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Charles Cadogan, 1st Earl Cadogan

British peer and politician (1728–1807)


British peer and politician (1728–1807)

FieldValue
imageCharles_Cadogan,_1st_Earl_Cadogan.png
honorific_prefixThe Right Honourable
nameThe Earl Cadogan
officeMaster of the Mint
term_start1769
term_end1784
predecessorThe Viscount Chetwynd
successorThe Earl of Effingham
office1Member of Parliament for Cambridge
term_start11755
term_end11776
predecessor1Viscount Dupplin
Thomas Bromley
alongside1Viscount Dupplin, Soame Jenyns
successor1Soame Jenyns
Benjamin Keene
term_start21749
term_end21754
predecessor2Viscount Dupplin
Christopher Jeaffreson
alongside2Viscount Dupplin
successor2Viscount Dupplin
Thomas Bromley
birth_nameCharles Sloane Cadogan
birth_date
death_date
death_placeSanton Downham, Suffolk
alma_materMagdalen College, Oxford
partyWhig
parentsCharles Cadogan, 2nd Baron Cadogan
Elizabeth Sloane
spouse{{plainlist
* {{marriageFrances Bromley<br>30 May 17471768reasonher death}}
* {{marriageMary Churchill<br>10 May 17771796reasondiv}}
children14
relativesSir Hans Sloane (grandfather)
Hans Stanley (cousin)

Thomas Bromley Benjamin Keene Christopher Jeaffreson Thomas Bromley Elizabeth Sloane

Hans Stanley (cousin) Charles Sloane Cadogan, 1st Earl Cadogan (29 September 1728 – 3 April 1807) was a British peer and Whig politician.

Early life

Cadogan was the only son of Charles Cadogan, 2nd Baron Cadogan and his wife, the former Elizabeth Sloane.

His maternal grandparents were Elisabeth (née Langley) Sloane and Sir Hans Sloane, 1st Baronet. Following the 1780 suicide of his cousin, Ambassador Hans Stanley (son of his maternal aunt Sarah Sloane Stanley and George Stanley of Paultons), he inherited Stanley's half of the Sloane estate.

Cadogan matriculated at Magdalen College, Oxford in 1746.

Career

From 1749 to 1754 and again from 1755, Cadogan was returned on the interest of his father-in-law, Lord Montfort, as a Member of Parliament for Cambridge until he inherited his father's title in 1776. He was also appointed Keeper of the Privy Purse to Prince Edward in 1756, Surveyor of the King's Gardens from 1764 to 1769 and Master of the Mint from 1769 to 1784. In 1800, he was elevated in the Peerage as 1st Viscount Chelsea and 1st Earl Cadogan.

In 1774, Cadogan entered into an agreement to loan £20,500 to Sir Robert Cockburn, Sir George Colebrooke, John Stewart and John Nelson to enable the four men to purchase a 320-acre estate in St George Parish, Grenada, together with the enslaved people on the estate.

In 1777 he leased 100 acre of the family estate in Chelsea to architect Henry Holland for building development. Holland built Sloane Square, Sloane Street, Cadogan Place and Hans Place. Lord Cadogan also served as Sloane Trustee of the British Museum from 1779 until his death in 1807.

Personal life

On 30 May 1747, Cadogan married Frances Bromley, a daughter of Henry Bromley, 1st Baron Montfort and the former Frances Wyndham (only daughter of Thomas Wyndham of Trent). Together, they had six sons:

  • Charles Henry Sloane Cadogan, 2nd Earl Cadogan (1749–1832), an officer in the British Army who became insane before his father's death.
  • William Bromley Cadogan (1751–1797), who married Jane Bradshaw in 1782.
  • Thomas Cadogan (1752–1782), a naval officer lost at sea aboard HMS Glorieux.
  • George Cadogan (1754–1780), who was killed in India while an officer in the HEIC Army.
  • Edward Cadogan (1758–1779), an army officer.
  • Henry William Cadogan (1761–1774), who died young.

Cadogan's first wife died in 1768, and on 10 May 1777, he married Mary Churchill, a daughter of Col. Charles Churchill and Lady Mary Walpole (a daughter of former Prime Minister Robert Walpole). Together, Mary and Charles were the parents of three sons and three daughters before they divorced in 1796:

  • Lady Emily Mary Cadogan (ABT 1778-1839), who married Gerald Valerian Wellesley, a younger son of Garret Wesley, 1st Earl of Mornington and brother to Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, and became the mother of George Wellesley.
  • Henry Cadogan (1780–1813), who was killed at the Battle of Vitoria.
  • Lady Charlotte Cadogan (1781–1853), who married Henry Wellesley, 1st Baron Cowley, also a son of the 1st Earl of Mornington, in 1803. After their divorce in 1810, she married Henry Paget, 1st Marquess of Anglesey, the eldest son of Henry Paget, 1st Earl of Uxbridge, also in 1810.
  • George Cadogan, 3rd Earl Cadogan (1783–1864), who married Louisa Blake, sister of Joseph Blake, 1st Baron Wallscourt and fifth daughter of Joseph Blake of Ardfry.
  • Lady Louisa Cadogan (1787–1843), who married the Rev. William Marsh in 1840.
  • Lt. Colonel Edward Cadogan (1789–1851), who married Ellen Donovan, daughter of Laurence Donovan in 1823, and then, secondly, Jeanne Marie-Zoé Dipierrin in 1849 at Tarbes, France. He died at Château Ayzac.

Lord Cadogan died at Santon Downham, Suffolk on 3 April 1807, and his titles passed to his eldest son by his first wife, Charles.

References

References

  1. (1986). "The Cadogan Family: The History of a Landed Family". Haggerston Press.
  2. "Charles Sloane Cadogan 1st Earl Cadogan". [[Centre for the Study of the Legacies of British Slavery]].
  3. (2017). "Cadogan & Chelsea: The Making of a Modern Estate". Unicorn Publishing Group LLP.
  4. "Cadogan, Charles Sloane".
  5. (1988). "The First Earl Cadogan, 1672-1726". Haggerston.
  6. "CADOGAN, Hon. Charles Sloane (1728-1807), of Caversham, Oxon.". [[History of Parliament Online]].
  7. Craig, John. (1953). "The Mint: A History of the London Mint from A.D. 287 to 1948". [[Cambridge University Press]].
  8. "A Walk through upper Chelsea and Belgravia".
  9. "Our Heritage {{!}} Cadogan Estates, Chelsea, London UK".
  10. (1832). "Life of the Honourable and Reverend William Bromley Cadogan ... Abridged". R.T.S..
  11. (1990). "The Cadogans at War, 1783-1864: The Third Earl Cadogan and His Family". Haggerston Press.
  12. "Marriage - Tarbes, Hautes-Pyrénées, France, 1849". Archives Départementales des Hautes-Pyrénées, TD 1843 1852 2 E 4/112 Vue 113.
  13. "Acte de décès Mairie Ayzac-Ost, 1851, Cadogan, Edouard". Archives Départementales des Hautes-Pyrénées.
  14. Lundy, Darryl. (February 2013). "p. 10703 § 107026 ". The Peerage}}{{Unreliable source?.
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