1st Baron Taunton, Henry Labouchere

1st Baron Taunton, Henry Labouchere

Male 1797 - 1869  (71 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  1st Baron Taunton, Henry Labouchere1st Baron Taunton, Henry Labouchere was born on 15 Aug 1797 in Over Stowey, Somerset; was christened on 04 Sep 1797 in St. Marylebone, Westminster, London (son of Peter Caesar Labouchere and Dorothy Elizabeth Baring); died on 13 Jul 1869 in His House, Belgrave-square, London; was buried on 20 Jul 1869 in St. Peter & St. Paul, Over Stowey, Somerset.

    Notes:

    Henry married Frances "Fanny" Baring on 10 Apr 1840 in St. Marylebone, Westminster, London. Frances (daughter of Thomas Baring and Mary Ursula Sealy) was born on 23 Aug 1813 in Stratton Park, Micheldever, Hampshire; was christened on 20 Sep 1813 in East Stratton, Hampshire; died on 25 May 1850 in Kent, England; was buried on 31 May 1850 in St. Giles, Stoke Poges, Buckinghamshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Notes:

    Married:

    --- "Dublin Morning Register" 03 Feb 1840, page 4:
    We understand a marriage is on the tapis between the youngest and only unmarried daughter of Sir Thomas Baring, Bart., of Stratton-park, near Winchester, and the Right Hon. H. Labouchere, M.P. for Taunton. The ceremony is expected to be solemnized very shortly.

    --- "The Globe" 13 Apr 1840, page 3:
    MARRIAGE IN HIGH LIFE. -- The marriage between the Right Hon. Henry Labouchere, the President of the Board of Trade, and his cousin, Miss Fanny Baring, was solemnised by special license in the drawing room of Mr. T. Baring's mansion, in Devonshire-place, on Friday morning, in the presence of Lord and Lady Ashburton, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, the Hon. Major and Lady Aug. Baring, Mr. John Labouchere, and other relatives of the parties. The bride and bridegroom, after the ceremony, set off in a travelling chariot and four for the delightful villa of the Right Hon. Poulett Thomson at Roehampton, where they will pass the honeymoon.

    --- "Taunton Courier" 15 Apr 1840, page 3:
    By special licence, on the 10th inst. the Right Hon. Henry Labouchere, M.P. to Frances, youngest daughter of Sir Thomas Baring, Bart. of Stratton Park.

    Children:
    1. Mary Dorothy Labouchere was born on 22 May 1842 in Belgrave-square, London; was christened on 20 Jun 1842 in St. Peter's, Pimlico, London; died on 15 Mar 1920; was buried in Over Stowey, West Somerset.
    2. Mina Frances Labouchere was born on 23 Jun 1843 in Belgrave-square, London; was christened on 16 Sep 1843 in St. Nicholas, Chislehurst, Kent; died on 04 Sep 1917; was buried in Englefield Green Cemetery, Surrey.
    3. Countess St. Germans, Emily Harriet Labouchere was born on 24 Jun 1844 in Datchet, Buckinghamshire; was christened on 01 Aug 1844 in Datchet, Buckinghamshire; died on 18 Oct 1933 in Penmadown House, St. Germans, Cornwall; was buried on 21 Oct 1933 in Eliot Family Plot, St. Germans, Cornwall, England.
    4. Stillborn Baby Labouchere was born on 25 May 1850 in Chislehurst, Kent; died on 25 May 1850 in Chislehurst, Kent.

    Henry married Mary Matilda Georgiana Howard on 13 Jul 1852 in St. Paul's, Knightsbridge. Mary (daughter of 6th Earl of Carlisle, George Howard and Georgiana Dorothy Cavendish) was born on 28 Jan 1823; was christened on 20 Mar 1823 in St. George Hanover Square, London; died on 17 Sep 1892 in London, England; was buried on 22 Sep 1892 in Over Stowey, West Somerset. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Notes:

    Married:

    --- "The Sun" 07 Jun 1852, page 3:
    APPROACHING MARRIAGE IN HIGH LIFE. -- We are enabled to announce that the preliminaries are arranged for a matrimonial alliance between the Right Hon. H. Labouchere, M.P., and the amiable and accomplished Lady Mary Howard, youngest sister of the Duchess of Sutherland.

    --- "Galway Mercury" 17 Jul 1852, page 2:
    The marriage of the Right Hon. Henry Labouchere M.P., and the Lady Mary Matilda Georgina Howard, sixth and youngest daughter of the late and sister of the present Earl of Carlisle, was solemnised on Monday morning, at St. Paul's Church, Knightsbridge, in the presence of a large circle of the relatives and friends of both parties. The present is Mr. Labouchere's second marriage, his first Lady being the daughter of Sir Thomas Baring, Baronet, who died in 1850, nearly two years ago.

    Children:
    1. Mary Dorothy Labouchere was born on 22 May 1842 in Belgrave-square, London; was christened on 20 Jun 1842 in St. Peter's, Pimlico, London; died on 15 Mar 1920; was buried in Over Stowey, West Somerset.
    2. Mina Frances Labouchere was born on 23 Jun 1843 in Belgrave-square, London; was christened on 16 Sep 1843 in St. Nicholas, Chislehurst, Kent; died on 04 Sep 1917; was buried in Englefield Green Cemetery, Surrey.
    3. Countess St. Germans, Emily Harriet Labouchere was born on 24 Jun 1844 in Datchet, Buckinghamshire; was christened on 01 Aug 1844 in Datchet, Buckinghamshire; died on 18 Oct 1933 in Penmadown House, St. Germans, Cornwall; was buried on 21 Oct 1933 in Eliot Family Plot, St. Germans, Cornwall, England.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Peter Caesar LaboucherePeter Caesar Labouchere was born in 1772 in The Hague, The Netherlands (son of Matthieu de Labouchere and Marie-Madeleine Moliere); died on 11 Jan 1839 in Hylands, near Chelmsford, Essex; was buried on 28 Jan 1839 in St. Peter & St. Paul, Over Stowey, Somerset.

    Notes:

    Peter married Dorothy Elizabeth Baring on 26 Nov 1796 in St. Mary's, Beddington, Surrey. Dorothy (daughter of Francis Baring and Harriet Herring) was born on 13 Feb 1771 in London, England; was christened on 14 Mar 1771 in St Gabriel, Fenchurch, London; died on 15 May 1859 in London. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Dorothy Elizabeth Baring was born on 13 Feb 1771 in London, England; was christened on 14 Mar 1771 in St Gabriel, Fenchurch, London (daughter of Francis Baring and Harriet Herring); died on 15 May 1859 in London.

    Notes:


    --- "Bridgwater Mercury" 04 May 1859, page 3:
    TAUNTON ELECTION.
    The nomination of candidates to represent this borough in Parliament having been appointed to take place on Friday, a considerable number of persons assembled on the Parade . . . Unfortunately, however, Mr. Labouchere had been called to town the day before to attend the sick-bed of a parent, who it was feared was near death; and in consquence he was not present.

    --- "Shepton Mallet Journal" 06 May 1859, page 4:
    TAUNTON.
    Borough Election. -- The nomination here took place on Friday. Mr. Labouchere, one of the old members, was unable to be present, having been summoned to London on the previous day in consquence of the sudden illness of his mother.

    --- "Bridgwater Mercury" 25 May 1859, page 8:
    We are sorry to hear that Mrs. Labouchere, mother of the Right Hon. H. Labouchere, died on Sunday last, at her residence, in Upper Grosvenor-street, London. It will be remembered that the illness of his parent was the cause of Mr. Labouchere's absence from the hustings at the late Parliamentary election for this borough. The deceased lady had reached the venerable age of 89 years.

    Children:
    1. 1. 1st Baron Taunton, Henry Labouchere was born on 15 Aug 1797 in Over Stowey, Somerset; was christened on 04 Sep 1797 in St. Marylebone, Westminster, London; died on 13 Jul 1869 in His House, Belgrave-square, London; was buried on 20 Jul 1869 in St. Peter & St. Paul, Over Stowey, Somerset.
    2. John Peter Labouchere was born on 15 Aug 1798; was christened on 13 Sep 1798 in St. Marylebone, Westminster, London.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Matthieu de Labouchere was born on 04 Sep 1721 in Orthez, Pyrenees-Atlantiques, Aquitaine, France (son of Pierre de Labouchere and Sara de Peyrollet); died on 12 Feb 1796 in The Hague, The Netherlands.

    Notes:


    --- "La France Protestante" Vol. 6,1856, page 465:
    Il eut de ce mariage Pierre, negociant a Orthez, qui s'unit, le 10 Avril 1708, a Sara de Peyrollet, fille de Jacques de Peyrollet, de La Bastide, refugie en Hollande apres la revocation, et de Sara de Casson, d'Oleron. Trois fils et plusieurs filles sontissus de ce mariage, savoir: Jacques, mort jeune a Orthes; Matthieu at Susanne, nes le 4er septembre 1724, dont nous parlerons plus bas; Pierre, ne a Orthez en 1726, negociant a Paris, puis a Nantes, qui se retira, en 1796, dans sa ville natale ou il mourut, le 12 Juin 1808. Une des filles de Pierre de Labouchere fut enlevee a ses parents et enfermee au couvent des Ursulines d'Orthez, ou elle prit le voile sous le nom de soeur Scholastique. La Revolution l'ayant chassee de cet asile, son neveu Pierre-Cesar pour-fut genereusement a son sort. Lorsque son frere Pierre se fut retire a Orthez, elle vecut aupres de lui jusqu a sa mort; puis elle reprit la vie religieuse et devint superieure de la communaute de Saint-Gerion a Hagetmau, ou elle mourut en 1824, a l'age de 96 ans.

    Matthieu fut envoye tres-jeune en Angleterre avec sa soeur jumelie Susanne. Apres avoir termine son education aupres du pasteur Magendie, a Londres, il se rendit a La Haye. Sa soeur qui l'y accompagna, epousa M. Yver. Matthieu se maria en premieres noces avec une demoiselle de Courcelles, et en secondes, avec Marie-Madeleine Moliere, fille de A-M Moliere et de Marie-Elizabeth Veron, deux famillies de refugies. Il mourut au commencement de 1796. De son premier mariage il ne liu naquet qu'un fils qui mourut jeune; du second provinrent deux filles, toutes deux nommees Henriette, mortes enfants, et quatre fils, Abel, ne en 1770 et mort a Amsterdam, en 1804; Pierre-Cesar, chef de la branche etablie en Angleterre; Antoine-Marie, souches de la branche francaise; et Samuel-Pierre, qui continua la descendance en Hollande.

    1. Pierre-Cesar Labouchere naquit a La Haye, en 1772. En 1785, il fut envoye a Nantes aupres de son oncle Pierre, et travailla dans ses bureaux jusqu'en 1790, epoque au il entra comme commis de correspondance francaise dans la maison Hope d'Amsterdam. Quatre ans plus tard, a l'age de 22 ans, il fut associe a cette importante maison de commerce, en meme temps que M. Alexandre Baring, dont il epousa la soeur, Dorothee, en 1796. En 1799, M. Labouchere fit un voyage a la Martinique. L'annee suivante, il etait de retour en Angleterre, ou la maison Hope avait transporte le siege de ses affaires apres l'invasion de la Hollande par Pichegru. Cette maison ne fut retablie dans son ancien poste qu'en 1802.

    Nous ne pouvons entrer dans le detail des grandes operations financieres auxquelles M. Labouchere a pris pari. Qu'il nous suffise de dire qu'il portait dans les affaires des sentiments d'honneuret de probitequ'on pourrait appeler chevaleresques, tantils etaient au-dessus du commun. Nous ne citerons qu'un fait que nous donnerons en exemple. Les maisons Hope et Baring avaient soumissionne un emprunt fait par le gouvernement francais. Tout etait conclu, lorsque la reflexion vint, apres coup, au ministre des finances, qui s'apercut que l'arraire serait tresonereuse pour l'Etat. Un ami commun, temoin de sa perplexite, le rassura en lui disant: "Je connais M. Labouchere, c'est l'homme du monde le plus integre et le plus genereux, et j'ai la conviction qu'en lui exposant votre situation, vous obteindrez de lui et de son digne beaufrere l'annulation dy contrat." Cet ami l'avait bein juge. Que d'autres se seraient empresses de jeter les titres sur la place, pour profiter de ce bon coup!

    En 1810, M. Labouchere fut agree par l'Empereur pour une mission secrete en Angleterre. Il s'agissait de sonder le gouvernement anglais sur les conditions qu'il mettrait au retablissement de la paix en Europe. Les exigences de Napoleon ne furent pas admises, et la negociation dut en rester la. Mais le duc d'Otrante la reprit, a 'linsu de son matire. M. Labouchere, qui ne se doutait de rien, coninua son role de negociateur. Napoleon ayant decouvert cette intrigue, destitua son ministre, et manda a Paris M. Labouchere. M. Thiers rapporte au long les details de cette affaire, dans le 12 vol. de son Histoire du consulat et de l'empire.
    "Des amis, dit-il, lui [M. Labouchere] expedierent un courrier pour l'engager a rebrousser chemin, et ne pas venir se geter dans la gueule du lion; mais fort de sa conscience et de sa droiture, il poursuivit sa route jusques a Paris, et on reconnut bientut qu'il s'etait conduit avec discretion, convenance, sincerite; qu'il ne s'etait mele de ces ouvertures que parce qu'il avait cru obeir aux volontes du gouvernement; que meme par une sorte de reserve qui lui etait naturelle, il s'etait toujours tenu en deca de ce qu'on lui disait, et qu'il s'etait borne le plus souvent a transmettre les notes envoyees par M. Ouvrard [l'intermediaire de Fouche]."

    En 1821, apres une carriere honorablement remplie, M. Labouchere se retira des affaires, en nommant sen plus jeune frere, Samuel, son second fils et un de ses neveux Baring associes de la maison Hope. Il se fixa en Angleterre, ou il mourut, le 16 Janvier 1839, apres une courte maladie, dans une de ses terres pres de Chelmsford, dans le comte d'Essex. Il laissa deux fils. Le cadet, John, un des chefs de la maison de banque Williams, Deacon et Labouchere, "homme modeste, d'une grande piete, et d'une grande charite," a epouse une demoiselle Dupre, issue d'une famille de refugies en Angleterre; l'aine, Henry, est un des hommes d'Etat les plus eminents dont s'honore aujourd'hui l'Angleterre. Il fit ses etudes a l'ecole publique de Winchester, ou il se lia d'amitie avec le comte de Derby; il all ensuite a l'universite d'Oxford qu'il quitta avec les honneurs, with the honors. Il entra jeune dans la chambre des Communes, comme representant du bourg de Taunton. En 1833, il fut nomme un des lords de l'Amiraute; en 1837, membre du Conseil prive, directeur de la Monnaie, vice-President du Board of Trade; en 1839, sous-secretaire d'Etat des Colonies; en 1840, ministre du commerce; en 1847, premier secretaire d'Irlande, puis de nouveau ministre du commerce. En 1855, il a fait partie du jury international des Beaux-Arts de l'Exposition universelle, et il vient d'etre appele au ministere des colonies. Marie une premiere fois a une de ses cousines germaines, Fanny Baring, qui luidonna trois filles, il epousa, en secondes noces, Lady Mary Howard, soeur du vice-roi d'Irlande, le comte de Carlisle.

    II. Antoine-Marie, troisieme fils de Matthieu Labouchere, naquit a La Haye, le 14 avril 1775. Il fut eleve avec ses freres a Offenback, pres de Francfort-surle Main. Apres avoir fait son education commerciale a Copenhague, a Petersbourg et a Londres, il all fonder a Nantes une maison de commerce. Il ne dementitpas les traditions de la famille. Sa maison devint une des plus honorables de cette importante place. On loue la noblesse de son caractere et l'affabillite de ses manieres. Il ne s'absorbait pas tout entierdans les affaires. Il aimait avec passion l'histoire naturelle et avait un penchant pour les beaux-arts auquel il s'abandonnait volontiers. Il peignait et gravait a l'eau forte avec la perfection d'un artiste. Depuis 1814, il remplit les fonctions de consul des Pays-Bas jusqu'a sa mort, arrivee a Nantes, le 4 sept 1829.

    De son mariage, en 1804, avec Cathinka Meinche Knudtson, fille du principal armateur de Drontheim, naquirent cinq enfants: 1 Jean-Charles, ne le 25 avril 1805, qui succeda a son pere comme chef de la maison qu'il avait fondee, et qui, en 1833, alla s'atablier au Havre, commue associe dirigeant de la maison Hottinger du Havre. Il epousa, en 1835, Caroline Feray; --- 2 Henriette-Emilie, nee le 12 juillet 1806, mariee, en 1829, a Albert Insinger, et morte aux Eaux-Bonnes, le 14 sept 1831; --- 3 Pierre-Antoine, ne le 26 nov 1807, qui suit; --- 4 Louise-Hortense, nee en 1810, mariee en fevr 1832 a M. Auguste Dassier, banquier a Paris, President de la Compagnie du chemin de fer de Lyon a Paris; --- 5 Mathilde-Adelaide-Cathinka, nee le 7 mai 1815, mariee, en nov 1836, a M. ch. Royd Smith.

    M. Pierre-Antoine Labouchere fit ses etudes en Allemagne et en Angleterre. Place d'abord dans une maison de commerce a Anvers, il fit, en 1827, un voyage aux Etats-Unis, comme secretaire de M. Bates, chef de la maison Baring, et en 1832, il alla en Chine comme subrecargue d'un navire du port de Nantes appartenant a son frere. "Mais helas! plus il allait, plus il voyait, et moins il se sentait d'aptitude au negoce." La peinture avait toujours ete sa passion dominante, et le sejour qu'il avait fait a Anvers au milieu de tant de chefs-d'oeuvre de l'ecole flamande, n'avait servi qu'a la developper. Aussi, en 1836, renonca-t-il a la carriere commerciale, et apres un voyage d'un an en Italie, il revint a Paris continuer ses etudes sous la direction de son ami et maitre M. Paul Delaroche: "Profondement penetre de la foi de ses peres," M. Labouchere retrace de preference des scenes de l'histoire de la Reformation. On a de lui plusieurs grandes toiles: Luther, Malanchthon, Pomeranus et Cruziger traduisant la Bible, tableau qui appartenait au roi des Pays-Bas, Guillaume II, et qui a valu a l'auteur l'ordre du Lion Neerlandais; Calvin pRESIdant un colloque a Geneve; Luther a la diete de Worms, etc. On lui doit, en outre, une serie de sujets tires de la vie de Luther, qui ont ete graves, et pour lesquels M. Merle d'Aubigne a ecrit les textes. Le 23 mai 1839, M. Labouchere epousa Natalie Mallet.

    III. Samuel-Pierre, quatrieme fils de Matthieu Labouchere, naquit a La Haye, en 1778. Il fut pendant longtemps a la tete de la maison Labouchere de Rotterdam, et devint, en 1824, associe de la maison Hope d'Amsterdam, dont il esst actuellement le chef. De son mariage, en 1806, avec Sara-Maria-Theodora Jotting, qu'il perdit en 1855, naquirent quatre fils et trois filles: 1 Henri-Matthieu, ne en 1807, associe de la maison Hope, qui epousa, en 1840, Keyet van Lennep, fille du savant professeur de ce nom; -- 2 Pierre-Cesar, ne en 1808, qui spousa, en 1832, Eugenie de Lepel; -- 3 Francois-Antoine, ne en 1809, et mort en 1849, qui avait epouse, en 1838, Nancy Hudig; --- 4 Emilie, nee en 1811, mariee, en 1837, a Charles Martin, de Geneve; -- 5 Charles-Bernard, ne en 1812, qui epousa, en 1854, Henrette Woombergh; -- 6 Henriette, nee en 1815, mariee a M. Jean Van Eeghen, d'Amsterdam; -- 7 Adele, mariee, en 1856, a M. Theodore Van Heys.

    From this marriage he had Pierre, a trader at Orthez, who joined on April 10, 1708, Sara de Peyrollet, daughter of Jacques de Peyrollet, from La Bastide, who took refuge in Holland after the revocation, and Sara de Casson, d 'Oleron. Three sons and several daughters came out of this marriage, namely: Jacques, died young at Orthes; Matthieu at Susanne, born September 4, 1724, which we will discuss below; Pierre, born in Orthez in 1726, negotiating in Paris, then in Nantes, who retired, in 1796, to his hometown where he died, June 12, 1808. One of Pierre de Labouchere's daughters was kidnapped from her parents and confined at the Ursuline convent of Orthez, where she took the veil under the name of Sister Scholastique. The Revolution having chased him from this asylum, his nephew Pierre-Cesar was generously to his fate. When his brother Pierre had retired to Orthez, she lived with him until his death; then she resumed religious life and became superior of the community of Saint-Gerion in Hagetmau, where she died in 1824, at the age of 96 years.

    Matthieu was sent very young to England with his twin sister Susanne. After finishing his education with Pastor Magendie in London, he went to The Hague. His sister, who accompanied him, married Mr. Yver. Matthieu married for the first time to a young lady from Courcelles, and in seconds, to Marie-Madeleine Moliere, daughter of A-M Moliere and Marie-Elizabeth Veron, two families of refugees. He died at the beginning of 1796. From his first marriage he was born only to a son who died young; from the second came two daughters, both named Henriette, dead children, and four sons, Abel, born in 1770 and died in Amsterdam, in 1804; Pierre-Cesar, head of the branch established in England; Antoine-Marie, strains from the French branch; and Samuel-Pierre, who continued the descendants in Holland.

    1. Pierre-Cesar Labouchere was born in The Hague in 1772. In 1785 he was sent to Nantes to his uncle Pierre, and worked in his offices until 1790, when he entered as a French correspondence clerk in the house Hope from Amsterdam. Four years later, at the age of 22, he was associated with this important trading house, at the same time as Mr. Alexandre Baring, whose sister, Dorothee, in 1796. In 1799, Mr. Labouchere made a trip to Martinique. The following year, he was back in England, where the Hope house had moved its business headquarters after Pichegru's invasion of Holland. This house was not restored to its former post until 1802.

    We cannot go into the details of the great financial operations in which M. Labouchere took part. Suffice it to say that he carried in affairs feelings of honor and probity which one could call chivalrous, so much were they above the common. We will cite only one fact which we will give as an example. Hope and Baring houses had submitted a loan made by the French government. Everything was concluded, when the reflection came, after the fact, to the Minister of Finance, who realized that the backwardness would be very burdensome for the State. A mutual friend, witness to his perplexity, reassured him by saying to him: "I know Mr. Labouchere, he is the most integrated and generous man in the world, and I am convinced that by exposing him to your situation, you will obtain from him and his worthy brother the cancellation of the contract. " This friend had been a good judge. How many others would have hastened to throw the titles on the square, to take advantage of this good move!

    In 1810, Mr. Labouchere was approved by the Emperor for a secret mission in England. It was a question of probing the English government on the conditions which it would put in the restoration of peace in Europe. Napoleon's demands were not accepted, and the negotiation had to remain there. But the Duke of Otranto took it back, unbeknownst to him. Mr. Labouchere, who suspected nothing, continued his role as a negotiator. Napoleon having discovered this intrigue, dismissed his minister, and sent M. Labouchere to Paris. Mr. Thiers reports on the details of this case in 12 vol. of his History of the Consulate and the Empire.
    "Friends, he said, sent him [Mr. Labouchere] a letter urging him to turn back, and not to come and bump into the lion's mouth; but strong of his conscience and his righteousness, he continued his en route to Paris, and it was soon recognized that he had behaved with discretion, convenience, sincerity; that he had only been involved in these overtures because he believed he was obeying the will of the government; that even by a kind of reserve which was natural to him, he had always kept short of what he was told, and that he had confined himself most often to transmitting the notes sent by Mr. Ouvrard [the intermediary of Fouche]. "

    In 1821, after an honorably full career, Mr. Labouchere retired from business, appointing his youngest brother, Samuel, his second son and one of his Baring nephews, associates of the Hope family. He settled in England, where he died on January 16, 1839, after a short illness, in one of his lands near Chelmsford, in the Earl of Essex. He left two sons. The youngest, John, one of the heads of the Williams bank house, Deacon and Labouchere, "a modest man, of great piety, and of great charity," married a young lady Dupre, from a family of refugees. in England; the eldest, Henry, is one of the most eminent statesmen of England today. He studied at the public school in Winchester, where he became friends with the Earl of Derby; he then went to the university of Oxford which he left with honors, with the honors. He entered the House of Commons at a young age, as a representative of the town of Taunton. In 1833 he was named one of the lords of the Admiralty; in 1837, member of the Private Council, director of the Mint, vice-President of the Board of Trade; in 1839, Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies; in 1840, Minister of Commerce; in 1847, first secretary of Ireland, then new Minister of Commerce. In 1855, he was a member of the international jury of Fine Arts at the Universal Exhibition, and he has just been called to the colonial ministry. Married for the first time to one of his first cousins, Fanny Baring, who had three daughters, he married, in second marriage, Lady Mary Howard, sister of the viceroy of Ireland, the Earl of Carlisle.

    II. Antoine-Marie, third son of Matthieu Labouchere, was born in The Hague on April 14, 1775. He was raised with his brothers at Offenback, near Frankfurt am Main. After having made his commercial education in Copenhagen, in Petersburg and in London, he went to found in Nantes a trading house. He does not deny the traditions of the family. His house became one of the most honorable of this important place. We praise the nobility of his character and the affability of his manners. He was not completely absorbed in business. He loved natural history with passion and had a penchant for the fine arts which he willingly gave up on. He painted and engraved in etching with the perfection of an artist. Since 1814, he served as Netherlands consul until his death, arriving in Nantes on September 4, 1829.

    From his marriage in 1804 to Cathinka Meinche Knudtson, daughter of the main shipowner from Drontheim, five children were born: 1 Jean-Charles, born April 25, 1805, who succeeded his father as head of the house he had founded, and who, in 1833, went to settle in Le Havre, as an associate manager of the Hottinger house in Le Havre. In 1835 he married Caroline Feray; --- 2 Henriette-Emilie, born July 12, 1806, married in 1829 to Albert Insinger, and died in Eaux-Bonnes, September 14, 1831; --- 3 Pierre-Antoine, born Nov 26, 1807, which follows; --- 4 Louise-Hortense, born in 1810, married in February 1832 to Mr. Auguste Dassier, banker in Paris, President of the Railway Company from Lyon to Paris; --- 5 Mathilde-Adelaide-Cathinka, born May 7, 1815, married, in Nov 1836, to M. ch. Royd Smith.

    Mr. Pierre-Antoine Labouchere studied in Germany and England. First placed in a trading house in Antwerp, he made, in 1827, a trip to the United States, as secretary to Mr. Bates, head of the Baring house, and in 1832, he went to China as subrecargue of a ship from the port of Nantes belonging to his brother. "But alas! The more he went, the more he saw, and the less he felt capable of trading." Painting had always been his dominant passion, and the stay he had made in Antwerp amidst so many masterpieces of the Flemish school, had only served to develop it. Also, in 1836, he renounced the commercial career, and after a year-long trip to Italy, he returned to Paris to continue his studies under the direction of his friend and master Mr. Paul Delaroche: "Deeply penetrated by the faith of his fathers, "M. Labouchere preferably retraces scenes from the history of the Reformation. He has several large paintings: Luther, Malanchthon, Pomeranus and Cruziger translating the Bible, a painting which belonged to the king of the Netherlands, William II, and which won the author the order of the Dutch Lion; Calvin presiding over a conference in Geneva; Luther to the Worms Diet, etc. We owe him, moreover, a series of subjects drawn from the life of Luther, which were serious, and for which M. Merle d'Aubigne wrote the texts. On May 23, 1839, Mr. Labouchere married Natalie Mallet.

    III. Samuel-Pierre, fourth son of Matthieu Labouchere, was born in The Hague, in 1778. He was for a long time at the head of the Labouchere house in Rotterdam, and became, in 1824, associate of the Hope house in Amsterdam, of which he is currently the chef. From his marriage in 1806 to Sara-Maria-Theodora Jotting, whom he lost in 1855, four sons and three daughters were born: 1 Henri-Matthieu, born in 1807, associate of the house of Hope, who married in 1840, Keyet van Lennep, daughter of the learned professor of this name; - 2 Pierre-Cesar, born in 1808, who spoused, in 1832, Eugenie de Lepel; - 3 Francois-Antoine, born in 1809, and died in 1849, who had married, in 1838, Nancy Hudig; --- 4 Emilie, born in 1811, married, in 1837, to Charles Martin, of Geneva; - 5 Charles-Bernard, born in 1812, who married, in 1854, Henrette Woombergh; - 6 Henriette, born in 1815, married to Mr. Jean Van Eeghen, of Amsterdam; - 7 Adele, married, in 1856, to Mr. Theodore Van Heys.

    Matthieu married Marie-Madeleine Moliere on 05 Mar 1769 in The Hague, The Netherlands. Marie-Madeleine was born in 1744; died in 1825. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Marie-Madeleine Moliere was born in 1744; died in 1825.
    Children:
    1. 2. Peter Caesar Labouchere was born in 1772 in The Hague, The Netherlands; died on 11 Jan 1839 in Hylands, near Chelmsford, Essex; was buried on 28 Jan 1839 in St. Peter & St. Paul, Over Stowey, Somerset.
    2. Antoine Maria Labouchere was born on 14 Apr 1775 in The Hague, The Netherlands.
    3. Samuel Peter Labouchere was born on 03 Feb 1778 in The Hague, The Netherlands; died on 17 Mar 1867 in Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands.

  3. 6.  Francis Baring was born on 18 Apr 1740 in Larkbeare, Devon (son of John Baring and Elizabeth Vowler); died on 12 Sep 1810 in Lee, Kent; was buried in Micheldever, Hampshire, England.

    Francis married Harriet Herring on 12 May 1767 in St. John Baptist, Croydon, Surrey. Harriet was born on 18 May 1750 in Lambeth Palace, Lambeth, London; died on 03 Dec 1804 in Bath, Somerset; was buried in Micheldever, Hampshire, England. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Harriet Herring was born on 18 May 1750 in Lambeth Palace, Lambeth, London; died on 03 Dec 1804 in Bath, Somerset; was buried in Micheldever, Hampshire, England.
    Children:
    1. Maria Baring
    2. Lydia Baring
    3. 3. Dorothy Elizabeth Baring was born on 13 Feb 1771 in London, England; was christened on 14 Mar 1771 in St Gabriel, Fenchurch, London; died on 15 May 1859 in London.
    4. Thomas Baring was born on 12 Jun 1772; was christened in in St. Margaret's, Pattens, London; died on 03 Apr 1848.
    5. Alexander Baring was born on 27 Oct 1774; died on 12 May 1848.
    6. Henry Baring was born on 18 Jan 1776; died on 13 Apr 1848.
    7. William Baring was born on 12 Aug 1779; died on 09 Jul 1820; was buried on 15 Jul 1820 in St. Andrew's, East Lulworth, Dorset.
    8. George Baring was born on 23 Sep 1781; was christened on 24 Oct 1781 in St. Gabriel's, Fenchurch, London; died on 04 Oct 1854.
    9. Frances Baring was born in 1785.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Pierre de Labouchere was born in 1685 (son of Francois Barrier de Labouchere and Marie de Maynet); died in 1729.

    Pierre married Sara de Peyrollet on 10 Apr 1708. Sara was born in 1680; died in 1740. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Sara de Peyrollet was born in 1680; died in 1740.
    Children:
    1. 4. Matthieu de Labouchere was born on 04 Sep 1721 in Orthez, Pyrenees-Atlantiques, Aquitaine, France; died on 12 Feb 1796 in The Hague, The Netherlands.
    2. Susanne de Labouchere was born on 04 Sep 1724 in Orthez, Pyrenees-Atlantiques, Aquitaine, France.
    3. Pierre de Labouchere was born in 1726 in Orthez, Pyrenees-Atlantiques, Aquitaine, France; died on 12 Jun 1808 in Orthez, Pyrenees-Atlantiques, Aquitaine, France.

  3. 12.  John Baring was born on 15 Nov 1697 in Bremen, Germany; was christened on 31 Jan 1697/98 (son of Franz Baring); died in 1748 in Larkbeare, Devon; was buried on 03 Nov 1748 in St. Leonard's, Exeter, Devon.

    Notes:


    --- "Visitation of England and Wales Notes" Vol. 5, 1903, page 59:
    John Baring of Palace Street, Exeter, and of Larkbear House, co. Devon (son of Dr. Franz Baring, Minister of St. Ansgar's Church at Bremen); born 31 January 1697/8; came to Exeter in 1717; naturalised by Act of Parliament 1723; bur. at St. Leonard's, Exeter, 3 November 1748.

    --- http://www.exetermemories.co.uk/em/_buildings/larkbeare_house.php
    The Baring's woollen factory
    It was let to tenants by its owner, a Mr Lavington. The house, along with 37 acres, was sold in 1737 to John Baring, of the Baring Bank family. Johann Baring was a German Lutheran from a family of wealthy cloth manufacturers who came to Exeter in 1717. In 1723 he was naturalized and married Elizabeth Vowler, the daughter of a tea and coffee wholesaler.

    Baring's fortune was initially made as a woollen serge manufacturer and merchant, and he built a manufactory on the land next to the house. The house had "large press-shops, packing rooms, linhays, tenter-grounds, and all conveniences on the demesne for finishing woollen cloths." After Baring's death in 1748, his son, also John, purchased and moved into Mount Radford House in 1770, while his other son, Charles, remained in Larkbeare. John Jnr., leased a fulling mill in Exwick that would supply the Larkbeare manufactory with cloth. A third son, Francis Baring moved to London as a merchant, where he purchased materials for his brother's Exeter business and found new markets for their output. It was Francis who founded Baring Brothers, the merchant bank.

    The manufactory at Larkbeare House survived into the early nineteenth-century but Exeter's woollen trade was no longer pre-eminent and was in fast decline. The Barings vacated the house in 1819 to let it to tenants, and disposed of the house in 1832 to a Mrs Hodge. The house started to deteriorate and in 1889 it was partly demolished when Roberts Road was developed and Holloway Street widened. It would seem that a Mr G Digginnes rescued and gave a "number of carvings in stone from the old Larkbeare House, lately demolished; and these it is hoped may some day be built into some portion of the Museum". (FP 1890) In 1770, John Baring Jnr., established the Devonshire Bank.

    John married Elizabeth Vowler on 15 Feb 1728. Elizabeth (daughter of John Vowler and Elizabeth Townshend) was born on 30 Apr 1702 in Devon, England; was christened in in St. Petrock's, Exeter, Devon; died in Apr 1766; was buried on 16 Apr 1766 in St. Leonard's, Exeter, Devon. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 13.  Elizabeth Vowler was born on 30 Apr 1702 in Devon, England; was christened in in St. Petrock's, Exeter, Devon (daughter of John Vowler and Elizabeth Townshend); died in Apr 1766; was buried on 16 Apr 1766 in St. Leonard's, Exeter, Devon.
    Children:
    1. Francis Baring died in Nov 1736; was buried on 24 Nov 1736 in St. Leonard's, Exeter, Devon.
    2. Francis Baring died in Jul 1737; was buried on 13 Jul 1737 in St. Leonard's, Exeter, Devon.
    3. John Baring died in Feb 1728/29; was buried on 18 Feb 1728/29 in St. Petrock's, Exeter, Devon.
    4. John Baring was born on 15 Oct 1730; died on 09 Feb 1816 in Larkebeare, Devon; was buried on 10 Feb 1816 in St. Leonard's, Exeter, Devon.
    5. Thomas Vowler Baring was born on 19 Jan 1733; died on 25 Aug 1758; was buried on 30 Aug 1758 in St. Leonard's, Exeter, Devon.
    6. 6. Francis Baring was born on 18 Apr 1740 in Larkbeare, Devon; died on 12 Sep 1810 in Lee, Kent; was buried in Micheldever, Hampshire, England.
    7. Charles Baring was born on 28 Oct 1742 in Exmouth Courtland, Devon; died on 13 Jan 1829 in Exmouth, Devon.
    8. Elizabeth Baring was born on 21 Jul 1744 in Larkebeare, Devon; died on 23 Feb 1809 in Cardigan Place, London.