George Broke-Middleton
Admiral Sir George Nathaniel Broke-Middleton, 3rd Baronet, CB was a British Royal Navy officer.
Early life
Broke-Middleton was the second son of eleven children born to Sarah Louisa Middleton and Sir Philip Broke, 1st Baronet, a Royal Navy officer who served in the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812.His paternal grandparents were Elizabeth Beaumont and Philip Bowes Broke of Broke Hall, Nacton, near Ipswich. His maternal grandparents were Sir William Fowle Middleton, 1st Baronet and Harriot Acton.
Career
He entered the Royal Navy as a midshipman on 16 August 1825. By 4 November 1840, he had gained the rank of Commander while serving on. On 18 December 1845, he was promoted to the rank of captain, and in 1855 took command of, seeing active service in the Crimean War. In 1858, Broke took command of, and in March 1859 became captain of. The following month he was invalided out of regular naval service. He was promoted to the rank of retired Rear Admiral on 3 December 1863, Vice Admiral on 1 April 1870 and Admiral on 22 January 1877.On 4 February 1855, he succeeded to his unmarried older brother's baronetcy. He was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath in July 1855. In 1860, Broke assumed the additional surname of Middleton after inheriting the estate of his cousin, Sir William Fowle Fowle Middleton, 2nd Baronet. In 1864, he served as High Sheriff of Suffolk.
Personal life
On 27 August 1853 at Ghent, Belgium, Broke married Albinia Maria Rushbrooke, daughter of Thomas Evans, after she had been divorced by her husband, Maj. Robert Frederick Brownlow Rushbrooke, on the grounds of her adultery with Broke.Broke-Middleton died at Shrubland Park on 14 January 1887, and the baronetcy became extinct. His Suffolk estates were inherited by a niece, Lady de Saumarez, formerly Jane Anne Broke, the daughter of his brother Capt. Charles Acton Broke. In 1882, she had married James Saumarez, 4th Baron de Saumarez, and the estates, including Shrubland Park at Coddenham, Suffolk, Broke Hall at Ipswich, and Livermore Park at Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk, thus passed into the Saumarez family. The inheritance made Lady de Saumarez the largest owner of London real estate in the aristocracy outside of the Duke of Westminster, which she held until the Middleton Estate, as it was known, was sold in 1921.