Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 34.djvu/305

 

Lady Blessington, in fact, described him as the one among talkers ‘who always makes me think’ (Idler in France, ii. 116), and Greville as ‘a philosopher in all things, but especially in religion.’ Gronow, who met him in Paris in 1849, calls him ‘the last of the Conversationists’ (Reminiscences, 1889, ii. 255). He died at his house, No. 31 Brompton Square, on the same day as Turner the painter, 19 Dec. 1851 (Athenæum, 27 Dec. 1851). His portrait hangs in the print room at Holland House (, ii. 243). A lithograph portrait from a drawing by Count D'Orsay is in the possession of White's Club, and is reproduced in Bourke's ‘History of White's’ (i. 224).



LUTTRELL, HENRY LAWES, second (1743–1821), soldier and politician, born on 7 Aug. 1743, was the eldest son of Simon Luttrell (d. 1787), successively Baron Irnham, Viscount Carhampton, and Earl Carhampton, all in the Irish peerage, by his wife Maria, daughter, and at length heiress, of Sir Nicholas Lawes. The Countess-dowager Carhampton died at a great age at the family seat, Sheepy Hall, Wiltshire, in December 1798 (Gent. Mag. 1798, ii. 1087). Possibly he is the Henry Luttrell mentioned in Foster's ‘Alumni Oxonienses’ as the son of Simon Luttrell of Coton Hall, Warwickshire, and as having matriculated at Christ Church on 13 Jan. 1755, aged 17. He was placed in the army, becoming ensign 48th foot on 21 Nov. 1757, lieutenant 34th foot on 27 March 1759, captain 16th light dragoons on 6 Aug. 1759, and major on 14 April 1762. On the same day he was appointed deputy adjutant-general to the forces in Portugal, on 8 Oct. following he was granted local rank of lieutenant-colonel in that country, and on 13 Feb. 1765 he was advanced to be lieutenant-colonel of the 1st regiment of horse. His father was ‘devoted to Lord Bute,’ through whose influence the son was at the general election of 1768 elected for the borough of Bossiney in Cornwall. When a candidate in the court interest was required to oppose Wilkes in Middlesex, Luttrell, who cherished ‘a personal enmity’ against him, vacated his Cornish seat (March 1769) to stand for that county. At the poll on 13 April, he was defeated by 1,143 votes to 296, but by a resolution of the House of Commons he was two days later declared to have been duly elected. For some time before the election bets were made on his life; on the polling day he owed his safety to his opponent's friends, and for some months afterwards he ‘did not dare to appear in the streets or scarce quit his lodging’ (cf. Cat. of Prints in Brit. Mus. Satiric, iv. 522 sq.). On 8 Sept. 1770 the post of adjutant-general of the land forces in Ireland was given to him for reward, but he was still discontented; in 1772 he threatened to resign, and in April 1774 he tried to embroil the ministry by a complaint that the sheriffs of Middlesex had summoned Wilkes, and not him, to attend in parliament. From 1774 to 1784 he sat once again for Bossiney, he represented Plympton Earls in Devonshire 1790–4, and from 1817 to his death he was member for Ludgershall in Wiltshire. At the general election in 1783 he was returned in the Irish parliament for the borough of Old Leighton. About 1798 he sold his Irish property at Luttrellstown, and he spent the latter years of his life at his seat of Painshill in Surrey. At first vehement against the union, he afterwards supported it (Cornwallis Corresp. iii. 112). He became colonel, brevet, on 29 Aug. 1777, and major-general on 20 Nov. 1782. On his father's death in 1787 he succeeded to the peerage, and he was appointed colonel of the 6th regiment of dragoons, 23 June 1788. In 1789 he became lieutenant-general of the ordnance in Ireland, and in 1795 was entrusted with the suppression of the Defenders in Connaught and the pacification of the province. His impressment of many rebels as sailors provoked much hostile criticism; but in 1796 he was promoted to the commandership of the forces in Ireland. He continued his high-handed policy. ‘Carhampton,’ the lord-lieutenant Lord Camden wrote to the Duke of Portland on 22 Jan. 1796, ‘did not confine himself to the strict rules of law’ (, History of Ireland, iii. 419). A conspiracy, for which two men were executed, was formed in May 1797 to assassinate him. On 2 Aug. 1797 he was made master-general of the ord-