Honorific Prefix: | The Right Honourable |
The Lord Vernon | |
Constituency Mp: | Lichfield |
Parliament: | British |
Term Start: | 1731 |
Term End: | 1747 |
Alongside: | Richard Plumer, Sir Rowland Hill, Sir Lister Holte |
Predecessor: | Walter Chetwynd Richard Plumer |
Successor: | Richard Leveson-Gower Thomas Anson |
Constituency Mp1: | Derby |
Parliament1: | British |
Term Start1: | 1754 |
Term End1: | 1762 |
Alongside1: | Lord Frederick Cavendish |
Predecessor1: | Viscount Duncannon Thomas Rivett |
Successor1: | Lord Frederick Cavendish William Fitzherbert |
Birth Name: | George Vernon |
Residence: | Sudbury Hall |
Parents: | Henry Vernon Anne Pigott |
Spouse: | |
Children: | 9 |
George Venables-Vernon, 1st Baron Vernon (9 February 1709 – 2 August 1780), was a British politician.[1]
Vernon was born on 9 February 1709. He was the eldest, and only surviving, son of Henry Vernon, of Sudbury, Derbyshire, MP for Staffordshire and Newcastle-under-Lyme, and his wife Anne Pigott, daughter and heiress of Thomas Pigott of Chetwynd by his wife Mary Venables (sister and heiress of Sir Peter Venables of Kinderton, Cheshire).
His father died in 1719, leaving him Sudbury Hall, and in 1728 he assumed, by royal licence, the additional surname of Venables after he had succeeded to the Cheshire estates on the death of his cousin, Anne Venables-Bertie, Countess of Abingdon (wife of Montagu Venables-Bertie, 2nd Earl of Abingdon), in accordance with the will of his uncle and her father, Sir Peter Venables.
Vernon began in politics as a Tory, but by 1754 was a supporter of Administration. He sat as a Member of Parliament, as an Anti-Walpole Whig, for Lichfield from 1731 to 1747 and for Derby from 1754 to 1762.[2]
In 1762 he was raised to the peerage as Lord Vernon, Baron of Kinderton, in the County of Chester.
He lived at Sudbury Hall, one the country's finest Restoration mansions, which now is a Grade I listed building.[3]
Lord Vernon was married three times and several of his descendants gained distinction. He married firstly the Hon. Mary Howard, daughter of Thomas Howard, 6th Baron Howard of Effingham, in 1733.[1] Together they had a son:[1]
After her death in 1740 he married secondly Ann Lee, daughter of Sir Thomas Lee, 3rd Baronet, of Hartwell, MP for Chipping Wycombe and Buckinghamshire, in 1741. She died shortly thereafter in 1742.[1]
After her death the following year he married, thirdly, Martha Harcourt, daughter of the Hon. Simon Harcourt (a younger son of Simon Harcourt, 1st Viscount Harcourt) and sister to Simon Harcourt, 1st Earl Harcourt, in 1744.[4] Together they had a son:[1]
Lord Vernon died in August 1780, aged 71, and was succeeded in the barony by his son from his first marriage, George. His second son from his third marriage, the Most Reverend the Hon. Edward Harcourt (who assumed the surname of Harcourt) became Archbishop of York and was the grandfather of Sir William Vernon Harcourt and the great-grandfather of Lewis Harcourt, 1st Viscount Harcourt.[1]
The widowed Lady Vernon moved to Grosvenor Square.[6] where she lived until her death in 1794.[1]