Edward Finch-Hatton (c.1697 – 16 May 1771) of Kirby Hall, near Rockingham, Northamptonshire, was a British diplomat and politician who sat in the House of Commons for 41 years from 1727 to 1768. The youngest son of the 7th Earl of Winchilsea
In 1724, Finch began a diplomatic career, representing Great Britain as envoy-extraordinary to the imperial diet of Regensburg in the winter of 1724 to 1725, then successively as Minister to Poland, Sweden and Russia between 1725 and 1742 (His letters from Russia have been published in: Сборник Императорского русского исторического общества, том 85: Дипломатическая переписка английских посланников при русском дворе с 1740 г. по 3 марта 1741 г., С -Петербург 1893). He was returned as Member of Parliament for Cambridge University at the 1727 British general election. He spent the longest period as minister in Stockholm, from 1728 to 1739 and is recorded as only voting once in Parliament over that period although he was returned for Cambridge University again in 1734 and 1741. On his return to England in 1742, he was appointed groom of the bedchamber to the King, a post he held despite changes of government until 1756. He spoke on the Address on 16 November 1742, giving an account of all his negotiations and spoke against an opposition motion of 6 December 1743 for discontinuing the Hanoverian troops on British pay. He was returned unopposed again at the 1747 British general election.[4]
Finch married Anne Palmer (b. August 1709 – 1795), daughter and co-heiress of Sir Thomas Palmer, 4th Baronet, of Wingham and sister to Mary Palmer, 8th Countess of Winchilsea on 15 August 1746, by special licence, at the house of his older brother, Daniel Finch, 8th Earl of Winchilsea, in Sackville Street, Mayfair.[6][7] In 1764, he took the additional surname Hatton in accordance with the will of his half aunt Anne Hatton.[8][3] When he inherited the Hatton properties including Kirby Hall from her.
Kirby hall grand order
Kirby Hall courtyard
Kirby Hall's facade from garden
Finch and his wife had two sons and three daughters:
Mary Henrietta Elizabeth Finch-Hatton (b. 12 May 1754 – Mar 1822).[12][13]
John Emilius Daniel Edward Finch-Hatton (b. 19 May 1755, d. Jan 1841).[14][15]
his wife Mrs. Finch-Hatton (Anne Palmer) of Manchester Square survived him by another 24 years and died in 1795 at Eastwell Park, their son's newly rebuilt house by Bonomi.[16]
Their eldest son George became an MP, and was succeeded in turn by his own son George Finch-Hatton, who inherited the family's title and became the 10th Earl of Winchilsea.[1]
^ abc[Anon.], ‘Hatton, Edward Finch- (1697?–1771)’, rev. R. D. E. Eagles, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, (Oxford University Press, 2004) [1], accessed 12 Oct 2008