Biography of John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville 1690-1763

Paternal Family Tree: Carteret

Maternal Family Tree: Jane Wyche

Before 22 Apr 1690 [his father] George Carteret 1st Baron Carteret (age 22) and [his mother] Jane Granville Baroness Gower (age 35) were married. She by marriage Baroness Carteret of Hawnes. She the daughter of [his grandfather] John Granville 1st Earl Bath (age 61) and [his grandmother] Jane Wyche.

On 22 Apr 1690 John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville was born to George Carteret 1st Baron Carteret (age 22) and Jane Granville Baroness Gower (age 35).

On 22 Sep 1695 [his father] George Carteret 1st Baron Carteret (age 28) died. His son John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 5) succeeded 2nd Baron Carteret of Hawnes, 3rd Baronet Carteret of Metesches in Jersey.

On 17 Oct 1710 John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 20) and Frances Worsley Countess Granville (age 17) were married at Longleat House. She by marriage Countess Granville. He the son of George Carteret 1st Baron Carteret and Jane Granville Baroness Gower (age 56).

Around 1712 [his daughter] Louisa Carteret Viscountess Weymouth was born to John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 21) and [his wife] Frances Worsley Countess Granville (age 19).

On 08 Jul 1713 [his daughter] Grace Carteret Countess Dysart was born to John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 23) and [his wife] Frances Worsley Countess Granville (age 20).

On 14 Feb 1716 [his son] George Carteret was born to John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 25) and [his wife] Frances Worsley Countess Granville (age 23).

On 12 Mar 1716 [his daughter] Georgiana Caroline Carteret was born to John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 25) and [his wife] Frances Worsley Countess Granville (age 23) at Lansdown, Somerset.

On 06 Apr 1718 [his daughter] Frances Carteret Marchioness Teviotdale was born to John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 27) and [his wife] Frances Worsley Countess Granville (age 25).

In 1721 [his son] Robert Carteret 3rd Earl Granville was born to John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 30) and [his wife] Frances Worsley Countess Granville (age 28).

In 1729 [his son-in-law] Lionel Tollemache 4th Earl Dysart (age 20) and [his daughter] Grace Carteret Countess Dysart (age 15) were married. She by marriage Countess Dysart. They had sixteen children of which only seven reached adulthood. She the daughter of John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 38) and [his wife] Frances Worsley Countess Granville (age 36).

On 14 Feb 1733 [his son-in-law] John Spencer (age 24) and [his daughter] Georgiana Caroline Carteret (age 16) were married. She the daughter of John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 42) and [his wife] Frances Worsley Countess Granville (age 40). He the son of Charles Spencer 3rd Earl of Sunderland and Anne Churchill Countess Sunderland.

On 03 Jul 1733 [his son-in-law] Thomas Thynne 2nd Viscount Weymouth (age 23) and [his daughter] Louisa Carteret Viscountess Weymouth (age 21) were married. She by marriage Viscountess Weymouth. She the daughter of John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 43) and [his wife] Frances Worsley Countess Granville (age 40). They were second cousin once removed.

In 1739 Thomas Hudson (age 38). Portrait of John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 48).

On 20 Jun 1743 [his wife] Frances Worsley Countess Granville (age 50) died at Hanover Lower Saxony.

In Apr 1744 John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 53) and Sophia Fermor Countess Granville were married. She by marriage Countess Granville. She the daughter of Thomas Fermor 1st Earl Pomfret (age 46) and Henriette Louise Jeffreys Countess Pomfret (age 45). He the son of George Carteret 1st Baron Carteret and Jane Granville Baroness Gower (age 89).

On 18 Oct 1744 [his mother] Jane Granville Baroness Gower (age 90) died. Her son John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 54) succeeded 2nd Earl Granville.

On 26 Aug 1745 [his daughter] Sophia Carteret Countess Shelburne was born to John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 55) and [his wife] Sophia Fermor Countess Granville.

On 07 Oct 1745 [his wife] Sophia Fermor Countess Granville died.

In 1748 [his son-in-law] John Hay 4th Marquess Tweedale (age 53) and [his daughter] Frances Carteret Marchioness Teviotdale (age 29) were married. She by marriage Marchioness Teviotdale. The difference in their ages was 23 years. She the daughter of John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 57) and [his former wife] Frances Worsley Countess Granville. He the son of Charles Hay 3rd Marquess Teviotdale.

1749 Creation of Garter Knights

Letters of Horace Walpole. 04 Mar 1749. Strawberry Hill. To Horace Mann 1st Baronet (age 42).

I have been so shut up in the House of Commons for this last fortnight or three weeks, that I have not had time to write you a line: we have not had such a session since the famous beginning of last Parliament. I am come hither for a day or two of rest and air, and find the additional pleasure of great beauty in my improvements: I could talk to you through the whole sheet, and with much more satisfaction, upon this head; but I shall postpone my own amusement to yours, for I am sure you want much more to know what has been doing in Parliament than at Strawberry Hill. You will conclude that we have been fighting over the peace; but we have not. It is laid before Parliament, but will not be taken up; the Opposition foresee that a vote of approbation would pass, and therefore will not begin upon it, as they wish to reserve it for censure in the next reign-or perhaps the next reign does not care to censure now what he must hereafter maintain-and the ministry do not seem to think their treaty so perfect as not to be liable to blame, should it come to be canvassed. We have been then upon several other matters: but first I should tell you, that from the utmost tranquillity and impotence of a minority, there is at once started up so formidable an Opposition as to divide 137 against 203.(1) The minority is headed by the Prince, who has continued opposing, though very unsuccessfully, ever since the removal of Lord Granville (age 58), and the desertion of the patriots. He stayed till the Pelhams had brought off every man of parts in his train, and then began to form his party. Lord Granville has never come into it, for fear of breaking with the King; and seems now to be patching up again with his old enemies. If Lord Bath has dealt with the Prince, it has been underhand. His ministry has had at the head of it poor Lord Baltimore (age 49), a very good-natured, weak, honest man; and Dr. Lee, a civilian, who was of Lord Granville's admiralty, and is still much attached to him. He is a grave man, and a good speaker, but of no very bright parts, and, from his way of life and profession, much ignorant of, and unfit for, a ministry. You will wonder what new resources the Prince has discovered-why, he has found them all in Lord Egmont (age 38), whom you have heard of under the name of Lord Perceval; but his father, an Irish Earl, is lately dead. As he is likely to make a very considerable figure in our history, I shall give you a more particular account of him. He has always earnestly studied our history and constitution and antiquities, with very ambitious views; and practised speaking early in the Irish Parliament. Indeed, this turn is his whole fund, for though he is between thirty and forty, he knows nothing of the world, and is always unpleasantly dragging the conversation to political dissertations. When very young, as he has told me himself, he dabbled in writing Craftsmen and penny-papers; but the first event that made him known, was his carrying the Westminster election at the end of my father's ministry,-which he amply described in the history of his own family, a genealogical work called "The History of the House of Yvery,"(2) a work which cost him three thousand pounds, as the heralds informed Mr. Chute and me, when we went to their office on your business; and which was so ridiculous, that he has since tried to suppress all the copies. It concluded with the description of the Westminster election, in these or some such words, "And here let us leave this young nobleman struggling for the dying liberties of his country!" When the change in the ministry happened, and Lord Bath was so abused by the remnant of the patriots, Lord Egmont published his celebrated pamphlet, called "Faction Detected," a work which the Pitts and Lytteltons have never forgiven him; and which, though he continued voting and sometimes speaking with the Pelhams, made him quite unpopular during all the last Parliament. When the new elections approached, he stood on his own bottom at Weobly in Herefordshire; but his election being contested, be applied for Mr. Pelham's support, who carried it for him in the House of Commons. This will always be a material blot in his life; for he had no sooner secured his seat, than he openly attached himself to the Prince, and has since been made a lord of his bedchamber. At the opening of this session, he published an extreme good pamphlet, which has made infinite noise, called "An Examination of the Principles and Conduct of the two Brothers," (the Pelhams,) and as Dr. Lee has been laid up with the gout, Egmont has taken the lead in the Opposition, and has made as great a figure as perhaps was ever made in so short a time. He is very bold and resolved, master of vast knowledge, and speaks at once with fire and method. His words are not picked and chosen like Pitt's, but his language is useful, clear, and strong. He has already by his parts and resolution mastered his great unpopularity, so far as to be heard with the utmost attention, though I believe nobody had ever more various difficulties to combat. All the old corps hate him on my father and Mr. Pelham's (age 54) account; the new part of the ministry on their own. The Tories have not quite forgiven his having left them in the last Parliament: besides that, they are now governed by one Prowse, a cold, plausible fellow. and a great well-wisher to Mr. Pelham. Lord Strange (age 33),(3) a busy Lord of a party by himself, yet voting generally with the Tories, continually clashes with Lord Egmont; and besides all this, there is a faction in the Prince's family, headed by Nugent, who are for moderate measures.

(1) Upon the last clause of the Mutiny-bill, an amendment to render half pay officers subject to the act, only in case of actual war, insurrection, rebellion, or invasion, was rejected by 203 to 137.-E.

(2) Compiled principally for Lord Egmont by Anderson, the genealogist. It was printed, but not published, in 1742. "Some," says Boswell, in his Life of Johnson, "have affected to laugh at the History of the House of Very: it would be well if many others would transmit their pedigrees to posterity, with the same accuracy and generous zeal with which the noble Lord who compiled that work has honoured and perpetuated his ancestry. Family histories, like, the imagines majorum of the ancients, excite to virtue." Vol. viii. p. 188.-E.

(3) James, Lord Strange, eldest son of Edward Stanley, eleventh Earl of Derby (age 59). In 1762 he was made Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, and died during his father's life-time, in 1771. He always called himself Lord Strange; though the title, which was a barony in fee, had in fact descended to the Duke of Atholl, as heir general of James, seventh Earl of Derby. D.

On 02 Jan 1763 John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville (age 72) died at Arlington Street. His son [his son] Robert Carteret 3rd Earl Granville (age 42) succeeded 3rd Earl Granville, 3rd Baron Carteret of Hawnes, 4th Baronet Carteret of Metesches in Jersey.

Royal Ancestors of John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville 1690-1763

Kings Wessex: Great x 21 Grand Son of King Edmund "Ironside" I of England

Kings Gwynedd: Great x 19 Grand Son of Owain "Great" King Gwynedd

Kings Seisyllwg: Great x 25 Grand Son of Hywel "Dda aka Good" King Seisyllwg King Deheubarth

Kings Powys: Great x 20 Grand Son of Maredudd ap Bleddyn King Powys

Kings England: Great x 13 Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Kings Scotland: Great x 20 Grand Son of King Duncan I of Scotland

Kings Franks: Great x 17 Grand Son of Louis VII King Franks

Kings France: Great x 21 Grand Son of Robert "Pious" II King France

Royal Descendants of John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville 1690-1763

Diana Spencer Princess Wales

Ancestors of John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville 1690-1763

Great x 4 Grandfather: Helier Carteret

Great x 3 Grandfather: Philippe Carteret 2nd Seigneur Sark

Great x 4 Grandmother: Margaret Carteret

Great x 2 Grandfather: Elias Carteret 11 x Great Grand Son of King Henry III of England

Great x 4 Grandfather: George Paulet of Holberry 9 x Great Grand Son of King Henry III of England

Great x 3 Grandmother: Rachel Paulet 10 x Great Grand Daughter of King Henry III of England

Great x 1 Grandfather: George Carteret 1st Baronet 12 x Great Grand Son of King Henry III of England

GrandFather: Philip Carteret 13 x Great Grand Son of King Henry III of England

Father: George Carteret 1st Baron Carteret 12 x Great Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Great x 4 Grandfather: Edward Montagu 7 x Great Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Great x 3 Grandfather: Edward Montagu 8 x Great Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Great x 4 Grandmother: Helen Roper

Great x 2 Grandfather: Sidney Montagu 9 x Great Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Great x 4 Grandfather: James Harrington

Great x 3 Grandmother: Elizabeth Harrington

Great x 4 Grandmother: Lucy Sidney

Great x 1 Grandfather: Edward Montagu 1st Earl Sandwich 10 x Great Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Great x 4 Grandfather: William Pepys of Cottenham

Great x 3 Grandfather: John Pepys of Impington

Great x 2 Grandmother: Paulina Pepys

GrandMother: Jemima Montagu 11 x Great Grand Daughter of King Edward I of England

Great x 4 Grandfather: John Crew

Great x 3 Grandfather: Thomas Crew

Great x 2 Grandfather: John Crew 1st Baron Crew

Great x 4 Grandfather: Reginald Bray of Stene and Hinton

Great x 3 Grandmother: Temperance Bray

Great x 1 Grandmother: Jemima Crew Countess Sandwich 12 x Great Grand Daughter of King Edward I of England

Great x 4 Grandfather: Edward Waldegrave 9 x Great Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Great x 3 Grandfather: Edward Waldegrave 10 x Great Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Great x 2 Grandmother: Jemima Waldegrave Baroness Crew 11 x Great Grand Daughter of King Edward I of England

Great x 4 Grandfather: John Higham

Great x 3 Grandmother: Sarah Higham

Great x 4 Grandmother: Martha Yelverton

John Carteret 2nd Earl Granville 13 x Great Grand Son of King Edward I of England

Great x 4 Grandfather: Roger Grenville

Great x 3 Grandfather: Richard Grenville

Great x 2 Grandfather: Bernard Grenvlle

Great x 1 Grandfather: Bevil Grenville

GrandFather: John Granville 1st Earl Bath

Great x 3 Grandfather: John Smith

Great x 2 Grandfather: George Smith of Exeter

Great x 4 Grandfather: Alexander Muttleberry of Jordans in Somerset

Great x 3 Grandmother: Alice Muttleberry

Great x 1 Grandmother: Grace Smith

Great x 3 Grandfather: William Viell of Trevorder

Great x 2 Grandmother: Grave Viell

Great x 4 Grandfather: John "Tilbury Jack" Arundell

Great x 3 Grandmother: Jane Arundell

Mother: Jane Granville Baroness Gower

Great x 1 Grandfather: Peter Wyche

GrandMother: Jane Wyche