BARONETAGE
Last updated 25/10/2018 (22 Mar 2024)
Date Type Order Name Born Died Age
Dates in italics in the "Born" column indicate that the baronet was baptised on that date; dates in italics in the "Died" column indicate that the baronet was buried on that date.
COX of Dunmanway, Cork
21 Nov 1706 I 1 Richard Cox
Lord Chancellor [I] 1703‑1707; Chief Justice [I] 1711‑1714
25 Mar 1650 3 May 1733 83
3 May 1733 2 Richard Cox
MP [I] for Clonakilty 1727‑1766
23 Nov 1702 2 Feb 1766 63
2 Feb 1766 3 Michael Cox c 1730 18 Jul 1772
18 Jul 1772 4 Richard Eyre Cox
For information on the death of this baronet, see the note at the foot of this page
c 1765 6 Sep 1783
6 Sep 1783 5 Richard Cox 6 Jun 1769 Sep 1786 17
Sep 1786 6 John Cox 4 Apr 1771 23 Dec 1832 61
23 Dec 1832 7 George Matthias Cox 24 Feb 1777 28 Jun 1838 61
28 Jun 1838 8 Richard Cox 7 May 1846
7 May 1846 9 Francis Cox 23 Jul 1769 6 Mar 1856 86
6 Mar 1856 10 Ralph Hawtrey Cox 1808 12 Apr 1872 63
12 Apr 1872 11 Michael Cox 1810 15 Jun 1872 61
15 Jun 1872
to    
17 Oct 1873
12 Francis Hawtrey Cox
Extinct on his death
For further information regarding subsequent assumptions of this title and an attempt to claim the title in 1915, see the note at the foot of this page
c 1816 17 Oct 1873
COX of Old Windsor, Berks
22 Jan 1921
to    
27 Mar 1922
UK 1 Reginald Henry Cox
Extinct on his death
c 1864 27 Mar 1922
COXEN of Seal, Kent
29 Jan 1941
to    
7 Apr 1946
UK 1 Sir William George Coxen
Extinct on his death
23 Mar 1867 7 Apr 1946 79
CRADOCK-HARTOPP of Freathby, Leics
12 May 1796 GB 1 Edmund Cradock-Hartopp
MP for Leicestershire 1798‑1806
21 Apr 1749 10 Jun 1833 84
10 Jun 1833 2 Edmund Cradock-Hartopp 17 May 1788 3 Apr 1849 60
3 Apr 1849 3 William Edmund Cradock-Hartopp 2 Dec 1794 16 Oct 1864 69
16 Oct 1864 4 John William Cradock-Hartopp 1829 25 May 1888 58
25 May 1888 5 Charles Edward Cradock-Hartopp 1858 20 Feb 1929 70
20 Feb 1929 6 Charles William Everard Cradock‑Hartopp 4 Sep 1893 14 Mar 1930 36
14 Mar 1930 7 Frederick Cradock-Hartopp 11 Jul 1869 26 Feb 1937 67
26 Feb 1937 8 George Francis Fleetwood Cradock‑Hartopp 20 Jul 1870 5 Sep 1949 79
5 Sep 1949 9 John Edmund Cradock-Hartopp 8 Apr 1912 7 Aug 1996 84
7 Aug 1996
to    
8 Jun 2000
10 Kenneth Alston Cradock-Hartopp
Extinct on his death
26 Feb 1918 8 Jun 2000 82
CRAIG of Carmichael, Scotland
30 Sep 1831 UK See "Gibson-Craig"
CRAIG of Craigavon, co. Down
5 Feb 1918 UK 1 James Craig
He was subsequently created Viscount Craigavon in 1927 with which title the baronetcy remains merged
8 Jan 1871 24 Nov 1940 69
CRAIG of Alsager, Cheshire
1 Jul 1927
to    
9 Apr 1933
UK 1 Ernest Craig
MP for Crewe 1912‑1918 and 1924‑1929
Extinct on his death
7 Aug 1859 9 Apr 1933 73
CRAIK of Kennoway, Fife
27 Jan 1926 UK 1 Sir Henry Craik
MP for Glasgow & Aberdeen Universities 1906‑1918 and Scottish Universities 1918‑1922; PC 1918
18 Oct 1846 16 Mar 1927 80
16 Mar 1927 2 George Lillie Craik 10 Oct 1874 9 Jul 1929 54
9 Jul 1929
to    
26 Mar 1955
3 Henry Duffield Craik
Governor of the Punjab 1938‑1941
Extinct on his death
2 Jan 1876 26 Mar 1955 79
CRAMPTON of Merrion Square, Dublin
14 Mar 1839 UK 1 Philip Crampton 7 Jun 1779 10 Jun 1858 79
10 Jun 1858
to    
5 Dec 1886
2 John Fiennes Twisleton Crampton
Extinct on his death
12 Aug 1805 5 Dec 1886 81
CRANE of Chilton, Suffolk
11 May 1627
to    
17 Feb 1643
E 1 Robert Crane
MP for Sudbury 1614, 1624‑1625, 1628‑1629, 1640 and 1640‑1643, and Suffolk 1621‑1622 and 1626
Extinct on his death
17 Feb 1643
CRANE of Woodrising, Norfolk
20 Mar 1643
to    
Mar 1645
E 1 Richard Crane
Extinct on his death
Mar 1645
CRAUFURD of Kilbirney, Ayr
8 Jun 1781 GB 1 Alexander Craufurd c 1729 15 Dec 1797
15 Dec 1797 2 James Craufurd (Gregan-Craufurd from 1812) 11 Oct 1761 9 Jul 1839 77
9 Jul 1839 3 George William Craufurd 10 Apr 1797 24 Feb 1881 83
24 Feb 1881 4 Charles William Frederick Craufurd
For further information on this baronet, see the noteat the foot of this page
28 Mar 1847 24 Sep 1939 92
24 Sep 1939 5 George Standish Gage Craufurd 19 Nov 1872 6 Jan 1957 84
6 Jan 1957 6 Quentin Charles Alexander Craufurd 11 Feb 1875 8 May 1957 82
8 May 1957 7 Alexander John Fortescue Craufurd 22 Mar 1876 10 Jul 1966 90
10 Jul 1966 8 James Gregan Craufurd 23 Feb 1886 7 Apr 1970 84
7 Apr 1970 9 Robert James Craufurd 18 Mar 1937
CRAVEN of Spersholt, Berks
4 Jun 1661
to    
c May 1713
E 1 Anthony Craven
Extinct on his death
5 Mar 1626 c May 1713 87
CRAVEN
21 Jan 1942 UK 1 Sir Charles Worthington Craven 10 May 1884 18 Nov 1944 60
18 Nov 1944
to    
3 Feb 1946
2 Derek Worthington Clunes Craven
Extinct on his death
For further information, see the note at the foot of this page
6 Jun 1910 3 Feb 1946 35
CRAWFORD of Kilbirney, Ayr
14 May 1628
to    
1662
NS 1 John Crawford
On his death the baronetcy became dormant
1662
19 Jul 1765 2 Hew Crawford
Title recognized 1765
1 Jul 1794
1 Jul 1794 3 Robert Crawford (Crawford-Pollok from 1820) 1762 7 Aug 1845 83
7 Aug 1845 4 Hew Crawford-Pollok 1794 5 Mar 1867 72
5 Mar 1867
to    
14 Dec 1885
5 Hew Crawford-Pollok
On his death the baronetcy again became dormant
For further information on this baronet, see the note at the foot of this page
1843 14 Dec 1885 42
CRAWLEY-BOEVEY of Highgrove, Gloucs
22 Jan 1784 GB 1 Charles Barrow
MP for Gloucester 1751‑1789
1707 10 Jan 1789 81
10 Jan 1789 2 Thomas Crawley-Boevey 14 Feb 1744 11 Aug 1818 74
11 Aug 1818 3 Thomas Crawley-Boevey 28 Nov 1769 10 Jan 1847 77
10 Jan 1847 4 Martin Hyde Crawley-Boevey 25 May 1812 14 Oct 1862 50
14 Oct 1862 5 Thomas Hyde Crawley-Boevey 2 Jul 1837 15 Mar 1912 74
15 Mar 1912 6 Francis Hyde Crawley-Boevey 25 Apr 1868 6 Oct 1928 60
6 Oct 1928 7 Launcelot Valentine Hyde Crawley‑Boevey 26 Apr 1900 4 Jul 1968 68
4 Jul 1968 8 Thomas Michael Blake Crawley-Boevey 29 Sep 1928 9 Mar 2021 92
9 Mar 2021 9 Thomas Hyde Crawley-Boevey 26 Jun 1958
CRESPIGNY of Champion Lodge, Surrey
31 Oct 1805 UK See "Champion de Crespigny"
CREWE of Calke Abbey, Derby
8 Sep 1626 E See "Harpur-Crewe"
CRISP of Bungay, Suffolk
5 Feb 1913 UK 1 Frank Crisp 25 Oct 1843 29 Apr 1919 75
29 Apr 1919 2 Frank Morris Crisp 13 Mar 1872 5 Apr 1938 66
5 Apr 1938 3 John Wilson Crisp 28 May 1873 11 Oct 1950 77
11 Oct 1950 4 John Peter Crisp 19 May 1925 20 Mar 2005 79
20 Mar 2005 5 John Charles Crisp 10 Dec 1955
CRISPE of Hammersmith, Middlesex
14 Apr 1665 E 1 Nicholas Crispe
MP for Winchelsea 1640‑1641 and 1661‑1666
c 1598 26 Feb 1666
26 Feb 1666 2 Nicholas Crispe c 1643 Nov 1698
Nov 1698 3 John Crispe c 1676 18 Jan 1728
18 Jan 1728 4 Nicholas Crispe c 1718 1 Jun 1730
1 Jun 1730
to    
9 Jul 1740
5 Charles Crispe
Extinct on his death
c 1680 9 Jul 1740
CRITCHETT of Harley Street, London
28 Nov 1908 UK 1 George Anderson Critchett 18 Dec 1845 9 Feb 1925 79
9 Feb 1925 2 George Montague Critchett 7 Jun 1884 30 May 1941 56
30 May 1941 3 Ian George Lorraine Critchett 9 Dec 1920 19 Jun 2004 83
19 Jun 2004 4 Charles George Montague Critchett 2 Apr 1965
CROFT of Croft Castle, Hereford
18 Nov 1671 E 1 Herbert Croft
MP for Herefordshire 1679 and 1690‑1698
c 1652 3 Nov 1720
3 Nov 1720 2 Archer Croft
MP for Leominster 1722‑1727, Winchelsea 1728 and Bere Alston 1728‑1734
3 Mar 1683 10 Dec 1753 70
10 Dec 1753 3 Archer Croft 1731 30 Nov 1792
30 Nov 1792 4 John Croft c 1735 4 Dec 1797
4 Dec 1797 5 Herbert Croft 1 Nov 1751 25 Apr 1816 64
25 Apr 1816 6 Richard Croft
For information on the death of this baronet, see the note at the foot of this page
9 Jan 1762 13 Feb 1818 56
13 Feb 1818 7 Thomas Elmsley Croft 2 Sep 1798 20 Oct 1835 37
20 Oct 1835 8 Archer Denman Croft 7 Dec 1801 10 Jan 1865 63
10 Jan 1865 9 Herbert George Denman Croft
MP for Herefordshire 1868‑1874
25 Jul 1838 11 Feb 1902 63
11 Feb 1902 10 Herbert Archer Croft 5 Sep 1868 11 Aug 1915 46
11 Aug 1915 11 James Herbert Croft 24 May 1907 15 Aug 1941 34
15 Aug 1941 12 Hugh Matthew Fiennes Croft 10 May 1874 15 Jun 1954 80
15 Jun 1954 13 Bernard Hugh Denman Croft 24 Aug 1903 Feb 1984 80
Feb 1984 14 Owen Glendower Croft 26 Apr 1932
CROFT of Cowling Hall, Yorks
17 Dec 1818 UK 1 John Croft c 1778 5 Feb 1862
5 Feb 1862 2 John Frederick Croft 31 Aug 1828 24 May 1904 75
24 May 1904 3 Frederick Leigh Croft 14 Feb 1860 31 Mar 1930 70
31 Mar 1930 4 John William Graham Croft 30 May 1910 2 Feb 1979 68
2 Feb 1979 5 John Archibald Radcliffe Croft 27 Mar 1910 16 Nov 1990 80
16 Nov 1990 6 Thomas Stephen Hutton Croft 12 Jun 1959
CROFT of Knowle, Hants
28 Feb 1924 UK 1 Henry Page Croft
He was subsequently created Baron Croft in 1940 with which title the baronetcy remains merged, although as at 30/06/2012 the baronetcy does not appear on the Official Roll of the Baronetage
22 Jun 1881 7 Dec 1947 66
CROFTON of the Mote, Roscommon
1 Jul 1661 I 1 Edward Crofton 1624 1675 51
1675 2 Edward Crofton
MP [I] for Boyle 1695‑1699 and Roscommon County 1703‑1730
c 1662 24 Nov 1729
24 Nov 1729 3 Edward Crofton
MP [I] for Roscommon Borough 1713‑1739; PC [I] 1733
25 May 1687 11 Nov 1739 52
11 Nov 1739 4 Edward Crofton
MP [I] for Roscommon County 1735‑1745
12 Apr 1713 26 Mar 1745 31
26 Mar 1745
to    
9 Nov 1780
5 Oliver Crofton
Extinct on his death
1710 9 Nov 1780 70
CROFTON of the Mote, Roscommon
12 Jun 1758 I 1 Marcus Lowther-Crofton c 1716 16 Jan 1784
16 Jan 1784 2 Edward Crofton
MP [I] for Roscommon County 1775‑1797
11 Oct 1748 30 Sep 1797 48
30 Sep 1797 3 Edward Crofton
For information on the death of this baronet, see the note at the foot of this page
23 Oct 1778 8 Jan 1816 37
8 Jan 1816 4 Edward Crofton
He subsequently succeeded to the Barony of Crofton in 1817 with which title the baronetcy remains merged
1 Aug 1806 27 Dec 1869 63
CROFTON of Mohill Castle, co. Leitrim
10 Aug 1801 UK 1 Morgan Crofton 25 Mar 1733 12 Feb 1802 68
12 Feb 1802 2 Hugh Crofton
MP [I] for Tulsk 1786‑1790
17 Jul 1763 6 Jan 1834 70
6 Jan 1834 3 Morgan George Crofton 21 Dec 1788 24 Jun 1867 78
24 Jun 1867 4 Morgan George Crofton 5 Apr 1850 26 Feb 1900 49
26 Feb 1900 5 Hugh Denis Crofton 11 Nov 1878 4 Feb 1902 23
4 Feb 1902 6 Morgan George Crofton 27 Nov 1879 9 Dec 1958 79
9 Dec 1958 7 Patrick Simon Crofton 2 Dec 1936 15 May 1987 50
15 May 1987 8 Hugh Denis Crofton 10 Apr 1937 26 May 2016 79
26 May 2016 9 Edward Morgan Crofton 26 Jul 1945
CROFTON of Longford House, Sligo
18 Aug 1838 UK 1 James Crofton 8 Aug 1776 1849 72
1849 2 Malby Crofton 21 Dec 1797 15 Dec 1872 74
15 Dec 1872 3 Malby Crofton 20 Aug 1857 17 Sep 1926 69
17 Sep 1926 4 Malby Richard Henry Crofton 18 Sep 1881 21 Jan 1962 80
21 Jan 1962 5 Malby Sturges Crofton 11 Jan 1923 20 Jan 2002 79
20 Jan 2002 6 Henry Edward Melville Crofton 15 Aug 1931 24 Jun 2003 71
24 Jun 2003 7 Julian Malby Crofton 6 Nov 1958 14 Jul 2018 59
14 Jul 2018 8 William Robert Malby Crofton 5 Jan 1996
CROFTS of Stow, Suffolk
16 Mar 1661
to    
Dec 1664
E 1 John Crofts
Extinct on his death
1635 Dec 1664 29
CROKE of Chilton, Bucks
c 1642 E 1 John Croke
For further information on this baronet, see the note at the foot of this page
c 1610 14 Mar 1679
Mar 1679
to    
16 Jan 1728
2 Dodsworth Croke
Extinct on his death
c 1644 16 Jan 1728
CROMIE of Stacombrie
3 Aug 1776 I 1 Michael Cromie
MP [I] for Ballyshannon 1776‑1797
c 1744 14 May 1824
14 May 1824
to    
27 Mar 1841
2 William Lambart Cromie
Extinct on his death
c 1780 27 Mar 1841
CROMPTON of Wood End, Yorks
18 Aug 1838
to    
27 Dec 1848
UK 1 Samuel Crompton
MP for East Retford 1818‑1826, Derby 1826‑1830 and Thirsk 1834‑1841
Extinct on his death
8 Jul 1785 27 Dec 1848 63
CROOKE of Baltimore, Cork
19 Apr 1624 I 1 Thomas Crooke c 1584 1630
1630
to    
c Mar 1666
2 Samuel Crooke
Extinct on his death
c Mar 1666
CROPLEY of Clerkenwell, Middlesex
7 May 1661 E 1 John Cropley 5 Nov 1676
Nov 1676
to    
22 Oct 1713
2 John Cropley
MP for Shaftesbury 1701‑1710
Extinct on his death
15 Jul 1663 22 Oct 1713 50
CROSBIE of Maryborough, Queen's Co.
24 Apr 1630 NS 1 Walter Crosbie 4 Aug 1638
4 Aug 1638 2 John Crosbie c 1695
c 1695 3 Warren Crosbie 30 Jan 1759
30 Jan 1759 4 Paul Crosbie Nov 1773
Nov 1773 5 Edward William Crosbie
For further information on this baronet, see the note at the foot of this page
5 Jun 1798
5 Jun 1798 6 William Crosbie 18 May 1794 3 Oct 1860 66
3 Oct 1860 7 William Richard Crosbie 30 Sep 1820 6 May 1877 56
6 May 1877
to    
30 Dec 1936
8 William Edward Douglas Crosbie
Extinct on his death
13 Oct 1855 30 Dec 1936 81
CROSFIELD of Highgate, London
24 Jun 1915
to    
22 Sep 1938
UK 1 Arthur Henry Crosfield
MP for Warrington 1906‑1910
Extinct on his death
For further information on this baronet, see the note at the foot of this page
5 Apr 1865 22 Sep 1938 73
CROSS of Marchbankwood, Dumfries
5 Jul 1912 UK 1 Alexander Cross
MP for Camlachie 1892‑1910
4 Nov 1847 13 Feb 1914 66
13 Feb 1914 2 William Coats Cross 28 May 1877 5 Dec 1947 70
5 Dec 1947
to    
12 May 1963
3 Alexander Cross
Extinct on his death
4 Apr 1880 12 May 1963 83
CROSS of Bolton-le-Moors, Lancs
15 Aug 1941
to    
3 Jun 1968
UK 1 Ronald Hibbert Cross
MP for Rossendale 1931‑1945 and Ormskirk 1950‑1951; Minister of Economic Warfare 1939‑1941; Minister of Shipping 1940‑1941; Governor of Tasmania 1951‑1958; PC 1940
Extinct on his death
9 May 1896 3 Jun 1968 72
CROSSE of Westminster, London
13 Jul 1713 GB 1 Thomas Crosse
MP for Westminster 1701, 1702‑1705 and 1710‑1722
29 Nov 1664 27 May 1738 73
27 May 1738
to    
12 Mar 1762
2 John Crosse
MP for Wootton Bassett 1727‑1734, Lostwithiel 1736‑1747 and Westminster 1754‑1761
Extinct on his death
c 1700 12 Mar 1762
CROSSLEY of Belle Vue, Yorks and Somerleyton, Suffolk
23 Jan 1863 UK 1 Francis Crossley
MP for Halifax 1852‑1859, Yorkshire West Riding 1859‑1865 and Yorkshire West Riding North 1865‑1872
26 Oct 1817 5 Jan 1872 54
5 Jan 1872 2 Savile Brinton Crossley
He was subsequently created Baron Somerleyton in 1916 with which title the baronetcy remains merged
14 Jun 1857 25 Feb 1935 77
CROSSLEY of Glenfield, Cheshire
16 Nov 1909 UK 1 William John Crossley
MP for Altrincham 1906‑1911
22 Apr 1844 12 Oct 1911 67
12 Oct 1911 2 Kenneth Irwin Crossley 17 Feb 1877 22 Nov 1957 80
22 Nov 1957 3 Christopher John Crossley 25 Sep 1931 10 Jul 1989 57
10 Jul 1989 4 Nicholas John Crossley 10 Dec 1962 13 Apr 2000 37
13 Apr 2000 5 Julian Charles Crossley 11 Dec 1964 5 Dec 2003 38
5 Dec 2003 6 Sloan Nicholas Crossley 20 Mar 1958
CROWE of Llanherne, Carmarthen
8 Jul 1627 E 1 Sackville Crowe
MP for Hastings 1625 and Bramber 1628‑1629
1683
1683
to    
21 Jun 1706
2 Sackville Crowe
Extinct on his death
c 1637 21 Jun 1706
CRYMES of Peckham, Surrey
c 1654 E 1 George Crymes 10 Feb 1605 16 Oct 1657 52
Oct 1657 2 Thomas Crymes 10 May 1638 by 1694
by 1694 3 Thomas Crymes c 1664 after 1709
after 1709 4 George Crymes c 1745
c 1745
to    
c 1770
5 Edmund Crymes
Presumed to have become extinct on his death
c 1770
CUFFE of Leyrath, Kilkenny
30 Dec 1800 I See "Wheeler-Cuffe"
CULLEN of East Sheen, Surrey
17 Jun 1661 E 1 Abraham Cullen
MP for Evesham 1661‑1668
c 1624 28 Aug 1668
28 Aug 1668 2 John Cullen 22 Oct 1652 1677 24
1677 3 Rushout Cullen
MP for Cambridgeshire 1697‑1710
Extinct on his death
12 Aug 1661 15 Oct 1730 69
CULLUM of Hastede, Suffolk
18 Jun 1660 E 1 Thomas Cullum c 1587 6 Apr 1664
6 Apr 1664 2 Thomas Cullum 26 Dec 1628 16 Oct 1680 51
16 Oct 1680 3 Dudley Cullum
MP for Suffolk 1702‑1705
17 Sep 1657 16 Sep 1720 62
16 Sep 1720 4 Jasper Cullum 6 Aug 1674 4 Nov 1754 80
4 Nov 1754 5 John Cullum 7 May 1699 16 Jan 1774 74
16 Jan 1774 6 John Cullum 21 Jun 1733 9 Oct 1785 52
9 Oct 1785 7 Thomas Gery Cullum 30 Nov 1741 8 Sep 1831 89
8 Sep 1831
to    
26 Jan 1855
8 Thomas Gery Cullum
Extinct on his death
23 Oct 1777 26 Jan 1855 77
CULME-SEYMOUR of High Mount, co. Cork and Friery Park, Devon
31 May 1809 UK 1 Michael Seymour 8 Nov 1768 9 Jul 1834 65
9 Jul 1834 2 John Hobart Seymour (Culme-Seymour from 6 May 1842) 24 Mar 1800 17 Sep 1880 80
17 Sep 1880 3 Michael Culme-Seymour
For further information on this baronet, and more particularly his daughters, see the note at the foot of this page
13 Mar 1836 11 Oct 1920 84
11 Oct 1920 4 Michael Culme-Seymour 29 Aug 1867 2 Apr 1925 57
2 Apr 1925 5 Michael Culme-Seymour 26 Apr 1909 13 Oct 1999 90
13 Oct 1999 6 Michael Patrick Culme-Seymour 28 Apr 1962
CUMMING of Culter, Scotland
28 Feb 1695 NS 1 Alexander Cumming
MP for Aberdeenshire 1709‑1722
c 1670 7 Feb 1725
7 Feb 1725 2 Alexander Cumming 1690 23 Aug 1775 85
23 Aug 1775
to    
c 1793
3 Alexander Cumming
On his death the baronetcy became either extinct or dormant
c 1737 c 1793
CUMMING-GORDON of Altyre, Elgin
21 May 1804 UK See "Gordon-Cumming"
CUNARD of Bush Hill, Middlesex
9 Mar 1859 UK 1 Samuel Cunard
For further information on this baronet, see the note at the foot of this page
21 Nov 1787 28 Apr 1865 77
28 Apr 1865 2 Edward Cunard 1 Jan 1816 6 Apr 1869 53
6 Apr 1869 3 Bache Edward Cunard
For further information on this baronet's wife, see the note at the foot of this page
15 May 1851 3 Nov 1925 74
3 Nov 1925 4 Gordon Cunard 22 May 1857 25 Apr 1933 75
25 Apr 1933 5 Edward Cunard 25 Nov 1891 2 Jul 1962 70
2 Jul 1962 6 Henry Palmes Cunard 12 Sep 1909 16 Jun 1973 63
16 Jun 1973
to    
17 Jan 1989
7 Guy Alick Cunard
Extinct on his death
2 Sep 1911 17 Jan 1989 77
CUNINGHAME of Corsehill, Ayr
26 Feb 1672 NS See "Montgomery-Cuninghame"
CUNINGHAME-FAIRLIE of Robertland, Ayr
25 Nov 1630 NS See "Fairlie-Cuninghame"
CUNLIFFE of Liverpool, Lancs
26 Mar 1759 GB 1 Ellis Cunliffe
For details of the special remainder included in this creation, see the note at the foot of this page
MP for Liverpool 1755‑1767
12 Apr 1717 16 Oct 1767 50
16 Oct 1767 2 Robert Cunliffe 17 Mar 1719 1778 59
1778 3 Foster Cunliffe 8 Feb 1755 15 Jun 1834 79
15 Jun 1834 4 Robert Henry Cunliffe 22 Apr 1785 10 Sep 1859 74
10 Sep 1859 5 Robert Alfred Cunliffe
MP for Flint Boroughs 1872‑1874 and Denbigh 1880‑1885
17 Jan 1839 18 Jun 1905 66
18 Jun 1905 6 Foster Hugh Egerton Cunliffe 17 Aug 1875 19 Jul 1916 40
19 Jul 1916 7 Robert Neville Henry Cunliffe 8 Feb 1884 1 May 1949 65
1 May 1949 8 Cyril Henley Cunliffe 3 Mar 1901 12 Feb 1969 67
12 Feb 1969 9 David Ellis Cunliffe 29 Oct 1957
CUNLIFFE-OWEN of Bray, Berks
2 Feb 1920 UK 1 Hugo Cunliffe-Owen 16 Aug 1870 14 Dec 1947 77
14 Dec 1947 2 Dudley Herbert Cunliffe-Owen 27 Mar 1923 17 Jul 1983 60
17 Jul 1983 3 Hugo Dudley Cunliffe-Owen 16 May 1966
CUNNINGHAM of Cunninghamhead, Ayr
4 Jul 1627 NS 1 William Cunningham 24 Nov 1601 Jun 1640 38
Jun 1640 2 William Cunningham 1670
1670
to    
Oct 1722
3 William Cunningham
On his death the baronetcy became dormant
c 1665 Oct 1722
CUNNINGHAM of Auchinhervie, Ayr
23 Dec 1633
to    
Feb 1659
NS 1 David Cunningham
He was also created a baronet of England 21 Jan 1642 - see entry below.
On his death the creation of 1633 became dormant and the creation of 1642 became extinct
7 Feb 1659
CUNNINGHAM of London
21 Jan 1642
to    
Feb 1659
E 1 Sir David Cunningham, 1st baronet
He had previously been created a baronet of Nova Scotia 23 Dec 1633 - see entry above.
On his death the creation of 1633 became dormant and the creation of 1642 became extinct
7 Feb 1659
CUNNINGHAM of Lambrughton, Ayr
19 Dec 1669 NS See "Dick-Cunyngham"
CUNNINGHAM of Auchinhervie, Ayr
3 Aug 1673 NS 1 Robert Cunningham Feb 1674
Feb 1674
to    
c Aug 1674
2 Robert Cunningham
Extinct on his death
7 Aug 1662 c Aug 1674 12
CUNNINGHAM of Hyndhope, Selkirk
7 Jul 1942 UK 1 Andrew Browne Cunningham
He was subsequently created Baron Cunningham of Hyndhope then Viscount Cunningham of Hyndhope with which title the baronetcy then merged until its extinction in 1963
7 Jan 1883 12 Jun 1963 80
CUNNINGHAM of Crookedstone, Killead
22 Nov 1963
to    
29 Jul 1976
UK 1 Samuel Knox Cunningham
MP for Antrim South 1955‑1970
Extinct on his death
3 Apr 1909 29 Jul 1976 67
CUNYNGHAME of Milncraig, Ayr
3 Feb 1702 NS 1 David Cunynghame 28 Jan 1708
28 Jan 1708 2 James Cunynghame
MP for Linlithgowshire 1715‑1722
c 1685 1 Feb 1747
1 Feb 1747 3 David Cunynghame 1 Aug 1700 10 Oct 1767 67
10 Oct 1767 4 William Augustus Cunynghame
MP for Linlithgowshire 1774‑1790
19 Apr 1747 17 Jan 1828 80
17 Jan 1828 5 David Cunynghame 14 Aug 1769 19 May 1854 84
19 May 1854 6 David Thurlow Cunynghame 16 Sep 1803 12 Nov 1869 66
12 Nov 1869 7 Edward Augustus Cunynghame Jan 1839 24 Jan 1877 38
24 Jan 1877 8 Francis Thurlow Cunynghame 11 Aug 1808 27 Oct 1877 69
27 Oct 1877 9 Francis George Thurlow Cunynghame 19 Apr 1835 12 Nov 1900 65
12 Nov 1900 10 Percy Cunynghame 21 Feb 1867 7 Jan 1941 73
7 Jan 1941 11 Henry David St. Leger Brooke Selwyn Cunynghame 7 Feb 1905 6 Aug 1978 73
6 Aug 1978 12 Andrew David Francis Cunynghame 25 Dec 1942
CURLL of Soberton, Hants
20 Jun 1678
to    
c 1679
E 1 Walter Curll
Extinct on his death
c 1679
CURRE of Itton Court, Monmouth
24 Jan 1928
to    
26 Jan 1930
UK 1 William Edward Carne Curre
Extinct on his death
26 Jun 1855 26 Jan 1930 74
CURRIE of Wickham Bishops, Essex
11 Jan 1847 UK 1 Frederick Currie 3 Feb 1799 11 Sep 1875 76
11 Sep 1875 2 Frederick Larkins Currie 18 Apr 1823 13 Nov 1900 77
13 Nov 1900 3 Frederick Reeve Currie 13 May 1851 27 Feb 1930 78
27 Feb 1930 4 Walter Louis Rackham Currie 16 Mar 1856 5 Feb 1941 84
5 Feb 1941 5 Walter Mordaunt Cyril Currie 3 Jun 1894 30 Jul 1978 84
30 Jul 1978 6 Alick Bradley Currie 8 Jun 1904 26 Jan 1987 82
26 Jan 1987 7 Donald Scott Currie 16 Jan 1930 9 Feb 2014 84
9 Feb 2014 8 Bradley Mark Higgins Currie 15 Jun 1983
CURSON of Water Perry, Oxon
30 Apr 1661 E 1 Thomas Curson 3 Apr 1611 25 Jan 1682 70
Jan 1682 2 John Curson c 1657 17 Dec 1727
17 Dec 1727 3 Francis Curson c 1678 29 May 1750
29 May 1750
to    
25 Feb 1765
4 Peter Curson
Extinct on his death
31 Jul 1687 25 Feb 1765 77
CURTIS of Gatcombe, Hants
10 Sep 1794 GB 1 Roger Curtis 14 Nov 1816
14 Nov 1816 2 Lucius Curtis 3 Jun 1786 14 Jan 1869 82
14 Jan 1869 3 Arthur Colin Curtis
For further information on this baronet, see the note at the foot of this page
1858 Jun 1898 39
Jun 1898
to    
7 Jan 1954
4 Roger Colin Molyneux Curtis
Extinct on his death
12 Sep 1886 7 Jan 1954 67
CURTIS of Cullands Grove, Middlesex
23 Dec 1802 UK 1 William Curtis
MP for London 1790‑1818 and 1820‑1826, Bletchingley 1819‑1820 and Hastings 1826
25 Jan 1752 18 Jan 1829 76
18 Jan 1829 2 William Curtis 2 Mar 1782 16 Mar 1847 65
16 Mar 1847 3 William Curtis 26 Aug 1804 7 Nov 1870 66
7 Nov 1870 4 William Michael Curtis 11 Nov 1859 19 Dec 1916 57
19 Dec 1916 5 Edgar Francis Egerton Curtis
For information on his death, see the note at the foot of this page
18 Dec 1875 9 Aug 1943 67
9 Aug 1943 6 Peter Curtis 9 Apr 1907 28 Sep 1976 69
28 Sep 1976 7 William Peter Curtis 9 Apr 1935 25 Apr 2014 79
25 Apr 2014 8 Edward Philip Curtis 25 Jun 1940
CURTIUS of Sweden
2 Apr 1652 E 1 William Curtius 12 Aug 1599 23 Jan 1678 78
23 Jan 1678 2 Charles William Curtius 26 Dec 1654 1733 78
1733 3 Herman Charles August Adolf Curtius 22 Apr 1699 18 Aug 1753 54
18 Aug 1753
to    
15 Jan 1823
4 Wilhelm Adam Curtius
Extinct on his death
21 Jul 1742 15 Jan 1823 80
CURWEN of Workington, Cumberland
12 Mar 1627
to    
15 Dec 1664
E 1 Patricius Curwen
MP for Cumberland 1625‑1626, 1628‑1629, 1640‑1644 and 1661‑1664
Extinct on his death
c 1602 15 Dec 1664
CURZON of Kedleston, Derby
18 Jun 1636
11 Aug 1641
NS
E
1
1
John Curzon c 1599 13 Dec 1686
13 Dec 1686 2 Nathaniel Curzon c 1640 4 Mar 1719
4 Mar 1719 3 John Curzon
MP for Derbyshire 1701‑1727
c 1674 7 Aug 1727
7 Aug 1727 4 Nathaniel Curzon
MP for Derby 1713‑1715, Clitheroe 1722‑1727 and Derbyshire 1727‑1754
c 1676 18 Nov 1758
18 Nov 1758 5 Nathaniel Curzon
He was subsequently created Baron Scarsdale in 1761 with which title the baronetcies then merged, although, as at 30/06/2012, the baronetcies do not appear on the Official Roll of the Baronetage
19 Jan 1727 5 Dec 1804 77
CUSACK-SMITH of Tuam, King's Co.
28 Aug 1799 I 1 Michael Smith
PC [I] 1801
7 Sep 1740 17 Dec 1808 68
17 Dec 1808 2 William Cusack-Smith
Solicitor General [I] 1800‑1801
23 Jan 1766 21 Aug 1836 70
21 Aug 1836 3 Michael Cusac-Smith 21 Dec 1793 16 May 1859 65
16 May 1859 4 William Cusack-Smith 1822 15 Apr 1919 96
15 Apr 1919 5 Berry Cusack-Smith 16 Feb 1859 7 Jul 1929 70
7 Jul 1929
to    
10 Apr 1970
6 William Robert Dermot Joshua Cusack‑Smith
Extinct on his death
6 Dec 1907 10 Apr 1970 62
CUST of Stamford, Lincs
29 Sep 1677 E 1 Richard Cust
MP for Lincolnshire 1653 and 1679‑1681
23 Jun 1622 30 Aug 1700 78
30 Aug 1700 2 Richard Cust 30 Oct 1680 25 Jul 1734 53
25 Jul 1734 3 John Cust
MP for Grantham 1743‑1770; Speaker of the House of Commons 1761‑1768 and 1768‑1770; PC 1762
29 Aug 1718 24 Jan 1770 51
24 Jan 1770 4 Brownlow Cust
He was subsequently created Baron Brownlow in 1776 with which title the baronetcies then merged
3 Dec 1744 25 Dec 1807 63
CUST of Leasowe Castle, Cheshire
26 Feb 1876 UK 1 Edward Cust
MP for Grantham 1818‑1826 and Lostwithiel 1826‑1832
17 Mar 1794 14 Jan 1878 83
14 Jan 1878 2 Leopold Cust 22 Jul 1831 3 Mar 1878 46
3 Mar 1878
to    
19 Jan 1931
3 Charles Leopold Cust
Extinct on his death
27 Feb 1864 19 Jan 1931 66
CUTLER of London
12 Nov 1660
to    
15 Apr 1693
E 1 John Cutler
MP for Taunton 1679‑1680 and Bodmin 1689‑1693
Extinct on his death
c 1607 15 Apr 1693
CUTTS of Childerley, Cambs
21 Jun 1660
to    
1670
E 1 John Cutts
Extinct on his death
c 1634 1670
CUYLER of St John Lodge, Herts
29 Oct 1814 UK 1 Cornelius Cuyler 1741 8 Mar 1819 77
8 Mar 1819 2 Charles Cuyler 29 Jan 1794 23 Jul 1862 68
23 Jul 1862 3 Charles Henry Johnes Cuyler 22 Jan 1826 17 Aug 1885 59
17 Aug 1885 4 Charles Cuyler 15 Aug 1867 1 Oct 1919 52
1 Oct 1919
to    
30 Apr 1947
5 George Hallifax Cuyler
Extinct on his death
23 Apr 1876 30 Apr 1947 71
 

Sir Richard Eyre Cox, 4th baronet
From The Morning Herald and Daily Advertiser of 10 September 1783:-
The following melancholy accident happened lately in the West of Ireland. As Sir Richard Cox, Bart., with some of his friends, was pleasuring on a large pond, near his mansion-house, at Donmanway, he held a wager that he would row 'round it in a short time; upon which he took the oar from one of his men, and began to row; but he had not gone far before the oar broke, which occasioned his being thrown under the boat, and he was drowned before any assistance could be given him. The deceased was within a month of being of age, and is succeeded in title and estate by the eldest son of the late worthy Col. Michael Cox, of the guards, now Sir Richard, a very promising youth about sixteen years of age.
The baronetcy of Cox of Dunmanway, Cork
The later history of this baronetcy (from 1838 onwards) is quite obscure. In not one instance did the baronetcy descend to an eldest son, and in only two instances (the 3rd and 4th baronets) did it descend to a son at all. In all other cases, the baronetcy descended to brothers or cousins. Even on the death of the 12th baronet in 1873, there is a degree of uncertainty, since, according to The Complete Baronetage it was sometimes said that, on the death of the 12th baronet, he was succeeded by a brother named William Saurin Cox, who died shortly thereafter.
After the death of the 12th baronet in 1873, the baronetcy was assumed by two parties - one, named Edmund Cox, claimed descent from a younger son of the 1st baronet, and the other, John Hamilton Cox, was the son of General William Cox, who features prominently in the note below. After John Hamilton Cox's death in 1887, his son, John Hawtrey Reginald Cox, assumed the title, and it is with his attempts to prove his right to it that this note is concerned.
The following (edited) article appeared in The Weekly Irish Times on 13 March 1915:-
The Privy Council on Baronetcies on Monday heard the petition of Major John Hawtrey Reginald Cox, of the 13th Middlesex Regiment, claiming to be the rightful heir to the baronetcy of Cox …
Major Cox … said he believed he was the rightful heir to the dignity, and that he had taken the necessary steps to bring his petition. In November, 1912, he presented script to the Ulster King-of-Arms, who in turn had placed it before the Home Secretary, praying that the title and degree of baronet under the style of Cox of Dunmanway in the Irish baronetcy, might be declared to belong to him, and that his name might be placed on the official roll of baronets. The petition had been referred to the Privy Council on September 21st of last year.
The Baronetcy of Cox … was created by Letters Patent, the petitioner went on, dated November 21, 1706, in the person of Sir Richard Cox, Kt., Lord High Chancellor of Ireland, to hold the same to him and the heirs male of the body of Richard Cox, the eldest son of the first Baronet, until the year 1838, when the elder line of the first Baronet became extinct upon the death, without issue, of Sir George Matthias Cox, the seventh Baronet. Upon the failure of the elder line the baronetcy descended in error, the petitioner submitted, upon the heirs male of the Most Rev. Michael Cox, Archbishop of Cashel, and was enjoyed after a break of some years, in which the title remained dormant, by Richard Cox, of Castletown, a great grandson of Michael Cox, and successively by Richard's uncle, Francis, and his three cousins, Ralph, Michael and Francis Hawtrey Cox, until the year 1873.
Upon the death of Francis Hawtrey [Cox], the claimant's father, Major-General John Cox, C.B., a first cousin of Francis, claimed the dignity. The petitioner's present claim to the title rested on the fact that he claimed to be the great grandson of John Cox … and that claim was admitted by the Ulster King-of-Arms. He (the petitioner) further claimed that John Cox was a son of Richard Cox, the eldest son of Sir Richard Cox, the first baronet, by Elinor Cox, otherwise Jeffreys, his third wife, and that, therefore, the dignity should have descended to John's eldest son, Thomas, in 1838, and subsequently his brother, General William Cox, in 1853, and afterwards to William's son, Major-General John Cox, C.B. in 1857, instead of to the descendants of the Most Rev. Michael Cox, Archbishop of Cashel.
General William Cox never claimed the title, as was pointed out in a memorandum to the petitioner by the Attorney-General of Ireland and Ulster King-at-Arms, but the General allowed in the first instance, not Ralph Hawtrey Cox, but Richard Cox, of Csstletown, to assume the dignity as the eighth baronet, as he was the son of the General's guardian and "greatest friend", who had brought him up at Castletown and put him in the Rifle Brigade. In fact, General William owed everything to Richard's father, Michael. Richard was the holder of the property and all the family papers, and even if William were in the country (he was in 1838 in Canada and did not return until 1843, and Richard did not take up the title until that year) was Richard, the petitioner asked, waiting to be sure that William had no intention of claiming the title before he did so?
In these circumstances it would have been more than extraordinary if William had put forward a claim to the dignity. Richard never produced to the Ulster Office evidence that he was the rightful heir to the dignity. The contention that the dignity should have descended to William, and not to Richard, was strongly supported. The petitioner's father. Major-General John Cox, C.B., was never given any information by his father, William, even when asked on his death, as to the title of his father, and consequently the petitioner's father made no objection to Dr. Michael or Captain Francis Hawtrey, his first cousins, assuming the title.
The article continues at length, mainly discussing the legitimacy of William Cox and the inability of the petitioner to discover the marriage certificate of William Cox's parents, who were allegedly married at a date prior to the existence of the marriage register at their alleged place of marriage. In the end, all of the petitioner's arguments were in vain, since the Court announced that their lordships "would humbly advise His Majesty that the name of the petitioner ought not to be entered on the official roll of the baronetcies."
Sir Charles William Frederick Craufurd, 4th baronet
Sir Charles found himself in court following an argument in a boot-maker's shop. The following account is taken from The Illustrated Police News of 24 April 1886:-
At the Mansion House, the other day, George Rawlings and G.W. Thake, assistants in the shop of Mr. J. Hand, bootmaker, Cheapside, were summoned for assaulting Sir Charles William Crauford, Bart., of Warwick-square, on March 23rd. Mr. Besley was for the complainant and Mr. St. John Wontner for the defence. After an ineffectual attempt to settle the case out of court, Sir Charles Crauford stated that he left a pair of boots on March 15th at the shop for the purpose of having them repaired. They were to be ready for him when he called again on the Monday or Tuesday following. On going there as arranged the defendants were extremely rude to him, but he took no notice, and as the boots were not finished he called again on March 23rd. Rawlings then wrapped up the boots in paper, said the repairs came to 6s 6d., and handed them across the counter to him. He (Sir Charles) observed, "You have kept me waiting for my boots, and I will keep you waiting for your money." Rawlings said, "No you won't," or words to that effect, and as he was moving away to the door the two defendants set upon him, dragged him down, and tried to get the boots from him. In the struggle some glass was broken, but not wilfully, by him. A policeman was sent for, and on his arrival witness placed himself under his protection, told him who he was, and gave him his card, saying that he was rightly in possession of his own boots, that he acknowledged the debt, and would pay, but wished to leave. At the door a small errand boy was preventing his departure, and on his placing his hand gently upon his shoulder for the purpose of putting him aside, Rawlings came at him again, put his arms round his neck, and, being assisted by Thake, dragged him back into the shop, where he was pulled down, and lost his boots. In cross-examination, Sir Charles said that he did not throw the defendants down. He told the policeman he was a magistrate and knew what he was doing. He was greatly irritated, and believed that he struck Thake with him umbrella. He lost his temper certainly for a moment or so. He could not account for the balustrade or the glass being broken. His hat was knocked off twice in the struggle. The constable did not interfere. The boots had been worn down very low and an insulting remark was made about them when he first called. By Mr. Besley: He purchased the boots for cash at the shop, and that was why he wished to have them repaired at the same place. Sir A[ndrew] Lusk said it was a rubbishy case, all about a pair of old boots, and sooner than having his time occupied in hearing such a case he would pay the 6s 6d himself. Mr. Wontner intimated that the case would occupy some hours. Sir Andrew: A week, I should say. The complainant said he should place himself in the hands of the court. Mr. Wontner stated that he would advise Mr. Hand not to proceed further, if possible. Sir Andrew said that Sir Charles was wrong in trying to leave the shop without paying for the boots. Mr. Besley observed that his client was very angry at the treatment he received, and that was why he did not pay. Ultimately the further hearing was adjourned for a month, the magustrate expressing a hope that he should hear no more about it.
Sir Derek Worthington Clunes Craven, 2nd and last baronet
From The Times of 4 February 1946:-
Sir Derek Craven, 2nd Bt., died in hospital in London yesterday without having gained full consciousness after the injuries he received in a motor accident at Acton on Friday [1 Feb].
Born on June 6, 1910, Derek Worthington Craven was the only son of Commander Sir Charles Craven, Bt, R.N., managing director of Vickers-Armstrong's, Limited, whom he succeeded in November, 1944. Sir Derek Craven was a director of Gresham, Craven and Heatly (Holdings) Limited, Gresham and Craven (India), Limited and the Abbey Sand Company, Limited. Lady Craven, who was also injured in the accident, is progressing favourably.
An inquest into Sir Derek's death was held on 14 February 1946 and was reported in The Times on the following day:-
A verdict of accidental death was returned at the adjourned inquest yesterday on the body of Sir Derek Craven, 35, of Balfour Mews, London, W., who was fatally injured when the car he was driving came into collision with a van at Acton. Mr. H.G. Broadhead, the West Middlesex Coroner, said that Sir Derek Craven misjudged his distance and his speed as he was going between a Canadian army lorry and the commercial van.
At the time of the accident, Lady Craven was well advanced in pregnancy, and subsequently gave birth to a daughter on 16 March 1946. Because this baby was a daughter, the baronetcy became extinct on the death of Sir Derek.
Sir Hew Crawford-Pollok, 5th baronet
On 30 May 1867, the following brief notice appeared in The Chicago Tribune, apparently reprinted from the Scottish American Journal:-
Some time ago the death of Sir Hew Crawford Pollok was announced, and it was stated that his son, the heir, had gone away of his own accord, and could not be heard of by his relatives. Mr. Crawford (now Sir Hugh) sailed from Liverpool to New York by the Inman line of steamers, in the fall of 1865, and it is now supposed that he is travelling incognitoin the United States. Without any apparent reason he has kept his whereabouts secret from his family and friends: and if this paragraph should meet his eye it is hoped that it will stimulate him to look after his interests. He is heir to Pollok Castle and £5,000 a year.
The campaign to find the missing heir was successful, as can be seen from this report which appeared in The Chicago Tribune of 4 October 1867, reprinted from The New York Herald:-
A romantic little incident has just come to my knowledge. The facts as given to me are as follows: Two years ago Hugh Crawford Pollok, a young gentleman then about twenty years old, suddenly disappeared from his home in Scotland, much to the dismay of his relatives and acquaintances. It subsequently became known that he had come to this country with five hundred pounds in his pocket. He sported about New York and other cities until his funds commenced to run short, when, in a fit of desperation, he enlisted in the Fifth United States Cavalry as a private soldier, and in this humble capacity struggled against hardships, and deprivations to which he had been wholly unused. In the meantime his father died some four months ago, leaving Hugh heir to a baronetcy and a snug little income of £5,000 per annum, or about $25,000 in gold. The young baronet was duly sought for, and, after an expenditure of $800 in advertisements, it was ascertained that he was stationed at Camp Verde, Texas, discharging the duties of a farrier. Colonel William S. Hillyer, of New York, who became interested in the case, induced Sir Frederick Bruce [the senior British diplomat in Washington at that time] to procure the discharge of Pollok, which was promptly acceded to by General Grant. The young Sir Hugh Crawford Pollok has, therefore, been telegraphed for, and has given up the occupation of shoer and curer of horses to enter upon a Scotch baronetcy and 5,000 pounds a year. Such is life.
After his return to Scotland, the young baronet managed to appear in the newspapers for other, less savoury, reasons. In 1878, he was successfully sued by his former housemaid for damages for alleged seduction and breach of promise of marriage, the baronet having fathered a son by her. On 31 July 1882, his home, Pollok Castle, was burnt to the ground. Finally, when he died suddenly, aged only 42, in 1885, the jury at the subsequent inquest found that his death was due to excessive drinking.
Sir Richard Croft, 6th baronet
Sir Richard committed suicide in February 1818. He was the male midwife to Princess Charlotte of Wales, only legitimate daughter of George, Prince of Wales (later King George IV). Princess Charlotte had married, 2 May 1816, Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (later King Leopold I of Belgium). When Charlotte became pregnant, Sir Richard Croft was chosen to be one of her attendants. She gave birth to a still-born son on 5 November 1817, but she bled to death early the next morning. Had she survived, she would have become Queen of England on the death of King George IV in 1830. Croft was distraught at this outcome, and killed himself a few months later.
The following report appeared in The Hull Packet of 17 February 1818:-
On Friday it was made known that Sir Richard Croft, the celebrated accoucheur, had died suddenly at the house of a Lady in Wimpole-street, (Mrs. Thackeray), whom he was attending in child-bed. The circumstance produced no ordinary sensation, as it was known that ever since the fatal termination of the accouchement of the amiable Princess Charlotte, Sir Richard has laboured under the most severe mental affliction. The unfortunate circumstance preyed upon [his] mind, and his friends have long observed symptoms of uneasiness that alarmed them, and which, probably, prepared them for the event that has happened. Various rumours were circulated on Friday, and among others his name was implicated in a most delicate affair that has occupied the attention of the highest circles for some days past, and to which we cannot give the smallest credit. The utmost industry was also used to suppress all knowledge of the manner of Sir Richard's death. The news reporters were prevented from access to the inquest; and by this exclusion, we can only state the circumstances as communicated to us by a witness. The inquest was taken at the house, No. 86, Wimpole-street, before Thomas Stirling, Esq., and a Jury of neighbours.
Sir Richard had been called in to attend the accouchement of Mrs. Thackeray, the wife of the Rev. Dr. Thackeray, of No. 86, Wimpole-street, Cavendish-square, on Sunday se'nnight. The lady's labour was tedious, and on Thursday morning her situation became so critical, that Sir Richard wished to have further medical advice and assistance. Another gentleman having been called in, it was their opinion that the result would prove fatal. This desperate aspect of the case was observed to have thrown Sir Richard into great agitation.
An apartment in the floor above that occupied by Mrs. Thackeray was appointed for the residence of Sir Richard. In this chamber there were two pistols belonging to Dr. Thackeray, hanging within the reach of Dr. Croft. Sir Richard retired to bed about half-past twelve o'clock on Thursday morning: about one o'clock Dr. Thackeray heard a noise, apparently proceeding from the room occupied by Dr. Croft, and sent a female servant to ascertain the cause; she returned, saying she found the Doctor in bed, and conceived him to be asleep. A short time after, a similar noise was heard, and the servant was again sent. She rapped on the door, but received no answer. This circumstance created alarm, in consequence of which the door of his apartment was broken open. Here a shocking spectacle presented itself. The body of Sir Richard Croft was lying on the bed, shockingly mangled; his arms extended over his breast, and a pistol in each hand. One of the pistols had been loaded with slugs, the other with ball. Both were discharged, and the head of the unfortunate gentleman was literally blown to atoms.
Doctors Latham and Baillie, and Mr. Finch, proved that the deceased had, since the death of the Princess Charlotte, laboured under mental distress. He had repeatedly been heard to say, that "this lamentable circumstance weighed heavily upon his mind, and he should never get over it."
Mr. Finch said that he was well aware that the deceased was labouring under a derangement of intellect for a considerable time past; and he should not have reposed trust in him on any occasion since the lamented catastrophe alluded to.
The Jury, which was summoned at eight o'clock, having heard the whole of the evidence adduced, retired about ten, after the Coroner (Mr. Stirling) had summed up the evidence with suitable comments. About eleven o'clock the Jury returned the following verdict:- "The deceased destroyed himself while in a fit of temporary derangement."
Mrs. Thackeray, we are happy to state, was safely delivered about eight o'clock on Friday morning … the lady was kept ignorant of the fatal event, and is in a fair way of doing well.
Sir Edward Crofton, 3rd baronet
Sir Edward committed suicide in January 1816. His death was reported in The [London] Morning Post of 12 January 1816:-
Suicide of Sir Edward Crofton. This shocking occurrence, it appears, took place on the 8th inst. at the Baronet's seat, at Moate, in the county of Roscommon. The annexed account of the circumstances is copied from 'The Dublin Chronicle' of the 8th:-
"We announce this melancholy intelligence with sentiments of sincere regret. The frequent recurrence of this unnatural enormity is calculated to excite the most lively apprehension for the security of our nationally characteristic morality.
"The circumstances of this fatal calamity were truly horrible. The unfortunate gentleman walked out on the day before yesterday, to a plantation not far distant from his house, discharged a case of pistols at his head, one from each hand. Having failed in the immediate accomplishment of his purpose, he discharged a small pocket pistol also at his head. He lived for a short time, and then expired in great agony.
"It is some consolation to the friends of this unfortunate gentleman, to know that his mind was for some time past apparently deranged. This derangement was attributed by some to pecuniary embarrassment, by others to some circumstances connected with an affair of honour in which he had been recently concerned."
Further information on the 'affair of honour' can be found in the following report which appeared in Jackson's Oxford Journal on 27 January 1816:-
Sir Edward had but a few days returned to his family seat from England, where he had been for some months with his Lady (the sister of the Earl of Galloway) on a visit to his family, after an absence of nine years. He remained but a few days at Dublin, as Lady Charlotte was far advanced in her pregnancy, and he must have arrived at Moate about New Year's Day. What the unhappy combination of circumstances which could have wound up the mind of a Gentleman circumstanced as he was, to the pitch of phrenzy which drove him to so desperate a purpose, it is difficult to conjecture. He was a man of gentle, affable, and cheerful disposition; in the prime of life, elegant and manly in person, the husband of an amiable and accomplished Lady, and the father of eight children, whom he loved with the tenderest affection, and was left bitterly to deplore his loss. His fate is imputed to the influence of derangement, and an affair of honour in which he was lately concerned. His zeal to maintain with firmness and moderation his authority as a Magistrate, in supporting the laws and protecting the oppressed, had some time since involved him in a dispute with a Major Browne; but that dispute Sir Edward had resolved to terminate by the arbitration of the law, rather than the desperate alternative of a duel, justly considering that a Gentleman is not personally responsible to the code of honour, as it is called, for acts temperately done in the exercise of his bounden duty as a public Magistrate. By his spirit and exertions, three persons, the dependants and proteges of Major Browne, were brought to trial at the last Quarter Sessions of the county of Roscommon, for a wanton and atrocious assault upon some poor country people peacably returning from a fair at Ballinaford, a village in the neighbourhood; and those persons were sentenced to three months imprisonment. Sir Edward was obliged to go armed for his defence to the Quarter Sessions. Some attempts were made to force him to a duel, which he very properly declined; which cause, and an indictment against Major Browne himself, awaited trial at the next Spring Assizes, as Sir Edward was determined to set an example to the Magistrates, and to try the question, whether a Magistrate in the proper exercise of his duty, was to rely on the protection of the law, or be responsible to any defaulter who may think fit, on the score of gentlemanhood, to set himself above the law, and deter a Magistrate from taking cognizance of his misconduct, or to take such other steps as may seem consistent with strict justice. What, if any influence, the circumstances connected with this affair may have had in the mind of Sir Edward, in producing the lamentable catastrophe his family has now to deplore, it is impossible to pronounce. But in him society has lost one of the worthiest members, his country and honour and an ornament, and the poor of his country a zealous protector, and warm friend.
Sir John Croke, 1st baronet
Sir John was a central figure in a conspiracy against one Robert Hawkins, in which Hawkins was falsely accused of theft. The story of this conspiracy is told in The Newgate Calendar.
The Subject of a foul Conspiracy on the Part of Henry Larrimore and Sir John Croke that failed at Aylesbury Assizes, 11th of March, 1669. A foul conspiracy against the life of a clerk in holy orders was laid bare at the assizes at Aylesbury on 11th of March, 1669, when Robert Hawkins, clerk of Chilton, was indicted with breaking into the dwelling-house of Henry Larrimore and stealing his gold rings and other articles. Larrimore deposed that on Friday, 18th of September, 1668, between twelve and one o'clock at noon, he locked up his doors and went into a hemp-plat, about two furlongs from his house, with all his family, to pull hemp. Coming home an hour and a half before sunset he found his doors open, and ran upstairs to a loft over the chamber where he lay, and, looking through the chinks of the boards, there he saw the prisoner rifling a box, in which, among other goods, was a white holland apron and a purse, in which were two gold rings of the value of ten shillings each, two ten-shilling pieces of gold, and nineteen shillings in silver. The prisoner hearing some noise, the deponent saw him glance by the stair-foot door, and so run out of his house, down the yard, with a great bunch of keys; and the deponent saw the prisoner hide himself in a close where there were some beans and weeds. The next day he procured a warrant from Sir Richard Piggot to search for his rings and money, and with the constable of the place, and some others, he went to search the prisoner's house, who refusing to open his doors, the constable broke them open, and in a basket filled with paper, rags and other trumpery he found one of the rings, and a five-shilling piece of silver, which he positively swore were the same which he had seen the prisoner the day before take out of his purse.
HAWKINS: Why did not Larrimore, when he saw his doors open, which he expected to have found locked, call some of his neighbours to assist in searching the house and securing me, or whoever the person it was that he found robbing him? To this Larrimore answered he did not then well consider what he did. HAWKINS: If he saw me commit the robbery in his house, why then did he search other houses for the goods he saw me steal? LARRIMORE: I had been robbed at several other times.
HAWKINS: How came he not to charge me positively with the felony before Sir Richard Piggot, of whom he had the warrant, if he had been sure I robbed him? To this Larrimore made no direct answer. Henry Larrimore, the son, and Joan Beamsley gave evidence as to seeing Hawkins run from the house, where upon Lord Chief Baron Hales said: "Here is evidence enough to hang twenty men." HAWKINS: I doubt not but to clear myself, notwithstanding this evidence. Pray, Sir Richard Piggot, when Larrimore came for the warrant to search, did he not say he suspected several persons of robbing him of them, and that I was but one of the suspected persons? Sir Richard Piggot, being upon the bench, acknowledged this to be true.
HAWKINS: And yet Larrimore swears he saw me steal them out of his house on the 18th of September, an hour and a half before sunset, which I desire the Court and the jury would take notice of. John Chilton was called, and said that Mr Hawkins brought him a pair of boots to put new legs to them, and that he told the prisoner he would lay them in his shop window, and he might take them as he came by, for he should be abroad; which accordingly the prisoner did, and paid him for doing them, at Sir John Croke's; but that when the prisoner came to demand his tithes, and sued for them, then this Larrimore, Mr Dodsworth Croke, Richard Maine the constable, and others, came to the deponent and plagued him night and day to charge the prisoner with felony for stealing the boots; and they would have forced him to fetch a warrant to search for them, and threatened, in case he would not, that Sir John Croke would indict him at the assizes, as accessory to the stealing his own goods; and Larrimore said he would make him swear that Mr Hawkins had stolen his boots, and subpoenaed him to the assizes for that purpose. LARRIMORE: My Lord, this fellow is hired by Mr Hawkins to swear this. CHILTON: I am not hired to swear by Mr Hawkins; but Thomas Croxton told me last Monday, if I would swear Mr Hawkins stole my boots, he would bear me out against Mr Hawkins as far as one hundred pounds would go; and if that would not do, as far as five hundred pounds would go; and if I doubted it, he would give me a bond to make good his promise. HAWKINS: My Lord, this is an easy way for the fanatics to pay their tithes. If they can but hang up the clergy, they may cease their pleas for liberty of conscience. I desire the Court and the jury will observe that this Chilton is one of Larrimore's witnesses, and yet he swears that Croxton and others used their utmost endeavours to persuade him to charge me with felony. Mr Hawkins added that Larrimore was a notorious Anabaptist, and an enemy to the Church of England, and ministry in general, but particularly to himself, he having sued him for tithes, and indicted him for not coming to church or baptizing his children; that Larrimore's malice had sufficiently appeared before this, by dissuading those who owed him money from paying him, and persuading others, whom he owed money to, to arrest him; by dissuading those he had sued for tithes from agreing with him, and telling them Sir John Croke would force him to run his country, etc. And if the jury doubted of any of these particulars, he was ready to prove them. Proceeding in his defence, he said it was very unlikely he should commit a robbery in his own parish in the daytime, where everybody that saw him must needs know him; and that if he had been conscious of his guilt he had twenty-four hours time to have made his escape; and it was strange he could find no other place to conceal this ring and five-shilling piece but in a little basket that hung up upon a pin; and that if Larrimore had seen him rob him, it was strange he did not tell his neighbours of it, or take any care to secure him till the next day; nor did he declare it to Sir Richard Piggot, from whom he fetched the warrant to search, as might appear by the contents of it. Hereupon my Lord Chief Baron ordered the constable to produce the warrant; and it being delivered to my Lord, he observed that it bore a date before the robbery was committed. Turning to Larrimore he said: "Thou art very cunning, to be provided with a warrant a day before you were robbed. It seems you knew upon the 17th day that you should be robbed on the 18th, and that this person now at the bar should rob you. But, Mr&nsbp;Hawkins, if you were innocent of this robbery, why did you refuse to open your doors and let your house be searched?" HAWKINS: Most of those persons present were my inveterate enemies. As for Sir John Croke and Larrimore, they had often threatened to pull down my house, and hired people to make a forcible entry upon it; particularly they Jaires to get down the chimney and open my doors when we were all abroad; they had also contracted with one Tyler for the same purpose. Besides, they had an execution against me which Larrimore's son had a few days before executed in part, and he was then present; and, my Lord, I offered at the same time that Mr Sanders, the other constable, who lived but next door, might search as narrowly as he pleased. These statements having been corroborated, the Lord Chief Baron said the business appeared very foul; and looking towards Sir John Croke asked if that were the Sir John Croke concerned in that business. HAWKINS: I doubt not to make appear to the world that Sir John is deeply concerned in this conspiracy. Mr Brown was called, and said that Sir John Croke and this Larrimore had threatened that if he came down to this assizes to testify what he had heard of this conspiracy they would ruin him and his family, and for that reason he dare not speak; but the Court promising him protection, he gave this evidence: Being entrusted by Sir John Lentall as keeper to Sir John Croke, who is a prisoner in the King's Bench, on Wednesday, the 16th of September last, as I was in bed at Sir John Croke's house in Chilton, I heard a great noise, and fearing they were contriving Sir John Croke's escape, I started out of bed in my shirt and stood at the dining-room door behind the hangings, and there I heard this Larrimore tell Sir John Croke that he had undone him by causing him to contend with the parson; for that he had entered him in most of the courts of England, and summoned him into the Crown Office and Chancery, and he could not maintain so many suits. Sir John replied: "Is that all? Come, brother Larrimore, be contented; we will have one trick more for Hawkins yet, which shall do his work." Larrimore answered: "You have put me upon too many tricks already -- more than I can manage -- and the parson is too hard for us still." Sir John replied: "If thou wilt but act, I will hatch enough to hang Hawkins. Cannot thou convey some gold or silver into his house, and have a warrant ready to search his house? -- and then our work is done"; and, says he: "Do you but go to Sir John Piggot and inform him you have lost your money and goods, and desire his warrant to search for them; and take Dick Maine the constable, who is one of us, and will do what we desire him, and search the house, and when you find these things, charge him with flat felony, and force him before me, and I will send him to jail without bail, and we will hang him at the next assizes." On the Sunday morning I went to the ale-house, where they had kept Mr Hawkins all night, and saw them carrying him to jail. I said to Sir John, when I came home. "They have carried the poor parson to jail," and he answered, "Let him go, and the devil go with him, and more shall follow after. Have I not often told you," says he, "if my brother Larrimore and I laid our heads together, nobody could stand against us?" And I replied: "Yes, Sir John, I have often heard you say so, but never believed it till now." THE LORD CHIEF BARON: Is all this true, which you have related? BROWN: Yes, my Lord; and there sits Sir John Croke (pointing at him), who knows that every word I have said is true. Soon after Sir John Croke stole off the bench, without taking leave of the Chief Baron. LARRIMORE: My Lord, what I have sworn as to Mr Hawkins is true. THE LORD CHIEF BARON: Larrimore, thou art a very villian; nay, I think thou art a devil. Gentlemen, where is this Sir John Croke?
It was answered he was gone. THE LORD CHIEF BARON: Gentlemen, I must acquaint you Sir John Croke sent me this morning two sugar loaves, to excuse his absence yesterday, but I sent them back again I did not then so well know what he meant by them as I do now. Surely Sir John does not think the King's justices will take bribes. Somebody may have used his name (here the Chief Baron showed Sir John's letter). Is this his hand?
Some of the justices on the bench said they believed it might be; and it being compared with mittimus, the hands appeared to be the same. His Lordship, summing up, said that it appeared upon the evidence, and from all the circumstances, to be a most foul and malicious conspiracy against the life of Mr Hawkins. Then the jury, without stirring from the bar, gave their verdict, that the prisoner was not guilty. Mr Hawkins moved that he might be discharged without paying his fees, for that he was very poor -- this, and other troubles the prosecutors had brought upon him, having cost him a great deal of money. My Lord Chief Baron answered he could not help it; he could not give away other people's rights: if they would not remit their fees, he must pay them. As soon as the trial was over, Sir John Croke, Larrimore the prosecutor, and their accomplices in the conspiracy, fled privately out of town.
Sir Edward William Crosbie, 5th baronet
The closing years of the eighteenth century were a period of major political and social unrest in Ireland. For the previous 100 years, Ireland had been to a large extent controlled by a Protestant minority which ruled the Roman Catholic majority through a system of institutionalised sectarianism. As the eighteenth century reached its final quarter, events such as the American Revolution and later the French Revolution provided an impetus for reform. The United Irishmen was an organisation founded in 1791 and led by Theobald Wolf Tone and other young radicals. It was originally founded as a liberal political organisation that sought parliamentary reform. The organisation was not based upon any religious beliefs - Tone, for example, was an Anglican and most of its early leaders were Presbyterians - but it sympathised with the interests of the Irish Catholics.
The organisation spread rapidly until it was banned in 1793 following the declaration of war between Britain and France. It then went underground and waited for French aid in a planned uprising, which eventually broke out in May 1798. For further information on this rebellion, see the entries in the standard encyclopedias or on Wikipedia.
One of the victims of the rebellion was Sir Edward William Crosbie, 5th baronet. His fate was sealed when a number of United Irishmen met on his estate at Viewmount, in county Carlow on the night before a disastrous attack on the town of Carlow, which left about 600 of their number dead. Crosbie was arrested, tried before a military court for high treason and executed on 5 June 1798.
There seems to be universal agreement that Crosbie was the victim of judicial murder. The following article is taken from the no-doubt biased The Chartist Circular of 13 June 1840:-
'This gentleman [Sir Edward Crosbie] was brought to trial before a Court-martial assembled in the town of Carlow, charged with "traitorous and rebellious conduct, in aiding and abetting a most villanous conspiracy for the overthrow of his Majesty's crown, and the extinction of all loyal subjects". Sir Edward Crosbie was a man warmly attached to the liberties of his country, and a foe to oppression in every shape. It was never insinuated by his enemies that he had borne arms, nor was any proof adduced of his having embraced the United system. An unsuccessful attempt had been made to surprise the town and garrison of Carlow, near which Sir Edward Crosbie resided. The plan was badly arranged, and the consequences were most disastrous to the assailants. A considerable popular force had assembled near Sir Edward's demesne, from whence they commenced their march upon the town. This, whatever might have been his disposition, he had not the power to prevent. His servants, who were implicated in the transaction, were tortured to give evidence against their master. Some had the firmness to resist, and preferred the excruciating lash to the impeachment of innocence. Others, who had witnesses the agony of their companions, had not the courage to imitate their conduct, and a feeling of self-preservation led them to give testimony, but to a very limited extent, against the unfortunate Baronet. The witnesses whom he called in the course of his trial, and whose testimony, as it appears by subsequent investigation, must have confirmed the falsehood of the charge, were not permitted the enter the Court! A verdict of guilty was pronounced against him. The sentence was confirmed by Sir Charles Asgill, General of the district; and, at a late and unusual hour, with the most shameful precipitancy, carried into immediate execution. The body was mutilated, and the head fixed on a pike and elevated from the top of the county jail, within the immediate view of his family mansion. On a representation of this circumstance to Lord Camden, he had the humanity to order the body to be given up to the disconsolate widow. Lady Crosbie could not procure for it the right of Christian burial. No minister of the Established Church, of which Sir Edward was a member, would perform this last solemn duty; she was necessitated to deposit the mutilated remains of her husband within the precincts of her own garden. The insults offered, by the military, to this excellent lady, became so alarming, that she was obliged, for personal security, to abandon her home and fly for refuge to England.
On the hundredth anniversary of the attack on Carlow, the Dublin-based Freeman's Journal and Daily Commercial Advertiser on 27 May 1898 published an article which included the following:-
The murder of Sir Edward Crosbie, which was prompted by the fiendish massacre at Carlow, is thus recorded by Mr. Lecky [presumably William Edward Hartpole Lecky, the Irish historian].
"Amongst the victims," he [Lecky] writes, "of martial law in Carlow was Sir Edward Crosbie, who was tried with indecent haste by a court-martial, of which only one member was above the rank of captain, and whose execution appears to have been little better than a judicial murder. He had been a Parliamentary reformer of the school of [Henry] Grattan, he was a benevolent and popular landlord and he had a few months before the Rebellion given money for the support of some political prisoners who were in a state of extreme destitution in Carlow jail, but there was no reason to believe that he was either a United Irishman or a Republican. He certainly took no part in the attack on Carlow and it does not appear that he had any previous knowledge of the intention of the rebels to asseble in his town. The point on which the court-martial seems to have specially insisted was that he had not gone at once to Carlow to give information. It was urged, probably with truth, that it was impossible for him to have done so for all his servants had declared themselves United Irishmen, he was surrounded by armed men, and even if he had himself succeeded in escaping his family would almost certainly have been murdered. Crosbie had only an hour given him to prepare his defence. He had no proper counsel, and some intended witnesses in his favour afterwards swore that they had tried in vain to obtain admission into the barracks. He was hanged and decapitated, and his head was fixed on a pike outside Carlow jail. It was afterwards stolen during the night by an old faithful servant, who brought it to the family burying place."
Sir Arthur Henry Crosfield, 1st and only baronet
Sir Arthur died when he fell from a train in France in September 1938. The following obituary appeared in The Scotsman of 23 September 1938:-
Sir Arthur Henry Crosfield, Bt., died today soon after he was found with a fractured skull on the railway line after falling from a train near Le Muy, on the Toulon-St. Raphael line. The train does not stop at Le Muy, which is a small village. A ticket found in his pocket showing he was going to Cannes. Lady Crosfield was travelling with him.
Sir Arthur had lived at Cannes for the last 20 years. He shares with King Gustav of Sweden the distinction of being the oldest competitor still playing in tennis tournaments. He had no child, but adopted a boy who is now eight [because he was adopted he could not succeed to the baronetcy].
Sir Arthur, who was 73, was created a baronet in 1915. He was formerly chairman of Joseph Crosfield & Sons, Ltd., Warrington, and from 1906 to 1910 was Liberal M.P. for Warrington, his family home. He was defeated when re-contesting the seat in 1910.
He married in 1907, the daughter of M. Elliadi, of Smyrna and Southport, a distinguished Greek magnate, who traced his descent from Homer. She is a close friend of Madame Venizelos, widow of the Greek statesman [Eleftherios Venizelos, several times Prime Minister of Greece], who stayed with them at their London home. There is no heir to the baronetcy.
For many years Sir Arthur was a leading figure in the playing fields movement and was first chairman of the National Playing Fields Association.
Sir Arthur was extremely fond of music - a love shared by his wife - and guests at their home have frequently been charmed by Sir Arthur's compositions for the piano and violin.
His recreation were golf, lawn tennis, and climbing. He was one of several English golfers who helped to establish the game on the Continent by participating in the French Open Amateur Championship which, instituted in 1904, was in its early days practically an English monopoly. Sir Arthur reached the final in 1905 at La Boulie and beat Sir Edgar Vincent [later Viscount D'Abernon] 7 and 5.
In 1929 the G.B.E. was conferred on him, and another honour conferred on him was the First Class Order of the Redeemer of Greece.
Sir Arthur was an authority on Greek and Near-East problems. A few years ago, he suggested a World Commission of Statesmen, to be selected by the International Court of Justice, to settle trade problems.
When it was proposed that Ken Wood - the last fragment of the vast Middlesex forest - should be used as a building site, the Ken Wood Preservation Committee was formed in 1919, with Sir Arthur as chairman. As a result of the Committee's work, 130 acres of the wood were bought for the nation from the Earl of Mansfield and opened as a public park by King George V and Queen Mary in July 1925.
Sir Michael Culme-Seymour, 3rd baronet
The correct pronunciation of the family name is 'Cullum-Seamer'.
Like the 1st baronet before him, and the 4th baronet after him, Sir Michael was an admiral in the British navy. Sir Michael commanded the Channel Squadron between 1890 and 1892, and the Mediterranean Fleet between 1893 and 1896. His elder daughter was Mary Elizabeth Culme-Seymour, who was born in 1871 and his younger daughter was Laura Grace, who died in 1895, aged 22. These young ladies would become two of the central figures in our story.
Also featuring prominently is King George V. Readers with a knowledge of British history will be aware that King George had an elder brother, Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence, who died in 1892. At the time of his death, Clarence was engaged to be married to Princess Victoria Mary of Teck, but he died six weeks after the engagement was announced. The Princess then became engaged to Prince George, then Duke of York and later King George V, and they were married on 6 July 1893.
For many years rumours circulated regarding a secret marriage that was alleged to have taken place between Mary Culme-Seymour and the Duke of York. The following article appeared in the Chicago Daily Tribune on 13 May 1898:-
The Duke and Duchess of York spent a day at Portsmouth last week for the purpose of visiting the hospitals and charitable institutions of England's greatest naval station. It must have been a rather embarrassing trip, as they were the guests of Admiral Sir Michael Culme-Seymour, the Governor of the port and father of Miss Mary Seymour, the young lady who is asserted to have contracted a secret marriage with the Duke of York at Malta and to have borne him two children before he was compelled by dynastic reasons to take advantage of that clause of the constitution which declares null and void every union contracted by any member of the reigning family in England without the consent of both sovereign and parliament.
Matters came to a head in November and December 1910, when there appeared in Paris a leaflet entitled The Liberator, published by a Edward Holden James. The leaflet included an article headed Sanctified Bigamy which contained the following passage …
During the year 1890, in the island of Malta, the man who is now the King of England was united in lawful holy wedlock with the daughter of Sir Michael Culme-Seymour, an Admiral of the British Navy. Of this marriage offspring were born. At the time of that marriage the Duke of Clarence, the eldest brother of the present King, was Heir to the Throne. Subsequently the Duke of Clarence died, leaving the present King Heir to the Throne. It is now that we are offered the spectacle of the immorality of the Monarchy in all its sickening, beastly monstrosity. In order to obtain the woman of Royal blood for his pretended wife George Frederick foully abandoned his true wife, the daughter of Sir Michael Culme-Seymour of the British Navy, and entered into a sham and shameful marriage with the daughter of the Duke of Teck in 1893.
The said George Frederick not having obtained a divorce from his first wife, who, by the common law of England and by the law of the Christian Church, remained, and, if she lives, remains, his true wife, committed the crime of bigamy, and he committed it with the aid and complicity of the prelates of the Anglican Church. This is the sickening and disgusting crime which has been committed by the English Church, which has married one man to two women. Our very Christian King, the Defender of the Faith, has a plurality of wives, just like any Mahomedan Sultan, and they are sanctified by the English Church. The daughter of Sir Michael Culme-Seymour, if she still lives, is by the unchangeable law of the Christian Church, as well as by the common law of England, the rightful Queen of England, and her children are the only rightful heirs to the English throne.
In a later issue of The Liberator, there is a short snippet which reads 'The Daily News of London informs us that the King plans to visit India with his wife. Would the newspaper kindly tell us which wife?'
It should be noted that The Liberator article does not name which of the two daughters of the Admiral allegedly married Prince George. The younger daughter, Laura Grace, as noted above, died in 1895, well before the article was published. The elder daughter, Mary Elizabeth, married in 1899, [Vice Admiral Sir] Trevylyan Napier (1867‑1920). Mary died in October 1944.
The person charged with the distribution of The Liberator in London was Edward Mylius, who was arrested in possession of a large number of copies of the leaflet on 26 December 1910. He was subsequently charged with three counts of criminal libel against the King. He was tried at the High Court before the Lord Chief Justice on 1 February 1911.
At the commencement of the trial, Mylius demanded that the King be present in the Court. He argued that every accused person has the right to be confronted with his accuser. He further argued that it would be highly unusual to try an action for libel without the allegedly libelled party being present. Both arguments were rejected, on the basis that it would be unconstitutional for the King to appear in court.
The prosecutor was able to prove that
* Prince George had never visited Malta at any time between October 1888 and July 1893, when he married Princess Victoria Mary
* Sir Michael's daughters first visited Malta in October or November 1893, after the date when Prince George married Princess Victoria Mary.
* The Malta marriage registers showed no marriage had been recorded.
The jury did not even leave the box before delivering a guilty verdict. Mylius was sentenced to the maximum term that could be inflicted upon him - twelve months' imprisonment.
Sir Samuel Cunard, 1st baronet
The following biography of Cunard appeared in the Australian monthly magazine Parade in its issue for April 1956. Unfortunately, some of the information contained in it in relation to the loss of ships appears to be doubtful, and I have made several corrections where necessary.
The big paddle-steamer Austria thrashed her way into the Atlantic from Hamburg in September 1858, loaded with emigrants for New York. Twelve days out, Boatswain Kelly set about a routine fumigation. Into a bucket of tar he dipped a red-hot sheet of iron. Billowing fumes rolled in pursuit of vermin skulking in crannies of the teeming steerage quarters. Kelly swore when the iron accidentally burned his fingers. He dropped it. The tar-bucket spilled, spluttered, and burst into flames. Within 20 minutes the Austria was a blazing derelict. From her pitifully inadequate lifeboats 63 people watched the pride of the American-owned Hamburg Line hiss beneath the surface, taking with her 490 charred and mutilated bodies. This calamity climaxed the early development of steamships on the Atlantic run. For decades there had been a constant record of catastrophe. When at last the scene cleared, one man - Samuel Cunard - stood above all others as the King of Shipping lines. Samuel Cunard, a "rustic little Quaker with keen eyes, firm lips and happy manners," did not make his fortune or reputation by flash attempts on speed records or dreaming of ocean greyhounds. While other ships were blowing up, his chunky little fleet chugged backwards and forwards across the Atlantic at a steady eight knots without accident.
Samuel Cunard, who built the Cunard Line, nobly represented today by the leviathans Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth, was born at Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1787. His family, of German descent, fled from the United States to Nova Scotia during the American revolution because of loyalty to Britain. Cunard entered the office of a Halifax merchant, became a partner before he was 20, and director at 25. The firm took his name. It traded with the West Indies, carried mails to the United States, and sent whaling expeditions as far as New Zealand. Cunard had interests in lumber, iron, and coal. He married a Quaker girl, Susan Duffus, who died after giving him two sons and five daughters. At 40 Cunard was a millionaire widower. He never looked at another woman.
By then the first crude steamships had lumbered across the Atlantic, helped along by auxiliary sails. Coastal steamers thrashed and puffed around England, blowing up, running out of coal, jeered at by men of sail as a dangerous novelty. Few solid conservatives thought there was much future in steamships. There was some surprise, therefore, when the usually die-hard Admiralty, then in charge of overseas mail, called for tenders for a twice-monthly mail service in steamships of not less than 300&nsp;horse-power. Till then they had entrusted all trans-Atlantic mail to special sailing ships known as "coffin brigs" because of their ugly lines. The coffin brigs were safe and steady but terribly slow. Scheduled to reach Halifax on the first of every month, they were sometimes a month late through having to stand off the coast till the wind changed. At last in sheer desperation the Admiralty launched their advertisement for a steamship service.
A copy of the advertisement reached Cunard at Halifax. He caught the first sailing packet for England. Pompous Admiralty officials refused to talk to the modest colonial until he produced bank drafts showing he commanded considerable funds. He offered to build and put into service the specified ships within 18 months in return for an annual subsidy of £55,000. His was the only tender. While the admirals deliberated, Cunard hurried to Scotland to see an ex-blacksmith named Robert Napier. Napier had been sacked from Robert Stevenson's engine factory at Edinburgh for blowing up a boiler. For £45 Napier bought a smithy, turned to engineering and ironfounding, and devised steam engines which consistently won pioneer steamboat races on the Clyde. Cunard proposed that he engine four large wooden paddle-ships, all of the same size and class. Napier agreed that mass-production would cut costs and accepted the commission. Thus began an association that lasted 15 years. Cunard then called on two warring coastal shipping owners, David MacIver and George Burns. He so impressed them with his plan for a steamship line, that they sank their hostilities to become his partners, putting up £300,000.
The company of Cunard, Burns and MacIver signed its first Admiralty mail contract in May 1839, guaranteeing a twice-monthly service to Halifax and Boston, with a fine of £15,000 for non-sailings and £500 for each delay of 12 hours. The ships were to be capable of carrying naval guns in time of war. Cunard had 13 months to design, build, man, and get them to sea. Napier's yards worked three shifts before the first ship, Britannia, took the water with a few days to spare. Acadia, Caledonia and Columbia followed. They displaced 2050 tons each, were 207 feet long, and burned 38 tons of Welsh coal a day while steaming at eight knots. Two&nsp;small masts carried sails as insurance against mechanical breakdown.
Under Captain Woodruff, Britannia sailed from Liverpool on July 4, 1840. She carried mail at a heavy premium, 90 nervous passengers including Cunard, and 225 tons of express cargo. Her churning paddles rose higher out of the water day by day as coal vanished in smoke up her single funnel. Every few days she stopped to clean boilers and tighten loose nuts. After a journey of 14 days and eight hours, she docked at Halifax, where the city voted Cunard 20 years' free harborage as a reward for his enterprise. Boston went mad with delight at receiving European news only two weeks old. Citizens sent Cunard 1873 invitations to dinner.
The four sister-ships became six, the trans-Atlantic crossing by steam no longer an impossible adventure. American business fought for a slice of the profitable trade. They built the liner President. The hoodoo that stalked every one of Cunard's competitors dates from the moment she left the stocks. President sailed from Boston in April 1841, with 251 souls aboard, and was never heard of again. [For further information see the note regarding Lord FitzRoy Lennox under the Dukes of Richmond]. Her owners persevered with the City of Glasgow. She vanished without trace. Brilliant English engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel built the 3400-tons Great Britain. She was stranded on the Irish coast, stayed there for months, was raised at great expense, and ended her life carrying emigrants to Australia. American finance tycoon Cornelius Vanderbilt built the Princeton in 1844 for the New York-England service. As high officials swarmed over her on dedication day, she blew up, killing the Unites States' Secretaries of State and Navy and many others. [28 February 1844].
Meanwhile Cunard's ships chugged steadily across the Atlantic earning a reputation for faultless reliability. He refused to run risks when rivals built faster, more flashy ships. His fleet grew. He bought out a Belgian line which lost a ship and then folded up, and the Guion Line which built more ships than it could pay for. The greatest challenge loomed when E[dward] K[night] Collins [1802‑1878], dummying for Vanderbilt, wheedled a large subsidy from Congress to found the American Collins Line. His fast [ships] Arctic, Atlantic, Baltic and Pacific burned American anthracite and could run rings round the plodding Cunarders. But in 1854, Arctic collided with a But in 1854 [27 September], Arctic collided with a French sailing ship in a fog off Newfoundland, drowning most of her 230 souls and many Frenchmen. Two years later [January 1856] Collins' Pacific vanished in mid-ocean with 186 people. Congress refused to renew his subsidy, and Collins retired.
Meanwhile, Cunard concentrated on safety and comfort. He fitted steam foghorns to his ships which could be heard 10 miles away. Though it was not then compulsory, he installed sufficient lifeboats to accommodate all passengers and crew. In 1852, Cunard scrapped his original paddle-wheel wooden fleet in favor of screw-driven iron ships, which lowered the Atlantic passage time to 10 days. The new iron ships were considered the height of luxury for each had a confined space known as a bathroom wherein passengers could take invigorating seawater baths.
The Crimea[n] War broke [out]. Two Cunarders were turned into hospital ships. Fourteen were mounted with guns and drafted into the Navy. The Atlantic service was reduced to a skeleton. This encouraged Irish get-rich-quick promoters to launch another spate of competition backed by mail subsidy. Irish men, women and children were then pouring hopefully to the New World after years of griping famine and depression. The new company [the City of Dublin Steam Packet Company] offered to take them to New York at seven pounds a head, against the nine charged by Cunard. The hoodoo struck again. The new firm's liner Connaught caught fire on its second voyage, and was abandoned. Hibernia struck a gale during delivery from the builders and had to be scrapped, Columbia hit an iceberg and sank with great loss of life. [In reality the City of Dublin line was by no means a new line, having been established in 1822. I can find no record of the fire aboard the Connaught; the Hibernia was built in 1824 and was therefore unlikely to have been "delivered" at the time in question; finally, I can find no record of the line operating a ship named Columbia.]
Cunard carried calmly on. He knew that his record for safety and reliability would always win. He was among the most generous subscribers to the charitable appeals in aid of survivors of his rivals' disasters. By 1860 his ships ran a weekly service so regularly that New York newspaper proprietors employed fast horsemen and special trains to race European news from Halifax. The Admiralty raised his subsidy to £80,000.
Cunard left record-breaking to his rivals but still the hoodoo dogged his rivals. When his native Canada founded a competitive line [the Allen Line], its flagship Canadian sank in the Saint Lawrence River, drowning 300. The Indian was wrecked [21 November 1859] on the Nova Scotian coast. The Hungarian went down with all hands [19 February 1860].
In 1859, Lord Palmerston belatedly conferred a baronetcy on Cunard, who was living modestly in London. New arrivals again and again seized the Blue Riband, as the unofficial speed crown came to be known. Again and again the rivals sank from sight. To this day the Cunard line refuses to take part in races, though it will not deny that its crack liners have made record passages. Cunard died in 1865, aged 77. He had never lost a ship.
Maud Alice Burke, Lady Cunard, wife of Sir Bache Cunard, 3rd baronet
The following biography of Lady Cunard appeared in the August 1970 issue of the Australian monthly magazine Parade:-
England's foremost society hostess in the 1930s was the petite, birdlike Lady Cunard, centre of a brilliant artistic, literary and musical circle and close friend of Edward, Prince of Wales. When King George V died and the prince became Edward VIII, an alluring vista opened for Lady Cunard. Dazzling power and influence seemed within her reach. Then all her dreams exploded with the king's decision to abdicate and marry the American divorcee Mrs. Wallis Simpson. "Oh how could he do this to me?" Lady Cunard wailed to her friends. But even if she was thwarted in her ambition to stahe-manage the royal court, Lady Cunard was to remain the unchallenged queen of London society.
She was a dynamic personality who rose from plain Maud Burke, of San Francisco, to become the wife of the baronet Sir Bache Cunard, grandson of the founder of the shipping line. Vital and voluble but hardly a beauty, Lady Cunard also became the mistress of the famous Irish-born novelist George Moore and of England's brilliant and acid-tongued conductor Sir Thomas Beecham. Small, dainty, fair-haired, but hard as nails beneath the social veneer, Emerald Cunard ran London's last salon and was one of the most talked-of figures of her day. She popularised opera and ballet in England, built a reputation as a wit - although she said a witty woman could never hold a man - and bought hats by the dozen because she would not waste time trying one on in a shop. Despite her own well-known adulteries, she was outrageously snobbish and shunned her writer-daughter Nancy when she began an affair with an American Negro jazz pianist. "Do you mean to say my daughter actually knows a Negro?" was her reaction when reporters told her the news. Her second thought was to start pulling political strings in an unsuccessful attempt to have him deported.
Maud Burke was born in San Francisco on August 3, 1872, of parents who had neither wealth nor influence. But her mother had a valuable asset in ability to captivate men. Thus when her husband died soon after her child's birth, she quickly acquired money from a number of wealthy admirers. These included William O'Brien [1825‑1878], millionaire silver king of the fabled Comstock lode, a San Francisco banker named William Coffin, and a wealthy real estate speculator, Horace Carpentier [1824‑1918]. O'Brien was even rumored to be the father of Mrs. Burke's daughter Maud and he did leave her a large sum in his will. Carpentier was interested in the girl as well as the mother. When Maud was 18 her mother married a stockbroker named Charles Tichenor so she moved into Carpentier's house and called him "my guardian".
In the summer of 1894 Carpentier provided funds for Maud Burke to visit Europe and it was in London that she met the Irish novelist George Moore [1852‑1933]. Moore was 42 and had been variously described as looking "like an over-ripe gooseberry", "as though carved out of a turnip" and "like the face of a fiery sheep". But George Moore was a celebrity, author of Confession of A Young Man, and the then risque novel Esther Waters. And these assets were more important than looks to the ambitious 22-year-old Maud Burke of San Francisco. So George Moore became her lover. Years later he wrote that he admired her "cold sensuality, cold because it was divorced from tenderness and passion". Probably what he meant was illustrated in his account in his account of their affair in his book Memoirs of My Dead Life. "While walking in the woods," wrote Moore, "she would say, 'Let us sit here', and after looking steadily at one for a few seconds, her pale marmoreal eyes glowing, she would say, "Yes, you can make love to me now, if you like'."
At the end of the summer the affair ended temporarily with Maud Burke's return to the United States where in New York she met Prince Andre Poniatowski, grandson of the last King of Poland. A friendship developed which prompted Maud to make an impetuous announcement to reporters of an engagement. This was publicly denied by Prince Poniatowski with charming courtesy and with blunt vehemence by a Miss Beth Sperry of San Francisco whom he shortly married. Maud Burke thereupon retaliated by announcing her engagement to a visiting English baronet, the 43-year-old Sir Bache Cunard. They were married in New York on April 17, 1895.
As Lady Cunard she moved into her husband's huge gloomy mansion, Nevill Holt in Leicestershire, where she found she had married a dull, melancholy man with little interest in anything except fox-hunting. Her daughter Nancy was born on March 10, 1896, and to relieve her boredom she had already invited George Moore and other literary and musical figures to stay at Nevill Holt. Sir Bache did not seem to mind so Lady Cunard also began spending some time in London where she became friendly with the beautiful Duchess of Rutland and Mrs. Cornwallis-West, formerly Lady Randolph Churchill. By the turn of the century she was established as a London hostess herself during the "season". But most of her time was still spent with her husband at Nevill Holt.
And that was how matters continued until 1911 when Lady Cunard fell head over heels in love with the brilliant orchestra conductor Sir Thomas Beecham. Beecham was also married and had just figured as co-respondent in a messy divorce case. But that meant nothing to the smitten Lady Cunard. Soon after their affair began, Beecham was due to sail for the US with his orchestra. So she made up her mind to leave Sir Bache and go with him. At the time she was at Nevill Holt, so she ordered her carriage and set out immediately for the Liverpool docks. The horses were slipping on the ice-covered roads but Lady Cunard was too much in love to worry. She kept ordering more speed from her coachman. At last, exasperated, he shouted: "We can't go any faster, my lady, the horses will break their legs". Ignoring the warning, she screamed back: "Whip them! Whip them!" And by such means Lady Cunard reached the docks just in time to catch the boat with Sir Thomas Beecham.
When she returned to England some months later, Sir Bache obtained a legal separation and his wife settled into a London mansion in Cavendish Square, the first of several residences from which she queened it over English society. There she entertained both her lovers, Sir Thomas Beecham and George Moore, but it was not until 1913 that the novelist learned he was sharing her favours with another. This was all the more wounding for Moore because he regarded all musicians as his inferiors from an artistic point of view. And the fact that Sir Thomas Beecham was a millionaire through his father's successful marketing of laxative pills only made him even more unworthy of Lady Cunard in George Moore's view. "We should have looked in vain for mummers (musicians) in the famous Parisian salons such as that of Madame Recamier," he wrote to her. "And it is to the honour of such ladies of olden times that we do not find them ostentatiously making love with inferiors."
Despite such waspish observations, George Moore remained Lady Cunard's devoted admirer as long as he lived. "I cannot endure life without seeing and hearing you," he wrote to her in his 70s. But that did not stop him also dancing attendance on Lady Cunard's daughter Nancy who by the 1920s was making a reputation of her own as a wild Bohemian rebel. She had known George Moore all her life and was aware he had been her mother's lover even before she married Sir Bache Cunard. Once when Nancy Cunard asked Moore if there was any truth in the rumour that he was her father, the novelist replied: "That is something you must ask your mother, my dear."
Whether his daughter or not, Moore was always flattering Nancy Cunard about her good looks and pestering her to let him see her naked body. "I am an old man," he kept saying. "Come now, what possible harm can there be in that?" Nancy Cunard kept refusing and Moore eventually reduced his demand to the sight of her naked back. So, as he was an old man of 73, Nancy Cunard eventually agreed. George Moore looked at her and enthused: "Oh, what a beautiful back, Nancy. It is as long as a weasel's. What a beautiful back." And the aged writer then proceeded to give her back (weasel resemblance and all) to a dirty old Irish peasant woman in his next short story.
Meanwhile in London between the wars Lady Cunard had outstripped rivals such as Lady Colefax and Mrs. Laura Corrigan as England's leading society hostess. The others could not match Lady Cunard's wit. Once Mrs. Corrigan (who was known to wear a wig) asked her if she was going to wear a diamond tiara to a gala night at the opera. "No, dear," replied Lady Cunard, "just a small emerald bandeau and my own hair."
Because emeralds were almost a trademark with Lady Cunard, she changed her christian name in 1926 from Maud to Emerald. At the time she was in Switzerland and she signed her next letter to George Moore "Maud Emerald". He immediately assumed she had married a man named Emerald and wrote a plaintive reply that such a marriage was "unfair to a man who has loved you dearly for more than 30 years."
Lady Cunard first heard that her daughter Nancy was living with a Negro pianist when the bluff Lady Asquith bounced up to her and boomed: "Well, Emerald, what's Nancy up to now? First it was drink and dope and now I hear, it's n*ggers." Sir Thomas Beecham was almost as aghast when he heard the news as was Lady Cunard. "She should be tarred and feathered," he exploded. The situation caused a break between mother and daughter that was never healed.
Lady Cunard disowned Nancy who retaliated by writing a pamphlet called Black Man and White Ladyship, which bitterly attacked her mother's tinsel social life. When World War II broke out, Lady Cunard was in the US with Sir Thomas Beecham. Then when he went on a long Canadian tour with his orchestra she decided to stay in New York. A few weeks later she received news that Beecham had married a young pianist, Betty Humby. Broken-hearted, she returned to England alone to find her house had been bombed out.
The great days of Lady Cunard were over. She moved into a two-room suite at the Dorchester Hotel and there she died of throat cancer on July 10, 1948. Friends had her ashes scattered in Grosvenor Square, the heart of the London she had socially ruled for so long. Surprisingly, Lady Cunard had left her daughter one-third of her estate. Increasingly addicted to alcohol, Nancy spent a period in an asylum and died in 1964 after being found unconscious in a Paris street.
Sir William James Montgomery-Cuninghame VC, 9th baronet
Montgomery-Cuninghame served in the Crimean War as a Lieutenant in the Rifle Brigade. On 20 November 1854, he, together with another Lieutenant named Claude Thomas Bourchier, was in a party ordered to clear some Russian soldiers from some rifle pits. Attacking in the dark, the party drove the Russians from their positions, but during this action the officer in command of the party was killed. Montgomery-Cuninghame and Bourchier withstood the Russian counter-attacks during the night and held their position until they were relieved the following day. Both Montgomery-Cuninghame and Bourchier were awarded Victoria Crosses for their bravery.
Montgomery-Cuninghame later represented Ayr Burghs in the House of Commons between 1874 and 1880.
The special remainder to the baronetcy of Cunliffe created in 1759
From the London Gazette of 20 March 1759 (issue 9880, page 2):-
The King has been pleased to grant unto Sir Ellis Cunliffe of Liverpool, in the County of Lancaster, Knight, and the Heirs Male of his Body lawfully begotten; and, in Default of such Issue, to his Brother, Robert Cunliffe, of Liverpool aforesaid, Esq; and the Heirs Male of his Body lawfully begotten, the Dignity of a Baronet of the Kingdom of Great Britain.
Sir Arthur Colin Curtis, 3rd baronet [GB 1794]
On 30 January 1899, leave was sought in the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Court to presume the death of Sir Arthur Colin Curtis. Evidence was given that, early in 1898, Sir Arthur Curtis joined an expedition which a Mr Roger Pocock was leading to the goldfields of British Columbia and the Klondike. On 3 March 1898, Sir Arthur made a will in favour of his wife, naming her as sole executrix. He left Liverpool on 10 March, arriving in Vancouver on 27 March 1898, where he met Pocock and started out for the goldfields. On 4 June, the party arrived at Quesnelle and four days later encamped on the banks of the Mud River. Here, some horses strayed, and most of the party went to look for them, Sir Arthur remaining in camp as the expedition's cook.
According to the evidence later given by Pocock …
Sir Arthur was still in camp after the rest had left. Indeed, I did not expect him to take part in the search, because he had always shown a curious inaptitude for brush work, getting puzzled and lost very easily. Nature intended him for the sea, and his tastes always led him afloat or shooting or mining, in which he was keenly interested. This morning, however, after he had arranged his saddle and gear for the day's march, he lit his pipe and walked briskly out of camp, before even taking breakfast, evidently intending to join in the horse hunting, as he had remarked earlier that nobody had looked up the valley.
He was never afterward seen. A search party was organised that evening, great fires were lighted on the hills, and guns were fired to if possible attract the attention of the lost nobleman. All day the woods rang for miles with gunshots and calls, and night after night the searchers returned dispirited and hopeless to the camp. On the sixth day after Sir Arthur's disappearance a band of wandering Indians were engaged to trace him, if possible.
That day they found his tracks, here a rotten log crushed in, there a branch torn down to keep off the flies, marks of a bewildered man wandering in circles. Then the tracks struck off guided by the sun northeast, about in the one direction which would lead to neither trail nor river, the one possible course which could lead to no earthly succour. A strong man, he had been walking steadily, showing no signs of madness on that first day of his straying.
Then at the end of fifteen miles or so was a trampled place where he had slept against a tree, heel marks sunk in the moss, and without a fire. We knew already that he had neither weapon nor compass. Now we knew that he was without matches and could make no smoke to drive away the terrible flies. A man may fight them through the long hot night, and all the blazing day, but the hands must grow weary at last, and the swarms will settle. Then comes blindness.
On the eighth morning of the search the Indians returned discouraged and would search no more. They had seen the marks of coyotes following the lost man's tracks. They had heard a black bear and smelled a grizzly, but there were no signs of the digging up of herbs or scraping of bark for food. But the signs led over vast reaches of deadfall [i.e. a tangled mass of fallen trees and branches] to a creek, and beyond there was nothing.
On the ninth morning I had to pronounce sentence of death, to say the words which brought the search to an end. We could only suppose that, blinded by the flies and mad, the dying man hid himself away from any rescue.
The Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Court, having considered the evidence put forward to it, granted leave to presume Sir Arthur's death on or after 10 June 1898.
Proving that conspiracy theories are not a new invention, the following article, upon which the reader will form his or her own judgment, appeared in the New Zealand Otago Witness on 30 December 1908:-
After an absence of over ten years, Sir Arthur Curtis has been discovered in the wilds of British Columbia, according to a story brought by T. W. Cole, one of the party with the British baronet when he so mysteriously went off with an Indian guide while making his way to Klondyke with a bunch of horses. Despite most diligent search, no tidings of the missing baronet could be found at the time, and eventually a skeleton was brought out by Indians which was identified as being the remains of the missing baronet. Cole asserts that he knew before he left Vancouver that Curtis would disappear before reaching the Klondyke, on account of family complications in England, which Curtis told him had been the means of driving him to Canada, and making him trek northwards with the party engaged in the horse trade.
In support of the story told by Cole is the fact that within six months of the day Curtis left the party, his wife, Lady Curtis, had applied for and received an order from the British courts declaring the missing man dead, and shortly afterwards she married Colonel Robert M. Brady, an Irishman, who is alleged by many to be the real cause of the disappearance of Curtis.
Incidentally, the story brought down by Cole from Ashcroft district was received but a few days before the provincial police had received fresh instructions from the Department of Justice at Ottawa to spare no pains to find Curtis.
Cole says Curtis is now living the life of a trapper, and is virtually a hermit, living on what he can catch or trap, and trading skins for such necessities of life as tobacco, tea, flour, etc.
The party with which Curtis went north was organised by Roger Pocock, founder of the Legion of Frontiersmen, and in "The Frontiersman" book, written by Pocock [the book's title is actually "A Frontiersman; An Autobiographical Narrative" published by Methuen & Co., London, 1903], he takes full responsibility for having driven Curtis away by abusing him for laziness and not doing his share of the work of the party. For many years Pocock has been looked upon by many as having been responsible for the death of Curtis, but the story and the proofs brought down by Cole will clear him of the stigma, which has made his life miserable for the past ten years.
Sir Edgar Francis Egerton Curtis, 5th baronet [UK 1802]
Sir Francis's death was reported in The Times on 12 August 1943:-
Sir Francis Curtis, Bt., who fell in front of a train at Knightsbridge tube station on Jul 27, has died in hospital at Wimbledon at the age of 67. Sir Francis served in the South African War with Strathcona's Horse, and in Egypt in the last war.
The findings of the resultant inquest were included in the Gloucester Citizen the same day:-
The driver of the tube train which inflicted fatal injuries on Sir Francis Curtis, Bart, of Pont Street, Chelsea, at Knightsbridge London Station on July 27, stated at the inquest to-day that Sir Francis deliberately jumped in front of the train.
"I was running into the station when I saw a man walk to the edge of the platform and jump into the centre of the track," said Driver Lee. "He stooped and folded his arms on the negative rail and laid his head down on his hands. That was his position when the train passed over him. It all happened in a few seconds."
James Boggetti, a porter at the Royal Thames Yacht Club, Knightsbridge, where Sir Francis had dined, said Sir Francis had coffee and brandy with his dinner and seemed to be in very jovial spirits.
The Coroner (Dr. C.F.J. Baron) recorded a verdict that Sir Francis took his life while the balance of his mind was disturbed. He remarked that he thought the evidence showed that Sir Francis was in perfect control of himself and was sober.