Charles Gordon-Lennox, 5th Duke of Richmond explained

Honorific-Prefix:His Grace
The Duke of Richmond
Order1:Postmaster General
Term Start1:11 December 1830
Term End1:5 July 1834
Primeminister1:The Earl Grey
Predecessor1:The Duke of Manchester
Successor1:The Marquess Conyngham
Office2:Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
Term Start2:28 August 1819
Term End2:21 October 1860
Hereditary peerage
Predecessor2:The 4th Duke of Richmond
Successor2:The 6th Duke of Richmond
Office3:Member of Parliament
for Chichester
Term Start3:1812
Term End3:1819
Predecessor3:George White-Thomas
Successor3:Lord John Lennox
Birth Place:Richmond House, Whitehall Gardens, London
Birth Name:Charles Lennox
Death Place:Portland Place, Marylebone, London
Nationality:British
Party:Ultra-Tories
Alma Mater:Trinity College, Dublin
Spouse:Lady Caroline Paget (1796–1874)
Parents:Charles Lennox, 4th Duke of Richmond
Lady Charlotte Gordon

Charles Gordon-Lennox, 5th Duke of Richmond, (né Lennox; 3 August 179121 October 1860), styled the Earl of March from 1806 until 1819, was a British peer, soldier and prominent Conservative politician. Upon the death of his uncle in 1836, he inherited the Gordon estates and per the terms of the bequest, adopted thus additional surname.

Origins

He was born "Charles Lennox", the son and heir of Charles Lennox, 4th Duke of Richmond (1764–1819) by his wife Lady Charlotte Gordon, the eldest child of Alexander Gordon, 4th Duke of Gordon. Until his father's death in 1819 he was styled Earl of March, a courtesy title, being one of his father's subsidiary titles.

Education

He was educated at Westminster School in London and Trinity College, Dublin.[1]

Military career

As Earl of March, he served on Wellington's staff in the Peninsular War, during which time he volunteered to join the 52nd (Oxfordshire) Regiment of Foot's advance storming party on the fortress of Ciudad Rodrigo.[2] He formally joined the 52nd Foot in 1813 and took command of a company of soldiers at the Battle of Orthez in 1814, where he was severely wounded; the musket-ball in his chest was never removed.[2] During the Battle of Waterloo (1815) he was aide-de-camp to the Prince of Orange, and following the latter's wounding, served as aide-de-camp to Wellington.[3] He was chiefly responsible for the institution in 1847 of the Military General Service Medal for all survivors of the campaigns between 1793 and 1814, considered by many belated as hitherto there had only been a Waterloo Medal. He campaigned in Parliament and also enlisted the interest of Queen Victoria.[4] Richmond himself received the medal with eight clasps.[2]

On 19 October 1817, he reformed the Goodwood Troop of Yeomanry Artillery, originally raised by the 3rd Duke in 1797. The unit supported the cavalry of the Sussex Yeomanry but was disbanded in December 1827.[5] Richmond was appointed Colonel of the Royal Sussex Light Infantry Militia on 4 December 1819, and Colonel-in-Chief of its offshoot the Royal Sussex Militia Artillery, on its formation in April 1853.[6]

Political career

Richmond sat as a Member of Parliament for Chichester between 1812 and 1819. The latter year he succeeded his father in the dukedom and entered the House of Lords where he was a vehement opponent of Roman Catholic emancipation, and later was a leader of the opposition to Peel's free trade policy, as he was the president of the Central Agricultural Protection Society, which campaigned for the preservation of the Corn Laws. Although a vigorous Conservative and Ultra-Tory for most of his career, Richmond's anger with Wellington over Catholic Emancipation prompted him to lead the Ultras into joining Earl Grey's reforming Whig government in 1830 (Lang, 1999).

He served under Grey as Postmaster General between 1830 and 1834. He was sworn of the Privy Council in 1830, and in 1831 was appointed to serve on the Government Commission upon Emigration, which was wound up in 1832.[7]

Richmond was Lord Lieutenant of Sussex between 1835 and 1860 and was appointed a Knight of the Garter in 1829.

In 1836, on inheriting the estates of his childless maternal uncle George Gordon, 5th Duke of Gordon, he was required by the terms of the bequest to assume the surname of Gordon before that of Lennox; he duly took the surname Gordon-Lennox for himself and his issue, by royal licence dated 9 August 1836.

Marriage and children

On 10 April 1817 he married Lady Caroline Paget (1797 – March 1874), a daughter of Henry Paget, 1st Marquess of Anglesey by his wife Lady Caroline Villiers, by whom he had five sons and five daughters:

Sons

Daughters

Death and burial

He died at Portland Place, Marylebone, London, in October 1860, aged 69 and was succeeded in the dukedom by his eldest son Charles Gordon-Lennox, 6th Duke of Richmond (1818–1903).

See also

References

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Notes and References

  1. Mosley, Charles (ed.) Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage, 107th edition. (volume 3) Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.A.: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd, 2003. Page 3335.
  2. Moorsom, W.S. Historical Record of the Fifty-Second Regiment (Oxfordshire Light Infantry), London: Richard Bentley, 1860, p. 443
  3. Georgiana, Dowager Lady De Ros. Personal Recollections of the Duke of Wellington, The Regency Library, Complimentary Issue July 2005. Originally published in Murray's Magazine 1889 Part I.
  4. Stanley C. Johnson,A Guide to Naval, Military, Air-force and Civil Medals and Ribbons, 1921, pp 57–60
  5. L. Barlow & R.J. Smith, The Uniforms of the British Yeomanry Force 1794–1914, 1: The Sussex Yeomanry Cavalry, London: Robert Ogilby Trust/Tunbridge Wells: Midas Books, ca 1979,, p. 7.
  6. Hart's Army List, 1855.
  7. Emigration from the United Kingdom. Journal of the Statistical Society of London. 1. 3 . July 1838. 156–157. 10.2307/2337910. 2337910. JSTOR.