my-server
← Wiki

Somerset Gough-Calthorpe, 7th Baron Calthorpe

Somerset John Gough-Calthorpe, 7th Baron Calthorpe (23 January 1831 – 16 November 1912), was a British peer, soldier and politician.

Calthorpe was the fifth but third surviving son of Frederick Gough, 4th Baron Calthorpe and Lady Charlotte Somerset, daughter of the 6th Duke of Beaufort. He joined the 8th Hussars in 1849, rising to Brevet major by 1855. During the Crimean War he served as ADC to Lord Raglan. Lord Cardigan sued Calthorpe for his eyewitness account of the Charge of the Light Brigade in his memoir Letters from Headquarters, Or Realities of the War in the Crimea, but the action failed. He became lieutenant-colonel in 1861, commanding the 5th Dragoon Guards. He was the first chairman of the Isle of Wight County Council, and was a JP both there and in his native Midlands.

Two years before his own death, he succeeded his elder brother Augustus (1829–1910) as Baron Calthorpe in 1910.

Marriage and issue

In 1862, Calthorpe married Eliza Maria Chamier, only child of Captain Chamier RN and widow of Captain Frederick Crewe. They had two sons and two daughters:

  • Hon. Somerset Frederick (1862–1940), succeeded as 8th Baron Calthorpe
  • Admiral of the Fleet Honourable Sir Hon. Somerset Arthur (1864–1937), a Royal Navy officer; married in 1900 Annie Euphemia "Effie" Dunsmuir, daughter of Robert Dunsmuir, of Craigdarroch Castle, Victoria, B.C.
  • Hon. Leila Mabel (11 September 1866 – 18 November 1933)
  • Hon. Leila Evelyn (6 February 1871 – 29 February 1956), married in 1899, Cecil Grosvenor Wilson (later Wilson-Heathcote)

The Lady chapel at St John's Church in Oakfield on the Isle of Wight was built as a memorial to him in 1914.

Arms

References

External links