George Hay Dawkins-Pennant

George Hay Dawkins-Pennant (20 February 1764 – 17 December 1840), of Penrhyn Castle, Caernarvonshire, and 56 Portland Place, Middlesex, was a plantation and slave owner,[1] Member of Parliament for Newark and New Romney.

Portrait by John Jackson

He was the second son of Henry Dawkins and his original name was George Hay Dawkins; the surname Pennant was added when he inherited the estate from his second cousin Richard Pennant, 1st Baron Penrhyn, who died in 1808.[2][3]

Life

Dawkins-Pennant was a Member of Parliament (MP) for Newark 19 May 1814 to 1818; and for New Romney 1820 to 1830.[2]

Dawkins-Pennant inherited four large sugar estates (Cotes, Denbigh, Kupuis, Pennant's)[1] in Clarendon Parish, Jamaica, and at the time of emancipation in the 1830s, the British government compensated him for over 650 slaves in his possession.[4] Best known for his development of the Penrhyn estates, he died immensely wealthy, leaving £600,000.[1]

Family

Dawkins-Pennant married in 1807 Sophia Mary Maude (d. 1812), daughter of Cornwallis Maude, 1st Viscount Hawarden. They had two children Juliana Isabella Mary (1808–1842) and Emma Elizabeth Alicia[5] (1810–1888). In 1814 he married Elizabeth, daughter of William Henry Bouverie.[6]

His eldest daughter and co-heiress Juliana Isabella Mary Dawkins-Pennant married Colonel Edward Gordon Douglas in August 1833, from 1841 Edward Douglas-Pennant, 1st Baron Penrhyn of the second creation.[7] They had two children, of which eldest son George Sholto Gordon Douglas-Pennant succeeded his father in 1886 as the 2nd Baron Penrhyn.

Emma Elizabeth Alicia Dawkins-Pennant[8] married in 1831 Thomas-Charles, Hanbury-Tracy, 2nd Baron Sudeley (d. 1863). He left £140,000.[9] She had children with him and his successor, also Lord Sudeley.[10]

References


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