Office: | Member of Parliament for Newcastle-under-Lyme |
Term Start: | 1715 |
Term End: | 1715 |
Predecessor: | William Burslem Rowland Cotton |
Alongside: | Rowland Cotton |
Successor: | Sir Brian Broughton Crewe Offley |
Office1: | Member of Parliament for Staffordshire |
Term Start1: | 1713 |
Term End1: | 1715 |
Predecessor1: | William Ward Charles Bagot |
Alongside1: | Ralph Sneyd |
Successor1: | William Ward Lord Paget |
Birth Date: | April 1686 |
Parents: | George Vernon Catherine Vernon |
Spouse: | |
Children: | George Venables-Vernon, 1st Baron Vernon Anna Lockwood |
Relations: | Sir Thomas Vernon (grandfather) Sir Charles Vernon (uncle) Henry Vernon (cousin) |
Henry Vernon (April 1686 – 25 February 1719), of Sudbury, Derbyshire, was an English landowner and politician.
Vernon was born in April 1686 as the only surviving son of George Vernon (1635–1702), MP for Derby, and his third wife, Catherine Vernon.[1] His father had previously been married to Margaret Oneley (daughter and heiress of Edward Oneley) and Dorothy Shirley (daughter of Sir Robert Shirley, 4th Baronet, of Staunton Harold Hall).[1]
His paternal grandparents were Sir Henry Vernon of Sudbury Hall, Derbyshire and Muriel Vernon (daughter of heiress of Sir George Vernon, Judge of Common Pleas). Eleven generations of Vernons lived at Haslington Hall until his grandmother Muriel married her distant cousin, Sir Henry Vernon and their estates merged. His paternal uncle, Henry Vernon, was MP for Stafford from 1711 to 1715 and his son, Vernon's first cousin, Henry Vernon, was MP for Lichfield and Newcastle-Under-Lyme from 1761 to 1762 who was the father of Henrietta Grosvenor.[2] His maternal grandparents were Ann Weston (daughter of Henry Weston of Ockham, Surrey) and Sir Thomas Vernon, London merchant and MP for City of London,[3] Among his maternal uncles were Thomas Vernon, MP for Whitchurch,[4] and Sir Charles Vernon, MP for Chipping Wycombe and Ripon.[3] His maternal aunt Judith was the wife of Dr. Stephen Waller of Hall Barn and John Aislabie, Chancellor of the Exchequer under George I, in 1713.[5]
Vernon succeeded to his father's estates in 1702. The Vernons of Sudbury acquired Swynnerton and Hilton in Staffordshire, by marriage, in 1557. Vernon's grandfather left Sudbury to his eldest son, George, Vernon's father, and Hilton to his second son, the grandfather of Henry Vernon of Hilton.[3]
He was returned as Member for Staffordshire from 1713 to 1715, and then returned as a Tory in 1715 to Newcastle-under-Lyme, but unseated on petition.[3]
Vernon was married to Anne Pigott (1693–1714), daughter and heiress of Thomas Pigott of Chetwynd by his wife Mary Venables (sister and heiress of Sir Peter Venables of Kinderton, Cheshire). Together, they were the parents of one son and one daughter, including:[3]
After Anne's death in 1714, Vernon married Matilda Wright, a daughter of Thomas Wright of Longstone, Derbyshire.[3]
Vernon died on 25 February 1719 and was succeeded in his estates by his only son, George.[3]