Robert Ridgeway, 4th Earl of Londonderry (died 7 March 1714) was an Anglo-Irish peer.
Londonderry was the son of Weston Ridgeway, 3rd Earl of Londonderry and Frances Temple. His father was the grandson of he former Cicely MacWilliam and Thomas Ridgeway, 1st Earl of Londonderry. His maternal grandparents were Sir Peter Temple, 2nd Baronet, MP for Buckingham, and the former Christiana Leveson. [1]
Upon the death of his father in 1672, he became the 4th Earl of Londonderry (also "Lord Baron of Gallen Ridgeway" [2] ). [3]
In 1686, Lord Londonderry married Lucy Jopson, a daughter of Sir William Jopson, 2nd Baronet and Lucy Tindall. Together, they were the parents of: [3]
Lord Londonderry of Tor Mohun in Devon died on 7 March 1714. As he had no male issue, his titles became extinct. [5] His daughter, Lady Frances, inherited the estate of Cudworth in Yorkshire and, in 1726, his son-in-law Thomas Pitt was created Earl of Londonderry in the title's second creation. [6]
Through his daughter Lady Frances, he was posthumously a grandfather of Thomas Pitt, 2nd Earl of Londonderry, Ridgeway Pitt, 3rd Earl of Londonderry, and Lady Lucy Pitt (wife of Pierce Meyrick, the youngest son of Owen Meyrick of Bodorgan, Anglesey). [3]
Marquess of Donegall is a title in the Peerage of Ireland held by the head of the Chichester family, originally from Devon, England. Sir John Chichester sat as a Member of Parliament and was High Sheriff of Devon in 1557. One of his sons, Sir Arthur Chichester, was Lord Deputy of Ireland from 1605 to 1616. In 1613, he was raised to the Peerage of Ireland as Baron Chichester, of Belfast in County Antrim. When he died childless in 1625 the barony became extinct.
Earl of Chichester is a title that has been created three times, twice in the Peerage of England and once in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. The current title was created in the Peerage of the United Kingdom in 1801 for Thomas Pelham, 2nd Baron Pelham of Stanmer.
Earl of Londonderry is a title that has been created three times in the Peerage of Ireland. The first creation came in 1622 in favour of Thomas Ridgeway, 1st Baron Ridgeway, who served as Treasurer of Ireland and was involved in the colonisation of Ulster. He had already been created a Baronet, of Torrington in the County of Devon, in 1611, Lord Ridgeway, Baron of Gallen-Ridgeway, in the Peerage of Ireland, in 1616, and was made Viscount Gallen-Ridgeway at the same time as he was granted the earldom, also in the Peerage of Ireland. The titles became extinct on the death of his great-grandson, the fourth Earl, in 1714.
Arthur Chichester, 3rd Earl of Donegall was an Irish nobleman and soldier.
Arthur Chichester, 2nd Earl of Donegall PC (Ire) was an Anglo-Irish politician.
Thomas Innes Pitt, 1st Earl of Londonderry was a British Army officer, speculator and Whig politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1713 to 1728. He served as Governor of the Leeward Islands from 1728 to his death in 1729.
John Harington, 1st Baron Harington of Exton in Rutland, was an English courtier and politician.
John Parker, 1st Earl of Morley FRS, known as 2nd Baron Boringdon from 1788 to 1815, was a British peer and politician.
William Willoughby Cole, 1st Earl of Enniskillen, styled The Honourable from 1760 to 1767, then known as the Lord Mountflorence to 1776 and as the Viscount Enniskillen to 1789, was an Irish peer and politician.
Thomas Ridgeway, 1st Earl of Londonderry was an English administrator active in Ireland, in particular in the Ulster Plantation.
Sir Henry Northcote, 4th Baronet (1655–1730) was an English baronet from Devon. He was by profession a doctor of medicine. His great-great-great-grandson was Stafford Northcote, 1st Earl of Iddesleigh (1818–1887).
Ridgeway Pitt, 3rd Earl of Londonderry of Soldon in the parish of Holsworthy in North Devon, was a British politician and peer.
Sir William Wrey, 1st Baronet of Trebeigh, St Ive, Cornwall and North Russell, Sourton, Devon, was High Sheriff of Cornwall in 1598 and was created a baronet by King Charles I in 1628.
Sir William Wrey, 2nd Baronet of Trebeigh, St Ive, Cornwall and North Russell, Sourton, Devon, was MP for Liskeard, Cornwall in 1624.
Soldon in the parish of Holsworthy Hamlets, Devon, England, is a historic estate, a seat of the Prideaux family. The manor house is a grade II listed building dating from the mid-16th century with later alterations. It was sold in 2014 as an eight bedroomed house with an acre and a half of grounds for an asking price of £750,000.
John Ridgeway of Abbots Carswell and Tor Mohun in Devon, was a lawyer who served as a Member of Parliament, twice for Dartmouth in 1539 and 1545 and twice for Exeter in 1553 and 1554.
Tor Mohun is a historic manor and parish on the south coast of Devon, now superseded by the Victorian sea-side resort of Torquay and known as Tormohun, an area within that town. In 1876 the Local Board of Health obtained the sanction of Government to alter the name of the district from Tormoham (sic) to Torquay.
Indio in the parish of Bovey Tracey in Devon, is an historic estate. The present large mansion house, known as Indio House is a grade II listed building rebuilt in 1850, situated about 1/2 mile south of Bovey Tracey Church, on the opposite side of the River Bovey. According to the Devon historian Pole (d.1635) it was originally a priory, however research from 1840 onwards has suggested it was more likely merely a grange farm, a possession of St John’s Hospital, Bridgwater, Somerset, from 1216.
Hercules Langford Rowley PC was an Irish politician and landowner.
Henry Hamilton-Moore, 3rd Earl of Drogheda PC (Ire) was an Anglo-Irish peer and soldier.