Sir William Stapleton, MP, 4th Baronet

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William Stapleton, MP, 4th Baronet

Birthdate:
Death: January 12, 1740 (37-46)
Bath, Somerset, England (United Kingdom)
Immediate Family:

Son of Sir William Stapleton of Nevis, 3rd Baronet and Frances Stapleton
Husband of Catherine Paul
Father of Will Stapleton; Sir Thomas Stapleton, MP, 5th Baronet and Catherine Wright
Brother of Col. James Russell Stapleton

Occupation: MP, 4th Baronet of the Leeward Islands
Managed by: Woodman Mark Lowes Dickinson, OBE
Last Updated:

About Sir William Stapleton, MP, 4th Baronet

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sir_William_Stapleton,_4th_Baronet

b. ?1698, 1st son of Sir William Stapleton, 3rd Boronet of Nevis by Frances, da. and coheir of Sir James Russell, gov. Nevis. educ. Christ Church Oxford. 17 Apr. 1714, aged 15. m. 28 Apr. 1724, Catherine, da. and h. of William Paul of Braywick, Berks. by Lady Catherine Fane, da. of Vere Fane, M.P., 4th Earl of Westmorland, 3s. 2da. suc. fa. Dec. 1699.

Biography

Stapleton was the grandson of Sir William Stapleton, who followed Charles II into exile in France, and after the Restoration was appointed deputy-governor of Montserrat and captain-general of the Leeward Islands, with a baronetcy.1 In February 1725 Stapleton invited several other Tories to a dinner, during which the Duke of Wharton publicly drank the Pretender’s health and boasted of the facility of a restoration with French help.2 At the general election of 1727, Dr. Stratford of Christ Church reported:

Our knighthood of the shire went a begging ... One Sir William Stapleton, a West Indian, formerly of Christ Church, a rake then as I hear he is still, is to be [the] man. He has but little estate in Oxfordshire, and that by his wife Mrs. Paul.3 Returned unopposed, he voted against the Administration in every recorded division. His only recorded speech was made on the resolutions for a bill for the relief of the sugar colonies, 21 Feb. 1733, when he successfully opposed the importation of rum from the North American colonies into Ireland as detrimental to the sugar colonies. He was the only unofficial member of the committee appointed to draft the bill, known as the Molasses Act.4

He died at Bath 12 Jan. 1740.

Ref Volumes: 1715-1754 Author: Eveline Cruickshanks

Notes

1. Oliver, Antigua, iii. 102. 2. HMC Var. viii. 385. 3. HMC Portland, vii. 450. 4. HMC Egmont Diary, i. 335.

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National Trust, Greys Court

National Trust, Greys Court

Greys Court is a partial survivor of one of the great houses of the Middle Ages and the Elizabethan era. It is named after Lord de Grey who was given permission to crenellate in 1347, whence the Great Tower still survives. In 1514, Henry VIII granted it to a court official, Robert Knollys (d.1521).

The property exchanged ownership regularly and therefore few paintings have survived. It passed down through the Knollys family until 1642, when it was sold. It was sold again in 1686 to William Paul of Braynick, Berkshire. In 1724 his daughter, Catherine, married the West Indian nabob, Sir William Stapleton (1698–1739), 4th Bt, which bought Greys Court into that family, where it remained for the next two centuries. In 1935 Sir Miles Stapleton (1893–1995), 9th Bt, sold it to Evelyn Fleming.

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Obituary in The Gentleman's Magazine

Oct. I. In London, aged 64, the Right Hon. Thomas Stapleton, Lord le Despencer (by writ 1264), and a Baronet (178?). The family of Stapleton were settled in Ireland until Sir William Stapleton, who was Governor of the Leeward Islands, and was created a Baronet in 1679, left his descendants considerable estates in the island of Ni-vis. His grandson Sir William, the 4lh Baronet, returning to England, acquired by marriage, the estate of Rotherfield Greys in Oxfordshire, and for some lime sat in Parliament for that county. It was from his marriage also that the family derived its claim to the barony of Despencer. The Baron now deceased was the grandson of Sir William, and was horn Not. 10, 1766, the eldest son of Sir Thomas Stapleton, the fifth Baronet, by Mary, daughter of Henry Fane, of W'nrmesley in Oxfordshire, esq. brother to Thomas eighth Karl of Westmoreland. At the age of fourteen he succeeded bis father in the Baronetcy, Nov. 1, 1781; and shortly after arriving at full age, became entitled to the Barony of le Despencer. This Very ancient title, which is only preceded in point of antiquity by that of de Ros, having passed through female heirs to the families of Nevill and Fane, had remained for a century and a half vested in the latter name, and merged in the Earldom of Westmoreland, until the death of John the seventh Earl without issue, in 1762. It then fell into abeyance between the heirs of his sisters, Mary wife of Sir Francis Dashwuod, Bart, and Catherine, who married William Paul, esq. hut in the following year, 1763, the Crown terminated the abeyance In favour of Sir Francis Dasbwood, the son of the elder sister. He died without issue in 1781, when the Barony again fell into abeyance between his sister Rarhael the widow of Sir Robert Austen, Bart, and the heir of Lady Catherine Paul before mentioned. Lady Austen's death, May Iti, 1788, terminated this abeyance; when the re-united title to the Barony devolved entire on Sir Thomas Stapleion, his grandmother having been Catherine Paul, the only daughter and heiress of the said Lady Catherine. His Lordship always led a private life, steering clear of all political divisions. Gent. Mao. November, 1831. He married Elizabeth, second daughter of Samuel Eliot, of Antigua, esq., and had four sons and six daughters: I. the Hon. Thomas Stapleton, who died June I, 1829 (see our vol. xcix. i. 572), leaving by Maria, daughter of Henry Bankes, esq. (who died in 1823) an only surviving child, the Right Hon. Mary-FrancesElizabeth, now Baroness le Despencer, born in 1822; 2. the Hon. ElizabethMary, who died Dec. 20, 1823, aged 30; 3. the Right Hon. Maria-Frances-Catberine, Countess of Roden; she was married in 1813 to Robert the third and present Earl of Roden, K.P., and has several children ; 4. the Hon. Emma, married in 1825 to Charles Brodrick, esq., eldest son of the late Archbishop of Cashel, and nephew to Viscount Midleton, and has issue; 5. the Hon. William Stapleton, who died at Barrackpore in India, where be was aid-de-camp to Lord Combermere, the commander-inchief, Sept. 20, 1826, aged 28; 6. the Hon. Emily, married in 1817 to Col. the Hon. Hercules-Robert Pakenbam, C. B., brother to the Earl of Longford, K. P., and has several children; 7. the Hon.and Rev. Miles-John Stapleton, Rector of Mereworth, Kent, who died June 11, 1830 (see our last volume, part i. p. 650), leaving four daughters; 8. the Hon. Frances j 9. the Hon. Anna-Theresa-Esther, married May 17, 1828, to Henry Maxwell, esq. nephew to Lord Farnham; and 10. the Hon. Sir Francis-Jervis Stapleton, who (provided his elder brother the clergyman died without male issue, which we believe was the case,) has succeeded to the title of Baronet: he was born in 1*107, and married, May 17, 1830, Margaret,eldest dad. of Lieut.-Geu. Sir George Airey, K.G.H.

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Sir William Stapleton, MP, 4th Baronet's Timeline

1698
1698
1725
1725
Oxfordshire, England, United Kingdom
1727
February 24, 1727
Oxfordshire, England, United Kingdom
1732
1732
1740
January 12, 1740
Age 42
Bath, Somerset, England (United Kingdom)