Amelius Lockwood, 1st Baron Lambourne

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File:Amelius Lockwood Vanity Fair 1894-09-06.jpg
"West Essex"
Lockwood as caricatured by Spy (Leslie Ward) in Vanity Fair, September 1894

Lieutenant Colonel Amelius Richard Mark Lockwood, 1st Baron Lambourne GCVO PC JP DL (17 August 1847 – 26 December 1928) was a British soldier and politician.

Background and education

Born Amelius Wood, he was the eldest son of Lieutenant-General William Mark Wood and Amelia Jane, daughter of Sir Robert Williams, 9th Baronet. He was a descendant of Richard Lockwood, Member of Parliament for Hindon, the City of London and Worcester in the early 18th century, whose father Richard Lockwood had acquired the Lambourne estate in Essex through his marriage to Susanna Cutts. He was educated at Eton. In 1876 he resumed by Royal license the original family surname of Lockwood (his father having assumed the surname of Wood in 1828 according to the will of his maternal uncle Sir Mark Wood, 2nd Baronet).[1]

Career

Lockwood joined the Coldstream Guards in 1866 but retired from the Army in 1883 with the rank of lieutenant-colonel. He sat as Conservative Member of Parliament for Epping from 1892 until 1917[1] and was also Provincial Grand Master of the Essex Freemasons from 1902, Vice President of the RSPCA, President of the Royal Horticultural Society and Chairman of the Governors of Chigwell School from 1893 to 1922. He was appointed a Privy Counsellor[2] and a CVO in 1905,[3] and raised to the peerage as Baron Lambourne, of Lambourne in the County of Essex, in 1917.[4] From 1919 until his death he served as Lord Lieutenant of Essex.[1] In 1927 he was appointed a GCVO.[5]

Family

Lord Lambourne married Isabella, daughter of Sir John Milbanke, 8th Baronet, in 1876. His nephew and heir, Richard Lockwood, was killed at the First Battle of the Aisne on 14 September 1914. Lady Lambourne died in September 1923. Lord Lambourne survived her by five years and died in December 1928, aged 81, when the barony became extinct.[1]

See also

References

External links

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Epping
1892–1917
Succeeded by
Richard Beale Colvin
Honorary titles
Preceded by Lord Lieutenant of Essex
1919–1928
Succeeded by
Richard Beale Colvin
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New creation Baron Lambourne
1917–1928
Extinct