Murray Finch-Hatton, 12th Earl of Winchilsea
Murray Edward Gordon Finch-Hatton, 12th Earl of Winchilsea and 7th Earl of Nottingham, styled the Hon. Murray Finch-Hatton until 1887, was a British Conservative politician and agriculturalist. His country residence was at Haverholme Priory, Lincolnshire.
Early life
Winchilsea was the second son of George Finch-Hatton, 10th Earl of Winchilsea and 5th Earl of Nottingham and eldest son by his third wife Fanny Margaretta Rice, daughter of Edward Royd Rice and Elizabeth Austen, who herself was daughter of Edward Austen Knight, brother of Jane Austen.Murray's paternal grandmother was Lady Elizabeth Murray. When his father the 10th Earl died, he left Haverholme Priory estate to his second son. The inherited estate generated close to £7,000 a year.
Career
Politician
He unsuccessfully contested Newark in 1880 but entered Parliament for Lincolnshire South in an 1884 by-election, a seat he held until the following year when the constituency was abolished. He then represented Spalding from 1885 until 1887 when he succeeded his half-brother in the two earldoms and entered the House of Lords. His succession led to a network of legal difficulties engaging at different times, it is stated, no fewer than 22 different firms of lawyers. In 1884 Finch-Hatton, with 135 other members of Parliament, voted that a clause of the Representation of the People Act 1884 enfranchising women be read a second time.Agriculturalist
He was particularly interested in agricultural questions, where he sought to improve the conditions of agricultural workers.Obliged by the agricultural depression and huge inherited debt from his half-brother the 11th Earl of Winchilsea, Murray now the 12th Earl was forced to sell their ancestral family seat of Eastwell Park for £250,000 to 2nd Baron Gerard of Garswood Hall in 1894. He became the recognised head of the movement which followed on the Agricultural Congress of 1892 and led in 1894 to the formation of The National Agricultural Union. It aimed at a thorough organisation of the agricultural interests represented alike by the landlords, tenants and labourers. Its programme included:
- reduction of local taxation of agricultural property
- abolition of preferential railway rates for British produce
- old-age pensions for working men
- amendment of the law relating to adulteration of food and the Merchandise Marks Acts
- amendment of the Agricultural Holdings Act
- increased facilities to enable working men to obtain small holdings
The National Farmers Union was formed in his home county of Lincolnshire in 1904, six years after his death.
Children's Order of Chivalry
In 1893 with his wife, the Countess, he founded the Children's Order of Chivalry in memory of their only son, George Edward Henry, Viscount Maidstone, who had died the previous year at the age of nine. Prior to his death, the child had discussed with his father the idea of establishing the Order.Personal life
In 1875, Murray Finch-Hatton married Edith Harcourt, daughter of Edward William Harcourt and Lady Susan Harriet Holroyd, daughter of 2nd Earl of Sheffield and Lady Harriet Lascelles of Harewood house. Edith's uncle was Sir William Harcourt, while her aunt Cecilia Harcourt had married her husband's uncle Sir Edward Rice.Together they had two children:
- George Edward Henry Murray Finch-Hatton, Viscount Maidstone,, died at the age of nine.
- Lady Muriel Finch-Hatton, who married Sir Richard Arthur Surtees Paget, 2nd Baronet and left issue, including their grandsons Alexander Chancellor, the father of model Cecilia Chancellor, and John Paget Chancellor, who married the Hon. Mary Alice Jolliffe, the parents of actress Anna Chancellor.
He died in September 1898, aged 47. Murray was succeeded by his younger brother who became Henry Finch-Hatton, 13th Earl of Winchilsea. His estate was proved at £106,403