John Hamilton, 1st Marquess of Abercorn
John James Hamilton, 1st Marquess of Abercorn KG, PC (Ire) (2 July 1756 – 27 January 1818) was an Anglo-Irish peer and politician. Background and educationJohn James was born in July 1756 in London,[2] the posthumous son of Captain Hon. John Hamilton (second son of 7th Earl of Abercorn) and his widow, Harriet. His father drowned in an accident at Portsmouth Harbour, seven months before his birth. John was baptized at St George's, Hanover Square.[3] He was educated at Harrow from 1770 to 1771.[4] He was admitted to the Inner Temple on 15 June 1773,[5] but did not remain there long; he was admitted to Pembroke College, Cambridge on 30 July 1773. He matriculated at Michaelmas and received his MA in 1776.[6] There he became the friend of William Pitt the Younger, a connection that would serve him well in later years.[4] House of CommonsHamilton went abroad in about 1781, and returned in the late summer of 1783. Through the influence of John Buller, his wife's uncle, he was returned as a Tory Member of Parliament for East Looe in December, taking the seat vacated by William Graves. His maiden speech was in opposition to the East India Bill of the Fox-North Coalition. He was naturally a supporter of his friend Pitt's first ministry. At the 1784, he was put in for St Germans, another Cornish borough, by his half-brother Edward Eliot. Though deeply attached to Pitt, he possessed great independence of character and something of his uncle's stiff pride. A staunch supporter of Warren Hastings, he spoke in 1788 against a bill to regulate (and thereby sanction) the slave trade, and in favour of its abolition.[4] House of Lords and later lifeOn 9 October 1789, Hamilton succeeded his childless uncle as Earl of Abercorn, and entered the House of Lords as Viscount Hamilton.[3] Hamilton was created 1st Marquess of Abercorn on 15 October 1790,[7] doubtless due to his political connections. He was sworn of the Privy Council of Ireland on 7 February 1794.[3] Most of the Abercorn lands were in Ireland, and the Marquess made great efforts to build a voting bloc in the Irish Parliament from County Donegal and County Tyrone, although with relatively little success. He was criticised for being a harsh landlord, and in 1805 he unsuccessfully tried to have a High Court judge who had raised the issue removed from the Bench; the judge's conduct was reckless in the extreme, as Abercorn has been called "the last man who could be attacked with impunity". He was invested as a Knight of the Garter on 17 January 1805.[3] George W. E. Russell provided the following sketch of his aristocratic character:
Marriages and issueHamilton married Catherine Copley (died 13 September 1791), daughter of Sir Joseph Copley, 1st Baronet, on 20 June 1779 at St Marylebone.[3] They had five children:
His first wife died in 1791. He married his first cousin, Lady Cecil Hamilton, daughter of Rev. Hon. George Hamilton, on 4 March 1792. She was granted a Royal Warrant of Precedence on 27 October 1789 to assume the precedence of an earl's daughter,[9] through his influence with Pitt; Sir Nathaniel Wraxall suggests that she was Hamilton's mistress before the death of his first wife, and that George III was very reluctant to make out the warrant.[10] They had one child:
His marriage to Lady Cecil was not a success; they separated in 1798 and were divorced by Act of Parliament in April 1799. The next month, she married Joseph Copley, the brother of Abercorn's first wife. Abercorn married Lady Anne Jane Gore (1763–1827), daughter of Arthur Gore, 2nd Earl of Arran, on 3 April 1800.[11] Lord Abercorn died on 27 January 1818 at Bentley Priory, Stanmore, and was buried on 5 February at Stanmore. His titles passed to his grandson, James Hamilton.[11] Notes and references
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