For the American soldier and senator, see William North.
William North, 6th Baron North and 2nd Baron Grey (22 December 1678 – 31 October 1734), known as Lord North and Grey, was an English soldier and Jacobite, and a peer for more than forty years. He had the right to sit in the House of Lords between 1698 and 1734, although he spent the last twelve years of his life overseas.
North and Grey was the first of his family to become a professional soldier, and he rose to the rank of Lieutenant General. His career faltered after the death of Queen Anne because he was known to be a Jacobite. After being arrested for his part in the Atterbury Plot, but released for lack of evidence, North and Grey took service in the army of King Philip V of Spain. He died in Madrid.
Early life and family
North was born in Caldecote, Cambridgeshire, the son of Charles North, 5th Baron North (c. 1636–1691), by his marriage to a daughter of the first Baron Grey of Warke. He was the grandson of Dudley North, 4th Baron North (1602–1677). Four years before the death of his grandfather, his father had been created a peer in his own right and summoned to the House of Lords as Baron Grey of Rolleston, so that North inherited both titles on his father's death in 1691 and was known as Lord North and Grey.[1]
In August 1721 North was arrested and accused of being part of the Atterbury Plot, a conspiracy led by Francis Atterbury aimed at the restoration of the House of Stuart. However, no one would give evidence against him, so he escaped the fates of some other conspirators and was released.[8] His agent and legal advisor Christopher Layer was hanged, drawn and quartered.[9] After his release, North travelled on the continent and was believed to have converted to Roman Catholicism. He was given an earldom in the Jacobite peerage as 'Earl North' on 6 January 1722.[10] He then took service as a general in the army of King Philip V of Spain.[4][7]
North died in Madrid on 31 October 1734, when he was succeeded in his estates and in the title of Baron North by a first cousin once removed, Francis North, 3rd Baron Guilford, the grandson of North's uncle Lord Chancellor North.[11] The title of Baron Grey de Rolleston became extinct.[1]
^ abRoger Burrow Manning, Swordsmen: the martial ethos in the three kingdoms (2003), Oxford University Press, p. 45, ISBN0199261210
^ abcdWilliam Cobbett, The parliamentary history of England, from the earliest period to the year 1803 (1810), p. 309
^Richard Cannon, Historical Record of the Tenth, or the North Lincolnshire Regiment of Foot (1847), p. 75
^Nicolaas de Roever, Abraham Bredius, Oud Holland vol. 107 (1993), p. 87 (in Dutch)
^ abJohn Struthers, The History of Scotland: From the Union to the Abolition of the Heritable Jurisdictions in 1748 (vol. 1, 1827), p. 230
^Eveline Cruickshanks, "Lord North, Christopher Layer and the Atterbury Plot: 1720–23", p. 94 in The Jacobite Challenge (Edinburgh, 1988), J. Donald Publishers, ISBN0859762130