Thomas Fairfax, 1st Viscount Fairfax explained

Honorific Prefix:The Right Honourable
The Viscount Fairfax
Honorific Suffix:JP
Office:Member of Parliament for Hedon
Term Start:1621
Term End:1626
Predecessor:Christopher Hilliard
William Sheffield
Alongside:Sir Matthew Boynton, Bt, Christopher Hilliard
Office1:Member of Parliament for Boroughbridge
Term Start1:1601
Term End1:1601
Alongside1:Richard Whaley
Successor1:John Ferne
Sir Henry Jenkins
Birth Name:Thomas Fairfax
Birth Date:1575
Alma Mater:Caius College, Cambridge
Parents:Sir William Fairfax
Jane Stapleton
Spouse:
    Children:11

    Thomas Fairfax, 1st Viscount Fairfax of Emley JP (1575 – 23 December 1636) was an English landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons at various times between 1601 and 1626. He was created Viscount Fairfax in the Peerage of Ireland in 1629. He "erected a mansion on Bishophill (York) early in Elizabeth's reign".

    Early life

    Fairfax was the only son and heir of Sir William Fairfax of Gilling Castle and Walton, Yorkshire, by his second wife Jane Stapleton, daughter and heiress of Brian Stapleton of Burton Joyce. He attended school at Gilling and entered Caius College, Cambridge, in 1590. He succeeded his father to the estates of Gilling and Walton in 1597 and was a sheep farmer and an encloser.

    Career

    In 1600 he was commissioner for musters for the West Riding of Yorkshire. In 1601, he was elected Member of Parliament for Boroughbridge. He was a J.P. for the North Riding of Yorkshire by 1603 and was knighted in April 1603. From July 1603 he was a member of the council in the north, and was vice-president of the council in the north in 1608 and 1616.

    In 1621, he was elected MP for Hedon. He was re-elected MP for Hedon in 1624, 1625, and 1626. From 1627 to 1628, he was High Sheriff of Yorkshire. He was created Viscount Fairfax on 10 January 1629.[1]

    Personal life

    Fairfax married Catherine Constable, daughter of Sir Henry Constable of Burton Constable in 1594 and had six sons and five daughters. She was an open Catholic and was convicted of recusancy at regular intervals from 1599 until her death. She does not appear to have been fined, which may be attributable to Fairfax's friendship with Sir Arthur Ingram, Secretary to the Council of the North, and collector, for a time, of recusancy fines. She also employed Catholic maids and escaped penalty for this; and although it was also an offence, at least two of the sons went abroad to Catholic colleges.[1] Before her death in 1626, they were the parents of at least eleven children, including:[2]

    In 1627, Fairfax remarried to Lady Mary Bamburgh, widow of Sir William Bamburgh, 1st Baronet of Howsham, and daughter of Sir Robert Forth of Butley, Suffolk.[3]

    Fairfax died at Howsham at the age of about 61 and was buried at Scrayingham.[1] His widow died in March 1638/9.

    Descendants

    Through his third son William, he was a grandfather of William Fairfax, 8th Viscount Fairfax (d. 1738), who married Elizabeth Gerard (a daughter of Capt. Gerard), parents of Hon. Alathea Fairfax (wife of Ralph Pigott of Whitton) and Charles Gregory Fairfax, 9th Viscount Fairfax (d. 1772). He married the Hon. Elizabeth Constable, widow of William Constable, 4th Viscount of Dunbar and eldest daughter of Hugh Clifford, 2nd Baron Clifford of Chudleigh, in 1719. On the death of the 9th Viscount Fairfax, the Viscountcy of Fairfax became extinct. After the death of his only surviving child, Hon. Anne Fairfax in 1793, the Gilling Castle estates passed to her first cousin once removed, Charles Gregory Pigott later Fairfax.[2]

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: FAIRFAX, Thomas II (c.1575-1636), of Gilling Castle and Walton, Yorks. . www.historyofparliamentonline.org . . 24 July 2020.
    2. Web site: Fairfax, Viscount (I, 1629 - 1772) . www.cracroftspeerage.co.uk . Heraldic Media Limited . 24 July 2020.
    3. 'Descendants of William Forth' (Pedigree) in V. Fenwick & V. Harrup, Untold Tales from the Suffolk Sandlings (Butley Research Group, Blaxhall 2009), pp. 24-30, at p. 26.