Peter Ludlow, 1st Earl Ludlow explained

Honorific-Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Earl Ludlow
Honorific-Suffix:PC
Order1:Comptroller of the Household
Term Start1:1782
Term End1:1784
Monarch1:George III
Primeminister1:The Earl of Shelburne
The Duke of Portland
William Pitt the Younger
Predecessor1:Sir Richard Worsley, Bt
Successor1:The Viscount Galway
Nationality:British
Spouse:Lady Frances Lumley

Peter Ludlow, 1st Earl Ludlow PC (21 April 1730 – 26 October 1803), known as The Lord Ludlow between 1755 and 1760, was a British politician. He served as Comptroller of the Household from 1782 to 1784.

Background

Ludlow was the son of Peter Ludlow and Mary, daughter of John Preston, of Ardsalla, County Meath (of the Viscounts Gormanston). He was the grandson of Stephen Ludlow, who represented several constituencies in the Irish House of Commons, and the great-grandson of Henry Ludlow, brother of the Parliamentarian general Edmund Ludlow.[1]

Political career

In 1755 Ludlow, then aged only 25, was elevated to the Peerage of Ireland as Baron Ludlow, of Ardsalla in the County of Meath. Five years later he was further honoured when he was made Viscount Preston, of Ardsalla in the County of Meath, and Earl Ludlow, both in the Peerage or Ireland. Lord Ludlow remained eligible to stand for election to the House of Commons and in 1768 he was returned for Huntingdonshire, a seat he would hold for the next 28 years.[2] In 1782 he was sworn of the Privy Council and appointed Comptroller of the Household, a post he held until 1784.[1]

Family

Lord Ludlow married Lady Frances, eldest daughter of Thomas Lumley-Saunderson, 3rd Earl of Scarbrough, in 1753. They had two sons and four daughters. They lived at Great Staughton Manor in Huntingdonshire.

He died in October 1803, aged 73, and was succeeded in the earldom by his eldest son, Augustus. Ludlow's second son George, the third Earl, was a General in the British Army.[1]

Notes and References

  1. [William Courthope (officer of arms)|William Courthope]
  2. Possession of an Irish peerage did not automatically confer the holder membership to the British House of Lords, or preclude them from sitting in the British House of Commmons.