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Charles Gerard, 1st Earl of Macclesfield

Charles Gerard, 1st Earl of Macclesfield, PC (c. 1618 – 7 January 1694) was an English aristocrat, soldier and courtier.

The 1st Earl of Macclesfield. By William Dobson in the Dunedin Public Art Gallery.

Early life edit

The eldest son of Sir Charles Gerard, he was a member of an old Lancashire family, his great-grandfather having been Sir Gilbert Gerard (died 1593) of Ince, in that county, one of the most distinguished judges in the reign of Elizabeth I.[1] His mother was Penelope Fitton, sister and co-heiress of Sir Edward Fitton, of Gawsworth, Cheshire.[2][3]

Nothing is known about Gerard's education until he entered Leyden University on 23 March 1633. He was also educated in France under John Goffe of Magdalen College, Oxford, brother of Stephen Goffe.[4] Dugdale states that he was "trained in the discipline of war from his youth in the United Provinces",[2] and that on the outbreak of the First English Civil War he joined the King at Shrewsbury, and raised a troop of horse at his own charge.[5]

Early Civil War battles and sieges edit

At the Battle of Edgehill, Gerard commanded a brigade of Royalist foot guards, the steadiness of which largely contributed to averting absolute defeat. In this battle, as also in the operations before Lichfield in April 1643, he was wounded. He was present at the siege of Bristol (July 1643), and arranged the very rigorous terms of the capitulation. He fought with distinction in the First Battle of Newbury (20 September 1643), and took part in the relief of Newark (March 1644), when he was again wounded, thrown from his horse, and taken prisoner, but released on parole shortly before the besiegers capitulated.[6]

Welsh campaigns edit

Shortly afterwards Gerard was appointed in succession to the Earl of Carbery in the general command in South Wales, then strongly held by Parliamentary forces, and by 19 May 1644 had succeeded in collecting a force of two thousand five hundred horse and foot with which to begin operations. He marched by Chepstow to Cardiff, which surrendered to him, and took Kidwelly. By 12 June he had already penetrated into Carmarthenshire, and before the 18th he was in possession of Carmarthen. He rapidly reduced Cardigan, Newcastle Emlyn, Laugharne, and Roch castles, and seems to have experienced no check until he was already threatening Pembroke about the middle of July, when the garrison of that place by a sortie routed a portion of his force and obtained supplies. On 22 August he took Haverfordwest, and before the end of the month had invested Pembroke and was threatening Tenby. His forces are said to have been largely composed of Irish levies, of whose barbarous atrocities loud complaint is made in the Kingdom's Intelligencer (15–23 October 1644).[7]

In September Gerard received orders to join Prince Rupert at Bristol, and in October he began his retreat, marching by Usk and Abergavenny, and thus evading General Edward Massey he reached Bristol towards the end of the month. November he spent in Oxford or the neighbourhood, whence in December he transferred his headquarters to Worcester, where he remained until 11 March 1645, when he marched to Cheshire to co-operate with Rupert, Maurice, and Sir Marmaduke Langdale against General Sir William Brereton. Their combined forces succeeded in relieving Beeston Castle on 17 March.[7]

Gerard was then ordered back to South Wales, where the Parliamentary General Rowland Laugharne had gained some successes. He marched through Wales from Chester in a south-westerly direction, carrying all before him and ravaging the country as he went. After a brush with Sir John Price at Llanidloes, he fell in with Laugharne before Newcastle Emlyn on 16 May, and completely defeated him. Haverfordwest and Cardigan Castle, which had been recovered by the Roundheads, were evacuated on his approach. Picton Castle offered a stout resistance, but was carried by assault. Carew Castle also fell into his hands. Pembroke and Tenby, closely invested, alone held out.[8]

With King Charles after Naseby edit

The ascendency of the royalists being thus re-established in South Wales, Gerard received orders to move eastward again, and was marching on Hereford at the head of five thousand horse and foot when the Battle of Naseby was fought (14 June 1645). After the battle, King Charles and Rupert, with the fragments of their army, fell back upon Hereford in the hope of effecting a junction with Gerard, who, however, seems to have been unexpectedly delayed; and Rupert, pushing on to Bristol, sent orders that part of Gerard's forces should join him there, while the King required a portion of the cavalry to attend his person. From Hereford Charles retreated to Abergavenny and thence to Cardiff, with the hope of raising a fresh army in Wales, but found the Welsh much disaffected, owing (according to Clarendon) to the irritation engendered by the extraordinary rigour with which Gerard had treated them; so that when news came that Hereford had been invested by the Scottish army and must fall unless relieved within a month, Charles could only induce the Welsh to move by superseding Gerard, promising at the same time to make him a baron. Gerard chose the territorial designation of Brandon, for no better reason, asserts Clarendon, than "that there was once an eminent person called Charles Brandon who was afterwards made a duke".[8][9][10]

Gerard had become Lieutenant-General of all the King's Horse, and assumed the command of his bodyguard. On the night of 4 August 1645, he escorted Charles from Cardiff to Brecknock, and thence to Ludlow, and throughout his progress to Oxford (28 August). Thence they returned to Hereford (4 September), the Scots raising the siege on their approach. At Hereford, on 14 September Charles heard of the fall of Bristol, and determined if possible to join Montrose in the north. Escorted by Gerard, he made for Chester, and succeeded in entering the city, having first detached Gerard to the assistance of Sir Marmaduke Langdale, who was endeavouring to muster the royalists in force outside the city, with the view of raising the siege. After much apparently purposeless marching and counter-marching, the royalists risked an engagement with the besiegers on Rowton Heath (23 September 1645), but were totally defeated by General Sydnam Poyntz.[11] Gerard was carried from the field desperately wounded. The King then evacuated Chester and retired to Newark, where he arrived with Gerard on 4 October, and fixed his headquarters for the winter. Gerard was dismissed from the King's service before the end of the month for taking part with Rupert and some other Cavaliers in a disorderly protest against the supersession of Sir Richard Willis, the governor of the place.[12]

With Prince Rupert and exile edit

Gerard now attached himself closely to Rupert's party, which consisted of about four hundred officers. They established themselves at Worton House, some fourteen miles from Newark-on-Trent, and made overtures to Parliament with the view of obtaining passes out of the country. Parliament, however, required that they should take an oath never again to bear arms against it. The Cavaliers, therefore, temporised, being really anxious for a reconciliation with the King on honourable terms. They were ordered to the neighbourhood of Worcester by Parliament, and there remained during the winter, but early in the following year (1646) returned to their allegiance and the King at Oxford. There Gerard raised another troop of horse, with which he scoured the adjoining country, penetrating on one occasion as far as the neighbourhood of Derby, where he was routed in a skirmish. At one time he seems to have been in command of Wallingford Castle, but when the lines of investment began to be drawn more closely round Oxford he withdrew within the city walls, where he seems to have remained until the surrender of the city on 24 June 1646). He probably left England with Rupert, as he was at the Hague on 27 December 1646.[13]

Early exile edit

Form late 1646 until the Restoration Gerard's movements are very hard to trace. He was at St. Germain-en-Laye in September 1647 with Rupert, Digby, and other Cavaliers. He was appointed vice-admiral of the fleet in November 1648, and on 8 December passed through Rotterdam on his way to Helvoetsluys to enter his new duties. In April 1649 he was at the Hague as Gentleman of the Bedchamber to the King Charles II. He apparently belonged to the "queen's faction",[14] which was understood to favour the policy of coming to an understanding with the commissioners from the Scottish Parliament, who were then at the Hague, but were denied an audience by Charles. In October of the same year he was with Charles in Jersey when the celebrated declaration addressed to the English people was published, and he was a member, and probably an influential member, of the council which advised the King to treat with the Scottish Parliament as a "committee of estates". He returned with the King to the Hague, where this policy was put in execution.[15]

On 18 March 1650 Hyde wrote from Madrid to Secretary Nicholas praising Gerard somewhat faintly as a "gallant young man" who "always wants a friend by him"; to which Nicholas replied on 4 May that Gerard is "the gallantest, honestest person now about the King, and the most constant to honourable principles".[14] In the following November (1650) Nicholas writes to Gerard that he has the commission appointing him general of Kent, but that the fact must be kept secret "because the King in his late declaration promised the Scots to grant none." In March 1650–1 Gerard left the Hague for Breda in attendance on the Duke of York, who was anxious to avoid certain "things called ambassadors," as Nicholas scornfully terms the Scottish envoys. In the following November, he was in Paris, where he seems to have remained for at least a year.[15]

On 13 May 1652, Gerard was appointed to the command of the corps of lifeguards then being raised. In 1653 he went to Utrecht, where Dr. Robert Creighton "wrought a miracle" upon him. He remained there through part of 1654, was present at the siege of Arras, serving under Marshal Turenne as a volunteer in August of that year,[16] and then returned to Paris, where he divided his energies between quarrelling with Hyde, intriguing on behalf of Queen Henrietta Maria, and instigating his cousin, John Gerard, to assassinate the Protector. The plot (Gerard's conspiracy), to which the King appears to have been privy (Gerard had presented his cousin to the King early in 1654), was discovered, and John Gerard was beheaded on Tower Hill.[17][18]

Exile and return edit

A letter from one F. Coniers to the King, dated London, 11 January 1655,[19] accuses Gerard of having treated with Thurloe for the poisoning of Cromwell. This the writer professes to have discovered by glancing over some papers incautiously exposed in Thurloe's chambers. "The story is obviously a mere invention" (Rigg 1890). In July 1655 Gerard was at Cologne, closely watched by Thurloe's spies. As Hyde wrote to Nicholas from Paris, 24 April 1654, Gerard was never without projects.[20] From Cologne he went to Antwerp "to attempt the new modelling of the plot", returning to Paris in September. There he appears to have resided until May 1656, busily employed in collecting intelligence. In this work he seems to have been much aided by the postal authorities, who, according to one of Thurloe's correspondents, allowed him to intercept whatever letters he pleased. In July he was at Cologne awaiting instructions. In February 1657 he was at the Hague, corresponding under the name of Thomas Enwood with one Dermot, a merchant at the sign of the Drum, Drury Lane. The only fragment of this correspondence which remains is unintelligible,[21] being couched in mercantile phraseology, which gives no clue to its real meaning.[18]

From the Hague, Gerard went to Brussels, where in April he received instructions to raise a troop of horse guards at once and a promise of an allowance of four hundred guilders a day for his family. From Brussels, he returned to Paris in March 1658. He was almost immediately despatched to Amsterdam, apparently for the purpose of chartering ships, and he spent the rest of that year and the first six months of the next partly in the Low Countries and partly at Boulogne, returning to Paris between August and September 1659. There he appears to have spent the latter part of the year, joining Secretary Nicholas at Brussels in the following January.[18]

From Brussels, in the spring of 1660 Gerard went to Breda (where the King held his court), and in May returned with the King to England. On 17 May 1660, he was commissioned Captain in the Life Guards. He rode at their head in the King's progress to Whitehall on 29 May 1660.[18]

Restoration edit

Restoration of Lord Gerrard Act 1660
Act of Parliament
 
Long titleAn Act for restoring to Charles Lord Gerard, Baron of Brandon, all his Honours, Manors, Lands, Tenements, and Hereditaments, whereof he was in Possession on the 20th Day of May, 1642, or at any Time sithence.
Citation12 Cha. 2. c. 8
Dates
Royal assent13 September 1660

On 29 July 1660, Gerard received a grant in reversion of the office of Remembrancer of the Tenths and First-Fruits. On 13 September his estates, which had been forfeited by Parliament, were restored to him.[22]

On 15 May 1661, Gerard petitioned for the post of ranger of Enfield Chase, which he obtained. His title, however, was disputed by the late ranger, James Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, and he was soon involved in litigation with Captains Thomas and Henry Batt, keepers of Potter's Walk and bailiffs of the Chase, whose patents he refused to recognise. Both matters were referred to the lord chancellor for decision. As against the Batts, Gerard succeeded on the technical ground that their patent was under the great seal, whereas by statute it should have been under that of the duchy of Lancaster. It does not appear how the question with the Earl of Salisbury was settled.[22]

In 1662 Gerard was granted a pension charged on the customs. Towards the end of the year, he was sent as envoy extraordinary to the French court, where he was very splendidly received. About this time he became a member of the Royal African Company, which obtained in January 1663 a grant by letters patent of the region between Port Sallee and the Cape of Good Hope for the term of one thousand years. Litigation in which he was this year engaged with his cousin, Alexander Fitton, afterwards Lord Chancellor of Ireland, was watched with much interest by his enemies. The dispute was about the title to the Gawsworth estate in Cheshire, of which Fitton was in possession, but which Gerard claimed. The title depended on the authenticity of a certain deed which Gerard alleged to be a forgery, producing the notorious forger Alexander Granger, who swore that he himself had forged it. Gerard obtained a verdict at the Chester assizes and ejected Fitton. Fitton, however, published a pamphlet in which he charged Gerard with having procured Granger's evidence by intimidation. Gerard moved the House of Lords on the subject, and the pamphlet was suppressed. Fitton was imprisoned for scandalum magnatum, the offence of libelling a peer: he remained in prison for almost 20 years.[22]

 
Gawsworth Old Hall

In March 1665 Gerard was granted a pension of £1,000 per annum to retire from the post of captain of the guard, which Charles desired to confer on the Duke of Monmouth. His retirement, however, did not take place until 1668, when Pepys says that he received £12,000 for it. Pepys also states that it was his practice to conceal the deaths of the troopers that he might draw their pay; and one of his clerks named Carr drew up a petition to the House of Lords charging him with peculation to the extent of £2,000 per annum. The petition found its way into print before presentation, and was treated by the house as a breach of privilege, voted a "scandalous paper", and ordered to be burned by the common hangman. Carr was sentenced to pay a fine of £1,000, to stand in the pillory for three hours on each of three different days, and to be imprisoned in the Fleet during the king's pleasure. Gerard subsequently indicted him as a deserter from the army. [23]

Post Restoration edit

On 5 January 1667, Gerard had been appointed to the general command of the Hampshire and Isle of Wight militia, with special instructions to provide for the security of the Isle of Wight and Portsmouth in view of the threatening attitude of the Dutch. In this capacity, he was busily engaged during the spring and summer of 1667 in strengthening the fortifications of Portsmouth. He continued to hold the post of Gentleman of the Bedchamber, with a pension of £1,000 attached to it, during the reign of Charles II.[23]

On 23 July 1679, he was created Earl of Macclesfield. On the occasion of the Duke of Monmouth's unauthorised return from abroad in November 1679, Gerard was sent by Charles to him "to tell him out of his great tenderness he gave him till night to be gone".[24] The messenger was ill-chosen, Gerard being himself one of the band of conspirators of which Monmouth was the tool. His name appears in the Journal of the House of Lords, with that of the Earl of Shaftesbury, as one of the protesters against the rejection of the Exclusion Bill on 15 November 1680. Lord Grey de Werke in his Confession (p. 61) asserts that Gerard suggested to Monmouth the expediency of murdering the Duke of York by way of terrorising Charles. In August 1681 Gerard was dismissed from the post of Gentleman of the Bedchamber. On 5 September 1682, he entertained the Duke of Monmouth at his seat in Cheshire.[23]

In 1684 the question of the Gawsworth title was revived (partly no doubt as a political move) by an application on the part of Fitton to the lord keeper, Francis, Lord Guilford, to review the case. Roger North, the 17th-century biographer, who being Guildford's brother was well placed to know the facts, wrote that as Fitton was then in favour at court, while Macclesfield (Gerard) was "stiff of the anti-court party",[24] it was generally anticipated that the lord keeper would, independently of the merits of the case, decide in favour of Fitton. In fact, however, he refused the application on the ground that the claim was stale, a "pitch of heroical justice" which North cannot adequately extol,[24] and which so impressed Macclesfield that he expended a shilling in the purchase of the lord keeper's portrait.[23]

The grand jury of Cheshire having presented Macclesfield on 17 September as disaffected to the government and recommended that he should be bound over to keep the peace, Macclesfield retaliated by an action of scandalum magnatum against a juryman named Starkey, laying the damages at £10,000. The case was tried in the exchequer chamber on 25 November 1684, and resulted in judgement for the defendant. On 7 September 1685, a royal proclamation was issued for Macclesfield's apprehension. He fled to the continent, and sentence of outlawry was passed against him.[25]

William III edit

Macclesfield spent the next three years in Germany and the Netherlands, returning to England in the revolution of 1688. During the progress of the Prince of Orange from Torbay to London, Gerard commanded his body-guard, a troop of some two hundred cavaliers, mostly English, mounted on Flemish chargers, whose splendid appearance excited much admiration. In February 1689 he was sworn of the Privy Council, and appointed lord president of the council of the Welsh Marches, and lord-lieutenant of Gloucester, Hereford, Monmouth, and North and South Wales. His outlawry was formally reversed in the following April. His political attitude is curiously illustrated by his speech in the debate on the Abjuration Bill. Lord Wharton, after owning that he had taken more oaths than he could remember, said that he should be "very unwilling to charge himself with more at the end of his days",[24] whereupon Macclesfield rose and said that "he was in much the same case with Lord Wharton,[24] though they had not always taken the same oaths; but he never knew them of any use but to make people declare against government that would have submitted quietly to it if they had been let alone".[24] He also disclaimed having had much hand in bringing about the revolution.[25]

In July 1690 he was one of a commission appointed to inquire into the conduct of the fleet during a recent engagement with the French off Beachy Head, which had not terminated so successfully as had been anticipated. He died on 7 January 1694 suddenly in a fit of vomiting, and was buried on the 18th in Exeter vault in Westminster Abbey.[25] The title and his estates passed to his son and heir Charles.[26]

Character edit

Samuel Pepys denounced Gerard as a "proud and violent man" whose "rogueries and cheats" were notorious.[27] Elrington Ball, in his study of his cousin and enemy Alexander Fitton, while accepting that Fitton was not a suitable character to be Lord Chancellor of Ireland, remarked that however bad Fitton's character it cannot have been as bad as Gerard's.[28]

Family edit

Macclesfield married Jane, daughter of Pierre de Civelle, a Frenchman resident in England. Little is known of her except that in 1663 she was dismissed by Charles II from attendance on the queen for tattling to her about Lady Castlemaine, and that on one occasion while being carried in her chair through the city she was mistaken for the Duchess of Portsmouth, saluted as the French whore, and mobbed by the populace.[29] They had two sons and three daughters:[26]

  • Charles (c. 1659–1701), who succeeded to the title[26]
  • Fitton[26] (1663–1702), who succeeded to the title on the death of his brother
  • Elizabeth, who married Digby Gerard, 5th Baron Gerard of Bromley,[30] and was buried in Westminster Abbey[26]
  • Charlotte[26]
  • Anne[26]

See also edit

List of deserters from James II to William of Orange

Notes edit

  1. ^ Chisholm 1911, p. 202.
  2. ^ a b Rigg 1890, p. 212.
  3. ^ Gerard's claim to Gawsworth as heir of his uncle Sir Edward Fitton (died 1643) involved him in a bitter 20-year dispute with his Irish cousins William Fitton and William's son Alexander (Lord Chancellor of Ireland) but was eventually successful.Rigg 1890, pp. 215–216
  4. ^ Rigg 1890, p. 212 cites Peacock, Leyden Students, p. 40; Athenæ Oxon., ed. Bliss, iii. 525; Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1633–4, p. 280.
  5. ^ Rigg 1890, p. 212 cites Baronage, ii. 41.
  6. ^ Rigg 1890, p. 212 cites Clarke Life of James II, i. 17; Clarendon, Rebellion, iii. 292, iv. 35, 145, 614; Warburton, Memoirs of Prince Rupert, ii. 237, 259; Baker, Chron. pp. 551–3; Mercur. Aulic. 20 Sept. 1643, 23 March 1643–4.
  7. ^ a b Rigg 1890, p. 213 cites Mercur. Aulic. 19 May and 31 August 1644; Perfect Occurr. 21 July 1644; Diary or Exact Journal, 7 November 1644; Manchester's Quarrel with Cromwell, Camd. Soc. p. 17; Weekly Account, 31 Oct. and 3 December 1644; Addit. MS. 18981, f. 326; Warburton, Memoirs of Prince Rupert, i. 500; Ormerod, Cheshire, ed. Helsby, ii. 275.
  8. ^ a b Rigg 1890, p. 213 cites Warburton, Memoirs of Prince Rupert, iii. 120; Clarendon, Rebellion, v. 186, 221–2, 227–9;
  9. ^ Rigg 1890, p. 213 see DNB art. Brandon, Charles, Duke of Suffolk, d. 1545.
  10. ^ Two dates have been assigned to the patent creating him Baron Gerard of Brandon, viz. 8 Oct. and 28 November 1645 (Rigg 1890, p. 213 cites Dugdal, Baronage, ii. 41; Nicolas, Historic Peerage, ed. Courthope; DOYLE gives 8 Nov.)
  11. ^ Rigg 1890, p. 213.
  12. ^ Rigg 1890, p. 214 cites "Iter Carolinum", in Somers Tracts; Symonds, Diary, Camd. Soc.; Parliament's Post, 23–30 Sept. 1645; Perfect Diurnal, 29 Sept.–6 Oct. 1645; King's Pamphlets, small 4to, vol. ccxxvii. Nos. 18, 21, 24–6; Hist. MSS. Comm. 7th Rep. App. 454 a, 9th Rep. App. 435–6; CARTE, Ormonde Papers, i. 338; BAKER, Chron. 364; Warburton, Memoirs of Prince Rupert, iii. 206–7.
  13. ^ Rigg 1890, p. 214 cites True Informer, 31 October 1645; Mercur. Britann. 27 Oct.–3 Nov. 1645; Perfect Passages, 28 Oct. 1645, 21 February 1645–6; Contin. of Special Passages, 31 Oct. 1645; Perfect Diurnal, 19 Nov. 1645, 10 Feb. 1645–6; Mod. Intell. 21 Nov. and 13 Dec. 1645, 24 January 1645–6, 27 December 1646; WOOD, Annals of Oxford, ed. Gutch, ii. 477; Perfect Occurr. 2 May 1646.
  14. ^ a b Rigg 1890, p. 214.
  15. ^ a b Rigg 1890, p. 214 cites Hist. MSS. Comm. 4th Rep. App. 275, 547, 5th Rep. App. 173; Carte, Ormonde Papers, i. 93, 155, 338, 426; Whitelocke, Mem. 349; Baillie, Letters, Bannatyne Club, iii. 8; Harris, Life of Charles II, p. 74; Clarendon State Papers, iii. 13; Nicholas Papers, Camden Soc., 171, 199, 279; Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1651–2, p. 3; Egerton MSS. 2534 ff. 117, 127, 2535 f. 483.
  16. ^ Rigg 1890, p. 214 cites GUALDO PRIORATO, Hist. del Ministerio del Cardinale Mazarino, ed. 1669, iii. 319
  17. ^ Rigg 1890, pp. 214–215.
  18. ^ a b c d Rigg 1890, p. 215 cites Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1651–2 pp. 3, 240, 1655, p. 341, 1655–6 p. 327, 1656–7 pp. 92, 340, 1657–8 pp. 201, 306, 313, 314, 346, 1659–60 pp. 81, 82, 136, 217, 308; Hist. MSS. Comm. 5th Rep. App. 184, 7th Rep. App. 459 b; Cobbett, State Trials, v. 518–519; Thurloe State Papers, i. 696, ii. 57, 512, 579, iii. 659, iv. 81, 100, 194, v. 160, vi. 26.
  19. ^ Rigg 1890, p. 215 cites Thurloe State Papers (i. 696),
  20. ^ Rigg 1890, p. 215 cites Cal. Clarendon Papers, ii. 341.
  21. ^ Rigg 1890, p. 215 Thurloe State Papers, vi. 26
  22. ^ a b c Rigg 1890, p. 215 cites Hist. MSS. Comm. 5th Rep. App. 184, 7th Rep. App. 125 a, 459 b; Lords' Journ. xi. 171 b, 541 a–561 a; Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1651–2–65; Cal. Amer. and West Indies, 1661–8; Thurloe State Papers, i. 696, ii. 57, iii. 659, iv. 81, 100, 194, v. 160, vi. 26, 756, 870, vii. 107, 247; Kennett, Register, 846; Pepys, Diary, 21 February 1667/8; Ormerod, Cheshire, ed. Helsby, iii. 551; NORTH, Examen, 558; B. M. Cat., "Gerard, Charles", "Fitton, Alexander".
  23. ^ a b c d Rigg 1890, p. 216 cites Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1663–7; Hist. MSS. Comm. 7th Rep. App. 486 a, 495 a, 8th Rep. App. 115 a; Pepys, Diary, 13 Oct. 1663, 14 Sept. and 16 Dec. 1667, 16 Sept. 1668; Lords' Journ. xii. 173–5, xiii. 666; Hatton Corresp. Camd. Soc. i. 206, ii. 7; Earwaker, East Cheshire, ii. 556; Burnet, Own Time, 8vo, iii. 56 n.; Luttrell, Relation of State Affairs, i. 120, 216; NORTH, Life of Lord-Keeper Guilford, 206; Examen, 558.
  24. ^ a b c d e f Rigg 1890, p. 216.
  25. ^ a b c Rigg 1890, pp. 216–217 cite Cobbett, State Trials, x. 1330; Luttrell, Relation of State Affairs, i. 305, 357, 399, 502, 505, 513, 522, ii. 74, iii. 250; Burnet, Own Time, fol. i. 780, 8vo iv. 79 n.; Ormerod, Cheshire, iii. 553, 556; Coll. Top. et Gen. viii. 9.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g Rigg 1890, p. 217.
  27. ^ Diary, 9 December 1667; 8 February 1668
  28. ^ Ball 1926, p. [page needed].
  29. ^ Rigg 1890, p. 217 cite Hatton Corresp. Camd. Soc. i. 175.
  30. ^ Rigg 1890, p. 217 cites Coll. Top. et Gen. viii. 12,

References edit

  • Ball, F. Elrington (1926). The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921. London: John Murray.
Attribution
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainRigg, James McMullen (1890). "Gerard, Charles (d.1694)". In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 21. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 212. Endnotes:
    • Granger's Biogr. Hist. (4th ed.), iii. 219;
    • Doyle's Baronage;
    • Bank's Extinct Peerage, iii. 304;
    • Burke's Extinct Peerage;
    • Phillips's Civil War in Wales;
    • Duke of Manchester's Court and Society from Elizabeth to Anne, i. 335, i. 123.

Further reading edit

  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Macclesfield, Charles Gerard, 1st Earl of" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 202–203.
  • Hutton, Ronald (January 2008) [2004]. "'Gerard, Charles, first earl of Macclesfield (c.1618–1694)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/10550. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Portrait in the National Portrait Gallery
Military offices
New regiment Captain and Colonel of
His Majesty's Own Troop of Horse Guards

1660–1668
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Lord President of Wales
1689
Office abolished
Lord Lieutenant of North Wales (Anglesey, Caernarvonshire, Denbighshire, Flintshire, Merionethshire and Montgomeryshire) and Herefordshire
1689–1694
Succeeded by
Lord Lieutenant of Gloucestershire
1689–1694
Succeeded by
Custos Rotulorum of Herefordshire
1689–1694
Succeeded by
Custos Rotulorum of Monmouthshire
1689–1694
Succeeded by
Lord Lieutenant of South Wales
(Brecknockshire, Cardiganshire, Carmarthenshire, Glamorgan, Pembrokeshire, and Radnorshire) and Monmouthshire

1689–1694
Succeeded by
Preceded by Custos Rotulorum of Brecknockshire
1689–1694
Succeeded by
Peerage of England
New creation Earl of Macclesfield
1679–1694
Succeeded by
Baron Gerard
1645–1694

charles, gerard, earl, macclesfield, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, january, 2021, 1618, january, 1694, english, aristocrat, sol. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article January 2021 Charles Gerard 1st Earl of Macclesfield PC c 1618 7 January 1694 was an English aristocrat soldier and courtier The 1st Earl of Macclesfield By William Dobson in the Dunedin Public Art Gallery Contents 1 Early life 2 Early Civil War battles and sieges 3 Welsh campaigns 4 With King Charles after Naseby 5 With Prince Rupert and exile 6 Early exile 7 Exile and return 8 Restoration 9 Post Restoration 10 William III 11 Character 12 Family 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 Further readingEarly life editThe eldest son of Sir Charles Gerard he was a member of an old Lancashire family his great grandfather having been Sir Gilbert Gerard died 1593 of Ince in that county one of the most distinguished judges in the reign of Elizabeth I 1 His mother was Penelope Fitton sister and co heiress of Sir Edward Fitton of Gawsworth Cheshire 2 3 Nothing is known about Gerard s education until he entered Leyden University on 23 March 1633 He was also educated in France under John Goffe of Magdalen College Oxford brother of Stephen Goffe 4 Dugdale states that he was trained in the discipline of war from his youth in the United Provinces 2 and that on the outbreak of the First English Civil War he joined the King at Shrewsbury and raised a troop of horse at his own charge 5 Early Civil War battles and sieges editAt the Battle of Edgehill Gerard commanded a brigade of Royalist foot guards the steadiness of which largely contributed to averting absolute defeat In this battle as also in the operations before Lichfield in April 1643 he was wounded He was present at the siege of Bristol July 1643 and arranged the very rigorous terms of the capitulation He fought with distinction in the First Battle of Newbury 20 September 1643 and took part in the relief of Newark March 1644 when he was again wounded thrown from his horse and taken prisoner but released on parole shortly before the besiegers capitulated 6 Welsh campaigns editShortly afterwards Gerard was appointed in succession to the Earl of Carbery in the general command in South Wales then strongly held by Parliamentary forces and by 19 May 1644 had succeeded in collecting a force of two thousand five hundred horse and foot with which to begin operations He marched by Chepstow to Cardiff which surrendered to him and took Kidwelly By 12 June he had already penetrated into Carmarthenshire and before the 18th he was in possession of Carmarthen He rapidly reduced Cardigan Newcastle Emlyn Laugharne and Roch castles and seems to have experienced no check until he was already threatening Pembroke about the middle of July when the garrison of that place by a sortie routed a portion of his force and obtained supplies On 22 August he took Haverfordwest and before the end of the month had invested Pembroke and was threatening Tenby His forces are said to have been largely composed of Irish levies of whose barbarous atrocities loud complaint is made in the Kingdom s Intelligencer 15 23 October 1644 7 In September Gerard received orders to join Prince Rupert at Bristol and in October he began his retreat marching by Usk and Abergavenny and thus evading General Edward Massey he reached Bristol towards the end of the month November he spent in Oxford or the neighbourhood whence in December he transferred his headquarters to Worcester where he remained until 11 March 1645 when he marched to Cheshire to co operate with Rupert Maurice and Sir Marmaduke Langdale against General Sir William Brereton Their combined forces succeeded in relieving Beeston Castle on 17 March 7 Gerard was then ordered back to South Wales where the Parliamentary General Rowland Laugharne had gained some successes He marched through Wales from Chester in a south westerly direction carrying all before him and ravaging the country as he went After a brush with Sir John Price at Llanidloes he fell in with Laugharne before Newcastle Emlyn on 16 May and completely defeated him Haverfordwest and Cardigan Castle which had been recovered by the Roundheads were evacuated on his approach Picton Castle offered a stout resistance but was carried by assault Carew Castle also fell into his hands Pembroke and Tenby closely invested alone held out 8 With King Charles after Naseby editThe ascendency of the royalists being thus re established in South Wales Gerard received orders to move eastward again and was marching on Hereford at the head of five thousand horse and foot when the Battle of Naseby was fought 14 June 1645 After the battle King Charles and Rupert with the fragments of their army fell back upon Hereford in the hope of effecting a junction with Gerard who however seems to have been unexpectedly delayed and Rupert pushing on to Bristol sent orders that part of Gerard s forces should join him there while the King required a portion of the cavalry to attend his person From Hereford Charles retreated to Abergavenny and thence to Cardiff with the hope of raising a fresh army in Wales but found the Welsh much disaffected owing according to Clarendon to the irritation engendered by the extraordinary rigour with which Gerard had treated them so that when news came that Hereford had been invested by the Scottish army and must fall unless relieved within a month Charles could only induce the Welsh to move by superseding Gerard promising at the same time to make him a baron Gerard chose the territorial designation of Brandon for no better reason asserts Clarendon than that there was once an eminent person called Charles Brandon who was afterwards made a duke 8 9 10 Gerard had become Lieutenant General of all the King s Horse and assumed the command of his bodyguard On the night of 4 August 1645 he escorted Charles from Cardiff to Brecknock and thence to Ludlow and throughout his progress to Oxford 28 August Thence they returned to Hereford 4 September the Scots raising the siege on their approach At Hereford on 14 September Charles heard of the fall of Bristol and determined if possible to join Montrose in the north Escorted by Gerard he made for Chester and succeeded in entering the city having first detached Gerard to the assistance of Sir Marmaduke Langdale who was endeavouring to muster the royalists in force outside the city with the view of raising the siege After much apparently purposeless marching and counter marching the royalists risked an engagement with the besiegers on Rowton Heath 23 September 1645 but were totally defeated by General Sydnam Poyntz 11 Gerard was carried from the field desperately wounded The King then evacuated Chester and retired to Newark where he arrived with Gerard on 4 October and fixed his headquarters for the winter Gerard was dismissed from the King s service before the end of the month for taking part with Rupert and some other Cavaliers in a disorderly protest against the supersession of Sir Richard Willis the governor of the place 12 With Prince Rupert and exile editGerard now attached himself closely to Rupert s party which consisted of about four hundred officers They established themselves at Worton House some fourteen miles from Newark on Trent and made overtures to Parliament with the view of obtaining passes out of the country Parliament however required that they should take an oath never again to bear arms against it The Cavaliers therefore temporised being really anxious for a reconciliation with the King on honourable terms They were ordered to the neighbourhood of Worcester by Parliament and there remained during the winter but early in the following year 1646 returned to their allegiance and the King at Oxford There Gerard raised another troop of horse with which he scoured the adjoining country penetrating on one occasion as far as the neighbourhood of Derby where he was routed in a skirmish At one time he seems to have been in command of Wallingford Castle but when the lines of investment began to be drawn more closely round Oxford he withdrew within the city walls where he seems to have remained until the surrender of the city on 24 June 1646 He probably left England with Rupert as he was at the Hague on 27 December 1646 13 Early exile editForm late 1646 until the Restoration Gerard s movements are very hard to trace He was at St Germain en Laye in September 1647 with Rupert Digby and other Cavaliers He was appointed vice admiral of the fleet in November 1648 and on 8 December passed through Rotterdam on his way to Helvoetsluys to enter his new duties In April 1649 he was at the Hague as Gentleman of the Bedchamber to the King Charles II He apparently belonged to the queen s faction 14 which was understood to favour the policy of coming to an understanding with the commissioners from the Scottish Parliament who were then at the Hague but were denied an audience by Charles In October of the same year he was with Charles in Jersey when the celebrated declaration addressed to the English people was published and he was a member and probably an influential member of the council which advised the King to treat with the Scottish Parliament as a committee of estates He returned with the King to the Hague where this policy was put in execution 15 On 18 March 1650 Hyde wrote from Madrid to Secretary Nicholas praising Gerard somewhat faintly as a gallant young man who always wants a friend by him to which Nicholas replied on 4 May that Gerard is the gallantest honestest person now about the King and the most constant to honourable principles 14 In the following November 1650 Nicholas writes to Gerard that he has the commission appointing him general of Kent but that the fact must be kept secret because the King in his late declaration promised the Scots to grant none In March 1650 1 Gerard left the Hague for Breda in attendance on the Duke of York who was anxious to avoid certain things called ambassadors as Nicholas scornfully terms the Scottish envoys In the following November he was in Paris where he seems to have remained for at least a year 15 On 13 May 1652 Gerard was appointed to the command of the corps of lifeguards then being raised In 1653 he went to Utrecht where Dr Robert Creighton wrought a miracle upon him He remained there through part of 1654 was present at the siege of Arras serving under Marshal Turenne as a volunteer in August of that year 16 and then returned to Paris where he divided his energies between quarrelling with Hyde intriguing on behalf of Queen Henrietta Maria and instigating his cousin John Gerard to assassinate the Protector The plot Gerard s conspiracy to which the King appears to have been privy Gerard had presented his cousin to the King early in 1654 was discovered and John Gerard was beheaded on Tower Hill 17 18 Exile and return editA letter from one F Coniers to the King dated London 11 January 1655 19 accuses Gerard of having treated with Thurloe for the poisoning of Cromwell This the writer professes to have discovered by glancing over some papers incautiously exposed in Thurloe s chambers The story is obviously a mere invention Rigg 1890 In July 1655 Gerard was at Cologne closely watched by Thurloe s spies As Hyde wrote to Nicholas from Paris 24 April 1654 Gerard was never without projects 20 From Cologne he went to Antwerp to attempt the new modelling of the plot returning to Paris in September There he appears to have resided until May 1656 busily employed in collecting intelligence In this work he seems to have been much aided by the postal authorities who according to one of Thurloe s correspondents allowed him to intercept whatever letters he pleased In July he was at Cologne awaiting instructions In February 1657 he was at the Hague corresponding under the name of Thomas Enwood with one Dermot a merchant at the sign of the Drum Drury Lane The only fragment of this correspondence which remains is unintelligible 21 being couched in mercantile phraseology which gives no clue to its real meaning 18 From the Hague Gerard went to Brussels where in April he received instructions to raise a troop of horse guards at once and a promise of an allowance of four hundred guilders a day for his family From Brussels he returned to Paris in March 1658 He was almost immediately despatched to Amsterdam apparently for the purpose of chartering ships and he spent the rest of that year and the first six months of the next partly in the Low Countries and partly at Boulogne returning to Paris between August and September 1659 There he appears to have spent the latter part of the year joining Secretary Nicholas at Brussels in the following January 18 From Brussels in the spring of 1660 Gerard went to Breda where the King held his court and in May returned with the King to England On 17 May 1660 he was commissioned Captain in the Life Guards He rode at their head in the King s progress to Whitehall on 29 May 1660 18 Restoration editRestoration of Lord Gerrard Act 1660Act of Parliament nbsp Parliament of EnglandLong titleAn Act for restoring to Charles Lord Gerard Baron of Brandon all his Honours Manors Lands Tenements and Hereditaments whereof he was in Possession on the 20th Day of May 1642 or at any Time sithence Citation12 Cha 2 c 8DatesRoyal assent13 September 1660On 29 July 1660 Gerard received a grant in reversion of the office of Remembrancer of the Tenths and First Fruits On 13 September his estates which had been forfeited by Parliament were restored to him 22 On 15 May 1661 Gerard petitioned for the post of ranger of Enfield Chase which he obtained His title however was disputed by the late ranger James Cecil Earl of Salisbury and he was soon involved in litigation with Captains Thomas and Henry Batt keepers of Potter s Walk and bailiffs of the Chase whose patents he refused to recognise Both matters were referred to the lord chancellor for decision As against the Batts Gerard succeeded on the technical ground that their patent was under the great seal whereas by statute it should have been under that of the duchy of Lancaster It does not appear how the question with the Earl of Salisbury was settled 22 In 1662 Gerard was granted a pension charged on the customs Towards the end of the year he was sent as envoy extraordinary to the French court where he was very splendidly received About this time he became a member of the Royal African Company which obtained in January 1663 a grant by letters patent of the region between Port Sallee and the Cape of Good Hope for the term of one thousand years Litigation in which he was this year engaged with his cousin Alexander Fitton afterwards Lord Chancellor of Ireland was watched with much interest by his enemies The dispute was about the title to the Gawsworth estate in Cheshire of which Fitton was in possession but which Gerard claimed The title depended on the authenticity of a certain deed which Gerard alleged to be a forgery producing the notorious forger Alexander Granger who swore that he himself had forged it Gerard obtained a verdict at the Chester assizes and ejected Fitton Fitton however published a pamphlet in which he charged Gerard with having procured Granger s evidence by intimidation Gerard moved the House of Lords on the subject and the pamphlet was suppressed Fitton was imprisoned for scandalum magnatum the offence of libelling a peer he remained in prison for almost 20 years 22 nbsp Gawsworth Old HallIn March 1665 Gerard was granted a pension of 1 000 per annum to retire from the post of captain of the guard which Charles desired to confer on the Duke of Monmouth His retirement however did not take place until 1668 when Pepys says that he received 12 000 for it Pepys also states that it was his practice to conceal the deaths of the troopers that he might draw their pay and one of his clerks named Carr drew up a petition to the House of Lords charging him with peculation to the extent of 2 000 per annum The petition found its way into print before presentation and was treated by the house as a breach of privilege voted a scandalous paper and ordered to be burned by the common hangman Carr was sentenced to pay a fine of 1 000 to stand in the pillory for three hours on each of three different days and to be imprisoned in the Fleet during the king s pleasure Gerard subsequently indicted him as a deserter from the army 23 Post Restoration editOn 5 January 1667 Gerard had been appointed to the general command of the Hampshire and Isle of Wight militia with special instructions to provide for the security of the Isle of Wight and Portsmouth in view of the threatening attitude of the Dutch In this capacity he was busily engaged during the spring and summer of 1667 in strengthening the fortifications of Portsmouth He continued to hold the post of Gentleman of the Bedchamber with a pension of 1 000 attached to it during the reign of Charles II 23 On 23 July 1679 he was created Earl of Macclesfield On the occasion of the Duke of Monmouth s unauthorised return from abroad in November 1679 Gerard was sent by Charles to him to tell him out of his great tenderness he gave him till night to be gone 24 The messenger was ill chosen Gerard being himself one of the band of conspirators of which Monmouth was the tool His name appears in the Journal of the House of Lords with that of the Earl of Shaftesbury as one of the protesters against the rejection of the Exclusion Bill on 15 November 1680 Lord Grey de Werke in his Confession p 61 asserts that Gerard suggested to Monmouth the expediency of murdering the Duke of York by way of terrorising Charles In August 1681 Gerard was dismissed from the post of Gentleman of the Bedchamber On 5 September 1682 he entertained the Duke of Monmouth at his seat in Cheshire 23 In 1684 the question of the Gawsworth title was revived partly no doubt as a political move by an application on the part of Fitton to the lord keeper Francis Lord Guilford to review the case Roger North the 17th century biographer who being Guildford s brother was well placed to know the facts wrote that as Fitton was then in favour at court while Macclesfield Gerard was stiff of the anti court party 24 it was generally anticipated that the lord keeper would independently of the merits of the case decide in favour of Fitton In fact however he refused the application on the ground that the claim was stale a pitch of heroical justice which North cannot adequately extol 24 and which so impressed Macclesfield that he expended a shilling in the purchase of the lord keeper s portrait 23 The grand jury of Cheshire having presented Macclesfield on 17 September as disaffected to the government and recommended that he should be bound over to keep the peace Macclesfield retaliated by an action of scandalum magnatum against a juryman named Starkey laying the damages at 10 000 The case was tried in the exchequer chamber on 25 November 1684 and resulted in judgement for the defendant On 7 September 1685 a royal proclamation was issued for Macclesfield s apprehension He fled to the continent and sentence of outlawry was passed against him 25 William III editMacclesfield spent the next three years in Germany and the Netherlands returning to England in the revolution of 1688 During the progress of the Prince of Orange from Torbay to London Gerard commanded his body guard a troop of some two hundred cavaliers mostly English mounted on Flemish chargers whose splendid appearance excited much admiration In February 1689 he was sworn of the Privy Council and appointed lord president of the council of the Welsh Marches and lord lieutenant of Gloucester Hereford Monmouth and North and South Wales His outlawry was formally reversed in the following April His political attitude is curiously illustrated by his speech in the debate on the Abjuration Bill Lord Wharton after owning that he had taken more oaths than he could remember said that he should be very unwilling to charge himself with more at the end of his days 24 whereupon Macclesfield rose and said that he was in much the same case with Lord Wharton 24 though they had not always taken the same oaths but he never knew them of any use but to make people declare against government that would have submitted quietly to it if they had been let alone 24 He also disclaimed having had much hand in bringing about the revolution 25 In July 1690 he was one of a commission appointed to inquire into the conduct of the fleet during a recent engagement with the French off Beachy Head which had not terminated so successfully as had been anticipated He died on 7 January 1694 suddenly in a fit of vomiting and was buried on the 18th in Exeter vault in Westminster Abbey 25 The title and his estates passed to his son and heir Charles 26 Character editSamuel Pepys denounced Gerard as a proud and violent man whose rogueries and cheats were notorious 27 Elrington Ball in his study of his cousin and enemy Alexander Fitton while accepting that Fitton was not a suitable character to be Lord Chancellor of Ireland remarked that however bad Fitton s character it cannot have been as bad as Gerard s 28 Family editMacclesfield married Jane daughter of Pierre de Civelle a Frenchman resident in England Little is known of her except that in 1663 she was dismissed by Charles II from attendance on the queen for tattling to her about Lady Castlemaine and that on one occasion while being carried in her chair through the city she was mistaken for the Duchess of Portsmouth saluted as the French whore and mobbed by the populace 29 They had two sons and three daughters 26 Charles c 1659 1701 who succeeded to the title 26 Fitton 26 1663 1702 who succeeded to the title on the death of his brother Elizabeth who married Digby Gerard 5th Baron Gerard of Bromley 30 and was buried in Westminster Abbey 26 Charlotte 26 Anne 26 See also editList of deserters from James II to William of OrangeNotes edit Chisholm 1911 p 202 a b Rigg 1890 p 212 Gerard s claim to Gawsworth as heir of his uncle Sir Edward Fitton died 1643 involved him in a bitter 20 year dispute with his Irish cousins William Fitton and William s son Alexander Lord Chancellor of Ireland but was eventually successful Rigg 1890 pp 215 216 Rigg 1890 p 212 cites Peacock Leyden Students p 40 Athenae Oxon ed Bliss iii 525 Cal State Papers Dom 1633 4 p 280 Rigg 1890 p 212 cites Baronage ii 41 Rigg 1890 p 212 cites Clarke Life of James II i 17 Clarendon Rebellion iii 292 iv 35 145 614 Warburton Memoirs of Prince Rupert ii 237 259 Baker Chron pp 551 3 Mercur Aulic 20 Sept 1643 23 March 1643 4 a b Rigg 1890 p 213 cites Mercur Aulic 19 May and 31 August 1644 Perfect Occurr 21 July 1644 Diary or Exact Journal 7 November 1644 Manchester s Quarrel with Cromwell Camd Soc p 17 Weekly Account 31 Oct and 3 December 1644 Addit MS 18981 f 326 Warburton Memoirs of Prince Rupert i 500 Ormerod Cheshire ed Helsby ii 275 a b Rigg 1890 p 213 cites Warburton Memoirs of Prince Rupert iii 120 Clarendon Rebellion v 186 221 2 227 9 Rigg 1890 p 213 see DNB art Brandon Charles Duke of Suffolk d 1545 Two dates have been assigned to the patent creating him Baron Gerard of Brandon viz 8 Oct and 28 November 1645 Rigg 1890 p 213 cites Dugdal Baronage ii 41 Nicolas Historic Peerage ed Courthope DOYLE gives 8 Nov Rigg 1890 p 213 Rigg 1890 p 214 cites Iter Carolinum in Somers Tracts Symonds Diary Camd Soc Parliament s Post 23 30 Sept 1645 Perfect Diurnal 29 Sept 6 Oct 1645 King s Pamphlets small 4to vol ccxxvii Nos 18 21 24 6 Hist MSS Comm 7th Rep App 454 a 9th Rep App 435 6 CARTE Ormonde Papers i 338 BAKER Chron 364 Warburton Memoirs of Prince Rupert iii 206 7 Rigg 1890 p 214 cites True Informer 31 October 1645 Mercur Britann 27 Oct 3 Nov 1645 Perfect Passages 28 Oct 1645 21 February 1645 6 Contin of Special Passages 31 Oct 1645 Perfect Diurnal 19 Nov 1645 10 Feb 1645 6 Mod Intell 21 Nov and 13 Dec 1645 24 January 1645 6 27 December 1646 WOOD Annals of Oxford ed Gutch ii 477 Perfect Occurr 2 May 1646 a b Rigg 1890 p 214 a b Rigg 1890 p 214 cites Hist MSS Comm 4th Rep App 275 547 5th Rep App 173 Carte Ormonde Papers i 93 155 338 426 Whitelocke Mem 349 Baillie Letters Bannatyne Club iii 8 Harris Life of Charles II p 74 Clarendon State Papers iii 13 Nicholas Papers Camden Soc 171 199 279 Cal State Papers Dom 1651 2 p 3 Egerton MSS 2534 ff 117 127 2535 f 483 Rigg 1890 p 214 cites GUALDO PRIORATO Hist del Ministerio del Cardinale Mazarino ed 1669 iii 319 Rigg 1890 pp 214 215 a b c d Rigg 1890 p 215 cites Cal State Papers Dom 1651 2 pp 3 240 1655 p 341 1655 6 p 327 1656 7 pp 92 340 1657 8 pp 201 306 313 314 346 1659 60 pp 81 82 136 217 308 Hist MSS Comm 5th Rep App 184 7th Rep App 459 b Cobbett State Trials v 518 519 Thurloe State Papers i 696 ii 57 512 579 iii 659 iv 81 100 194 v 160 vi 26 Rigg 1890 p 215 cites Thurloe State Papers i 696 Rigg 1890 p 215 cites Cal Clarendon Papers ii 341 Rigg 1890 p 215 Thurloe State Papers vi 26 a b c Rigg 1890 p 215 cites Hist MSS Comm 5th Rep App 184 7th Rep App 125 a 459 b Lords Journ xi 171 b 541 a 561 a Cal State Papers Dom 1651 2 65 Cal Amer and West Indies 1661 8 Thurloe State Papers i 696 ii 57 iii 659 iv 81 100 194 v 160 vi 26 756 870 vii 107 247 Kennett Register 846 Pepys Diary 21 February 1667 8 Ormerod Cheshire ed Helsby iii 551 NORTH Examen 558 B M Cat Gerard Charles Fitton Alexander a b c d Rigg 1890 p 216 cites Cal State Papers Dom 1663 7 Hist MSS Comm 7th Rep App 486 a 495 a 8th Rep App 115 a Pepys Diary 13 Oct 1663 14 Sept and 16 Dec 1667 16 Sept 1668 Lords Journ xii 173 5 xiii 666 Hatton Corresp Camd Soc i 206 ii 7 Earwaker East Cheshire ii 556 Burnet Own Time 8vo iii 56 n Luttrell Relation of State Affairs i 120 216 NORTH Life of Lord Keeper Guilford 206 Examen 558 a b c d e f Rigg 1890 p 216 a b c Rigg 1890 pp 216 217 cite Cobbett State Trials x 1330 Luttrell Relation of State Affairs i 305 357 399 502 505 513 522 ii 74 iii 250 Burnet Own Time fol i 780 8vo iv 79 n Ormerod Cheshire iii 553 556 Coll Top et Gen viii 9 a b c d e f g Rigg 1890 p 217 Diary 9 December 1667 8 February 1668 Ball 1926 p page needed Rigg 1890 p 217 cite Hatton Corresp Camd Soc i 175 Rigg 1890 p 217 cites Coll Top et Gen viii 12 References editBall F Elrington 1926 The Judges in Ireland 1221 1921 London John Murray Attribution nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Rigg James McMullen 1890 Gerard Charles d 1694 In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 21 London Smith Elder amp Co p 212 Endnotes Granger s Biogr Hist 4th ed iii 219 Doyle s Baronage Bank s Extinct Peerage iii 304 Burke s Extinct Peerage Phillips s Civil War in Wales Duke of Manchester s Court and Society from Elizabeth to Anne i 335 i 123 Further reading editChisholm Hugh ed 1911 Macclesfield Charles Gerard 1st Earl of Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 202 203 Hutton Ronald January 2008 2004 Gerard Charles first earl of Macclesfield c 1618 1694 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 10550 Subscription or UK public library membership required Portrait in the National Portrait GalleryMilitary officesNew regiment Captain and Colonel ofHis Majesty s Own Troop of Horse Guards1660 1668 Succeeded byThe Duke of MonmouthHonorary titlesPreceded byThe Duke of Beaufort Lord President of Wales1689 Office abolishedLord Lieutenant of North Wales Anglesey Caernarvonshire Denbighshire Flintshire Merionethshire and Montgomeryshire and Herefordshire1689 1694 Succeeded byThe Duke of ShrewsburyLord Lieutenant of Gloucestershire1689 1694 Succeeded byViscount DursleyCustos Rotulorum of Herefordshire1689 1694 Succeeded byThe Lord ConingsbyCustos Rotulorum of Monmouthshire1689 1694 Succeeded byThomas MorganLord Lieutenant of South Wales Brecknockshire Cardiganshire Carmarthenshire Glamorgan Pembrokeshire and Radnorshire and Monmouthshire1689 1694 Succeeded byThe Earl of PembrokePreceded bySir Rowland Gwynne Custos Rotulorum of Brecknockshire1689 1694 Succeeded byThe Lord Herbert of ChirburyPeerage of EnglandNew creation Earl of Macclesfield1679 1694 Succeeded byCharles GerardBaron Gerard1645 1694 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Gerard 1st Earl of Macclesfield amp oldid 1168417197, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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