William Tollemache, 9th Earl of Dysart

William John Manners Tollemache, 9th Earl of Dysart (3 March 1859 – 22 November 1935) in the Peerage of Scotland, was also a Baronet (cr.1793) in the Baronetage of Great Britain, Lord Lieutenant of Rutland (1881–1906), and Justice of the Peace for Leicestershire and Lincolnshire.

He was a grandson of the 8th Earl, and the son of William Tollemache, Lord Huntingtower and his wife Katherine. In 1885 he married Cecilia Florence (d. 1917), daughter of George Onslow Newton, Esq., of Croxton Park, Cambridgeshire. Upon her death he did not remarry.

Lord Dysart's seats were Ham House, Petersham, Richmond, Surrey, and Buckminster Park, Grantham, Lincolnshire.

The Earl was blind for most of his life, but this did not prevent him from serving as president of the London Wagner Society from 1884 until 1895.[1]

Upon his death, the Scottish peerage devolved upon his niece, Wenefryde Scott, 10th Countess of Dysart, while his British baronetcy was inherited by his second cousin Sir Lyonel Tollemache, 4th Baronet, to whom Dysart bequeathed Ham House.

References

  1. ^ Sessa, Anne Dzamba (1839). Richard Wagner and the English. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. p. 38. ISBN 0838620558. http://books.google.com/books?id=lMDdEWuXU44C. Retrieved 2008-01-09. 

Sources

External links

Honorary titles
Preceded by
The Earl of Gainsborough
Lord Lieutenant of Rutland
1881–1906
Succeeded by
John Henry Brocklehurst
Peerage of Scotland
Preceded by
Lionel Tollemache
Earl of Dysart
1878–1935
Succeeded by
Wenefryde Scott
Baronetage of Great Britain
Preceded by
Lionel Tollemache
Baronet
(of Hanley Hall)
1878–1935
Succeeded by
Lyonel Tollemache