Henry Graham (of Levens)
Henry Graham, of Levens (ca. 1676 – 7 January 1706/1707), also spelt Grahme, was an English gentleman, heir to a Westmorland estate, and member of parliament.
Graham was the eldest of the three sons of James Grahme or Graham of Levens (1649–1729), by his marriage to Dorothy Howard, daughter of William Howard and a granddaughter of Thomas Howard, 1st Earl of Berkshire (1587–1669). James Graham, who was a younger brother of Richard Graham, 1st Viscount Preston, became Keeper of the Privy Purse to King James II.[1]
He first stood for
Graham's Westmorland home was at Levens Hall, a country house with a large estate four miles south of Kendal which his father had bought in 1689 for £24,000.[4] However, although he was his father's heir, Graham inherited nothing from him. His father outlived him by more than twenty years and, indeed, outlived both of his brothers, so that in the end the property went to an heiress.[1]
On 23 May 1705, at
Graham died at Westminster.[2][7]
Notes
- ^ a b c Josceline Bagot, Colonel James Grahme of Levens: A Biographical Sketch of Jacobite Times compiled from contemporary letters and papers at Levens Hall (London & Kendal, 1886) pp. 2-5
- ^ a b c George Edward Cokayne, Vicary Gibbs, The complete peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain, vol. 4, p. 225
- ^ David Hayton, Eveline Cruickshanks & Stuart Handley, The House of Commons, 1690-1715, vol. 1, p. 69
- ^ 'James Grahme of Levens Hall' in Transactions of the Cumberland & Westmoreland Antiquarian & Archeological Society, vol. 86 (1985), p. 132
- ^ H. Askew, in William White, ed., Notes and Queries, vol. 165 (1933), p. 840
- ^ Ralph Arnold, Northern lights: the story of Lord Derwentwater (Constable, 1959), p. 44
- ^ Abel Boyer, The history of the reign of Queen Anne: digested into annals, vol. 6 (A. Roper, 1708), p. 379: "This Month died also Henry Graham, Esq; Knight of the Shire for the County of Westmorland."