Lewis William Buck

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Lewis William Buck (1784–1858), portrait by Francis Grant (1803–1878), collection of Stucley family of Hartland Abbey, Devon. Displayed in Billiards Room, Hartland Abbey
Canting arms of Buck of Daddon (alias Moreton), Bideford: Per fess embattled argent and sable, three buck's attires each fixed to the scalp counterchanged[1]

Lewis William Buck (1784–1858) of Moreton House, Bideford, and Hartland Abbey, Devon, was Member of Parliament for Exeter 1826–32 and for North Devon 1839–57, and was Sheriff of Devon in 1825/6.[2] A full-length portrait of Lewis William Buck by Francis Grant (1803–1878) was presented to him by the people of North Devon after he had served eighteen years as their MP, now displayed in the billiards room of Hartland Abbey, with his electioneering posters on each side.[3]

George Stucley Buck (1755–1791), of Daddon House (later called Morton House) and Affeton, Devon, dressed in military uniform. He was the father of Lewis Stucley Buck. Portrait by a follower of George Romney (1734–1802), collection of Bideford Town Council, displayed at Bideford Town Hall

He was a younger son of George Stucley Buck (1755–1791) by his wife Martha Keats (1753–1833),[4] eldest daughter of Rev. Richard Keats, rector of Bideford and King's Nympton and Master of Blundells School, Tiverton (1775–1797), and sister of Admiral Sir Richard Goodwin Keats (1757–1834).[5] A portrait of George Stucley Buck painted by a follower of George Romney (1734–1802) hangs in Bideford Town Hall. The family of Buck were Bideford ship owners and merchants who from the 17th century traded with the American Colonies and owned tobacco plantations in Virginia and a saw-mill in Bideford, Maine. Bideford was the leading tobacco trading port in England. The family originated in Ireland, having settled in Devon in the late seventeenth century.[6] From their profits they acquired much land near Bideford and eventually by the end of the 18th century their estates almost surrounded the north side of the town from Westleigh to Northam.[7] Their arms are: Per fess embattled argent and sable three buck's attires each fixed to the scalp counterchanged. These arms are quartered with the ancient arms of Stucley by the present Stucley Baronets, his direct descendants in the male line, but with the Stucley arms in the 1st and 4th quarters of greatest honour.[8][9]

Inheritance

Lewis was his father's 3rd son, and thus under the primogeniture custom was not expected to receive any inheritance. He was only 7 years old on the death of his father, who had predeceased his own father George II Buck (d.1794), and the latter intended his grandson Lewis for the priesthood and intended to bestow on him the advowsons of West Worlington (in which parish was situated his estate of Affeton) and Bideford.[10] Events however moved him into a different situation and career.

Daddon/Moreton and Affeton

In 1805 aged 21 he became the heir of his elder brother George Pawley Buck (1782–1805) of Daddon, who had died aged 23 without progeny, having inherited the paternal estates of Daddon House[11] (the name of which he later changed in 1821 to Moreton House) near Bideford, and Affeton, which latter estate with ruinous fortified manor house, had been inherited in 1755 by his grandfather George II Buck (1731–1794), JP for Devon, and grandson of Sara Stucley (d.1742), following the death without progeny of Sarah's nephew Dennis II Stucley (d.1755), Sheriff of Devon in 1748.

Hartland Abbey

In 1824, at the age of 40, Lewis inherited Hartland Abbey, about 14 miles west of Bideford, from his father's first cousin Rev. Thomas Hooper Morrison (1767–1824).[12] It was not however with vacant possession as still occupied until her death by Thomas Morrison's aunt Bettina Lawley (d.1833), widow of Col. Paul II Orchard (1739–1812), MP, of Hartland Abbey. Thomas Morrison was the son of Rev. Hooper Morrison of Yeo Vale, Alwington,[13] Devon, by his wife Charlotte Orchard[14] (d.1791) (whose monument survives in the Yeo Vale Chapel (north aisle) of Alwington Church[15]), a sister and in her issue heiress of Paul II Orchard (1739–1812)[16] of Hartland Abbey[17] and sister-in-law of George II Buck (1731–1794), thus great-aunt of Lewis Buck.

Career

He was educated at Blundells School in Tiverton, Devon (of which his maternal grandfather Rev. Richard Keats was headmaster (1775–1797)), and at Emmanuel College, Cambridge. Lewis is believed in 1821 to have undertaken further building work at Daddon House and to have changed its name to Moreton House. He entertained Benjamin Disraeli at Moreton House,[18] but before he became Prime Minister in 1868, thus after Lewis's death. He had a distinguished political career and it is believed that had he lived long enough to serve under Disraeli's premiership he would have been made a minister and peer, and thus the honour of a baronetcy awarded to his son was in some way a recompense.[19]

Marriage and progeny

In 1808 he married Ann Robbins (1791–1879), daughter of Thomas Robbins (d.1806)[20] of Roundham, Hampshire,[21] by whom he had the following progeny:[22]

  • Sir George Stucley Buck Stucley, 1st Baronet (1812–1900), eldest son and heir, who in July 1858 assumed by royal licence the surname of Stucley and in April 1859 was created a baronet. His great-great-great grandfather George I Buck (1674–1743), seven times mayor of Bideford, had married Sara Stucley (d.1742), daughter and in her issue heiress of Dennis Stucley (1673–1674 - 1741–1742) of Affeton in the parish of West Worlington, Devon, a very ancient and prominent Devonshire gentry family, which had however almost been ruined during the Civil War for its adherence to the Royalist cause. He is the ancestor of the present Stucley Baronets of Affeton and Hartland Abbey in Devon.
  • Louisa Buck, who in 1840 married (as his 2nd wife) Samuel Trehawke Kekewich (1796–1873), of Peamore House near Exeter, who had been co-MP (Tory) for Exeter in 1826 with her father.[23]
  • Emma Helena Buck (d.1840)

Death and burial

He died on his birthday, 25 April 1858, aged 74 and was buried at St Helen's Church, Abbotsham, Devon.

Mural monument, Abbotsham

Sources

References

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