Revision as of 19:34, 29 November 2022 editCharles Matthews (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Administrators360,292 edits cats← Previous edit | Revision as of 19:36, 29 November 2022 edit undoCharles Matthews (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Administrators360,292 editsm Charles Matthews moved page Draft:Peter Holford to Peter Holford without leaving a redirect: move draft into mainspaceNext edit → |
(No difference) |
Revision as of 19:36, 29 November 2022
This article or section is in a state of significant expansion or restructuring. You are welcome to assist in its construction by editing it as well. If this article or section has not been edited in several days, please remove this template. If you are the editor who added this template and you are actively editing, please be sure to replace this template with {{in use}} during the active editing session. Click on the link for template parameters to use.
This article was last edited by Charles Matthews (talk | contribs) 2 years ago. (Update timer) |
Peter Holford (c.1720–1804) was an English barrister. He was a master in chancery from 1750 and a Fellow of the Royal Society.
Background
He was the eldest son of Robert Holford (1686–1753) and his wife Sarah Vandeput, and grandson of Sir Richard Holford, master in chancery, and his second wife Elizabeth Stayner, daughter of Sir Richard Stayner RN.
The Holfords were chancery lawyers and landowners. Sir Richard Holford (died 1718) was married three times. He had sons by each marriage. He bought the manor of Avebury from the heirs of John Stawell, 2nd Baron Stawell, who died in 1692. It went to Samuel, son of his third wife Susanna Trotman. On his death in 1730 it went to Richard, son of Sir Richard's son by his first marriage, to Sarah Crew, who died in 1742. It passed on to his brother Staynor Holford, who died in 1767. It then was bequeathed out of the Holford family. Robert Holford took advantage of the situation in 1742 to acquire from Richard the younger a farm at Beckhampton in lieu of a debt repayment. Distrust remained in the family.
Life
Peter Holford was educated at Westminster School, and matriculated at St John's College, Cambridge in 1736. He entered Lincoln's Inn in 1735, and was called to the bar in 1740. He became a master in chancery in 1750.
Holford was elected to the Royal Society in 1747 (N.S.), and belonged to a dining club within it that met in house on The Strand, with a membership in which physicians predominated, and including Henry Cavendish.
Family
Holford married Anne Nutt, daughter of William Nutt of Buxted. They had two sons and two daughters:
- Robert Halford, died unmarried 1838.
- George Peter Holford, father of Robert Stayner Holford.
- Sarah, married as his second wife Sir Charles Grave Hudson, 1st Baronet.
- Charlotte, married in 1796 Charles Bosanquet.
Notes
- ^ Barker, G.F. Russell; Stenning, Alan H. (1928). The Record of Old Westminsters: A Biographical List of All Those who are Known to Have Been Educated at Westminster School from the Earliest Times to 1927. Vol. I. Printed at the Chiswick Press.
- ^ "Peter Holford (HLFT736P)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Burke, Bernard (1871). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland. Harrison. p. 636.
- Crisp, Frederick A. (1903). Visitation of England and Wales: Notes. Vol. 5. Heritage Books. p. 48. ISBN 978-0-7884-0702-4.
- "Parishes: Avebury, British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk.
- Country Life. 1921. p. 552.
- Beatson, Robert (1788). A Political Index to the Histories of Great Britain and Ireland. Vol. I. London: G. G. J. & J. Robinson. p. 429.
- Thomson, Thomas (1812). History of the Royal Society: From Its Institution to the End of the Eighteenth Century. R. Baldwin. p. xliv.
- Jungnickel, Christa; McCormmach, Russell (1999). Cavendish: The Experimental Life. Bucknell University Press. p. 78. ISBN 978-0-8387-5445-0.
- Burke, Bernard (1871). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland. Harrison. p. 636.
- O'Shaughnessy, Andrew J. "Bosanquet, Charles (1769–1850)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/2927. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)