Frances Stewart, Marchioness of Londonderry
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Frances Stewart,
Marchioness of Londonderry
| image = Thomas Romney Robinson (1756-1810) - A Conversation Piece, with Robert, 1st Marquess of Londonderry, His Second Wife, Lady Frances Pratt, - 1219961 - National Trust.jpg
| caption = Marquess of Londonderry with her family in A Conversation Piece by Thomas Romney Robinson
| birth_name = Frances Pratt
| birth_date = 15 April 1751
| death_date = 18 January 1833
| nationality = English
| occupation = Aristocratic hostess, political confidante
}}
Frances Stewart, Marchioness of Londonderry (née Pratt; 15 April 1751 – 18 January 1833), was an English aristocrat and mistress of a large landed and politically connected household in late Georgian Ireland. From her husband's mansion at Mount Stewart, County Down, in the 1790s her circle of friends and acquaintances extended to figures engaged in the democratic politics of the United Irishmen. Correspondence with her stepson, Robert Stewart, Viscount Castlereagh (British Foreign Secretary at the Congress of Vienna), and with the English peer and politician John Petty, record major political and social developments of her era.
Whig family and Irish marriage
The future Lady Londonderry was born in England circa 1751, the daughter of Charles Pratt and Elizabeth Jeffreys. Her father (later 1st Earl Camden) was a lawyer with an established interest in constitutional law and civil liberties, and a Whig politician with a popular reputation. In 1770, King George III had demanded and secured his dismissal as Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain for his openly expressed sympathies with John Wilkes and the American colonists.Thomas, P. D. G. (2008) "[http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/22699 Pratt, Charles, first Earl Camden (1714–1794)]", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, online edn, accessed 15 February 2008 {{ODNBsub}}
As a young woman, his daughter reportedly moved in her own dissident and enlightened circle: "that strange masonic band known as 'society.'"{{Cite book|last=Hyde|first=H. M.|url=http://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.77199|title=The Rise Of Castlereagh|publisher=Macmillan & Co|year=1933|location=London|pages=19}} In 1775, she married the widowed Robert Stewart, Earl (1796), and later Marquess (1816), of Londonderry. Stewart was one of the principal landowners in County Down but, as a Presbyterian within Ireland's otherwise Anglican Ascendancy, he was popularly identified with the cause of reform. It was a reputation he burnished both as a member of the Irish House of Commons in Dublin (1769–1776), and during the American War of Independence as an officer in the Irish Volunteer movement.
A few years after her marriage Lady Frances was a subject of wild rumour. During a visit to one of her father’s estates, she is supposed to have been robbed in the park and to have come home "quite naked." Many things were said at the time, including intimations of madness. After this incident she appeared to retire into "the bosom of her family", yet her correspondence reveals a continuing and lively interest in education and in public affairs.
It was a quality admired by her county neighbour, herself the centre of a circle of politically engaged women: Elizabeth Rawdon, the dowager Countess of Moira had, like Lady Frances's father, been open in her sympathy for the American cause.{{Cite book |last=Todd |first=Janet |title=Rebel Daughters: Ireland in Conflict 1798 |publisher=Penguin |year=2004 |isbn=9780141004891 |pages=154–155}}
=='Republican countess'==
There is evidence that, in time, stronger Whig convictions and more liberal interests placed Lady Frances privately at odds with her husband, as well as with her brother, John Pratt, 1st Marquess Camden. During the United Irish risings in the early summer of 1798 Camden was Lord Lieutenant of Ireland and was served, as Chief Secretary, by Lady Frances's stepson, Robert Stewart, Viscount Castlereagh.
She was a friend of Jane Greg, reputedly "the head of the [
In September 1797. Lady Frances tried to intercede with her brother for the life of William Orr, who was condemned for administering the United Irish test to two soldiers.{{Cite book|last=Bew|first=John|title=Castlereagh: Enlightenment, War and Tyranny|publisher=Quercus|year=2011|isbn=9780857381866|location=London|pages=112}} For the United Irishwomen Mary Ann McCracken the gesture was proof that Lady Frances was "equal in firmness and energy of character to her husband".{{cite book|last1=McNeill|first1=Mary|title=The Life and Times of Mary Ann McCracken, 1770–1866|date=1960|publisher=Allen Figgis & Co|location=Dublin|pages=157}}
1798, the execution of James Porter
After the northern rebellion in June 1798, during which Mount Stewart was briefly occupied,{{Cite book|last=The National Archives|first=Reference U840/C562|url=https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/6d91b7c1-f454-46ce-ae1e-4e178dc6561c|title="Insurgents in occupation at Mount Stewart", John Petty to Frances Stewart, Marchioness of Londonderry|date=1797–1809|language=English}} Lady Frances sought reprieve for James Porter. Porter, the local Presbyterian minister, had been close to the Stewarts:{{Cite journal|last=Waters|first=Ormonde D. P.|date=1990|title=The Rev. James Porter Dissenting Minister of Greyabbey, 1753-1798|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/29742440|journal=Seanchas Ardmhacha: Journal of the Armagh Diocesan Historical Society|volume=14|issue=1|pages=80–101|doi=10.2307/29742440|jstor=29742440 |issn=0488-0196}} once a frequent visitor to the house, he had entertained Lady Frances and her daughters with his lectures on natural and experimental philosophy. In 1790, when Castlereagh was still reputedly a Presbyterian and friend of reform, Porter had been his election agent.{{sfn|Waters|1990|p=83}} With her young sister, Lady Elizabeth (then dying of tuberculosis), she was overwhelmed by Porter's wife and their seven children when they appeared at the house pleading for his life. One of Porter's sons was later to recount that when Londonderry discovered his wife composing a letter to General Nugent, he insisted she add a postscript: "L does not allow me to interfere in Mr Porter's case. I cannot, therefore, and beg not to be mentioned. I only send the letter to gratify the humour", and that with a smile that filed his mother with "much horror", Londonderry then handed her the letter.{{Sfn|Waters|1990|pp=95–96}}
Londonderry was content that other offenders—among them David Bailie Warden who commanded north Down rebels in the field,{{Cite book|last1=Courtney|first1=Roger|title=Dissenting Voices: Rediscovering the Irish Progressive Presbyterian Tradition|date=2013|publisher=Ulster Historical Foundation|isbn=9781909556065|location=Belfast|pages=133–134}} and the Reverend Thomas Ledlie Birch who had urged them on to "drive the bloodhounds of King George the German king beyond the seas"quoted by J. C. Robb, Sunday Press, 1 May 1955. The source is not given.{{cite journal|last1=McClelland|first1=Aiken|date=1964|title=Thomas Ledlie Birch, United Irishman|url=http://discoversaintfield.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/T-L-Birch-AMcC-.pdf|journal=Belfast Natural History and Philosophical Society (Sessions 161/62-1963/64)|volume=Second Series, 7|accessdate=18 November 2020}}—should be allowed American exile. But James Porter, convicted on uncertain evidence {{Cite DNB |wstitle= Porter, James (1753-1798) |volume= 46 |last= Gordon |first= Alexander |author-link= Alexander Gordon (Unitarian) |pages = 180-182 |short=1}} of having helped insurgents "relieve" a post-rider of "a vital military despatch",{{Cite web|last=Phoenix|first=Eamon|date=30 June 2014|title=Presbyterian minister hanged in '98|url=http://www.irishnews.com/opinion/2014/06/30/news/presbyterian-minister-hanged-in-98-95513/|access-date=2021-09-20|website=The Irish News|language=en}} he was to see hang in front of his own church at Greyabbey. Porter's offence may have been to have lampooned Londonderry in his popular satire of the landed interest, Billy Bluff. (The master of Mount Stewart is recognisable as the inarticulate tyrant "Lord Mountmumble").{{Cite book|title=Billy Bluff and the Squire [1796] and Other Writing by Re. James Porter|publisher=Athol Books|year=1991|isbn=9780850340457|editor=Brendan Clifford|location=Belfast|pages=80}} But It is also possible that Londonderry, aware that his wife had continued to send for Porter's offending paper, the Northern Star,Bew (2011), p. 101 and had corresponded with Greg, believed the minister to have been an original source of her wayward, and potentially compromising, political sympathies. (He might also have had cause to suspect an earlier tutor to the family, Arthur McMahon, who became a United Irish colonel in Antrim).{{Cite web |last=Woods |first=C. J. |date=2009 |title=McMahon (McMechan), Arthur {{!}} Dictionary of Irish Biography |url=https://www.dib.ie/biography/mcmahon-mcmechan-arthur-a5734 |access-date=2023-01-20 |website=www.dib.ie |language=en}}
Later years
Lady Frances was a friend of John Petty, Earl Wycombe, son of the former British Prime Minister Lord Shelbourne in whose ministry her father had served. A disaffected Whig MP, from 1797 he had repaired to his father's estates in Ireland where his political associations were such that Dublin Castle threatened to arrest him if he did not leave the country.{{Cite web|title=PETTY, John Henry, Earl Wycombe (1765-1809). {{!}} History of Parliament Online|url=https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1790-1820/member/petty-john-henry-1765-1809|access-date=2021-11-26|website=www.historyofparliamentonline.org}} In 1803, he is reported to have visited the rebel arms depot in Thomas Street, Dublin, shortly before Robert Emmet's abortive rising in July.{{Cite web|last=Geoghegan|first=Patrick|date=2009|title=Petty, John Henry {{!}} Dictionary of Irish Biography|url=https://www.dib.ie/biography/petty-john-henry-a7302|access-date=2021-11-26|website=www.dib.ie}}
Petty's correspondence with Lady Frances, which he maintained until his death in 1809, reveals that she continued to entertain criticism of government policy in Ireland, including the Act of Union that her step son helped push though the Irish Parliament in 1800; of the Anglican church establishment and the tithes it levied atop rack rents; of “British tyranny in navigation”, and of religion ("a bad substitute for common sense").{{Cite book|last=The National Archives|first=Reference U840/C562|url=https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/6d91b7c1-f454-46ce-ae1e-4e178dc6561c|title=John Petty to Frances Stewart, Marchioness of Londonderry|date=1797–1809|language=English}}
While continuing to take a keen interest in political affairs and corresponding regularly with Castlereagh throughout his war-time service as War, and subsequently as Foreign, Secretary, Lady Frances also immersed herself in local projects. In 1809 she was engaged with the building of a primary school near Mount Stewart for 200 children.Bew (2011), p. 279
After her husband's death in 1821 Lady Frances returned to England. She died in Hastings, Sussex, on 18 January 1833.{{Cite web|title=Ancestors of Lady Frances Anne Emily Vane-Stewart (1822-1899)|url=http://brigittegastelancestry.com/famous/f/francesvanestewartanc1822.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190624225341/http://brigittegastelancestry.com/famous/f/francesvanestewartanc1822.htm|url-status=dead|archive-date=24 June 2019|access-date=2021-09-08|website=brigittegastelancestry.com}} She was preceded in death by six of her eleven children.
Children
She had eleven children with Lord Londonderry, three sons and eight daughters:
- Charles William (1778-1854), succeeded his father as 3rd Marquess{{Sfn|Debrett|1828|p=[https://archive.org/details/debrettspeerage01debrgoog/page/n213/ 635, line 11]|ps=: "Charles-William, G.C.B., present and 3d marquess."}}
- Frances Ann (1777–1810), married Lord Charles Fitzroy{{Sfn|Burke|1949|p=[https://archive.org/details/burkesgenealogic1949unse/page/1247/ 1247, right column, line 17]|ps=: "Frances Ann, m. 10 March 1799, Lord Charles Fitzroy ; and d. 9 Feb. 1810 ..."}}
- Elizabeth Mary (1779–1798){{Sfn|Debrett|1828|p=[https://archive.org/details/debrettspeerage01debrgoog/page/n213/ 635, line 16]|ps=: "Elizabeth-Mary, d. 1798."}}
- Caroline (1781–1860), married Col. Thomas Wood MP{{Sfn|Burke|1949|p=[https://archive.org/details/burkesgenealogic1949unse/page/1247/ 1247, right column, line 19]|ps=: "Caroline m. 23 Dec. 1801 Thomas Wood, MP of Littleton, Middlesex, and of Gwernevet, co. Brecon, Col. of the East Middlesex mil., and d. 26 Jan. 1860."}}
- Alexander John (1783–1800){{Sfn|Debrett|1828|p=[https://archive.org/details/debrettspeerage01debrgoog/page/n213/ 635, line 12]|ps=: "Alexander-John, d. 1800"}}
- Georgiana (1785–1804), married the politician George Canning, 1st Baron Garvagh.
- Selina Sarah Juliana (1786–1871), married David Guardi Ker MP for Downpatrick{{Sfn|Burke|1949|p=[https://archive.org/details/burkesgenealogic1949unse/page/1247/ 1247, right column, line 24]|ps=: "Selina m. 22 Feb. 1814, David Kerr of Portavo, Down, and d. 5 Feb. 1871, leaving issue. He d. 30 Dec. 1844."}}
- Matilda Charlotte (1787–1842), married Edward Michael Ward.{{Sfn|Burke|1949|p=[https://archive.org/details/burkesgenealogic1949unse/page/1247/ 1247, right column, line 26]|ps=: "Matilda m. 14 Sept. 1815, Michael Edward Ward, and d. 3 Oct. 1842, leaving issue ..."}}
- Emily Jane (1789–1865), married Henry Hardinge, 1st Viscount Hardinge{{Sfn|Burke|1949|p=[https://archive.org/details/burkesgenealogic1949unse/page/1247/ 1247, right column, line 28]|ps=: "Emily Jane m. 1stly, 29 June 1814 John James who d. 4 June 1818. She m. 2ndly, 10 Dec. 1821 1st Viscount Hardinge, G.C.B., C-in-C, and d. 18 Oct. 1865, leaving issue. He d. 24 Sept. 1856."}}
- Thomas Henry (1790–1810){{Sfn|Debrett|1828|p=[https://archive.org/details/debrettspeerage01debrgoog/page/n213/ 635, line 15]|ps=: "Thomas-Henry, d. 1810"}}
- Octavia (1792–1819), married Edward Law, 1st Earl of Ellenborough{{Sfn|Burke|1949|p=[https://archive.org/details/burkesgenealogic1949unse/page/1247/ 1247, right column, line 31]|ps=: "Octavia m. 11 Dec. 1813, 2nd Lord, afterwards Earl of Ellenborough; and d.s.p. [died without issue] 5 March 1819. He d. 22 Sept. 1871."}}{{Sfn|Debrett|1838|p=[https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_Ru4UAAAAQAAJ/page/n383/ 313]|ps=: "[Edward Law] married 1st, 11 Dec. 1813, Octavia-Catherine Stewart, youngest daughter of Robert 1st Marquess ..."}}
References
{{Reflist}}
=Bibliography=
- {{Cite book|last=Burke |first=Bernard |author-link=Bernard Burke |date=1949 |title=A Genealogical and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire |edition=99th |publisher=Burke's Peerage Ltd. |location=London |url=https://archive.org/details/burkesgenealogic1949unse/}}
- {{cite book |last1=Debrett |first1=John |title=Debrett's Peerage of England, Scotland, and Ireland |date=1828 |edition=17th |url=https://archive.org/details/debrettspeerage01debrgoog |language=English}}
- {{Cite book|last=Debrett |first=John |author-link=John Debrett |editor-last=Courthope |editor-first=William |date=1838 |title=Debrett's Complete Peerage of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland |edition=22nd |publisher=F. C. and J. Rivington |location=London |oclc=315551200 |url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_Ru4UAAAAQAAJ/}} (later events)
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Stewart, Frances, Marchioness}}