Lewis Watson, 1st Baron Sondes
Lewis Watson, 1st Baron Sondes, called Hon. Lewis Monson before 1746 and Hon. Lewis Watson from 1746 to 1760, was a British Whig politician and peer.
Biography
Lewis Monson was the second son of John Monson, 1st Baron Monson, and Lady Margaret Watson, youngest daughter of Lewis Watson, 1st Earl of Rockingham who had married Catherine Sondes, daughter of George Sondes, 1st Earl of Feversham of Lees Court, Kent. Through this marriage Lewis Watson inherited Lees Court on the death without issue of his brother-in-law Louis de Duras, Marquis of Blanquefort and 2nd Earl of Feversham in 1709, Lord Duras had married Mary Sondes, Catherine's sister. In 1714 Lewis Watson was created Earl of Rockingham and Viscount Sondes.On the Death of Thomas Watson 3rd Earl of Rockingham in 1745 the titles became extinct, but the estates of Rockingham Castle and Lees Court passed to Lewis Monson.
He was educated at Westminster School between 1737 and 1745. He assumed the surname of Watson in 1746 after inheriting the estates of his cousin, Thomas Watson, 3rd Earl of Rockingham. Watson afterwards went on the Grand Tour with his second cousin the Earl of Malton and his third cousin Thomas Pelham.
While abroad in Europe in 1750, his third cousin once removed, the Duke of Newcastle, arranged for Watson to be returned in April as Member of Parliament for Boroughbridge in place of the Earl of Dalkeith, who had died. That autumn, the three kinsmen visited Hanover, where Newcastle presented them, together with Viscount Downe and three other young Englishmen, to George II of Great Britain, who was holding court in the Electorate. The king was not pleased and snubbed the party when they were presented.
On 12 October 1752, he married his third cousin Grace Pelham, the third surviving daughter and co-heiress of Prime Minister Henry Pelham, Newcastle's brother. They had four sons:
- Lewis Watson, 2nd Baron Sondes.
- Rev. Hon. Henry Watson, rector of East Carlton and Kettering.
- Hon. Charles Watson.
- Hon. George Watson.
He died on 30 March 1795 and was succeeded in his title by his eldest son, Lewis Watson. Sondes was buried at Rockingham, Northamptonshire.