrender | c 1686 | 13 Jan 1772 | ||
| 13 Jan 1772 | 3 | Patrick Warrender | 7 Mar 1731 | 14 Jun 1799 | 68 | |
| MP for Haddington Burghs 1768-1774 | ||||||
| 14 Jun 1799 | 4 | George Warrender | 5 Dec 1782 | 21 Feb 1849 | 66 | |
| MP for Haddington Burghs 1807-1812, | ||||||
| Truro 1812-1818, Sandwich 1818-1826, | ||||||
| Westbury 1826-1830 and Honiton 1830-1832 | ||||||
| 21 Feb 1849 | 5 | John Warrender | Mar 1786 | 21 Jan 1867 | 80 | |
| 21 Jan 1867 | 6 | George Warrender | 7 Oct 1825 | 13 Jun 1901 | 75 | |
| 13 Jun 1901 | 7 | George John Scott Warrender | 31 Jul 1860 | 8 Jan 1917 | 56 | |
| 8 Jan 1917 | 8 | Victor Alexander George Anthony | ||||
| Warrender | 23 Jun 1899 | 14 Jan 1993 | 93 | |||
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Bruntisfield (qv) in 1942 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| WASTENEYS of Headon,Notts | ||||||
| 18 Dec 1622 | E | 1 | Hardolph Wasteneys | May 1649 | ||
| May 1649 | 2 | Hardolph Wasteneys | c 1612 | 1673 | ||
| 1673 | 3 | Edmund Wasteneys | 12 Mar 1678 | |||
| 12 Mar 1678 | 4 | Hardolph Wasteneys | 19 Feb 1674 | 17 Dec 1742 | 68 | |
| to | MP for East Retford 1706-1708 | |||||
| 17 Dec 1742 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| For information on a claim made to this baronetcy | ||||||
| in 1887,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| WATERLOW of Fairseat,Kent and | ||||||
| Highgate,Middlesex | ||||||
| 4 Aug 1873 | UK | 1 | Sir Sydney Hedley Waterlow | 1 Nov 1822 | 3 Aug 1906 | 83 |
| MP for Dumfries 1868-1869, Maidstone | ||||||
| 1874-1880 and Gravesend 1880-1885 | ||||||
| 3 Aug 1906 | 2 | Philip Hickson Waterlow | 30 Oct 1847 | 20 Sep 1931 | 83 | |
| 20 Sep 1931 | 3 | Edgar Lutwyche Waterlow | 15 Jun 1870 | 12 Jan 1954 | 83 | |
| 12 Jan 1954 | 4 | Philip Alexander Waterlow | 17 Mar 1897 | 18 Jul 1973 | 76 | |
| 18 Jul 1973 | 5 | Christopher Rupert Waterlow | 12 Aug 1959 | |||
| WATERLOW of Harrow Weald,Middlesex | ||||||
| 28 Oct 1930 | UK | 1 | Sir William Alfred Waterlow | 23 Apr 1871 | 6 Jul 1931 | 60 |
| For information on his involvement in the "Great | ||||||
| Portuguese Banknote Scandal" of 1925, see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 6 Jul 1931 | 2 | William James Waterlow | 20 Mar 1905 | 20 Nov 1969 | 64 | |
| 20 Nov 1969 | 3 | Thomas Gordon Waterlow | 2 Jan 1911 | 8 Aug 1982 | 71 | |
| 8 Aug 1982 | 4 | James Gerard Waterlow | 3 Sep 1939 | 8 Oct 2013 | 74 | |
| 8 Oct 2013 | 5 | Thomas James Waterlow | 20 Mar 1970 | |||
| WATKIN of Rose Hill,Cheshire | ||||||
| 12 May 1880 | UK | 1 | Sir Edward William Watkin | 26 Sep 1819 | 14 Apr 1901 | 81 |
| MP for Great Yarmouth 1857-1858, | ||||||
| Stockport 1864-1868 and Hythe 1874-1895 | ||||||
| 14 Apr 1901 | 2 | Alfred Mellor Watkin | 19 Aug 1846 | 30 Nov 1914 | 68 | |
| to | MP for Grimsby 1877-1880 | |||||
| 30 Nov 1914 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| WATSON of Rockingham Castle,Northants | ||||||
| 23 Jun 1621 | E | 1 | Lewis Watson | 14 Jul 1584 | 5 Jan 1653 | 68 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Rockingham (qv) in 1645 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until its | ||||||
| extinction in 1782 | ||||||
| WATSON of Fulmer,Bucks | ||||||
| 21 Mar 1760 | GB | 1 | Charles Watson | 9 Jun 1751 | 26 Aug 1844 | 93 |
| 26 Aug 1844 | 2 | Charles Wager Watson | 4 Jan 1800 | 30 Dec 1852 | 52 | |
| 30 Dec 1852 | 3 | Charles Watson (Watson-Copley from 12 Mar 1887) | 6 Apr 1828 | 6 Apr 1888 | 60 | |
| 6 Apr 1888 | 4 | Walter Joseph Watson | 27 Jun 1836 | 30 Sep 1904 | 68 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 30 Sep 1904 | ||||||
| WATSON of East Sheen,Surrey | ||||||
| 5 Dec 1803 | UK | See "Kay" | ||||
| WATSON of Henrietta Street | ||||||
| 27 Jun 1866 | UK | 1 | Thomas Watson | 7 Mar 1792 | 12 Dec 1882 | 90 |
| 12 Dec 1882 | 2 | Arthur Townley Watson | 13 Sep 1830 | 15 Mar 1907 | 76 | |
| 15 Mar 1907 | 3 | Charles Rushworth Watson | 21 Sep 1865 | 27 Mar 1922 | 56 | |
| 27 Mar 1922 | 4 | Thomas Aubrey Watson | 7 Nov 1911 | 10 Jan 1941 | 29 | |
| 10 Jan 1941 | 5 | James Andrew Watson | 30 Dec 1937 | 21 Jun 2025 | 87 | |
| 21 Jun 2025 | 6 | Roland Victor Watson | 4 Mar 1966 | |||
| WATSON of Earnock,Lanark | ||||||
| 15 Jul 1895 | UK | 1 | John Watson | 9 Jul 1819 | 26 Sep 1898 | 79 |
| 26 Sep 1898 | 2 | John Watson | 31 Aug 1860 | 13 Sep 1903 | 43 | |
| 13 Sep 1903 | 3 | John Watson | 24 Feb 1898 | 23 Mar 1918 | 20 | |
| 23 Mar 1918 | 4 | Derrick William Inglefield Watson (Inglefield- | ||||
| Watson from 1945) | 7 Oct 1901 | 27 Jan 1987 | 85 | |||
| 27 Jan 1987 | 5 | John Forbes Inglefield-Watson | 16 May 1926 | 7 Feb 2007 | 80 | |
| 7 Feb 2007 | 6 | Simon Conran Hamilton Watson | 11 Aug 1939 | 11 Feb 2016 | 76 | |
| 11 Feb 2016 | 7 | Julian Frank Somerled Watson | 12 Nov 1931 | 3 May 2016 | 84 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 3 May 2016 | ||||||
| WATSON of Sulhamstead,Berks | ||||||
| 11 Jul 1912 | UK | 1 | William George Watson | 26 Dec 1861 | 12 Jul 1930 | 68 |
| 12 Jul 1930 | 2 | Norman James Watson | 17 Mar 1897 | 19 May 1983 | 86 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 19 May 1983 | ||||||
| WATSON of Newport,Monmouth | ||||||
| 13 Feb 1918 | UK | 1 | Thomas Edward Watson | 1 Jan 1851 | 1 May 1921 | 70 |
| For information on the death of this baronet, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 1 May 1921 | 2 | Wilfrid Hood Watson | 23 Jul 1875 | 31 Jan 1922 | 46 | |
| 1922 | 3 | Geoffrey Lewin Watson | 19 Jul 1879 | 15 Dec 1959 | 80 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 15 Dec 1959 | ||||||
| WATSON of Ashley,Dorset | ||||||
| 11 Jun 1937 | UK | See "Milne-Watson" | ||||
| WATT of Bathgate,Linlithgow | ||||||
| 5 Sep 1945 | UK | See "Harvie-Watt" | ||||
| WAUCHOPE of Newton,Berwick | ||||||
| 7 Jun 1667 | NS | See "Don-Wauchope" | ||||
| WAY of Montefiore,Australia | ||||||
| 2 Aug 1899 | UK | 1 | Samuel James Way | 11 Apr 1836 | 8 Jan 1916 | 79 |
| to | PC 1897 | |||||
| 10 Jan 1916 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| WEBB of Odstock,Wilts | ||||||
| 2 Apr 1644 | E | 1 | John Webb | 1680 | ||
| 1680 | 2 | John Webb | 29 Oct 1700 | |||
| 29 Oct 1700 | 3 | John Webb | Oct 1745 | |||
| Oct 1745 | 4 | Thomas Webb | 29 Jun 1763 | |||
| 29 Jun 1763 | 5 | John Webb | Apr 1797 | |||
| Apr 1797 | 6 | Thomas Webb | c 1774 | 26 Mar 1823 | ||
| 26 Mar 1823 | 7 | Henry Webb | 27 Apr 1806 | 19 Aug 1874 | 68 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 19 Aug 1874 | ||||||
| WEBB of Llwynarthen,Monmouth | ||||||
| 28 Jan 1916 | UK | 1 | Henry Webb | 28 Jul 1866 | 29 Oct 1940 | 74 |
| to | MP for Forest of Dean 1911-1918 and | |||||
| 29 Oct 1940 | Cardiff East 1923-1924 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| WEBB-JOHNSON of Stoke-on-Trent,Staffs | ||||||
| 15 Mar 1945 | UK | 1 | Sir Alfred Edward Webb-Johnson | 4 Sep 1880 | 28 May 1958 | 77 |
| He was subsequently created Baron Webb- | ||||||
| Johnson (qv) in 1948 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1958 | ||||||
| WEBSTER of Kirby,Norfolk | ||||||
| 31 May 1660 | E | 1 | John Webster | 14 Apr 1675 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Apr 1675 | ||||||
| WEBSTER of Copthall,Essex | ||||||
| 21 May 1703 | E | 1 | Thomas Webster | 12 Nov 1676 | 30 May 1751 | 74 |
| MP for Colchester 1705-1711, 1713-1714 | ||||||
| and 1722-1727 | ||||||
| 30 May 1751 | 2 | Whistler Webster | after 1699 | 21 Sep 1779 | ||
| MP for East Grinstead 1741-1761 | ||||||
| 21 Sep 1779 | 3 | Godfrey Webster | 6 May 1780 | |||
| 6 May 1780 | 4 | Godfrey Webster | 25 Dec 1747 | 3 Jun 1800 | 52 | |
| MP for Seaford 1786-1790 and Wareham | ||||||
| 1796-1800 | ||||||
| 3 Jun 1800 | 5 | Godfrey Vassal Webster | 6 Oct 1789 | 17 Jul 1836 | 46 | |
| MP for Sussex 1812-1820 | ||||||
| 17 Jul 1836 | 6 | Godfrey Vassal Webster | 3 Jul 1815 | 4 May 1853 | 37 | |
| 4 May 1853 | 7 | Augustus Frederick George Douglas | ||||
| Webster | 19 Apr 1819 | 27 Mar 1886 | 66 | |||
| 27 Mar 1886 | 8 | Augustus Frederick Walpole Edward | ||||
| to | Webster | 10 Feb 1864 | 13 Aug 1923 | 59 | ||
| 13 Aug 1923 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| WEBSTER of Alverstone,Isle of Wight | ||||||
| 29 Jan 1900 | UK | 1 | Richard Everard Webster | 22 Dec 1842 | 15 Dec 1915 | 72 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Alverstone (qv) in 1900 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until its | ||||||
| extinction in 1915 | ||||||
| WEDDERBURN of Blackness,Forfar | ||||||
| 9 Aug 1704 | NS | 1 | John Wedderburn | 12 Feb 1641 | 1706 | 65 |
| 1706 | 2 | Alexander Wedderburn | 7 Apr 1672 | Feb 1710 | 37 | |
| Feb 1710 | 3 | John Wedderburn | 2 Dec 1700 | 1723 | 22 | |
| 1723 | 4 | Alexander Wedderburn | 4 Nov 1675 | 21 Sep 1744 | 68 | |
| 21 Sep 1744 | 5 | John Wedderburn | 4 Aug 1704 | 28 Nov 1746 | 42 | |
| He was attainted, executed and the baronetcy | ||||||
| forfeited 1746. The baronetcy was, however, | ||||||
| assumed as under:- | ||||||
| [28 Nov 1746] | [6] | John Wedderburn | 21 Feb 1729 | 13 Jun 1803 | 74 | |
| [13 Jun 1803] | [7] | David Wedderburn | 10 Mar 1775 | 7 Apr 1858 | 83 | |
| 10 Aug 1803 | UK | 1 | He was created a baronet of the United | |||
| Kingdom 10 Aug 1803. For further details of | ||||||
| this baronetcy see "Ogilvy-Wedderburn" | ||||||
| WEDGWOOD of Etruria, Staffs | ||||||
| 20 Jan 1942 | UK | 1 | Sir Ralph Lewis Wedgwood | 2 Mar 1874 | 5 Sep 1956 | 82 |
| 5 Sep 1956 | 2 | John Hamilton Wedgwood | 16 Nov 1907 | 11 Dec 1989 | 82 | |
| 11 Dec 1989 | 3 | Hugo Martin Wedgwood | 27 Dec 1933 | 12 Oct 2010 | 76 | |
| 12 Oct 2010 | 4 | Ralph Nicholas Wedgwood | 10 Dec 1964 | |||
| WEIGALL of Woodhall Spa,Lincs | ||||||
| 28 Jun 1938 | UK | 1 | Sir William Ernest George Archibald Weigall | 8 Dec 1874 | 3 Jun 1952 | 77 |
| to | MP for Horncastle 1911-1920. Governor of | |||||
| 3 Jun 1952 | South Australia 1920-1922 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| WEIR of Blackwood,Lanark | ||||||
| 28 Nov 1694 | NS | 1 | George Weir | 12 Jun 1674 | 7 Jan 1716 | 41 |
| 7 Jan 1716 | 2 | William Weir | 1722 | |||
| 1722 | 3 | George Weir | 1735 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1735 | ||||||
| WELBY of Denton Manor,Lincs | ||||||
| 27 Jun 1801 | UK | 1 | William Earle Welby | c 1734 | 6 Nov 1815 | |
| MP for Grantham 1802-1806 | ||||||
| 6 Nov 1815 | 2 | William Earle Welby | 14 Nov 1768 | 3 Nov 1852 | 83 | |
| MP for Grantham 1807-1820 | ||||||
| 3 Nov 1852 | 3 | Glynne Earle Welby (Welby-Gregory from 1861) | 26 Jun 1806 | 23 Aug 1875 | 69 | |
| MP for Grantham 1830-1857 | ||||||
| 23 Aug 1875 | 4 | William Earle Welby-Gregory | 4 Jan 1829 | 26 Nov 1898 | 69 | |
| MP for Grantham 1857-1868 and Lincolnshire | ||||||
| South 1868-1884 | ||||||
| 26 Nov 1898 | 5 | Charles Glynne Earle Welby | 11 Aug 1865 | 19 Mar 1938 | 72 | |
| MP for Newark 1900-1906 | ||||||
| 19 Mar 1938 | 6 | Oliver Charles Earle Welby | 26 Jan 1902 | 6 Oct 1977 | 75 | |
| 6 Oct 1977 | 7 | Richard Bruno Gregory Welby | 11 Mar 1928 | |||
| WELCH of Chard,Somerset | ||||||
| 16 Dec 1957 | UK | 1 | Sir George James Cullum Welch | 20 Oct 1895 | 28 Jul 1980 | 84 |
| 28 Jul 1980 | 2 | John Reader Welch | 26 Jul 1933 | 5 Sep 2023 | 80 | |
| 5 Sep 2023 | 3 | James Douglass Cullum Welch | 10 Nov 1973 | |||
| WELDON of Dunmore,co.Carlow | ||||||
| 11 Jul 1723 | I | 1 | Thomas Burdett | 14 Sep 1668 | 14 Apr 1727 | 58 |
| 14 Apr 1727 | 2 | William Vigors Burdett | 8 Jun 1715 | 17 Dec 1798 | 83 | |
| 17 Dec 1798 | 3 | William Bagenal Burdett | 16 Jul 1770 | 14 Dec 1840 | 70 | |
| 14 Dec 1840 | 4 | Anthony Weldon | 16 Jun 1781 | 21 Dec 1858 | 77 | |
| 21 Dec 1858 | 5 | Anthony Crossdill Weldon | 16 Mar 1827 | 14 Jan 1900 | 72 | |
| 14 Jan 1900 | 6 | Anthony Arthur Weldon | 1 Mar 1863 | 29 Jun 1917 | 54 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Kildare 1913-1918 | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1917 | 7 | Anthony Edward Wolseley Weldon | 1 Dec 1902 | 9 Jan 1971 | 68 | |
| 9 Jan 1971 | 8 | Thomas Brian Weldon | 19 May 1905 | 5 Aug 1979 | 74 | |
| 5 Aug 1979 | 9 | Anthony William Weldon | 11 May 1947 | |||
| WELLS of Upper Grosvenor Street,London | ||||||
| 11 May 1883 | UK | 1 | Thomas Spencer Wells | 3 Feb 1818 | 31 Jan 1898 | 79 |
| 31 Jan 1898 | 2 | Arthur Spencer Wells | 25 Jun 1866 | 31 Mar 1906 | 39 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 31 Mar 1906 | ||||||
| WELLS of Felmersham,Beds | ||||||
| 21 Jan 1944 | UK | 1 | Sir Sydney Richard Wells | 3 Aug 1879 | 26 Nov 1956 | 77 |
| MP for Bedford 1922-1945 | ||||||
| 26 Nov 1956 | 2 | Charles Maltby Wells | 24 Jul 1908 | 23 Jun 1996 | 87 | |
| 23 Jun 1996 | 3 | Christopher Charles Wells | 12 Aug 1936 | |||
| WELLS of Hove,Sussex | ||||||
| 30 Nov 1948 | UK | 1 | Sir Frederick Michael Wells | 11 Mar 1884 | 13 Sep 1966 | 82 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Sep 1966 | ||||||
| WELLWOOD-MONCREIFF of Moncreiff,Perth | ||||||
| 22 Apr 1626 | NS | See "Moncreiff" | ||||
| WEMYSS of Wemyss,Fife | ||||||
| 29 May 1625 | NS | 1 | John Wemyss | 1586 | 22 Nov 1649 | 63 |
| He was subsequently created Baron Wemyss | ||||||
| (qv) in 1628 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until it became | ||||||
| dormant in 1679 | ||||||
| WEMYSS of Bogie,Fife | ||||||
| 12 Oct 1704 | NS | 1 | James Wemyss | c 1706 | ||
| c 1706 | 2 | John Wemyss | c 1750 | |||
| c 1750 | 3 | James Wemyss | c 1770 | |||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became dormant | |||||
| c 1770 | ||||||
| WENMAN of Caswell,Oxon | ||||||
| 29 Nov 1662 | E | 1 | Francis Wenman | c 1630 | 2 Sep 1680 | |
| MP for Oxfordshire 1664-1679 | ||||||
| 2 Sep 1680 | 2 | Richard Wenman | 1657 | 1 Mar 1690 | 32 | |
| He subsequently succeeded to the Viscountcy | ||||||
| of Wenman (qv) in 1686 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1800 | ||||||
| WENTWORTH of Wentworth Woodhouse,Yorks | ||||||
| 20 Jun 1611 | E | 1 | William Wentworth | 3 Jul 1562 | 10 Sep 1614 | |
| Sep 1614 | 2 | Thomas Wentworth | 13 Apr 1593 | 12 May 1641 | 48 | |
| He was subsequently created Earl of | ||||||
| Strafford (qv) in 1640 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until he was | ||||||
| attainted and his honours forfeited | ||||||
| in 1641 | ||||||
| 12 May 1662 | 3 | William Wentworth,Earl of Strafford | 8 Jun 1626 | 16 Oct 1695 | 69 | |
| He obtained a reversal of the attainder | ||||||
| in 1662 | ||||||
| 16 Oct 1695 | 4 | Thomas Wentworth,Baron Raby | 17 Sep 1672 | 15 Nov 1739 | 67 | |
| He was subsequently created Earl of | ||||||
| Strafford (qv) in 1711 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until its | ||||||
| extinction in 1799 | ||||||
| WENTWORTH of Gosfield,Essex | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1611 | E | 1 | John Wentworth | c 1583 | Oct 1631 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Oct 1631 | ||||||
| WENTWORTH of West Bretton,Yorks | ||||||
| 27 Sep 1664 | E | 1 | Thomas Wentworth | c 1615 | 5 Dec 1675 | |
| 5 Dec 1675 | 2 | Matthew Wentworth | 1 Aug 1678 | |||
| 1 Aug 1678 | 3 | Matthew Wentworth | c 1665 | Feb 1706 | ||
| Feb 1706 | 4 | William Wentworth | 29 Oct 1686 | 1 Mar 1763 | 76 | |
| MP for Malton 1731-1741 | ||||||
| 1 Mar 1763 | 5 | Thomas Wentworth Blackett | 12 Apr 1726 | 10 Jul 1792 | 66 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 10 Jul 1792 | ||||||
| WENTWORTH of North Elmsal,Yorks | ||||||
| 28 Jul 1692 | E | 1 | John Wentworth | 18 Nov 1673 | 25 Apr 1720 | 46 |
| 25 Apr 1720 | 2 | Butler Cavendish Wentworth | c 1710 | 3 Dec 1741 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 3 Dec 1741 | ||||||
| WENTWORTH of Parlut,Lincs | ||||||
| 16 May 1795 | GB | 1 | John Wentworth | c 1737 | 8 Apr 1820 | |
| 8 Apr 1820 | 2 | Charles Mary Wentworth | 18 Jan 1775 | 10 Apr 1844 | 69 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 10 Apr 1844 | ||||||
| Sir Harry Leonard d'Arcy Waechter, 2nd and last baronet | ||||||
| From the London "Daily Telegraph" of 7 December 1955:- | ||||||
| 'Sir Harry Leonard d'Arcy Waechter, 43, of the White House, Suckley, Worcs., appeared before | ||||||
| Worcester county magistrates yesterday on charges alleging indecency and serious offences | ||||||
| against male persons. He was sent for trial at Worcestershire Assizes on Jan. 25 on six of eight | ||||||
| charges. He pleaded not guilty and was allowed bail. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Peter Barnes, for the Director of Public Prosecutions, said Sir d'Arcy and his wife were | ||||||
| joint masters of the North Ledbury Hounds and the kennels and stables of the hunt were at | ||||||
| their home. Various stable boys and apprentice grooms, most of them between 14 and 16, lived | ||||||
| in the White House. | ||||||
| 'On their first meeting Sir d'Arcy contrived to get the youths alone, and each time followed a | ||||||
| similar course of indecent behaviour. Where a boy looked disgusted such conduct went to | ||||||
| further. | ||||||
| 'One of the charges, Mr. Barnes said, related to Sir d'Arcy's alleged conduct in Worcester. He | ||||||
| used to go to a newsvendor named O'Shea, asking him to find a boy who had been in an | ||||||
| approved school or Borstal. O'Shea informed the police. | ||||||
| 'Sir d'Arcy had told the police that he was on the Home Office Homosexuality Committee, but | ||||||
| the secretary of that committee, Mr. W. Roberts, had said this was not so.' | ||||||
| The result of his trial was reported in the "Daily Telegraph" of 26 January 1956:- | ||||||
| 'Sir Harry Leonard d'Arcy Waechter, 43, the second baronet, the White House, Suckley, Worcs., | ||||||
| joint master of the North Ledbury Hunt, was gaoled for 21 months at Worcestershire Assizes | ||||||
| yesterday for indecently assaulting youths employed by him and attempting to procure an ex- | ||||||
| Borstal or approved school boy to commit indecency. | ||||||
| 'He pleaded guilty to five counts and not guilty to five others. Mr. Ryder Richardson, | ||||||
| prosecuting, said the offences took place between November, 1951, and last July, with stable | ||||||
| boys or apprentice grooms. | ||||||
| 'Mr. J.F. Bourke, defending, said that between 1948 and 1954 a great change came over Sir | ||||||
| Harry's character, well known as a pathological condition. In a doctor's opinion, that phase | ||||||
| had passed. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Justice Hallett said to Sir Harry: "The psychiatrist's evidence wholly unconvinced me, | ||||||
| because it shows that you were for some time habitually corrupting young men who came to | ||||||
| work for you. At the very end, in the autumn of 1954, you were trying to get fresh supplies | ||||||
| of boys to misuse them." | ||||||
| From the London "Daily Telegraph" of 17 October 1967:- | ||||||
| 'Sir Harry D'Arcy Waechter, Bart., 55, of no settled address, admitted at Bow Street yesyerday | ||||||
| that he took a pork pie, sandwiuches and an egg from a cafeteria at Victoria Station without | ||||||
| paying for them. He told Mr. Barraclough, the magistrate: "I want to get a job - I'm tired of | ||||||
| wandering about." | ||||||
| 'P.C. Douglas Borer of the British Railways' Police said that when he was arrested Waechter said: | ||||||
| "I was hungry." Waechter had served as a captain in the Army and had worked as a gardener- | ||||||
| handyman, car park attendant and porter at Caxton Hall. | ||||||
| 'Waechter told the court that he had been hoping to go to two interviews about jobs. He was | ||||||
| remanded until Monday for reports.' | ||||||
| From the London "Daily Telegraph" of 24 October 1967:- | ||||||
| 'Sir Harry D'Arcy Waechter, Bart., 55, of no settled address, who last week admitted stealing a | ||||||
| pork pie, sandwiches and an egg from a Victoria Station cafeteria, was granted a conditional | ||||||
| discharge for a year at Bow Street yesterday, where he appeared on remand. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Barry Swinney, probation officer, said that since the first hearing Waechter had received | ||||||
| many offers of help. Waechter was said to have been working as a gardener-handyman and a | ||||||
| car park attendant. He had lost a job as a porter at Caxton Hall because the work was too | ||||||
| heavy for him.' | ||||||
| Sir Richard Wallace, 1st and only baronet [UK 1871] | ||||||
| Richard was the illegitimate son of Richard Seymour-Conway, 4th Marquess of Hertford. | ||||||
| For further information on this peer, see the note at the foot of the page which contains | ||||||
| details of the Hertford peerage. | ||||||
| Richard was born in Paris as a result of the 4th Marquess' liaison with an Agnes Wallace, 'a | ||||||
| Scottish girl of low birth' much older than the Marquess. After placing the child with a French | ||||||
| concierge and seeing Agnes married to a Mr Jackson, the Marquess thought that he had done | ||||||
| enough for his illegitimate son. | ||||||
| By the 1850s, however, Richard had become his father's secretary and lived in Paris with him. | ||||||
| The Marquess' only pleasure was in collecting art and, when the Marquess died in 1870, | ||||||
| Richard was left the Marquess' art collection and personal fortune of some £7,000,000. The | ||||||
| title and the entailed estates were inherited by a cousin, the 5th Marquess. | ||||||
| Richard was aged 52 when his father died. He was, if possible, an even more ardent art- | ||||||
| collector than his father and had now become wealthy beyond his wildest dreams. However, | ||||||
| before he indulged himself in art collecting, he poured out money for the relief of sufferers in | ||||||
| the Franco-Prussian War. In addition, he founded the Hertford Hospital in Paris and made a gift | ||||||
| to the city of 50 drinking fountains, some of which can still be seen today. | ||||||
| In February 1871, he married his long-term mistress and father of his son, Julie Castelnau. In | ||||||
| November 1871, he was created a baronet and settled at Hertford House in London. Between | ||||||
| 1873 and 1885 he sat in the House of Commons for Lisburn, but the enrichment of his art | ||||||
| collection remained his major interest. His placid life was racked by a bitter quarrel with his son, | ||||||
| who involved himself in a liaison with a French girl and had children by her. When Sir Richard | ||||||
| remonstrated with him, his son replied that he had merely followed his father's example. The | ||||||
| son died soon after, but to the time of his death, Sir Richard refused to recognise his grand- | ||||||
| children or their mother. | ||||||
| As private secretary Sir Richard hired John Murray Scott, a young barrister whose grandfather | ||||||
| and father had been friends of the 4th Marquess of Hertford. When Sir Richard died in Paris in | ||||||
| 1890, Scott continued to watch over Lady Wallace's interests until her death in 1897. Lady | ||||||
| Wallace had inherited the whole of her husband's estate and she, in turn, wanted to leave it | ||||||
| all to Scott. Instead, he persuaded her to leave the art treasures to the nation and, after her | ||||||
| death, the contents of Hertford House became state property under the name of the Wallace | ||||||
| Collection, where it remains to this day. | ||||||
| Scott was rewarded with a baronetcy in 1899. He died in 1912, leaving a controversial will in | ||||||
| which he left large amounts of money and art to Baroness Sackville. For details of the 1913 | ||||||
| court case arising from this bequest, see the note at the foot of the page containing details of | ||||||
| the Sackville peerage. | ||||||
| The Baronetcy of Wasteneys | ||||||
| Reference works on the baronetage agree that the Wasteneys baronetcy became extinct on | ||||||
| the death of the 4th baronet in 1742. Notwithstanding this, the following advertisement | ||||||
| appeared in the London "Morning Post" on 3 August 1887:- | ||||||
| 'ASSUMPTION OF TITLE - Whereas King James the First, by his Patent, dated the 18th day of | ||||||
| December, 1622, granted the dignity and title of a Baronet of England unto Hardolph | ||||||
| Wasteneys, in Headon, in the county of Notts, esquire, and the heirs male of his body lawfully | ||||||
| begotten; and Whereas Sir Hardolph Wasteneys, fourth baronet, great grandson of the first | ||||||
| mentioned Baronet, died without male issue, and all other collateral male issue being extinct, | ||||||
| the title vested in the cousin and heir-at-law of the fourth baronet, that is to say, in Simon | ||||||
| Wasteneys, of Edlington, in the county of York, who was also the direct male issue of the | ||||||
| grantee of the title. And Whereas the said Simon left one son only, William, who left one son | ||||||
| only, William (deceased), who had two sons and no more, William Parslove and Hardolph, | ||||||
| whereof the elder, William Parslove is dead, leaving me, William Wasteneys, his only son and | ||||||
| heir-at-law surviving; and Whereas I am advised and believe that it is expedient that I should | ||||||
| assume the title and dignity of baronet to which I am entitled as aforesaid. Now I HEREBY | ||||||
| DECLARE THAT IT IS MY INTENTION HENCEFORTH TO ASSUME AND BEAR SUCH DIGNITY AND | ||||||
| TITLE, AND TO BE DESIGNATED in all Legal Documents and Otherwise as SIR WILLIAM | ||||||
| WASTENEYS, BARONET; and I hereby request all persons whom it may concern so to call and | ||||||
| designate me. As witness my hand this 28th day of January, 1887. W. WASTENEYS. Witness | ||||||
| to the signature of the said Sir William Wasteneys, Baronet, ARTHUR D. BENNETT, Notary Public, | ||||||
| Auckland, New Zealand.' | ||||||
| Some further information on "Sir" William Wasteney, which fills in some details of his life both | ||||||
| before and after this advertisement, appeared in an article published in the "Auckland Star" on | ||||||
| 3 June 1903. The article is headed "Sir William Wasteney's Troubles":- | ||||||
| 'The public examination of Sir William Wasteneys, against whom, in March last, a receiving order | ||||||
| was made on the petition on his wife, her claim being for £2035, alleged to be due under a deed | ||||||
| of separation, was concluded in the Bankruptcy Court last Tuesday. In examination the debtor | ||||||
| said he was a baronet, having formally assumed the title some twelve years ago. As far as he | ||||||
| was aware his father did not make use of it. On coming of age in February, 1872 [he is said to | ||||||
| have been born 6 February 1851], he succeeded to various estates in South Yorkshire, valued | ||||||
| at £60,000, and the minerals at £20,000. All were unencumbered with the exception of a | ||||||
| mortgage for £8000, which he discharged by raising £11,000 on property at Micklebring and | ||||||
| Lambcote Grange. | ||||||
| 'On his marriage in 1875 [other sources place the date of his marriage as 1878] he settled | ||||||
| property to the value of £8000 on his wife [Julia Marianne Fardell], the income of which was | ||||||
| applicable to the maintenance of his home and family. In 1875 he was called to the Bar, and in | ||||||
| the summer of that year he realised £25,000 on the sale of four of the Yorkshire properties, | ||||||
| which money had gone mainly in living expenses. | ||||||
| 'In 1885 he arranged to go to New Zealand for the benefit of his wife's health, but at the last | ||||||
| moment she decided not to go, and he then entered into a deed of separation for two years, | ||||||
| agreeing to allow her £240 a year. He then realised a further £4400 on the property and went | ||||||
| to Auckland [New Zealand]. In March, 1887, his wife joined him there, and a further covenant | ||||||
| was entered into to extend the separation for two more years, the wife living under the same | ||||||
| roof. In March, 1889, he purchased for £400 the "Waikato News" [Waikato is a region in the | ||||||
| North Island of New Zealand], carried on at Cambridge. He ran the paper for a year and then | ||||||
| discontinued it, a fire having practically destroyed the town. | ||||||
| 'Down to 1898 he practised [law] at various towns in New Zealand, and in that year he returned | ||||||
| to England. Having no income, he had since lived on an allowance from his mother and his | ||||||
| earnings at the Bar, which had been small. The rest of the Yorkshire property had been sold by | ||||||
| the trustees under the settlement. | ||||||
| 'In 1891 he endeavoured to obtain a judicial separation from his wife in New Zealand, but | ||||||
| eventually abandoned the suit, and in April of that year a deed of separation was entered into, | ||||||
| under which he agreed to allow his wife £240 a year from the income of the £8000 included in | ||||||
| the marriage settlement. In 1891, as the result of the proceedings which took place between | ||||||
| the parties, he succeeded in setting aside the separation deed, which decision was upheld in | ||||||
| the Court of Appeal in New Zealand. | ||||||
| 'In 1898 his wife appealed with success to the Privy Council. A judgment for costs obtained by | ||||||
| his wife in certain of the proceedings formed the basis of the receiving order which she had | ||||||
| obtained against him. His present position was due to the constant litigation which had been | ||||||
| brought against him by his wife, to the expenses of her long illness, and the depreciation on the | ||||||
| sale of his Yorkshire properties. Replying to questions, the debtor stated that he had no | ||||||
| interest in any property in New Zealand, neither had he any in England which was not fully | ||||||
| charged to creditors. His mother had died recently, but, beyond a life interest in household | ||||||
| furniture of small value, he had not succeeded to any property.' | ||||||
| Unfortunately, I have been unable to trace any later events in the life of "Sir" William. | ||||||
| Sir William Alfred Waterlow, 1st baronet [UK 1930] | ||||||
| The following article appeared in the April 1957 issue of the Australian monthly magazine | ||||||
| "Parade." The story consistently describes Sir William as "Bart," but he was only a KBE at the | ||||||
| time - his baronetcy was awarded in 1930, following his term as Lord Mayor of London. As | ||||||
| mentioned in the article's penultimate paragraph, the driving force behind the whole criminal | ||||||
| enterprise is now acknowledged to have been (Artur Virgilio) Alves Reis [1896-1955]. | ||||||
| 'A small group stood round a pit in the courtyard of the Bank of Portugal, Lisbon, one day in | ||||||
| in October, 1932. They talked quietly as one of their number knelt and struck a match. He held | ||||||
| the flame against bundles of paper in the pit. In a few seconds just on £2,900,000 worth of | ||||||
| banknotes were burning. Thus ended the fantastic story of the Portuguese banknote swindle, | ||||||
| one of the most audacious frauds in modern history. | ||||||
| 'The swindlers' plan went smoothly into operation on December 4, 1924, when a handsome | ||||||
| prepossessing young Dutchman, K. Marang van Ysselveere, presented himself at the office of | ||||||
| the leading London printing firm of Waterlow and Sons, Limited. Waterlow's had been commiss- | ||||||
| ioned several years earlier to print some 500-escudo notes, worth about £5 sterling each, for | ||||||
| the Bank of Portugal. Marang, of the firm of Messrs. Marang and Collignon, The Hague, handed | ||||||
| what appeared to be official Portuguese Government credentials to head of the company, Sir | ||||||
| William Waterlow, [later] Bart. The papers were faked! | ||||||
| 'Marang, about 35, explained to Sir William that he was a member of a Dutch syndicate of | ||||||
| businessmen who had come to an arrangement with the Portuguese Government to help | ||||||
| Portugal's West African colony, Angola, out of dire financial difficulties. The syndicate, he said, | ||||||
| was to finance a new note issue for Angola in return for valuable trading concessions. | ||||||
| 'Waterlow's still had in their possession the printing plates for the Portuguese 500-escudo notes | ||||||
| bearing an engraving of the likeness of explorer Vasco da Gama. Marang suggested these plates | ||||||
| would "serve the purpose" for the "new Angola issue." He assured the polite but cautious Sir | ||||||
| William Waterlow that there was "no need to worry" about the serial numbers duplicating those | ||||||
| on the Portuguese notes previously printed by Waterlow's. The new issue would be stamped | ||||||
| with the word "Angola" when they were delivered in Portugal and would be used for circulation | ||||||
| only in the colony, he added. | ||||||
| 'Sir William pointed out he would still need direct authority from the Bank of Portugal to use | ||||||
| their plates in the printing of the notes. Marang replied that his secretary, Jose Bandeira, was a | ||||||
| brother of Antonio Bandeira, Portuguese Minister at The Hague. It would be easy to arrange for | ||||||
| the diplomat to see Waterlow's representative in Lisbon, H.G.W. Romer, and finalise the | ||||||
| necessary authority. In Lisbon Romer became suspicious when Bandeira did not keep their | ||||||
| rendezvous. Romer made a few discreet inquiries and warned Sir William by letter: "I cannot help | ||||||
| thinking the Bank of Portugal would never consent to their plates being utilised for the purpose | ||||||
| of making a new emission of notes for a Portuguese colony whose finances appear to be in a | ||||||
| state of absolute chaos." | ||||||
| 'The smooth-talking Marang, however, had completely deceived the English baronet [sic]. | ||||||
| Waterlow ignored Romer's warning. On December 17, 1924, Marang returned to London and | ||||||
| explained he had obtained the necessary authority himself. He produced more documents - all | ||||||
| expert forgeries - purporting to give his syndicate permission to have the notes printed from | ||||||
| the Bank of Portugal plates in Waterlow's possession. As a final, formal check, Sir William | ||||||
| drafted a letter to the Governor of the Bank of Portugal [Inocźncio Camacho Rodrigues (1867- | ||||||
| 1943)] asking if it was all right to start printing the notes. So taken by Marang was Sir William | ||||||
| that, at the Dutchman's suggestion, he handed him the letter to be "delivered by hand" to the | ||||||
| bank. | ||||||
| 'When Marang returned on January 6 [1925] he had a reply signed - a perfect forgery - by the | ||||||
| Governor of the Bank. This letter told Sir William to go ahead with the work. Thus was the stage | ||||||
| set for the grand coup. The contract was signed. The printing of the Portuguese Vasco ad | ||||||
| Gama notes began. Sir William Waterlow nearly ruined the swindle when he sent a personal | ||||||
| letter to the Governor of the Bank of Portugal acknowledging permission to print. That letter | ||||||
| was never delivered. | ||||||
| 'Between February 10 and March 12, 1925, Marang took delivery from Waterlow's of Portuguese | ||||||
| notes worth a cool 100,000,000 escudos - the equivalent of £stg. 1,000,000. The notes, packed | ||||||
| in special suitcases, were delivered to Marang at the Ritz Hotel, London. He calmly deposited | ||||||
| them at the baggage-room at Liverpool St. Station while preparing for his journey to Lisbon. He | ||||||
| even quibbled about the 1/6 luggage fee he had to pay when he reclaimed the ordinary-looking | ||||||
| cases that contained enough illicit money to wreck Portugal's banking system. | ||||||
| 'Marang and his gang at once began to distribute the illicit money through Portugal. They were | ||||||
| rapidly disposing of it when, in autumn, 1925, rumours ran in many parts of Portugal that forged | ||||||
| 500-escudo notes were being circulated. The rumours stopped on May 6, 1925, when, after | ||||||
| investigation by its officers, the Bank of Portugal published an official denial that forgeries were | ||||||
| circulating. | ||||||
| 'This gave new encouragement to the syndicate of crooks. As a group of businessmen with | ||||||
| Government authority, they established their own bank - Banco Angola e Metropole in Oporto - | ||||||
| with a stated capital of £stg. 200,000, and started flooding out the illicit currency. They lent | ||||||
| money to almost anyone who applied. They granted mortgages and credit indiscriminately. They | ||||||
| bought property all over the country. They even bought bundles of Bank of Portugal shares - | ||||||
| probably hoping that if they got enough they would be able to stop the bank taking any action | ||||||
| against them if ever they were discovered. | ||||||
| 'So successful were the gang's operations that Marang returned to London with more forged | ||||||
| papers purporting to be from the Governor of the Bank of Portugal. These papers gave him | ||||||
| authority to order from Waterlow's the printing of another 380,000 Portuguese 500-escudo | ||||||
| notes for "the Angola issue." When Sir William Waterlow wrote to the Bank for confirmation, | ||||||
| Marang made sure he received a favourable reply. Between August and November, 1925, the | ||||||
| printers delivered to Marang in London another £stg. 900,000 worth of Portuguese Vasco da | ||||||
| Gama notes. | ||||||
| 'Meanwhile, a Portuguese newspaper became suspicious of the amazing activities of the new | ||||||
| Banco Angola e Metropole. Suggestions were made that some foreign Power might be supplying | ||||||
| the bank's capital in an attempt to juggle Portugal's economy. The Government ordered a secret | ||||||
| inquiry. Officials of the Bank of Portugal learnt of suspicious activities by a jewellery shop in | ||||||
| Oporto, where the new bank had its headquarters. The jewellery shop was buying large | ||||||
| quantities of foreign currency and paying for it with new 500-escudo notes, the officials were | ||||||
| told. Another private banker queried the large number of new 500-escudo notes in circulation. | ||||||
| 'Portugal's Criminal Investigation Department was called in. On Saturday, December 5, 1925, the | ||||||
| police swooped on the premises of the Banco Angola e Metropole and the jewellery shop in | ||||||
| Oporto. The manager of the Bank, Adriano Silva, and two other members of the gang, Alves | ||||||
| Reis and Jose Bandeira, were caught in the raid. In a search of the bank premises the police | ||||||
| found about 4000 new 500-escudo notes. Working on a hunch, one of the raiders, Campos e | ||||||
| Sa, an inspector from the Bank of Portugal, took the seized money to the local branch of the | ||||||
| Bank of Portugal. There, to his horror, he discovered notes bearing the same serial numbers. | ||||||
| 'Next day, Sunday, December 6, 1925. the Directors of the Bank of Portugal were told of the | ||||||
| strange happenings at Oporto. After a five-hour meeting the directors decided on the drastic | ||||||
| step of withdrawing from circulation all Vasco da Gama 500-escudo notes and exchanging them, | ||||||
| good or bad, for notes of other denominations. The withdrawn notes represented one-sixth of | ||||||
| the nation's currency. Next morning the banks were rushed. By the time the banks stopped | ||||||
| accepting the notes for exchange they had received 795,556 Vasco da Gama 500-escudo | ||||||
| notes - nearly 200,000 more than had been legitimately put into circulation. | ||||||
| 'Sir William Waterlow and some of his note experts rushed to Lisbon. After lengthy, microscopic | ||||||
| examination they found various minute printing differences by which the illicit notes could be | ||||||
| told from the genuine. Antonio Bandeira, Portuguese Minister at The Hague, who gave Marang | ||||||
| Hague, who gave Marang his credentials, was recalled and arrested. Financial circles panicked. | ||||||
| Everyone was under suspicion. The Governor and Deputy Governor of the Bank of Portugal were | ||||||
| arrested but were released the same day. The police interviewed Sir William Waterlow, who | ||||||
| after being cleared left Lisbon under an assumed name. There was a new scare when 75 trip- | ||||||
| licates were discovered. It appeared some modest forger had also been at work. A special | ||||||
| commission was appointed to conduct the liquidation of Banco Angola e Metropole. | ||||||
| 'Meanwhile the wily Marang fled the country. He was arrested in Holland and ordered to stand | ||||||
| trial on a charge of obtaining the bank notes from Waterlow's by means of forged documents. | ||||||
| When the case came into court in November, 1926, the shrewd Dutchman pleaded he had been | ||||||
| the innocent, unsuspecting tool of the gang. The court acquitted him of the main charge and | ||||||
| sentenced him to 11 months' gaol on a lesser charge of "receiving" the illicit notes. As he had | ||||||
| been in gaol 11 months awaiting trial he was immediately released. The Crown appealed against | ||||||
| the lightness of the penalty, which was later increased to two years' gaol. Meanwhile, Marang | ||||||
| had left Holland and never served the sentence. | ||||||
| 'Alves Reis, Antonio Bandeira, the former diplomat, and his brother, Jose Bandeira, Adriano Silva | ||||||
| and other members of the gang were not tried in Lisbon till July, 1930. They received sentences | ||||||
| of up to 25 years' deportation. In 1932, however, an article appeared in a European magazine | ||||||
| under the name of Alves Reis claiming he was the sole mastermind of the swindle. All other | ||||||
| members of the gang had been duped by him. The article said Marang believed the transactions | ||||||
| with Waterlow's to be a legitimate business deal. | ||||||
| 'Meanwhile, the Bank of Portugal sued Waterlow and Sons, Limited, for damages, claiming | ||||||
| breach of contract and/or negligence and/or conversion. Though there was no suggestion of | ||||||
| dishonesty on the part of the printers, the bank claimed Waterlow's should never have used | ||||||
| their plates to print the money. The case dragged on for more than two years till the House of | ||||||
| Lords delivered the final judgment in favour of the bank on April 28, 1932. By a majority of three | ||||||
| to two the Lords awarded the Bank of Portugal damages totalling £616,392.' | ||||||
| Sir William died of peritonitis before the House of Lords had reached its final judgment. The firm | ||||||
| of Waterlow and Sons never fully recovered from its involvement, and was eventually acquired | ||||||
| by De La Rue in 1961. | ||||||
| Sir Thomas Edward Watson, 1st baronet | ||||||
| Sir Thomas killed in a traffic accident in May 1921. The following report appeared in 'The | ||||||
| Manchester Guardian' on 4 May 1921:- | ||||||
| 'The tragic story of the death of Sir Thomas Edward Watson, the well-known colliery proprietor, | ||||||
| was told at an inquest conducted by Mr. Ingleby Oddie, the Westminster Coroner, yesterday. | ||||||
| 'Sir Thomas had come to London from his home at Newport (Monmouthshire) last Friday, and | ||||||
| was staying at a West End hotel. He was crossing the road near St.George's Hospital, Hyde | ||||||
| Park, about midday, in the company of his daughter, when he was knocked down by a passing | ||||||
| motor-car. He was picked up in an unconscious condition and removed to the hospital, where | ||||||
| he succumbed little more than an hour later to his injuries. | ||||||
| 'Evidence was given that Sir Thomas, who had been standing on an island refuge, tried to cross | ||||||
| in front of a taxi which was being overtaken by the car. The chauffeur of the car applied his | ||||||
| brakes immediately he saw him, but was unable to avoid knocking him down. | ||||||
| 'Summing up, the Coroner said that it was a common cause of accident for people to cross in | ||||||
| front of one vehicle before assuring themselves that there was not another vehicle overtaking it | ||||||
| on the other side. There was a danger in vehicles overtaking other vehicles near refuges, and | ||||||
| he was of opinion that they should be compelled to pass in single file. In this case the driver of | ||||||
| the car was entitled to overtake the slowly moving taxi, and he seemed to have pulled up the | ||||||
| car with great promptitude. | ||||||
| 'The Coroner said he had no hesitation in recording a verdict of accidental death, exonerating | ||||||
| the driver from all blame. Sir Thomas Watson unfortunately did not realise a very common | ||||||
| danger, and was doing something expressly prohibited by the rules of "Safety First." | ||||||
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