John Proby, 1st Baron Carysfort
John Proby, 1st Baron Carysfort KB PC (25 November 1720 – 18 October 1772) was a British Whig politician.
Life
He was the son of John Proby, of Elton Hall, Huntingdonshire, and his wife Jane, daughter of John Leveson-Gower, 1st Baron Gower. He was educated at Jesus College, Cambridge.[1]
Proby was returned to Parliament for Stamford in 1747, a seat he held until 1754, and then represented Huntingdonshire from 1754 to 1768. Carysfort served as a Lord of the Admiralty under the Duke of Devonshire in 1757 and under George Grenville from 1763 to 1765. In 1752 he was raised to the Peerage of Ireland as Baron Carysfort, of Carysfort in the County of Wicklow, and in 1758 he was admitted to the Irish Privy Council. In 1761 he was further honoured when he was made a Knight of the Order of the Bath.
Lord Carysfort died in October 1772, aged 51, and was succeeded in the barony by his son John, who was created Earl of Carysfort in 1789. Lady Carysfort died in March 1783, aged 60.
HMS Carysfort (1766) was the first ship named in his honour following his service as Lord of the Admiralty. In 1941, HMS Carysfort (R25) was named in his honour as the fifth Royal Navy warship to carry the name Carysfort.
Family
Proby married the Hon. Elizabeth Allen, daughter of Joshua Allen, 2nd Viscount Allen, in 1750: they had a son and a daughter.[2] The daughter Elizabeth (1752–1808) married Thomas John Storer (died 1792).[3]
References
- ^ "Proby, John (PRBY737J)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- ^ "Proby, John, jun. (1720–72), of Elton Hall, Hunts. and Glenart, co. Wicklow, History of Parliament Online". Retrieved 11 November 2017.
- ^ Innes, Anne (1827). The Annual peerage of the British empire. Saunders & Otley. pp. 148–9.
- Leigh Rayment's Peerage Pages [self-published source] [better source needed]
- www.thepeerage.com
Parliament of Great Britain | ||
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Preceded by William Noel John Proby | Member of Parliament for Stamford 1747–1754 With: Lord Burghley 1747 Robert Barbor 1747–1754 | Succeeded by Robert Barbor John Harvey-Thursby |
Preceded by Coulson Fellowes Edward Wortley Montagu | Member of Parliament for Huntingdonshire 1754–1768 With: Coulson Fellowes 1754–1761 Viscount Mandeville 1761–1762 Lord Charles Montagu 1762–1765 Robert Bernard 1765–1768 | Succeeded by |
Masonic offices | ||
Preceded by | Grand Master of the Premier Grand Lodge of England 1752–1753 | Succeeded by |
Peerage of Ireland | ||
New creation | Baron Carysfort 1752–1772 | Succeeded by |
- v
- t
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Masters
- Anthony Sayer (1717–1718)
- George Payne (1718–1719)
- John Theophilus Desaguliers (1719–1720)
- George Payne (1720–1721)
- Duke of Montagu (1721–1723)
- Duke of Wharton (1723)
- Earl of Dalkeith (1723–1724)
- Duke of Richmond (1724)
- Lord Paisley (1724–1725)
- Earl of Inchiquin (1726–1727)
- Baron Colerane (1727–1728)
- Baron Kingston (1728–1730)
- Duke of Norfolk (1730–1731)
- Baron Lovell (1731–1732)
- Viscount Montagu (1732–1733)
- Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne (1733–1734)
- Earl of Crawford (1734–1735)
- Lord Weymouth (1735–1736)
- Earl of Loudoun (1736–1737)
- Earl of Darnley (1737–1738)
- Marquis of Carnarvon (1738–1739)
- Baron Raymond (1739–1740)
- Earl of Kintore (1740–1741)
- Earl of Morton (1741–1742)
- Baron Ward (1742–1744)
- Lord Cranstoun (1744–1747)
- Baron Byron (1747–1752)
- Baron Carysfort (1752–1753)
- Marquis of Carnarvon (1754–1757)
- Lord Aberdour (1757–1762)
- Earl Ferrers (1762–1764)
- Baron Blayney (1764–1767)
- Duke of Beaufort (1767–1772)
- Baron Petre (1772–1777)
- Duke of Manchester (1777–1782)
- Duke of Cumberland (1782–1790)
- George, Prince of Wales (1792–1813)
- Duke of Sussex (1813)
articles
- History of Freemasonry
- Antient Grand Lodge of England
- United Grand Lodge of England
- James Anderson's The Constitutions of the Free-Masons (1723)
- Freemasons' Tavern
- Freemasons' Hall, London
- Royal Society
- Society of Antiquaries of London
- Royal College of Physicians
- Worshipful Society of Apothecaries
- Spalding Gentlemen's Society
- Newtonianism
- English Enlightenment
- Order of the Bath
- Walpole ministries
- Whiggism (Kit-Cat Club)
- Gormogons
- Hellfire Club
- Foundling Hospital
- Unlawful Societies Act 1799
- James Anderson
- John Byrom
- William Stukeley
- William Jones
- Earl of Chesterfield
- Charles Delafaye
- Baron Carpenter
- William Billers
- Sir Thomas Prendergast, 2nd Baronet
- Brook Taylor
- Martin Folkes
- John Arbuthnot
- Charles Cox
- Earl Cornwallis
- Richard Cantillon
- John Machin
- William Rutty
- James Vernon
- John Senex
- James Thornhill
- Earl of Macclesfield
- John Browne
- James Jurin
- James Douglas
- Alexander Stuart
- Ephraim Chambers
- Richard Manningham
- Frank Nicholls
- Richard Rawlinson
- Charles Stanhope
- Lord James Cavendish
- Earl of Hopetoun
- William Richardson
- William Becket
- John Anstis
- Duke of Ancaster
- Charles Hayes
- Edmund Prideaux
- George Shelvocke
- John Woodward
- John Ward
- John Baptist Grano
- Baron King
- Jacques Leblon
- Adolphus Oughton
- Sir Robert Rich, 4th Baronet
- Viscount Cobham
- Francis Columbine
- Hugh Warburton
- Earl of Pembroke
- Viscount Townshend
- Martin Bladen
- Earl Waldegrave
- Duke of Kingston
- Earl of Burlington
- Earl of Essex
- Duke of Queensberry
- Earl of Deloraine
- Earl of Portmore
- Duke of Marlborough
- Baron Baltimore
- Duke of Atholl
- Marquess of Lothian
- Earl of Balcarres
- Earl of Winchilsea
- Sir Arthur Acheson, 5th Baronet
- Sir Robert Lawley, 4th Baronet
- Alexander Brodie
- William Hogarth
- Charles Labelye
- Walter Calverley-Blackett
- Frederick, Prince of Wales
- Thomas Wright
- Edward Gibbon
- Baron Hervey
- Thomas Dunckerley
- William Preston
- Marquess of Hastings
- James Moore Smythe
- Robert Boyle-Walsingham
- Sir Robert de Cornwall
- Batty Langley
- Thomas Arne
- John Soane
- Joseph Banks
- Johan Zoffany
- John Coustos
- Hipólito da Costa
- Meyer Löw Schomberg
- Joseph Salvador
- Sampson Eardley
- Moses Mendez
- Meyer Solomon
- Moses Montefiore
- Nathan Mayer Rothschild
Prime ministers |
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