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David Murray, 2nd Earl of Mansfield

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The Earl of Mansfield
Lord President of the Council
In office
17 December 1794 – 1 September 1796
MonarchGeorge III
Prime MinisterWilliam Pitt
Preceded byWilliam Fitzwilliam, 4th Earl Fitzwilliam
Succeeded byJohn Pitt, 2nd Earl of Chatham
In office
2 April 1783 – 19 December 1783
MonarchGeorge III
Prime MinisterWilliam Cavendish-Bentinck, 3rd Duke of Portland
Preceded byCharles Pratt, 1st Earl Camden
Succeeded byGranville Leveson-Gower, 2nd Earl Gower
Secretary of State for the Northern Department
In office
27 October 1779 – 27 March 1782
MonarchGeorge III
Prime MinisterFrederick North, Lord North
Preceded byThomas Thynne, Viscount Weymouth
Succeeded byOffice Abolished
William Petty, 2nd Earl of Shelburne as Home Secretary
Charles James Fox as Foreign Secretary
Personal details
Born
David Murray

9 October 1727
Died1 September 1796(1796-09-01) (aged 68)
Resting placeWestminster Abbey (body)
Comlongon Castle (heart)
Spouses
(m. 1759; died 1766)
(m. 1776)
Children
Parents
RelativesWilliam Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield (paternal uncle)
Alma materWestminster School
Christ Church, Oxford
OccupationPolitician

David Murray, 2nd Earl of Mansfield, 7th Viscount of Stormont, KT, PC (9 October 1727 – 1 September 1796) known as the (7th) Viscount of Stormont from 1748 to 1793, was a British diplomat and politician. He succeeded to both the Mansfield and Stormont lines of the Murray family, inheriting two titles and two fortunes.

Background

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Mansfield was the son of David Murray, 6th Viscount of Stormont, and his wife, Anne Stewart, heiress of John Stewart of Innernytie. The Lord Chief Justice, William Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield, was his paternal uncle and mentor. Stormont inherited the family's estate and title of Viscount Stormont at 21 when his father died in 1748. The ancestral seat of the Viscounts Stormont is Scone Palace.

Diplomat

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Countess Henrietta von Bünau by Marcello Bacciareli

Stormont's uncle was determined to advance his nephew and heir, so he carefully planned Stormont's education and occupation. He excelled in the study of the classics and languages especially latin, so it was decided that he would become a diplomat.

Stormont became ambassador to Saxony-Poland, Austria and then to France with the help of his uncle, in the early years of the American War of Independence, he played a role in sending news of American actions back to England. He had been elected a Scottish representative peer in 1754. He also made a lifelong friend in William Cavendish-Bentinck, 3rd Duke of Portland, when he was sent to study under Stormont for a year in Warsaw, at the request of Stormont's uncle and the Duchess of Portland. The Duke was accompanied by Stormont's secretary, Benjamin Langlois.[1]

When Frederick II of Prussia invaded Saxony, the Elector of Saxony was forced to retreat from Dresden to Warsaw, capital of his Polish kingdom. Stormont followed, he had previously met a German Imperial Countess (Reichsgrafin) in Dresden, her name was Henrietta Frederica von Bünau, daughter of Imperial Count Heinrich von Bünau. They fell in love and were married in Warsaw, Poland in 1759.[2] Walpole wrote "Lord Stormont is actually married and is the happiest creature in the world, I would have him always so for his is the best."[3]

His marriage was unexpected, instead of a calculated marriage with a British peerage like his uncle, he opted to marry for love to Countess Henrietta. Before her 2nd marriage, Henrietta was already a young and wealthy noble widow, her 1st husband had died young and bequeathed her all his fortune and three Danish estates. After marrying Stormont, she sold them in 1760.[2] Stormont's uncle Lord Chief Justice encouraged him on his courtship, he even sent letters to Henrietta, future Countess of Mansfield and welcoming her to the family.[2]

Vienna

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Then Stormont was appointed British Ambassador to Austria in 1763 to 1772 at the court of Empress Maria Theresa. Stormont's wife, who was a German noblewoman by birth helped him be accepted by the high society of Vienna. She was a woman of enormous charm, this made up for the reserved manner of her husband, this made the embassy to Vienna a huge success.

His wife's health was always fragile, Horace Walpole described her as such a Semele. In 1766, Henrietta suddenly died in Vienna at the age of only 29. Her death caused Stormont to have a nervous breakdown and was given extended leave of absence, he embalmed her heart in a gold vase and carried it everywhere he went (later taken to Scone). They had one surviving daughter Lady Elizabeth Murray, who was eventually brought up by his uncle and his wife at Kenwood House.[2]

Stormont described his wife as "Flourishing in the prime of life, in talent, in beauty, [and] remarkable for every praise, endowed with every virtue, she met a death happy to herself, [but] deeply bitter to her friends, parent and most wretched husband".[2]

Dido Elizabeth Belle and Lady Elizabeth Murray by David Martin. Dido Elizabeth Belle (1761-1804) and Lady Elizabeth Murray (1760-1825), previously at Kenwood now at Scone Palace

His friend a fellow diplomat, Sir William Hamilton said to his niece Mary Hamilton, that if it wasn't for his help to get him out of his depression and recovered in Rome, he believed that Stormont might have gone mad, Hamilton said that the countess had a very elegant mind. Stormont didn't return to his post for two years and remained unmarried for a decade, despite the urgent need of providing an heir to keep both his and his uncle's titles from extinction.[2]

The great antiquarian Johann Joachim Winckelmann (whom he met in Rome in 1768), had worked as librarian to Stormont's father in-law (Count von Bünau). He remarked that Stormont was "the most learned man of his rank whom I have yet known".[4]

After his return from Rome, the final four years in Vienna were dominated by the Russo-Turkish War which began in 1768, He protested unofficially about the partitioning of Poland, but the partition was finalised in 1772.[2]

Upon leaving Vienna, he was gifted a gold box set with diamonds by Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor.[5]

Paris

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By now Stormont had become a leading British diplomat, this followed by ambassador to Paris from 1772 to March 1778.[4] In France, he met Queen Marie Antoinette, whom he had acquainted back when she was a little archduchess in the court of her mother in Vienna years prior, The Queen of France was very pleased to be greeted by a friendly face and befriended the Viscount, it was said that he taught the young queen how to reels, to commemorate their friendship, she gifted him one of three Jean Henri Riesener writing desks previously commissioned to mark her marriage.[6] Marie Antoinette nicknamed him "le bel Anglais" meaning the beautiful English.[7]

Queen Marie Antoinette writing desk by Riesener given to the 2nd earl (Scone Palace)

In 1774, when his uncle Lord Mansfield stayed at the French Embassy, Lord Stormont presented his uncle to Louis XVI and Marie Antionette at the Palace of Versailles.[4] He was valued amongst French nobility for his intelligent brain, kind heart, and good looks, which he carried into middle age. He remarried after a decade to younger Louisa Cathcart in 1776.

When the French government secretly sent funds to America. The Americans built a frigate at Amsterdam, and another at Nantes. The French also contributed the means for supplying American privateers, that came into their ports. Every thing was done with as much discreet as possible; but Stormont, the British ambassador, had spies in all the principal ports, and was aware of all their proceedings.[8]

Benjamin Franklin wrote to Stormont in April 1777 about exchanging prisoners, for which he didn't receive a satisfactory answer, later some prisoners were exchanged but the channel of exchanges wasn't always established.[9]

In March 1778, France declared support for the American revolution against Britain. Hence, the ambassadors to both countries were recalled and Stormont returned to England. Madame du Deffand, lamented him as a friend and frequenter of her celebrated parties. ‘‘ I find wit in your Ambassador,” she wrote to Horace Walpole,“ The best of all our diplomatists without comparison. At last war is declared. Your Ambassador has received his recall, and perhaps leaves to-morrow. I wrote him one word. He promises to come and see me to-morrow between five and six. I own that I regret him, and have seen nothing in him that is not honest and reasonable ".

After diplomatic career

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No. 37 Portland Place was destroyed during World War II, it had the same Adam façade as its twin No. 46-48 right across.

Stormont reached the apex of his career when he was appointed as the last Secretary of State for the Northern Department, serving from 1779 to 1782.

In 1783 he was appointed as Lord President of the Council, and again from 1794 to 1796. He served as Lord Justice General between 1778 and 1795. He was appointed a Privy Counsellor in 1763 and made a Knight of the Thistle in 1768.

He purchased 56 Portland Place (later renumbered to No.37) in 1778, the largest house in the street, recently developed by his friend Duke of Portland and Robert Adam.[10]

King George III said that he had owed Stormont a great deal, but he never rewarded him, this was noted by his friend Mary Hamilton, who said word of a prince can't be held reliable, but a word of a King needed to be.[11]For he had served King George III as envoy extraordinary for more than 20 years (his many letters to the King are held at The National Archives).

The 18th century hostess Elizabeth Montagu praised Stormont in 1779 saying "I was very sorry when he left us, for he used to call on me often, great sense, knowledge, & large acquaintance with the World make him very agreable, & I love him the better for his admirable answer to ye malicious attack on Lord Sandwich."[12]

David Murray, Lord Stormont c.1780.

Gordon Riots

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Kenwood House with the new wings to the left and right added by the 2nd Earl (North facade)

During the Gordon riots of 1780, his uncle Lord Mansfield's Bloomsbury Square townhouse was burned to the ground. It was reported that Lord Mansfield, Lady Mansfield and his daughter Lady Elizabeth had escaped using the back door. Lady Mansfield's clothes were burned alongside Lord Mansfield's precious book collection.[13]

But it was rumored that sixty angry mobs also targeted Kenwood House next, given its close proximity to London. Stormont wrote to King George III that he had ordered light cavalry to be dispatched to Kenwood. The rioters approached Kenwood with hostile intentions, but were stalled by free ale from the nearby Spaniard’s Inn, assisted by Lord Mansfield’s steward using wine supply from the house, they successfully stalled the mob until the armed forces arrived to protect the house.[13]

He knew not only that Kenwood House would one day be his, but also his own daughter and sisters were in dire danger, as they still remained at Kenwood. Stormont successfully saved Kenwood, his uncle beloved home from burning and looting.[13]

Second Earl of Mansfield

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In 1793 he succeeded his uncle, William, 1st Earl of Mansfield who had died. Stormont became the 2nd Earl of Mansfield of the 1792 creation, while his wife succeeded as 2nd Countess of Mansfield of the 1776 creation, according to special remainders in the letters patent. He inherited his uncle's Kenwood House in the London Borough of Camden and his entire wealth.

In March 1794, King George III visited Kenwood House, Queen Charlotte wrote in her diary that his majesty took his airing walk and was curious about the new architectural addition to Kenwood by his friend, the 2nd Earl of Mansfield.[14]

Death

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Countess Henrietta and Lord Stormont's memorial at Scone Palace. (the inscription was added right at the small base below the vase)

Lord Mansfield died in September 1796 at Brighton. In his will he had requested a simple burial wherever he died and his heart removed and taken to Scone Palace to be reunited with that of his first wife, he also requested adding latin inscriptions of "Mutuique amoris perpetuo memor, Nunc demum addit suum" meaning "Remembering each other's love forever and now, at last, he adds his own" to their memorial at Scone Palace.

But, instead his body was laid to rest with his uncle, the 1st Earl, at Westminster Abbey with a lot of processions fit for such prominent figure.[15] His heart was interred in Comlongon Castle. He left his eldest daughter, three paintings of her mother Henrietta that still hung in his dressing room and left all his younger children equal inheritances.

He was succeeded in his titles by his eldest son David William Murray. His second son, the Honourable George Murray, became a Lieutenant-General in the Army. His fourth son, the Honourable Sir Henry Murray, rose to the rank of General.

His sister, Lady Margery said in her will, "I leave amber snuff box set in gold as a token of my love and esteem for the kindest and best of brothers he will value it as having once belonged to his worthy friend." From Lord Stormont's obituary in Gentleman's Magazine:

No man ever fulfilled all the relative duties of social life with more scrupulous exactness, either as a father, a husband, a brother, or a friend. His liberality was unbounded, not ostentatious indeed, but secret in the manner, and princely in the measure, as the writer of this, who knew him long and well, can vouch; not only as having been, on a very important occasion of his life, the object of it, but also as one of the channels through which it flowed, to the amount of many thousand pounds.[16]

The Countess of Mansfield survived her husband by 47 years. She went on to remarry to her first cousin the Hon. Robert Fulke Greville in 1797. Lady Mansfield died in July 1843, aged 85.

Family

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Coat of arms of the Murrays, Earls of Mansfield

Lord Stormont, as he was known at the time, married his wife on 16 August 1759, whilst he was British ambassador to Saxony. She was Countess Henrietta Frederica von Bünau daughter of Count Heinrich von Bünau. They had two daughters:

Henrietta died on 10 March 1766 in Vienna. A decade later, on 5 May 1776, Stormont married secondly The Hon. Louisa Cathcart, daughter of Charles Cathcart, 9th Lord Cathcart and Jane Hamilton. Louisa was his junior by 30 years, she was also the niece of Sir William Hamilton, and they had five children:

His second wife once said that she had never seen a good portrait of her husband, "the drawing of me, which had many faults, you shall have a resemblance of me in some shape or the other, but as for Lord Stormont I shall not consent, for I never saw a good likeness of him".[11]

Representation in media

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Poser, Norman S. (2013). Lord Mansfield : justice in the age of reason. Internet Archive. Montreal & Kingston; Ithaca : McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-4183-2.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Scott, Hamish. "The Rise of the House of Mansfield: Scottish Service Nobility in the emerging British State" (PDF). The Rise of the House of Mansfield. pp. 134–136.
  3. ^ "Yale edition of Walpole's correspondence". libsvcs-1.its.yale.edu. Retrieved 23 June 2024.
  4. ^ a b c Stamp, Agnes (10 June 2013). "Scone Palace: The Seat of the Earl of Mansfield and Mansfield, part 1 by John Cornforth". Country Life. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
  5. ^ "Old Bailey". Morning Herald (London). 19 September 1805. p. 3.
  6. ^ "Murray Family". Scone Palace. Retrieved 14 October 2022.
  7. ^ "Tour - Drawing Room". Scone Palace. Retrieved 23 January 2023.
  8. ^ "Biography of Benjamin Franklin". www.ushistory.org. Retrieved 9 February 2024.
  9. ^ "Founders Online: The American Commissioners to Lord Stormont, 2 April 1777". founders.archives.gov. Retrieved 9 February 2024.
  10. ^ UCL (6 December 2016). "South-East Marylebone". The Bartlett School of Architecture. Retrieved 18 February 2023.
  11. ^ a b Hamilton, Mary (17 July 1785). "Diary of Mary Hamilton (15 July 1784 - 2 August 1784) HAM/2/12".
  12. ^ "Letter from Elizabeth Montagu to Leonard Smelt - EMCO 2329 - at Elizabeth Montagu Correspondence Online (EMCO)". emco.swansea.ac.uk. Retrieved 17 September 2023.
  13. ^ a b c Byrne, Paula (2014). Belle : the true story behind the movie. Internet Archive. London : William Collins. ISBN 978-0-00-754272-7.
  14. ^ "George III's Visit to Kenwood House in 1794". Georgian Papers Programme. 8 March 2017. Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  15. ^ "William Murray, Lord Mansfield". Westminster Abbey. Retrieved 24 January 2018.
  16. ^ Cass, Frederick Charles; Society, London and Middlesex Archaeological (1885). East Barnet. London and Middlesex Archaeological Society.
  17. ^ Dalton, Charles (1904), The Waterloo roll call. With biographical notes and anecdotes, London: Eyre and Spottiswoode, p. 91
  18. ^ AlloCine, Marie Antoinette (in French), retrieved 9 February 2024
  19. ^ AlloCine, Casting Franklin S01 (in French), retrieved 8 February 2024

Further reading

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Diplomatic posts
Preceded by British Minister to Saxony
1755–1764
Succeeded by
Preceded by British Ambassador to France
1772–1778
Vacant
Title next held by
Thomas Grenville in 1782
Legal offices
Preceded by Lord Justice General
1778–1795
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Secretary of State for the Northern Department
1779–1782
Office abolished
Preceded by Leader of the House of Lords
1779–1782
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lord President of the Council
1783
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lord President of the Council
1794–1796
Succeeded by
Peerage of Great Britain
Preceded by Earl of Mansfield
2nd creation
1793–1796
Succeeded by
Peerage of Scotland
Preceded by Viscount Stormont
1748–1796
Succeeded by