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Shelburne, Parry and associates I confess a particular interest in the career of William Petty, Second Earl of Shelburne. The area around my home in High Wycombe was once owned by him, and some of its scenic features can be traced to him. Even before his birth, the name William Petty carries some distinction, thanks to the reputation of one of his ancestors.
The surname is inherited through a grandmother. Quite a common feature of those days, as noble lines ending in a woman keep their name by passing it on to her husband or son: he has to accept the change in order to inherit the family wealth. George Jackson adds the surname Duckett on this basis. Petty inherits other names: Lord Fitzmaurice (an Irish title) through his grandfather; Earl of Shelburne from his father. His final apotheosis is as Marquis of Lansdowne, a title earned through his own efforts. He also inherits Loakes Manor Estate in High Wycombe, which he later sells. Meanwhile he has bought Bowood in Wiltshire, where descendants still live.
He has an impressive list of friends and contacts, including Matthew Boulton, Benjamin Franklin and Jeremy Bentham. There are eighteen entries under his name in Uglow's index. For a while he employs Joseph Priestley as librarian: Bowood boasts the room where Priestley once discovered oxygen. And a political career culminates in a short but significant spell at the head of government. A brief early spell in the army is notable for the contacts he makes in the Twentieth Regiment of Foot: particularly Isaac Barré, who serves under Wolfe at Quebec.
Barré takes over the Wycombe seat when Shelburne moves to the Lords. On purchasing Bowood, Shelburne also becomes patron of the two seats at Calne. Barré moves there, while the second seat goes to another protégé, John Dunning. With Shelburne in the Lords, they form a triumvirate of dissidence during the American War.
Another army contact is David Parry. He is third son of "Humphrey Parry of Pwllhairlog in the county of Flint", who (to judge by his 1744 will) also had land in Denbighshire, Merionethshire and Carmarthenshire. Most of Humphrey's estate is left to his eldest son Robert, while second son Roger is destined for the Church. David goes into the army. By the end of 1759 he is captain in the Twentieth Foot, having distinguished himself at the Battle of Minden. His rank advances to major in 1770.
David Parry's altercation with Cort starts to spill over into litigation in 1775, the year which sees his last entry in the army list. We can assume he retires the following year (thereby missing the regiment's posting to America and their surrender at Saratoga), following the death of his father-in-law Edmund Okeden. Okeden has no male heir: Parry is the main beneficiary of his will, as well as executor, and is henceforth "Major David Parry of Moore Critchell in the County of Dorset". In 1782, with Shelburne heading the Government, Parry is appointed Governor of Barbados. Codicils to his will in 1792 and 1793 show him suffering ill health, so we can't be sure whether he gives up the post before his death in 1794. A pity Cort does not square things properly with Parry. Otherwise he might rise in the esteem of Parry's friend Shelburne, and be able to count on his help when misfortunes crowd around in the late 1780s.
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The pages on this site are copied from the original site of Eric Alexander (henrycort.net) with his allowance. |