Hij is getrouwd met Mary Fanny BLUNT.
Zij zijn getrouwd op 25 april 1815 te St George, Hanover Square, Belgravia, Westminster, Middlesex, hij was toen 27 jaar oud.Bron 1
Kind(eren):
1841 aged 50, living at 4 Grosvenor Place, St George Hanover Square, Westminster with his wife, Mary 45, children Fanny 20, Helen 15, Blanche 14, Caroline 11, Henry 10, Percy 6 and Constance 4, and 31 servants.
1851 aged 63, living at Petworth House, Petworth, Sussex with his wife, Mary 59, daughters Ellen 25, Constance 14, visitors George Paulett 64 and James Constantine 30, and 35 servants.
1861 aged 73, living at Petworth House, Petworth, Sussex with his wife, Mary Fanny Lady Leconfield 69, children the Hon. Percy Scawen 26, the Hon. Helen Caroline Elizabeth 38, married daughter and son in law, the Hon. Constance Elizabeth Mure 24 and William Mure 30, daughter in law the Hon. Madeline Caroline Frances Eden Wyndham 25, visitors widow Lady Pamela Campbell 63, and her children Mary Louisa 28, Julia Henrietta Elizabeth 19 and Guy Theophilus Campbell 6, and MP William Townley Mitford 43, farm bailiff Peter Smith 45 and 33 servants.
George Wyndham, 1st Baron Leconfield (5 June 1787 - 18 March 1869), was a British soldier and peer.
A direct descendant of Sir John Wyndham, he was the eldest natural son of George O'Brien Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont, and Elizabeth Ilive. His parents were married in 1801 but had no sons after their marriage.
George Wyndham entered the Royal Navy in 1799 as a midshipman in HMS Amelia. In 1802 he transferred to the Army as a Cornet in the 5th Dragoon Guards, promoted in 1803 to Lieutenant in the 3rd Dragoon Guards. In 1805 he was a Captain in the 72nd Highlanders and ADC to Sir Eyre Coote who was Lieutenant Governor of Jamaica. In 1807 he was DAAG to Earl Cathcart at the Bombardment of Copenhagen; in 1809, as Captain in the 1st Foot Guards, he took part in the Walcheren Expedition; in 1811 he was a Major in the 78th Regiment and the 12th Light Dragoons; and in 1812 he was Lieutenant-Colonel commanding the 20th Light Dragoons at the siege of Ciudad Rodrigo.
The earldom of Egremont became extinct on the death of the 4th Earl of Egremont in 1845 and this George Wyndham was adopted as the heir to the substantial Egremont estates, including Petworth House in Sussex. In 1859 he was raised to the peerage as Baron Leconfield, of Leconfield in the East Riding of the County of York.
During the Great Irish Famine, Col. George Wyndham was often in residence in his County Clare estate near Ennis where he assisted tenants who wanted to emigrate to Canada. This was a continuation of his father's improving policies in Sussex. In late 1849 and early 1850, a series of seven anonymous essays and illustrations concerning the famine appeared in the Illustrated London News under the title "Condition of Ireland: Illustrations of the New Poor Law." Here the narrator (likely the journalist and philanthropist Sidney Godolphin Osborne) writes of Col. Wyndham that "Colonel Windham . . . is not tired of his fellow-creatures, and does not seek to exterminate them. Not a roofless house did I see here." His property was a "little oasis of humanity in the desert of misery."
George Wyndham married Mary Fanny Blunt, daughter of Reverend William Blunt, in 1815. He died in March 1869, aged 81, and was succeeded in the barony by his eldest surviving son Henry. His third son, the Hon. Percy Scawen Wyndham, was the father of the politician and man of letters George Wyndham. His daughter, Hon. Caroline Sophia Wyndham (b. 12 Jul 1829, d. 19 Mar 1852) married Colonel Sir Robert Nigel Fitzhardinge Kingscote on 13 March 1851 at Petworth, Sussex. She died giving birth and is buried with her still-born child in the family vault at Bartons Lane Cemetery, Petworth, West Sussex.
SOURCE: Wikipedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Wyndham,_1st_Baron_Leconfield
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