Daniel Higford Davall Burr Explained

Daniel Higford Davall Burr
Honorific Suffix:MP JP DL
Birth Name:Daniel Higford Davall Burr
Death Place:Aldermaston, Berkshire
Resting Place:Church of St Mary the Virgin, Aldermaston
Occupation:Member of Parliament
Lord of the Manor of Aldermaston
Term:1849–1885
Predecessor:Daniel Higford Davall Burr
Spouse:Anne-Margaretta Scobell
Children:3
Parents:Daniel Burr and Mary Davis
Relatives:James Davis (maternal grandfather)
Charles Howard, 11th Duke of Norfolk (maternal great-grandfather)

Daniel Higford Davall Burr JP DL (24 March 1811 – 29 November 1885) was a British Member of Parliament and Justice of the Peace.[1]

Biography

Burr was born to Daniel Burr (a lieutenant colonel with the East India Company) and Mary Davis. His maternal grandfather was James Davis. His maternal lineage also included Charles Howard, 11th Duke of Norfolk. He was educated at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford.

On 1 February 1836, Burr's mother died and he inherited the estate of Alvington, Gloucestershire.[2] The following year, he became Conservative Member of Parliament for Hereford, a position he held for four years. He was a member of the Carlton Club.

In 1849, Burr purchased Aldermaston Court, a country estate in Aldermaston, Berkshire, that had been destroyed by fire six years previously.[3] He commissioned Philip Charles Hardwick to build a neoclassical mansion. Burr was an eccentric, and owned monkeys and snakes. His monkey was known to climb the maypole on the village green.[4]

In 1851, Burr became High Sheriff of Berkshire.

Landholdings

In 1883 John Bateman in his digest of the Return of Owners of Land, 1873, The Great Landowners of Great Britain and Ireland, listed Burr's lands as follows:

Personal life

Burr married Anne-Margaretta Scobell, an amateur watercolour artist, on 18 September 1839 at St Marylebone Parish Church.[5] They had four sons – Higford (b. 20 July 1840), Edward (b. 25 September 1842), James Scudamore (b. 15 January 1854). and Arthur Scudamore (b. 21 June 1857).

Burr died on 29 November 1885. The Aldermaston estate was occupied by his son Higford for a short while, before he sold it to Charles Edward Keyser in 1893.

Burr's family's coat of arms included a golden rampant lion, with a crest inscribed with "Ternate" – the Indonesian Maluku Island captured by his father in 1801.[6] The family's motto was versus veras honos – literally "virtue, truth, honour".

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Burke, Bernard. A genealogical and heraldic dictionary of the landed gentry of Great Britain and Ireland. 1. 1858. Harrison. London. 159.
  2. Book: A History of the County of Gloucester. Currie, CRJ . Herbert, NM . 1996. 5. 5–14. Alvington: Bledisloe Hundred, St. Briavels Hundred, The Forest of Dean.
  3. Web site: Aldermaston – A Brief History . https://web.archive.org/web/20160109010321/http://www.aldermaston.co.uk/images/stories/aldermaston_history.pdf . dead . 9 January 2016 . 7 June 2007 . Aldermaston Parish Council . 4 March 2010 .
  4. Book: Timmins, Gordon. Aldermaston: A Village History. Hampshire County Council. Winchester, Hampshire. 2000.
  5. Book: White, William. Notes and Queries. 122. 1910. Oxford University Press. Oxford, Oxfordshire. 350.
  6. Book: Burke, Bernard. The General Armory of England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales: Comprising a Registry of Armorial Bearings from the Earliest to the Present Time. 1864. Harrison. London. 149.