| PEERAGE | ||||||
| Last updated 19/09/2025 | ||||||
| Date | Rank | Order | Name | Born | Died | Age |
| GRANDISON | ||||||
| 21 Sep 1299 | B | 1 | Sir Otho de Grandison | c 1305 | ||
| to | Summoned to Parliament as Lord | |||||
| c 1305 | Grandison 21 Sep 1299 | |||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 6 Feb 1299 | B | 1 | William de Grandison | c 1330 | ||
| Summoned to Parliament as Lord | ||||||
| Grandison 6 Feb 1299 | ||||||
| c 1330 | 2 | Peter de Grandison | 1295 | 10 Aug 1358 | 63 | |
| 10 Aug 1358 | 3 | John de Grandison | 1292 | 15 Jul 1369 | 77 | |
| 15 Jul 1369 | 4 | Thomas de Grandison | 1339 | 1375 | 36 | |
| to | On his death the peerage fell into abeyance | |||||
| 1375 | ||||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 3 Jan 1621 | V[I] | 1 | Sir Oliver St.John | c 1560 | 29 Dec 1630 | |
| Created Viscount Grandison 3 Jan 1621 | ||||||
| and Baron Tregoz 20 May 1626 | ||||||
| Chief Governor of Ireland 1616-1622 | ||||||
| 29 Dec 1630 | 2 | William Villiers | 1614 | 24 Jul 1643 | 29 | |
| 24 Jul 1643 | 3 | John Villiers | c 1661 | |||
| c 1661 | 4 | George Villiers | c 1617 | 16 Dec 1699 | ||
| 16 Dec 1699 | 5 | John Fitzgerald Villiers | c 1682 | 14 May 1766 | ||
| 11 Sep 1721 | Created Earl Grandison 11 Sep 1721 | |||||
| to | PC [I] 1721 | |||||
| 14 May 1766 | On his death the Earldom became extinct | |||||
| whilst the Viscountcy passed to - | ||||||
| 14 May 1766 | 6 | William Villiers | 28 Aug 1769 | |||
| He had previously succeeded to the Earldom | ||||||
| of Jersey (qv) in 1721 with which title | ||||||
| this peerage then merged and so remains | ||||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 19 Feb 1767 | E[I] | 1 | Elizabeth Mason | 29 May 1782 | ||
| Created Viscountess Grandison | ||||||
| 10 Apr 1746 and Viscountess Villiers | ||||||
| and Countess Grandison 19 Feb 1767 | ||||||
| 29 May 1782 | 2 | George Mason-Villiers | 13 Jul 1751 | 14 Jul 1800 | 49 | |
| to | MP for Ludlow 1774-1780 PC [I] 1785 | |||||
| 14 Jul 1800 | Peerages extinct on his death | |||||
| GRANE | ||||||
| 2 Jan 1536 | V[I] | 1 | Lord Leonard Grey | c 1490 | 28 Jun 1541 | |
| to | Created Viscount Grane 2 Jan 1536 | |||||
| 28 Jun 1541 | He was attainted and the peerage forfeited | |||||
| GRANTCHESTER | ||||||
| 30 Jun 1953 | B | 1 | Sir Alfred Jesse Suenson-Taylor | 14 Aug 1893 | 2 Jul 1976 | 82 |
| Created Baron Grantchester | ||||||
| 30 Jun 1953 | ||||||
| 2 Jul 1976 | 2 | Kenneth Bent Suenson-Taylor | 18 Aug 1921 | 12 Aug 1995 | 74 | |
| 12 Aug 1995 | 3 | Christopher John Suenson-Taylor [Elected | 8 Apr 1951 | |||
| hereditary peer 2003-] | ||||||
| GRANTHAM | ||||||
| 24 Dec 1698 | E | 1 | Henry d'Auverquerque | c 1675 | 5 Dec 1754 | |
| to | Created Baron of Alford,Viscount | |||||
| 5 Dec 1754 | Boston and Earl of Grantham | |||||
| 24 Dec 1698 | ||||||
| PC 1727 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 7 Apr 1761 | B | 1 | Thomas Robinson | 24 Apr 1695 | 30 Sep 1770 | 75 |
| Created Baron Grantham 7 Apr 1761 | ||||||
| MP for Thirsk 1727-1734 and Christchurch | ||||||
| 1748-1761. Secretary of State 1754-1755. | ||||||
| Postmaster General 1765-1766. PC 1750 | ||||||
| 30 Sep 1770 | 2 | Thomas Robinson | 30 Nov 1738 | 20 Jul 1786 | 47 | |
| MP for Christchurch 1761-1770. President | ||||||
| of the Board of Trade 1780-1782. Foreign | ||||||
| Secretary 1782-1783. PC 1770 | ||||||
| 20 Jul 1786 | 3 | Thomas Philip Robinson (later de Grey) | 8 Dec 1781 | 14 Nov 1859 | 77 | |
| He succeeded to the Earldom of de Grey (qv) | ||||||
| in 1833 with which title this peerage then | ||||||
| merged until its extinction in 1923 | ||||||
| GRANTLEY | ||||||
| 9 Apr 1782 | B | 1 | Fletcher Norton | 23 Jun 1716 | 1 Jan 1789 | 72 |
| Created Baron Grantley 9 Apr 1782 | ||||||
| MP for Appleby 1756-1761, Wigan 1761-1768 | ||||||
| and Guildford 1768-1782. Solicitor General | ||||||
| 1761-1763. Attorney General 1763-1765. | ||||||
| Speaker of the House of Commons 1770- | ||||||
| 1780. PC 1769 | ||||||
| 1 Jan 1789 | 2 | William Norton | 19 Feb 1742 | 12 Nov 1822 | 80 | |
| MP for Richmond 1768-1774, Wigtoun | ||||||
| Burghs 1774-1775, Guildford 1782-1784 | ||||||
| and Surrey 1784-1789 | ||||||
| 12 Nov 1822 | 3 | Fletcher Norton | 14 Jul 1796 | 28 Aug 1875 | 79 | |
| 28 Aug 1875 | 4 | Thomas Brinsley Norton | 14 Nov 1831 | 24 Jul 1877 | 45 | |
| 24 Jul 1877 | 5 | John Richard Brinsley Norton | 1 Oct 1855 | 5 Aug 1943 | 87 | |
| 5 Aug 1943 | 6 | Richard Henry Brinsley Norton | 2 Apr 1892 | 17 Jul 1954 | 62 | |
| For further information on this peer,see the note | ||||||
| at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 17 Jul 1954 | 7 | John Richard Brinsley Norton | 30 Jul 1923 | 24 Jun 1995 | 71 | |
| 24 Jun 1995 | 8 | Richard William Brinsley Norton | 30 Jan 1956 | |||
| GRANVILLE | ||||||
| 20 Apr 1661 | V | 1 | John Granville | 29 Aug 1628 | 22 Aug 1701 | 72 |
| Created Baron Granville,Viscount | ||||||
| Granville and Earl of Bath 20 Apr 1661 | ||||||
| See "Bath" | ||||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 16 Jul 1689 | B | 2 | Charles Granville | 31 Aug 1661 | 4 Sep 1701 | 40 |
| Summoned to Parliament as Baron | ||||||
| Granville 16 Jul 1689 | ||||||
| See "Bath" | ||||||
| ************** | ||||||
| 16 Jul 1689 | Charles Granville | 31 Aug 1661 | 4 Sep 1701 | 40 | ||
| He was summoned to Parliament by a Writ of | ||||||
| Acceleration as Baron Granville 16 Jul 1689 | ||||||
| He succeeded as Earl of Bath (qv) in 1701 | ||||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 13 Mar 1703 | B | 1 | John Granville | 12 Apr 1665 | 3 Dec 1707 | 42 |
| to | Created Baron Granville 13 Mar 1703 | |||||
| 3 Dec 1707 | MP for Launceston 1685-1687,Plymouth 1689- | |||||
| 1698,Newport 1698-1700,Fowey 1701 and | ||||||
| Cornwall 1701-1703. Lord Lieutenant | ||||||
| Cornwall 1702-1705. PC 1702 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 1 Jan 1715 | E | 1 | Grace Carteret | 1667 | 18 Oct 1744 | 77 |
| Created Viscountess Carteret and | ||||||
| Countess Granville 1 Jan 1715 | ||||||
| 18 Oct 1744 | 2 | John Carteret,2nd Baron Carteret | 22 Apr 1690 | 2 Jan 1763 | 72 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Devonshire 1716-1721. | ||||||
| Secretary of State 1721-1724. Lord | ||||||
| Lieutenant of Ireland 1724-1730. Lord | ||||||
| President of the Council 1751-1763. | ||||||
| PC 1720 KG 1749 | ||||||
| 2 Jan 1763 | 3 | Robert Carteret | 21 Sep 1721 | 13 Feb 1776 | 54 | |
| to | MP for Yarmouth 1744-1747 | |||||
| 13 Feb 1776 | Peerages extinct on his death | |||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 10 May 1833 | E | 1 | Lord Granville Leveson-Gower | 12 Oct 1773 | 8 Jan 1846 | 72 |
| Created Viscount Granville 12 Aug | ||||||
| 1815 and Baron Leveson and Earl | ||||||
| Granville 10 May 1833 | ||||||
| MP for Lichfield 1795-1799 and | ||||||
| Staffordshire 1799-1815. Secretary at War | ||||||
| 1809. PC 1804 | ||||||
| 8 Jan 1846 | 2 | Granville George Leveson-Gower | 11 May 1815 | 31 Mar 1891 | 75 | |
| MP for Morpeth 1836-1840 and Lichfield | ||||||
| 1841-1846. Vice President of the Board of | ||||||
| Trade 1848-1851. Foreign Secretary 1851- | ||||||
| 1852, 1870-1874 and 1880-1885. Secretary | ||||||
| of State for Colonies 1868-1870 and 1886. | ||||||
| Lord President of the Council 1852-1854, | ||||||
| 1855-1858 and 1859-1866. Chancellor of | ||||||
| the Duchy of Lancaster 1854-1855. | ||||||
| PC 1846 KG 1857 Lord Warden of the | ||||||
| Cinque Ports 1865 | ||||||
| 31 Mar 1891 | 3 | Granville George Leveson-Gower | 4 Mar 1872 | 21 Jul 1939 | 67 | |
| PC 1928 | ||||||
| 21 Jul 1939 | 4 | William Spencer Leveson-Gower | 11 Jul 1880 | 25 Jun 1953 | 72 | |
| Governor of Northern Ireland 1945-1952 | ||||||
| KG 1952 | ||||||
| 25 Jun 1953 | 5 | Granville James Leveson-Gower | 6 Dec 1918 | 31 Oct 1996 | 77 | |
| Lord Lieutenant Western Isles 1983-1993 | ||||||
| 31 Oct 1996 | 6 | Granville George Fergus Leveson-Gower | 10 Sep 1959 | |||
| GRANVILLE OF EYE | ||||||
| 12 Sep 1967 | B[L] | 1 | Edgar Louis Granville | 12 Feb 1898 | 14 Feb 1998 | 100 |
| to | Created Baron Granville of Eye for life | |||||
| 14 Feb 1998 | 12 Sep 1967 | |||||
| MP for Eye 1929-1951 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GRANVILLE-WEST | ||||||
| 6 Aug 1958 | B[L] | 1 | Daniel Granville West | 17 Mar 1904 | 23 Sep 1984 | 80 |
| to | Created Baron Granville-West for life | |||||
| 23 Sep 1984 | 6 Aug 1958 | |||||
| MP for Pontypool 1946-1958 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GRAVES | ||||||
| 24 Oct 1794 | B[I] | 1 | Thomas Graves | 23 Oct 1725 | 9 Feb 1802 | 76 |
| Created Baron Graves 24 Oct 1794 | ||||||
| MP for East Looe 1775 | ||||||
| 9 Feb 1802 | 2 | Thomas North Graves | 28 May 1775 | 7 Feb 1830 | 54 | |
| MP for Okehampton 1812-1818, Windsor | ||||||
| 1819-1820 and Milborne Port 1820-1827 | ||||||
| For further information on the death of this peer, | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 7 Feb 1830 | 3 | Thomas William Graves | 18 Apr 1804 | 20 Mar 1870 | 65 | |
| 20 Mar 1870 | 4 | Clarence Edward Graves | 8 Jun 1847 | 29 Jan 1904 | 56 | |
| 29 Jan 1904 | 5 | Henry Cyril Percy Graves | 10 Sep 1847 | 13 Jan 1914 | 66 | |
| 13 Jan 1914 | 6 | Clarence Percy Rivers Graves | 16 Aug 1871 | 1 Mar 1937 | 65 | |
| 1 Mar 1937 | 7 | Henry Algernon Claude Graves | 3 Oct 1877 | 6 Nov 1963 | 86 | |
| 6 Nov 1963 | 8 | Peter George Wellesley Graves | 21 Oct 1911 | 6 Jun 1994 | 82 | |
| 6 Jun 1994 | 9 | Evelyn Paget Graves | 17 May 1926 | 6 Dec 2002 | 76 | |
| 6 Dec 2002 | 10 | Timothy Evelyn Graves | 27 Mar 1960 | |||
| GRAY | ||||||
| 1445 | B[S] | 1 | Sir Andrew Gray | c 1390 | 1469 | |
| Created Lord Gray 1445 | ||||||
| 1469 | 2 | Andrew Gray | Feb 1514 | |||
| Feb 1514 | 3 | Patrick Gray | Apr 1541 | |||
| Apr 1541 | 4 | Patrick Gray | 1582 | |||
| 1582 | 5 | Patrick Gray | 1609 | |||
| 1609 | 6 | Patrick Gray | 1612 | |||
| 1612 | 7 | Andrew Gray | 1663 | |||
| 1663 | 8 | Patrick Grey | Jan 1711 | |||
| He resigned the peerage in favour of - | ||||||
| 1707 | 9 | John Gray | 10 Jan 1724 | |||
| 10 Jan 1724 | 10 | John Gray | 15 Jan 1683 | 15 Dec 1738 | 55 | |
| 15 Dec 1738 | 11 | John Gray | 11 Apr 1716 | 28 Aug 1782 | 66 | |
| 28 Aug 1782 | 12 | Charles Gray | 1752 | 18 Dec 1786 | 34 | |
| 18 Dec 1786 | 13 | William John Gray | Mar 1754 | 12 Dec 1807 | 53 | |
| 12 Dec 1807 | 14 | Francis Gray | 1 Sep 1765 | 20 Aug 1842 | 76 | |
| 20 Aug 1842 | 15 | John Gray | 12 May 1798 | 31 Jan 1867 | 68 | |
| 31 Jan 1867 | 16 | Madelina Gray | 11 Nov 1799 | 20 Feb 1869 | 69 | |
| 20 Feb 1869 | 17 | Margaret Murray | 14 Apr 1821 | 27 May 1878 | 57 | |
| 27 May 1878 | 18 | George Stuart,14th Earl of Moray | 14 Aug 1816 | 16 Mar 1895 | 78 | |
| 16 Mar 1895 | 19 | Eveleen Smith-Gray | 3 May 1841 | 24 Dec 1918 | 77 | |
| For further information on this peeress, see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of this page. | ||||||
| 24 Dec 1918 | 20 | James Maclaren Stuart Gray | 4 Jun 1864 | 2 May 1919 | 54 | |
| 2 May 1919 | 21 | Ethel Eveleen Gray-Campbell | 16 Jan 1866 | 2 Oct 1946 | 80 | |
| 2 Oct 1946 | 22 | Angus Diarmid Ian Campbell-Gray | 3 Jul 1931 | 29 Apr 2003 | 71 | |
| 29 Apr 2003 | 23 | Andrew Godfrey Diarmid Stuart Campbell-Gray | 3 Sep 1964 | |||
| GRAY OF CONTIN | ||||||
| 4 Jul 1983 | B[L] | 1 | James Hector Northey Gray | 28 Jun 1927 | 14 Mar 2006 | 78 |
| to | Created Baron Gray of Contin for life | |||||
| 14 Mar 2006 | 4 Jul 1983 | |||||
| MP for Ross and Cromarty 1970-1983. | ||||||
| Minister of State,Energy 1979-1983. Minister | ||||||
| of State,Scotland 1983-1986. PC 1982 | ||||||
| Lord Lieutenant Inverness 1996-2002 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GRAY OF TOTTENHAM | ||||||
| 04 Feb 2025 | B[L] | 1 | Sue Anne Gray | 1957 | ||
| Created Baroness Gray of Tottenham for life | ||||||
| 04 Feb 2025 | ||||||
| GRAYLING | ||||||
| 20 Aug 2024 | B[L] | 1 | Christopher Stephen Grayling, PC | 1 Apr 1962 | ||
| Created Baron Grayling for life | ||||||
| 20 Aug 2024 | ||||||
| GREAVES | ||||||
| 4 May 2000 | B[L] | 1 | Anthony Robert Greaves | 27 Jul 1942 | 23 Mar 2021 | 78 |
| to | Created Baron Greaves for life 4 May 2000 | |||||
| 23 Mar 2021 | Peerage extinct on his death | |||||
| GREEN OF DEDDINGTON | ||||||
| 28 Nov 2014 | B[L] | 1 | Sir Andrew Green | 6 Aug 1941 | ||
| Created Baron Green of Deddington for life | ||||||
| 28 Nov 2014 | ||||||
| GREEN OF HURSTPIERPONT | ||||||
| 16 Nov 2010 | B[L] | 1 | Stephen Keith Green | 7 Nov 1948 | ||
| Created Baron Green of Hurstpierpont for | ||||||
| life 16 Nov 2010 | ||||||
| GREENE | ||||||
| 16 Jul 1941 | B | 1 | Sir Wilfrid Arthur Greene | 30 Dec 1883 | 16 Apr 1952 | 68 |
| to | Created Baron Greene 16 Jul 1941 | |||||
| 16 Apr 1952 | Lord Justice of Appeal 1935-1937. Master | |||||
| of the Rolls 1937-1949. Lord of Appeal in | ||||||
| Ordinary 1949-1950. PC 1935 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GREENE OF HARROW WEALD | ||||||
| 21 Jan 1975 | B[L] | 1 | Sir Sidney Francis Greene | 12 Feb 1910 | 26 Jul 2004 | 94 |
| to | Created Baron Greene of Harrow | |||||
| 26 Jul 2004 | Weald for life 21 Jan 1975 | |||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GREENFIELD | ||||||
| 18 Jun 2001 | B[L] | 1 | Susan Adele Greenfield | 1 Oct 1950 | ||
| Created Baroness Greenfield for life | ||||||
| 18 Jun 2001 | ||||||
| GREENGROSS | ||||||
| 10 Feb 2000 | B[L] | 1 | Sally Ralea Greengross | 29 Jun 1935 | 23 Jun 2022 | 86 |
| to | Created Baroness Greengross for life | |||||
| 23 Jun 2022 | 10 Feb 2000 | |||||
| Peerage extinct on her death | ||||||
| GREENHALGH | ||||||
| 16 April 2020 | B[L] | 1 | Stephen John Greenhalgh | 4 Sept 1967 | ||
| Created Baron Greenhallgh for life on 16 April 2020 | ||||||
| GREENHILL | ||||||
| 8 Jul 1950 | B | 1 | Ernest Greenhill | 23 Apr 1887 | 18 Feb 1967 | 79 |
| Created Baron Greenhill 8 Jul 1950 | ||||||
| 18 Feb 1967 | 2 | Stanley Ernest Greenhill | 17 Jul 1917 | 28 Sep 1989 | 72 | |
| 28 Sep 1989 | 3 | Malcolm Greenhill | 5 May 1924 | 13 Jan 2020 | 96 | |
| to | ||||||
| 13 Jan 2020 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GREENHILL OF HARROW | ||||||
| 31 Jan 1974 | B[L] | 1 | Sir Denis Arthur Greenhill | 7 Nov 1913 | 8 Nov 2000 | 87 |
| to | Created Baron Greenhill of Harrow for life | |||||
| 8 Nov 2000 | 31 Jan 1974 | |||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GREENOCK | ||||||
| 9 Nov 1807 | B | 1 | William Schaw Cathcart | 17 Sep 1755 | 16 Jun 1843 | 87 |
| Created Baron Greenock and Viscount | ||||||
| Cathcart 9 Nov 1807 and Earl | ||||||
| Cathcart 16 Jul 1814 | ||||||
| See "Cathcart" | ||||||
| GREENWAY | ||||||
| 18 Jan 1927 | B | 1 | Sir Charles Greenway,1st baronet | 13 Jun 1857 | 17 Dec 1934 | 77 |
| Created Baron Greenway 18 Jan 1927 | ||||||
| 17 Dec 1934 | 2 | Charles Kelvynge Greenway | 24 Mar 1888 | 30 Apr 1963 | 75 | |
| 30 Apr 1963 | 3 | Charles Paul Greenway | 31 Jan 1917 | 14 Sep 1975 | 58 | |
| 14 Sep 1975 | 4 | Ambrose Charles Drexel Greenway [Elected | 21 May 1941 | |||
| hereditary peer 1999-] | ||||||
| GREENWICH | ||||||
| 27 Apr 1719 | D | 1 | John Campbell,2nd Duke of Argyll | 10 Oct 1680 | 4 Oct 1743 | 62 |
| to | Created Baron of Chatham and Earl of | |||||
| 4 Oct 1743 | Greenwich 26 Nov 1705 and Duke of | |||||
| Greenwich 27 Apr 1719 | ||||||
| These creations extinct on his death | ||||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 19 Aug 1767 | B | 1 | Caroline Townshend | 7 Nov 1717 | 11 Jan 1794 | 76 |
| to | Created Baroness of Greenwich | |||||
| 11 Jan 1794 | 19 Aug 1767 | |||||
| Peerage extinct on her death | ||||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 20 Nov 1947 | B | 1 | Philip Mountbatten | 10 Jun 1921 | 9 Apr 2021 | 99 |
| Created Baron Greenwich,Earl of | ||||||
| Merioneth and Duke of Edinburgh | ||||||
| 20 Nov 1947 | ||||||
| 9 Apr 2021 | 2 | Charles Philip Arthur George | 14 Nov 1948 | |||
| Prince of Wales, Duke of Cornwall and Rothesay | ||||||
| GREENWOOD | ||||||
| 16 Feb 1937 | V | 1 | Sir Hamar Greenwood,1st baronet | 7 Feb 1870 | 10 Sep 1948 | 78 |
| Created Baron Greenwood 31 Aug 1929 | ||||||
| and Viscount Greenwood 16 Feb 1937 | ||||||
| MP for York 1906-1910, Sunderland 1910- | ||||||
| 1922,and Walthamstow East 1924-1929. | ||||||
| Chief Secretary for Ireland 1920-1922. | ||||||
| PC 1920. PC [I] 1920 | ||||||
| 10 Sep 1948 | 2 | David Henry Hamar Greenwood | 30 Oct 1914 | 30 Jul 1998 | 83 | |
| 30 Jul 1998 | 3 | Michael George Hamar Greenwood | 5 May 1923 | 7 Jul 2003 | 80 | |
| to | Peerages extinct on his death | |||||
| 7 Jul 2003 | ||||||
| GREENWOOD OF ROSSENDALE | ||||||
| 22 Sep 1970 | B[L] | 1 | Arthur William James Anthony Greenwood | 14 Sep 1911 | 12 Apr 1982 | 70 |
| to | Created Baron Greenwood of | |||||
| 12 Apr 1982 | Rossendale for life 22 Sep 1970 | |||||
| MP for Heywood and Radcliffe 1946-1950 | ||||||
| and Rossendale 1950-1970. Secretary of | ||||||
| State for Colonial Affairs 1964-1965. | ||||||
| Minister of Overseas Development 1965- | ||||||
| 1966. Minister of Housing and Local | ||||||
| Government 1966-1970. PC 1964 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GREGSON | ||||||
| 11 Jul 1975 | B[L] | 1 | John Gregson | 29 Jan 1924 | 12 Aug 2009 | 85 |
| to | Created Baron Gregson for life 11 Jul 1975 | |||||
| 12 Aug 2009 | Peerage extinct on his death | |||||
| GRENDER | ||||||
| 4 Sep 2013 | B[L] | 1 | Rosalind Mary Grender | 19 Aug 1962 | ||
| Created Baroness Grender for life 4 Sep 2013 | ||||||
| GRENDON | ||||||
| 29 Dec 1299 | B | 1 | Sir Ralph Grendon | c 1331 | ||
| Summoned to Parliament as Lord | ||||||
| Grendon 29 Dec 1299 | ||||||
| c 1331 | 2 | Robert Grendon | 1348 | |||
| to | Peerage extinct on his death | |||||
| 1348 | ||||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 22 Jan 1305 | B | 1 | Robert de Grendon | |||
| to | Summoned to Parliament as Lord | |||||
| after 1305 | Grendon 22 Jan 1305 | |||||
| Nothing further is known of this peerage | ||||||
| GRENFELL | ||||||
| 19 Jul 1902 | B | 1 | Sir Francis Wallace Grenfell | 29 Apr 1841 | 27 Jan 1925 | 83 |
| Created Baron Grenfell 19 Jul 1902 | ||||||
| Governor of Malta 1899-1903. Field | ||||||
| Marshal 1908. PC [I] 1904 | ||||||
| 27 Jan 1925 | 2 | Pascoe Christian Victor Francis Grenfell | 12 Dec 1905 | 24 Sep 1976 | 70 | |
| 24 Sep 1976 | 3 | Julian Pascoe Francis St.Leger Grenfell | 23 May 1935 | |||
| Created Baron Grenfell of Kilvey 2000 | ||||||
| GRENFELL OF KILVEY | ||||||
| 17 Apr 2000 | B[L] | 1 | Julian Pascoe Francis St.Leger Grenfell,3rd | 23 May 1935 | ||
| Baron Grenfell | ||||||
| Created Baron Grenfell of Kilvey for life | ||||||
| 17 Apr 2000 | ||||||
| GRENVILLE | ||||||
| 25 Nov 1790 | B | 1 | William Wyndham Grenville | 25 Oct 1759 | 12 Jan 1834 | 74 |
| to | Created Baron Grenville 25 Nov 1790 | |||||
| 12 Jan 1834 | MP for Buckingham 1782-1784 and | |||||
| Buckinghamshire 1784-1790. Vice President | ||||||
| of the Board of Trade 1786-1789. Speaker | ||||||
| of the House of Commons 1789. Home | ||||||
| Secretary 1789. President of the Board of | ||||||
| Control 1790-1793. Foreign Secretary | ||||||
| 1791-1801. Prime Minister 1806-1807. | ||||||
| PC [I] 1782. PC 1783 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GRESLEY | ||||||
| 10 Mar 1308 | B | 1 | Thomas de Gresley | 1279 | c 1347 | |
| to | Summoned to Parliament as Lord | |||||
| c 1347 | Gresley 10 Mar 1308 | |||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GRETTON | ||||||
| 27 Jan 1944 | B | 1 | John Gretton | 1 Sep 1867 | 2 Jun 1947 | 79 |
| Created Baron Gretton 27 Jan 1944 | ||||||
| MP for Derbyshire South 1895-1906, | ||||||
| Rutland 1907-1918 and Burton 1918-1943 | ||||||
| PC 1926 | ||||||
| 2 Jun 1947 | 2 | John Frederic Gretton | 15 Aug 1902 | 26 Mar 1982 | 79 | |
| MP for Burton 1943-1945 | ||||||
| 26 Mar 1982 | 3 | John Henrik Gretton | 9 Feb 1941 | 4 Apr 1989 | 48 | |
| 4 Apr 1989 | 4 | John Lysander Gretton | 17 Apr 1975 | |||
| GREVILLE | ||||||
| 15 Dec 1869 | B | 1 | Fulke Southwell Greville-Nugent | 17 Feb 1821 | 26 Jan 1883 | 61 |
| Created Baron Greville 15 Dec 1869 | ||||||
| MP for Longford 1852-1869. Lord | ||||||
| Lieutenant Westmeath 1871-1883 | ||||||
| 26 Jan 1883 | 2 | Algernon William Fulke Greville | 11 Feb 1841 | 2 Dec 1909 | 68 | |
| MP for Westmeath 1865-1874 | ||||||
| 2 Dec 1909 | 3 | Charles Beresford Fulke Greville | 3 Mar 1871 | 14 May 1952 | 81 | |
| 14 May 1952 | 4 | Ronald Charles Fulke Greville | 11 Apr 1912 | 9 Dec 1987 | 75 | |
| to | Peerage extinct on his death | |||||
| 9 Dec 1987 | ||||||
| GREY | ||||||
| 19 May 1740 | M | 1 | Henry Grey,1st Duke of Kent | 28 Sep 1671 | 5 Jun 1740 | 68 |
| Created Marquess Grey 19 May 1740 | ||||||
| For details of the special remainder included | ||||||
| in this creation, see the note at the foot of | ||||||
| this page | ||||||
| 5 Jun 1740 | 2 | Jemima Yorke | 9 Oct 1722 | 10 Jan 1797 | 74 | |
| to | Peerage extinct on her death | |||||
| 10 Jan 1797 | ||||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 11 Apr 1806 | E | 1 | Charles Grey | 23 Oct 1729 | 14 Nov 1807 | 78 |
| Created Baron Grey of Howick 23 Jun | ||||||
| 1801 and Viscount Howick and Earl | ||||||
| Grey 11 Apr 1806 | ||||||
| PC 1797 | ||||||
| 14 Nov 1807 | 2 | Charles Grey | 13 Mar 1764 | 17 Jul 1845 | 81 | |
| MP for Northumberland 1784-1807,Appleby 1807 | ||||||
| and tavistock 1807. First Lord of the Admiralty | ||||||
| 1806. Foreign Secretary 1806-1807. Prime Minister | ||||||
| 1830-1834. PC 1806 KG 1831 | ||||||
| 17 Jul 1845 | 3 | Henry George Grey | 28 Dec 1802 | 9 Oct 1894 | 91 | |
| MP for Winchilsea 1826-1830, Higham | ||||||
| Ferrers 1830-1831, Northumberland 1831- | ||||||
| 1832, Northumberland North 1833-1841 | ||||||
| and Sunderland 1841-1845. Secretary at | ||||||
| War 1835-1839. Colonial Secretary 1846- | ||||||
| 1852. Lord Lieutenant Northumberland | ||||||
| 1847-1877. PC 1835 KG 1863 | ||||||
| 9 Oct 1894 | 4 | Alfred Henry George Grey | 28 Nov 1851 | 28 Aug 1917 | 65 | |
| MP for Northumberland South 1880-1885 | ||||||
| and Tyneside 1885-1886. Governor General | ||||||
| of Canada 1904-1911. Lord Lieutenant | ||||||
| Northumberland 1899-1904. PC 1908 | ||||||
| 28 Aug 1917 | 5 | Charles Robert Grey | 15 Dec 1879 | 2 Apr 1963 | 83 | |
| 2 Apr 1963 | 6 | Richard Fleming George Charles Grey | 4 Mar 1939 | 10 Sep 2013 | 74 | |
| 10 Sep 2013 | 7 | Philip Kent Grey | 11 May 1940 | 5 Nov 2023 | 83 | |
| 5 Nov 2023 | 8 | Alexander Edward Grey | 20 Dec 1968 | |||
| GREY DE CODNOR | ||||||
| 6 Feb 1299 | B | 1 | Henry Grey | Sep 1309 | ||
| Summoned to Parliament as Lord | ||||||
| Grey de Codnor 6 Feb 1299 | ||||||
| Sep 1309 | 2 | Richard Grey | c 1282 | Mar 1335 | ||
| Mar 1335 | 3 | John Grey | 1305 | c 1393 | ||
| c 1393 | 4 | Richard Grey | 1 Aug 1418 | |||
| KG 1403 | ||||||
| 1 Aug 1418 | 5 | John Grey | 1396 | 14 Sep 1431 | 35 | |
| 14 Sep 1431 | 6 | Henry Grey | 1406 | 17 Jul 1444 | 38 | |
| 17 Jul 1444 | 7 | Henry Grey | 1435 | 8 Apr 1496 | 60 | |
| to | On his death the peerage fell into abeyance | |||||
| 8 Apr 1496 | ||||||
| 1989 | 8 | Charles Legh Shuldham Cornwall-Legh | 10 Feb 1903 | 23 Dec 1996 | 93 | |
| Abeyance terminated in his favour | ||||||
| 23 Dec 1996 | 9 | Richard Henry Cornwall-Legh | 14 May 1936 | |||
| GREY OF FALLODON | ||||||
| 27 Jul 1916 | V | 1 | Sir Edward Grey,3rd baronet | 25 Apr 1862 | 7 Sep 1933 | 71 |
| to | Created Viscount Grey of Fallodon | |||||
| 7 Sep 1933 | 27 Jul 1916 | |||||
| MP for Berwick on Tweed 1885-1916. | ||||||
| Foreign Secretary 1905-1916. PC 1902 | ||||||
| KG 1912 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GREY OF GROBY | ||||||
| 21 Jul 1603 | B | 1 | Sir Henry Grey | 26 Jul 1614 | ||
| Created Baron Grey of Groby | ||||||
| 21 Jul 1603 | ||||||
| 26 Jul 1614 | 2 | Henry Grey | c 1600 | 21 Aug 1673 | ||
| He was created Earl of Stamford (qv) in | ||||||
| 1628 with which title this peerage then | ||||||
| merged | ||||||
| **************** | ||||||
| 15 Jan 1833 | George Harry Grey | 5 Apr 1802 | 24 Oct 1835 | 33 | ||
| He was summoned to Parliament by a Writ of | ||||||
| Acceleration as Baron Grey of Groby in | ||||||
| 15 Jan 1833 | ||||||
| He was the son and heir apparent of the 6th | ||||||
| Earl of Stamford, but died before he could | ||||||
| succeed to that title | ||||||
| GREY OF NAUNTON | ||||||
| 17 Sep 1968 | B[L] | 1 | Sir Ralph Francis Alnwick Grey | 15 Apr 1910 | 17 Oct 1999 | 89 |
| to | Created Baron Grey of Naunton for life | |||||
| 17 Oct 1999 | 17 Sep 1968 | |||||
| Governor of British Guiana 1959-1964, | ||||||
| Bahamas 1964-1968 and Northern Ireland | ||||||
| 1968-1973 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GREY DE POWIS | ||||||
| 15 Nov 1482 | B | 1 | John Grey | 1460 | 1497 | 37 |
| Summoned to Parliament as Lord | ||||||
| Grey de Powis 15 Nov 1482 | ||||||
| 1497 | 2 | John Grey | 1485 | 15 Apr 1504 | 18 | |
| 15 Apr 1504 | 3 | Edward Grey | 2 Jul 1551 | |||
| to | Peerage extinct on his death | |||||
| 2 Jul 1551 | ||||||
| GREY DE RADCLIFFE | ||||||
| 14 Jun 1875 | B | 1 | Arthur Edward Holland Grey Egerton,3rd Earl | |||
| to | of Wilton | 25 Nov 1833 | 18 Jan 1885 | 51 | ||
| 18 Jan 1885 | Created Baron Grey de Radcliffe | |||||
| 14 Jun 1875 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GREY DE ROLLESTON | ||||||
| 24 Oct 1673 | B | 1 | Charles North | 1634 | Jan 1690 | 55 |
| Summoned to Parliament as Lord | ||||||
| Grey de Rolleston 24 Oct 1673 | ||||||
| Jan 1690 | 2 | William North | 31 Oct 1734 | |||
| to | Peerage extinct on his death | |||||
| 31 Oct 1734 | ||||||
| GREY DE ROTHERFIELD | ||||||
| 25 Aug 1338 | B | 1 | Sir John de Grey | c 1300 | 1 Sep 1359 | |
| Summoned to Parliament as Lord | ||||||
| Grey de Rotherfield 25 Aug 1338 | ||||||
| KG 1348 | ||||||
| 1 Sep 1359 | 2 | John Grey | 1320 | 4 Jun 1375 | 54 | |
| 4 Jun 1375 | 3 | Bartholomew Grey | 1351 | 12 Nov 1376 | 25 | |
| 12 Nov 1376 | 4 | Robert Grey | 14 Jan 1388 | |||
| to | On his death the peerage became dormant | |||||
| 14 Jan 1388 | ||||||
| GREY DE RUTHYN | ||||||
| 30 Dec 1324 | B | 1 | Roger de Grey | c 1298 | 6 Mar 1353 | |
| Summoned to Parliament as Lord | ||||||
| Grey de Ruthyn 30 Dec 1324 | ||||||
| 6 Mar 1353 | 2 | Reginald Grey | 1323 | 28 Jul 1388 | 65 | |
| 28 Jul 1388 | 3 | Reginald Grey | 1362 | 18 Oct 1440 | 78 | |
| 18 Oct 1440 | 4 | Edmund Grey,later [1465] 1st Earl of Kent | c 1420 | 22 May 1489 | ||
| 22 May 1489 | 5 | George Grey,2nd Earl of Kent | c 1455 | 21 Dec 1503 | ||
| 21 Dec 1503 | 6 | Richard Grey,3rd Earl of Kent | 1481 | 3 May 1524 | 42 | |
| 3 May 1524 | 7 | Henry Grey,4th Earl of Kent | c 1502 | 24 Sep 1562 | ||
| 24 Sep 1562 | 8 | Reginald Grey,5th Earl of Kent | c 1540 | 17 Mar 1573 | ||
| 17 Mar 1573 | 9 | Henry Grey,6th Earl of Kent | 1541 | 31 Jan 1615 | 73 | |
| 31 Jan 1615 | 10 | Charles Grey,7th Earl of Kent | c 1545 | 26 Sep 1623 | ||
| 26 Sep 1623 | 11 | Henry Grey,8th Earl of Kent | c 1580 | 21 Nov 1639 | ||
| 21 Nov 1639 | 12 | Charles Longueville | 21 Apr 1612 | 17 Jun 1643 | 31 | |
| 17 Jun 1643 | 13 | Susan Yelverton | 1634 | 28 Jan 1676 | 41 | |
| 28 Jan 1676 | 14 | Sir Charles Yelverton,3rd baronet | 21 Aug 1657 | 17 May 1679 | 21 | |
| 17 May 1679 | 15 | Henry Yelverton | c 1664 | 24 Mar 1704 | ||
| Created Viscount de Longueville | ||||||
| 21 Apr 1690 | ||||||
| 24 Mar 1704 | 16 | Talbot Yelverton,later [1717] 1st Earl of Sussex | 2 May 1690 | 27 Oct 1731 | 41 | |
| 27 Oct 1731 | 17 | George Augustus Yelverton,2nd Earl of Sussex | 27 Jul 1727 | 8 Jan 1758 | 30 | |
| 8 Jan 1758 | 18 | Henry Yelverton,3rd Earl of Sussex | 7 Jul 1728 | 22 Apr 1799 | 70 | |
| 22 Apr 1799 | 19 | Henry Edward Yelverton | 8 Sep 1780 | 29 Oct 1810 | 30 | |
| 29 Oct 1810 | 20 | Barbara Rawdon-Hastings | 20 May 1810 | 19 Nov 1858 | 48 | |
| 19 Nov 1858 | 21 | Henry Weysford Charles Plantagenet | ||||
| to | Rawdon-Hastings,4th Marquess of Hastings | 22 Jul 1842 | 10 Nov 1868 | 26 | ||
| 10 Nov 1868 | On his death the peerage fell into abeyance | |||||
| 29 Dec 1885 | 22 | Bertha Lelgarde Clifton | 30 Apr 1835 | 15 Dec 1887 | 52 | |
| Abeyance terminated in her favour | ||||||
| For information on the termination of the abeyance | ||||||
| see the note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 15 Dec 1887 | 23 | Rawdon George Grey Clifton | 14 Nov 1858 | 31 Aug 1912 | 53 | |
| 31 Aug 1912 | 24 | Cecil Talbot Clifton | 9 Jan 1862 | 21 May 1934 | 72 | |
| to | On his death the peerage again fell into | |||||
| 21 May 1934 | abeyance | |||||
| For further information on this peer, see the note | ||||||
| at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 1940 | 25 | John Lancelot Wykeham Butler-Bowden | 25 Oct 1883 | 25 Oct 1963 | 80 | |
| to | Abeyance terminated in his favour. | |||||
| 25 Oct 1963 | On his death the peerage again fell into | |||||
| abeyance | ||||||
| GREY OF WERKE | ||||||
| 11 Feb 1624 | B | 1 | Sir William Grey,1st baronet | 7 Aug 1674 | ||
| Created Baron Grey of Werke | ||||||
| 11 Feb 1624 | ||||||
| Aug 1674 | 2 | Ralph Grey | 27 Oct 1630 | 24 Jun 1675 | 44 | |
| Jun 1675 | 3 | Ford Grey,later [1695] 1st Earl of Tankerville | 20 Jul 1655 | 24 Jun 1701 | 45 | |
| 24 Jun 1701 | 4 | Ralph Grey | 28 Nov 1661 | 20 Jun 1706 | 54 | |
| to | MP for Berwick upon Tweed 1679-1681,1695- | |||||
| 20 Jun 1706 | 1698 and 1701 | |||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GREY DE WILTON | ||||||
| 23 Jun 1295 | B | 1 | Reginald de Grey | 5 Apr 1308 | ||
| Summoned to Parliament as Lord | ||||||
| Grey de Wilton 23 Jun 1295 | ||||||
| 5 Apr 1308 | 2 | John Grey | 1268 | 28 Oct 1323 | 55 | |
| 28 Oct 1323 | 3 | Henry Grey | 28 Oct 1282 | 16 Dec 1342 | 60 | |
| 16 Dec 1342 | 4 | Reginald Grey | 1 Nov 1312 | 4 Jun 1370 | 57 | |
| 4 Jun 1370 | 5 | Henry Grey | 1342 | 22 Apr 1396 | 53 | |
| 22 Apr 1396 | 6 | Richard Grey | 1393 | 13 Aug 1442 | 49 | |
| 13 Aug 1442 | 7 | Reginald Grey | 1421 | c 1493 | ||
| c 1493 | 8 | John Grey | 2 Mar 1498 | |||
| 2 Mar 1498 | 9 | Edmund Grey | May 1511 | |||
| May 1511 | 10 | George Grey | c 1515 | |||
| c 1515 | 11 | Thomas Grey | c 1497 | c 1518 | ||
| c 1518 | 12 | Richard Grey | 1507 | c 1520 | ||
| c 1520 | 13 | William Grey | 14 Dec 1562 | |||
| KG 1557 | ||||||
| 14 Dec 1562 | 14 | Arthur Grey | 1536 | 14 Oct 1593 | 57 | |
| KG 1572 | ||||||
| 14 Oct 1593 | 15 | Thomas Grey | c 1575 | 9 Jul 1614 | ||
| to | He was attainted and the peerage forfeited | |||||
| 1603 | ||||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 15 May 1784 | B | 1 | Thomas Egerton | 14 May 1749 | 23 Sep 1814 | 65 |
| 26 Jun 1801 | V | 1 | Created Baron Grey de Wilton 15 May | |||
| 1784 and Viscount Grey de Wilton and | ||||||
| Earl of Wilton 26 Jun 1801 | ||||||
| See "Wilton" | ||||||
| GREYSTOCK | ||||||
| 24 Jun 1295 | B | 1 | John de Greystock | 1264 | 2 Sep 1306 | 42 |
| to | Summoned to Parliament as Lord | |||||
| 2 Sep 1306 | Greystock 24 Jun 1295 | |||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 24 Jun 1295 | B | 1 | Ralph Fitzwilliam | Nov 1315 | ||
| Summoned to Parliament as Lord | ||||||
| Fitzwilliam 24 Jun 1295 | ||||||
| Nov 1315 | 2 | Robert Fitzwilliam | 1275 | 1317 | 42 | |
| 1317 | 3 | Ralph de Greystock | c 1299 | 13 Jul 1323 | ||
| Summoned to Parliament as Lord | ||||||
| Greystock 15 May 1321 | ||||||
| 13 Jul 1323 | 4 | William de Greystock | 1320 | 20 Jul 1358 | 38 | |
| 20 Jul 1358 | 5 | Ralph de Greystock | 1352 | 6 Apr 1417 | 64 | |
| 6 Apr 1417 | 6 | John de Greystock | c 1389 | 8 Aug 1436 | ||
| 8 Aug 1436 | 7 | Ralph de Greystock | 1414 | 1 Jun 1487 | 72 | |
| 1 Jun 1487 | 8 | Elizabeth Dacre | 13 Aug 1516 | |||
| 13 Aug 1516 | 9 | William Dacre,3rd Lord Dacre | 29 Apr 1500 | 12 Nov 1563 | ||
| 12 Nov 1563 | 10 | Thomas Dacre,4th Lord Dacre | c 1526 | 1 Jul 1566 | ||
| 1 Jul 1566 | 11 | George Dacre,5th Lord Dacre | 1561 | 17 May 1569 | 7 | |
| to | On his death the peerage fell into abeyance | |||||
| 17 May 1569 | ||||||
| GREY-THOMPSON | ||||||
| 23 Mar 2010 | B[L] | 1 | Dame Tanni Carys Davina Grey-Thompson | 26 Jul 1969 | ||
| Created Baroness Grey-Thompson for life | ||||||
| 23 Mar 2010 | ||||||
| GRIDLEY | ||||||
| 10 Jan 1955 | B | 1 | Sir Arnold Babb Gridley | 16 Jul 1878 | 27 Jul 1965 | 87 |
| Created Baron Gridley 10 Jan 1955 | ||||||
| MP for Stockport 1935-1950 and | ||||||
| Stockport South 1950-1955 | ||||||
| 27 Jul 1965 | 2 | Arnold Hudson Gridley | 26 May 1906 | 15 Jun 1996 | 90 | |
| 15 Jun 1996 | 3 | Richard David Arnold Gridley | 22 Aug 1956 | |||
| GRIFFIN OF BRAYBROOKE | ||||||
| 3 Dec 1688 | B | 1 | Edward Griffin | c 1630 | 10 Nov 1710 | |
| Created Baron Griffin of Braybrooke | ||||||
| 3 Dec 1688 | ||||||
| 10 Nov 1710 | 2 | James Griffin | 15 Dec 1667 | 31 Oct 1715 | 47 | |
| MP for Brackley 1685 | ||||||
| Oct 1715 | 3 | Edward Griffin | 17 Oct 1693 | 22 Jun 1742 | 48 | |
| to | Peerage extinct on his death | |||||
| 22 Jun 1742 | ||||||
| GRIFFIN OF PRINCETHORPE | ||||||
| 16 Jan 2025 | B[L] | 1 | Theresa Mary Griffin | 11 Dec 1962 | ||
| Created Baroness Griffin of Princethorpe for life | ||||||
| 16 Jan 2025 | ||||||
| GRIFFITHS | ||||||
| 23 May 1985 | B[L] | 1 | Sir William Hugh Griffiths | 26 Sep 1923 | 30 May 2015 | 91 |
| to | Created Baron Griffiths for life 23 May 1985 | |||||
| 30 May 2015 | Lord Justice of Appeal 1980-1985. Lord of | |||||
| Appeal in Ordinary 1985-1993. PC 1980 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GRIFFITHS OF BURRY PORT | ||||||
| 30 Jun 2004 | B[L] | 1 | Leslie John Griffiths | 15 Feb 1942 | ||
| Created Baron Griffiths of Burry Port for life | ||||||
| 30 Jun 2004 | ||||||
| GRIFFITHS OF FFORESTFFACH | ||||||
| 5 Feb 1991 | B[L] | 1 | Brian Griffiths | 27 Dec 1941 | ||
| Created Baron Griffiths of Fforestffach | ||||||
| for life 5 Feb 1991 | ||||||
| GRIMOND | ||||||
| 12 Oct 1983 | B[L] | 1 | Joseph Grimond | 29 Jul 1913 | 24 Oct 1993 | 80 |
| to | Created Baron Grimond for life 12 Oct 1983 | |||||
| 24 Oct 1993 | MP for Orkney and Shetland 1950-1983 | |||||
| PC 1961 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GRIMSTON | ||||||
| 29 Nov 1719 | V[I] | 1 | William Grimston | 31 Dec 1684 | 15 Oct 1756 | 71 |
| Created Baron Dunboyne and Viscount | ||||||
| Grimston 29 Nov 1719 | ||||||
| MP for St.Albans 1710-1722 and 1727-1734 | ||||||
| 15 Oct 1756 | 2 | James Grimston | 9 Oct 1711 | 15 Dec 1773 | 62 | |
| MP for St.Albans 1754-1761 | ||||||
| 15 Dec 1773 | 3 | James Bucknall Grimston | 9 May 1747 | 30 Dec 1808 | 61 | |
| Created Baron Verulam 8 Jul 1790 | ||||||
| MP for St.Albans 1783-1784 and | ||||||
| Hertfordshire 1784-1790 | ||||||
| 30 Dec 1808 | 4 | James Walter Grimston | 26 Sep 1775 | 17 Nov 1845 | 70 | |
| 24 Nov 1815 | V | 1 | Created Viscount Grimston and Earl of | |||
| Verulam 24 Nov 1815 | ||||||
| See "Verulam" | ||||||
| GRIMSTON OF WESTBURY | ||||||
| 11 Dec 1964 | B | 1 | Sir Robert Villiers Grimston,1st baronet | 8 Jun 1897 | 8 Dec 1979 | 82 |
| Created Baron Grimston of Westbury | ||||||
| 11 Dec 1964 | ||||||
| MP for Westbury 1931-1964 | ||||||
| 8 Dec 1979 | 2 | Robert Walter Sigismund Grimston | 14 Jun 1925 | 16 Jun 2003 | 78 | |
| 16 Jun 2003 | 3 | Robert John Sylvester Grimston | 30 Apr 1951 | |||
| GRIMSTONE OF BOSCOBEL | ||||||
| 8 April 2020 | B[L] | 1 | Sir Gerald Edgar Grimstone, Kt | 27 Aug 1949 | ||
Created Baron Grimstone of Boscobel for life 8 April 2020 |
||||||
| GRIMTHORPE | ||||||
| 17 Feb 1886 | B | 1 | Sir Edmund Beckett,5th baronet | 12 May 1816 | 29 Apr 1905 | 88 |
| Created Baron Grimthorpe 17 Feb 1886 | ||||||
| For details of the special remainder included in the | ||||||
| creation of this peerage,see the note at the | ||||||
| foot of this page | ||||||
| 29 Apr 1905 | 2 | Ernest William Beckett | 25 Nov 1856 | 11 May 1917 | 60 | |
| 11 May 1917 | 3 | Ralph William Ernest Beckett | 3 May 1891 | 22 Feb 1963 | 71 | |
| 22 Feb 1963 | 4 | Christopher John Beckett | 16 Sep 1915 | 6 Jul 2003 | 87 | |
| 6 Jul 2003 | 5 | Edward John Beckett | 20 Nov 1954 | |||
| GRINSTEAD | ||||||
| 11 Aug 1815 | B | 1 | John Willoughby Cole,2nd Earl of Enniskillen | 23 Mar 1768 | 31 Mar 1840 | 72 |
| Created Baron Grinstead 11 Aug 1815 | ||||||
| See "Enniskillen" | ||||||
| GROCOTT | ||||||
| 2 Jul 2001 | B[L] | 1 | Bruce Joseph Grocott | 1 Nov 1940 | ||
| Created Baron Grocott for life 2 Jul 2001 | ||||||
| MP for Lichfield & Tamworth 1974-1979, | ||||||
| The Wrekin 1987-1997 and Telford 1997-2001 | ||||||
| PC 2002 | ||||||
| GROSVENOR | ||||||
| 5 Jul 1784 | E | 1 | Sir Richard Grosvenor,7th baronet | 18 Jun 1731 | 5 Aug 1802 | 71 |
| Created Baron Grosvenor 8 Apr 1761 | ||||||
| and Viscount Belgrave and Earl | ||||||
| Grosvenor 5 Jul 1784 | ||||||
| MP for Chester 1754-1761 | ||||||
| 5 Aug 1802 | 2 | Robert Grosvenor | 22 Mar 1767 | 17 Feb 1845 | 77 | |
| He was created Marquess of Westminster | ||||||
| (qv) in 1831 with which title this peerage | ||||||
| then merged | ||||||
| GUERNSEY | ||||||
| 15 Mar 1703 | B | 1 | Heneage Finch | 22 Jul 1719 | ||
| Created Baron of Guernsey 15 Mar | ||||||
| 1703 and Earl of Aylesford 19 Oct 1714 | ||||||
| See "Aylesford" | ||||||
| GUEST | ||||||
| 20 Jan 1961 | B[L] | 1 | Christopher William Graham Guest | 7 Nov 1901 | 25 Sep 1984 | 82 |
| to | Created Baron Guest for life 20 Jan 1961 | |||||
| 25 Sep 1984 | Lord of Appeal in Ordinary 1961-1971 | |||||
| PC 1961 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GUETERBOCK | ||||||
| 18 Apr 2000 | B[L] | 1 | Anthony Fitzhardinge Gueterbock,Baron | |||
| Berkeley | 20 Sep 1939 | |||||
| Created Baron Gueterbock for life | ||||||
| 18 Apr 2000 | ||||||
| GUILFORD | ||||||
| 14 Jul 1660 | E[L] | 1 | Elizabeth Boyle | 3 Sep 1667 | ||
| to | Created Countess of Guilford for life | |||||
| 3 Sep 1667 | 14 Jul 1660 | |||||
| Peerage extinct on her death | ||||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 25 Jun 1674 | E | 1 | John Maitland,1st Duke of Lauderdale | 24 May 1616 | 24 Aug 1682 | 66 |
| to | Created Baron Petersham and Earl of | |||||
| 24 Aug 1682 | Guilford 25 Jun 1674 | |||||
| Peerages extinct on his death | ||||||
| ---------------------------------------------------- | ||||||
| 27 Sep 1683 | B | 1 | Francis North | 22 Oct 1637 | 5 Sep 1685 | 47 |
| Created Baron of Guilford 27 Sep 1683 | ||||||
| MP for Kings Lynn 1672-1675. Attorney | ||||||
| General 1673. Chief Justice of the Common | ||||||
| Pleas 1675-1682. Lord Keeper 1682-1685 | ||||||
| PC 1679 | ||||||
| 5 Sep 1685 | 2 | Francis North | 14 Dec 1673 | 17 Oct 1729 | 55 | |
| President of the Board of Trade 1714. Lord | ||||||
| Lieutenant Essex 1703-1705. PC 1712 | ||||||
| 17 Oct 1729 | 3 | Francis North | 13 Apr 1704 | 4 Aug 1790 | 86 | |
| 8 Apr 1752 | E | 1 | Created Earl of Guilford 8 Apr 1752 | |||
| MP for Banbury 1727-1729 | ||||||
| 4 Aug 1790 | 2 | Frederick North | 13 Apr 1732 | 5 Aug 1792 | 60 | |
| MP for Banbury 1754-1790. Chancellor of | ||||||
| the Exchequer 1767. Prime Minister 1770- | ||||||
| 1782. Lord Lieutenant Somerset 1774-1792. Lord | ||||||
| Warden of the Cinque Ports 1778. Home | ||||||
| Secretary 1783. PC 1766 KG 1772 | ||||||
| 5 Aug 1792 | 3 | George Augustus North | 11 Sep 1757 | 20 Apr 1802 | 44 | |
| MP for Harwich 1778-1784, Wootton | ||||||
| Bassett 1784-1790, Petersfield 1790 and | ||||||
| Banbury 1790-1792 | ||||||
| 20 Apr 1802 | 4 | Francis North | 25 Dec 1761 | 11 Jan 1817 | 55 | |
| 11 Jan 1817 | 5 | Frederick North | 7 Feb 1766 | 14 Oct 1827 | 61 | |
| MP for Banbury 1792-1794. Governor of | ||||||
| Ceylon 1798-1805 | ||||||
| For further information on this peer's tenure as | ||||||
| Governor of Ceylon,see the note at the foot | ||||||
| of this page | ||||||
| 14 Oct 1827 | 6 | Francis North | 17 Dec 1772 | 29 Jan 1861 | 88 | |
| For further information on this peer,see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 29 Jan 1861 | 7 | Dudley Francis North | 14 Jul 1851 | 19 Dec 1885 | 34 | |
| For information on the death of this peer,see the | ||||||
| note at the foot of this page | ||||||
| 19 Dec 1885 | 8 | Frederick George North | 19 Nov 1876 | 9 Nov 1949 | 72 | |
| For information on the death of this peer's son, | ||||||
| who was styled Lord North,see the note at the | ||||||
| foot of this page | ||||||
| 9 Nov 1949 | 9 | Edward Francis North | 22 Sep 1933 | 26 Mar 1999 | 65 | |
| 26 Mar 1999 | 10 | Piers Edward Brownlow North | 9 Mar 1971 | |||
| GUILLAMORE | ||||||
| 28 Jan 1831 | V[I] | 1 | Standish O'Grady | 1766 | 21 Apr 1840 | 73 |
| Created Baron O'Grady and Viscount | ||||||
| Guillamore 28 Jan 1831 | ||||||
| Attorney General [I] 1803-1805. Chief | ||||||
| Baron of the Exchequer [I] 1805-1831 | ||||||
| PC [I] 1803 | ||||||
| 21 Apr 1840 | 2 | Standish Darby O'Grady | 26 Dec 1792 | 22 Jul 1848 | 55 | |
| MP for Limerick 1820-1826 and 1830-1835 | ||||||
| 22 Jul 1848 | 3 | Standish O'Grady | 8 Jul 1832 | 10 Apr 1860 | 37 | |
| 10 Apr 1860 | 4 | Paget Standish O'Grady | 29 Nov 1835 | 29 Jul 1877 | 41 | |
| 29 Jul 1877 | 5 | Hardress Standish O'Grady | 20 Oct 1841 | 6 Feb 1918 | 76 | |
| 6 Feb 1918 | 6 | Frederick Standish O'Grady | 20 Apr 1847 | 11 Oct 1927 | 80 | |
| 11 Oct 1927 | 7 | Hugh Hamon Massy O'Grady | 5 Jul 1860 | 13 Jun 1930 | 69 | |
| 13 Jun 1930 | 8 | Richard O'Grady | 9 Aug 1867 | 28 Nov 1943 | 76 | |
| 28 Nov 1943 | 9 | Standish Bruce O'Grady | 17 Mar 1869 | 15 Oct 1955 | 86 | |
| to | Peerage extinct on his death | |||||
| 15 Oct 1955 | ||||||
| GUSTAFSSON | ||||||
| 15 Nov 2024 | B[L] | 1 | Poppy Claire Veronica Gustafsson | 24 Aug 1982 | ||
| Created Baroness Gustafsson for life | ||||||
| 15 Nov 2024 | ||||||
| Minister of State for Investment, 2024 -. | ||||||
| GUTHRIE OF CRAIGIEBANK | ||||||
| 27 Jun 2001 | B[L] | 1 | Sir Charles Ronald Llewelyn Guthrie | 17 Nov 1938 | 18 Sep 2025 | 86 |
| to | Created Baron Guthrie of Craigiebank for life | |||||
| 18 Sep 2025 | 27 Jun 2001 | |||||
| Chief of the Defence Staff 1997-2001 | ||||||
| Peerage extinct on his death | ||||||
| GWYDYR | ||||||
| 16 Jun 1796 | B | 1 | Sir Peter Burrell,2nd baronet | 16 Jun 1754 | 29 Jun 1820 | 66 |
| Created Baron Gwydyr 16 Jun 1796 | ||||||
| MP for Haslemere 1776-1780 and Boston | ||||||
| 1782-1796 PC 1820 | ||||||
| 29 Jun 1820 | 2 | Peter Robert Drummond-Burrell,later [1828] | ||||
| 20th Lord Willoughby de Eresby | 19 Mar 1782 | 22 Feb 1865 | 82 | |||
| 22 Feb 1865 | 3 | Alberic Drummond-Willoughby,21st Lord | ||||
| Willoughby de Eresby | 25 Dec 1821 | 26 Aug 1870 | 48 | |||
| 26 Aug 1870 | 4 | Peter Robert Burrell | 27 Apr 1810 | 3 Apr 1909 | 98 | |
| 3 Apr 1909 | 5 | Willoughby Merrik Campbell Burrell | 26 Oct 1841 | 13 Feb 1915 | 73 | |
| to | Peerage extinct on his death | |||||
| 13 Feb 1915 | ||||||
| GWYNEDD | ||||||
| 12 Feb 1945 | V | 1 | David Lloyd George | 17 Jan 1863 | 26 Mar 1945 | 82 |
| Created Viscount Gwynedd and Earl | ||||||
| Lloyd George of Dwyfor 12 Feb 1945 | ||||||
| Richard Henry Brinsley Norton, 6th Baron Grantley | ||||||
| The following biography of the 6th Baron Grantley is taken from the August 1961 issue of | ||||||
| the Australian monthly magazine "Parade":- | ||||||
| 'On a summer afternoon in 1913, the time-honoured Changing of the Guard was taking place in | ||||||
| in the courtyard before Buckingham Palace. In resplendent scarlet uniform, a young second | ||||||
| lieutenant, acutely aware of the admiring interest of the watching crowd, marched his men | ||||||
| smartly up and down. Each time they approached a railing that barred their path, they received | ||||||
| his shouted command: "About turn!" Then his attention wandered to a couple of pretty girls | ||||||
| among the onlookers and next time he forgot to give the command. Indescribable confusion | ||||||
| reigned as the guardsmen marched straight into the fence. | ||||||
| 'Recollection of that disaster still makes Colonel Blimps blanch. Gradually, however, the man | ||||||
| responsible, the sixth Lord Grantley, lived down the disgrace to become the gay, witty, | ||||||
| monocled darling of smart English society. Pale-faced, languid and bent through war injuries | ||||||
| to look like the hunchback Richard III, Lord Grantley was a record-breaking racing motorist, an | ||||||
| international financier and a pioneer of the English film industry. | ||||||
| 'Society was shocked when his butler stole the Prince of Wales' wine. He taught a bunch of | ||||||
| Americans at a party how to play chemin-de-fer and then lost $25,000 to them, which he | ||||||
| couldn't pay. Once Lord Grantley invited his fiancée and her aristocratic mother to tea - and | ||||||
| had proceedings interrupted by the arrival of a writ citing him as co-respondent in a divorce | ||||||
| case. | ||||||
| 'The sixth Lord Grantley was born in 1892. With his four older sisters he was reared at the | ||||||
| ancestral home in Yorkshire. It contained 100 bedrooms and required 50 servants to run it, but | ||||||
| had only one bathroom. His title dated to George III, who transformed his faithful Attorney- | ||||||
| General into the first Lord Grantley. In the interim, a family fortune of more than a £1,000,000 | ||||||
| was accumulated to go with the rank. Lord Grantley's father, the fifth lord, had a divorce record | ||||||
| probably unmatched in the British peerage. A student, a linguist and a coin-collector, he made | ||||||
| headlines three times in his life - all in sensational divorce cases. | ||||||
| 'Once Lord Grantley became perturbed at the entry in Burke's Peerage regarding the date of his | ||||||
| eldest sister's birthday, a mere three weeks after his parents' marriage. He tried to persuade his | ||||||
| father to have this bald evidence of a race against time deleted from future editions of the | ||||||
| famous reference on the English aristocracy. "Fiddlesticks!" snorted his rakish parent. "It doesn't | ||||||
| matter in the least. Only domestic servants read Burke's Peerage, and I don't give a damn what | ||||||
| they think." | ||||||
| 'Lord Grantley's boyhood idol was the family butler - whose name was also Butler. He initiated | ||||||
| the future peer into the secrets of horseracing and put shilling bets on for him with the local | ||||||
| bookie. At exclusive Wellington College - Grantly was sent there at six - he was bullied into | ||||||
| spending hours every night perched on top of a hot water cistern that nearly fried him alive. | ||||||
| He went to Oxford, but was "sent down" in his second year. His offence was to float 100 | ||||||
| enamel chamber pots filled with flaming kerosene down the river. At 20, Lord Grantley landed in | ||||||
| London. As heir to a million-pound fortune, he had no trouble borrowing money on his future | ||||||
| inheritance through financier Clarence Hatry [1888-1965, crooked company promoter who served | ||||||
| nine years for fraud and forgery]. | ||||||
| 'He joined the Guards as a second lieutenant, bought himself a white Rolls-Royce and was linked | ||||||
| romantically with half the chorus girls in London. With the outbreak of World War I, Lord | ||||||
| Grantley was packed off to France. Rushed to the front line to stiffen the British resistance, the | ||||||
| crack Guards Brigade suffered appalling casualties. Just before Christmas, 1914, Grantley | ||||||
| crawled out in front of his trench to reconnoitre and was shockingly injured by a German shell. | ||||||
| He woke up in a London hospital a bent and broken wreck of the gay young blade of a few | ||||||
| months earlier. Doctors predicted he would never walk again. His own will and determination put | ||||||
| him on his feet in a few months, but his back was bent grotesquely. | ||||||
| 'Despite the disability, Lord Grantley plunged back into the London social swim. He took a desk | ||||||
| job at the War Office under Lord Kitchener and organised the famous Boys' Brigade, in which | ||||||
| 250,000 school cadets got their initial military training. Then his debts caught up with him. | ||||||
| Accommodating moneylenders, who had advanced him £45,000, demanded payment. Grantley | ||||||
| had to get help from his stern, irascible father. The debts were settled and a trust fund set up | ||||||
| for any children he might have. In return he signed away his own inheritance claims for an | ||||||
| income of £750 a year which was hardly enough to pay his tailor. | ||||||
| 'Then he got a job as London representative of the American private bankers, Spreyer & Co., | ||||||
| and was soon clearing £5000 a year. He wooed the most dazzling society beauty of the day, | ||||||
| Jean Kinloch, daughter of a Scottish baronet. When he proposed a week after they met, the | ||||||
| girl arrived at his flat for tea with her mother. Lady Kinloch seemed impressed that he was a | ||||||
| suitable son-in-law until a bowler-hatted little man burst in with a summons citing Lord Grantley | ||||||
| as co-respondent. That difficulty was met with a £2000 payment to the complaining husband. | ||||||
| The suit was withdrawn. | ||||||
| 'After marriage, the couple settled in a West End mansion, which they lent to the Prince of | ||||||
| Wales when he wanted to give a private party. The arrangement continued till the Prince | ||||||
| found that wine he had stored in the cellar was missing. Guilt was eventually pinned on the | ||||||
| Grantley butler. "Yes, I snitched it Your Royal Highness," he confessed under the Prince's | ||||||
| relentless interrogation. | ||||||
| 'Off to America to consult with his employers, Lord Grantley was feted by high society. Invited | ||||||
| to a weekend at a Palm Beach mansion, he offered to teach other guests how to play chemin- | ||||||
| de-fer. They caught on so well that he lost $25,000 before the evening was out and had to | ||||||
| raise a loan from his host to pay. | ||||||
| 'Lord Grantley had a flair for high finance. He left Spreyer & Co. and became a junior partner in | ||||||
| the great American financial house of Kuhn, Loeb & Co. For them he negotiated loans to half | ||||||
| the governments of Europe during the booming 1920's. A single loan of $15 million to Hungary | ||||||
| meant a profit of $450,000 for the firm. Lord Grantley's income rocketed to £30,000 a year, | ||||||
| more than his millionaire father ever received. As a sideline he built a backyard factory into a | ||||||
| a big neon-lighting concern. With the depression of the 1930s he sold this business for | ||||||
| £200,000. Then he saw his former assets jump to £3,000,000 before World War II. | ||||||
| 'About this time, Grantley, despite his physical infirmities, won fame as a speedcar driver. For | ||||||
| years he held the world's 24-hour record with an average speed of 159 kilometres an hour. | ||||||
| 'But the depression upset the international money market. Grantley found himself out of a job | ||||||
| when Kuhn, Loeb & Co. suspended operations in Europe. He turned to the infant British film | ||||||
| industry. As an independent producer he marketed hits like Elizabeth Bergner's 'Escape Me | ||||||
| Never', 'The Lambeth Walk' and 'This Man is News.' When J. Arthur Rank, then a millionaire | ||||||
| miller, invaded the film industry in the mid-1930s, he made Grantley his managing director. | ||||||
| British films were being banned in America, so Grantley set off post-haste to New York, where | ||||||
| he faced the censorship czar, Will Hays. The main trouble was low-cut dresses in several | ||||||
| historical films. Lord Grantley pushed under Hays' nose the front page of a sensational New York | ||||||
| paper, which was crammed with lurid crimes and semi-nude pictures of local chorus girls. "This | ||||||
| is what people here get every day," he snapped. "Yet you want to ban our pictures simply | ||||||
| because we show the cleavage of a woman's bosom." The censor gave in and the films were | ||||||
| were passed. Lord Grantley's term, cleavage, and what it denoted, became accepted as almost | ||||||
| a trademark of future period films. | ||||||
| 'In June, 1939, speeding to a Cornish film location in his supercharged Bentley, Lord Grantley | ||||||
| crashed into a lorry at 80 m.p.h. He crawled out of the wreck with a broken leg and arm, | ||||||
| smashed hands, punctured lung and his crushed jaw hanging down on his chest. Still in hospital | ||||||
| when war broke out in September, he dashed off an offer of his services to his old regiment. | ||||||
| 'The unofficial reply he received from the adjutant read "There are four reasons why we are | ||||||
| unable to avail ourselves of your offer. First, you are 47. Second, you were pensioned off in | ||||||
| the middle of the last show. Third, you are still recovering from a car accident. Fourth, you | ||||||
| were no ----- good anyway." | ||||||
| 'The war and his health caused Lord Grantley's retirement. In 1954, the sixth Lord Grantley died, | ||||||
| His only regret, he said, was his inability in the post-war world to satisfy his taste for plover's | ||||||
| eggs and caviar.' | ||||||
| Thomas North Graves, 2nd Baron Graves | ||||||
| Lord Graves died by his own hand on 7 February 1830. The first report below is from the | ||||||
| "Caledonian Mercury" of 13 February 1830:- | ||||||
| 'At eleven o'clock on Monday morning, an inquisition was taken before J.H.Gell, Esq., and a | ||||||
| highly respectable Jury, at the Mason's Arms, Maddox Street, Hanover Square, on view of the | ||||||
| body of the Right Hon. Thomas North, Lord Graves, aged 54. The following was the substance | ||||||
| of the evidence:- | ||||||
| 'John Spry stated, that he had been travelling servant to his Lordship for nearly four years; he | ||||||
| was not aware that he had been afflicted with any bodily complaint for the last six months; | ||||||
| about a year ago he was laid up with rheumatic fever. Last Saturday his Lordship, who was | ||||||
| one of the Commissioners of Excise, went to the office on business, and returned about four | ||||||
| o'clock; after this, he dined in Belgrave Square, at Sir George Murray's, and returned home at | ||||||
| eleven o'clock, and soon after went to bed; he was in very low spirits when he went out. | ||||||
| Witness sat by his bedside until about two o'clock in the morning; he had usually done so for | ||||||
| some time past, on account of his Lordship being quite a cripple from the rheumatism, although | ||||||
| he has of late been fast recovering. It was his Lordship's wish that he sat up with him until he | ||||||
| fell asleep, as he did not like to be left alone. He could not tell the reason why. Yesterday | ||||||
| morning he went into his Lordship's room about eight o'clock, and found him asleep. He went in | ||||||
| again soon after ten o'clock, and found him dressing. He breakfasted about twelve o'clock, and | ||||||
| soon afterwards Sir James Anderson came in, who attended his Lordship. Witness went out to | ||||||
| get some medicine ordered, and returned between three and four, and asked his Lordship for a | ||||||
| parcel which he had told him to send to Lady Graves, at Hampton Court. The parcel was given | ||||||
| to him; it contained a letter from his Lordship to her, and he took it to the coach office in | ||||||
| Piccadilly. Witness returned, and put out his Lordship's things to dress, as he was going to | ||||||
| dine at the Marquis of Anglesey's. His Lordship told him to order a coach at a quarter before | ||||||
| seven o'clock. He went out for that purpose, and on his return, after cleaning his Lordship's | ||||||
| shoes, took them into his room; the door was not locked; he did not see his Lordship, but | ||||||
| observed the looking glass standing on the table covered with blood, and two candles burning | ||||||
| in front of the glass. Witness called for assistance, and his Lordship was found on the floor | ||||||
| of the room, close under the dressing case, with his throat cut from ear to ear, and two razors | ||||||
| lying beside him. Medical assistance soon arrived, but his Lordship was quite dead. | ||||||
| 'By the Jury - I have latterly observed his Lordship to labour under a depression of spirits. I | ||||||
| have no doubt but that he cut his throat while labouring under a depression of spirits. I cannot | ||||||
| upon my oath take upon myself to state what was the cause that produced the depression | ||||||
| of spirits. | ||||||
| 'Sir James Anderson stated, that he had attended his Lordship professionally. It was his opinion | ||||||
| that his Lordship's state of mind was greatly depressed, arising both from bodily disease and | ||||||
| mental excitement, and, in one of those paroxysms of excitement, he had no doubt committed | ||||||
| the dreadful act. | ||||||
| 'By the Jury - It is no uncommon thing for a person to be excited to the extent Lord Graves | ||||||
| was to be sufficiently sound in mind one minute and the next to be entirely lost, so as to | ||||||
| commit suicide, particularly when the instrument was in the room. | ||||||
| 'The Coroner briefly addressed the Jury, who returned a verdict that the deceased cut his | ||||||
| throat in a fit of delirium.' | ||||||
| The above report is fine, as far as it goes. However, it makes no attempt to address the reason | ||||||
| for Lord Graves' depression. This is not to say that no attempt was made - the jury did try to | ||||||
| ascertain the background to Lord Graves' depression, but was somewhat frustrated in its | ||||||
| attempt by the Coroner, as is illustrated in the following extract from the "Sun," which was | ||||||
| reprinted in the "Caledonian Mercury" on the same day as the report given above:- | ||||||
| 'In addition to the slovenly and hasty manner in which the late Inquest on the unfortunate Lord | ||||||
| Graves was conducted - a haste the motives for which we can more readily comprehend than | ||||||
| excuse - we cannot but express our astonishment at the conduct of the Coroner, who at the | ||||||
| very moment when the evidence began to assume an intelligible shape, and to throw light on | ||||||
| the cause that induced the deplorable catastrophe, was so far from farthering, that he actually | ||||||
| attempted to prevent the elucidation of the necessary facts. | ||||||
| 'Coroner - You have no doubt, I presume, that his Lordship committed suicide, while labouring | ||||||
| under depression of spirits? | ||||||
| 'Witness - I have no doubt that his Lordship cut his throat in a fit of great depression of spirits, | ||||||
| not knowing what he was about. | ||||||
| 'Juror - But can you inform us what has caused that depression of spirits under which his | ||||||
| Lordship laboured? | ||||||
| 'The question seemed to excite the greatest interest among the Jury. All eyes were turned | ||||||
| towards the witness; but before he could make the reply, the Coroner interposed, and said, | ||||||
| he did not consider it necessary to put such a question to the witness. They had assembled | ||||||
| to inquire whether Lord Graves died from violence inflicted by himself or by any other person, | ||||||
| and in what state of mind he was at the time - whether insane or otherwise. It was in | ||||||
| evidence that his Lordship had laboured under great depression of spirits, and it was therefore | ||||||
| probable that he committed the rash act while labouring under temporary insanity. | ||||||
| 'Juror - But, Sir, I consider that we shall not discharge our duty unless we inquire into the cause | ||||||
| of that depression of spirits under which his Lordship is said to have laboured. According to the | ||||||
| oath that you administer to us, are we not bound to investigate all the circumstances? | ||||||
| 'Coroner - No, Gentleman; I do not consider it a part of your duty to make inquiry upon that | ||||||
| point to which allusion has been made. The oath that I administer to you, and which is the | ||||||
| same that is administered to Jurors upon all similar occasions, is, that "you shall diligently | ||||||
| inquire, and true presentment make, on behalf of our Sovereign Lord the King, how and in what | ||||||
| manner Lord Graves came by his death - and true verdict, according to the evidence - so help | ||||||
| you God." | ||||||
| 'The Juror, however, contended that he was justified in putting the question, and pressed for | ||||||
| the answer. | ||||||
| 'The Coroner said that he would raise no further objection to the question. The witness might, | ||||||
| if he pleased, give the answer. | ||||||
| 'The question having been put, the witness said, "I cannot, upon my oath, take upon myself | ||||||
| to state what was the cause which produced that depression of spirits under which his Lordship | ||||||
| laboured." | ||||||
| 'It appears by the above minutes, if correct, that every exertion was used to strangle the very | ||||||
| evidence that was most essential to a right understanding of the case, and that those exertions | ||||||
| were not desisted from till and intelligent and persevering Juryman had pressed for the | ||||||
| necessary facts. The inquest altogether appears to have been a smuggled affair, and ought (as | ||||||
| it would have been in every other case) to have been adjourned till better evidence could be | ||||||
| procured. In fact, the inquisition should be held over again. At present a dreadful and suspicious | ||||||
| mystery hangs over the case.' | ||||||
| Also reprinted in the same issue of the "Caledonian Mercury" is the following [edited] article | ||||||
| from the "Star." The florid language used is, in hindsight, quite amusing when viewed in terms | ||||||
| of today's style of writing, but it is typical of the time. | ||||||
| 'We know not when the public feelings have been harrowed by the contemplation of so | ||||||
| distressing a tragedy - Deep, dreadful and complicate[d] are the circumstances connected with | ||||||
| it; yet - if we forebear to expose those circumstances now - be it not imagined that it is for | ||||||
| want of a clue to guide us in this dark labyrinth of palatial perpetration. No: respect for One, of | ||||||
| whose feelings, even allegiance would command us to be tender, shall for the present set a | ||||||
| seal upon our lips. For his sake, we will withhold our curses - for his sake, repress the | ||||||
| smouldering fires of that indignant denunciation which we would send forth in quest of the | ||||||
| lurking criminal, and which should post after him - whithersoever he fled - like the ban of | ||||||
| heaven, into the obscurest recesses of the land. | ||||||
| 'The blood which was shed on Sunday - aye, and more blood - would we conjure up to bear | ||||||
| witness against him; the wail of destroyed families should make demon music in his ears……. | ||||||
| But we have set a seal upon our lips. Woe unto him when the day comes for the opening of | ||||||
| that seal - for it will be one of terrible revelation. Surely the hand of God is upon this corrupted | ||||||
| country, when those who are its most exalted in station are become also its most exalted in | ||||||
| vice and crime………….' | ||||||
| It is not too difficult to work out exactly whom the "Star" was talking about. The references to | ||||||
| 'palatial perpetration' and 'most exalted in station' were almost certainly aimed at the Duke of | ||||||
| Cumberland and Teviotdale, younger brother of King George IV, and later, from 1837, King of | ||||||
| Hanover. Lord Graves had been Cumberland's Lord of the Bedchamber and Comptroller of the | ||||||
| Duke's Household. It was widely rumoured that the Duke was in a liaison with Lord Graves' | ||||||
| wife, the former Lady Mary Paget, and that Lord Graves had committed suicide as a result of | ||||||
| this alleged liaison. For further information about the Duke of Cumberland and Teviotdale, see | ||||||
| the note at the foot of the page which contains details of his peerage. | ||||||
| Eveleen Smith-Gray, Baroness Gray in her own right (19th holder of the title) | ||||||
| On 7 July 1896, the House of Lords Committee of Privileges met to hear the claim of Mrs. | ||||||
| Eveleen Smith to the Scottish barony of Gray. | ||||||
| As is common with older Scottish peerages, the honours can, and often do, descend in the | ||||||
| female line - that is, the descent of the peerage is not limited to male heirs. Both the 16th and | ||||||
| 17th holders of the title had been females. On the death of Lady Grey, the 17th holder of the | ||||||
| title, the next heir to the barony was the 14th Earl of Moray, who was descended from Jane | ||||||
| Gray, daughter of the 11th Lord Gray, who had married the 9th Earl of Moray. Their son | ||||||
| became the 10th Earl of Moray - he married twice, the two marriages producing four sons and | ||||||
| a daughter. Remarkably, none of the four sons ever married and, as a result, the four sons | ||||||
| succeeded each other in turn as the 11th, 12th, 13th and 14th Earls of Moray. | ||||||
| On the death of the 14th Earl in 1895, the line of descent reverted to the descendants of the | ||||||
| daughter of the 10th Earl of Moray, referred to above. Her name was Lady Jane Stuart, who | ||||||
| appears to have been somewhat eccentric, and it was her daughter who petitioned the House | ||||||
| of Lords Committee of Privileges for the Gray peerage. | ||||||
| According to evidence given before the Committee, the claimant's mother, Lady Jane Stuart, | ||||||
| married firstly, in 1832, Sir John Archibald Drummond Stewart, who died in May 1838. No children | ||||||
| were born from this marriage. She married for a second time, in August 1838, a Dr. Jeremiah | ||||||
| Lonsdale Pounden. One version of events is that, when this marriage took place, the couple | ||||||
| neglected to go through the formality of the publication of the marriage banns and also | ||||||
| appeared to fail to give their full names to the Registrar - both of these omissions being | ||||||
| sufficient to invalidate the marriage. In September 1840, knowing that she was pregnant and of | ||||||
| the doubts surrounding the legality of the 1838 marriage, she went through another marriage | ||||||
| ceremony, this time being careful to fulfil all of the necessary formalities. | ||||||
| After the second marriage, the couple moved to Dresden in Germany, where a daughter, | ||||||
| Eveleen, was born on 3 May 1841. Apparently, Lady Jane once more neglected the formalities | ||||||
| with the result that Eveleen's birth was never registered either by the authorities in Dresden, | ||||||
| or by the British Consul who was resident there. Lady Jane also appeared to have had some | ||||||
| peculiar views relating to baptism, with the result that Eveleen was not baptised for many years | ||||||
| after - one report says that she was not baptised until the evening before her own marriage in | ||||||
| 1863. | ||||||
| All of this meant that no documentary evidence existed which proved the birth of Eveleen - no | ||||||
| birth certificate and no contemporary certificate of baptism. However, numerous other | ||||||
| documents, including the marriage certificate from the 1840 ceremony, were tendered in | ||||||
| evidence and the Committee decided that, since there were no other claimants and that no | ||||||
| estates were in dispute, the claimant's petition be granted, and thus Eveleen became Lady | ||||||
| Gray. | ||||||
| The special remainder to the Marquessate of Grey created in 1740 | ||||||
| From the "London Gazette" of 27 May 1740 (issue 7914, page 1):- | ||||||
| 'His Majesty's Letters Patent are passed the Grewt Seal, for granting the Dignity of a Marquess | ||||||
| of the Kingdom of Great Britain unto his Grace Henry Duke of Kent, by the Name, Stile and Title | ||||||
| of Marquess Grey; to hold the same to him and his Heirs Male of his Body, and in Default of such | ||||||
| issue, the Dignity of Marchioness Grey to Jemima Campbell (Grand Daughter of the said Duke by | ||||||
| the Lady Anabell Grey, deceased, eldest Daughter of the said Duke, and late Wife of the Lord | ||||||
| Glenorchy,) and the Dignity of Marquess Grey to the Heirs Male of the Body of the said Jemima | ||||||
| Campbell.' | ||||||
| The termination of the abeyance of the Grey de Ruthyn peerage in 1885 | ||||||
| The barony of Grey de Ruthyn fell into abeyance in 1868. In 1876, a petition to terminate the | ||||||
| abeyance was considered by the House of Lords Committee of Privileges, as reported in the | ||||||
| "Manchester Guardian" of 1 June 1876:- | ||||||
| 'The Grey de Ruthyn Peerage - The House of Lords Committee of Privileges had this matter | ||||||
| before it on Tuesday. It was the case of Lady Bertha Lelgarde Clifton, the wife of Captain | ||||||
| Augustus Wykeham Clifton, late of the Rifle Brigade, who has petitioned Her Majesty that the | ||||||
| abeyance in the Barony of Grey de Ruthyn, in the peerage of England, may be terminated in | ||||||
| her favour. | ||||||
| 'This ancient dignity, which is one of the oldest baronies in the peerage of England, was stated | ||||||
| to have been created in the person of Roger de Grey, the only son of the second marriage of | ||||||
| John, Lord Grey de Wilton, in 1324, by King Edward II who conferred that honour upon him as | ||||||
| a reward for important services in the Welsh wars. Reginald, the third Lord Grey de Ruthyn, | ||||||
| was declared heir of John, third Earl of Pembroke, and as such he had the honour of bearing | ||||||
| at the coronation of King Henry IV, the great gilt spurs of the kingdom, "in like manner as his | ||||||
| ancestors had formerly done at previous coronations." Edmund, the fourth lord, was appointed | ||||||
| Lord High Treasurer of England in 1463, and in 1465 he was raised to the dignity of Earl of Kent, | ||||||
| a title which passed from the Grey family on the death, without issue, of Henry, eighth Earl of | ||||||
| Kent, when the De Ruthyn barony devolved upon Susan, Baroness Grey de Ruthyn. Her eldest | ||||||
| son was declared by the House of Lords, in 1641, to be entitled to the Barony of Grey de | ||||||
| Ruthyn, and on his death, in 1643, without male issue, the dignity devolved upon Susan, the | ||||||
| wife of Sir Henry Yelverton. Her second son, Henry, was declared by the House of Lords to | ||||||
| have been rightly summoned to Parliament as being lineally descended from Reginald, Lord Grey | ||||||
| de Ruthyn; and his right to bear the great gilt spurs of the kingdom at the coronation of King | ||||||
| James II and of King William III was admitted against the claim of the Earl of Kent. His son | ||||||
| Talbot was created Earl of Sussex in 1717, and he carried the spurs at the coronation of King | ||||||
| George I and King George II, being appointed Deputy Earl Marshal of England in 1725. Henry, | ||||||
| third Earl of Sussex, carried the spurs at the coronation of King George III, and on his death, | ||||||
| without issue male, in 1799, the title of Earl of Sussex became extinct. Henry, the son of his | ||||||
| daughter Barbara, took his seat in the House of Lords in 1802 as 20th Lord Grey de Ruthyn, but | ||||||
| died without issue male in 1810. Barbara, his daughter, married the second Marquis of Hastings, | ||||||
| and had two sons, who became respectively the third and fourth marquises, but died without | ||||||
| issue. She, by her deputies, carried the spurs at the coronations of George IV, William IV and | ||||||
| of Her Majesty. She also left four daughters, the eldest of whom was the late Countess of | ||||||
| Loudoun, in whose favour the abeyance of the English baronies of Botreaux, Hungerford, De | ||||||
| Moleyns, and Hastings were determined. The petitioner now prayed the abeyance in the | ||||||
| case of the Grey de Ruthyn barony might be determined in her favour.' | ||||||
| The right to carry the spurs at future coronations currently rests equally between the Barons | ||||||
| Grey de Ruthyn (although the peerage is at present in abeyance), and the Earls of Loudoun. | ||||||
| Nine years after the presentation of the petition discussed above, the following notice appeared | ||||||
| in the London Gazette (issue 25544, page 6300), dated 29 December 1885:- | ||||||
| The Queen has been pleased to direct Letters Patent to be passed under the Great Seal of the | ||||||
| United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, declaring that Bertha Lelgarde Clifton (commonly | ||||||
| called Lady Bertha Lelgarde Clifton), wife of Augustus Wykeham Clifton, of Warton Hall, Lytham, | ||||||
| in the county of Lancaster, Esquire, sometime a Captain in the Rifle Brigade, the second daughter | ||||||
| of the Most Honourable George Augustus Francis, Marquess of Hastings, by Barbara Yelverton, | ||||||
| in her own right Baroness Grey de Ruthyn, his wife, and sister and coheir of the Most Honourable | ||||||
| Weysford Charles Plantagenet, Marquess of Hastings, and Baron Grey de Ruthyn, all deceased, | ||||||
| is and shall be Baroness Grey de Ruthyn, and shall have and enjoy the ancient Barony of Grey de | ||||||
| Ruthyn, together with all the rights, titles, privileges, preeminences, precedencies, immunities, | ||||||
| and advantages whatsoever thereunto belonging or in any wise appertaining, to hold to her and | ||||||
| the heirs of the body lawfully begotten and to be begotten in as full and ample manner as the | ||||||
| said Henry Weysford Charles Plantagenet, Marquess of Hastings, the last Baron Grey de Ruthyn, | ||||||
| or any of his ancestors, held and enjoyed the same.' | ||||||
| Cecil Talbot Clifton, 24th Lord Grey de Ruthyn | ||||||
| From the Dundee "Evening Telegraph and Post" of 4 September 1912:- | ||||||
| 'A telegram to the New York Sun from Butte, Montana, says that the Hon. Cecil Clifton, the | ||||||
| Montana rancher, who has just succeeded to the title of Lord Grey de Ruthyn, may not return | ||||||
| to England. The Sun quotes Mr. Harold Lowther, the new peer's ranching partner, who is a | ||||||
| brother of the Speaker of the House of Commons, as saying that Lord Grey de Ruthyn likes | ||||||
| ranching so much that he does not care about his title. | ||||||
| 'Others, according to the Sun, declare that there is romantic reason behind Lord Grey de Ruthyn's | ||||||
| refusal to return to England. Lord Grey de Ruthyn and Mr. Lowther were cattle breeders on a | ||||||
| large scale until three years ago, when they sold most of their holdings, retaining 1400 acres near | ||||||
| the town of Roundup, where they now live. The new Peer is described as a musician, who spends | ||||||
| most of his time with musical instruments, dogs, and horses. He refuses to discuss his plans.' | ||||||
| The special remainder to the Barony of Grimthorpe | ||||||
| From the "London Gazette" of 16 February 1886 (issue 25559, page 744):- | ||||||
| "The Queen has been pleased to direct Letters Patent to be passed under the Great Seal of the | ||||||
| United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland granting the dignity of a Baron of the said United | ||||||
| Kingdom unto Sir Edmund Beckett, Bart., and the heirs male of his body lawfully begotten, by the | ||||||
| name, style, and title of Baron Grimthorpe, of Grimthorpe, in the East Riding of the county of | ||||||
| York, with remainder in default of such issue to the heirs male of the body of his father, Sir | ||||||
| Edmund Beckett, Bart., deceased." | ||||||
| Frederick North, 5th Earl of Guilford | ||||||
| Before he succeeded to the Earldom in 1817, North had been for some years Governor of | ||||||
| Ceylon [now Sri Lanka]. The following history of his tenure as Governor is the subject of an | ||||||
| article in the June 1956 issue of the Australian monthly magazine "Parade":- | ||||||
| 'Late in June, 1803, a British soldier staggered into the jungle outpost of Fort Macdowall, near | ||||||
| Trincomalee, Ceylon. He was gaunt with hunger and fever. A gaping sword wound had severed | ||||||
| the muscles of his neck and as he walked, he supported his head in his hands. The man was | ||||||
| Corporal Barnesley of Her Majesty's 19th Regiment of Foot, the lone survivor of 1000 men. He | ||||||
| had made a nightmare journey through more than 100 miles of swamp and jungle to bring back | ||||||
| the shocking story of murder and treachery which ended an ill-conceived attempt to win all | ||||||
| Ceylon for Britain. The blame for this inglorious chapter in British colonial history rests on the | ||||||
| shoulders of Ceylon's first governor, the Honourable Frederick North, later 5th Earl of Guilford. | ||||||
| 'In 1798, the British had dislodged the Dutch from Ceylon and were firmly entrenched along the | ||||||
| entire coastline. The mountainous centre of the island remained native territory - the kingdom | ||||||
| of Kandy. It was ruled by Vicrema Singha [Sri Vikrama Rajasimha], newly crowned, but following | ||||||
| the best traditions of the tyrannical Malabar kings. Early in 1799, Pilema Talawuwe arrived in | ||||||
| Colombo with a proposition for Governor North. The new king, he said, was an unpopular | ||||||
| weakling. Blandly, he told the Governor that he intended to murder the king when the time was | ||||||
| ripe and take over the throne. But just in case his fellow nobles objected, he needed a little | ||||||
| armed assistance. In return for British backing, he was prepared to allow North to put a British | ||||||
| garrison into the town of Kandy. | ||||||
| 'Governor North refused to be a party to murder, but he was plainly interested. Pilema therefore | ||||||
| made a second proposition. He offered to provoke Kandy into attacking the British on condition | ||||||
| that after the war he was allowed a free hand to take over the throne. North again refused, but | ||||||
| but Pilema knew his ambition to make Kandy a British protectorate and hammered at his | ||||||
| weakness. He told North that the king knew his hold on the throne was shaky and was in deadly | ||||||
| fear of his life. If the British offered to make Kandy a protectorate and allow him to retire to the | ||||||
| safety of Colombo, the king would accept gladly. The Governor believed the slippery Minister | ||||||
| and drew up a treaty naming Kandy a British protectorate. The king was to retain his title and | ||||||
| live in Colombo. Pilema was to become ruler of Kandy under British direction. | ||||||
| 'Early in 1800 North sent General Macdowall to Kandy with the treaty. He gave strict | ||||||
| instructions that the treaty would come into force only if the king signed willingly. Pilema was | ||||||
| delighted with his scheme, but more delighted with the size of General Macdowall's escort - | ||||||
| 1164 troops and six six-pounder guns. He felt sure that such a show of force would bluff the | ||||||
| king into signing. Macdowall soon discovered that the king was by no means unsure of his | ||||||
| throne and had no fears for his life. He greeted Macdowall haughtily and sent him back to | ||||||
| Colombo with a cold refusal. | ||||||
| 'Back in Kandy, Pilema worked assiduously to unseat the king, but found he was surprisingly | ||||||
| popular with Kandyan nobles. He changed tactics and put all his efforts into inciting war | ||||||
| between Kandy and the British, hoping that in the melee he could grab the throne. | ||||||
| 'In 1802, Pilema succeeded. He ordered the confiscation of £1000 worth of areca nuts belonging | ||||||
| to British merchants. North demanded compensation from the king. Vicrema Singha ignored the | ||||||
| request, and to save face North declared war on Kandy. Before launching his attack, North put | ||||||
| his muddled intentions into writing. He hoped that Pilema would aid the British, he wrote, and, if | ||||||
| he "proved to be very powerful," he proposed to make him ruler of Kandy under British direction. | ||||||
| On the other hand, if Pilema turned out to be a weak force in Kandy, he proposed to put Prince | ||||||
| Muttasamy, the brotherin-law of the late king on the throne. With this shaky policy, North | ||||||
| went to war. | ||||||
| 'In January, 1803, General Macdowall marched from Colombo with 1900 troops. Early in February | ||||||
| Colonel Barbut led another column of 1444 from Trincomalee, on the other side of Ceylon. The | ||||||
| Kandyans refused pitched battles. They were content to cut off isolated coolie trains, snipe, | ||||||
| harry the strungout column, and wait for fever to weaken the British. The two British columns | ||||||
| converged on Kandy in March. It was a hollow victory. Except for stray dogs and old women, | ||||||
| the town was deserted. The wily Vicrema Singh had stripped it bare and retired to | ||||||
| Hanguranketa. Pilema was nowhere in sight, so, on the orders of Governor North, Colonel Barbut | ||||||
| proclaimed Prince Muttasamy King of Kandy. Muttasamy's first act was to offer King Vicrema | ||||||
| Singha a pension and a residence in Colornbo. Vicrema Singha, with his forces intact, no doubt | ||||||
| laughed heartily. | ||||||
| 'Pilema, the arch opportunist, saw that the British expedition was doomed to failure and threw | ||||||
| in his lot with Vicrema Singha. In secret he told General Macdowall that the king was hiding at | ||||||
| Hanguranketa. Macdowall despatched a large force to capture the king, and walked into a | ||||||
| carefully prepared ambush. The column fought its way out with heavy losses and returned to | ||||||
| Kandy. General Macdowall found himself in a dangerous situation. The rainy season had set in | ||||||
| and further campaigning was out of the question. Hostile Kandyans had cut his supply line and | ||||||
| no food or ammunition was reaching him from the coast. Worse, malaria was taking a terrible toll | ||||||
| of his troops. | ||||||
| 'Pilema, still playing the game from both sides, contacted Governor North. He offered to deliver | ||||||
| up the king if North would make him "Grand Prince" and the real ruler of Kandy. North agreed, | ||||||
| and met Pilema to sign the documents. In his report he wrote that he now thought Pilema was | ||||||
| in good faith. Never was trust more misplaced. At the time North met him to sign the documents | ||||||
| Pilema had a well laid plan to kidnap him. Only the unexpected size of the Governor's escort and | ||||||
| the arrival of a detachment of British troops saved North from rotting in a Kandyan gaol as a | ||||||
| hostage. | ||||||
| 'Secure in his belief that the powerful Pilema was on the side of the British, North ordered the | ||||||
| evacuation of Kandy. He left behind 1000 men, most of whom were too sick to travel, under | ||||||
| Colonel Barbut. General Macdowall marched out, leaving the garrison to the mercy of Pilema. | ||||||
| Shortly afterwards, Colonel Barbut died of fever and Major Adam Davie, a man with no active | ||||||
| service, was left in command of Kandy. | ||||||
| 'Before dawn on June 23, Pilema led 10,000 Kandyans in an attack on the town. Davie met the | ||||||
| attack with 35 sick European troops and 290 unreliable native soldiers. When the garrison was | ||||||
| driven into the king's palace, Davie abandoned the useless fight and asked for terms. Pilema | ||||||
| guaranteed his force a safe conduct to the coast and promised to care for the 120 sick and | ||||||
| wounded in the hospital. He insisted that Davie's party must surrender their powder supplies. | ||||||
| Davie and his men marched out of Kandy the same day, taking the puppet king Muttasamy | ||||||
| with them, Of the original 1000 men, 34 Europeans and 390 native troops essayed the march. | ||||||
| 'Davie's capitulation to Pilema sealed the fate of the 120 sick Europeans in Kandy. Before noon | ||||||
| the next day the tribesmen swooped from the jungle and raged through the hospital. Only one | ||||||
| man escaped the massacre - Corporal Barnesley. Left for dead by a native swordsman, | ||||||
| Barnesley crawled into the jungle and began his unbelievable trek to the coast. | ||||||
| 'Meanwhile Davie and his miserable army reached the Mahwali-Ganga and found the river a | ||||||
| raging torrent. Pilema had promised to provide boats for the crossing, but broke his promise. He | ||||||
| told Davie that he could have the boats if he handed over Muttasamy. Davie agreed, even | ||||||
| though be knew it meant certain death for Muttasamy. The unfortunate puppet was beheaded | ||||||
| next day and died cursing the British. After the execution, Pilema continued his treachery by | ||||||
| still refusing the boats. Baulked by the torrent, Davie's men began building rafts. From the | ||||||
| surrounding jungle the Kandyans watched them, and each time they got a rope across the | ||||||
| river, cut it. Again Pilema approached Davie. He offered to provide boats if the British would lay | ||||||
| down their arms. Davie grasped at the faint hope, and gave the order which left his men | ||||||
| without even bayonets to defend themselves. The Kandyans closed in gleefully on the helpless | ||||||
| men. They led them into the jungle in pairs, clubbed them to death, hacked off their heads, and | ||||||
| tossed the bodies into the river. Three officers, Major Davie, Captain Humphreys and Captain | ||||||
| Rumley, were spared. They died miserably in Kandyan gaols years later. | ||||||
| 'When news of the debacle reached Colombo, Governor North asked for 3000 troops for a | ||||||
| punitive expedition. But Britain was fully occupied fighting Napoleon and sent him 800. Vicrema | ||||||
| Singha decided that the time was ripe to throw the British out of Ceylon. His troops overran the | ||||||
| Maritime Provinces and advanced towards Colombo. Fighting in open country was not to the | ||||||
| Kandyan taste, and at Fort Hungwella, 20 miles from Colombo, a small British force under | ||||||
| Captain Pollock stopped Vicrema in his tracks. He had been so certain of victory that he had | ||||||
| set up pointed stakes for impaling British prisoners. A cannon ball which ploughed up the ground | ||||||
| at his feet sent him scurrying for the hills with his army behind him. Though he had led the rout, | ||||||
| Vicrema had three of his generals beheaded for cowardice. | ||||||
| 'Fighting stopped by mutual consent in 1805. That year Governor North was replaced by the | ||||||
| able administrator, Sir Henry Maitland. Maitland restored order and straightened out his | ||||||
| predecessor's muddles. Vicrema Singha spent the days of peace building his reputation as a | ||||||
| monster. Suspicious of every noble who attained popularity, he executed hundreds by impaling, | ||||||
| beheading or trampling to death by the royal elephants. | ||||||
| 'In 1811, Pilema Talawuwe, a schemer to the end, raised his supporters in revolt. It was his last | ||||||
| plot. The king arrested him. Vicrema had a special fate for traitors. His torturers cut strips from | ||||||
| Pilerna's body and forced him to eat them before he was beheaded. Pilema's successor, | ||||||
| Ehelopola, endured the king's tyranny for three years, then he, too, revolted. He was defeated | ||||||
| and fled to Colombo. Vicrema took terrible vengeance on his family and friends. | ||||||
| 'In the end Vicrema Singha's cruelty destroyed him. In 1814 he suspected 10 merchants from | ||||||
| the British provinces of spying. He cut off their noses, ears and right arms, hung them round | ||||||
| their necks, and sent them back to Colombo. Nine of the ten died. The British Governor was | ||||||
| forced to act. In January 1815, the British invasion of Kandy began. This time the supply and | ||||||
| medical services worked smoothly. Within a month, British troops occupied Kandy with little | ||||||
| opposition. To Ehelopola, the man whose family Vicrema Singha had foully butchered, fell the | ||||||
| honour of capturing him. He caught him in a native village and dragged him shrieking to the | ||||||
| British commander. If Ehelopola hoped his family would be avenged, he was wrong. The British | ||||||
| exiled Vicrema Singha to India, where he died peacefully in 1832 - the last King of Kandy.' | ||||||
| Francis North, 6th Earl of Guilford | ||||||
| The 6th Earl was at the centre of a major scandal during the middle years of the 19th century | ||||||
| when it was found that he had abused his position as Master of the St. Cross Hospital by | ||||||
| misappropriating its funds, since he was not legally appointed to the Mastership of the hospital. | ||||||
| Between 1808, when he was first appointed, and 1853, it was estimated that he had illegally | ||||||
| received £90,000. After a lengthy campaign by the newspapers of the time, particularly the | ||||||
| "Daily News," the matter was the subject of an inquiry by the Master of the Rolls in 1853. The | ||||||
| following is extracted from a lengthy report which appeared in the "Daily News" of 3 August | ||||||
| 1853:- | ||||||
| 'The case of St. Cross is so rich an illustration of various charity abuses as to be embarrassing | ||||||
| from its very fullness. Its Master, the Rev. Lord Guilford, is the son of a Bishop of Winchester | ||||||
| [Brownlow North 1741-1820, half brother of Lord North, later 2nd Earl of Guilford]. By his | ||||||
| episcopal parent he was first made Rector of St. Mary, Southampton, worth between £2000 | ||||||
| and £3000 a year; then he was appointed by the same generous patron Rector of Alresford, | ||||||
| worth some £1500 to £1800 a year; next the same fond relative gave him a Canonry in | ||||||
| Winchester Cathedral, then equal in value probably to the living of Alresford. Thus comfortably | ||||||
| provided for was the Rev. Francis North, Lord Guilford [although he did not succeed to the | ||||||
| Earldom until 1827], in the year of grace 1808, when the Mastership of the Hospital of St. | ||||||
| Cross became vacant by Dr. Lockman's death. It was in the Bishop's gift, and to it also he | ||||||
| resolved to appoint his well-beloved son. But here a difficulty arose. By the statute of Henry | ||||||
| VIII, no clerk could, under any circumstances, hold more than three benefices. Now the Bishop's | ||||||
| son had already three pieces of ecclesiastical preferment, and though the Mastership of St. | ||||||
| Cross was a lay office, it could only be held by the rectors of the subordinate incumbency of | ||||||
| St. Faith, in which parish the Hospital is. To be Master of St. Cross, the appointee must first | ||||||
| be Rector of St. Faith; and hence it is that a clergyman always holds the office, though it is | ||||||
| in itself a lay one. But Bishops and their sons in 1808 cared little for Acts of Parliament..... | ||||||
| So the Bishop made his son Master, without giving him induction into the Rectory of St. Faith; | ||||||
| and, though for the last forty-four years Lord Guilford has acted as Master of St. Cross, there | ||||||
| seems very small reason to doubt that he has from the first been a trespasser and an intruder, | ||||||
| and that de jure the mastership has been vacant ever since Dr. Lockman's death.' | ||||||
| The Master of the Rolls (Sir John Romilly, later 1st Baron Romilly) characterised the whole affair | ||||||
| as "a shameless perversion of charity" to the extent of at least £9000 a year. In his findings he | ||||||
| urged that "there should be an inquiry as to the present state and condition of the charity, and | ||||||
| that the present master of St. Cross Hospital, the Earl of Guilford, should account for the | ||||||
| receipt of the rents and profits of the hospital from the date of filing of the present information." | ||||||
| He further commented that "the shameless perversion of one of our noblest charities has been | ||||||
| done under a system which not even the most unscrupulous cupidity could have carried out | ||||||
| till hardened into a contempt for common decency." Romilly's reference to the "date of filing of | ||||||
| the present information" meant that Guilford was called upon to refund only a small portion of | ||||||
| the charity's income - that for the previous four years, since the initial information had been | ||||||
| filed in 1849. | ||||||
| Dudley Francis North, 7th Earl of Guilford | ||||||
| The 7th Earl died following a hunting accident, as reported by 'The Sportsman' of 21 December | ||||||
| 1885:- | ||||||
| 'With deep regret we announce the death of the Earl of Guilford, M[aster of the] F[ox] H[ounds], | ||||||
| which occurred at Sydling-court, near Dorchester, on Saturday evening shortly before 10 | ||||||
| o'clock, from the effects of the terrible injuries he sustained through being thrown from his horse | ||||||
| in taking an awkward double fence on Friday whilst hunting with the Cattistock Hounds, of | ||||||
| which he had been the master since 1882, near Buckland Newton. His Lordship, after the | ||||||
| occurrence, was taken to Castlehill House, whence, after his leg had been set, he was removed | ||||||
| to Sydling-court, where it was ascertained that his injuries were much more serious than were | ||||||
| at first anticipated, as, in addition to a bad compound fracture of the leg as well as of several | ||||||
| ribs, he was found to be suffering from internal injuries of such a dangerous nature that his | ||||||
| recovery was considered from the first almost hopeless. Dr. M'Enery, of Sherbourne, with Dr. | ||||||
| Kerr, were unremitting in their attentions, but his Lordship, who lapsed into a comatose state | ||||||
| early on Saturday, gradually sank and expired, as we have said, a little before 10 p.m. that | ||||||
| evening, to the intense grief of the Countess, who was present at the time, as well as a host | ||||||
| of friends throughout Dorsetshire and elsewhere. Deceased, who was only in his 35th year, | ||||||
| leaves a son, George Frederick, who succeeds to the title, and an only daughter.' | ||||||
| Francis George North, styled Lord North, son of the 8th Earl of Guilford (15 June 1902- | ||||||
| 25 August 1940) | ||||||
| Lord North, together with his sister Cynthia, is shown in 'Burke's Peerage' as having been killed | ||||||
| in an accident on 25 August 1940. This accident occurred when he was walking in a prohibited | ||||||
| area - the reason the particular area was prohibited is that it was sown with land-mines as a | ||||||
| defence against a possible German invasion during WWII. | ||||||
| The following report appeared in the 'Manchester Guardian' of 28 August 1940:- | ||||||
| 'Death by misadventure was the verdict recorded at the inquest on Lord North and his sister | ||||||
| Lady Cynthia Williams, killed by a land-mine when walking on Sunday morning. Lady North, who | ||||||
| was with them, was seriously injured. | ||||||
| 'The accident occurred in a prohibited area. A police constable said that on going to the scene | ||||||
| of a loud explosion he saw Lady North stepping over some barbed wire. All she could say was, | ||||||
| "Lord North and Lady Cynthia are down there. Are they all right?" Police and military made a | ||||||
| search of the spot, but all they could find were remnants of clothing which it was known that | ||||||
| Lord North and his sister were wearing at the time, and it was by these that their identity was | ||||||
| established. There was a series of large craters where the mishap occurred. | ||||||
| 'The Coroner said that while some might think that a strong notice of warning should be | ||||||
| exhibited in places of danger any interference with the defences was highly dangerous. The | ||||||
| public should know that they must not go beyond them. | ||||||
| 'From the military evidence it was learned that at least 700 sentries would be wanted to | ||||||
| safeguard the particular area in which the tragedy occurred.' | ||||||
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