The Fletcher-Vane (previously Vane-Fletcher) baronetcy, of Hutton in the Forest in the County of Cumberland, was a title in the Baronetage of Great Britain.[1] It was created on 27 June 1786 for Lionel Vane-Fletcher.[1] His son, the second Baronet, was a Member of Parliament for Winchelsea and Carlisle.[1] He assumed the surname of Fletcher-Vane in lieu of Vane-Fletcher.[1] The fifth Baronet was involved in the Scouting movement.[2] The title became extinct on his death in 1934.[2]
The family estates at Hutton in the Forest passed to William Vane, a distant kinsman of the Fletcher-Vane baronets, who took the surname Fletcher-Vane in 1931 and was created Baron Inglewood in 1964.[3] The surname reflects descent from the Fletcher baronets of Hutton, but Inglewood was not a descendant of the Fletcher family, unlike the Fletcher-Vane baronets who were direct descendants.[1]