Daniel Harvey (British Army officer)

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2018}}

{{Use British English|date=March 2018}}

{{Infobox military person

| name = Daniel Harvey

| image =

| image_size =

| caption =

| nickname =

| birth_date = {{circa}} 1664

| birth_place = Coombe Surrey, England

| death_date = 6 September {{Death year and age|1732|1664}}

| death_place = Mitcham London, England

| placeofburial = St Peter and St Paul, Mitcham

| allegiance = {{flagicon|Britain}} Great Britain

| branch = Cavalry

| serviceyears = ca. 1688–1712

| rank = General

| unit = Colonel 3rd Regiment of Horse 1699–1712

| commands = Governor of Guernsey 1714–1732

| battles = Nine Years' War
War of the Spanish Succession

| awards = Member of Parliament
Clitheroe 1707–1708
Dunwich 1709–1710
Weymouth and Melcombe Regis 1713–1714, 1715–1722

| relations =

| laterwork =

}}

General Daniel Harvey ({{circa}} 1664 – 6 September 1732) was a British soldier and politician who was Governor of Guernsey from 1714 to 1732.

Life

Daniel Harvey was born in 1664 in Coombe, near Kingston the second of three brothers.{{efn|The mortality rate of the period meant names were often repeated.}} His father Sir Daniel was the son and grandson of wealthy London merchants who married Elizabeth Montagu, daughter of Edward Montagu, Earl of Sandwich in 1651. In 1668 he was appointed Ambassador to Constantinople where he died in August 1672.

Harvey was educated at Christ Church, Oxford and graduated in 1681; he joined the army in 1688, served as a Member of Parliament or MP for three different constituencies between 1708 and 1722 and was Governor of Guernsey from 1714 to 1732. He had numerous and well-connected cousins, many of whom were also MPs; in 1707 he married his cousin Anne Montagu, widow of Alexander Popham.

Career

In this period, regiments were considered the personal property of their Colonel, changed names when transferred and were disbanded as soon as possible.{{cite book |last1=Chandler David |first1=Beckett Ian |title=The Oxford History Of The British Army |date=1996 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=0-19-280311-5 |page=52 |edition=2002}} Commissions were assets that could be bought, sold or used as an investment; at senior levels in particular, ownership and command were separate functions and many Colonels delegated their military duties to a subordinate.{{cite book |last1=Guy |first1=Alan |title=Economy and Discipline: Officership and the British Army, 1714–63 |date=1985 |publisher=Manchester University Press |isbn=0-7190-1099-3 |page=49}} Even the idea of a professional military career was comparatively new in late 17th century England which made it possible for people like Harvey to simultaneously pursue a political and military career.{{cite book|last1=Childs|first1=John|title=British Army of William III, 1689-1702|date=1990|publisher=Manchester University Press|isbn=0719025524|pages=39–41}}

Harvey first appears as Captain in a cavalry regiment raised by Lord Delamere in 1688 to support William III. Delamere quickly relinquished command to Theodore Russell, an experienced Irish Protestant soldier and the regiment was posted to Ireland during the 1689–1691 Williamite War.{{cite book|last1=Childs|first1=John|title=British Army of William III, 1689-1702|date=1990|publisher=Manchester University Press|isbn=0719025524|page=18}}

File:Sacheverell riots.jpg

In 1694, Harvey became Colonel of a Regiment of Horse which served in Flanders until it was disbanded following the Treaty of Ryswick in 1697. He purchased the position of Colonel in the 3rd Regiment of Horse in 1699 on the death of the previous commander Richard Leveson and retained this until 1712.

Image:Charles Mohun, 4th Baron Mohun by Sir Godfrey Kneller, Bt.jpg

During the War of the Spanish Succession, Harvey was promoted Major-General in May 1704 and his unit sent to Portugal to support Archduke Charles, Austrian candidate for King of Spain. However, he does not appear to have spent much time there; he returned to England before campaigning began in 1705 and in 1706 Lord Godolphin wrote of his ‘indignation’ at seeing Harvey and Lord Mohun in London 'while their regiments are serving abroad.'{{cite book|last1=Snyder|first1=Henry, L|title=The Marlborough-Godolphin Correspondence|date=1975|publisher=OUP Oxford|isbn=019967020X|page=590}} He was promoted to Lieutenant-General in 1707 and General in 1709.

Harvey now focused on his political career, generally siding with the Whigs. In January 1707 he was elected Member of Parliament or MP for Clitheroe, a seat controlled by his uncle the Duke of Montagu. Clitheroe returned two MPs, the other being his elder brother Edward, a Tory later implicated in the 1722 Jacobite Atterbury Plot.{{efn|He was later released without charge but remained a Jacobite until his death in 1734.}} Harvey strengthened his connection with the Montagus a few months later by marrying his recently widowed cousin Anne.

In 1710, he voted in favour of the impeachment of Dr Henry Sacheverell, a decision that led to the anti-Whig Sacheverell Riots which were followed by a Tory landslide in the 1710 election. Harvey lost his seat and resigned from the Army in 1712 when ordered to rejoin his regiment or be court-martialled. When George I came to the throne in 1714, the Whigs returned to power; Harvey was appointed Governor of Guernsey in 1714 and served as MP for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis from 1715 to 1722 but never achieved government office.

Family

Daniel Harvey and Anne Montagu (1674 – January 1742) had one daughter, in addition to Anne's daughter from her marriage to Alexander Popham;

  • Ann Harvey; died young;
  • Elizabeth Popham (22 May 1693 – 20 March 1761);

Notes

{{notelist}}

References

{{Reflist|30em}}

Sources

  • Eveline Cruickshanks, [http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1715-1754/member/harvey-daniel-1664-1732 HARVEY, Daniel (?1664-1732), of Mitcham, Surr.] in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1715-1754 (1970)
  • Paula Watson and Richard Harrison, [http://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1690-1715/member/harvey-daniel-1664-1732 HARVEY, Daniel (c.1664-1732), of Mitcham, Surr.] in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1690-1715 (2002)
  • John Burke, [https://books.google.com/books?id=0alfAAAAcAAJ A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerages of England, Ireland, and Scotland, extinct, dormant, and in abeyance ... England] p. 116, Henry Colburn (1846)
  • Joseph Haydn, [https://archive.org/details/bookdignitiesco00haydgoog The Book of Dignities: Containing Lists of the Official Personages of the British Empire ... from the Earliest Periods to the Present Time ... Together with the Sovereigns and Rulers of Europe, from the Foundation of Their Respective States; the Peerage of England and Great Britain] p. 317, Longmans, Brown, Green, and Longmans (1851)

{{Authority control}}

{{Portal bar|Biography}}

{{s-start}}

{{s-par|en}}

{{s-bef | before=Edward Harvey | before2=Thomas Stringer}}

{{s-ttl | title=Member of Parliament for Clitheroe | with=Edward Harvey | years=1707}}

{{s-aft | after=Parliament of Great Britain}}

{{s-par|gb}}

{{s-bef | before=Parliament of England}}

{{s-ttl | title=Member of Parliament for Clitheroe | with=Edward Harvey | years=1707–1708}}

{{s-aft | after=Edward Harvey | after2=Christopher Parker}}

{{s-bef | before=Sir Charles Blois | before2=Robert Kemp}}

{{s-ttl | title=Member of Parliament for Dunwich | with=Sir Richard Allin | years=1709–1710}}

{{s-aft | after=Sir George Downing | after2=Richard Richardson}}

{{s-bef | before=Maurice Ashley | before2=Sir Thomas Hardy | before3=William Harvey | before4=Reginald Marriott}}

{{s-ttl | title=Member of Parliament for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis | with=John Baker | with2=James Littleton | with3=William Betts | years=1713–1714}}

{{s-aft | after=James Littleton | after2=Sir Thomas Hardy | after3=William Harvey | after4=Reginald Marriott}}

{{s-bef | before=James Littleton | before2=Sir Thomas Hardy | before3=William Harvey | before4=Reginald Marriott}}

{{s-ttl | title=Member of Parliament for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis | with=John Baker 1715–1717 | with2=Thomas Littleton 1715–1722 | with3=William Betts 1715–1722 | with4=Edward Harrison 1717–1722 | years=1715–1722}}

{{s-aft | after=William Betts | after2=Sir James Thornhill | after3=Thomas Pearse | after4=John Ward}}

{{s-mil}}

{{s-bef | before=Richard Leveson}}

{{s-ttl | title=Colonel of the 2nd Dragoon Guards (Queen's Bays) | years=1699–1712}}

{{s-aft | after=John Bland}}

{{s-bef | before=Giles Spencer}}

{{s-ttl | title=Lieutenant Governor of Guernsey | years=1714–1732}}

{{s-aft | after=George Cholmondeley, 2nd Earl of Cholmondeley}}

{{s-end}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Harvey, Daniel}}

Category:1660s births

Category:1732 deaths

Category:Military personnel from Surrey

Category:British Army generals

Category:Members of the Parliament of Great Britain for English constituencies

Category:British military personnel of the War of the Spanish Succession

Category:Alumni of Christ Church, Oxford

Category:2nd Dragoon Guards (Queen's Bays) officers

Category:English MPs 1705–1707

Category:British MPs 1707–1708

Category:British MPs 1708–1710

Category:British MPs 1713–1715

Category:British MPs 1715–1722

Category:Governors of Guernsey (1500–1835)