| BARONETAGE | ||||||
| Last updated 17/01/2025 | ||||||
| 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 | ||||||
| EARDLEY (formerly GIDEON) of Spalding,Lincs | ||||||
| and Belvidere,Kent | ||||||
| 21 May 1759 | GB | 1 | Sampson Gideon (he changed his surname to | 10 Oct 1744 | 25 Dec 1824 | 80 |
| to | Eardley in July 1789) | |||||
| 25 Dec 1824 | He was subsequently created Baron Eardley | |||||
| (qv) in 1789 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1824 | ||||||
| EARDLEY of Hadley,Middlesex | ||||||
| 22 Dec 1802 | UK | 1 | Culling Smith | 20 Nov 1731 | 19 Oct 1812 | 80 |
| 19 Oct 1812 | 2 | Culling Smith | 1769 | 30 Jun 1829 | 59 | |
| 30 Jun 1829 | 3 | Culling Eardley Smith (Eardley from 1847) | 21 Apr 1805 | 21 May 1863 | 58 | |
| MP for Pontefract 1830-1831 | ||||||
| 21 May 1863 | 4 | Eardley Gideon Culling Eardley | 12 Aug 1838 | 13 May 1875 | 36 | |
| to | For further information on this baronet, see the | |||||
| 13 May 1875 | note at the foot of this page | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| EARDLEY-WILMOT | ||||||
| of Berkswell Hall,Warwicks | ||||||
| 23 Aug 1821 | UK | 1 | John Eardley Eardley-Wilmot | 21 Feb 1783 | 3 Feb 1847 | 63 |
| Governor of Tasmania 1843-1846. MP for | ||||||
| Warwickshire North 1832-1843 | ||||||
| For information on this baronet,see the note | ||||||
| at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 3 Feb 1847 | 2 | John Eardley Eardley-Wilmot | 16 Nov 1810 | 1 Feb 1892 | 81 | |
| MP for Warwickshire South 1874-1885 | ||||||
| 1 Feb 1892 | 3 | William Assheton Eardley-Wilmot | 16 May 1841 | 12 Apr 1896 | 54 | |
| 12 Apr 1896 | 4 | John Eardley-Wilmot | 14 Oct 1882 | 9 Feb 1970 | 87 | |
| 9 Feb 1970 | 5 | John Assheton Eardley-Wilmot | 2 Jan 1917 | 20 Dec 1995 | 78 | |
| 20 Dec 1995 | 6 | Michael John Assheton Eardley-Wilmot | 13 Jan 1941 | 15 Nov 2014 | 73 | |
| 15 Nov 2014 | 7 | Benjamin John Eardley-Wilmot | 24 Jan 1974 | |||
| EARLE of Craglethorpe,Lincs | ||||||
| 2 Jul 1629 | E | 1 | Richard Earle | c 1606 | 25 Mar 1667 | |
| 25 Mar 1667 | 2 | Richard Earle | c 1670 | |||
| c 1670 | 3 | Richard Earle | c 1680 | |||
| c 1680 | 4 | Richard Earle | c 1673 | 13 Aug 1697 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Aug 1697 | ||||||
| EARLE of Allerton Tower,Lancs | ||||||
| 3 Nov 1869 | UK | 1 | Hardman Earle | 11 Jul 1792 | 25 Jan 1877 | 84 |
| 25 Jan 1877 | 2 | Thomas Earle | 30 Jun 1820 | 13 Apr 1900 | 79 | |
| 13 Apr 1900 | 3 | Henry Earle | 15 Aug 1854 | 16 Jul 1939 | 84 | |
| 16 Jul 1939 | 4 | Thomas Algernon Earle | 16 Jul 1860 | 5 Sep 1945 | 85 | |
| 5 Sep 1945 | 5 | Hardman Alexander Mort Earle | 19 Aug 1902 | 17 Sep 1979 | 77 | |
| 17 Sep 1979 | 6 | Hardman George Algernon Earle | 4 Feb 1932 | 1 Jan 2025 | 92 | |
| 1 Jan 2025 | 7 | Robert George Bligh Earle | 24 Jan 1970 | |||
| EAST of Marden,Surrey | ||||||
| 13 Jan 1732 | GB | See "Clayton" | ||||
| EAST of Hall Place,Berks | ||||||
| 5 Jun 1766 | GB | 1 | William East | 27 Feb 1738 | 12 Oct 1819 | 81 |
| 12 Oct 1819 | 2 | Gilbert East | 17 Apr 1764 | 11 Dec 1828 | 64 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 11 Dec 1828 | ||||||
| EAST of Calcutta,India | ||||||
| 25 Apr 1823 | UK | 1 | Sir Edward Hyde East | 9 Sep 1764 | 8 Jan 1847 | 82 |
| MP for Great Bedwyn 1792-1796 and Winchester | ||||||
| 1823-1831. PC 1831 | ||||||
| 8 Jan 1847 | 2 | James Buller East | 1789 | 19 Nov 1878 | 89 | |
| to | MP for Winchester 1831-1832 and 1835-1864 | |||||
| 19 Nov 1878 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| EAST of Hall Place,Berks | ||||||
| 17 Aug 1838 | UK | See "Clayton-East" | ||||
| EASTHOPE of Fir Grove,Surrey | ||||||
| 24 Aug 1841 | UK | 1 | John Easthope | 29 Oct 1784 | 11 Dec 1865 | 81 |
| to | MP for St.Albans 1826-1830, Banbury 1831- | |||||
| 11 Dec 1865 | 1832 and Leicester 1837-1847 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| EATON of Dunmoylin,Limerick | ||||||
| 21 Feb 1682 | I | 1 | Simon Eaton | 16 Dec 1697 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| Dec 1697 | ||||||
| EBRAHIM of Bombay | ||||||
| 20 Jul 1910 | UK | 1 | Sir Currimbhoy Ebrahim | 21 Oct 1840 | 26 Sep 1924 | 83 |
| 26 Sep 1924 | 2 | Mahomedbhoy Currimbhoy Ebrahim | 11 Sep 1867 | 3 Mar 1928 | 60 | |
| 3 Mar 1928 | 3 | Huseinlali Currimbhoy Ebrahim | 13 Apr 1903 | 4 Mar 1952 | 48 | |
| 4 Mar 1952 | 4 | Mahomed Currimbhoy Ebrahim | 24 Jun 1935 | |||
| ECHLIN of Clonagh,co.Kildare | ||||||
| 17 Oct 1721 | I | 1 | Henry Echlin | 1652 | 29 Nov 1725 | 73 |
| 29 Nov 1725 | 2 | Robert Echlin | 13 Nov 1699 | 13 May 1757 | 57 | |
| 13 May 1757 | 3 | Henry Echlin | 22 Dec 1740 | 1799 | 58 | |
| 1799 | 4 | James Echlin | 1769 | 18 Feb 1833 | 63 | |
| 18 Feb 1833 | 5 | Frederick Henry Echlin | 4 Mar 1795 | 27 May 1871 | 76 | |
| 27 May 1871 | 6 | Ferdinand Fenton Echlin | 10 Mar 1798 | 4 Jul 1877 | 79 | |
| 4 Jul 1877 | 7 | Thomas Echlin | 8 Nov 1844 | 1 Nov 1906 | 61 | |
| 1 Nov 1906 | 8 | Henry Frederick Echlin | 14 Aug 1846 | 8 Nov 1923 | 77 | |
| For further information on this baronet,see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 8 Nov 1923 | 9 | John Frederick Echlin | 18 Sep 1890 | 25 Sep 1932 | 42 | |
| 25 Sep 1932 | 10 | Norman David Fenton Echlin | 1 Dec 1925 | 11 Apr 2007 | 81 | |
| to | Dormant on his death | |||||
| 11 Apr 2007 | ||||||
| ECKSTEIN of Fairwarp,Sussex and of the Sudan | ||||||
| 24 Apr 1929 | UK | 1 | Friedrich Gustav Jonathan Eckstein | 9 Apr 1857 | 10 Jun 1930 | 73 |
| 10 Jun 1930 | 2 | Bernard Eckstein | 2 Nov 1894 | 10 May 1948 | 53 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 10 May 1948 | ||||||
| EDEN of West Auckland,Durham | ||||||
| 13 Nov 1672 | E | 1 | Robert Eden | c 1644 | 30 Mar 1721 | |
| MP for Durham County 1679, 1690-1695, | ||||||
| 1698-1701 and 1702-1713 | ||||||
| 30 Mar 1721 | 2 | John Eden | 11 Sep 1677 | 2 May 1728 | 50 | |
| MP for Durham County 1713-1727 | ||||||
| 2 May 1728 | 3 | Robert Eden | c 1718 | 25 Jun 1755 | ||
| 25 Jun 1755 | 4 | John Eden | 16 Sep 1740 | 23 Aug 1812 | 71 | |
| MP for Durham County 1774-1790 | ||||||
| 23 Aug 1812 | 5 | Robert Johnson-Eden | 25 Oct 1774 | 4 Sep 1844 | 69 | |
| 4 Sep 1844 | 6 | William Eden | 31 Jan 1803 | 21 Oct 1873 | 70 | |
| 4 | He had previously succeeded to the | |||||
| baronetcy of Eden created 1776 (qv) | ||||||
| in 1814 | ||||||
| 21 Oct 1873 | 7 | William Eden | 4 Apr 1849 | 20 Feb 1915 | 65 | |
| 5 | ||||||
| 20 Feb 1915 | 8 | Timothy Calvert Eden | 3 May 1893 | 13 May 1963 | 70 | |
| 6 | ||||||
| 13 May 1963 | 9 | John Benedict Eden,later [1983] Baron Eden | ||||
| 7 | of Winton [L] | 15 Sep 1925 | 23 May 2020 | 94 | ||
| MP for Bournemouth West 1954-1983 | ||||||
| Minister of State,Technology 1970. Minister | ||||||
| for Industry 1970-1972. Minister of Posts | ||||||
| and Telecommunications 1972-1974. PC 1972 | ||||||
| 23 May 2020 | 10 | Robert Frederick Calvert Eden | 30 Apr 1964 | |||
8
|
||||||
| EDEN of Maryland,North America | ||||||
| 19 Oct 1776 | GB | 1 | Robert Eden | c 1741 | 2 Sep 1784 | |
| 2 Sep 1784 | 2 | Frederick Morton Eden | c 1767 | 14 Nov 1809 | ||
| 14 Nov 1809 | 3 | Frederick Eden | c 1798 | 24 Dec 1814 | ||
| 24 Dec 1814 | 4 | William Eden | 31 Jan 1803 | 21 Oct 1873 | 70 | |
| He subsequently succeeded to the baronetcy | ||||||
| of Eden created 1672 (qv) in 1844 when the | ||||||
| baronetcies merged | ||||||
| EDGAR of Chalfont,Bucks | ||||||
| 17 Feb 1920 | UK | 1 | Edward Mackay Edgar | 27 Feb 1876 | 7 Oct 1934 | 58 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 7 Oct 1934 | ||||||
| EDGE of Ribble Lodge,Lancs | ||||||
| 9 Jun 1937 | UK | 1 | Sir William Edge | 21 Nov 1880 | 18 Dec 1948 | 68 |
| MP for Bolton 1916-1923 and Bosworth | ||||||
| 1927-1945 | ||||||
| 18 Dec 1948 | 2 | Knowles Edge | 31 Dec 1905 | 19 Mar 1984 | 78 | |
| 19 Mar 1984 | 3 | William Edge | 5 Oct 1936 | 7 Aug 2021 | 84 | |
| 7 Aug 2021 | 4 | Edward Knowles Edge | 6 Jun 1965 | |||
| EDMONSTONE of Duntreath,Stirling | ||||||
| 20 May 1774 | GB | 1 | Archibald Edmonstone | 10 Oct 1717 | 20 Jul 1807 | 89 |
| MP for Dunbartonshire 1761-1780 and 1790- | ||||||
| 1796, and Ayr Burghs 1780-1790 | ||||||
| 20 Jul 1807 | 2 | Charles Edmonstone | 10 Oct 1764 | 1 Apr 1821 | 56 | |
| MP for Dunbartonshire 1806-1807 and | ||||||
| Stirlingshire 1812-1821 | ||||||
| 1 Apr 1821 | 3 | Archibald Edmonstone | 12 Mar 1795 | 15 Mar 1871 | 76 | |
| 15 Mar 1871 | 4 | William Edmonstone | 29 Jan 1810 | 18 Feb 1888 | 78 | |
| MP for Stirlingshire 1874-1880 | ||||||
| 18 Feb 1888 | 5 | Archibald Edmonstone | 30 May 1867 | 1 Apr 1954 | 86 | |
| 1 Apr 1954 | 6 | Archibald Charles Edmonstone | 16 Jun 1898 | 5 Jun 1954 | 55 | |
| 5 Jun 1954 | 7 | Archibald Bruce Charles Edmonstone | 3 Aug 1934 | |||
| EDWARDES of Shrewsbury,Salop | ||||||
| 21 Mar 1645 | E | 1 | Thomas Edwards | c 1599 | 27 Apr 1660 | |
| Apr 1660 | 2 | Francis Edwards | 13 May 1643 | 1690 | 47 | |
| 22 Apr 1678 | E | 1 | He obtained a fresh creation in 1678 | |||
| MP for Shrewsbury 1685-1690 | ||||||
| 1690 | 2 | Francis Edwards | 23 Oct 1701 | |||
| Oct 1701 | 3 | Francis Edwards | 17 Apr 1699 | 5 Aug 1734 | 35 | |
| 5 Aug 1734 | 4 | Henry Edwards | 26 Mar 1767 | |||
| 26 Mar 1767 | 5 | Thomas Edwards | c 1730 | 13 Nov 1790 | ||
| 13 Nov 1790 | 6 | Thomas Edwardes | 7 Jan 1727 | 22 Sep 1797 | 70 | |
| 22 Sep 1797 | 7 | John Thomas Cholmondeley Edwardes | c 1764 | 23 Feb 1816 | ||
| 23 Feb 1816 | 8 | Henry Edwardes | 14 Aug 1787 | 26 Aug 1841 | 54 | |
| 26 Aug 1841 | 9 | Henry Hope Edwardes | 10 Apr 1829 | 24 Aug 1900 | 71 | |
| to | Both creations extinct on his death | |||||
| 24 Aug 1900 | ||||||
| EDWARDS of York,Yorks | ||||||
| 7 Dec 1691 | E | 1 | James Edwards | Mar 1702 | ||
| Mar 1702 | 2 | James Edwards | c 1689 | 1744 | ||
| 1744 | 3 | Nathaniel Edwards | c 1699 | 4 Mar 1764 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 4 Mar 1764 | ||||||
| EDWARDS of Garth,Montgomery | ||||||
| 23 Jul 1838 | UK | 1 | John Edwards | 15 Jan 1770 | 19 Apr 1850 | 80 |
| to | MP for Montgomery 1833-1841 | |||||
| 19 Apr 1850 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| EDWARDS of Pye Nest,Yorks | ||||||
| 3 Aug 1866 | UK | 1 | Henry Edwards | 20 Jul 1812 | 23 Apr 1886 | 73 |
| MP for Halifax 1847-1852 and Beverley | ||||||
| 1857-1868 | ||||||
| For further information on this baronet,see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 23 Apr 1886 | 2 | Henry Coster Lea Edwards | 3 Jun 1840 | 5 Dec 1896 | 56 | |
| 5 Dec 1896 | 3 | John Henry Priestley Churchill Edwards | 7 Jul 1889 | 13 Nov 1942 | 53 | |
| 13 Nov 1942 | 4 | Henry Charles Serrell Priestley Edwards | 1 Mar 1893 | 3 Apr 1963 | 70 | |
| 3 Apr 1963 | 5 | Christopher John Churchill Edwards | 16 Aug 1941 | |||
| EDWARDS of Knighton,Radnor | ||||||
| 25 Jul 1907 | UK | 1 | Francis Edwards | 28 Apr 1852 | 10 May 1927 | 75 |
| to | MP for Radnorshire 1892-1895, 1900-1910 | |||||
| 10 May 1927 | and 1910-1918 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| EDWARDS of Treforis,Glamorgan | ||||||
| 30 Jun 1921 | UK | 1 | John Bryn Edwards | 12 Jan 1889 | 23 Aug 1922 | 33 |
| 23 Aug 1922 | 2 | John Clive Leighton Edwards | 11 Oct 1916 | 19 Feb 1999 | 82 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 19 Feb 1999 | ||||||
| EDWARDS-MOSS of Roby Hall,Lancs | ||||||
| 23 Dec 1868 | UK | 1 | Thomas Edwards-Moss | 17 Jul,1811 | 26 Apr 1890 | 78 |
| 26 Apr 1890 | 2 | John Edwards Edwards-Moss | 25 Oct 1850 | 26 Jun 1935 | 84 | |
| 26 Jun 1935 | 3 | Thomas Edwards-Moss | 17 Jan 1874 | 26 Jul 1960 | 86 | |
| 26 Jul 1960 | 4 | John Herbert Theodore Edwards-Moss | 24 Jun 1913 | 28 Dec 1988 | 75 | |
| 28 Dec 1988 | 5 | David John Edwards-Moss | 2 Feb 1955 | |||
| EGERTON of Egerton,Cheshire | ||||||
| 5 Apr 1617 | E | 1 | Roland Egerton | 3 Oct 1646 | ||
| MP for Wootton Bassett 1624-1625 | ||||||
| Oct 1646 | 2 | John Egerton | 1674 | |||
| 1674 | 3 | John Egerton | c 1658 | 12 Apr 1729 | ||
| 12 Apr 1729 | 4 | Holland Egerton | c 1689 | 25 Apr 1730 | ||
| 25 Apr 1730 | 5 | Edward Egerton | c 1719 | 16 Feb 1744 | ||
| 16 Feb 1744 | 6 | Thomas Grey Egerton | c 1721 | 7 Aug 1756 | ||
| MP for Newton 1747-1754 | ||||||
| 7 Aug 1756 | 7 | Thomas Egerton,later [1801] 1st Earl of Wilton | 14 Aug 1749 | 23 Sep 1814 | 65 | |
| 23 Sep 1814 | 8 | John Egerton (Grey-Egerton from 17 Oct 1815) | 11 Jul 1766 | 24 May 1825 | 58 | |
| MP for Chester 1807-1818 | ||||||
| 24 May 1825 | 9 | Philip Grey-Egerton | 6 Jan 1767 | 13 Dec 1829 | 62 | |
| 13 Dec 1829 | 10 | Philip de Malpas Grey-Egerton | 13 Nov 1806 | 5 Apr 1881 | 74 | |
| MP for Chester 1830-1831, Cheshire South | ||||||
| 1835-1868 and Cheshire West 1868-1881 | ||||||
| 5 Apr 1881 | 11 | Philip le Belward Grey-Egerton | 28 Mar 1833 | 2 Sep 1891 | 58 | |
| 2 Sep 1891 | 12 | Philip Henry Brian Grey-Egerton | 29 Apr 1864 | 4 Jul 1937 | 73 | |
| 4 Jul 1937 | 13 | Brooke de Malpas Grey-Egerton | 19 Aug 1845 | 5 Nov 1945 | 100 | |
| 5 Nov 1945 | 14 | Philip Reginald le Belward Grey-Egerton | 3 Sep 1885 | 9 Jun 1962 | 76 | |
| 9 Jun 1962 | 15 | Philip John Caledon Grey-Egerton | 19 Oct 1920 | 19 Feb 2008 | 87 | |
| 19 Feb 2008 | 16 | David Boswell Egerton | 24 Jul 1914 | 17 Nov 2010 | 96 | |
| 17 Nov 2010 | 17 | William de Malpas Egerton | 27 Apr 1949 | |||
| EGERTON-BARRETT-BRYDGES | ||||||
| of Denton Court,Kent | ||||||
| 27 May 1815 | UK | See "Brydges" | ||||
| ELDRED of Saxham Magna,Suffolk | ||||||
| 29 Jan 1642 | E | 1 | Revett Eldred | c 1653 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1653 | ||||||
| ELEY of Sagamore,Oxon | ||||||
| 14 Jan 1921 | UK | 1 | Frederick Eley | 22 Nov 1866 | 7 Feb 1951 | 84 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 7 Feb 1951 | ||||||
| ELFORD of Bickham,Devon | ||||||
| 26 Nov 1800 | GB | 1 | William Elford | Aug 1749 | 30 Nov 1837 | 88 |
| to | MP for Plymouth 1796-1806 and Rye | |||||
| 30 Nov 1837 | 1807-1808 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| ELGAR of Broadheath,Worcs | ||||||
| 23 Jun 1931 | UK | 1 | Sir Edward William Elgar | 2 Jun 1857 | 23 Feb 1934 | 76 |
| to | OM 1911 | |||||
| 23 Feb 1934 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| ELIOTT of Stobs,Roxburgh | ||||||
| 3 Dec 1666 | NS | 1 | Gilbert Eliott | c 1680 | ||
| c 1680 | 2 | William Eliott | 19 Feb 1699 | |||
| 19 Feb 1699 | 3 | Gilbert Eliott | c 1680 | 27 May 1764 | ||
| MP for Roxburghshire 1708-1715 and 1726-1727 | ||||||
| 27 May 1764 | 4 | John Eliott | c 1705 | 31 Dec 1767 | ||
| 31 Dec 1767 | 5 | Francis Eliott | 20 Jun 1791 | |||
| 20 Jun 1791 | 6 | William Eliott | 14 May 1812 | |||
| 14 May 1812 | 7 | William Francis Eliott | 1792 | 3 Sep 1864 | 72 | |
| 3 Sep 1864 | 8 | William Francis Augustus Eliott | 2 Feb 1827 | 6 Apr 1910 | 83 | |
| 6 Apr 1910 | 9 | Arthur Boswell Eliott | 13 Jul 1856 | 15 Jan 1926 | 69 | |
| 15 Jan 1926 | 10 | Gilbert Alexander Boswell Eliott | 5 May 1885 | 26 Jul 1958 | 73 | |
| 26 Jul 1958 | 11 | Arthur Francis Augustus Boswell Eliott | 2 Jan 1915 | 6 Apr 1989 | 74 | |
| 6 Apr 1989 | 12 | Charles Joseph Alexander Eliott | 9 Jan 1937 | 8 Jul 2014 | 77 | |
| 8 Jul 2014 | 13 | Rodney Gilbert Charles Eliott | 15 Jul 1966 | |||
| ELLERMAN of Connaught Square,London | ||||||
| 11 Dec 1905 | UK | 1 | John Reeves Ellerman | 15 May 1862 | 16 Jul 1933 | 71 |
| CH 1921 | ||||||
| 16 Jul 1933 | 2 | John Reeves Ellerman | 21 Dec 1909 | 17 Jul 1973 | 63 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 17 Jul 1973 | ||||||
| ELLIOT of Headshaw,Roxburgh | ||||||
| 19 Apr 1700 | NS | 1 | Gilbert Elliot | c 1650 | 1 May 1718 | |
| 1 May 1718 | 2 | Gilbert Elliot | c 1693 | 16 Apr 1766 | ||
| MP for Roxburghshire 1722-1726 | ||||||
| 16 Apr 1766 | 3 | Gilbert Elliot | Sep 1722 | 11 Feb 1777 | 54 | |
| MP for Selkirkshire 1753-1765 and | ||||||
| Roxburghshire 1765-1777 | ||||||
| 11 Feb 1777 | 4 | Gilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound | 23 Apr 1751 | 21 Jun 1814 | 63 | |
| He was subsequently created Earl of Minto | ||||||
| (qv) in 1813 with which title the baronetcy | ||||||
| remains merged,although as at 30/06/2014 it | ||||||
| does not appear on the Official Roll of the | ||||||
| Baronetage | ||||||
| ELLIOT of Penshaw,Durham | ||||||
| 15 May 1874 | UK | 1 | George Elliot | 18 Mar 1814 | 23 Dec 1893 | 79 |
| MP for Durham County 1868-1874,1874-1880 | ||||||
| and 1881-1885 and Monmouth 1886-1892 | ||||||
| 23 Dec 1893 | 2 | George William Elliot | 13 May 1844 | 15 Nov 1895 | 51 | |
| MP for Northallerton 1874-1885 and | ||||||
| Richmond 1886-1895 | ||||||
| 15 Nov 1895 | 3 | George Elliot | 30 May 1867 | 14 Oct 1904 | 37 | |
| 14 Oct 1904 | 4 | Charles Elliot | 2 Apr 1873 | 15 Jan 1911 | 37 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 15 Jan 1911 | ||||||
| ELLIOTT of Peebles,Scotland | ||||||
| 25 Jul 1778 | GB | 1 | John Elliott | 1736 | 7 Nov 1786 | 50 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 7 Nov 1786 | ||||||
| ELLIOTT of Limpsfield,Surrey | ||||||
| 21 Jun 1917 | UK | 1 | Sir Thomas Henry Elliott | 7 Sep 1854 | 4 Jun 1926 | 71 |
| 4 Jun 1926 | 2 | Ivo D'Oyly Elliott | 7 Mar 1882 | 18 Sep 1961 | 79 | |
| 18 Sep 1961 | 3 | Hugh Francis Ivo Elliott | 10 Mar 1913 | 21 Dec 1989 | 76 | |
| 21 Dec 1989 | 4 | Clive Christopher Hugh Elliott | 12 Aug 1945 | 18 Apr 2018 | 72 | |
| 18 Apr 2018 | 5 | Ivo Anthony Moritz Elliott | 9 May 1978 | |||
| ELLIS of Byfleet,Surrey | ||||||
| 6 Jun 1882 | UK | 1 | John Whittaker Ellis | 25 Jan 1829 | 20 Sep 1912 | 83 |
| to | MP for Surrey Mid 1884-1885 and Kingston | |||||
| 20 Sep 1912 | upon Thames 1885-1892 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| ELLIS of Threshfield,Yorks | ||||||
| 24 Jun 1932 | UK | 1 | Robert Geoffrey Ellis | 4 Sep 1874 | 28 Jul 1956 | 81 |
| to | MP for Wakefield 1922-1923 and 1924-1929, | |||||
| 28 Jul 1956 | Winchester 1931-1935 and Ecclesall 1935- | |||||
| 1945 | ||||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| ELLIS-GRIFFITH of Llanidan,Anglesey | ||||||
| 26 Jan 1918 | UK | 1 | Ellis Jones Ellis-Griffith | 23 May 1860 | 30 Nov 1926 | 66 |
| MP for Anglesey 1895-1918 and Carmarthen | ||||||
| 1923-1924. PC 1914 | ||||||
| 30 Nov 1926 | 2 | Elis Arundell Ellis-Griffith | 15 Sep 1896 | 14 Jun 1934 | 37 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 14 Jun 1934 | ||||||
| ELLIS-NANNEY of Gwynfryn,Carnarvon | ||||||
| and Cefndeuddwr,Merioneth | ||||||
| 7 Mar 1898 | UK | 1 | Hugh John Ellis-Nanney | 16 Feb 1845 | 7 Jun 1920 | 75 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 7 Jun 1920 | ||||||
| ELLYS of Wyham,Lincs | ||||||
| 30 Jun 1660 | E | 1 | Thomas Ellys | 8 Oct 1627 | 1668 | |
| 1668 | 2 | William Ellys | 2 May 1654 | 6 Oct 1727 | 73 | |
| MP for Grantham 1679-1685 and 1689-1713 | ||||||
| 6 Oct 1727 | 3 | Richard Ellys | 14 Mar 1683 | 14 Feb 1742 | 58 | |
| to | MP for Grantham 1701-1705 and Boston | |||||
| 14 Feb 1742 | 1719-1734 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| ELPHINSTONE of Elphinstone,Lanark | ||||||
| 20 Jun 1628 | NS | 1 | William Elphinstone | 10 Dec 1645 | ||
| to | on his death the baronetcy became dormant | |||||
| 10 Dec 1645 | ||||||
| ELPHINSTONE of Logie,Aberdeen | ||||||
| 2 Dec 1701 | NS | 1 | James Elphinstone | c 1645 | 10 Mar 1722 | |
| 10 Mar 1722 | 2 | John Elphinstone | 8 Aug 1675 | 11 Mar 1732 | 56 | |
| 11 Mar 1732 | 3 | James Elphinstone | c 1710 | Apr 1739 | ||
| Apr 1739 | 4 | John Elphinstone | c 1717 | Jan 1743 | ||
| to | on his death the baronetcy became dormant | |||||
| Jan 1743 | ||||||
| [Jan 1743] | 5 | John Elphinstone | 1665 | Sep 1758 | 93 | |
| [Sep 1758] | 6 | Alexander Elphinstone | 26 Nov 1795 | |||
| [26 Nov 1795] | 7 | John Elphinstone | 15 May 1771 | 16 Apr 1835 | 63 | |
| [16 Apr 1835] | 8 | Alexander Elphinstone | 3 Apr 1801 | 28 Nov 1888 | 87 | |
| [28 Nov 1888] | 9 | John Elphinstone | 16 Dec 1834 | 30 Jun 1893 | 58 | |
| [30 Jun 1893] | 10 | Alexander Logie Elphinstone | 8 Mar 1880 | 16 Dec 1970 | 90 | |
| Nov 1927 | Proved his right to the baronetcy in 1927 | |||||
| For further information on this baronet,see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 16 Dec 1970 | 11 | John Elphinston | 12 Aug 1924 | 28 May 2015 | 90 | |
| 28 May 2015 | 12 | Alexander Elphinston | 6 Jun 1955 | |||
| ELPHINSTONE of Sowerby,Cumberland | ||||||
| 25 May 1816 | UK | 1 | Howard Elphinstone | 4 Mar 1773 | 28 Apr 1846 | 73 |
| 28 Apr 1846 | 2 | Howard Elphinstone | 9 Jun 1804 | 16 Mar 1893 | 88 | |
| MP for Hastings 1835-1837 and Lewes | ||||||
| 1841-1847 | ||||||
| 16 Mar 1893 | 3 | Howard Warburton Elphinstone | 26 Jul 1830 | 3 Jan 1917 | 86 | |
| 3 Jan 1917 | 4 | Howard Graham Elphinstone | 28 Dec 1898 | 18 May 1975 | 76 | |
| 18 May 1975 | 5 | Maurice Douglas Warburton Elphinstone | 13 Apr 1909 | 5 Dec 1995 | 86 | |
| 5 Dec 1995 | 6 | John Howard Main Elphinstone | 25 Feb 1949 | |||
| ELPHINSTONE-DALRYMPLE | ||||||
| of North Berwick,Haddington | ||||||
| 16 Jan 1828 | UK | 1 | Robert Dalrymple-Horn-Elphinstone | 27 Feb 1766 | 11 Oct 1848 | 82 |
| 11 Oct 1848 | 2 | James Dalrymple-Horn-Elphinstone | 20 Nov 1805 | 26 Dec 1886 | 81 | |
| MP for Portsmouth 1857-1865 and 1868- | ||||||
| 1880 | ||||||
| 26 Dec 1886 | 3 | Robert Elphinstone Dalrymple-Horn- | ||||
| Elphinstone | 12 Sep 1841 | 11 Feb 1887 | 45 | |||
| 11 Feb 1887 | 4 | Graeme Hepburn Dalrymple-Horn- | ||||
| Elphinstone | 12 Sep 1841 | 23 May 1900 | 58 | |||
| 23 May 1900 | 5 | Robert Graeme Elphinstone-Dalrymple | 17 Jan 1844 | 16 Apr 1908 | 64 | |
| 16 Apr 1908 | 6 | Edward Arthur Elphinstone-Dalrymple | 3 Oct 1877 | 24 Apr 1913 | 35 | |
| 24 Apr 1913 | 7 | Francis Napier Elphinstone-Dalrymple | 17 Jul 1882 | 18 Dec 1956 | 74 | |
| to | On his death the baronetcy became dormant | |||||
| 18 Dec 1956 | ||||||
| ELTON of Bristol,Somerset | ||||||
| 31 Oct 1717 | GB | 1 | Abraham Elton | 3 Jul 1654 | 9 Feb 1728 | 73 |
| MP for Bristol 1722-1727 | ||||||
| 9 Feb 1728 | 2 | Abraham Elton | 30 Jun 1679 | 20 Oct 1743 | 64 | |
| MP for Taunton 1724-1727 and Bristol | ||||||
| 1727-1742 | ||||||
| 20 Oct 1743 | 3 | Abraham Elton | 1703 | 29 Nov 1761 | 58 | |
| 29 Nov 1761 | 4 | Abraham Isaac Elton | 1717 | 5 Feb 1790 | 72 | |
| 5 Feb 1790 | 5 | Abraham Elton | 23 Mar 1755 | 23 Feb 1842 | 86 | |
| 23 Feb 1842 | 6 | Charles Abraham Elton | 31 Oct 1778 | 1 Jun 1853 | 74 | |
| 1 Jun 1853 | 7 | Arthur Hallam Elton | 19 Apr 1818 | 14 Oct 1883 | 65 | |
| MP for Bath 1857-1859 | ||||||
| 14 Oct 1883 | 8 | Edmund Harry Elton | 3 May 1846 | 17 Jul 1920 | 74 | |
| 17 Jul 1920 | 9 | Ambrose Elton | 23 May 1869 | 11 Jul 1951 | 82 | |
| 11 Jul 1951 | 10 | Arthur Hallam Rice Elton | 10 Feb 1906 | 1 Jan 1973 | 66 | |
| 1 Jan 1973 | 11 | Charles Abraham Grierson Elton | 23 May 1953 | |||
| ELTON of Widworthy Court,Devon | ||||||
| 1 Aug 1838 | UK | See "Marwood-Elton" | ||||
| ELWES of Stoke,Suffolk | ||||||
| 22 Jun 1660 | E | 1 | Gervase Elwes | 21 Aug 1628 | 11 Apr 1706 | 77 |
| MP for Sudbury 1677-1679, 1679-1681 and | ||||||
| 1700-1706 and Suffolk 1679 and 1690-1698 | ||||||
| 11 Apr 1706 | 2 | Hervey Elwes | Jul 1683 | 22 Oct 1763 | 80 | |
| MP for Sudbury 1706-1710 and 1713-1722 | ||||||
| 22 Oct 1763 | 3 | William Elwes | 26 Nov 1778 | |||
| Nov 1778 | 4 | Henry Elwes | 19 Jan 1787 | |||
| to | On his death the baronetcy became either | |||||
| Jan 1787 | extinct or dormant | |||||
| ELWILL of Exeter,Devon | ||||||
| 25 Aug 1709 | GB | 1 | John Elwill | 24 Sep 1643 | 25 Apr 1717 | 73 |
| MP for Beeralston 1681,1689-1690 and | ||||||
| 1695-1698 | ||||||
| 25 Apr 1717 | 2 | John Elwill | 10 Sep 1727 | |||
| 10 Sep 1727 | 3 | Edmund Elwill | 2 Feb 1740 | |||
| 2 Feb 1740 | 4 | John Elwill | 1 Mar 1778 | |||
| to | MP for Guildford 1747-1768 | |||||
| 1 Mar 1778 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| EMERSON-TENNENT | ||||||
| of Tempo Manor,Fermanagh | ||||||
| 14 Feb 1867 | UK | 1 | James Emerson-Tennent | 7 Apr 1804 | 6 Mar 1869 | 64 |
| MP for Belfast 1832-1837 and 1838-1845 | ||||||
| 6 Mar 1869 | 2 | William Emerson-Tennent | 14 May 1835 | 16 Nov 1876 | 41 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 16 Nov 1876 | ||||||
| ENGLEFIELD of Wotton Basset,Wilts | ||||||
| 25 Nov 1611 | E | 1 | Francis Englefield | c 1561 | 26 Oct 1631 | |
| 26 Oct 1631 | 2 | Francis Englefield | 1 May 1656 | |||
| 1 May 1656 | 3 | Francis Englefield | May 1665 | |||
| May 1665 | 4 | Thomas Englefield | 1678 | |||
| 1678 | 5 | Charles Englefield | c 1670 | 21 Apr 1728 | ||
| 21 Apr 1728 | 6 | Henry Englefield | 25 May 1780 | |||
| 25 May 1780 | 7 | Henry Charles Englefield | 1752 | 21 Mar 1822 | 69 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 21 Mar 1822 | ||||||
| ENNIS of Ballinahown Court,Westmeath | ||||||
| 27 Jul 1866 | UK | 1 | John Ennis | 1809 | 8 Aug 1878 | 69 |
| MP for Athlone 1857-1865 | ||||||
| 8 Aug 1878 | 2 | John James Ennis | 1842 | 28 May 1884 | 41 | |
| to | MP for Athlone 1868-1874 and 1880-1884 | |||||
| 28 May 1884 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| ENYON of Flowrie,Northants | ||||||
| 9 Apr 1642 | E | 1 | James Enyon | c 1587 | 15 Sep 1643 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 15 Sep 1643 | ||||||
| ERICHSEN of Cavendish Place,London | ||||||
| 26 Feb 1895 | UK | 1 | John Eric Erichsen | 19 Jul 1818 | 23 Sep 1896 | 77 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 23 Sep 1896 | ||||||
| ERNLE of Etchilhampton,Wilts | ||||||
| 2 Feb 1660 | E | 1 | Walter Ernle | c 1628 | 25 Jul 1682 | |
| MP for Devizes 1679 and 1681-1682 | ||||||
| 25 Jul 1682 | 2 | Walter Ernle | c 1671 | 1690 | ||
| 1690 | 3 | Edward Ernle | c 1673 | 31 Jan 1729 | ||
| MP for Devizes 1695-1698,Wiltshire 1698- | ||||||
| 1701,Wareham 1701,1704-1705,1710-1713 and | ||||||
| 1722-1729,Heytesbury 1701-1702,Marlborough | ||||||
| 1708-1710 and Portsmouth 1715-1722 | ||||||
| 31 Jan 1729 | 4 | Walter Ernle | 1676 | 16 Jul 1732 | 56 | |
| 16 Jul 1732 | 5 | John Ernle | c 1681 | 30 Mar 1734 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 30 Mar 1734 | ||||||
| ERRINGTON of Hooton,Cheshire | ||||||
| 17 Jun 1661 | E | 1 | William Stanley | Sep 1628 | 30 Sep 1673 | 45 |
| Sep 1673 | 2 | Rowland Stanley | Jun 1653 | 5 Jun 1737 | 83 | |
| 5 Jun 1737 | 3 | William Stanley | 11 Nov 1679 | Jul 1740 | 60 | |
| Jul 1740 | 4 | Rowland Stanley | 23 Aug 1707 | 9 Apr 1771 | 63 | |
| 9 Apr 1771 | 5 | William Stanley | c 1753 | 29 May 1792 | ||
| 29 May 1792 | 6 | John Stanley-Massey-Stanley | 28 Feb 1711 | 24 Nov 1794 | 83 | |
| 24 Nov 1794 | 7 | Thomas Stanley-Massey-Stanley | c 1755 | 19 Feb 1795 | ||
| 19 Feb 1795 | 8 | William Stanley-Massey-Stanley | c 1780 | 14 Jun 1800 | ||
| 14 Jun 1800 | 9 | Thomas Stanley-Massey-Stanley | 23 Jan 1782 | 20 Aug 1841 | 59 | |
| 20 Aug 1841 | 10 | William Thomas Stanley-Massey-Stanley | 24 Nov 1806 | 29 Jun 1863 | 56 | |
| MP for Pontefract 1837-1841 | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1863 | 11 | Rowland Errington | 4 Apr 1809 | 31 Mar 1875 | 65 | |
| 31 Mar 1875 | 12 | John Errington | 30 Apr 1810 | 19 Mar 1893 | 82 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 19 Mar 1893 | ||||||
| ERRINGTON of Lockham Manor,Wilts | ||||||
| 18 Jul 1885 | UK | 1 | George Errington | 1839 | 19 Mar 1920 | 80 |
| to | MP for Longford 1874-1885 | |||||
| 19 Mar 1920 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| ERRINGTON of Ness,Cheshire | ||||||
| 26 Jun 1963 | UK | 1 | Sir Eric Errington | 17 Mar 1900 | 3 Jun 1973 | 73 |
| MP for Bootle 1935-1945 and Aldershot | ||||||
| 1954-1970 | ||||||
| 3 Jun 1973 | 2 | Geoffrey Frederick Errington | 15 Feb 1926 | 3 Oct 2015 | 89 | |
| 3 Oct 2015 | 3 | Robin Davenport Errington | 1 Jul 1957 | |||
| ERSKINE of Alva,Fife | ||||||
| 30 Apr 1666 | NS | 1 | Charles Erskine | 4 Jul 1643 | 4 Jun 1690 | 46 |
| 4 Jun 1690 | 2 | James Erskine | c 1670 | 23 Jul 1693 | ||
| 23 Jul 1693 | 3 | John Erskine | 1672 | 12 Mar 1739 | 66 | |
| MP for Scotland 1707-1708 and | ||||||
| Clackmannanshire 1713-1715 | ||||||
| 12 Mar 1739 | 4 | Charles Erskine | 2 Jul 1747 | |||
| 2 Jul 1747 | 5 | Henry Erskine | 23 Dec 1710 | 7 Aug 1765 | 54 | |
| MP for Ayr Burghs 1749-1754 and | ||||||
| Anstruther Easter Burghs 1754-1765 | ||||||
| 7 Aug 1765 | 6 | James Erskine | 6 Feb 1762 | 18 Jan 1837 | 74 | |
| He subsequently succeeded to the Earldom | ||||||
| of Rosslyn (qv) in 1805 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remains merged | ||||||
| ERSKINE of Cambo,Fife | ||||||
| 20 Aug 1666 | NS | 1 | Charles Erskine | c 1620 | Feb 1677 | |
| Feb 1677 | 2 | Alexander Erskine | c 1663 | 4 Aug 1727 | ||
| MP for Fifeshire 1710-1715 | ||||||
| 4 Aug 1727 | 3 | Charles Erskine | 8 Feb 1753 | |||
| 8 Feb 1753 | 4 | John Erskine | 20 Jul 1754 | |||
| 20 Jul 1754 | 5 | William Erskine | 30 Oct 1780 | |||
| 30 Oct 1780 | 6 | Charles Erskine | 6 Mar 1790 | |||
| 6 Mar 1790 | 7 | William Erskine | c 1760 | 2 Oct 1791 | ||
| 2 Oct 1791 | 8 | Charles Erskine | 1764 | 28 Oct 1799 | 35 | |
| He subsequently succeeded to the Earldom | ||||||
| of Kellie (qv) in 1797 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1829 | ||||||
| ERSKINE of Torrie,Fife | ||||||
| 28 Jul 1791 | GB | 1 | William Erskine | 27 Mar 1728 | 19 Mar 1795 | 66 |
| 19 Mar 1795 | 2 | William Erskine | 30 Mar 1770 | 14 May 1813 | 43 | |
| MP for Fifeshire 1796-1806 | ||||||
| For further information on this baronet, see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of this page. | ||||||
| 14 May 1813 | 3 | James Erskine | 30 Sep 1772 | 3 Mar 1825 | 52 | |
| 3 Mar 1825 | 4 | John Drummond Erskine | 5 Apr 1776 | 30 Jul 1836 | 60 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 30 Jul 1836 | ||||||
| ERSKINE of Cambo,Fife | ||||||
| 27 Aug 1821 | UK | 1 | David Erskine | 6 Feb 1792 | 29 Jan 1841 | 48 |
| 29 Jan 1841 | 2 | Thomas Erskine | 23 Jul 1824 | 27 Sep 1902 | 78 | |
| 27 Sep 1902 | 3 | Ffolliott Williams Erskine | 28 Oct 1850 | 9 Jan 1912 | 61 | |
| 9 Jan 1912 | 4 | Thomas Wilfrid Hargreaves John Erskine | 27 May 1880 | 29 Apr 1944 | 63 | |
| 29 Apr 1944 | 5 | Thomas David Erskine | 31 Jul 1912 | 21 Mar 2007 | 94 | |
| 21 Mar 2007 | 6 | Thomas Peter Neil Erskine | 28 Mar 1950 | |||
| ERSKINE of Rerrick | ||||||
| 5 Jul 1961 | UK | 1 | John Maxwell Erskine | 14 Dec 1893 | 14 Dec 1980 | 87 |
| He subsequently created Baron Erskine of | ||||||
| Rerrick (qv) in 1964 with which title the | ||||||
| baronetcy then merged until its extinction | ||||||
| in 1995 | ||||||
| ERSKINE-HILL of Quothquhan,Lanark | ||||||
| 22 Jun 1945 | UK | 1 | Alexander Galloway Erskine-Hill | 3 Apr 1894 | 6 Jun 1947 | 53 |
| MP for Edinburgh North 1935-1945 | ||||||
| 6 Jun 1947 | 2 | Robert Erskine-Hill | 6 Feb 1917 | 10 Jul 1989 | 72 | |
| 10 Jul 1989 | 3 | Alexander Rodger Erskine-Hill | 15 Aug 1949 | |||
| ESMONDE of Ballynastragh,co.Wexford | ||||||
| 28 Jan 1629 | I | 1 | Thomas Esmonde | c 1665 | ||
| c 1665 | 2 | Laurence Esmonde | 1688 | |||
| 1688 | 3 | Laurence Esmonde | c 1717 | |||
| c 1717 | 4 | Laurence Esmonde | 1738 | |||
| 1738 | 5 | John Esmonde | 30 Jun 1758 | |||
| 30 Jun 1758 | 6 | Walter Esmonde | Feb 1766 | |||
| Feb 1766 | 7 | James Esmonde | 23 Apr 1701 | Feb 1766 | 65 | |
| He held the baronetcy for only two days | ||||||
| Feb 1766 | 8 | Thomas Esmonde | 19 Dec 1803 | |||
| 19 Dec 1803 | 9 | Thomas Esmonde | 10 Dec 1786 | 31 Dec 1868 | 82 | |
| MP for Wexford 1841-1847. PC [I] 1846 | ||||||
| 31 Dec 1868 | 10 | John Esmonde | 16 May 1826 | 9 Dec 1876 | 50 | |
| MP for Waterford 1852-1876 | ||||||
| For information on this baronet's brother, Thomas | ||||||
| Esmonde VC,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 9 Dec 1876 | 11 | Thomas Henry Grattan Esmonde | 21 Sep 1862 | 15 Sep 1935 | 72 | |
| MP for Dublin South 1885-1892,Kerry West | ||||||
| 1892-1900 and Wexford North 1900-1918 | ||||||
| 15 Sep 1935 | 12 | Osmond Thomas Grattan Esmonde | 4 Apr 1896 | 22 Jul 1936 | 40 | |
| 22 Jul 1936 | 13 | Laurence Grattan Esmonde | 3 Nov 1863 | 1 Feb 1943 | 79 | |
| 1 Feb 1943 | 14 | John Lymbrick Esmonde | 15 Dec 1893 | 6 Jul 1958 | 64 | |
| MP for Tipperary North 1915-1918 | ||||||
| 6 Jul 1958 | 15 | Anthony Charles Esmonde | 18 Jan 1899 | 17 Mar 1981 | 82 | |
| 17 Mar 1981 | 16 | John Henry Grattan Esmonde | 27 Jun 1928 | 16 May 1987 | 58 | |
| 16 May 1987 | 17 | Thomas Francis Grattan Esmonde | 14 Oct 1960 | 24 Jul 2021 | 60 | |
| 24 Jul 2021 | 18 | Sean Vincent Grattan Esmonde | 8 Jan 1989 | |||
| ESPLEN of Hardres Court,Kent | ||||||
| 14 Jul 1921 | UK | 1 | Sir John Esplen | 7 Apr 1863 | 7 Feb 1930 | 66 |
| 7 Feb 1930 | 2 | William Graham Esplen | 29 Dec 1899 | 29 Apr 1989 | 89 | |
| 29 Apr 1989 | 3 | John Graham Esplen | 4 Aug 1932 | 26 Mar 2016 | 83 | |
| 26 Mar 2016 | 4 | William John Harry Esplen | 24 Feb 1967 | |||
| ESSEX of Bewcot,Berks | ||||||
| 25 Nov 1611 | E | 1 | William Essex | c 1575 | c 1645 | |
| to | MP for Arundel 1597-1598 and Stafford | |||||
| c 1645 | 1601 | |||||
| Extinct on his death | ||||||
| ESTCOURT of Newton,Wilts | ||||||
| 17 Mar 1627 | E | 1 | Giles Estcourt | c 1601 | c 1650 | |
| MP for Cirencester 1628-1629 | ||||||
| c 1650 | 2 | Giles Estcourt | c Jul 1676 | |||
| c Jul 1676 | 3 | William Estcourt | c 1684 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| c 1684 | ||||||
| ETHERINGTON of Kingston-upon-Hull,Yorks | ||||||
| 22 Nov 1775 | GB | 1 | Henry Etherington | c 1732 | 16 Aug 1819 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 16 Aug 1819 | ||||||
| EUSTACE of Castle Martin,Kildare | ||||||
| 23 Dec 1685 | I | 1 | Maurice Eustace | 15 Oct 1693 | ||
| to | He was attainted and the baronetcy | |||||
| 1691 | forfeited in 1691 | |||||
| EVANS of Kilcreene,Kilkenny | ||||||
| 19 Feb 1683 | I | 1 | William Evans | 1662 | May 1690 | 27 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| May 1690 | ||||||
| EVANS of Allestree Hall,Derby | ||||||
| 18 Jul 1887 | UK | 1 | Thomas William Evans | 15 Apr 1821 | 4 Oct 1892 | 71 |
| to | MP for Derbyshire South 1857-1868 and 1874-1885 | |||||
| 4 Oct 1892 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| EVANS of Tubbenden, Orpington, Kent | ||||||
| 26 Jul 1902 | UK | 1 | Sir Francis Henry Evans | 29 Aug 1840 | 22 Jan 1907 | 66 |
| MP for Southampton 1896-1900 and | ||||||
| Maidstone 1901-1906 | ||||||
| 22 Jan 1907 | 2 | Murland de Grasse Evans | 8 Dec 1874 | 28 Jun 1946 | 71 | |
| 28 Jun 1946 | 3 | Evelyn Ward Evans | 4 Mar 1883 | 1 Feb 1970 | 86 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1 Feb 1970 | ||||||
| EVANS of Colchester,Essex | ||||||
| 15 Nov 1916 | UK | See "Worthington-Evans" | ||||
| EVANS of Wightwick,Staffs | ||||||
| 31 Jan 1920 | UK | 1 | Walter Harry Evans | 19 May 1872 | 7 Nov 1954 | 82 |
| For information on the death of this baronet's | ||||||
| son and heir,see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 7 Nov 1954 | 2 | Anthony Adney Evans | 5 Aug 1922 | 30 Aug 2017 | 95 | |
| 30 Aug 2017 | 3 | Marcus Adney Evans | 1960 | |||
| EVANS of Rottingdean,Sussex | ||||||
| 21 Nov 1963 | UK | 1 | Harold Evans | 29 Apr 1911 | 21 Apr 1983 | 71 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 21 Apr 1983 | ||||||
| EVANS-BEVAN of Cadoxton-Juxta- | ||||||
| Neath,Glamorgan | ||||||
| 9 Jul 1958 | UK | 1 | David Martyn Evans-Bevan | 4 Mar 1902 | 9 Sep 1973 | 71 |
| 9 Sep 1973 | 2 | Martyn Evan Evans-Bevan | 1 Apr 1932 | 5 Nov 2024 | 92 | |
| 5 Nov 2024 | 3 | David Gawain Evans-Bevan | 16 Sep 1961 | |||
| EVANS-FREKE of Castle Freke,Cork | ||||||
| 15 Jul 1768 | I | 1 | John Freke (later Evans-Freke) | 1744 | 20 Mar 1777 | 32 |
| 20 Mar 1777 | 2 | John Evans-Freke | 11 Nov 1765 | 12 May 1845 | 79 | |
| He subsequently succeeded to the Barony | ||||||
| of Carbery (qv) in 1807 with which title | ||||||
| the baronetcy remains merged, aqlthough,as at | ||||||
| 30/06/2014,it does not appear on the Official | ||||||
| Roll of the Baronetage | ||||||
| EVANS-TIPPING of Oaklands,Gloucs | ||||||
| 17 Jun 1913 | UK | 1 | William Gwynne-Evans | 3 Feb 1845 | 23 Jan 1927 | 81 |
| 23 Jan 1927 | 2 | Evan Gwynne Gwynne-Evans | 4 May 1877 | 2 Feb 1959 | 81 | |
| 2 Feb 1959 | 3 | Ian William Gwynne-Evans | 21 Feb 1909 | 27 Dec 1985 | 76 | |
| 27 Dec 1985 | 4 | Francis Loring Gwynne-Evans | 22 Feb 1914 | 29 Dec 1993 | 79 | |
| 29 Dec 1993 | 5 | David Gwynne Evans-Tipping | 25 Nov 1943 | 31 Jan 2023 | 79 | |
| 31 Jan 2023 | 6 | Guy Edward Francis Evans-Tipping | 10 May 1978 | |||
| EVE of Silsoe,Beds | ||||||
| 18 Jan 1943 | UK | 1 | Arthur Malcolm Trustram Eve | 8 Apr 1894 | 3 Dec 1976 | 82 |
| He was subsequently created Baron Silsoe | ||||||
| (qv) in 1963 with which title the baronetcy | ||||||
| then merged | ||||||
| EVELYN of Godstone,Surrey | ||||||
| 29 May 1660 | E | 1 | John Evelyn | 12 Mar 1633 | 10 Aug 1671 | 38 |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 10 Aug 1671 | ||||||
| EVELYN of Long Ditton,Surrey | ||||||
| 17 Feb 1683 | E | 1 | Edward Evelyn | 25 Jan 1626 | 3 May 1692 | 66 |
| to | MP for Surrey 1685-1687 | |||||
| 3 May 1692 | Extinct on his death | |||||
| EVELYN of Wotton,Surrey | ||||||
| 6 Aug 1713 | GB | 1 | John Evelyn | 2 Mar 1682 | 15 Jul 1763 | 81 |
| MP for Helston 1708-1710. Joint Postmaster | ||||||
| General 1708-1715 | ||||||
| 15 Jul 1763 | 2 | John Evelyn | 24 Aug 1706 | 11 Jun 1767 | 60 | |
| MP for Helston 1727-1741 and 1747-1767 | ||||||
| and Penrhyn 1741-1747 | ||||||
| 11 Jun 1767 | 3 | Frederick Evelyn | 1734 | 1 Apr 1812 | 77 | |
| 1 Apr 1812 | 4 | John Evelyn | c 1758 | 14 May 1833 | ||
| 14 May 1833 | 5 | Hugh Evelyn | 31 Jan 1769 | 28 Aug 1848 | 79 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 28 Aug 1848 | ||||||
| EVERARD of Ballybay,Tipperary | ||||||
| 30 Apr 1622 | I | 1 | Richard Everard | c 1660 | ||
| c 1660 | 2 | Redmond Everard | 20 Feb 1686 | |||
| 20 Feb 1686 | 3 | John Everard | 12 Jul 1690 | |||
| 12 Jul 1690 | 4 | Redmond Everard | c 1689 | 13 Apr 1742 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Apr 1742 | ||||||
| EVERARD of Much Waltham,Essex | ||||||
| 29 Jan 1629 | E | 1 | Richard Everard | c 1680 | ||
| c 1680 | 2 | Richard Everard | c 1625 | 29 Aug 1694 | ||
| MP for Westminster 1661-1678 | ||||||
| 29 Aug 1694 | 3 | Hugh Everard | c 1654 | 2 Jan 1706 | ||
| 2 Jan 1706 | 4 | Richard Everard | c 1683 | 17 Feb 1733 | ||
| Governor of North Carolina 1724 | ||||||
| 17 Feb 1733 | 5 | Richard Everard | 7 Mar 1742 | |||
| 7 Mar 1742 | 6 | Hugh Everard | 1745 | |||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1745 | ||||||
| EVERARD of Randlestown,co.Meath | ||||||
| 30 Jun 1911 | UK | 1 | Nugent Talbot Everard | 24 Oct 1849 | 11 Jul 1929 | 79 |
| Lord Lieutenant Meath 1906-1922 | ||||||
| 11 Jul 1929 | 2 | Richard William Everard | 9 Sep 1874 | 22 Jul 1929 | 54 | |
| 22 Jul 1929 | 3 | Nugent Henry Everard | 28 Feb 1905 | 15 Dec 1984 | 79 | |
| 15 Dec 1984 | 4 | Robin Charles Everard | 5 Oct 1939 | 31 Aug 2010 | 70 | |
| 31 Aug 2010 | 5 | Henry Peter Charles Everard | 6 Aug 1970 | |||
| EVERSFIELD of Welches,Sussex | ||||||
| 4 May 1725 | GB | 1 | Henry Fermor | 3 Jun 1734 | ||
| 3 Jun 1734 | 2 | Charles Eversfield | c 1708 | 26 Oct 1784 | ||
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 26 Oct 1784 | ||||||
| EVERY of Egginton,Derby | ||||||
| 26 May 1641 | E | 1 | Simon Every | c 1603 | c 1647 | |
| MP for Leicester 1640 | ||||||
| c 1647 | 2 | Henry Every | 15 Nov 1629 | 29 Sep 1700 | 70 | |
| 29 Sep 1700 | 3 | Henry Every | c 1653 | Sep 1709 | ||
| Sep 1709 | 4 | John Every | c 1654 | 1 Jul 1729 | ||
| 1 Jul 1729 | 5 | Simon Every | c 1658 | 12 Jan 1753 | ||
| 12 Jan 1753 | 6 | Henry Every | 25 Oct 1708 | 31 May 1755 | 46 | |
| 31 May 1755 | 7 | John Every | 17 Oct 1709 | 29 Jun 1779 | 69 | |
| 29 Jun 1779 | 8 | Edward Every | 15 Aug 1754 | 4 Jan 1786 | 31 | |
| Jan 1786 | 9 | Henry Every | 4 Jun 1777 | 28 Dec 1855 | 78 | |
| 28 Dec 1855 | 10 | Henry Flower Every | 25 Dec 1830 | 26 Feb 1893 | 62 | |
| 26 Feb 1893 | 11 | Edward Oswald Every | 14 Jan 1886 | 11 Nov 1959 | 73 | |
| 11 Nov 1959 | 12 | John Simon Every | 24 Apr 1914 | 3 Nov 1988 | 74 | |
| 3 Nov 1988 | 13 | Henry John Michael Every | 6 Apr 1947 | |||
| EWART of Glenmachan House,co.Down | ||||||
| and Glenbank,co.Antrim | ||||||
| 13 Sep 1887 | UK | 1 | William Ewart | 22 Nov 1817 | 1 Aug 1889 | 71 |
| MP for Belfast 1878-1885 and Belfast North | ||||||
| 1885-1889 | ||||||
| 1 Aug 1889 | 2 | William Quartus Ewart | 14 Jun 1844 | 17 Oct 1919 | 75 | |
| 17 Oct 1919 | 3 | Robert Heard Ewart | 5 Nov 1879 | 12 Aug 1939 | 59 | |
| 12 Aug 1939 | 4 | Lavens Mathewson Algernon Ewart | 6 Sep 1885 | 21 Sep 1939 | 54 | |
| 21 Sep 1939 | 5 | Talbot Ewart | 2 Nov 1878 | 23 Oct 1959 | 80 | |
| 23 Oct 1959 | 6 | William Ivan Cecil Ewart | 18 Jul 1919 | 29 Nov 1995 | 76 | |
| 29 Nov 1995 | 7 | William Michael Ewart | 10 Jun 1953 | |||
| EWART of White House,Hants | ||||||
| 14 Jun 1910 | UK | Sir Henry Peter Ewart | 20 Aug 1838 | 16 Apr 1928 | 89 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 16 Apr 1928 | ||||||
| EWING of Ballikinran,Stirling | ||||||
| 8 Mar 1886 | UK | See "Orr-Ewing" | ||||
| EYLES of London | ||||||
| 1 Dec 1714 | GB | 1 | Francis Eyles | 24 May 1716 | ||
| 24 May 1716 | 2 | John Eyles | c 1683 | 11 Mar 1745 | ||
| MP for Chippenham 1713-1727 and London | ||||||
| 1727-1734 | ||||||
| 11 Mar 1745 | 3 | Francis Haskins Eyles-Stiles | 29 Jan 1762 | |||
| 29 Jan 1762 | 4 | John Haskins Eyles-Stiles | 16 Apr 1741 | 1 Nov 1768 | 27 | |
| to | Extinct on his death | |||||
| 1 Nov 1768 | ||||||
| Sir Eardley Gideon Culling Eardley, 4th baronet | ||||||
| In January 1868, this baronet was tried on a charge of bigamy before the Central Criminal Court. | ||||||
| The following report is taken from 'The Hull Packet and East Riding Times" of 31 January 1868:- | ||||||
| 'Sir Culling Eardley was placed at the bar of the Central Criminal Court on Monday, to take his | ||||||
| trial for feloniously intermarrying with Mary Elizabeth Allen, at the district church of | ||||||
| St.George's, Hanover-square, his wife Emily Florence Magee, to whom he had previously been | ||||||
| married at New York, in the United States of America, being alive. | ||||||
| 'This case appeared to create considerable interest on account of the position of the defendant | ||||||
| and the circumstances connected with the charge. Evidence was adduced to show that on the | ||||||
| 12th of December, 1859, the defendant, being then Mr. Eardley, married Miss Emily Florence | ||||||
| Magee at New York, and continued to live with that lady for some time afterwards, when a | ||||||
| separation took place. In the first instance Sir Culling Eardley, the father of the defendant, was | ||||||
| ignorant of the fact of the marriage having taken place, but when he became aware of the fact | ||||||
| that his son had married a lady of position and respectability, he at once acknowledged her as | ||||||
| his daughter, and made a settlement of £1,500 a year upon her. After the defendant came to | ||||||
| the title by the death of his father, he endeavoured to procure a reconciliation with his wife, | ||||||
| but she refused to live with him again, and in September 1867, he contracted a second | ||||||
| marriage with a lady named Allen, at St. George's Church, Hanover-square. The marriage was | ||||||
| advertised in the Times, and the father of the defendant's first wife immediately commenced | ||||||
| the present prosecution. | ||||||
| 'Mr. De Tracy Gould, a member of the American bar, practising in England, proved that the | ||||||
| marriage in America was a perfectly legal ceremony. | ||||||
| 'Evidence having been given of the second marriage, Mr. M. Williams addressed the jury for | ||||||
| the defendant. | ||||||
| 'The Recorder, in summing up the case to the jury, said that he really did not see any real | ||||||
| answer to the charge, or any facts in the case that would justify them in coming to the | ||||||
| conclusion that the defendant had not committed the offence imputed to him. | ||||||
| 'The jury, after a short deliberation, returned a verdict of Guilty. | ||||||
| 'The Recorder, in passing sentence, said that in the absence of any information as to the | ||||||
| circumstances connected with the second marriage, the Court must deal with the case as it | ||||||
| stood. The defendant had deliberately committed a very grave offence, and one that was | ||||||
| calculated to do very serious injury to the person who was a victim of it. There did not appear | ||||||
| to be any extenuation for his conduct, and the sentence he felt bound to pass upon him was | ||||||
| that he be imprisoned and kept to hard labour for eighteen months.' | ||||||
| Sir John Eardley Eardley-Wilmot, 1st baronet | ||||||
| Sir John was Governor of Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania) between 1843 and 1846. The | ||||||
| following story of his shabby treatment by the British Government appeared in the Australian | ||||||
| monthly magazine "Parade" in its issue for November 1963:- | ||||||
| On January 26, 1847, Sir William Thomas Denison, newly-appointed Governor of Van Diemen's | ||||||
| Land, landed in Hobart from the barque Windermere. Incoming governors were usually greeted | ||||||
| by the roar of cannon, but in Denison's case the artillery was dispensed with out of | ||||||
| consideration for his predecessor, Sir John Eardley-Wilmot. Disgraced and dismissed, Eardley- | ||||||
| Wilmot lay dying in a small cottage owned by his secretary and, eight days later, Denison | ||||||
| attended the funeral of the tragic man he had superseded. | ||||||
| 'Officially, Eardley-Wilmot's death at 64 was due to "complete exhaustion of his frame and the | ||||||
| decay of nature." But as he had been in perfect health a few months before few Tasmanians | ||||||
| believed this. His friends knew he simply wanted to die. His career had been wrecked by the | ||||||
| injustice of a British politician, and his personal reputation had been sabotaged by the | ||||||
| envenomed pens of anonymous accusers. | ||||||
| 'One of the most tragic figures in early Australian history, Sir John Eardley-Wilmot was born in | ||||||
| England on February 21, 1783, and educated at Harrow for a law career. After practising at | ||||||
| the bar for some years he inherited the family estates and entered the House of Commons as | ||||||
| a member of Warwickshire [North]. One of his weaknesses was his unusually genial | ||||||
| temperament. Often he carried this to extremes when he sat on the bench as chairman of the | ||||||
| Warwickshire Quarter Sessions and exchanged pleasantries with the accused. While the habit | ||||||
| gained him the sobriquet of the "joking justice," his ill-timed humour was not highly regarded in | ||||||
| judicial circles. Many dignified eyebrows were raised in 1843 when Lord Stanley, Colonial | ||||||
| Secretary in Sir Robert Peel's government, appointed the jovial humanitarian Governor of Van | ||||||
| Diemen's Land. The newspapers published some acid comments on what they considered an | ||||||
| unsuitable appointment. Their strictures, hastily reprinted in Hobart, did the new governor much | ||||||
| harm. | ||||||
| 'Van Diemen's Land at that time had such a sinister reputation in Britain that when several | ||||||
| reputable visitors from the colony put up at a London hotel the proprietor begged them not to | ||||||
| reveal where they had come from, lest the other guests leave. Moreover the ratio of convicts | ||||||
| to free settlers was increasing rapidly. Since transportation to New South Wales had ceased, | ||||||
| felons of all kinds were being poured into the island. Alarmed at being swamped by prisoners, | ||||||
| and indignant at having to foot the bill for policing this horde, the colonists protested bitterly. | ||||||
| Between 1841 and Eardley-Wilmot's arrival in 1843 some 12,000 free colonists left the island, | ||||||
| thus throwing an additional burden on those who remained. | ||||||
| 'To make matters worse a new system had been evolved in London. In earlier days, most | ||||||
| convicts were assigned as servants to settlers in various parts of the colony. This at least | ||||||
| distributed them widely. But under the new scheme new arrivals were herded in "probation | ||||||
| gangs," where they were set to hard labour. Having endured six months of this without giving | ||||||
| any trouble, they became "pass-holders," and were allowed to work for wages, part of their | ||||||
| earnings being deferred. From pass-holders they graduated to the ranks of the ticket-of-leave | ||||||
| men, and were finally granted conditional pardons under which they were free men provided | ||||||
| they remained in Van Diemen's Land. | ||||||
| 'To those who held control in London the system appeared ideal. In practice it broke down in | ||||||
| the 1840s, when a depression hit the Australian colonies. As the returns from agriculture fell | ||||||
| below the cost of production, there was no work for the army of pass-holders. Herded in hiring | ||||||
| depots waiting for work, they had to be kept at the public expense. | ||||||
| 'When Eardley-Wilmot took over there were nearly 2,000 escaped convicts at large and the | ||||||
| colonists were expected to foot the bill to recapturing them. To clean up this situation proved | ||||||
| an impossible task for an English country gentleman with a sense of humour and some vague | ||||||
| theories on penal reform. Already prejudiced by adverse press comments in London, Eardley- | ||||||
| Wilmot aroused further ire in Hobart when it was found that he had left his wife and family | ||||||
| behind in Warwickshire. Some of the local socialites construed this into an affront to Hobart | ||||||
| society. | ||||||
| 'The new governor fell foul of the judiciary for his clemency to the bushranger Kavanagh, a | ||||||
| violent ruffian who had already escaped the gallows several times. Sentenced to death for | ||||||
| robbery and attempted murder, Kavanagh was reprieved by the Governor within 10 minutes of | ||||||
| being sentenced to death. This act of mercy not only offended the judge who had sentenced | ||||||
| Kavanagh, but angered farmers who were the chief targets of bushrangers. In any case, it | ||||||
| merely postponed Kavanagh's end. He was hanged at Norfolk Island in 1846. | ||||||
| 'The well-meaning Eardley-Wilmot soon found his position hopeless. When he applied to Britain | ||||||
| for financial aid to help pay the ever-increasing costs of police and gaols he was ignored. But | ||||||
| when he floated a public loan of £70,000 he was harshly censured for extravagance and ordered | ||||||
| to tax the settlers. Meanwhile, William Ewart Gladstone, later celebrated as the "Grand Old Man" | ||||||
| of British politics, had taken over the Colonial Office. Pigeon-holing Eardley-Wilmot's requests | ||||||
| for money, Gladstone called for reports on the moral standards of the convict population. Most | ||||||
| contemporary accounts agree that their standards could scarcely have been lower, but there | ||||||
| was nothing the harassed governor could do about it. | ||||||
| 'In 1845 he called the Legislative Council together to consider some way of raising money. This | ||||||
| body, whose members were all appointed by the Governor himself, consisted of six government | ||||||
| officials and eight private citizens. The official party was prepared to endorse whatever Sir John | ||||||
| suggested. But the private members were in a recalcitrant mood. One of them suggested that | ||||||
| the best way to obtain funds was to tax dogs and billiard tables. As there were only 10 billiard | ||||||
| tables in the colony, Eardley-Wilmot, whose sense of humour was fast waning, declared the | ||||||
| proposal facetious. His own suggestion was to treble the customs duties. After a long and fierce | ||||||
| argument this was passed on the Governor's casting vote. But when he brought in a Bill to | ||||||
| establish toll gates on the roads the unofficial members rebelled. Declaring that they vote for | ||||||
| no more taxes until the British Government paid the expenses of maintaining the convicts it | ||||||
| sent, six private members refused to attend any more council meetings. This meant that Sir | ||||||
| John could no longer get a quorum and the patriotic six, as they were called, became the | ||||||
| heroes of the island. | ||||||
| 'By now Eardley-Wilmot regretted ever having heard of Van Diemen's Land. Caught between the | ||||||
| colonists and the Colonial Office, he could make no impression on either. His reports on the | ||||||
| condition of the convicts under the hated probation system were ignored in London. So, too, | ||||||
| was his plea on behalf of a political offender named Zephania Williams, who had been exiled for | ||||||
| life for participating in the Chartist movement. Williams, a harmless working-class leader whose | ||||||
| conduct on the island had been exemplary, rushed into a burning mental hospital and rescued a | ||||||
| number of inmates at the risk of his life. Eardley-Wilmot brought his heroism to the notice of | ||||||
| Gladstone but his dispatch was not even acknowledged. | ||||||
| 'Sir John's next attempt to raise funds was by special taxes on auctioneers, pawnbrokers, | ||||||
| publicans, butchers, restaurant keepers and even cabmen. This gave the wits of Hobart an | ||||||
| opportunity. The town was placarded with punning posters calling on butchers to show their | ||||||
| pluck and hotelkeepers their spirit, while cabmen were exhorted to take a stand against the | ||||||
| unjust imposts. | ||||||
| 'By now the colonists were on the point of revolt and Eardley-Wilmot was at the end of his | ||||||
| resources. No longer the "joking justice," he battled on, weighed down with work and worry and | ||||||
| entirely without support from the government which had sent him there. Gladstone, however, | ||||||
| had already prepared the final blow. On October 13, 1846, Eardley-Wilmot received a dispatch | ||||||
| from the Colonial Office giving him immediate notice to resign. In the official notification | ||||||
| Gladstone accused him of "failure to give due attention to the pressing exigencies of convict | ||||||
| discipline and to impress a moral and reforming character on the convict system." But it was the | ||||||
| accompanying private letter which stunned the Governor. In this letter Gladstone told him he | ||||||
| could expect no more appointments under the Crown as his immorality had become notorious in | ||||||
| Van Diemen's Land. Gladstone added that he had been informed that Sir John's regime | ||||||
| Government House had become a place shunned by the respectable ladies of Hobart. That this | ||||||
| was no ordinary case was shown by the immediate arrival of C.J. Latrobe, superintendent of | ||||||
| Port Phillip, who had received urgent orders to assume the administration of the colony until | ||||||
| Sir William Denison arrived. | ||||||
| 'Instead of returning to England immediately, the bewildered Eardley-Wilmot stayed on in Hobart | ||||||
| to try to vindicate his character. But when he attempted to find out who had maligned him, he | ||||||
| came up against a blank wall. Many locals came forward to defend the slandered Governor. The | ||||||
| Chief Justice, Sir John Pedder, declared that Gladstone's charges were entirely false. He added | ||||||
| that his wife and the wives of his friends were frequent visitors at Government House. Even | ||||||
| though some of them had not been on good terms with Eardley-Wilmot, 300 prominent | ||||||
| Tasmanians signed a memorial protesting against the way he had been treated. Eardley-Wilmot | ||||||
| asked to be given the privilege accorded the meanest criminal and allowed to face his accusers | ||||||
| in a court of law. The home government made no reply. | ||||||
| 'Finally, his health completely shattered, Eardley-Wilmot found refuge in a small cottage owned | ||||||
| by his former private secretary. There he died on February 3, 1847, eight days after his | ||||||
| successor was sworn in. | ||||||
| 'In June 1847 the [former] Prime Minister, Sir Robert Peel, blandly assured the House of | ||||||
| Commons that the allegations against Sir John Eardley-Wilmot were totally and entirely | ||||||
| erroneous. Sir Robert did not inform the House who had made the false charges, although many | ||||||
| rumours were current in Van Diemen's Land. Nor did Peel mention the £12,000 due to Eardley- | ||||||
| Wilmot's heirs as the balance of his salary for the remaining years of his six-year term. | ||||||
| 'Sir John Eardley-Wilmot lies in St. David's Church, Hobart, under a monument erected by public | ||||||
| subscription. Gladstone survived another 50 years, to have four terms as Prime Minister and | ||||||
| become one of the greatest figures of Victorian Britain. By then he had long lived down what | ||||||
| his biographer, John Morley, dismissed as a "trivial episode." | ||||||
| Sir Henry Frederick Echlin, 8th baronet | ||||||
| The following article on Sir Henry Echlin appeared in the New Zealand 'Feilding Star,' reprinted | ||||||
| from the 'London Express,' on 6 February 1907:- | ||||||
| "Sir Henry Echlin, Bart., licensed to sell beer, wines, and spirits, to be consumed on or off the | ||||||
| premises. Dealer in tobacco." | ||||||
| 'This legend, in brand new paint, will be written prominently over the door of the Rose and | ||||||
| Crown Inn, a small wayside hostelry half a mile out of the little Buckinghamshire township of | ||||||
| Wooburn Green, by the end of the present week. | ||||||
| 'The proprietor of the Rose and Crown, who was serving out pewters of mild ale and screws | ||||||
| of shag to rustic customers for about fourteen years past, succeeded to the ancient baronetcy | ||||||
| of the Echlins on the death of his elder brother Thomas, the seventh baronet, a fortnight ago. | ||||||
| 'Sir Henry first heard a rumour of the honour thus thrust upon him during last week. On | ||||||
| Saturday evening when the farm labourers and paper-mill hands of Wooburn opened the local | ||||||
| newspapers in the Working Men's Club they read of the sudden exaltation of their host at the | ||||||
| Rose and Crown. | ||||||
| 'It dawned upon them slowly that they had "quality" in their midst. The club was almost | ||||||
| deserted that night. The members strolled down to the inn with newspapers in their | ||||||
| hands, and found that Sir Henry had already heard of his new dignity from the same source. So | ||||||
| they crowded on the window-seat and the old settle in the little bar and gazed and drank and | ||||||
| talked, putting unctuous deference into the order "Another 'arf-pint, Sir 'Enery." | ||||||
| 'When I walked out to the Rose and Crown to-day I arrived at the same moment that the first | ||||||
| official intimation of his succession to the baronetcy reached the proprietor. Sergeant King, of | ||||||
| the Wooburn police, bore it in the shape of a letter from the head office of the Royal Irish | ||||||
| Constabulary, in which service Sir Henry's brother, Sir Thomas, had been since 1860. | ||||||
| 'Sir Henry Echlin had last heard of his brother fourteen years before. That was in the present | ||||||
| baronet's first year as a publican. He was then proprietor of the Red Lion, at High Wycombe. | ||||||
| 'In a chat with me Sir Henry, who is a finely built man of nearly sixty years, standing over six | ||||||
| feet in his stockings, straight as a die, with black hair, clean-shaven chin, and iron-grey | ||||||
| moustache, gave a remarkable account of his life history. [He] had been employed in the | ||||||
| following varied capacities:- Footman: three or four years. Royal Irish Constabulary: Four years. | ||||||
| 2nd Life Guards: About a month. Liverpool Police: Six weeks. 2nd Life Guards: Twenty-one | ||||||
| years. Commissionaire: Twelve months. Prison warder: About four months. Private lunatic | ||||||
| attendant: Three years. Publican: About fourteen years. | ||||||
| "My father was poor, but a gentleman," he said. "When I was about seven years old I left home | ||||||
| to live with my uncle, and went to the village school until I was fourteen or fifteen. Then I | ||||||
| entered the service of Sir Gerald Aylmer, Bart., at Donadea Castle, C. Kildare, as a footman, | ||||||
| and remained with him for about four years. | ||||||
| "After that I served in the Royal Irish Constabulary for four years, and then left to join the 2nd | ||||||
| Life Guards. But I only served a month with the Guards then. The yarns of the old soldiers put | ||||||
| me off the Army altogether. I was only a young fellow; but all that these old hands told me | ||||||
| made me feel that the regiment was not up to concert pitch, so I deserted. I was a fool to | ||||||
| desert, as I was really getting on well. | ||||||
| "'As a deserter I joined the Liverpool police. That was about 1865. I used to see my name in | ||||||
| the ''Police Gazette' every morning as a deserter, and I had many a good laugh at it, for they | ||||||
| spelt it ''Ashlin,' and that was why I was never found out. | ||||||
| I left the Liverpool Police after six weeks, one reason being that the helmets they wore in those | ||||||
| days were too heavy. They made my head ache. I tried to join the Preston police, but they | ||||||
| were full up; so, after wandering miserably about for some weeks with nothing to do, I gave | ||||||
| myself up as a deserter. | ||||||
| "I was sent back to London for punishment; but I was only in the guardroom one day, when I | ||||||
| was released by the Duke of Cambridge's orders. He was a real soldier's friend, and we all loved | ||||||
| him. He let me go on the plea that I was only a youngster, that I did not take away any | ||||||
| accoutrements or equipment, and that my previous character was very good. | ||||||
| "So I was reinstated, and served in the 2nd Life Guards for twenty-one years, finally leaving the | ||||||
| regiment a non-commissioned officer. I never saw any foreign service, but I was often one of | ||||||
| Queen Victoria's bodyguard, and rode with her Majesty to the opening of Blackfriars Bridge and | ||||||
| the stonelaying of St. Thomas' Hospital. | ||||||
| "After that I served in the Corps of Commissionaires for a year, and then as a warder at | ||||||
| Wandsworth Prison for a few months. In my next employment, as private attendant to an | ||||||
| insane gentleman at Kingston-on-Thames, I had some really exciting experiences. | ||||||
| "My charge stood six feet high and weighed eighteen stone nine pounds, and was subject to | ||||||
| periodical attacks of violent insanity. Two days before the full moon I had to look out for | ||||||
| squalls. I used to see his neck swell and grow as red as a turkey cock's, and lively times | ||||||
| followed, for he was a tough handful to overpower. | ||||||
| "I remained with him for three years, and on the whole we got on very well, for we were both | ||||||
| Army men." | ||||||
| 'Sir Henry Echlin's subsequent career has been spent behind the bars of country inns, he having | ||||||
| successively owned the following public houses:- Wheelwright's Arms, Marlow; Rupert Arms, | ||||||
| Reading; Criterion, Windsor; Red Lion, Wycombe; Rose and Crown, Wooburn Green. | ||||||
| 'At Reading Sir Henry married, and his one child, a daughter, is now a pupil teacher at Wooburn | ||||||
| School. He is a very pretty girl of fourteen summers. Her name, Margaret Daisy, figures on five | ||||||
| certificates for proficiency in religious knowledge hanging in the little bar parlour at the Rose | ||||||
| and Crown. | ||||||
| 'Lady Echlin was serving beer and tobacco in the bar while her husband talked with me, and | ||||||
| was in no way abashed at the words, "Your ladyship," now punctiliously added by every | ||||||
| customer at the Rose and Crown who has heard the news. | ||||||
| 'In reply to the question whether he would now remove from the Rose and Crown, Sir Henry | ||||||
| said: "Funds will not let me live elsewhere. I am doing a fair wayside trade, and am under a | ||||||
| very good brewer. I have already given the order for a new signboard with my title on it and I | ||||||
| suppose I shall keep here. | ||||||
| "There is property in Dublin, I believe, belonging to my family; but money will be required to get | ||||||
| it, and I have no money. I am going to write to the Dublin office of the Royal Irish Constabulary | ||||||
| at once to learn more about my brother. I have a sister in Canada, and a younger brother who | ||||||
| is a stationmaster on an Irish railway. We are all poor now. It was the baronets who have gone | ||||||
| before who squandered all our estates." | ||||||
| 'Sir Henry is a non-smoker, and, as he put it yesterday, his "strongest drink is mild beer." He did | ||||||
| not know whether he was the seventh or eighth baronet until I informed him. | ||||||
| 'The Echlin baronetcy was created in 1721. The family is of ancient Scottish origin, and formerly | ||||||
| possessed vast estates both in Scotland and Ireland. One Echlin was Constable and Deputy | ||||||
| Governor of Edinburgh Castle during the siege of 1572; another - Bishop of Down and Connor - | ||||||
| was murdered in 1635, and Sir Henry Echlin, the first baronet, was a Baron of the Court of | ||||||
| Exchequer in Ireland. The second baronet sat as M.P. for Newry. The third, fourth, fifth and | ||||||
| sixth baronets successively dissipated the family possessions. | ||||||
| 'The elaborate coat-of-arms of the Echlins includes a device of a hound in full chase after a | ||||||
| stag, and the family motto is, "Non sine praeda" (not without prey).' | ||||||
| Sir Henry Edwards, 1st baronet [UK 1866] | ||||||
| Following an incident between two of his servants, Sir Henry found himself in court charged | ||||||
| with assaulting his butler. The report beneath of this case appeared in the 'Glasgow Herald' | ||||||
| of 18 January 1870:- | ||||||
| 'At the West Riding Court, Halifax, on Saturday, two charges of assault were heard by the | ||||||
| magistrates. The first charge was that of Henry Hill Hobson, second footman in the service of | ||||||
| Sir H. Edwards, of Pye Nest, near Halifax, against George Lovett, butler to Sir Henry, for an | ||||||
| assault at Pye Nest on the 6th inst.; the other being brought by the butler against Sir Henry | ||||||
| for an assault said to have occurred at the same place on the 7th of January. According to | ||||||
| priority in taking out the summons, the charge against the butler was first heard. | ||||||
| 'Complainant said that on the day named, whilst in the pantry about two o'clock in the | ||||||
| afternoon, the butler went in and asked what he had been saying about him. Complainant | ||||||
| replied that he did not know what he meant, upon which the butler said he did know, and began | ||||||
| to use coarse and abusive language, ordering him out of the pantry. Complainant refused to go, | ||||||
| upon which the butler took off his coat, threw it upon the floor, and after using more abusive | ||||||
| language, seized complainant by one of his whiskers with one hand, and by the ear with the | ||||||
| other, but did not succeed in pulling him out. The butler then went out, but returned soon | ||||||
| afterwards, and continued to use abusive and coarse language. Complainant then said to the | ||||||
| butler that once before he had intended to give notice to Lady Edwards to leave on account of | ||||||
| his conduct, and this time he should do so. Defendant replied that he had better do so, and | ||||||
| again repeated his improper language, adding that complainant was of no use there. Defendant | ||||||
| again pulled off his coat, and tried to put the footman out, but did not succeed. Defendant had | ||||||
| previously used similar offensive language to him and others in the house. When Lady Edwards | ||||||
| returned home about half-past three o'clock the same afternoon, complainant gave her notice, | ||||||
| and on her Ladyship wishing to know the reason he told her of defendant's conduct. In | ||||||
| consequence of this, on the following morning, the butler, the complainant, and the other | ||||||
| footman were called before Sir Henry, and complainant gave a full explanation. A kitchen-maid, | ||||||
| named Jemima Smith, was called to prove the charge, her attention having been drawn to the | ||||||
| pantry by hearing a noise, and she saw the butler have hold of the footman's ear and whisker. | ||||||
| At the same time he was using foul language to the footman. The butler's defence was that | ||||||
| he had frequently had to complain of the neglect of complainant, who on the day named was | ||||||
| insolent, and he ordered him out of the pantry. As the footman refused to go, he got hold of | ||||||
| him to put him out, but not by the ear and whisker, but only by the coat. They struggled with | ||||||
| each other, the question being who should be put out of the pantry, but no blows were struck | ||||||
| by defendant. | ||||||
| 'Before deciding upon this case, the bench decided to hear that against Sir Henry. The butler | ||||||
| said he had been in the service of Sir Henry for two months and seventeen days. On Friday | ||||||
| the 7th instant, in consequence of a message brought to him, he went into the entrance hall, | ||||||
| where he saw Sir Henry, who, in warm terms, demanded to know the meaning of his conduct. | ||||||
| In reply to this, the butler said he "demanded" to know what conduct he alluded to. Sir Henry | ||||||
| said it was using abusive language, taking off his coat, and threatening to fight. Complainant | ||||||
| said he had had frequent cause of complaint against Hobson for insubordination, and that he | ||||||
| might have used language which he should have been glad not to have been called to use, | ||||||
| but he had made no effort to strike Hobson, and that all the morning he had been complaining | ||||||
| of Hobson's inattention to work. At this Sir Henry made some derisive remark, and then charged | ||||||
| him with having insulted his son Churchill, which witness denied. Sir Henry said, "You have; a | ||||||
| gentleman told me so, and if I had heard it I would have kicked you out of the house." To this | ||||||
| complainant replied, "I am surprised you should use language as violent as mine, of which you | ||||||
| have complained." Previous to this Sir Henry had told him that he must leave his service that | ||||||
| day three months; to which complainant replied that it would be very agreeable to him. Sir | ||||||
| Henry then told him he must leave that day, and ordered the men to "chuck" him out of the | ||||||
| house. Complainant was asked if the men did so, and he replied, "I rather fancy not; the men | ||||||
| did not attempt to do so." Sir Henry then went towards him, and, without any intimation, | ||||||
| struck him violently on the left cheek. Complainant was not much intimidated by this, and | ||||||
| was retreating gently, when Sir Henry followed up and said, "If you don't be off I will give you | ||||||
| another." Complainant told him he would hear of that another day, and then (he said) "I turned | ||||||
| round to leave the room, but he followed me, and, like a coward, he pushed me. I say it was | ||||||
| cowardly." | ||||||
| 'Henry Hill Hobson, the footman, was called, and said that what Sir Henry said to complainant | ||||||
| was, "You mean to say that you did not pull off your coat and want to fight?" to which | ||||||
| complainant replied, "I may have done so through excitement." Witness also said that when | ||||||
| complainant was ordered out of the hall he refused to go, and said it was not gentlemanly of | ||||||
| Sir Henry to order him out. He said several times he should not go. Sir Henry then called upon | ||||||
| them to put the butler out and to fetch a policeman. The butler then put himself up to Sir | ||||||
| Henry, who in pushing him away caught his ear. Sir Henry pushed the butler past witness, and | ||||||
| out of the door, but witness did not see Sir Henry kick the butler. The other footman, Alfred | ||||||
| Micklethwaite, corroborated this evidence. | ||||||
| 'Mr. Jubb, for the defence, said that if complainant had acted to Sir Henry as his own evidence | ||||||
| proved, he was justified, not only in discharging him, but in kicking him out of the hall, and any | ||||||
| master would have done the same. | ||||||
| 'The Magistrates having consulted together, Mr. John Waterhouse (the chairman) said the | ||||||
| Bench were unanimously decided as to the merits of the two cases; and with regard to the | ||||||
| one against the butler they were quite of opinion that the charge was proved, and he would | ||||||
| have £1 6s 6d penalty and costs to pay. With regard to the charge against Sir H. Edwards, | ||||||
| their unanimous opinion was there was not the shadow of ground to establish it, and they | ||||||
| therefore dismissed the case. (Hisses.) All servants should remember that when they are | ||||||
| ordered to leave their master's house and did not do so at once they became trespassers. In | ||||||
| this case the servant was frequently requested to leave, but instead of doing so he insulted | ||||||
| his employer, and got what he deserved.' | ||||||
| Sir Alexander Logie Elphinstone, 10th baronet | ||||||
| In November 1927, Elphinstone's claim to the baronetcy, which had been dormant since 1743, | ||||||
| was heard and decided in his favour. The following report appeared in 'The Scotsman' on | ||||||
| 1 December 1927:- | ||||||
| 'A genealogical tangle came up for unravelling before the Baronetcy Committee of the Privy | ||||||
| Council at London yesterday, when a claim to a Scottish title, dating back to December 1701, | ||||||
| in the time of King William III, and which has lain in abeyance [sic] since 1743, was made by a | ||||||
| military officer. | ||||||
| 'The claimant is Alexander Elphinstone of Glack, a Major in the Reserve of Officers, living at 40 | ||||||
| Kildare Terrace, London, and he claimed to be heir of the baronetcy of the Order of Scotland | ||||||
| and of Nova Scotia, which was conferred upon Mr. James Elphinstone of Logie, because, it was | ||||||
| stated, of his contributions to the development of Nova Scotia, where he held a grant of | ||||||
| 16,000 acres. | ||||||
| 'Lord Dunedin was the chairman of the Committee, and the other members were Lord Shaw of | ||||||
| Dunfermline, Lord Fitzalan and Sir Herbert Maxwell. As the letters patent under the Great Seal | ||||||
| creating the baronetcy were not in the possession of the petitioner, and as he was not aware | ||||||
| whether it was in existence, he was given permission to search in the Great Seal Register, and | ||||||
| some quaint entries were disclosed. | ||||||
| 'There was an item of £118 4s 8d stated to have been paid for the funeral expenses of an | ||||||
| ancestor, Robert Elphinstone, on two days in September 1704, which drew from Lord Shaw the | ||||||
| remark that "it seems to take two days to perform the burial function." | ||||||
| 'Mr. Hugh McMillan, for the petitioner, said that during the early development of Nova Scotia | ||||||
| each Baronet on being exalted was asked to contribute 3000 marks towards the development | ||||||
| of the colony, and was given 16,000 acres of land. | ||||||
| 'Tracing the pedigree of the petitioner, counsel said Sir John Elphinstone, the fourth Baronet, | ||||||
| died in 1743, unmarried, and then the whole heirs male became extinct, as well as the heirs of | ||||||
| the patentee's father, William Elphinstone, of Ressiviot. | ||||||
| 'The Baronetcy then devolved on Sir John's third cousin, John Elphinstone of Glack. This John | ||||||
| Elphinstone married Jean Achyndachy. He was the grandfather in the male line of John | ||||||
| Elphinstone of Glack, who was a member of the Council of Bombay, under the Honourable East | ||||||
| India Co., and was the great-grandfather in the male line of the petitioner. | ||||||
| 'Major Alexander Elphinstone, said counsel, was thus the nearest heir male collateral and male | ||||||
| representative of the patentee. So far as the petitioner was aware the dignity had not been | ||||||
| assumed since the death of Sir John Elphinstone, the fourth holder. | ||||||
| 'After a short deliberation, Lord Dunedin said - The Committee has decided to recommend the | ||||||
| claim.' | ||||||
| Unfortunately, in March 1933, Sir Alexander found himself in court to be sentenced after being | ||||||
| found guilty on criminal charges, as related in an article in 'The Times of India' on 9 March | ||||||
| 1933:- | ||||||
| 'The trial was concluded before Judge Whiteley, K.C., at the Central Criminal Court of Alfred | ||||||
| Laurens, 70, manager, and Sir Logie Elphinstone, Bt., 52, charged with conspiring to defraud | ||||||
| such persons as might be induced to invest or purchase shares in the National Match Company, | ||||||
| and concurring in publishing a statement which they knew to be false. | ||||||
| 'Laurens was found guilty on these charges and with obtaining money by false pretences and | ||||||
| and sentenced to three years' penal servitude. | ||||||
| 'Elphinstone was found guilty of conspiring to defraud and not guilty on the other charge. | ||||||
| Sentence was postponed on him until next sessions. The jury recommended him to clemency. | ||||||
| 'Divisional Detective-Inspector Young proved six previous convictions against Laurens, one | ||||||
| previous sentence being of three years' penal servitude. His correct name was Alfred Baker. | ||||||
| and he was known under other names, including that of Baron de Lussan. Altogether he had | ||||||
| obtained £5,841 in connexion with the National Match Company and a subsidiary company, of | ||||||
| which £350 was repaid. | ||||||
| 'The witness stated that several investors who called at Laurens's offices in Abbey House, | ||||||
| Westminster, were unable to obtain an interview, as he had a room at the offices known as | ||||||
| the "bunk-hole" to which he retired. | ||||||
| 'Elphinstone was born in America and came to this country when he was four years old. He | ||||||
| joined the Army in 1899 and served in the South African War. During the Great War he had | ||||||
| the rank of major. He established his claim to the baronetcy in November, 1927. It was a very | ||||||
| old title dating back to 1435 [sic]. He had twice been convicted in America for larceny and at | ||||||
| the London Sessions in 1910 for obtaining credit as an undischarged bankrupt. He had been | ||||||
| associated with a number of companies which had been wound up. | ||||||
| 'Judge Whiteley, passing sentence on Laurens, said the evidence showed that he was an | ||||||
| extremely clever man and very dominating. He was a dangerous criminal. Elphinstone must feel | ||||||
| it a disgraceful thing for a man of his opportunities, education, and position to find himself in | ||||||
| the dock of the Central Criminal Court with a man convicted six times. | ||||||
| 'Elphinstone - I knew nothing about it, I swear. | ||||||
| 'Judge Whiteley said he had lent his name and he had had opportunity of getting out of the | ||||||
| company.' | ||||||
| Elphinstone was subsequently bound over for two years, the Judge saying that if there was | ||||||
| any suggestion that Elphinstone was entering into City affairs or making himself a party to | ||||||
| obtaining money from the public, he would be brought to the Court and sentenced for the | ||||||
| present offence. The Army was, however, less forgiving, since the 'London Gazette' of 2 | ||||||
| June 1933 contained a paragraph in which it was revealed that Elphinstone had been removed | ||||||
| from the Army and stripped of his rank of Major. | ||||||
| Sir William Erskine, 2nd baronet of Torrie, Fife (created 1791) | ||||||
| Before his appointment as one of the Duke of Wellington's senior commanders in the Peninsular | ||||||
| War, Erskine had twice been confined in an insane asylum. | ||||||
| After obtaining a commission in the cavalry, Erskine served with the British army in Flanders. | ||||||
| In 1794, he fought with the 15th Light Dragoons at the Battle of Villers-en-Cauchies, where a | ||||||
| handful of British and Austrian cavalry routed a much larger French force. | ||||||
| After representing Fifeshire in the House of Commons between 1796 and 1806, he was | ||||||
| promoted to Major General and shipped to Portugal to assist Wellington. When Wellington heard | ||||||
| of this, he complained that he 'generally understood him to be a madman.' Wellington received | ||||||
| the far from reassuring reply that 'no doubt he is sometimes a little mad, but in his lucid | ||||||
| intervals he is an uncommonly clever fellow, and I trust he will have no fit during the campaign, | ||||||
| though he looked a little wild as he embarked.' A further concern was Erskine's eyesight, which | ||||||
| was particularly poor. Before the enemy could be engaged, he had to ask a subordinate to | ||||||
| point him in the right direction. | ||||||
| During the 1811 campaign in Portugal, Erskine took over the command of the Light Division. He | ||||||
| soon developed a reputation for rashness. Wellington wrote that 'it is impossible to trust to his | ||||||
| judgment in any critical case.' | ||||||
| At Casal Novo on 14 March 1811, Erskine advanced his men along the main road, in fog, and | ||||||
| with no proper scouts. When the fog suddenly cleared, he found himself facing infantry with | ||||||
| artillery support and lost 155 killed and wounded. | ||||||
| At the Battle of Sabugal on 3 April 1811, the fog and Erskine's incompetence saved the | ||||||
| opposing French forces from destruction. Erskine was in command of both the cavalry and the | ||||||
| light infantry. Each was marched off in the direction the other should have taken, the cavalry | ||||||
| promptly becoming lost in the fog and the French were able to escape. | ||||||
| At the Siege of Almeida in May 1811, Erskine's actions confounded Wellington's battle tactics, | ||||||
| causing the Duke to protest that 'this was the most disgraceful military event that has yet | ||||||
| occurred to us.' The besieged French garrison was allowed to escape because Erskine failed to | ||||||
| guard the bridge of Barba de Puerca. Erskine was dining with a colleague when Wellington's | ||||||
| order to guard the bridge arrived. Told to send some cavalry and a force of infantry, Erskine | ||||||
| despatched a corporal and four privates. When a fellow diner pointed out that this party would | ||||||
| not be insufficient, he decided to send a whole regiment. He wrote out the necessary order | ||||||
| and then put the order in his pocket, forgetting all about it. When he was undressing for bed | ||||||
| that night, he found the order and passed it on to a Colonel Bevan, who arrived at the bridge | ||||||
| too late; the French had already slipped away. Wellington was furious - 'I have never been so | ||||||
| distressed by any military event as by the escape of even a man of them.' | ||||||
| Aware that he could not dismiss Erskine because of his political influence, Wellington from then | ||||||
| on placed Erskine in positions where he could do minimal harm. Eventually, Erskine was declared | ||||||
| insane and dismissed. He committed suicide in Lisbon in 1813 by jumping out a window. His last | ||||||
| words to bystanders were 'Why did I do that?' | ||||||
| Thomas Esmonde (25 May 1829-14 Jan 1873), brother of Sir John Esmonde, | ||||||
| 10th baronet | ||||||
| Esmonde was awarded the Victoria Cross for his gallantry during the Crimean War. The citation, | ||||||
| dated 25 September 1857, reads as follows:- | ||||||
| 'Captain Thomas Esmonde, 18th Regiment, for having (on the 18th and 20th June, 1855), after | ||||||
| being engaged in the attack on the Redan, repeatedly assisted, at great personal risk, under a | ||||||
| heavy fire of shell and grape, in rescuing wounded men from exposed positions, and also, while | ||||||
| in command of a covering party, two days after, for having rushed, with the most prompt and | ||||||
| daring gallantry, to a spot where a fire-ball from the enemy had just been lodged, which he | ||||||
| effectively extinguished before it had betrayed the position of the working party under his | ||||||
| protection - thus saving it from a murderous fire of shell and grape, which was immediately | ||||||
| opened upon the spot where the fire-ball had fallen.' | ||||||
| Walter Terence Evans (18 Sep 1911-4 Apr 1932), son and heir of Sir Walter Harry Evans, | ||||||
| 1st baronet [UK 1920] | ||||||
| Walter Evans drowned in April 1932 when his canoe sank in an Irish lake. The following report | ||||||
| appeared in the 'Weekly Irish Times' of 16 April 1932:- | ||||||
| 'The story of a man's attempt to fight for life in the placid waters of Lake Bollager, one of the | ||||||
| beauty spots in Connemara [in County Galway], was told at an inquest on 6th April on the body | ||||||
| of Mr. Walter Terence Evans (20), son of Sir W.Evans, baronet, Wightwick Hall, Wolverhampton, | ||||||
| who was drowned on Monday. The remains were recovered after extensive dragging operations | ||||||
| on the previous evening. | ||||||
| 'John Anthony Tinne, Emlaughmore Lodge, Clifden, said that Mr. Evans was on a holiday in | ||||||
| Emlaughmore since March 27, and intended returning home on Wednesday. Witness | ||||||
| accompanied him to Emlaughmore on Monday. Mr. Evans and witness went to Bollager Lake, | ||||||
| about three miles from the lodge, and they crossed two lakes before coming to Bollager. They | ||||||
| were in a small Canadian canoe, and their intention was to Lough Fada in order to gather | ||||||
| herons' eggs. | ||||||
| 'When they were in the middle of Lake Bollager, Mr. Evans mentioned to witness that they | ||||||
| appeared to be getting some water in the canoe, and suggested that witness should move up | ||||||
| further in the boat. Almost immediately after, the deceased man said that the water was | ||||||
| increasing in the boat. Witness said that they should go towards an island about 150 yards | ||||||
| away. They paddled towards the island, and when about 75 yards away from it the canoe | ||||||
| seemed to sink in the stern, and witness said to Mr. Evans: "jump out." Both did so and started | ||||||
| to swim towards the island, with the boat between them, each holding an end of the boat. | ||||||
| After swimming some distance, Mr. Evans mentioned that he wanted to take off his shoes. | ||||||
| 'Witness held him while he tried to take them off, and they both started swimming again and got | ||||||
| to within thirty yards of the island. Mr. Evans said that he could not hold out much longer. He | ||||||
| appeared to be quite calm. Witness was becoming exhausted by this time, and told Evans that | ||||||
| he would swim ashore and return undressed to help him, and told him to tread water. In the | ||||||
| meantime witness swam to the island and left Evans, so far as he could remember, still holding | ||||||
| on to the canoe. Just as witness reached near the island and was able to find ground to walk | ||||||
| on he heard the deceased man call in his ordinary voice: "Help me, Tony." When witness got to | ||||||
| land he looked round and saw deceased man's head disappear under the water about fifteen | ||||||
| yards from the shore. | ||||||
| The canoe had drifted off, and witness believed that Mr. Evans left the canoe and tried to | ||||||
| follow him, and when witness got to land he tried to take off his clothes, but was unable to do | ||||||
| so owing to numbness. He was horrified for a minute or so. The deceased man did not come | ||||||
| over the water after witness saw him sink. Witness returned to Emlaughmore looking for help, | ||||||
| as he could not do anything further. | ||||||
| 'Before the accident Evans and witness were joking and paddling extra hard, each pulling | ||||||
| against the other. It appeared that the result of this was that they shipped water. There was | ||||||
| a pretty strong wind blowing, and when they turned to the breeze they must have shipped | ||||||
| more water. The deceased man was about fourteen stone weight and was in the stern, and | ||||||
| this may have helped towards the accident. | ||||||
| 'Dr. P.J. Maguire, medical officer, Roundstone, said that the cause of death was immersion in | ||||||
| the water. Sergeant Fox, Roundstone, said that when found the body was about fifteen yards | ||||||
| from the shore of the island. When the body was taken from the water the left shoe was | ||||||
| missing, and the bootlace of the right shoe was loose. The water where Mr. Evans was found | ||||||
| was between fifteen and twenty feet deep. | ||||||
| 'A verdict of "Death from misadventure" was returned, and sympathy extended to the relatives.' | ||||||
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