George Finch-Hatton, 11th Earl of Winchilsea explained

Birth Name:George James Finch-Hatton
Birth Date:1815 5, df=yes
Other Titles:Earl of Nottingham
Viscount Maidstone
Baron Finch of Daventry
Predecessor:George Finch-Hatton
Successor:Murray Finch-Hatton
Issue:4

George James Finch-Hatton, 11th Earl of Winchilsea and 6th Earl of Nottingham (31 May 1815 – 9 June 1887), styled Viscount Maidstone between 1826 and 1857, was a British peer and Tory politician.

Early life

Winchilsea was born in May 1815 and was the son of George Finch-Hatton, 10th Earl of Winchilsea and 5th Earl of Nottingham (1791–1858) by his first wife Lady Georgiana Charlotte (d. 1835), daughter of James Graham, 3rd Duke of Montrose (1755–1836) and Lady Caroline Montagu, daughter of 4th Duke of Manchester.

Career

Winchilsea was elected as a Member of Parliament (MP) for Northamptonshire North in 1837, a seat he held until 1841. In 1858 he succeeded his father in the earldom and entered the House of Lords.

Estates

In the mid-1860s, Lord Winchilsea experienced serious financial difficulties due to his gambling addiction, which eventually forced him to leave his property at Eastwell Park in Kent. On 4 December 1868, trustees (including his in-law the Duke of Richmond) appointed under the Winchilsea Estate Act (1865) entered into a contract to let Eastwell Park, together with its furnishings and effects, to the Duke of Abercorn for a period of five years. Lord Winchilsea had been obliged to vacate the property some time prior to December 1868,[1] and he was formally adjudged bankrupt on 5 October 1870.[2] Eastwell was next occupied by Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, the second son of Queen Victoria.

Despite his bankruptcy, by 1883, his combined lands and estates generated about £19,000 a year.[3]

Personal life

Lord Winchilsea was married twice. In 1846, he married Lady Constance Henrietta Paget (1823 – 1878), daughter of Henry Paget, 2nd Marquess of Anglesey and Eleanora Campbell, daughter of Lady Charlotte Campbell, who was daughter of John Campbell, 5th Duke of Argyll. Lord Winchilsea and Lady Constance were noted to be one of the handsomest couple of their days.[4] They had one son and three daughters :

On 2 May 1862, Lord and Lady Winchilsea and Lady Florence Paget attended the Banquet at Stafford House (Lancaster House) given by The Duke and Duchess of Sutherland.[7]

After his first wife died in March 1878, he married his wife's first cousin, Lady Elizabeth Georgiana (died 1904), daughter of Francis Conyngham, 2nd Marquess Conyngham and Lady Jane Paget (sister to 2nd Marquess of Anglesey), in 1882. There were no children from this marriage.

His half-brother, Henry, later the 13th Earl of Winchilsea, wrote about him in his diary despite of what happened "I hope he knew how fond of him we all were. But he was always thinking we must hate him. we didn't."[8]

Lord Winchilsea died in June 1887, aged 72. As his only son, George Finch-Hatton, Viscount Maidstone, had predeceased him, he was succeeded in his titles by his half-brother, Murray Finch-Hatton, 12th Earl of Winchilsea. Lady Winchilsea died in February 1904. Lord Winchilsea, his son and his second wife are buried in the cemetery of the now ruined church of St Mary the Virgin at Eastwell Park.

Ancestry

Descendants

Through his daughter, Lady Constance, he was the grandfather of Gordon Howard, 5th Earl of Effingham (1873–1946), who married Rosamond Margaret Hudson and later, Madeleine Foshay, and Capt. Hon. Algernon George Mowbray Frederick Howard (1874–1950). Through his grandson, the 5th Earl of Effingham, he was the great-grandfather of Mowbray Howard, 6th Earl of Effingham (1905–1996), Hon. John Algernon Frederick Charles Howard (1907–1970), and Hon. Nicholas Howard (1919–2016).

References

Notes

Sources

Notes and References

  1. The Duke of Richmond and Another v. Calisher. In The Times, Wednesday 2 February 1870, p. 11.
  2. Court of Bankruptcy. In Re The Earl Of Winchilsea. In The Times, Thursday 6 October 1870, p. 11.
  3. Web site: Archives . The National . The Discovery Service . 2023-10-17 . discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk . en-GB.
  4. Book: Fashions of To-day . 1892 . Sampson Low, Marston . en.
  5. News: Viscount Maidstone. The Cornishman. 31. 13 February 1879. 6.
  6. Web site: The Correspondence of James McNeill Whistler :: Biography . 2024-05-09 . www.whistler.arts.gla.ac.uk.
  7. News: 3 May 1862 . Saint James's Chronicle . 4.
  8. Book: Wheeler, Sara . Too close to the sun : the audacious life and times of Denys Finch Hatton . 2009 . New York : Random House Trade Paperbacks . Internet Archive . 978-0-8129-6892-7.