Sir Charles Lemon, 2nd Baronet Lemon of Carclew (3 September 1784[1] – 13 February 1868) was a British Member of Parliament for several constituencies and a baronet.
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Lemon served as Member of Parliament for Penryn in Cornwall from 1807 to 1812 and again from 1830 to 1831. In 1831, he became a Whig Member for Cornwall serving until the Reform Act 1832, whereafter he was Liberal Member for West Cornwall until 1841. In 1842 he was again returned for West Cornwall, serving until 1857.
In 1836, he headed the petitioners from the town of Falmouth, Cornwall to the Admiralty, seeking to prevent the removal of the Packet Service [2].
In 1837, he was appointed to serve on the Transportation Committee of the House of Commons [3]
He inherited his baronetcy in 1824 upon the death of his father Sir William Lemon, 1st Baronet and Carclew House. His mother was Lady Lemon, who had been the eldest daughter of James Buller MP for Cornwall and Jane, in turn eldest daughter of Allen Bathurst, 1st Earl Bathurst.
He attended Harrow School [4]
He married on 5 December 1810 to Lady Charlotte Ann Foxstrangways, 4th daughter of Henry Thomas Fox-Strangways, 2nd Earl of Ilchester. They had two sons, both of whom died young and were named Charles William. The first son died at the age of 13 months. The second was drowned at the age of twelve, at Harrow School [5]. Their daughter, Charlotte Augusta Caroline died at the age of 10, in Aix-les-Bains in 1825 [6].
The baronetcy became extinct on his death on 13 February 1868, as he had no surviving children. The majority of his estate was inherited by Colonel Arthur Tremayne, Sir Charles Lemon's nephew,[7] the son of his sister, Caroline and her husband John Hearle Tremayne, of Heligan.[1][8][9][10] Tremayne was a hero of the Crimean War and a survivor of the Charge of the Light Brigade.[1][11][12]
He funded the establishment of what is now the Camborne School of Mines. The name "Lemon" lives on in Truro as "Lemon Street" and "Lemon Quay", and a rhododendron Sir Charles Lemon was bred by him from seeds collected by Joseph Dalton Hooker.[13]
He was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society on 23 May 1822[14]. He was the second president (1836-8) of what is now the Royal Statistical Society. He spoke at the Newcastle Meeting of the British Association in 1838, during a meeting of the Statistical Section.[15]. From 1840-1856 served as President of the Royal Geological Society of Cornwall.[16] He was President of the Royal Cornwall Polytechnic Society from its foundation until his death.[7] He was President of the Falmouth Board of Guardians from its foundation in 1837 until his death.[7] He was "a distinguished member of the masonic fraternity" and PMG for Cornwall for many years.[7]
He was on the Committee of management of the South Western Railway in 1836[17].