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2 Publications  





3 Family  





4 See also  





5 References  














Francis Perceval Eliot: Difference between revisions






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→‎See also: +ancestors section
Tag: Reverted
Undid revision 1045225038 by Icairns 2 (talk) I have noted the message on my talk page. I still hold that this content goes against explicit Wikipedia policy on the matter. If you feel strongly about it, we can certainly discuss it. Either way, you might be interested in the (huge) discussion over at Template talk:Ahnentafel.
Line 80: Line 80:


His widow died 15 August 1829 at Blackheath, and was buried 19 August at St Mary's Church, Lewisham, Kent.

His widow died 15 August 1829 at Blackheath, and was buried 19 August at St Mary's Church, Lewisham, Kent.


==Ancestors==

{{ahnentafel |collapsible=yes |ref=<ref name="ahnentafel">{{cite web |url=https://www.ancestry.co.uk/ |title=Ancestors of Francis Perceval Eliot |publisher=Ancestry.co.uk |access-date=19 September 2021}}</ref>

|1 =1. '''Francis Perceval Eliot''' (1755-1818)

|2 =2. Granville Elliott (1713-59)

|3 =3. Elizabeth Duckett (1724-1804)

|4 =4. [[Roger Elliott]] (1666-1714)

|5 =5. Charlotte Elliot (1692-1753)

|6 =6. William Duckett (1686-1749)

|7 =7. Mary Turberville (1698-1780)

|8 =8. [[George Elliott (surgeon)|George Elliott]] (1636-68)

|9 =9. Katherine Maxwell (1638-1709)

|10=10. William (The Laceman) Elliot (1660-1718)

|11=11. Eleanor Tankard (1664-1745)

|12=12. Lionel Duckett (1662-1693)

|13=13. Martha Ashe (1651-1688)

|14=14. Thomas Turberville (1670-1704)

|15=15. Mary Trenchard (1671-1739)

|16=16. Richard Eliot (1614-)

|17=17. [[Catherine Killigrew]] (1618-89)

|18=18. William Maxwell (1605-1663)

|19=19. (?) Murdoch

|20=20. John Elliot (1627-1705)

|21=21. Margaret Johnstone (1630-1706)

|22=22. Dillington Tankard (1630-1684)

|23=23. Anne

|24=24. William Duckett (1624-)

|25=25. Elizabeth Henshaw (1621-1664)

|26=26. Samuel Ashe (1620-1708)

|27=27. Anne Pleydell

|28=28. Thomas Turberville (1621-1700)

|29=29. Elizabeth Baskett (1637-1686)

|30=30. Thomas Trenchard (1640-1671)

|31=31. Anne Earle (1645-)

|32=32. [[John Eliot (statesman)|John Eliot]](1592-1632)

|33=33. Rhadigund Geddy (1596-1628)

|34=34. [[Robert Killigrew]] (1580-1633)

|35=35. [[Mary Woodhouse]] (1584-1656)


|38=38. Alexander Murdoch (1596-)


|40=40. Archibald Eliot


|42=42. Robert Johnstone

|43=43. Barbara Halliburton


|48=48. John Duckett (1581-)

|49=49. Jane Winter

|50=50. Benjamin Henshaw

|51=51. Anne Bonham

|52=52. James Ashe

|53=53. Grace Pitts

|54=54. Oliver Pleydell

|55=55. Martha Brind

|56=56. Thomas Turberville

|57=57. Dorothy Baskett

|58=58. Thomas Baskett

|59=59. Elizabeth Downes

|60=60. Thomas Trenchard

|61=61. Hannah Henley

|62=62. Thomas Earle

|63=63. Susanna Fiennes


}}



==See also==

==See also==


Revision as of 22:02, 5 February 2022

Francis Perceval Eliot
with permission from
The Eliot Sisters Collection
BornSeptember 1755
Kew Green, Surrey, England
Died23 August 1818(1818-08-23) (aged 62)
22Portman Street, London, England
Buried
St Marylebone burial ground
Allegiance United Kingdom
Years of service1773–1806
RankColonel
Commands held14th Regiment of Foot
Staffordshire Yeomanry Cavalry
Staffordshire Yeomanry Infantry
2nd Staffordshire Militia
Spouse(s)

Anne Breynton

(m. 1778⁠–⁠1818)
Other work
  • Man of letters
  • Francis Perceval Eliot
    (1755–1818)
    with permission from
    The Eliot Archives

    Francis Perceval Eliot (September 1755 – 23 August 1818) was an English soldier, auditor, and man of letters. In 1814 he succeeded his half-brother as Count Eliot, however he did not feel it was proper to assume the title.[1]

    Life

    Eliot was the son of General Granville Elliott (1713–1759) and his second wife, Elizabeth Duckett (1724–1804). He was born at Kew Green, Richmond-upon-Thames, Surrey, and baptised on 9 October 1755 at St Anne's Church, Kew Green.

    Following his father's death on 10 October 1759, the family moved on 15 April 1760 to Richmond. In 1762, Francis lodged at Hargreaves in St Martin's Lane, London. On 17 April 1764, he lodged with Mrs Bathurst, Charterhouse Square and attended the public school of St Bartholomew. In 1770, he went to Mrs Betesworth's Academy in Kingston, near Portsmouth, Hampshire, leaving in 1772 to join Mr Lockee's Military Academy, Little Chelsea, London, and later to Colonel Gallatin's School of Equitation for 7 months.

    On 15 December 1773, he was commissioned as Ensign in the 14th Regiment of Foot. On 28 March 1774, he joined his first regiment, moving to quarters in Dover on 13 May 1774. In March 1775, he left for America, where, on 25 August 1775, he was appointed Lieutenant in the 14th Regiment of Foot. By 28 November 1778, he had returned to St George's, Hanover Square, London, where he married Anne Breynton (c. 1756 – 15 August 1829), the daughter of the famous minister in Nova Scotia, Rev Dr John Breynton (c. 1719–1799). In 1790, he bought Elmhurst Hall and various other properties in Staffordshire, while still maintaining a house in London. In 1794 he raised the Staffordshire Yeomanry Cavalry and became its Major and subsequently Colonel, raising the Staffordshire Yeomanry Infantry in 1798. On 25 April 1798 he was commissioned colonel of the 3rd Staffordshire Militia, but this was disbanded the following year. On 28 June 1803 he was commissioned colonel of a new 2nd Staffordshire Militia, but this was also disbanded in 1805.[2]

    In 1797, he tried to sell off his Staffordshire estates and by 1800 he had moved to Lichfield. In 1806, he finally disposed of his Staffordshire properties, pulling down the derelict Elmhurst Hall. He moved back to London full-time, and took an oath as a Commissioner of Public Accounts,[3] based at Somerset House in the Strand. Around this time he became a man of letters, addressing the foremost politicians of the time, while also writing for a magazine – The Aegis. The next year, he attempted to be elected as MP for Westminster in the 1807 United Kingdom general election. On Friday 8 May 1807, he attended a meeting at Covent Garden, London where he was introduced to the meeting, by Col. Robinson who at that time commanded London Recruiting District, and the Pimlico battalion of the Queen's Loyal Volunteers from about 1803. His election was unsuccessful and he returned to his literary pursuits.

    Publications

    Family

    On 28 November 1778 at St George's, Hanover Square, London, Francis married Anne Breynton (c. 1756 – 15 August 1829), the daughter of Rev Dr John Breynton, and had by her 7 sons and 3 daughters:

    1. William Granville Eliot (7 September 1779 – 26 August 1855),[7][8] Lieutenant-Colonel RHA, who married firstly Harriet Ann Mann (30 June 1776 – 30 December 1812), a daughter of Gother Mann (21 December 1746 - 27 March 1830) Lieutenant-General of the Royal Engineers and Inspector General of Fortifications, and secondly Ann Heywood (24 May 1791 – 17 October 1857), a daughter of Samuel Heywood
    2. Francis Breynton Eliot (1 April 1781 – 5 May 1855), Captain, who married Maria Sweet, was posted to Canada where they became the progenitors of the Canadian branch of the Eliot military family
    3. Edward John Eliot (20 September 1782 – 6 November 1863), Captain, who married Margaret James (died 10 September 1881)
    4. George Augustus Eliot (19 February 1784 – 6 August 1835), Lieutenant-Colonel RSC, who married Jane McCrea (9 March 1794 – 30 November 1877). George Augustus Eliot's army career progressed from the 62nd Foot, 103rd Foot, 68th Foot until arriving at Lower Canada. Here, his regiment is described variously as RSC or Royal England Province of Lower Canada District of Quebec. He described his rank as Brevet Colonel or Lieutenant-Colonel of Brigade.
    5. Elizabeth Mary Eliot (11 October 1785 – 21 July 1872) who died unmarried
    6. Lionel Ducket Eliot (27 March 1787 – March 1855), who married Charlotte Russell (1791 - 16 August 1851)
    7. Ann Cathrina Eliot (8 November 1789 – 30 October 1891) who died unmarried
    8. Henry Algernon Eliot (18 May 1790 – 17 August 1857), Rear-Admiral RN, who married firstly Jane Crombie (died 27 January 1846), daughter of Alexander Crombie, and secondly Maynard Baring (1813 - 15 January 1856), daughter of George Baring and granddaughter of Sir Francis Baring
    9. Frances Charlotte Eliot (23 December 1791 – 28 October 1819) who died unmarried
    10. Charles Turberville Eliot (4 July 1794 – 17 February 1875), who married Elizabeth Reed (1809 - January 1863)

    Many of his sons went on to play significant roles in the British Armed Forces.

    He died at his home at 22 Portman Street, London on 23 August 1818 and was buried on 28 August in or by the western wall of the St Marylebone burial ground on the south side of Paddington Street, London – near to his father-in-law, Rev Dr John Breynton.

    His widow died 15 August 1829 at Blackheath, and was buried 19 August at St Mary's Church, Lewisham, Kent.

    See also

    References

    1. ^ Marshall, John, Royal Naval Biography, Volume 3, Part 2, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, London, 1832
  • ^ Staffordshire Militia at 'This Re-Illuminated School of Mars'.
  • ^ Office-Holders: Commissioners - Audit
  • ^ "Archival material relating to Francis Perceval Eliot". UK National Archives.
  • ^ The National Archives | National Register of Archives | Francis Perceval Eliot | University of Birmingham Library Special Collection Ref: 6/vi/5
  • ^ Zupko, Ronald Edward (1990), Revolution in Measurement: Western European Weights and Measures Since the Age of Science, vol. 186, ISBN 9780871691866, retrieved 25 August 2014
  • ^ William Granville Eliot at VIAF
  • ^ The National Archives | National Register of Archives | William Granville Eliot | PROB 11/2222 - Volume number: 19 Quire numbers: 901-950
  • Military offices
    Preceded by

    Unknown

    Lieutenant of the 14th Regiment of Foot
    1775-
    Succeeded by

    Unknown

    Preceded by

    Unknown

    Major, Colonel of the Staffordshire Yeomanry Cavalry
    1794-
    Succeeded by

    Unknown

    Preceded by

    Unknown

    Colonel of the Staffordshire Yeomanry Infantry
    1798-
    Succeeded by

    Unknown

    Preceded by

    Unknown

    Lieutenant-Colonel of the 2nd Staffordshire Militia
    1803-
    Succeeded by

    Unknown

    Government offices
    Preceded by

    Unknown

    Commissioner of Public Accounts
    1806-1818
    Succeeded by

    Unknown

    German nobility
    Preceded by

    Amable Elliott

    Count Elliott Declined and Discontinued

    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Francis_Perceval_Eliot&oldid=1070137562"

    Categories: 
    1755 births
    1818 deaths
    18th-century English non-fiction writers
    19th-century English non-fiction writers
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    British magazine writers
    British Militia officers
    West Yorkshire Regiment officers
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    People from Elmhurst, Staffordshire
    British Army personnel of the American Revolutionary War
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    Use dmy dates from July 2021
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    This page was last edited on 5 February 2022, at 22:02 (UTC).

    This version of the page has been revised. Besides normal editing, the reason for revision may have been that this version contains factual inaccuracies, vandalism, or material not compatible with the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.



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