James Stuart, 8th Earl of Moray

James Stuart, 8th Earl of Moray KT (1708 5 July 1767) was the son of Francis Stuart, 7th Earl of Moray.

James Stuart, 8th Earl of Moray
Earl of Moray
Moray residence, Darnaway Castle
Tenure1739 to 1767
PredecessorFrancis Stuart, 7th Earl of Moray (1673-1739)
SuccessorSir Francis Stuart, 9th Earl of Moray (1737-1810)
BornJames Stuart
1708
Died5 July 1767
NationalityScots
ResidenceDarnaway Castle
LocalityMoray
OfficesScottish Representative Peer 1741 to 1767
Grand Master, Masonic Grand Lodge of Scotland 1744-1745
Spouse(s)Grace Lockhart (1706-1738)
Margaret Wemyss (died 1779)
IssueFrancis (1737-1810), James (1741-1809), David (died 1784)
ParentsFrancis Stuart, 7th Earl of Moray (1673-1739)
Jean Elphinstone (1682-1739)

In 1741, he was elected as one of the 16 Scottish Representative peers who sat in the post-1707 British House of Lords, a position he retained until his death.

Life

James Stuart was born in 1708

In 1734, James married Grace Lockhart (1706–1738), granddaughter of the 9th Earl of Eglington and widow of 3rd Earl of Aboyne. Before her death in 1738, they had two children, Francis, (1737–1810), who succeeded as Earl of Moray, and Euphemia (1738–1771). He married again in 1740, this time to Margaret Wemyss, eldest daughter of the Earl of Wemyss; they had two sons, Lt-Colonel James Stuart (1741–1809), [lower-alpha 1] and Lieutenant (RN) David Stuart (1745–1784).[lower-alpha 2][1]

In 1755 he purchased Balmerino House in Leith from the Crown who had confiscated the house due to Lord Balmerino's active support of the Jacobite Rebellion.[2]

Footnotes

  1. Captain, 20th Foot, 1762; Lieutenant-Colonel Sutherland Fencibles, 1793 ; deputy-governor of Fort George, 1777 ; Captain, North British Veteran Battalion, 1803; Died at Fort George 4 May 1808
  2. Died Budleigh Salterton, Devon, 12 June 1784

References

  1. Debrett 1825, p. 707.
  2. Cassell's Old and New Edinburgh; vol. 6, ch. 24

Sources

  • Debrett, John, ed. (1825). Debrett's Peerage of England, Scotland, and Ireland: Vol II. J Moyes, London.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.