William Montagu, 7th Duke of Manchester explained

Honorific-Prefix:His Grace
The Duke of Manchester
Honorific-Suffix:KP
Birthname:William Drogo Montagu, Lord Kimbolton
Birth Date:15 October 1823
Birth Place:Kimbolton Castle, Huntingdonshire, England
Death Place:Naples, Italy
Nationality:British
Office:Member of Parliament
for Bewdley
Term Start:1848
Term End:1852
Office1:Member of Parliament
for Huntingdonshire
Term Start1:1852
Term End1:1855
Monarch1:Victoria
Party:Conservative

William Drogo Montagu, 7th Duke of Manchester KP (15[1] October 1823 – 22[2] March 1890), known as Lord Kimbolton from 1823 to 1843 and as Viscount Mandeville from 1843 to 1855, was a British peer and Conservative Member of Parliament.

Early life

William Montagu was born at Kimbolton Castle in 1823. He was the eldest son of George Montagu, 6th Duke of Manchester. His mother was Millicent Bernard-Sparrow, daughter of Brig. Gen. Robert Bernard-Sparrow of Brampton Park, Huntingdonshire, and wife the Lady Olivia Acheson (eldest daughter of Arthur Acheson, 1st Earl of Gosford).[3]

Career

He was MP for Bewdley 1848–1852 and Huntingdonshire 1852–1855.

He joined the Canterbury Association on 27 May, 1848. It was Edward Gibbon Wakefield's unfulfilled hope that Lord Mandeville would emigrate to New Zealand and be the aristocratic leader in the colony. However, Lord Mandeville and his grandmother, Lady Olivia Bernard-Sparrow, did buy of land between them in Riccarton. Mandeville North near Kaiapoi is named after Lord Mandeville.

He succeeded to the dukedom on the death of his father in 1855, inheriting the family seat of Kimbolton Castle in Huntingdonshire.

Personal life

He had an illegitimate son with Sarah Maria Morris. When Sarah was eight months pregnant, the Montagu family had her married off to Samuel Palmer on 4 March, 1850. When the child was born on 10 May 1850, he was named William Edward Palmer. William Edward Palmer married Emma Prentice on 24 December 1873, at Harrold, Bedfordshire.

William was married to Countess Luise Friederike Auguste von Alten in Hanover on 22 July 1852. Together, they had five children:[4]

In 1877, he was created a Knight of the Order of St Patrick. He was also the Grand Prior of the Order of Saint John (1861-1888), the last one not to be a member of the Royal House.

He held 27,000 acres with 13,000 of these in Huntingdon and 12,000 in Co Armagh.[5]

He died on 22 March 1890, in Italy at the Hotel Royal, Naples.

Notes and References

  1. Sometimes appears 16.
  2. Sometimes appears 21.
  3. Book: Bain , Rev. Michael . The Canterbury Association (1848–1852): A Study of Its Members' Connections . 2007 . Project Canterbury . Christchurch . 22 September 2012 . 60–61.
  4. Web site: Manchester, Duke of (GB, 1719) . cracroftspeerage.co.uk . Heraldic Media Limited . 5 May 2020.
  5. https://archive.org/details/greatlandownerso00bateuoft/page/297/mode/1up The great landowners of Great Britain and Ireland