PANMURE, Earl of,
a title (attainted) in the peerage of Scotland, conferred 3d August
1646, with the secondary title of Baron Maule of Brechin and Navar, on
Patrick Maule of Panmure, (see MAULE). He was a faithful adherent of
Charles I., and attended that unfortunate monarch in his imprisonment at
Holdenby and Carisbrook till compelled to leave him by the orders of
parliament. By Cromwell he was, in 1654, fined in the exorbitant sum of
£10,000 sterling, and £2,500 on account of his younger son, Henry, who
had the command of a regiment in the duke of Hamilton’s army, raised for
the rescue of the king in 1648, and who, at the battle of Dunbar in
1650, also commanded a regiment. The earl’s fine was mitigated to
£4,000, and that for his son, Henry, to £1,000. His lordship died 22d
December, 1661.
His elder son, George,
second earl, when Lord Maule, fought at the head of the Forfarshire
regiment of horse, of which he was colonel, at the battle of Dunbar, 3d
September 1650, and also at an engagement with the English at
Inverkeithing, 20th July following, when he was wounded. After the
defeat of the royalists at Worcester, many of them repaired to Lord
Maule, but, finding that he could be of no further service to the king’s
cause, he made his peace with General Monk in 1652. The second earl of
Panmure died at Edinburgh 24th March 1671. By his countess, Lady Jean
Campbell, eldest daughter of John, earl of Loudoun, high-chancellor of
Scotland, he had nine children, of whom four sons and one daughter died
young.
The eldest surviving son,
George, third earl, was a privy councilor to Charles II. and James VII.,
and died 1st February 1686. He had a son, George, Lord Maule, who
predeceased him. The third earl’s brother, the Hon. James Maule of
Ballumby, succeeded him as fourth earl. In his youth, he served as a
volunteer at the siege of Luxembourg. He was a privy councilor to James
VII., but was removed for opposing the abrogation of the penal laws
against popery. At the convention of estates in March 1689, he
vigorously supported the interest of the abdicated monarch. When the
crown was settled on King William and Queen Mary, the earl of Panmure,
with his brother, the Hon. Harry Maule of Kelly, who was also a member
of the convention, left the meeting, and never appeared again in the
parliament of Scotland. When the rebellion of 1715 broke out, the earl
and his brother joined the standard of the Pretender, and the former
proclaimed James VIII. At Brechin. At the battle of Sheriffmuir, his
lordship commanded a battalion of foot, and was taken prisoner, but
rescued by his brother. He afterwards took refuge in France, and was
attainted by act of parliament. The yearly rental of his estates was
£3,456 sterling, the largest of the confiscated properties, and though
the government twice offered to restore them, if he would return and
take the oath of allegiance to the house of Hanover, he remained firm in
his attachment to the Stuart family. In 1717, an act of parliament was
passed, to enable King George to make such a provision to his countess,
Lady Mary Hamilton, third daughter of William and Anne, duke and duchess
of Hamilton, as she would have been entitled to had her husband been
dead. His lordship died at Paris, 11th April 1723, in his 64th year,
without issue.
His brother, Mr. Maule of
Kelly, after the Revolution lived in a retired manner till the rebellion
of 1715, and spent much of his time in the study of the laws, history,
and antiquities of his native country. He died at Edinburgh in 1734. He
was twice married. By his first wife, Lady Mary Fleming, only daughter
of the first earl of Wigton, he had, with other issue, a son, William,
earl of Panmure in the Irish peerage, of whom afterwards; and a
daughter, Jean, married, first, to George, Lord Ramsay, eldest son of
the sixth earl of Dalhousie. By his second wife, Anne, daughter of the
Hon. Patrick Lindsay Crawford of Kilbirnie, he had, with other issue,
John Maule of Inverkeillour, one of the barons of the court of exchequer
in Scotland, who died, unmarried, in 1781.
William Maule, above
mentioned, was, on 6th April 1743, created a peer of Ireland, by the
titles of earl of Panmure of forth, and Viscount Maule of Whitechurch.
This nobleman purchased in 1764 the forfeited Panmure estates from the
York Buildings company, for £49,157 18s 4d. He had early entered the
army, and served several campaigns in Flanders. He was at the battles of
Dettingen and Fontenoy, and in 1770 attained the rank of general. He
died at Edinburgh 1st January 1782, aged 82. As his titles were limited
to the heirs male of his body, and those of his brother of the
half-blood, John Maul of Inverkeillour, who predeceased him, without
issue, they became extinct at his death.
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PANMURE, Baron, of
Brechin and Navar, a title in the peerage of the United Kingdom,
conferred, 9th September 1831, on the Hon. William Maule, formerly
Ramsay, second son of the eighth earl of Dalhousie, (see DALHOUSIE) and
grandson of George, Lord Ramsay and Jean Maule, daughter of the Hon.
Harry Maule of Kelly. He was born 27th October 1771. His granduncle,
William earl of Panmure, in the Irish peerage, had, in 1775, executed an
entail of his estates, which form the largest landed property in
Forfarshire, in favour of his nephew, George, earl of Dalhousie, in
liferent, and his second and other sons in fee. This settlement was
attempted to be set aside by Thomas Maule, lieutenant of invalids, heir
male of the Panmure family, grandson of Henry Maule, bishop of Meath;
but the court of session, on 1st March 1782, determined in favour of the
earl of Dalhousie, except as to certain long leases of Panmure and
Brechin Parks, which were found to belong to Lieutenant Maule. On the
death of the earl of Dalhousie, 4th November 1787, the estates devolved
on his second son, the Hon. William Ramsay, then 16 years of age, who
thereupon assumed the name and arms of Maule. In 1789 he entered the
army as a cornet in the 11th dragoons, and afterwards raised an
independent company of foot, which was disbanded in 1791. At the general
election in 1796, he was elected M.P. for Forfarshire. The politics of
his family were Tory, but he came forward on the Whig interest, to which
he firmly adhered during his long life. He was rechosen at all the
subsequent elections, till 9th September 1831, when he was raised to the
peerage. His lordship died at Brechin castle, April 13, 1832. He was
twice married; 1st, in 1794, to Patricia Heron, daughter of Gilbert
Gordon, Esq. of Halleaths; and, 2dly, in 1822 (his first wife having
died in 1821), to Miss Elizabeth Barton. By the latter he had no issue,
but by the former he had, with 5 daughters, 3 sons, viz. 1. Fox, 2d
Baron Panmure, and 11th Earl of Dalhousie. 2. Hon. Lauderdale Maule,
lieutenant-colonel 79th Highlanders, who died at Varna, Aug. 1, 1854;
and 3. Hon. William Maule, born in 1809, died Feb. 17, 1859. He married
in 1844, Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Binny, Esq. of Maulesden and
Fearn; issue, 2 sons, who died in childhood, and 4 daughters.
In an obituary notice of
the first Lord Panmure, it is stated that “he was emphatically a
remarkable man. Endowed with much natural shrewdness, he neglected the
cultivation of his talents; but of an energetic and fearless character,
he drew attention to himself by his systematic defiance of conventional
decorums. His public career was marked by consistent devotion to popular
liberty, and mutual tolerance, and by benevolence rare both in its
extent and its intensity. Alike unmeasured in his loves and hatreds, he
was devotedly and tenderly attached to those who did not thwart him,
implacable to those who did; liberal and humane to all who only came in
contact with him in the abstractions of public life, he was a despot to
those who stood in more intimate relations to him. Kind, liberal,
tolerant, so long as nothing touched him personally, he was fierce and
unrelenting as soon as his self-will was opposed.” With his eldest son
and some other members of his family he was long at variance. His
munificence and liberality were shown in bestowing a pension on the
widow of Fox, whose principles he had adopted and maintained steadfastly
to the last, and after whom he named his eldest son, and also in
conferring an annuity of £50 on the widow of Robert Burns, which was
continued till the poet’s family assured him that it was no longer
needed. In 1838, he enlarged the building of the Public schools of
Brechin, and erected a hall, with library, &c., for the Mechanics’
Institution, at his own expense, and in 1841, he gifted the whole in
perpetuity to the town council of that town. In 1839 his tenantry
erected a handsome column, 105 feet high, in honour of his lordship, as
a lasting memorial of their respect for him as their landlord. It is
called the Panmure of ‘Live and Let Live’ testimonial, and stands on the
highest part of the Downie hills, Forfarshire, commanding a view of
large portions of seven counties.
The eldest son, long
known as the Hon. Fox Maule, became second Lord Panmure. Born 22d April
1801, he was educated at the charter-house, and when young entered the
army as an ensign in the 79th Highlanders. He served for several years
in Canada, on the staff of his uncle, the earl of Dalhousie, and retired
from the army in 1831, with the rank of captain. He entered parliament
in 1835 as member for Perthshire, and in April of that year was
appointed under secretary of state for the home department, in Viscount
Melbourne’s administration. Rejected in 1837 for Perthshire, in the
following year he was chosen for the Elgin district of burghs, and in
1841 was returned for Perth. In June of the latter year he was appointed
vice-president of the board of trade, and sworn a privy councilor, but
only held the former office till the following September. In November
1842 he was elected lord-rector of the university of Glasgow, and in
July 1846, on the restoration of the Whigs to power, he became a cabinet
minister, and was constituted secretary at war. In 1849 he was appointed
lord-lieutenant of Forfarshire. He continued secretary at war till 1852,
when the expiration of the East India Company’s charter rendering it
necessary to have a minister of influence to direct the affairs of
India, he was promoted to the presidency of the board of control. Soon
afterwards he succeeded his father as Lord Panmure. In May 1853, the
office of keeper of the privy seal of Scotland, to which no salary is
attached, vacant by the death of Lord Melville, was conferred upon him.
Under the Aberdeen coalition ministry he held no office, but when Lord
Palmerston became prime minister in 1854, he accepted the office of
minister of war. In 1853 he was created a knight of the Thistle, and in
1855 was decorated with the order of the Bath. ON the death of his
cousin, James Andrew Ramsay, 10th earl and 1st marquis of Dalhousie,
without male issue, Dec. 19, 1860, he succeeded to the earldom of
Dalhousie in the Scottish peerage; the marquisate, a creation of the
United Kingdom, became extinct. In 1861 he resumed the family surname of
Ramsay after that of Maule. He married in 1831, Montagu, eldest daughter
of George, 2d Lord Abercromby. She died, without issue, Nov. 11, 1853. |