| BARONETAGE | ||||||
| Last updated 22/11/2023 | ||||||
| Names of baronets shown in blue | ||||||
| have not yet proved succession and, as a | ||||||
| result, their name has not yet been placed on | ||||||
| the Official Roll of the Baronetage. | ||||||
| Date | Type | Order | Name | Born | Died | Age |
| Dates in italics in the "Born" column indicate that the baronet was | ||||||
| baptised on that date; dates in italics in the "Died" column indicate | ||||||
| that the baronet was buried on that date | ||||||
| WERDEN of Cholmeaton,Cheshire | ||||||
| 28 Nov 1672 | E | 1 | John Werden | 25 Mar 1640 | 29 Oct 1716 | 76 |
| MP for Reigate 1673-1679 and 1685-1689 | ||||||
| 29 Nov 1716 | 2 | John Werden | 28 Apr 1683 | 13 Feb 1758 | 74 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Feb 1758 | ||||||
| WERNHER of Luton Hoo,Beds | ||||||
| 2 Aug 1905 | UK | 1 | Julius Charles Wernher | 9 Apr 1850 | 21 May 1912 | 62 |
| 21 May 1912 | 2 | Derrick Julius Wernher | 7 Jun 1889 | 6 Mar 1948 | 58 | |
| for further information on this baronet,see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 6 Mar 1948 | 3 | Sir Harold Augustus Wernher | 16 Jan 1893 | 30 Jun 1973 | 80 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 30 Jun 1973 | ||||||
| WESTCOMBE of Cadiz,Spain | ||||||
| 23 Mar 1700 | E | 1 | Martin Westcombe | by 1736 | ||
| by 1736 | 2 | Anthony Westcombe | c 1708 | 6 Dec 1752 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 6 Dec 1752 | ||||||
| WESTERN of Rivenhall,Essex | ||||||
| 20 Aug 1864 | UK | 1 | Thomas Burch Western | 22 Aug 1795 | 30 May 1873 | 77 |
| MP for Essex North 1865-1868. Lord | ||||||
| Lieutenant Essex 1869-1873 | ||||||
| 30 May 1873 | 2 | Thomas Sutton Western | 7 Oct 1821 | 20 Jun 1877 | 55 | |
| MP for Maldon 1857-1865 | ||||||
| 20 Jun 1877 | 3 | Thomas Charles Callis Western | 29 Aug 1850 | 1 Feb 1917 | 66 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1 Feb 1917 | ||||||
| WESTON of Kendal,Westmorland | ||||||
| 31 Jul 1926 | UK | 1 | John Wakefield Weston | 13 Jun 1852 | 19 Sep 1926 | 74 |
| to | MP for Kendal 1913-1918 and | |||||
| 19 Sep 1926 | Westmorland 1918-1924 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| WHALLEY-SMYTHE-GARDINER | ||||||
| of Roche Court,Hants | ||||||
| 14 Jan 1783 | GB | 1 | John Whalley-Gardiner | 26 May 1743 | 18 Nov 1797 | 54 |
| For information on the special remainder | ||||||
| included in this creation, see the note at | ||||||
| the foot of this page | ||||||
| MP for Westbury 1780-1784 | ||||||
| 18 Nov 1797 | 2 | James Whalley-Smythe-Gardiner | 1 Oct 1748 | 21 Aug 1805 | 56 | |
| 21 Aug 1805 | 3 | James Whalley-Smythe-Gardiner | 2 Sep 1785 | 22 Oct 1851 | 66 | |
| 22 Oct 1851 | 4 | John Brocas Whalley-Smythe-Gardiner | 16 Mar 1814 | 6 Oct 1868 | 54 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 6 Oct 1868 | ||||||
| WHARTON of Kirby Kendall,Westmorland | ||||||
| 19 Dec 1677 | E | 1 | George Wharton | 4 Apr 1617 | 12 Aug 1681 | 64 |
| 12 Aug 1681 | 2 | Polycarpus Wharton | c 1652 | by 1741 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| by 1741 | ||||||
| WHEATE of Glympton,Oxon | ||||||
| 2 May 1696 | E | 1 | Thomas Wheate | 6 Sep 1667 | 25 Aug 1721 | 53 |
| MP for Woodstock 1690-1695 and 1708-1721 | ||||||
| 25 Aug 1721 | 2 | Thomas Wheate | 2 Mar 1693 | 1 May 1746 | ||
| MP for Woodstock 1722-1727 | ||||||
| 1 May 1746 | 3 | George Wheate | c 1700 | 5 Jun 1751 | ||
| 5 Jun 1751 | 4 | George Wheate | 26 Jan 1760 | |||
| 26 Jan 1760 | 5 | Jacob Wheate | Feb 1783 | |||
| Feb 1783 | 6 | John Thomas Wheate | 17 Oct 1749 | 14 Jul 1816 | 66 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 14 Jul 1816 | ||||||
| WHEELER of Woodhouse Eaves,Leics | ||||||
| 7 Feb 1920 | UK | 1 | Arthur Wheeler | 18 Sep 1860 | 20 May 1943 | 82 |
| 20 May 1943 | 2 | Arthur Frederick Pullman Wheeler | 10 Dec 1900 | 16 Dec 1964 | 64 | |
| 16 Dec 1964 | 3 | John Hieron Wheeler | 22 Jul 1905 | 21 Apr 2005 | 99 | |
| 21 Apr 2005 | 4 | John Frederick Wheeler | 3 May 1933 | |||
| WHEELER-CUFFE of Leyrath,Kilkenny | ||||||
| 30 Dec 1800 | I | 1 | Jonah Wheeler-Denny-Cuffe (later Denny- | |||
| Wheeler-Cuffe) | c 1769 | 9 May 1853 | ||||
| 9 May 1853 | 2 | Charles Frederick Denny Wheeler-Cuffe | 1 Sep 1832 | 15 Jan 1915 | 82 | |
| 15 Jan 1915 | 3 | Otway Fortescue Luke Wheeler-Cuffe | 9 Dec 1866 | 8 Feb 1934 | 67 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 8 Feb 1934 | ||||||
| WHELER of Westminster,Middlesex | ||||||
| 11 Aug 1660 | E | 1 | William Wheler | c 1601 | 6 Aug 1666 | |
| MP for Westbury 1640-1648 and 1659, and | ||||||
| Queenborough 1660 | ||||||
| 6 Aug 1666 | 2 | Charles Wheler | c 1620 | 26 Aug 1683 | ||
| MP for Cambridge University 1667-Jan 1679 | ||||||
| 26 Aug 1683 | 3 | William Wheler | 1654 | 23 Feb 1709 | 54 | |
| 23 Feb 1709 | 4 | Trevor Wheler | 25 Nov 1697 | 17 Oct 1718 | 20 | |
| Oct 1718 | 5 | William Wheler | c 1704 | 4 Jun 1763 | ||
| Jun 1763 | 6 | William Wheler | 16 Jul 1726 | 16 Apr 1799 | 72 | |
| Apr 1799 | 7 | Charles Wheler | 22 Dec 1730 | 12 Jul 1821 | 90 | |
| 12 Jul 1821 | 8 | Trevor Wheler | 23 Jun 1763 | 4 Feb 1830 | 66 | |
| 4 Feb 1830 | 9 | Trevor Wheler | 20 Dec 1792 | 6 Sep 1869 | 76 | |
| 6 Sep 1869 | 10 | Francis Wheler | 9 Nov 1801 | 4 Apr 1878 | 76 | |
| 4 Apr 1878 | 11 | Trevor Wheler | 12 Mar 1828 | 10 Jan 1900 | 71 | |
| 10 Jan 1900 | 12 | Edward Wheler | 5 Dec 1857 | 11 Aug 1903 | 45 | |
| 11 Aug 1903 | 13 | Trevor Wood Wheler | 20 Sep 1889 | 14 Jan 1986 | 96 | |
| 14 Jan 1986 | 14 | Edward Woodford Wheler | 13 Jun 1920 | 22 Jun 2008 | 88 | |
| 22 Jun 2008 | 15 | Trevor Woodford Wheler | 11 Apr 1946 | |||
| WHELER of Otterden,Kent | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1925 | UK | 1 | Granville Charles Hastings Wheler | 2 Oct 1872 | 14 Dec 1927 | 55 |
| to | MP for Faversham 1910-1927 | |||||
| 14 Dec 1927 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| WHICHCOTE of Inner Temple,London | ||||||
| 2 Apr 1660 | E | 1 | Jeremy Whichcote | c 1614 | 22 Jun 1677 | |
| 22 Jun 1677 | 2 | Paul Whichcote | 5 Mar 1643 | Dec 1721 | 78 | |
| Dec 1721 | 3 | Francis Whichcote | c 1692 | 27 Oct 1775 | ||
| MP for Cambridgeshire 1718-1722 | ||||||
| 27 Oct 1775 | 4 | Christopher Whichcote | 15 Mar 1738 | 9 Mar 1786 | 57 | |
| 9 Mar 1786 | 5 | Thomas Whichcote | 5 Mar 1763 | 4 Oct 1828 | 65 | |
| 4 Oct 1828 | 6 | Thomas Whichcote | 10 Aug 1787 | 23 Aug 1829 | 42 | |
| 23 Aug 1829 | 7 | Thomas Whichcote | 23 May 1813 | 17 Jan 1892 | 78 | |
| 17 Jan 1892 | 8 | George Whichcote | 31 May 1817 | 14 Apr 1893 | 75 | |
| 14 Apr 1893 | 9 | George Whichcote | 3 Sep 1870 | 5 Dec 1946 | 76 | |
| 5 Dec 1946 | 10 | Hugh Christopher Whichcote | 18 Apr 1874 | 7 May 1949 | 75 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 7 May 1949 | ||||||
| WHITAKER of Babworth,Notts | ||||||
| 15 Jul 1936 | UK | 1 | Sir Albert Edward Whitaker | 9 May 1860 | 11 Jun 1945 | 85 |
| 11 Jun 1945 | 2 | John Albert Charles Whitaker | 5 Mar 1897 | 5 Oct 1957 | 60 | |
| 5 Oct 1957 | 3 | James Herbert Ingham Whitaker | 27 Jul 1925 | 13 Jan 1999 | 73 | |
| 13 Jan 1999 | 4 | John James Ingham Whitaker | 23 Oct 1952 | |||
| WHITE of Blagdon,Northumberland | ||||||
| 6 May 1756 | GB | See "Ridley" | ||||
| WHITE of Tuxford,Notts and | ||||||
| Wallingwells,Yorks | ||||||
| 20 Dec 1802 | UK | 1 | Thomas Woollaston White | 20 Jan 1767 | 28 Oct 1817 | 50 |
| For details of the special remainder included | ||||||
| in the creation of this baronetcy,see the note | ||||||
| at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 28 Oct 1817 | 2 | Thomas Woollaston White | 3 Oct 1801 | 7 Aug 1882 | 80 | |
| 7 Aug 1882 | 3 | Thomas Woollaston White | 7 Feb 1828 | 20 May 1907 | 79 | |
| 20 May 1907 | 4 | Archibald Woollaston White | 14 Oct 1877 | 16 Dec 1945 | 68 | |
| 16 Dec 1945 | 5 | Thomas Astley Woollaston White | 13 May 1904 | 20 May 1996 | 92 | |
| 20 May 1996 | 6 | Nicholas Peter Archibald White | 2 Mar 1939 | |||
| WHITE of Cotham House,Bristol,Gloucs | ||||||
| 26 Aug 1904 | UK | 1 | George White | 28 Mar 1854 | 22 Nov 1916 | 62 |
| 22 Nov 1916 | 2 | George Stanley White | 31 Jul 1882 | 18 Jan 1964 | 81 | |
| 18 Jan 1964 | 3 | George Stanley Midelton White | 11 Apr 1913 | 31 Mar 1983 | 69 | |
| 31 Mar 1983 | 4 | George Stanley James White | 4 Nov 1948 | |||
| WHITE of Salle Park,Norfolk | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1922 | UK | 1 | Woolmer Rudolph Donati White | 21 Aug 1858 | 6 Dec 1931 | 73 |
| 6 Dec 1931 | 2 | Rudolph Dymoke White | 11 Jun 1888 | 25 May 1968 | 79 | |
| MP for Fareham 1939-1950 | ||||||
| 25 May 1968 | 3 | Headley Dymoke White | 15 Apr 1914 | 25 Feb 1971 | 56 | |
| For information on the death of this baronet, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 25 Feb 1971 | 4 | John Woolmer White | 4 Feb 1947 | |||
| WHITE of High Mark,Wigtown | ||||||
| 28 Jul 1926 | UK | See "Dalrymple-White" | ||||
| WHITE of Boulge Hall,Suffolk | ||||||
| 14 Jun 1937 | UK | 1 | Robert Eaton White | 6 Nov 1864 | 5 Aug 1940 | 75 |
| 5 Aug 1940 | 2 | Eric Richard Meadows White | 29 Jun 1910 | 26 Apr 1972 | 61 | |
| 26 Apr 1972 | 3 | Christopher Robert Meadows White | 26 Aug 1940 | 2015 | 74 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 2015 | ||||||
| WHITE-TODD of Eaton Place,London | ||||||
| 20 Jun 1913 | UK | 1 | Joseph White-Todd | 23 Jun 1846 | 19 Feb 1926 | 79 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 19 Feb 1926 | ||||||
| WHITEFOORD of Blairquhan,Ayr | ||||||
| 30 Dec 1701 | NS | 1 | Adam Whitefoord | Nov 1727 | ||
| Nov 1727 | 2 | John Whitefoord | c 1701 | 2 Mar 1763 | ||
| 2 Mar 1763 | 3 | John Whitefoord | c 1730 | 10 Apr 1803 | ||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became dormant | |||||
| 10 Apr 1803 | ||||||
| WHITEHEAD of Highfield House,Kent | ||||||
| 26 Nov 1889 | UK | 1 | James Whitehead | 2 Mar 1834 | 20 Oct 1917 | 83 |
| MP for Leicester 1892-1894 | ||||||
| 20 Oct 1917 | 2 | George Hugh Whitehead | 30 Oct 1861 | 21 May 1931 | 69 | |
| 21 May 1931 | 3 | Rowland Edward Whitehead | 1 Sep 1863 | 9 Oct 1942 | 79 | |
| 9 Oct 1942 | 4 | Philip Henry Rathbone Whitehead | 24 Jul 1897 | 31 Dec 1953 | 56 | |
| 31 Dec 1953 | 5 | Rowland John Rathbone Whitehead | 24 Jun 1930 | 28 Jul 2007 | 77 | |
| 28 Jul 2007 | 6 | Philip Henry Rathbone Whitehead | 13 Oct 1957 | |||
| WHITELEY of Grimley, Worcs | ||||||
| 8 Feb 1918 | UK | See "Huntingdon-Whiteley" | ||||
| WHITMORE of Apley,Salop | ||||||
| 28 Jun 1641 | E | 1 | Thomas Whitmore | 28 Nov 1612 | May 1653 | 40 |
| MP for Bridgnorth 1640-1644 | ||||||
| May 1653 | 2 | William Whitmore | 6 Apr 1637 | 30 Mar 1699 | 61 | |
| to | MP for Shropshire 1660 and Bridgnorth | |||||
| 30 Mar 1699 | 1661-1699 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| WHITMORE of Orsett,Essex | ||||||
| 28 Jun 1954 | UK | 1 | Sir Francis Henry Douglas Charlton Whitmore | 20 Apr 1872 | 12 Jun 1962 | 90 |
| Lord Lieutenant Essex 1936-1958 | ||||||
| 12 Jun 1962 | 2 | John Henry Douglas Whitmore | 16 Oct 1937 | 28 Apr 2017 | 79 | |
| 28 Apr 2017 | 3 | Jason Whitmore | 26 Jan 1983 | |||
| WHITSHED of Killincarrick,Wicklow | ||||||
| 16 May 1834 | UK | See "Hawkins-Whitshed" | ||||
| WHITWORTH of The Firs,Lancs | ||||||
| 1 Nov 1869 | UK | 1 | Joseph Whitworth | 21 Dec 1803 | 22 Jan 1887 | 83 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 22 Jan 1887 | ||||||
| WIDDRINGTON | ||||||
| of Widdrington,Northumberland | ||||||
| 26 Sep 1635 | NS | 1 | Edward Widdrington | 13 Jul 1671 | ||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became either | |||||
| 13 Jul 1671 | extinct or dormant | |||||
| WIDDRINGTON | ||||||
| of Widdrington,Northumberland | ||||||
| 9 Jul 1642 | E | 1 | William Widdrington | 11 Jul 1610 | 3 Sep 1651 | 41 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Widdrington (qv) in 1643 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until its | ||||||
| forfeiture in 1716 | ||||||
| WIDDRINGTON | ||||||
| of Cartington,Northumberland | ||||||
| 8 Aug 1642 | E | 1 | Edward Widdrington | 13 Jul 1671 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Jul 1671 | ||||||
| WIGAN of Clare Lawn,Surrey | ||||||
| and Purland Chase,Ross | ||||||
| 9 Mar 1898 | UK | 1 | Sir Frederick Wigan | 4 Oct 1827 | 2 Mar 1907 | 79 |
| 2 Mar 1907 | 2 | Frederick William Wigan | 18 Mar 1859 | 6 Apr 1907 | 48 | |
| 6 Apr 1907 | 3 | Roderick Grey Wigan | 11 Nov 1886 | 15 Jan 1954 | 67 | |
| 15 Jan 1954 | 4 | Frederick Adair Wigan | 13 Apr 1911 | 24 Jan 1979 | 67 | |
| 24 Jan 1979 | 5 | Alan Lewis Wigan | 19 Nov 1913 | 3 May 1996 | 82 | |
| 3 May 1996 | 6 | Michael Iain Wigan | 3 Oct 1951 | |||
| WIGGIN of Metchley Grange,Staffs | ||||||
| and Garth Gwynion,Montgomery | ||||||
| 17 Jun 1892 | UK | 1 | Henry Samuel Wiggin | 14 Feb 1824 | 12 Nov 1905 | 81 |
| MP for Staffordshire East 1880-1885 and | ||||||
| Handsworth 1885-1892 | ||||||
| 12 Nov 1905 | 2 | Henry Arthur Wiggin | 3 May 1852 | 2 May 1917 | 64 | |
| 2 May 1917 | 3 | Charles Richard Henry Wiggin | 21 Mar 1885 | 16 Sep 1972 | 87 | |
| 16 Sep 1972 | 4 | John Henry Wiggin | 3 Mar 1921 | 1 Jan 1992 | 70 | |
| 1 Jan 1992 | 5 | Charles Rupert John Wiggin | 2 Jul 1949 | 12 Oct 2012 | 63 | |
| 12 Oct 2012 | 6 | Richard Edward John Wiggin | 1 Jul 1980 | |||
| WIGRAM of Walthamstow,Essex | ||||||
| 30 Oct 1805 | UK | 1 | Robert Wigram | 30 Jan 1743 | 6 Nov 1830 | 87 |
| MP for Fowey 1802-1806 and Wexford 1806-1807 | ||||||
| 6 Nov 1830 | 2 | Robert Wigram (Fitzwygram from 1832) | 25 Sep 1773 | 17 Dec 1843 | 70 | |
| MP for Fowey 1806-1818,Lostwithiel 1818-1826 | ||||||
| and Wexford 1829-1830 | ||||||
| 17 Dec 1843 | 3 | Robert Fitzwygram | 7 Aug 1813 | 3 Sep 1873 | 60 | |
| 3 Sep 1873 | 4 | Frederick Wellington John Fitzwygram | 29 Aug 1823 | 9 Dec 1904 | 81 | |
| MP for Hampshire South 1884-1885 and Fareham | ||||||
| 1885-1900 | ||||||
| 9 Dec 1904 | 5 | Frederick Loftus Francis Fitzwygram | 11 Aug 1884 | 5 May 1920 | 35 | |
| 5 May 1920 | 6 | Edgar Thomas Ainger Wigram | 23 Nov 1864 | 15 Mar 1935 | 70 | |
| 15 Mar 1935 | 7 | Clifford Woolmore Wigram | 24 Jan 1911 | 11 Dec 2000 | 89 | |
| 11 Dec 2000 | 8 | Edward Robert Woolmore Wigram | 19 Jul 1913 | 11 Oct 2003 | 90 | |
| 11 Oct 2003 | 9 | John Woolmore Wigram | 25 May 1957 | |||
| WILBRAHAM of Woodhey,Cheshire | ||||||
| 5 May 1621 | E | 1 | Richard Wilbraham | 1579 | Apr 1643 | 63 |
| Apr 1643 | 2 | Thomas Wilbraham | c 1601 | 31 Oct 1660 | ||
| 31 Oct 1660 | 3 | Thomas Wilbraham | c 1630 | 19 Aug 1692 | ||
| to | MP for Stafford 1679-1681 | |||||
| Aug 1692 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| WILBRAHAM of Loventor,Devon | ||||||
| 19 Sep 1776 | GB | See "Baker-Wilbraham" | ||||
| WILDE of London | ||||||
| 13 Sep 1660 | E | 1 | William Wilde | c 1611 | 23 Nov 1679 | |
| MP for London 1660 | ||||||
| 23 Nov 1679 | 2 | Felix Wilde | c 1654 | late 1721 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| late 1721 | ||||||
| WILKINSON of Brook Witley,Surrey | ||||||
| 8 Dec 1941 | UK | 1 | George Henry Wilkinson | 20 Jul 1885 | 27 Jun 1967 | 81 |
| 27 Jun 1967 | 2 | Leonard David Wilkinson | 18 Jan 1920 | 1 Nov 1972 | 52 | |
| 1 Nov 1972 | 3 | David Graham Brook Wilkinson | 18 May 1947 | |||
| WILKS of Grosvenor Street,London | ||||||
| 5 Feb 1898 | UK | 1 | Samuel Wilks | 2 Jun 1824 | 8 Nov 1911 | 87 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 8 Nov 1911 | ||||||
| WILLIAMS of Vaynol,Carnarvon | ||||||
| 15 Jun 1622 | E | 1 | William Williams | c 1630 | ||
| c 1630 | 2 | Thomas Williams | c 1650 | |||
| c 1650 | 3 | William Williams | c 1659 | |||
| c 1659 | 4 | Griffith Williams | c 1663 | |||
| c 1663 | 5 | Thomas Williams | c 1673 | |||
| c 1673 | 6 | William Williams | c 1668 | 23 Dec 1696 | ||
| to | MP for Carnarvonshire 1689-1696 | |||||
| 23 Dec 1696 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| WILLIAMS of Marnhull,Dorset | ||||||
| 19 Apr 1642 | E | 1 | Edmund Williams | early 1644 | ||
| early 1644 | 2 | John Williams | 11 Sep 1642 | 14 Nov 1680 | 38 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Nov 1680 | ||||||
| WILLIAMS of Minster,Kent | ||||||
| 22 Apr 1642 | E | 1 | John Williams | c 1609 | 27 Feb 1669 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 27 Feb 1669 | ||||||
| WILLIAMS of Llangibby,Monmouth | ||||||
| 14 May 1642 | E | 1 | Trevor Williams | c 1622 | Nov 1692 | |
| MP for Monmouth 1660-1661 and 1679, and | ||||||
| Monmouthshire 1667-1679 and 1679-1685 | ||||||
| Nov 1692 | 2 | John Williams | c 1651 | Nov 1704 | ||
| MP for Monmouth 1689-1690 and | ||||||
| Monmouthshire 1698-1704 | ||||||
| Nov 1704 | 3 | Hopton Williams | c 1663 | 20 Nov 1723 | ||
| MP for Monmouthshire 1705-1708 | ||||||
| 20 Nov 1723 | 4 | John Williams | 11 Mar 1739 | |||
| 11 Mar 1739 | 5 | Leonard Williams | Dec 1753 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Dec 1753 | ||||||
| WILLIAMS of Guernevet,Brecon | ||||||
| 4 May 1644 | E | 1 | Henry Williams | c 1607 | c 1652 | |
| MP for Breconshire 1628-1629 | ||||||
| c 1652 | 2 | Henry Williams | c 1635 | Feb 1666 | ||
| MP for Brecon 1660-1661 | ||||||
| Feb 1666 | 3 | Walter Williams | c 1636 | c 1695 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1695 | ||||||
| WILLIAMS of Eltham,Kent | ||||||
| 12 Nov 1674 | E | 1 | Thomas Williams | c 1621 | 12 Sep 1712 | |
| MP for Weobly 1675-1678 | ||||||
| 12 Sep 1712 | 2 | John Williams | 24 Nov 1653 | 28 Apr 1723 | 69 | |
| MP for Herefordshire 1701-1705 | ||||||
| 28 Apr 1723 | 3 | David Williams | 6 Nov 1659 | 6 Feb 1740 | 80 | |
| 6 Feb 1740 | 4 | Henry Williams | 15 Aug 1741 | |||
| 15 Aug 1741 | 5 | Edward Williams | 12 Jul 1804 | |||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became either | |||||
| 12 Jul 1804 | extinct or dormant | |||||
| WILLIAMS of Grays Inn,London | ||||||
| 6 Jul 1688 | E | See "Williams-Wynn" | ||||
| WILLIAMS of Edwinsford,Carmarthen | ||||||
| 30 Jul 1707 | GB | 1 | Nicholas Williams | 1681 | 19 Jul 1745 | 64 |
| to | MP for Carmarthenshire 1724-1745. Lord | |||||
| 19 Jul 1745 | Lieutenant Carmarthenshire 1735-1740 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| WILLIAMS of Clapton,Northants | ||||||
| 4 Apr 1747 | GB | 1 | Hutchins Williams | c 1700 | 4 Nov 1758 | |
| 4 Nov 1758 | 2 | William Peere Williams | c 1730 | 27 Apr 1761 | ||
| MP for New Shoreham 1758-1761 | ||||||
| 27 Apr 1761 | 3 | Booth Williams | c 1735 | 2 Feb 1784 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 2 Feb 1784 | ||||||
| WILLIAMS of Clovelly,Devon | ||||||
| 7 Jul 1795 | GB | See "Hamlyn-Williams" | ||||
| WILLIAMS of Bodelwyddan,Flint | ||||||
| 24 Jul 1798 | GB | 1 | John Williams | 22 Dec 1761 | 9 Oct 1830 | 68 |
| 9 Oct 1830 | 2 | John Williams (Hay-Williams from 12 May 1842) | 9 Jan 1794 | 10 Sep 1859 | 65 | |
| 10 Sep 1859 | 3 | Hugh Williams | 8 Jan 1802 | 10 May 1876 | 74 | |
| 10 May 1876 | 4 | William Grenville Williams | 30 May 1844 | 28 Aug 1904 | 60 | |
| For information on the death of this baronet's two | ||||||
| daughters,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 28 Aug 1904 | 5 | William Willoughby Williams | 11 Sep 1888 | 18 Jan 1932 | 43 | |
| 18 Jan 1932 | 6 | Hugh Grenville Williams | 26 Mar 1889 | 9 Dec 1961 | 72 | |
| 9 Dec 1961 | 7 | Reginald Lawrence William Williams | 3 May 1900 | 30 Jan 1971 | 70 | |
| 30 Jan 1971 | 8 | Francis John Watkin Williams | 24 Jan 1905 | 3 Jan 1995 | 89 | |
| 3 Jan 1995 | 9 | Lawrence Hugh Williams | 25 Aug 1929 | 19 Apr 2018 | 88 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 19 Apr 2018 | ||||||
| WILLIAMS of Llwyny Wormwood,Carmarthen | ||||||
| 22 May 1815 | UK | See "Griffies-Williams" | ||||
| WILLIAMS of Kars | ||||||
| 18 Jul 1856 | UK | 1 | Sir William Fenwick Williams | 4 Dec 1800 | 26 Jul 1883 | 82 |
| to | MP for Calne 1856-1859 | |||||
| 26 Jul 1883 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| WILLIAMS of Tregullow,Cornwall | ||||||
| 4 Aug 1866 | UK | 1 | William Williams | 3 Aug 1791 | 24 Mar 1870 | 78 |
| 24 Mar 1870 | 2 | Frederick Martin Williams | 25 Jan 1830 | 3 Sep 1878 | 48 | |
| MP for Truro 1863-1878 | ||||||
| 3 Sep 1878 | 3 | William Robert Williams | 21 Feb 1860 | 16 May 1903 | 43 | |
| 16 May 1903 | 4 | William Frederick Williams | 17 May 1886 | 20 Sep 1905 | 19 | |
| 20 Sep 1905 | 5 | Frederick William Williams | 15 Jan 1888 | 2 Oct 1913 | 25 | |
| For further information on the death of this | ||||||
| baronet,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 2 Oct 1913 | 6 | Burton Robert Williams | 7 Jul 1889 | 3 Oct 1917 | 28 | |
| 3 Oct 1917 | 7 | Frederick Law Williams | 10 May 1862 | 20 Dec 1921 | 59 | |
| 20 Dec 1921 | 8 | William Law Williams | 1 May 1907 | 1 Jul 1960 | 53 | |
| For further information on this baronet, see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 1 Jul 1960 | 9 | Robert Ernest Williams | 6 Jun 1924 | 26 May 1976 | 51 | |
| 26 May 1976 | 10 | Donald Mark Williams | 7 Nov 1954 | |||
| WILLIAMS of London | ||||||
| 30 Oct 1894 | UK | 1 | John Williams | 6 Nov 1840 | 24 May 1926 | 85 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 24 May 1926 | ||||||
| WILLIAMS of Castell Deudrath | ||||||
| and Borthwen,Merioneth | ||||||
| 28 Jul 1909 | UK | 1 | Arthur Osmond Williams | 17 Mar 1849 | 28 Jan 1927 | 77 |
| MP for Merionethshire 1900-1910. Lord | ||||||
| Lieutenant Merioneth 1909-1927 | ||||||
| 28 Jan 1927 | 2 | Michael Osmond Williams | 22 Apr 1914 | 19 Dec 2012 | 98 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 19 Dec 2012 | ||||||
| WILLIAMS of Bridehead,Dorset | ||||||
| 9 Feb 1915 | UK | 1 | Robert Williams | 15 Jun 1848 | 15 Apr 1943 | 94 |
| MP for Dorset West 1895-1922 | ||||||
| 15 Apr 1943 | 2 | Philip Francis Cunningham Williams | 6 Jul 1884 | 6 May 1958 | 73 | |
| 6 May 1958 | 3 | David Philip Williams | 5 Oct 1909 | 31 Oct 1970 | 61 | |
| 31 Oct 1970 | 4 | Robert Philip Nathaniel Williams | 3 May 1950 | |||
| WILLIAMS of Miskin,Glamorgan | ||||||
| 25 Jun 1918 | UK | See "Rhys-Williams" | ||||
| WILLIAMS of Ewhurst,Surrey | ||||||
| 28 Nov 1922 | UK | See "Hume-Williams" | ||||
| WILLIAMS of Park,Aberdeen | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1928 | UK | 1 | Robert Williams | 21 Jan 1860 | 25 Apr 1938 | 78 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 25 Apr 1938 | ||||||
| WILLIAMS of Glynwr,Carmarthen | ||||||
| 10 Jul 1935 | UK | 1 | Evan Williams | 2 Jul 1871 | 3 Feb 1959 | 87 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 3 Feb 1959 | ||||||
| WILLIAMS of Cilgeraint,Carnarvon | ||||||
| 3 Jul 1953 | UK | 1 | Sir Herbert Geraint Williams | 2 Dec 1884 | 25 Jul 1954 | 69 |
| MP for Reading 1924-1929, Croydon | ||||||
| South 1932-1945 and Croydon East 1950-54 | ||||||
| 25 Jul 1954 | 2 | Robin Philip Williams | 27 May 1928 | 14 Sep 2013 | 85 | |
| 14 Sep 2013 | 3 | Anthony Geraint Williams | 22 Dec 1958 | |||
| WILLIAMS | ||||||
| 1955 | UK | 1 | George Clark Williams | 2 Nov 1878 | 15 Oct 1958 | 79 |
| to | Lord Lieutenant Carmarthen 1949-1953 | |||||
| 15 Oct 1958 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| WILLIAMS of Exeter,Devon | ||||||
| 2 Jul 1964 | UK | See "Dudley-Williams" | ||||
| WILLIAMS-BULKELEY of Penrhyn,Carnarvon | ||||||
| 17 Jun 1661 | E | 1 | Griffith Williams | 1663 | ||
| 1663 | 2 | Robert Williams | c 1627 | 1678 | ||
| MP for Carnarvonshire 1656-1658 and | ||||||
| Carnarvon 1659 | ||||||
| 1678 | 3 | John Williams | c 1682 | |||
| c 1682 | 4 | Griffith Williams | c 1685 | |||
| c 1685 | 5 | Hugh Williams | c 1706 | |||
| c 1706 | 6 | Griffith Williams | Jul 1734 | |||
| Jul 1734 | 7 | Robert Williams | Nov 1745 | |||
| Nov 1745 | 8 | Hugh Williams | 1718 | 19 Aug 1794 | 76 | |
| MP for Beaumaris 1768-1780 and 1785-1794 | ||||||
| 19 Aug 1794 | 9 | Robert Williams | 20 Jul 1764 | 1 Dec 1830 | 66 | |
| MP for Carnarvonshire 1790-1826 and | ||||||
| Beaumaris 1826-1830 | ||||||
| 1 Dec 1830 | 10 | Richard Bulkeley Williams-Bulkeley | 23 Sep 1801 | 28 Aug 1875 | 73 | |
| MP for Beaumaris 1831-1832, Anglesey | ||||||
| 1832-1837 and 1847-1868 and Flint | ||||||
| Burghs 1841-1847. Lord Lieutenant | ||||||
| Caernarvonshire 1851-1866 | ||||||
| 28 Aug 1875 | 11 | Richard Mostyn Lewis Williams-Bulkeley | 20 May 1833 | 28 Jan 1884 | 50 | |
| 28 Jan 1884 | 12 | Richard Henry Williams-Bulkeley | 4 Dec 1862 | 7 Jul 1942 | 79 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Anglesey 1896-1942 | ||||||
| 7 Jul 1942 | 13 | Richard Harry David Williams-Bulkeley | 5 Oct 1911 | 3 Feb 1992 | 80 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Anglesey 1947-1974 | ||||||
| 3 Feb 1992 | 14 | Richard Thomas Williams-Bulkeley | 25 May 1939 | |||
| WILLIAMS-DRUMMOND | ||||||
| of Hawthornden,Edinburgh | ||||||
| 27 Feb 1828 | UK | 1 | John Forbes Drummond | 28 May 1829 | ||
| For details of the special remainder included | ||||||
| in this creation, see the note at the foot of | ||||||
| this page | ||||||
| 28 May 1829 | 2 | Francis Walker Drummond | 1781 | 29 Feb 1844 | 62 | |
| 29 Feb 1844 | 3 | James Williams-Drummond | 11 Aug 1814 | 10 May 1866 | 51 | |
| 10 May 1866 | 4 | James Hamlyn Williams Williams-Drummond | 13 Jan 1857 | 15 Jun 1913 | 56 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Carmarthen 1898-1913 | ||||||
| 15 Jun 1913 | 5 | James Hamlyn Williams Williams-Drummond | 25 May 1891 | 7 Jan 1970 | 78 | |
| 7 Jan 1970 | 6 | William Hugh Dudley Williams-Drummond | 13 Feb 1901 | 27 May 1976 | 75 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 27 May 1976 | ||||||
| WILLIAMS-WYNN of Grays Inn,London | ||||||
| 6 Jul 1688 | E | 1 | William Williams | c 1634 | 11 Jul 1700 | |
| MP for Chester 1675-1681, Montgomery | ||||||
| 1685 and Beaumaris 1689-1690 and 1695-98 | ||||||
| Solicitor General 1687-1689. Speaker of | ||||||
| the House of Commons 1680-81. Lord | ||||||
| Lieutenant Merioneth 1689-1690 | ||||||
| 11 Jul 1700 | 2 | William Williams | c 1665 | 20 Oct 1740 | ||
| MP for Denbigh 1708-1710 | ||||||
| 20 Oct 1740 | 3 | Watkin Williams-Wynn | 1692 | 23 Sep 1749 | 57 | |
| MP for Denbighshire 1716-1741 and 1747-1749 | ||||||
| 23 Sep 1749 | 4 | Watkin Williams-Wynn | 1749 | 24 Jul 1789 | 40 | |
| MP for Shropshire 1772-1774 and | ||||||
| Denbighshire 1774-1789. Lord Lieutenant | ||||||
| Merioneth 1775-1789 | ||||||
| 24 Jul 1789 | 5 | Watkin Williams-Wynn | 25 Oct 1772 | 6 Jan 1840 | 67 | |
| MP for Beaumaris 1794-1796 and | ||||||
| Denbighshire 1796-1840. Lord Lieutenant | ||||||
| Merioneth 1793-1830 | ||||||
| 6 Jan 1840 | 6 | Watkin Williams-Wynn | 22 May 1820 | 9 May 1885 | 64 | |
| MP for Denbighshire 1841-1885 | ||||||
| 9 May 1885 | 7 | Herbert Lloyd Watkin Williams-Wynn | 6 Jun 1860 | 24 May 1944 | 83 | |
| MP for Denbighshire 1885. Lord Lieutenant | ||||||
| Montgomery 1891-1944 | ||||||
| 24 May 1944 | 8 | Watkin Williams-Wynn | 25 Jan 1891 | 9 May 1949 | 58 | |
| 9 May 1949 | 9 | Robert William Herbert Watkin | ||||
| Williams-Wynn | 3 Jun 1862 | 23 Nov 1951 | 89 | |||
| Lord Lieutenant Denbigh 1928-1951 | ||||||
| 23 Nov 1951 | 10 | Owen Watkin Williams-Wynn | 30 Nov 1904 | 13 May 1988 | 83 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Denbigh 1966-1974 and | ||||||
| Clwyd 1976-1979 | ||||||
| 13 May 1988 | 11 | David Watkin Williams-Wynn | 18 Feb 1940 | 18 Nov 2023 | 83 | |
| 18 Nov 2023 | 12 | Charles Edward Watkin Williams-Wynn | 16 Sep 1970 | |||
| WILLIAMSON of East Markham,Notts | ||||||
| 3 Jun 1642 | E | 1 | Thomas Williamson | 14 May 1609 | 14 Oct 1657 | 48 |
| 14 Oct 1657 | 2 | Thomas Williamson | 10 May 1636 | 23 Apr 1703 | 66 | |
| 23 Apr 1703 | 3 | Robert Williamson | 25 May 1707 | |||
| May 1707 | 4 | William Williamson | 9 Oct 1681 | Apr 1747 | 65 | |
| Apr 1747 | 5 | Hedworth Williamson | c 1710 | 9 Jan 1788 | ||
| 9 Jan 1788 | 6 | Hedworth Williamson | 1751 | 14 Mar 1810 | 58 | |
| 14 Mar 1810 | 7 | Hedworth Williamson | 1 Nov 1797 | 24 Apr 1861 | 63 | |
| MP for co.Durham 1831-1832, Durham | ||||||
| North 1832-1837 and Sunderland 1847-1852 | ||||||
| 24 Apr 1861 | 8 | Hedworth Williamson | 25 Mar 1827 | 26 Aug 1900 | 73 | |
| MP for Durham North 1864-1874 | ||||||
| For further information on this baronet,see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 26 Aug 1900 | 9 | Hedworth Williamson | 23 May 1867 | 27 Oct 1942 | 75 | |
| 27 Oct 1942 | 10 | Charles Hedworth Williamson | 6 Sep 1903 | 8 Apr 1946 | 42 | |
| 8 Apr 1946 | 11 | Nicholas Frederick Hedworth Williamson | 26 Oct 1937 | 31 Dec 2000 | 63 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 31 Dec 2000 | For further information on this baronet,see | |||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| WILLIAMSON of Glenogil,Forfar | ||||||
| 29 Jul 1909 | UK | 1 | Archibald Williamson | 13 Sep 1860 | 29 Oct 1931 | 71 |
| He was subsequently created Baron Forres | ||||||
| (qv) in 1922 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| WILLINK of Dingle Bank,Lancs | ||||||
| 20 Jul 1957 | UK | 1 | Henry Urmston Willink | 7 Mar 1894 | 1 Jan 1973 | 78 |
| MP for Croydon North 1940-1948. Minister | ||||||
| of Health 1943-1945. PC 1943 | ||||||
| 1 Jan 1973 | 2 | Charles William Willink | 10 Sep 1929 | 10 Mar 2009 | 79 | |
| 10 Mar 2009 | 3 | Edward Daniel Willink | 18 Feb 1957 | |||
| WILLOUGHBY of Risley,Derby | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1611 | E | 1 | Henry Willoughby | 14 Sep 1579 | 20 Nov 1649 | 70 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 20 Nov 1649 | ||||||
| WILLOUGHBY of Willoughby,Notts | ||||||
| 4 Aug 1660 | E | 1 | William Willoughby | c 1630 | 10 Feb 1671 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 10 Feb 1671 | ||||||
| WILLOUGHBY of Wollaton,Notts | ||||||
| 7 Apr 1677 | E | 1 | Francis Willoughby | 1668 | Sep 1688 | 20 |
| Sep 1688 | 2 | Thomas Willoughby | 9 Apr 1672 | 2 Apr 1729 | 56 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Middleton (qv) in 1712 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| WILLOUGHBY of Baldon House,Oxon | ||||||
| 8 Dec 1794 | GB | 1 | Christopher Willoughby | Nov 1748 | 5 Apr 1808 | 59 |
| 5 Apr 1808 | 2 | Christopher William Willoughby | 2 Sep 1793 | 24 Jun 1813 | 19 | |
| 24 Jun 1813 | 3 | Henry Pollard Willoughby | 17 Nov 1796 | 23 Mar 1865 | 68 | |
| MP for Yarmouth IOW 1831-1832, Newcastle | ||||||
| under Lyme 1832-1834 and Evesham 1847-1865 | ||||||
| 23 Mar 1865 | 4 | John Pollard Willoughby | 21 Apr 1799 | 15 Sep 1866 | 67 | |
| MP for Leominster 1857-1858 | ||||||
| 15 Sep 1866 | 5 | John Christopher Willoughby | 20 Feb 1859 | 16 Apr 1918 | 59 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 16 Apr 1918 | ||||||
| WILLS of Coombe Lodge,Somerset | ||||||
| 12 Aug 1893 | UK | 1 | William Henry Wills | 1 Sep 1830 | 29 Jan 1911 | 80 |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Winterstoke (qv) in 1906 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy then merged until its | ||||||
| extinction in 1911 | ||||||
| WILLS of Manor Heath,Hants | ||||||
| 15 Feb 1897 | UK | 1 | Frederick Wills | 22 Nov 1838 | 18 Feb 1909 | 70 |
| MP for Bristol North 1900-1906 | ||||||
| 18 Feb 1909 | 2 | Gilbert Alan Hamilton Wills | 28 Mar 1880 | 1 Dec 1956 | 76 | |
| He was subsequently created Baron | ||||||
| Dulverton (qv) in 1929 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| WILLS of Hazelwood,Gloucs and | ||||||
| Clapton-in-Gordano,Somerset | ||||||
| 19 Aug 1904 | UK | 1 | Sir Edward Payson Wills | 12 Jun 1834 | 13 Mar 1910 | 75 |
| 13 Mar 1910 | 2 | Edward Chaning Wills | 25 Apr 1861 | 14 Oct 1921 | 60 | |
| 14 Oct 1921 | 3 | Ernest Salter Wills | 30 Nov 1869 | 14 Jan 1958 | 88 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Wiltshire 1930-1942 | ||||||
| 14 Jan 1958 | 4 | Ernest Edward de Winton Wells | 8 Dec 1903 | 19 Aug 1983 | 79 | |
| 19 Aug 1983 | 5 | David Seton Wills | 29 Dec 1939 | 2 Jun 2023 | 83 | |
| 2 Jun 2023 | 6 | James Seton Wills | 24 Nov 1970 | |||
| WILLS of Blagdon,Somerset | ||||||
| 19 Jul 1923 | UK | 1 | George Alfred Wills | 3 Jun 1854 | 11 Jul 1928 | 74 |
| 11 Jul 1928 | 2 | George Vernon Proctor Wills | 21 Mar 1887 | 1 Feb 1931 | 43 | |
| 1 Feb 1931 | 3 | George Peter Vernon Wills | 8 Jan 1922 | 19 Apr 1945 | 23 | |
| 19 Apr 1945 | 4 | John Vernon Wills | 3 Jul 1928 | 26 Aug 1998 | 70 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Avon 1974-1996 and Somerset | ||||||
| 1994-1998 | ||||||
| 26 Aug 1998 | 5 | David James Vernon Wills | 2 Jan 1955 | |||
| WILLSHIRE of the East Indies | ||||||
| 22 May 1841 | UK | 1 | Sir Thomas Willshire | 24 Aug 1789 | 31 May 1862 | 72 |
| 31 May 1862 | 2 | Arthur Reginald Thomas Willshire | 23 Nov 1850 | 26 Apr 1919 | 68 | |
| 26 Apr 1919 | 3 | Gerard Arthur Maxwell Willshire | 21 Aug 1892 | 1 Apr 1947 | 54 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1 Apr 1947 | For further information on this baronet,see | |||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| WILLYS of Fen Ditton,Cambs | ||||||
| 15 Dec 1641 | E | 1 | Thomas Willys | c 1614 | 17 Nov 1701 | |
| MP for Cambridgeshire 1659 and | ||||||
| Cambridge 1660 | ||||||
| 17 Nov 1701 | 2 | John Willys | c 1635 | 9 Aug 1704 | ||
| Aug 1704 | 3 | Thomas Willys | c 1674 | 17 Jun 1705 | ||
| 17 Jun 1705 | 4 | Thomas Willys | c 1704 | c 1724 | ||
| c 1724 | 5 | Thomas Willys | c 1680 | 17 Jul 1726 | ||
| 17 Jul 1726 | 6 | William Willys | c 1685 | 14 Apr 1732 | ||
| to | MP for Newport IOW 1727 and Great Bedwyn | |||||
| 14 Apr 1732 | 1727-1732 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| WILLYS of Fen Ditton,Cambs | ||||||
| 11 Jun 1646 | E | 1 | Richard Willys | c 1615 | 9 Dec 1690 | |
| Dec 1690 | 2 | Thomas Fox Willys | 30 Jun 1661 | 1701 | 40 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1701 | ||||||
| WILMOT of Witney,Oxon | ||||||
| 1 Oct 1621 | I | 1 | Arthur Wilmot | 13 Mar 1629 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Mar 1629 | ||||||
| WILMOT of Chaddesden,Derby | ||||||
| 15 Feb 1759 | GB | 1 | Edward Wilmot | 29 Oct 1693 | 21 Nov 1786 | 93 |
| 21 Nov 1786 | 2 | Robert Mead Wilmot | 13 Sep 1731 | 9 Sep 1793 | 61 | |
| 9 Sep 1793 | 3 | Robert Wilmot | 5 Jul 1765 | 13 Jul 1842 | 77 | |
| 13 Jul 1842 | 4 | Henry Sacheverell Wilmot | 11 Feb 1801 | 11 Apr 1872 | 71 | |
| 11 Apr 1872 | 5 | Henry Sacheverell Wilmot VC | 3 Feb 1831 | 7 Apr 1901 | 70 | |
| MP for Derbyshire South 1869-1885 | ||||||
| For further information on this baronet and VC | ||||||
| winner,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 7 Apr 1901 | 6 | Ralph Henry Sacheverell Wilmot | 8 Jun 1875 | 14 Jan 1918 | 42 | |
| 14 Jan 1918 | 7 | Arthur Ralph Wilmot | 2 Feb 1909 | 3 Oct 1942 | 33 | |
| 3 Oct 1942 | 8 | Robert Arthur Wilmot | 8 Oct 1939 | 14 Nov 1974 | 35 | |
| 14 Nov 1974 | 9 | Henry Robert Wilmot | 10 Apr 1967 | |||
| WILMOT of Osmaston,Derby | ||||||
| 10 Oct 1772 | GB | 1 | Robert Wilmot | c 1708 | 14 Nov 1772 | |
| 14 Nov 1772 | 2 | Robert Wilmot | c 1752 | 23 Jul 1834 | ||
| 23 Jul 1834 | 3 | Robert John Wilmot (Wilmot-Horton from 1823) | 21 Dec 1784 | 31 May 1841 | 56 | |
| MP for Newcastle under Lyme 1818-1830 | ||||||
| Governor of Ceylon 1831-1837. PC 1827 | ||||||
| 31 May 1841 | 4 | Robert Edward Wilmot-Horton (Wilmot from | 29 Jan 1808 | 22 Sep 1880 | 72 | |
| 11 Jan 1842 and Wilmot-Horton from 1871) | ||||||
| 22 Sep 1880 | 5 | George Lewis Wilmot-Horton | 8 Nov 1825 | 24 Oct 1887 | 61 | |
| 24 Oct 1887 | 6 | Robert Rodney Wilmot | 20 Jun 1853 | 16 Aug 1931 | 78 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 16 Aug 1931 | ||||||
| WILMOT of Berkswell Hall,Warwicks | ||||||
| 23 Aug 1821 | UK | See "Eardley" | ||||
| WILSON of Killenure,Donegal | ||||||
| 3 Jul 1629 | I | 1 | John Wilson | 16 Apr 1636 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 16 Apr 1636 | ||||||
| WILSON of Eastbourne,Sussex | ||||||
| 4 Mar 1661 | E | See "Maryon-Wilson" | ||||
| WILSON of East Stoke,Notts | ||||||
| 31 Oct 1757 | GB | See "Bromley" | ||||
| WILSON of Delhi,India | ||||||
| 8 Jan 1858 | UK | 1 | Sir Archdale Wilson | 3 Aug 1803 | 9 May 1874 | 70 |
| 9 May 1874 | 2 | Roland Knyvet Wilson | 27 Aug 1840 | 29 Oct 1919 | 79 | |
| 29 Oct 1919 | 3 | Arthur Knyvet Wilson | 4 Mar 1842 | 25 May 1921 | 79 | |
| to | OM 1912 | |||||
| 25 May 1921 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| WILSON of Eshton Hall,Yorks | ||||||
| 16 Mar 1874 | UK | 1 | Mathew Wilson | 29 Aug 1802 | 18 Jan 1891 | 88 |
| MP for Clitheroe 1841-1842 and 1847-1853, | ||||||
| Yorkshire West Riding North 1874-1885 and | ||||||
| Skipton 1885-1886 | ||||||
| 18 Jan 1891 | 2 | Mathew Wharton Wilson | 20 Mar 1827 | 1 Mar 1909 | 81 | |
| 1 Mar 1909 | 3 | Mathew Amcotts Wilson | 2 Jan 1853 | 18 Jan 1914 | 61 | |
| 18 Jan 1914 | 4 | Mathew Richard Henry Wilson | 25 Aug 1875 | 19 May 1958 | 82 | |
| MP for Bethnal Green South West 1914-1922 | ||||||
| 17 May 1958 | 5 | Mathew Martin Wilson | 2 Jul 1906 | 20 Mar 1991 | 84 | |
| 20 Mar 1991 | 6 | Mathew John Anthony Wilson, OBE, MC. | 2 Oct 1935 | 5 Dec 2019 | 84 | |
| 5 Dec 2019 | 7 | Edward Amcotts Wilson | 13 Oct 1966 | |||
| WILSON of Archer House,Yorks | ||||||
| 26 Aug 1897 | UK | 1 | Alexander Wilson | 28 Jun 1837 | 27 Apr 1907 | 69 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 29 Apr 1907 | ||||||
| WILSON of Airdrie,Fife | ||||||
| 27 Jul 1906 | UK | 1 | John Wilson | 26 Jun 1844 | 28 Jul 1918 | 74 |
| MP for Falkirk 1895-1906 | ||||||
| 28 Jul 1918 | 2 | James Robertson Wilson | 5 May 1883 | 30 Sep 1964 | 81 | |
| 30 Sep 1964 | 3 | John Menzies Wilson | 12 Feb 1885 | 22 Oct 1968 | 83 | |
| 22 Oct 1968 | 4 | Thomas Douglas Wilson | 10 Jun 1917 | 12 Nov 1984 | 67 | |
| 12 Nov 1984 | 5 | James William Douglas Wilson | 8 Oct 1960 | |||
| WILSON of Currygrane,Longford | ||||||
| 3 Oct 1919 | UK | 1 | Henry Hughes Wilson | 5 May 1864 | 22 Jun 1922 | 58 |
| to | Field Marshal 1919. MP for Down North 1922 | |||||
| 22 Jun 1922 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| For further information on the death of this | ||||||
| baronet,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| WILSON of Carbeth,Stirling | ||||||
| 11 Feb 1920 | UK | 1 | David Wilson | 4 Apr 1855 | 8 Mar 1930 | 74 |
| 8 Mar 1930 | 2 | John Mitchell Harvey Wilson | 10 Oct 1898 | 6 Feb 1975 | 76 | |
| 6 Feb 1975 | 3 | David Wilson | 30 Oct 1928 | 28 Apr 2014 | 85 | |
| 28 Apr 2014 | 4 | Thomas David Wilson | 6 Jan 1959 | |||
| Sir Derrick Julius Wernher, 2nd baronet | ||||||
| Sir Julius Wernher, 1st baronet, became one of the wealthiest men in England due to his | ||||||
| interests in diamond mines in South Africa. Unfortunately, it would seem that his eldest son | ||||||
| did not inherit his father's financial acumen. | ||||||
| In May 1912 he appeared in the bankruptcy courts, as reported in 'The New York Times' of | ||||||
| 8 May:- | ||||||
| 'Derrick Wernher, son of the South African millionaire Sir Julius Wernher, appeared in the | ||||||
| Bankruptcy Court today, when an extraordinary story of how he spent £115,000 ($575,000) | ||||||
| was disclosed. | ||||||
| 'The bankrupt attributed his failure to extravagant living, betting, gambling, and heavy interest, | ||||||
| commissions, and bonuses on money-lending transactions. | ||||||
| 'Derrick Wernher is 22 years of age. He was educated at Eton and Oxford, and on leaving the | ||||||
| university had contracted debts to the amount of $200,000, chiefly as a result of gambling | ||||||
| transactions, including baccarat and horse racing. These debts were paid by his father, who | ||||||
| then advertised in the English and Continental newspapers that he would not be responsible | ||||||
| for any further debts his son might incur. | ||||||
| 'Since then, the bankrupt said, he had incurred debts to the amount of $350,000 to unsecured | ||||||
| creditors. In November, 1910, his father obtained an appointment for him as private secretary | ||||||
| to a gentleman travelling in Egypt and the Sudan at a remuneration of $200 a month, but in | ||||||
| May, 1911, that engagement terminated. | ||||||
| "Did your father say that if you would do two year's honest work he would leave you his vast | ||||||
| fortune, but that if you did not turn over a new leaf he would leave his money elsewhere?" was | ||||||
| asked. "He did not," was the reply. | ||||||
| Questioned regarding the heavy purchases of jewellery, Derrick Wernher said that Oscar Kahn | ||||||
| was a creditor for $245,000 under that head. He bought the jewellery in October, 1910, under | ||||||
| the following circumstances:- | ||||||
| 'He had made the acquaintance of Tery, a Hungarian, who was acquainted with his financial | ||||||
| necessities and suggested a plan of relieving them. Tery said he had relations with a large | ||||||
| jewellery firm in Paris which would willingly do business with the debtor. Accordingly Terry | ||||||
| introduced him to Oscar Kahn, who asked the witness if he were the eldest son of his father, | ||||||
| On learning that he was, Kahn, the debtor said, supplied him with a magnificent string of pearls. | ||||||
| He was not asked any question as to his financial position, and did not instruct Tery to make | ||||||
| any statement on the subject. He gave Kahn security in the shape of acceptances for the | ||||||
| jewellery. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Wernher added that he took the string of pearls to an address which Kahn gave him and | ||||||
| received for the jewels $6,000 in cash and a check for $44,400. He took the check back to | ||||||
| Kahn because a premium of $1,000 had been paid in respect to a policy affected on his life. | ||||||
| The check was cashed and the witness received $43,000, which, with the $6,000 in cash, made | ||||||
| up the total consideration in respect of a liability of over $235,000. He paid Tery a commission | ||||||
| of $4,000 out of the money. | ||||||
| 'The debtor said he had paid off a number of debts with the money, and the remainder went | ||||||
| chiefly in gambling in Florence and in the payment of betting losses in England.' | ||||||
| When Sir Julius died later that month, his estate was valued at $25 million. Of this amount a | ||||||
| sum of $750,000 was left in trust for life for Derrick, with the proviso that no more than $6,000 | ||||||
| per annum be paid to him between the ages of 25 and 30, and not more than $12,000 per | ||||||
| annum after reaching age 30. If and when he married, the $750,000 would remain in trust for | ||||||
| the benefit of his wife and any children. If he died unmarried, the capital amount would | ||||||
| revert to his father's estate. | ||||||
| According to a report in 'The Washington Post' of 17 October 1919, Sir Derrick's "career in the | ||||||
| United States, especially New York, has been almost as unpleasantly spectacular as in England." | ||||||
| This report also states that, after joining the Army during WW1 and rising to the rank of acting | ||||||
| Major, Wernher was cashiered following a court-martial. | ||||||
| In June 1924, Derrick was arrested and charged with perjury. The warrant for his arrest was | ||||||
| dated 12 years earlier and alleged that he had committed perjury during his bankruptcy | ||||||
| hearing. Fortunately for him, the principal witness against him had died in the meantime, and | ||||||
| he was accordingly discharged. | ||||||
| Wernher died when he fell from his apartment balcony, as reported in 'The Manchester Guardian' | ||||||
| on 8 March 1948:- | ||||||
| 'Sir Derrick Julius Wernher (58) fell 80 feet to his death from the balcony of his flat in Princess | ||||||
| Gate, South Kensington, London, early on Saturday. His body, fully clothed, was found by | ||||||
| another resident of the flats on the terrace at the back of the building. There is no suspicion | ||||||
| of foul play. | ||||||
| 'A woman friend told a reporter that Sir Derrick, who was 6ft 7in in height, suffered from | ||||||
| giddiness. "But he loved to go out on to the balcony of his flat to admire the view or, at night, | ||||||
| to watch the lights." | ||||||
| The special remainder to the baronetcy of Whalley-Gardiner created in 1783 | ||||||
| From the "London Gazette" of 24 December 1782 (issue 12400, page 1):- | ||||||
| 'The King has been pleased to grant the Dignity of a Baronet of the Kingdom of Great Britain to | ||||||
| John Whalley Gardiner, of Roch Court in the County of Hants, Esq., and the Heirs Male of his | ||||||
| Body lawfully begotten; with Remainders severally to James Whalley, Esq., Son of Robert | ||||||
| Whalley, late of the City of Oxford, Esq; and to Thomas William Whalley, Esq, also Son of the | ||||||
| said Robert Whalley, and the respective Heirs Male of their Bodies lawfully begotten.' | ||||||
| The special remainder to the baronetcy of White created in 1802 | ||||||
| From the "London Gazette" of 27 November 1802 (issue 15536, page 1253):- | ||||||
| 'The King has been pleased to grant the Dignity of a Baronet of the United Kingdom of Great | ||||||
| Britain and Ireland to Thomas Wollaston White, of Tuxford and Wallingwells, in the Counties | ||||||
| of Nottingham and York, Esq; with Remainders to his Brothers Taylor White and Charles | ||||||
| Lawrence White, Esqrs, and their respective Heirs Male.' | ||||||
| Sir Headley Dymoke White, 3rd baronet [UK 1922] | ||||||
| Sir Headley committed suicide in February 1971. The following report on the subsequent inquest | ||||||
| into his death appeared in the London "Daily Telegraph" of 3 March 1971:- | ||||||
| 'A baronet shot himself after a lovers' quarrel, his mistress told an inquest in Norwich yesterday. | ||||||
| She had rejected him, she said, and he had said: "I cannot live without you." | ||||||
| 'A suicide verdict was recorded on Sir Headley Dymoke White, 56, who died in hospital on | ||||||
| Thursday after the shooting in a lane at Taverham, Norfolk. Sir Headley, the third baronet, | ||||||
| farmed 2,500 acres at Salle, Norfolk. | ||||||
| 'Mrs. Vilma Seppings, 37, told the inquest that after becoming Sir Headley's secretary four | ||||||
| years ago, she became his mistress in June, 1968. After leaving her husband last September, | ||||||
| she lived in rooms at Cambridge Street, Norwich, where she was visited by Sir Headley who | ||||||
| provided money for her maintenance. The baronet, she said, had by this time been separated | ||||||
| from his wife more than six months. Two months later she realised things were not working well | ||||||
| between them and she told him she wanted to end their liaison. He refused to listen and said | ||||||
| he would kill himself. She did not take the threat seriously. To avoid him she moved to another | ||||||
| address in Norwich. She said Sir Headley employed a private detective to try and find her, but | ||||||
| they then met by accident. Because of his threats to shoot himself she agreed to move back | ||||||
| to her previous address. | ||||||
| 'She said that last month she moved to a caravan site at Drayton, Norfolk, to get away from | ||||||
| him. She was due to see him on this return from a week in Italy on Feb. 18, but she left a note | ||||||
| instead. It said: "I must be absolutely honest. I never intended to be waiting for you when you | ||||||
| came back tonight. I thought the holiday would make you realise how much better we are | ||||||
| apart. I have been happier these last few days than for a long while and everyone says how | ||||||
| much better I look. I still never intend going home with you. I have had enough of men to last | ||||||
| me a lifetime." The note continued: "I shall never go out of my way to avoid you. Perhaps we | ||||||
| ought to be adult about things and not bear any malice. But at the moment I never want to set | ||||||
| eyes on you again." | ||||||
| 'But, Mrs. Seppings told the inquest, on Monday last week they met by chance and had further | ||||||
| meetings until a quarrel on Wednesday. She agreed to see him the following day in Norwich. The | ||||||
| rendezvous was later altered and they met in Breck Farm Lane, Taverham. He got out of his car | ||||||
| and sat in the passenger seat of her car. "We talked and talked and talked. He talked about me | ||||||
| coming back to him, threatening to shoot himself if I left him. I kept making it quite clear that I | ||||||
| would not go back to him." | ||||||
| 'He told her he could not live without her. He went to his car and opened the boot. She saw | ||||||
| him point the end of a double-barrelled shotgun into his mouth. "There was a flash and he fell. | ||||||
| I ran to his side but there was nothing I could do." Mrs. Seppings added: "I knew he possessed | ||||||
| a gun and sometimes kept it in his car for shooting purposes. But I did not think he would ever | ||||||
| use it." | ||||||
| 'Sir Headley was a major in the Army Intelligence Corps in the 1939-45 war. He leaves a widow, | ||||||
| two daughters and a son, Mr. John Woolmer White, who succeeds to the baronetcy.' | ||||||
| Sir William Grenville Williams, 4th baronet [GB 1798] | ||||||
| Sir William suffered more than his share of tragedy during his life. His infant son, Owen Arthur | ||||||
| Williams, died at 11 months, apparently after he swallowed some orange pips, and two of his | ||||||
| daughters, together with their governess, were drowned when they fell through the ice into a | ||||||
| frozen pond. The following report appeared in the "Weekly Irish Times" of 22 February 1902:- | ||||||
| 'An inquest was held yesterday relative to the sad ice accident at Rhuddian, North Wales, on | ||||||
| Thursday, in which two daughters [Megan Louise (11) and Olwen Harriet (8)] of Sir William | ||||||
| Grenville Williams, Bart., and Miss Garrett, their governess, lost their lives. The bereaved father, | ||||||
| who was the first witness, wept bitterly, and said he did not know the governess was with his | ||||||
| daughters, so that she must have met them after they saw him off at the railway station. Sir | ||||||
| William gave his evidence with the greatest difficulty, and was assisted by his brother, the | ||||||
| Bishop of Bangor. The stationmaster at Rhuddian stated he saw Miss Garrett in the water, but | ||||||
| did not know there were other victims till the bodies were recovered. He was able to get a rope | ||||||
| across the pond, and the governess succeeded in catching hold of it. He pulled her on to the | ||||||
| ice, but then she fell back and sank. Some of the jury mentioned that the pond was the most | ||||||
| dangerous one in the district, and that a spring existed there. Several accidents had occurred | ||||||
| there. The jury returned a verdict of accidentally drowned, and passed a vote of sympathy | ||||||
| with Sir William. They also expressed the opinion that Miss Garrett (who belonged to Surrey) | ||||||
| had behaved most heroically, it being evident that she lost her life in trying to save the children. | ||||||
| They also decided to petition to London and North-Western Railway Company to fence the pool | ||||||
| on account of its dangerous character. | ||||||
| 'Further particulars of the sad affair show that the Misses Williams were accompanied by a dog, | ||||||
| which they tied to a post before going on to the ice to slide. The animal became greatly excited | ||||||
| when released and rushed to the ice after his mistresses, crying piteously.' | ||||||
| Sir Frederick William Williams, 5th baronet [UK 1866] | ||||||
| Sir Frederick died as a result of an overdose of ether in Paris in 1913, aged only 25. The | ||||||
| following account of his death appeared in the Adelaide 'Advertiser,' reprinted from the | ||||||
| London 'Daily Sketch,' on 19 November 1913:- | ||||||
| 'The English baronet, Sir Frederick William Williams, of Barnstaple, who died in Paris from an | ||||||
| overdose of ether, was a brilliant, handsome, eccentric man of 25, who devoted his talents | ||||||
| to the pursuit of luxury. | ||||||
| 'His Paris apartments were strangely and elaborately fitted up, as were those he used to | ||||||
| occupy in London, which contained one room draped in black, with a coffin in the centre. | ||||||
| 'It would be difficult to conceive of anything more extraordinary than this London "death | ||||||
| chamber." Incense was kept burning in it, and it was lighted by a solitary candle. A human | ||||||
| skull rested on the top of the coffin. | ||||||
| 'Sir Frederick came (says the Paris correspondent of a London paper) to France a few months | ||||||
| ago and lived on a scale that surpassed his London achievements. His flat in the Montmartre | ||||||
| quarter was most expensively furnished. It was decorated with rare flowers and perfume | ||||||
| burners, and the air has heavy with scent. Here, with his eyebrows pencilled and his lips | ||||||
| reddened, he received his visitors. At the last Mi-Careme ball he distinguished himself by | ||||||
| coming out as a ballet dancer. A few weeks ago he took up the tango, and engaged a lady to | ||||||
| give him lessons. | ||||||
| 'His friends knew that he took drugs - he boasted of it - but were ignorant of the fact that he | ||||||
| had taken to ether. His intellectual attainments were many, and he knew several languages. | ||||||
| 'The death of Sir Frederick William Williams from an overdose of ether should act as a warning | ||||||
| to the many people who have got into the habit of using this drug. Sir Frederick is the third | ||||||
| victim reported from Paris within a few days. The other two were women. | ||||||
| "I am afraid a great many people take ether nowadays without realising its harmful and | ||||||
| dangerous effects," said a West-End physician to the London "Daily Sketch." | ||||||
| "Medically, ether is used in very small doses as a stimulant to the heart. It is also used as an | ||||||
| anaesthetic by surgeons and dentists. | ||||||
| "Of recent years there has grown up a habit of taking ether as a substitute for alcohol. You | ||||||
| can get drunk on ether just as you can get drunk on whisky, and it's very much cheaper. | ||||||
| "It can be drunk like any other spirit, or is fumes can be inhaled. It acts much more quickly | ||||||
| when inhaled. At first there is a pleasant sensation and then unconsciousness supervenes. But | ||||||
| when inhaled it must be mixed with air, or the feeling is one of suffocation. An overdose causes | ||||||
| a stoppage of the heart's action, the ultimate effect of all powerful stimulants indiscriminately | ||||||
| used." | ||||||
| 'A firm of chemists told the "Daily Sketch" that a great deal of ether was sold, there being no | ||||||
| restrictions upon it.' | ||||||
| Sir William Law Williams, 8th baronet [UK 1866] | ||||||
| After Sir William's death, the following article appeared in the London "Daily Telegraph" of | ||||||
| 2 July 1960:- | ||||||
| 'Sir William Law Williams, the baronet who became the licensee of an inn, collapsed and died at | ||||||
| his club in Barnstaple yesterday, aged 53. He is succeeded by his second cousin, Mr. Robert | ||||||
| Ernest Williams, 36, a Canadian National Railways brakeman and part-time guard. | ||||||
| 'The Canadian has three small sons and a daughter. He had described himself as "a common, | ||||||
| ordinary Joe." | ||||||
| 'Some time ago he telephoned Sir William, who had no children of his own, to say he had | ||||||
| discovered he was the heir, being the grandson of Sir William's father's seventh brother. | ||||||
| 'He will inherit the Heanton estate in North Devon and the family seat at Upcott, near | ||||||
| Barnstaple. He will also become the owner of a number of farms and shooting rights over a | ||||||
| considerable area. Sir William was a first-class shot and an authority on game birds. | ||||||
| 'In 1928 he lost a fortune of £150,000 intended to endow the baronetcy. His great-uncle, Mr. | ||||||
| Michael Williams, who died in 1905, left the money to the first person born after his death to | ||||||
| become entitled to the baronetcy and attain the age of 21. | ||||||
| 'Sir William succeeded to the title in 1921. In 1928, when he was 21, he claimed the money, | ||||||
| but the bequest was held void for remoteness by Mr. Justice Clausen in the Chancery Division. | ||||||
| The law of perpetuity had been overlooked when the will was drawn up. By this law property | ||||||
| cannot be legally tied up for longer than lives in being at the date of the settlement, and | ||||||
| within 21 years afterwards. Sir William, born in 1907, thus lost his claim by two years [i.e. he | ||||||
| needed to claim the bequest by 1926, being 21 years after the death of Michael Williams - but | ||||||
| in 1926, he had not yet reached the age of 21 as specified in the will]. | ||||||
| 'In 1952 he failed in another suit in the Chancery Division. Mr. Justice Roxburgh ruled that | ||||||
| under the will of his father, Sir Frederick Law Williams, he was entitled only to a life interest in | ||||||
| freeholds in Devon and Cornwall worth about £200,000. | ||||||
| 'As a young man Sir William joined the Royal Welch Fusiliers, in which he became a captain. | ||||||
| Later he became licensee of the Exeter Inn at Heanton, on his estate, and changed the name | ||||||
| to the Williams Arms. He married in 1950. His wife was then Miss Betty Kathleen Taylor.' | ||||||
| The special remainder to the baronetcy of Drummond (later Williams-Drummond) | ||||||
| created in 1828 | ||||||
| From the "London Gazette" of 25 December 1827 (issue 18426, page 2625):- | ||||||
| 'The King has been pleased to direct letters patent to be passed under the Great Seal of the | ||||||
| United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, for granting the dignity of a Baronet of the said | ||||||
| United Kingdom to John Forbes Drummond, of Hawthornden, in the county of Mid Lothian, Esq. | ||||||
| Captain in the Navy, and to the heirs male of his body lawfully begotten; and in default of such | ||||||
| issue, to Francis Walker-Drummond, of Hawthornden aforesaid, Esq. And his heirs male by | ||||||
| Margaret Anne Walker Drummond, his wife (daughter of the said John Forbes Drummond).' | ||||||
| Sir Hedworth Williamson, 8th baronet | ||||||
| Sir Hedworth suffered the misfortune of accidently shooting a member of his hunting party in | ||||||
| October 1867. The following account of this accident appeared in 'The York Herald' on 2 | ||||||
| November 1867:- | ||||||
| 'On Tuesday [29 October], a painful gun accident occurred at Edlingham, a village a few miles | ||||||
| west of Alnwick, where Sir Hedworth Williamson, M.P. for North Durham, and a party of friends, | ||||||
| including Col. Harrison, of the Royal Artillery, had been shooting in the woods belonging to Sir | ||||||
| John Swinburne. The party had followed the sport during the morning, and shortly after noon | ||||||
| they partook of luncheon together. Sir Hedworth had a new breech-loading gun, of which, | ||||||
| after luncheon, the party were discussing the merits; and Sir Hedworth was in the act of | ||||||
| handing it to Col. Harrison for inspection, when it unfortunately exploded, the contents entering | ||||||
| the deceased's leg near to the knee, on the inner side, and going in a slanting direction across | ||||||
| and up the thigh. Col. Harrison was carried to the house of the Rev. M.G.H. Buckle, vicar of | ||||||
| Edlingham, which was only a short distance, and medical assistance [was] immediately sent | ||||||
| for. Dr. Robertson, of Glanton, was promptly in attendance, and, assisted by Dr. Easton, of | ||||||
| Alnwick, who had also been sent for, dressed the wound, and used every means that their skill | ||||||
| suggested to stop the bleeding, but without completely succeeding. As it still continued to | ||||||
| flow, other means were applied and stimulants administered, but all without avail, as the | ||||||
| unfortunate gentleman died from the effects of haemorrhage the same evening, at eight o'clock. | ||||||
| Intelligence of the sad catastrophe was telegraphed to Mr. T.E. Harrison, engineer of the North- | ||||||
| Eastern Railway, and brother of the deceased, who proceeded to Edlingham, and the wife of | ||||||
| Colonel Harrison and his son arrived upon the scene on Wednesday. Colonel Harrison was son of | ||||||
| Mr. Harrison, of Sunderland, the family having long been associated with the trade of that port. | ||||||
| The unfortunate colonel, who was a neighbour of Sir H. Williamson, at Whitburn, near | ||||||
| Sunderland, had been twenty-one years in India, and only returned home last year, after having | ||||||
| got a well-earned pension. | ||||||
| 'Another version of the melancholy affair is that Colonel Harrison was walking in front of Sir | ||||||
| Hedworth Williamson, who was carrying his gun under his arm with the muzzle pointed down- | ||||||
| wards, when, by some accident, the trigger caught a button, and the contents of the gun were | ||||||
| discharged into one of Colonel Harrison's legs below the knee. It tore the calf of the leg nearly | ||||||
| away, and lacerated it fearfully, leaving the bone exposed. One of the party, a military | ||||||
| gentleman, who had been in the service in India, had some knowledge of surgery, and | ||||||
| succeeded in tying up the arteries, and to an extent stopping the bleeding. Col. Harrison was | ||||||
| carefully removed to the Vicarage at Edlingham, and the best medical aid in the district was | ||||||
| summoned to his assistance; but all the efforts of the professional gentlemen could not prolong | ||||||
| life.' | ||||||
| Sir Nicholas Frederick Hedworth Williamson, 11th and last baronet [E 1642] | ||||||
| 'The Times' of 12 January 2001:- | ||||||
| 'An Old Etonian racing driver drank himself to death on New Year's Eve when his only company | ||||||
| was his customary bottle of whisky, an inquest was told yesterday. | ||||||
| 'Sir Nicholas Williamson, the colourful and eccentric 11th Baronet, was found by his housekeeper | ||||||
| slumped in his favourite armchair at his country home, Abbey Croft, in the village of Mortimer, | ||||||
| near Reading. Dorothy Smith told Charles Hoile, the West Berkshire Coroner, that Sir Nicholas, | ||||||
| 63, drank up to a pint of whisky a day. She added: "He was a nice man and a very good | ||||||
| employer." Recording a verdict of death by dependency on alcohol, Mr. Hoile said: "My | ||||||
| conclusion is that he died as a result of alcohol toxicity." | ||||||
| 'Sir Nicholas, who succeeded his uncle, Sir Charles Williamson, to the baronetcy in 1946, was | ||||||
| unmarried and had no heirs. His father, Major William Williamson, died in action in 1942. | ||||||
| 'After the inquest Julian Lambton, his godson and cousin, said that he remembered Sir Nicholas | ||||||
| as the "exciting dare-devil hero of the family." The sports car fanatic would race state-of-the- | ||||||
| art vehicles through the grounds of private country houses. He was national hill-climbing | ||||||
| champion in 1970 and 1972 and his collection of cars included Maclarens, D-type Jaguars and | ||||||
| Mercedes - the Formula One cars of their day. Lamenting the demise of the baronetcy, created | ||||||
| in 1642, Mr. Lambton added: "That's the quite sad thing about it - it has to go to a direct | ||||||
| descendant." | ||||||
| 'Sir Nicholas had lived in Mortimer all his life and served on the parish council. He was for almost | ||||||
| 40 years in the volunteer fire brigade, started because of his habit of hanging around waiting | ||||||
| for fire calls during his school holidays. Mr. Lambton said: "In the end the firemen would let him | ||||||
| ride on the engine and then asked him to join when he was in his late teens." | ||||||
| 'Sir Nicholas bought a vintage engine and restored it before giving it to the service. The 1938 | ||||||
| Dennis was the first ladder escape vehicle acquired by Reading Fire Service. Now based at | ||||||
| Windsor fire station for ceremonial duties, it will accompany the funeral procession through | ||||||
| Mortimer today.' | ||||||
| Sir Gerard Arthur Maxwell Willshire, 3rd baronet | ||||||
| Sir Gerard was imprisoned in 1927 following his conviction for indecent assault on a young | ||||||
| woman. The following report appeared in 'The Times' of 29 June 1927:- | ||||||
| 'Sir Gerard Arthur Maxwell Willshire, Bt., of Rose House, Hindhead, was brought up at the Kent | ||||||
| Assizes at Maidstone yesterday, committed by the county magistrates sitting at Maidstone on | ||||||
| May 19, on the charge of having "unlawfully and indecently assaulted and ill-treated Jean | ||||||
| Olds," aged 22, at Thurnham on May 10. | ||||||
| 'When committed the defendant pleaded "Not Guilty," and reserved his defence. Yesterday on | ||||||
| the case being called he pleaded "Guilty," and Mr. Justice Rowlatt sentenced him to six months' | ||||||
| imprisonment in the second division. | ||||||
| 'In the case presented by the prosecution when the defendant was before the magistrates it | ||||||
| was alleged that he had taken Miss Olds for a drive in his motor-car from London, stopped at | ||||||
| a wood near Maidstone, tied her hands behind her, having ordered her to undress, and when | ||||||
| she was wearing only her shoes and stockings blackened her with some [black boot] polish. | ||||||
| 'Sir Travers Humphreys [the prosecutor], after the plea of "Guilty" had been tendered, said | ||||||
| that additional evidence had been taken with regard to other acts. This indicated that the | ||||||
| defendant was very far from being a normal person. He did things at times which were certainly | ||||||
| the actions of a person of abnormal mentality, possibly of abnormal sexual ideas. | ||||||
| 'The Judge asked if the woman had complained to the police. Sir Travers Humphreys - The | ||||||
| woman at whose house she called said to the police, "What a state she was in!" and a police | ||||||
| officer actually saw the girl while she was black before she had a bath. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Birkett [for the defence] said that the very serious course of pleading "Guilty" had been | ||||||
| taken after the most anxious consideration. That course prevented a repetition of the painful | ||||||
| and distressing story which had attained such wide publicity, and moreover would save Miss | ||||||
| Olds from another painful ordeal. There were matters contained in the additional evidence | ||||||
| which it was right to consider. They were matters confined to a comparatively short space of | ||||||
| time. On the other hand, there would be much which one could say in favour of the defendant | ||||||
| in every other part of his life. He had been most happily married to Lady Willshire for four years, | ||||||
| and Lady Willshire told him (counsel) that life had been one of continuous happiness without | ||||||
| any blot. | ||||||
| 'The defendant, continued counsel, had during his war service contracted a virulent type of | ||||||
| trench fever, which still had recurrent effects upon him at the present time. A doctor would | ||||||
| give evidence to the effect that the trench fever caused a mental disturbance, and in these | ||||||
| circumstances the slightest quantity of drink taken by the defendant had a very pronounced | ||||||
| effect. There could be no doubt that during the days immediately preceding the offence the | ||||||
| defendant had been drinking heavily and was at the same time suffering from trench fever. | ||||||
| He (Mr. Birkett) suggested that the defendant should be kept under medical supervision. | ||||||
| 'Dr. Beckett Overy was then called by Mr. Birkett, and said that he was prepared in a certain | ||||||
| event to see that the defendant went to a suitable home where he could get medical | ||||||
| supervision. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Justice Rowlatt, passing sentence, said that he did not think it would be possible for | ||||||
| anyone to have believed that the young woman who was the prosecutrix could possibly have | ||||||
| consented to the sort of acts that were done. The publicity and humiliation for the | ||||||
| prosecutrix would have been very much greater, but by pleading "Guilty" the defendant had | ||||||
| saved that, and had done something by acknowledging his fault towards lessening it. The case | ||||||
| revealed a most terrible outrage. To cover a woman's naked body with blacking and abandon | ||||||
| her in the middle if the night was an outrage which it was very, very difficult to speak | ||||||
| temperately of. He could not conceive why a man should do it unless under the influence of | ||||||
| some abnormality. The defendant had been suffering from neurasthenia and had had trench | ||||||
| fever, but he (the Judge) was perfectly sure it would not have caused him to do anything | ||||||
| like this but for drink. He had seen the other evidence which could have been given, and he | ||||||
| had no doubt that that was the whole of the story. The defendant seemed to fall under the | ||||||
| influence of some curious tendencies when he got drunk, and if he yielded to it one of these | ||||||
| days it might be that he would handle some woman in such a way that he would be charged | ||||||
| with murder. | ||||||
| 'In the face of an outrage of this kind he could not yield to the plea that the defendant should | ||||||
| be put under medical supervision. Prison would be an inebriate's home for him, and he would | ||||||
| urge the defendant when he came out to take the advice of his doctor and absolutely quit the | ||||||
| drink, as he did not know what his future might be. The mildest possible sentence was six | ||||||
| calendar months' imprisonment in the second division.' | ||||||
| Sir Henry Sacheverell Wilmot VC, 5th baronet and MP for Derbyshire South 1869-1885 | ||||||
| Wilmot was a Captain in the 2nd Battalion of the Rifle Brigade during the Indian Mutiny, during | ||||||
| which conflict he was awarded the Victoria Cross. The citation, dated 24 December 1858, | ||||||
| reads:- | ||||||
| 'Captain (now Brevet-Major) Henry Wilmot, Corporal W. Nash, and Private David Hawkes, for | ||||||
| conspicuous gallantry at Lucknow on the 11th of March, 1858. Captain Wilmot's company was | ||||||
| engaged with a large body of the enemy near the Iron Bridge. That officer found himself at the | ||||||
| end of a street with only four of his men, opposed to a considerable body. One of the four was | ||||||
| shot through both legs and became utterly helpless; the two men lifted him up, and although | ||||||
| Private Hawkes was severely wounded he carried him for a considerable distance, exposed to | ||||||
| the fire of the enemy, Captain Wilmot firing with [his] men's rifles, and covering the retreat of | ||||||
| the party.' | ||||||
| Sir Henry Hughes Wilson, 1st baronet | ||||||
| Wilson was an Anglo-Irish soldier whose career reached its culmination during the Great War. | ||||||
| In 1918, he was appointed Chief of the Imperial General Staff and was promoted to Field | ||||||
| Marshal in 1919. After retiring from the Army, he was returned to the House of Commons in | ||||||
| February 1922. Four months later, he was assassinated by two members of the Irish | ||||||
| Republican Army. The following report appeared in 'The Times' of 23 June 1922:- | ||||||
| 'Field-Marshal Sir Henry Wilson, M.P., late Chief of the Imperial General Staff, was murdered | ||||||
| yesterday afternoon at the door of his London residence, 36, Eaton-place, S.W., by men who | ||||||
| fired at him at close range when he was about to enter his house. | ||||||
| 'Two men, who are believed to be connected with the I.R.A., are under arrest. | ||||||
| 'After the murder the assailants made desperate efforts to escape. Armed with large Service | ||||||
| revolvers, they kept up fire on their pursuers until they were overpowered. | ||||||
| 'Two police constables and another man, a motor-car driver named Alexander Clarke, were | ||||||
| wounded. | ||||||
| 'The murder was committed just after half-past 2. Sir Henry Wilson, wearing uniform, had earlier | ||||||
| in the afternoon unveiled the Great Eastern Railway War Memorial at Liverpool-street Station, | ||||||
| and he returned home in a taxi-cab. There was nothing in the quiet thoroughfares in the | ||||||
| neighbourhood of Eaton-square to suggest the imminence of a diabolical crime. | ||||||
| 'Sir Henry Wilson's house stands at the corner of Eaton-place and Belgrave-place, the entrance | ||||||
| being in the latter thoroughfare. From the stories of eye-witnesses it would appear that Sir | ||||||
| Henry Wilson, on alighting from his cab, stepped across the pavement to his door and was in | ||||||
| the act of opening it when a shot was fired, apparently diagonally from near the kerb at the | ||||||
| corner of Eaton-place, only a few yards away. He instinctively ducked, and the bullet entered | ||||||
| the left upper panel of the door. Another shot followed. It is stated that with great intrepidity | ||||||
| the Field-Marshal turned towards his assailants, and according to one eye-witness he was | ||||||
| seen to grasp his sword as if he were about to draw it. | ||||||
| 'Several shots were then fired, apparently from different directions, but at a few yard's range, | ||||||
| and Sir Henry Wilson was wounded in the body, arm, and leg. He fell on the pavement near his | ||||||
| own doorstep. Lady Wilson, who was at home, hearing the commotion, hurried to the door | ||||||
| and was terribly distressed to find what had happened. She was able, however, to assist in | ||||||
| getting Sir Henry carried into the house. | ||||||
| 'The sound of the revolver shots brought a number of people to the scene, and the assailants, | ||||||
| both young men, one described as of stout build and the other as a cripple, having | ||||||
| accomplished their cowardly task, endeavoured to escape. Police whistles were blown, and an | ||||||
| exciting chase ensued. The police, however, were at a disadvantage, being unarmed, and it | ||||||
| was soon evident that the runaways meant to resist to the very last. They were apparently | ||||||
| well equipped with ammunition, and they were not slow to use it. | ||||||
| 'From the scene of the outrage the assailants made off along Eaton-place and, according to | ||||||
| several eye-witnesses, they jumped into a taxicab which was coming from Lowndes-place, | ||||||
| but, for some reason, they alighted again, and continued towards Eaton-terrace. They kept | ||||||
| their pursuers back by turning every now and then and firing their revolvers, and for some | ||||||
| distance they walked backwards as they kept up an almost continuous fire. One of the men | ||||||
| sought to elude his pursuers by jumping into a victoria [a form of carriage], but after riding | ||||||
| for some distance he alighted again. | ||||||
| 'The fugitives made for Eaton-terrace and the pursuit was continued along Eaton-terrace | ||||||
| into Chester-terrace where the men, still firing their revolvers, turned into South Eaton- | ||||||
| place and then into Ebury-street, where they were arrested. | ||||||
| 'Police-constable March, who was hot in pursuit, received a serious wound as he was turning | ||||||
| into Eaton-terrace on the heels of the armed men. He was hit in the stomach, and blood- | ||||||
| stains on the pavement indicate that he had clung for support to some area railings before | ||||||
| staggering a few yards to the roadway, where he collapsed on a heap of sand, at a point | ||||||
| where the street is under repair. Roadmen engaged at work have stated that they were | ||||||
| alarmed by the sound of shots and the blowing of police whistles. They saw the fugitives, with | ||||||
| revolvers in their hands, and several shots were fired as they passed through Eaton-terrace. | ||||||
| 'The continuous blowing of police whistles resulted in an ever-increasing crowd of pursuers, | ||||||
| and when Ebury-street was reached there were large reinforcements of police from Gerald- | ||||||
| road Police Station. Many constables who were off duty at the time joined in the pursuit in | ||||||
| their shirt sleeves. The police, with drawn batons, pressed forward, notwithstanding the | ||||||
| revolver fire, and when a part of Ebury-street had been traversed, a constable succeeded in | ||||||
| felling the smaller of the two men by throwing his truncheon at him with well-directed aim. The | ||||||
| other man was arrested almost simultaneously. It is stated that a milkman, who threw a milk | ||||||
| bottle at him, was responsible for this arrest. There was a short and sharp struggle between | ||||||
| him and the police, during which, it is said, the man was heard to plead for mercy. He was | ||||||
| soon overpowered and disarmed. The crowd assumed a hostile attitude towards the prisoners, | ||||||
| and had it not been for the efforts of the police they might have been lynched. The fugitives, | ||||||
| unknowingly, had followed a route which brought them quite close to Gerald-road police | ||||||
| station, to which they were speedily removed.' | ||||||
| The two men who shot Wilson were Reginald Dunne and Joseph O'Sullivan. Both were members | ||||||
| of the I.R.A. although O'Sullivan had fought in the British Army during the Great War, and had | ||||||
| lost a leg at Ypres, which accounts for the description of one of the men as a "cripple." Both | ||||||
| men were subsequently found guilty of Wilson's murder and were hanged on 10 August 1922. | ||||||
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