John Manners, 5th Duke of Rutland
John Henry Manners, 5th Duke of Rutland, styled Lord Roos from 1778–79 and Marquess of Granby from 1779–87, was a British aristocrat and landowner. He succeeded to his father's titles at age 9 and consequently held his dukedom for nearly 70 years.
Background
Styled Lord Roos the first year of his life, Rutland was born at Knightsbridge, London, the eldest son of Charles Manners, 4th Duke of Rutland, by Lady Mary Isabella Somerset, daughter of Charles Somerset, 4th Duke of Beaufort. He was the grandson of John Manners, Marquess of Granby, and the brother of Lord Charles Manners and Lord Robert Manners. He was styled as the Marquess of Granby when his father succeeded to the dukedom in 1779. In 1787, he inherited the dukedom at only 9 years of age upon the unexpected death of his father at age 37.He was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, leaving with an M.A. degree in 1797.
Public life
A peer from age 9, Rutland was unable to serve in the House of Commons, taking his seat in the House of Lords instead in 1799 after leaving Cambridge. He was strongly supportive of the Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger and subsequent Tory ministries. He held a conservative opinion on matters of church and state, and opposed the relaxation of the Test and Corporation Acts that restricted public office holders to members of the Church of England. He also opposed the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1813, which extended additional rights to Irish Roman Catholics. He was Lord Lieutenant of Leicestershire between 1799 and 1857.At the age of 20 he was commissioned as Colonel of the Leicestershire Militia on 21 May 1798 and held the appointment until his death nearly 60 years later.
He was also a prominent owner and breeder of Thoroughbred racehorses. His most successful horse was Cadland, which won The Derby in 1828.
Rutland was fictionalized as "the duke" in Benjamin Disraeli's novel Coningsby. His two sons also figured as "the marquis of Beaumanoir" and "Lord Henry Sidney".
There is a bronze statue of him in Market Place, Leicester which was erected on this site in 1852 after having been previously exhibited at the Great Exhibition at Crystal Palace, London in 1851. It was the first public statue to be erected in Leicester, and was unveiled by Sir Frederick Gustavus Fowke, Provincial Grand Master of Freemasons for the Province of Leicestershire, on 28 April 1852. It was sculpted by Edward Davis. It is marked " EDW DAVIS
Simonet & Fils / Fondeurs Paris 1851".
It stands on a high stone plinth on which is carved an inscription as follows:
JOHN HENRY
DUKE OF RUTLAND, KG
LORD LIEUTENANT
OF LEICESTERSHIRE.
THE INHABITANTS
OF THE COUNTY & TOWN
OF LEICESTER
DURING
THE FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY
OF HIS HIGH OFFICE
WITH UNIVERSAL CONSENT
CAUSED THIS STATUE
TO BE ERECTED
M.DCCC.Lii.
PRAESENTI TIBI MATUROS LARCIMUR HONORES.
Marriage and issue
Rutland married Lady Elizabeth Howard, daughter of Frederick Howard, 5th Earl of Carlisle, on 22 April 1799.They had ten children:
- Lady Caroline Isabella Manners
- Lady Elizabeth Frederica Manners, married Andrew Robert Drummond on 7 March 1821. They had seven children.
- Lady Emmeline Charlotte Elizabeth Manners, married Charles Stuart-Wortley-Mackenzie on 17 February 1831. They had three children.
- George John Henry Manners, Marquess of Granby
- Lady Katherine Isabella Manners, married Frederick Hervey, 2nd Marquess of Bristol on 1 December 1830. They had seven children.
- Lady Adeliza Elizabeth Gertrude Manners, married her first cousin Rev. Canon Frederic John Norman on 22 February 1848, and had issue.
- George John Frederick Manners, Marquess of Granby
- Charles Cecil John Manners, 6th Duke of Rutland
- John James Robert Manners, 7th Duke of Rutland, married Catherine Marley on 10 June 1851. They had one son. He remarried Janetta Hughan on 15 May 1862. They had four children.
- Lord George John Manners, married Adeliza Fitzalan-Howard on 4 October 1855. They had five children.
The Duchess of Rutland died in November 1825, aged 45. Rutland remained a widower until his death from bronchitis at Belvoir Castle, Leicestershire, in January 1857, aged 79.