Page:The Complete Peerage Ed 1 Vol 2.djvu/222

 CHESHAM — CHESTER. 221 Yarmouth (We of Wight) 1831-32 ; for East Sussex, 1332-41 ; for Yough.il (Ireland) 1841-47 ; ami for Bucks, J uly IS 17 to Dec. 1857. Having thus been nearly 40 years in the House of Commons, he was on 15 Jan. 185S, a: BARON CHESHAM of Chesham, en. Buckingham. He m. 16 June 1814, Catherine Susan, 1st da. of George (Gokdox), 9th JUhqubss of Hustlt [S.] by Catherine, da. of Sir Charles Cope, Bart. He d. 12 Nov. 1S03 in his 71st year, at No. 19 Grosvenor sq. Midx. His widow, who was i. 22 Dec. 1792, d. at the Hoo, Welwyu. Herts, 14 Dec. 1866 in her 74th year. II. 1863. % William George (Cavendish), Baron Chesham, only s. and h. b. 29 Oct. 1815, ed. at Eton ; was sometime (1833-40) an officer in the 10th Light Dragoons ; in the Bucks Militia, 1840-55 : Captain in the Derby Militia, 1S55-66. He was M.P. for Peterborough, 1847-52, and for Bucks 1857-63. He m. 24 July 1819, Henrietta Frances, da. of the Rt. Hon. William Saunders Sebright Lascelt.es (yr. s. of Henry, 2nd Earl op Harewood) by Caroline Georgians, da. of George (Howard), 6th Earl ok Carlisle. He d. 26 June 1882 at Latimers, aged 66. His widow, who was b. Feb. 1830, d. at No. 17, Grosvenor street, Midx., 21 May 1884. Her will pr. Aug. 1884 above £4000. III. 1SS2. 3. Charles Comptox William (Cavendish), Baron Chesham, s. and h., b. 13 Dec. 1850, ed. at Eton ; sometime (1870) an officer in the Coldstream Guards, exchanged (1873) to the 10th Hussars, Capt. 1877, exchanged (1878) to 1 Gtli Lancers, retired 1S79 ; Capt. Bucks Yeomanry. He m. 13 Nov. 1877, at Eccleston, co. Chester, Beatrice Constance, 2nd da. of Hugh Lupus (Grosvenor), 1st Duke OP Westminster, by his 1st wife, Constance Gertrude, da. of George Granville (Sutherland-Leveson-Gower). 2nd Duke of Sutherland. She was b. 14 Nov. 1858. Family Estates. — These, in 18S3, consisted of 2,S68 acres in Bucks (valued afc £4,203 a year) : 3,7S7 in CO, Huntingdon ; 2,365 in co. Lancaster ; 1,688 in co. Lincoln and 775 in Herts ; besides 3 acres in co. Northampton and 1 in Sussex. Total 11,487 acres valued at £15,625 a year..' Principal Residence. — Latimers,^) in Chesham, Bucks. CHESTER (County of.) ["The county of Chester is the best known example of & Palatine Earldom in England. The Palatine Earldum of Lancaster was not cr. till 1351, Dugdale to have been Baron Powes jure matrix, for this is the first mention in the Rolls of a Lord Powis after 1420, his father having been summoned as "John Tiptofte," and he himself was created Earl of Worcester six years before, and moreover on that occasion bis name appears by his proper title of " Comes Wygorn ; " it must therefore, the editor presumes, apply to Diehard Grey, father of John Grey, who was sum. to Pari, as "Johanni Grey de Powis," 22 Ed. IV, but no account of the said Richard having been sum. to Pari, is recorded." [The concluding paragraph, as altered by " Courthope," is as follows]. "These remarks have been made on the supposition that no act ever took place in favour of Edward Tiptoft, s. and h. of John, Earl of Worcester, the other coheir of the Barony, said to have been attainted in 1470, but the Rolls of Pari, give no account either of such attainder or of any subsequent proceedings on the subject of it [vide Note under Worcester). If there were no attainder, the moiety of the Barony of Cherleton, to which the Baid Edward Tiptoft was heir, devolved on Iris death, infra, (vtatem, s.p., on his aunts, viz. Philippa, who m. Thomas Lord Roos ; Johanna, the wife of Sir Robert Ingoldesthorp ; and Joyce, who m. Edmund Sutton, s. and h. apparent of Lord Dudley, or more properly Lord Sutton of Dudley ; whilst the other moiety was at the same time vested in John Grey de Powys, great-grandson of Joan, eldest dau. and coheir of Edward, 4th [rectius »th] Baron Cherleton." (*) Latimers, a hamlet of Chesham, which belonged originally to the family of Latimer, and of Nevill, Lords Latimer, and subsequently to that of Greville and Sandys, was in possession of the family of Cavendish before 1628, when it was part of the dower of Elizabeth, Countess of Devonshire. Charles I was lodged here, on his way from Holdeuby House to Hampton Court, in 1647.