Page:The Complete Peerage Ed 2 Vol 2.djvu/507

 CALTHORPE 491 III. 1807. 3. George (Gough-Calthorpe), Baron Calthorpe, br. and h., b. 22 June 1787. Ed. at St. John's Coll. Cambridge; B.A. i8o8.(*) He d. unm., Sep. 1851, at Lyon, aged 64. Will pr. Dec. 1851.^ IV. 1851. 4. Frederick. (Gough), Baron Calthorpe, br. and h., b. 14 June 1790, in London. M. ?.("=) for Hindon (Wilts) 1818-26, and for Bramber 1826-31. By Royal lie. 14 May 1845, he discontinued {for himself only) the additional surname of Calthorpe. High Sheriff of CO. Stafford 1848. He w., 12 Aug. 1823, Charlotte Sophia, ist da. of Henry Charles (Somerset), 6th Duke of Beaufort, by Charlotte Sophia, da. of Granville (Leveson-Gower), ist Marquess of Stafford. She was b. 25 Apr. 1795, and d. 12 Nov. 1865, at Elvetham. He d. there 2 May 1868, aged 77. Will dat. 13 May 1856, pr. 14 May 1868, under ^70,000. V. 1868. 5. Frederick Henry William (Gough-Calthorpe), Baron Calthorpe, s. and h., b. 24 July 1 826, in London. Ed. at Eton, and at Trin. Coll. Cambridge. M.P. (Liberal) for East Worcester 1859-68. He d. unm., 25 June 1893, in his 67th year, at 38 Grosvenor Sq. Will pr. at ^^297, 902. VI. 1893. 6. Augustus Cholmondeley (Gough-Calthorpe), Baron Calthorpe [1796], also a Baronet [1728], next br. and h., b. 8 Nov. 1829, at Elvetham. High Sheriff of co. Stafford 1881. A Conservative. He»;.,22 July 1869, atSt. Paul's, Knightsbridge, Maud Augusta Louisa, 3rd and yst. da. of the Hon. Octavius Duncombe (yr. s. of Charles, ist Baron Feversham of Duncombe Park), by Emily Caroline, da. of John Frederick (Campbell), ist Earl Cawdor of Castle- martin. He ^., after a short illness, aged 80, s.p.in.s.,(^) in Grosvenor Sq., 22, and was bur. 27 July 19 10, at Elvetham, the body having previously been cremated at Golder's Green. Will pr. 30 Sep. 19 10, gross ^177,393, net ;£i 67,909.0 He was sue. by his br., who is outside the scope of this work. His widow, who was b. 14 Jan. 1850, is now (19 12) living. (^) He was a Whig for many years, he voted for Catholic emancipation, against the Reform Bill in 1831, and for it in 1832. In later life he rarely took part in divisions, but inclined to the Conservatives, and is classed in Dodv/t. that party. V.G. (^) Green, in his Diary of a Lover of Literature, describes him at a county meeting at Stowmarket, 29 Jan. 1822, as "of mean aspect, ridiculously egotistical, self sufficient, and manifestly a trimmer." V.G. (') A Whig in the Commons, and in the Lords a very moderate Palmerstonian Liberal. V.G. (<^) His only s., Walter, h. 3 May 1873, ed. at Eton, and at Ch. Ch. Oxford, d. unm. and v. p., 21 Dec. 1906, of consumption, at San Moritz. V.G. (') The 7th Baron wrote to the Times in Sep. 1910, to the effect that his "late brother had alienated the whole of the estates which have hitherto gone with the title." V.G.