Honorific-Prefix: | The Right Honourable |
The Lord Clinton | |
Order1: | Under-Secretary of State for India |
Term Start1: | 31 July 1867 |
Term End1: | 25 February 1868 |
Monarch1: | Victoria |
Primeminister1: | The Earl of Derby Benjamin Disraeli |
Predecessor1: | Sir James Ferguson, Bt |
Successor1: | M. E. Grant Duff |
Birth Name: | Charles Henry Rolle Trefusis |
Birth Date: | 2 March 1834 |
Birth Place: | Rome, Papal States |
Death Place: | Cairo, Egypt |
Nationality: | British |
Party: | Conservative |
Alma Mater: | Christ Church, Oxford |
Spouse: |
Charles Henry Rolle Hepburn-Stuart-Forbes-Trefusis, 20th Baron Clinton (2 March 1834 – 29 March 1904), styled The Honourable Charles Trefusis between 1832 and 1866, was a British Conservative politician. He served as Under-Secretary of State for India from 1867 to 1868.[1]
Clinton was born in Rome in 1834, the eldest son of the eight children of Charles Trefusis, 19th Baron Clinton, and Lady Elizabeth Georgiana Kerr, daughter of William Kerr, 6th Marquess of Lothian.[2] [3] His father was at the time suffering financial difficulties as the estates inherited from his own father were heavily mortgaged, partly to pay jointures and allowances to other family members. His younger brother was Hon. Mark Rolle (1835–1907) (born Mark George Kerr Trefusis), of Stevenstone, St Giles in the Wood, Devon, High Sheriff of Devon in 1864, a DL of Devon and High Steward of Barnstaple, who due to an inheritance at the age of six from his uncle by marriage, John Rolle, 1st Baron Rolle (1750–1842), acquired a life interest in the largest private estate in Devon, amounting to about 55,000 acres and producing a high annual income. As Mark Rolle died without male progeny, his brother Lord Clinton became (in his issue) his heir, under the terms of the entail created by Lord Rolle. The bulk of his father's Devon estates and the title Baron Clinton had been inherited by marriage from the wealthy Rolle family of Heanton Satchville, Petrockstowe, a junior branch of the even wealthier Rolles of Stevenstone. When the Rolle mansion of Heanton Satchville burnt down, the then Lord Clinton purchased an estate on the opposite side of the valley in the small parish of Huish, and renamed the existing mansion there Heanton Satchville.
Clinton was educated at Eton College. In 1854, he graduated with first-class honours in law and modern history from Christ Church, Oxford.[1]
Clinton was elected to the House of Commons for Devon North in 1857, a seat he held until he succeeded his father in the peerage in 1866 and entered the House of Lords.[1]
In July 1867, he was appointed Under-Secretary of State for India in the Conservative administration of the Earl of Derby. He retained this office also when Benjamin Disraeli became Prime Minister in February 1868. The government fell in December of the same year. Clinton never held political office again but served as a Charity Commissioner from 1874 to 1880. Apart from his political career he was also Lord Lieutenant of Devon between 1887 and 1904.[1] He had served as chairman of the Devon Quarter Sessions, the local government body for Devon, and served as the first Chairman of its replacement, the newly formed Devon County Council from 1889 to 1901.[4]
In later life, Lord Clinton owned estates in England of 18,135 acres, of which 14,431 were in Devon, worth £23,246 per annum, and in Scotland 16,655 acres worth £14,230 per annum. This contrasted with his former meagre annual allowance received from his father at the time of his first marriage of £700 per annum.[5]
Lord Clinton married twice. First, in 1858 at Fasque, near Fettercairn in Scotland, he wed his first cousin Harriet Williamina Hepburn-Forbes (d. 1869), daughter and heiress of Sir John Stuart Hepburn-Forbes, 8th Baronet (d.1867), of Fettercairn and Pitsligo, Scotland. The mothers of each were daughters of William Kerr, Marquess of Lothian, and their families initially opposed the match on the grounds of consanguinity. In 1867, in accordance with his father-in-law's will,[6] he assumed by royal licence the additional surnames and arms of Hepburn-Stuart-Forbes. By Harriet he had five children:[3]
Harriet died in 1869, and in 1875 Lord Clinton remarried, to Margaret Walrond (d.1930),[3] daughter of Sir John Walrond, 1st Baronet, of Bradfield House, Uffculme, Devon. As Lady Clinton, Margaret organised the 'Ladies of Devonshire' wedding gift of pearl earrings to Mary of Teck, the future Queen Mary.[7] By Margaret he had seven further children:[3]
Lord Clinton died of heart failure in Cairo in March 1904, aged 70, where he had gone for health reasons,[1] and was buried at St Andrew's Church, South Huish, which he had rebuilt in memory of his first wife Harriet.[8] He was succeeded in the barony by his eldest son from his first marriage, Charles Hepburn-Stuart-Forbes-Trefusis, 21st Baron Clinton.