Francis Mackenzie, 1st Baron Seaforth
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Francis Humberston Mackenzie, 1st Baron Seaforth (9 June 1754–11 January 1819) was a British politician and general.
When he was about twelve he suffered from scarlet fever which resulted in his losing his hearing and almost all speech, from this he was known as MacCoinnich Bodhar (Deaf Mackenzie) in Gaelic. He nearly recovered the use of his tongue but during the last two years of his life, mourning the deaths of his four sons, he never made the attempt to articulate.
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[edit] Military career
In 1784 and again in 1790 he was elected Member of Parliament for the County of Ross. In 1787 he offered to raise a regiment on his own estates to be commanded by himself. The government declined his patriotic offer but accepted his services in procuring recruits for the 74th and 75th. On 19 May 1790 he renewed his offer but the government again declined his services. When war broke out in 1793 he offered for a third time and a letter of service was granted in his favour dated 7 March 1793 empowering him as Lieutenant-Colonel-Commandant to raise a Highland Battalion to be called 78th Highland Regiment, known as "Seaforth's Highlanders". The original Mackenzie regiment had had its number previously reduced to 72nd Regiment of Foot. On 10th February 1794 the government agreed to his proposal to raise a second battalion, the Ross-shire Buffs. The two battalions were amalgamated in 1796. Another battalion was raised in 1804 (letter of service dated 17th April) and these were again amalgamated July 1817.
In 1798 he was appointed Colonel of the Ross-shire Regiment of Militia. In 1808 he was made a Lieutenant-General.
[edit] Non-military appointments
In 1794 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. He was appointed Lord Lieutenant of Ross and was raised to the peerage of the United Kingdom as Lord Seaforth and Baron Mackenzie of Kintail on 26 October 1797. He was Governor of Barbados from 1800-06, during which period he ended slavery and slave killing on the island, after which he held high office in Demerera and Berbice.
[edit] Art supporter
In 1796, he gave £1,000 to Sir Thomas Lawrence to relieve him from his financial difficulties. Lawrence later painted a full-length portrait of Seaforth's daughter, Mary. Lord Seaforth commissioned Benjamin West's painting "King Alexander III of Scotland being rescued from the fury of a stag by the intrepidity of Colin Fitzgerald [1]."
[edit] Quote
‘The last Baron of Kintail, Francis, Lord Seaforth was a nobleman of extraordinary talents, who must have made for himself a lasting reputation had not his political exertions been checked by painful natural infirmities.’ Walter Scott
[edit] Family
He was son of Major William Mackenzie and Mary Humberston. He received his estates from his brother Colonel Thomas Frederick Mackenzie Humberston. He married, 1782, Mary Proby, daughter of The Very Rev Baptist Proby, 7th Dean of Lichfield and Mary Russell. Mary was brother of John Proby, 1st Baron Carysfort. Francis's four sons all predeceased him as predicted by the Brahan Seer. His children were:
- William Frederick Mackenzie (died young)
- George Leveson Boucherat Mackenzie (died young)
- William Frederick Mackenzie, MP (died 1814)
- Francis John Mackenzie, midshipman, RN (died unmarried 1813)
- Mary Elizabeth Frederica Mackenzie, heiress to her father, (married first Admiral Sir Samuel Hood, married second Rt Hon James Alexander Stewart of Glasserton).
- Frances Catherine Mackenzie, dsp
- Caroline Mackenzie (accidentally killed unmarried)
- Charlotte Elizabeth Mackenzie (died unmarried)
- Augusta Anne Mackenzie (died unmarried)
- Helen Ann Mackenzie (married Joshua Henry Mackenzie)
[edit] References
- Mackenzie, Alexander (1894). History of the Mackenzies. Inverness: A & W Mackenzie.
- Sidney Lee (ed), Dictionary of National Biography (1891, London, Smith, Elder & Co
[edit] External links
- Mackenzie family tree.
- Seaforth's Lewis by Finlay MacLeod
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Preceded by William Bishop, acting |
Governor of Barbados 1802–1806 |
Succeeded by John Spooner, acting |