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Egerton Leigh (priest)

Dr Egerton Leigh (1702 – 5 February 1760), was an 18th-century Anglican clergyman and landowner, seated at West Hall, High Legh in Cheshire.

Archdeacon of Shropshire from 1741 and a Canon of Hereford Cathedral from 1743, Leigh was a noted English antiquarian who died in 1760 at Bath, Somerset.

Family background

The eldest son of the Revd Peter Leigh (1663–1719), Rector of Lymm, by his wife Elizabeth (1679–1720), only daughter and heiress-in-issue of the Hon. Thomas Egerton (third son of John Egerton, 2nd Earl of Bridgewater), he was head of the ancient Cheshire landed gentry family whose numerous cadet branches include the Leighs of Adlestrop (cr. Baron Leigh, of Stoneleigh).

In his late teenagehood, Leigh inherited the ancestral seat of West Hall together with the lordship of the manor of High Legh and the advowson of the 1st mediety of Lymm, as well as other family estates in Cheshire and Lancashire.

Education and ministry

After attending Eton, Leigh went up to St John's College, Cambridge (LLB 1728, LLD 1743) becoming a noted antiquarian, and was a friend of the poet John Byrom.

Although his education was interrupted by the death of his parents in quick succession, Leigh was scholarly being elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries and entered holy orders, unlike some county families who were capitalising in commerce at the outset of the Industrial Revolution. Introduced to various church livings as Rector of Lymm in Cheshire, Rector of Myddle in Shropshire and Vicar of Upton Bishop in Herefordshire, his advancement in the Church was much helped by his cousin Bishop Henry Egerton.

Collated as Archdeacon of Shropshire in 1741, Leigh was installed as Prebendary of Bullinghope alias Bullingham Magna, Herefordshire in 1742 and elected a Canon of Hereford Cathedral in 1743, before being appointed Master of St Katherine's Hospital, Ledbury in 1749.

Legacy

Dr Egerton Leigh married three times, having nineteen children (some of whom died young). He married firstly in 1724 Anne Yate (died 1734), elder daughter and co-heiress of Hamlet Yate, of nearby Garland Hall, Cheshire, and had by her:

He married secondly in 1734 Elizabeth Drinkwater (died 1742), daughter of John Drinkwater of Thelwall, having by her:

He married thirdly in 1746 Cassandra Phelps (died 1770), daughter of the Revd Preb. George Phelps, Master of St Ethelbert’s Hospital, Hereford, having issue (with a son, Henry, who died an infant):

  • Cassandra Leigh (1747–1826), married the Revd Samuel Cooke <small>BD</small> (died 1820), Vicar of Great Bookham, Surrey and Rector of Cottisford, Oxfordshire, leaving issue
  • Catherine Leigh, died unmarried 1826
  • Ariana Leigh, died unmarried 1827.

The senior representative of the Leighs of West Hall now is Sir Neville Leigh's younger son, the Rt Hon. Sir Edward Leigh, Father of the House of Commons.

Sir Egerton Leigh, 1st Bt (Attorney-General of South Carolina) was a nephew of Dr Leigh and the suffragette Lydia Becker was his great-great-great niece.

See also

References