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Joan Canning, 1st Viscountess Canning

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(Redirected from Joan Canning) "Viscountess Canning" redirects here. For her daughter-in-law, see Charlotte Canning, Countess Canning.

Joan Canning, 1st Viscountess Canning (née Scott; 1776 – 14 March 1837) was the wife of British prime minister George Canning.

She was born in Scotland, the daughter of Major-General John Scott and Margaret Dundas. Her sisters were Henrietta Bentinck, Duchess of Portland and Lucy, wife of Francis Stuart, 10th Earl of Moray.

On 8 July 1800, she married George Canning in St George's, Hanover Square on Hanover Square, London, with John Hookham Frere and William Pitt the Younger as witnesses. They had four children:

On 22 January 1828, nearly six months after the death of her husband, Joan was created 1st Viscountess Canning of Kilbraham, with a special remainder to the heirs male of her late husband. She lived with her youngest son in the family's London home in Grosvenor Square.

Arms

Coat of arms of Joan Canning, 1st Viscountess Canning
Escutcheon
Or, on a bend azure a mullet of six points between two crescents of the first differenced by a bordure engrailed gules and a crescent of the last (A difference of Scott of Buccleuch, Scotland).
Supporters
Dexter a lion Argent charged on the shoulder with three trefoils slipped Vert and holding in the sinister forepaw an arrow point downwards. Sinister a cormorant holding in its beak a branch of laver all Proper.

References

  1. "Grosvenor Square: Individual Houses built before 1926 Pages 117-166 Survey of London: Volume 40, the Grosvenor Estate in Mayfair, Part 2 (The Buildings)". British History Online. LCC 1980. Retrieved 5 December 2022.
  2. Debrett's Peerage. 1831.
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Viscountess Canning
1828–1837
Succeeded byCharles Canning
Spouses of British prime ministers
Great Britain
United Kingdom
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