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Thomas Brudenell-Bruce, 1st Earl of Ailesbury

British courtier

Thomas Brudenell-Bruce, 1st Earl of Ailesbury

British courtier

FieldValue
honorific-prefixThe Right Honourable
nameThe Earl of Ailesbury
honorific-suffixKT
imageJoshua Reynolds, Portrait of Thomas Bruce Brudenell-Bruce, later 1st Earl of Ailesbury, in Peer's Robes (1776).jpg
imagesize200px
captionThe Earl of Ailesbury by Joshua Reynolds.
officeLord-Lieutenant of Wiltshire
term_start1780
term_end1782
predecessorThe Earl of Pembroke
successorThe Earl of Pembroke
birth_date30 April 1729
death_date
death_placeSeamore Place, Mayfair, London, England
nationalityBritish
spouse
parents
children5, including Charles Brudenell-Bruce, 1st Marquess of Ailesbury

| honorific-prefix = The Right Honourable | honorific-suffix = KT Thomas Brudenell-Bruce, 1st Earl of Ailesbury, KT (30 April 1729 – 19 April 1814), styled The Honourable Thomas Brudenell until 1747 and known as the Lord Bruce between 1747 and 1776, was a British courtier.

Background and education

Born Thomas Brudenell, he was the youngest son of George Brudenell, 3rd Earl of Cardigan and Lady Elizabeth Bruce. He was the younger brother of George Montagu, 1st Duke of Montagu, James Brudenell, 5th Earl of Cardigan and the Honourable Robert Brudenell. He was educated at Winchester College. In February 1747, aged 17, he succeeded his uncle, the 4th Earl of Elgin and 3rd and last Earl of Ailesbury, as 2nd Baron Bruce of Tottenham according to a special remainder in the letters patent. In 1767 he assumed by Royal licence the additional surname of Bruce.

Public life

Coats of Arms of Thomas Brudenell-Bruce

When the Wiltshire Militia was embodied on 8 November 1758 he was commissioned as its Colonel. He (and many of his officers) resigned in 1770 when the Lord Lieutenant of Wiltshire promoted a junior officer to the vacant position of Lieutenant-Colonel of the regiment.

Lord Bruce served as a Lord of the Bedchamber to King George III, and was briefly in May 1776 Governor to the Prince of Wales and Prince Frederick. In June 1776 he was created Earl of Ailesbury (later styled Aylesbury), in the County of Buckingham, a revival of the earldom which had become extinct on his uncle's death. He subsequently served as Lord Lieutenant of Wiltshire from 1780 to 1782, as Lord Chamberlain to Queen Charlotte from 1780 to 1792 and as Treasurer to Queen Charlotte from 1792 to 1814.

On 29 November 1786 he was made a Knight of the Order of the Thistle.

He hired Capability Brown to work on Tottenham House from 1764 to c 1770.

Family

Lord Ailesbury married firstly, Susanna Hoare, daughter of the banker Henry Hoare and widow of Charles Boyle, Viscount Dungarvan, on 17 February 1761; her only child from her first marriage was Henrietta O'Neill, later a successful poet. They had five children:

  • Lady Caroline Anne Brudenell-Bruce (d. 1824), died unmarried.
  • George Brudenell-Bruce, Lord Bruce (1762–1783), died unmarried.
  • Lady Frances Elizabeth Brudenell-Bruce (1765–1836), married Sir Henry Wright-Wilson, MP for St Albans.
  • Hon. Charles Brudenell-Bruce (1767–1768), died in infancy.
  • Charles Brudenell-Bruce, 1st Marquess of Ailesbury (1773–1856).

Susanna, Countess of Ailesbury, died on 4 February 1783. Lord Ailesbury married as his second wife Lady Anne Elizabeth Rawdon (1753-1813), eldest daughter of John Rawdon, 1st Earl of Moira, on 14 February 1788. There were no children from this marriage. She died on 8 January 1813. Lord Ailesbury died at Seamore Place, Mayfair, London, in April 1814, aged eighty-four. He was succeeded in the earldom by his third but only surviving son, Charles, who was created Marquess of Ailesbury in 1821.

References

References

  1. {{London Gazette. (26–29 December 1767)
  2. Kenrick, p. 303.
  3. {{London Gazette. (4 June 1776)
  4. Stroud, Dorothy. (1 October 1984). "Capability Brown". [[Faber & Faber]].
  5. Willis, Peter. (1984). "Capability Brown's account with Drummonds Bank, 1753-1783". Architectural History.
  6. WRO [43] 15th HMC Report App VII
  7. WRO 9, 100, 111; NRA 30725; Principal Family estate correspondence, 1996, A-K [12a]
  8. BL, MSS, II, 1984
  9. NRS GD224/663; NRA 34806
  10. CUL BP; NRA 42238
  11. NRAS 3955; NRA 26223 Bruce
  12. Sheffield City Archives WWM; WRA 1083 Wentworth Woodhouse
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