George Evans, 3rd Baron Carbery
George Evans, 3rd Baron Carbery (died 1783), known as Hon. George Evans from 1749 to 1759, was an Irish peer. He probably built the house later enlarged as the present Laxton Hall.
He was the eldest son of George Evans, 2nd Baron Carbery and his wife Frances. He succeeded his father in the title in 1759, and inherited an estate heavily encumbered by his father's debts, and family settlements: he complained in 1760 that of his first half-year's rent, he had to pay £1,000 to his mother and £4,000 to his brother John and sister Frances.[1] On 7 February 1760, he married Lady Juliana Noel (died 18 December 1760), the third daughter of Baptist Noel, 4th Earl of Gainsborough. They had one daughter:[2]
- Hon. Juliana Evans (1760 – 20 May 1807), married Edward Hartopp-Wigley, of Dalby House, Leicestershire, on 16 April 1782
After the death of Lady Juliana, Carbery married Elizabeth Horton (died 14 June 1789) on 13 December 1762. They had one son:[2]
- George Evans, 4th Baron Carbery (1766–1804)
He probably commissioned W. D. Legg to design the new house at Laxton after 1778.[3] He also held estates in County Limerick, where Jeremiah Jackson was his agent in the 1760s and 1770s.[4]
By 1782, he was nearly blind, and rendered an invalid by gout. After having once refused Hartopp's suit, Carbery's daughter eloped with him, to Carbery's surprise and indignation, although Hartopp in the end made a good marriage settlement on her.[5] Carbery died the following year, on 26 May 1783, and was succeeded by his son George.[2] He left the unentailed portion of his Irish estates to his daughter in the event that George died without heirs, a contingency that came to pass in 1807.[6]
References
- ^ Malcomson, A. P. W. (2006). The Pursuit of the Heiress: Aristocratic Marriage in Ireland 1740-1840 (revised ed.). Ulster Historical Foundation. p. 70. ISBN 1903688655.
- ^ a b c Debrett's Peerage. Vol. 2. London: J. Moyes. 1825. pp. 1087–1088.
- ^ "Laxton". An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in the County of Northamptonshire. Vol. v. 6, Architectural Monuments in North Northamptonshire. London. 1984. pp. 106–115.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ "ESTATE: JACKSON (FANNINGSTOWN)". Landed Estates Database. National University of Ireland, Galway. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
- ^ Noel, William Frederick (1908). "A bundle of old local letters". The Rutland Magazine and County Historical Record. 3: 254–255.
- ^ Malcomson, A. P. W. (2006). The Pursuit of the Heiress: Aristocratic Marriage in Ireland 1740-1840 (revised ed.). Ulster Historical Foundation. p. 71. ISBN 1903688655.