John Richmond Webb

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General John Richmond Webb (26 December 1667 – 5 September 1724), of Biddesden House, Ludgershall, Wiltshire, was a British general and Tory politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1695 to 1724. Politically he was a Hanoverian Tory who supported the Hanoverian Succession rather than the rival Jacobite movement.

Early life[]

Biddesden House

Webb was the son of Colonel Edmund Richmond Webb, a Wiltshire gentleman with a position in the household of Prince George of Denmark and second cousin to another Wiltshire man, Henry St John, who became the Tory leader in Parliament during the reign of Queen Anne. Webb was commissioned as a Cornet of Dragoons in 1687. The following year he served in the Glorious Revolution campaign. While serving under Patrick Sarsfield at the Wincanton Skirmish, he was badly wounded by the Dutch.

On 3 February 1690 Webb married Henrietta Borlase, daughter of William Borlase and Joanna Bancks. In 1692, possibly using the wealth he acquired by his marriage, he purchased Biddesden House at Ludgershall in Wiltshire, an estate which carried with it the decisive electoral influence over the pocket borough of the same name.

Political and military careers[]

Webb entered Parliament in 1695 as Tory Member of Parliament for Ludgershall, and became a close political follower of St John.[1] In the same year, he was promoted to Colonel of Princess Anne of Denmark's Regiment of Foot in 1695. In September 1697, Webb was dangerously injured in a duel. The following year he briefly lost his seat in Parliament, but his defeat at Ludgershall was overturned on petition. He served in Flanders in the campaign of 1702–1703, was a Brigadier at the Battle of Blenheim and a Major-General at Ramillies and Oudenarde.

In September 1708, commanding the British troops at the Battle of Wijnendale, he succeeded in protecting a convoy from superior French forces and delivering supplies to the besiegers of Lille, which led eventually to the town's capture; but opponents of the army commander, Marlborough, accused him of giving the credit in his initial dispatch to Webb's Whig subordinate, William Cadogan, for political reasons. Webb subsequently received full credit and the thanks of Parliament for the action, and the following year he was promoted to Lieutenant-General. Nevertheless, from this point onwards Webb became the centre of Tory agitation against Marlborough.

In 1709, Webb served at the Battle of Malplaquet, where he was severely wounded; he was awarded a substantial pension and returned to England, seeing no further active service. In 1710 he was appointed Governor of the Isle of Wight, a military post which among other advantages gave substantial influence in choosing the Members of Parliament who sat for the island's three boroughs; he took advantage of this by sitting as MP for Newport (Isle of Wight), a constituency traditionally represented by at least one distinguished military or naval figure, from 1713 to 1715. Furthermore, in 1712 he was promoted to General, and appointed commander of land forces in Great Britain. However, together with the other Tories, he was dismissed from his offices following the accession of George I. Unable to expect re-election at Newport under the new Governor, his old rival Cadogan, he was forced once more to fall back on the family seat at Ludgershall, which he represented again from 1715 until his death.[2]

Death and legacy[]

Webb died on 5 September 1724. He left his estates to his second son Borlase Richmond Webb to the exclusion of his eldest son Edmund. His eldest son by his second wife, also called John Richmond Webb, was a lawyer, and briefly a judge and Member of Parliament. Webb's brother Thomas Richmond Webb was an ancestor of the novelist William Makepeace Thackeray, and Webb is sympathetically depicted in Thackeray's historical novel The History of Henry Esmond

References[]

  1. ^ "WEBB, John Richmond (1667-1724), of Biddesden House, Ludgershall, Wilts". History of Parliament Online (volume 1690-1715). Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  2. ^ "WEBB, John Richmond (1667-1724), of Biddesden, in Ludgershall, Wilts". History of Parliament Online (volume 1715-1754). Retrieved 17 August 2018.
  • Sir George Clark, The Later Stuarts 1660-1714 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1955)
  • David Hayton, Eveline Cruickshanks, Stuart Handley, The House of Commons, 1690-1715 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002)
  • Mark Noble & James Granger, A Biographical History of England, from the Revolution to the End of George I's Reign (London: W Richardson, 1806) [1]
  • Robert Walcott, English Politics in the Early Eighteenth Century (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1956)
  • Concise Dictionary of National Biography (1930)
  • thepeerage.com
  • regiments.org

External links[]

Parliament of England
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Ludgershall
1695–1698
With: Thomas Neale
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Ludgershall
1699–1705
With: 1699–1701
Edmund Richmond Webb 1701–1705
Succeeded by

Preceded by

Member of Parliament for Ludgershall
1706–1707
With:
Succeeded by
Parliament of Great Britain
Parliament of Great Britain
Preceded by
Parliament of England
Member of Parliament for Ludgershall
1707–1713
With: 1707–1708
1708–1710
Thomas Pearce 1710–1713
Succeeded by

Preceded by
William Stephens
William Seymour
Member of Parliament for Newport (Isle of Wight)
1713–1715
With: William Stephens
Succeeded by
William Stephens
Anthony Morgan
Preceded by

Member of Parliament for Ludgershall
1715–1724
With: John Ivory Talbot 1715–1722
Borlase Richmond Webb 1722–1724
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Vice-Admiral of Hampshire
1710–1714
Succeeded by
Governor of the Isle of Wight
1710–1715
Succeeded by
Military offices
Preceded by
John Beaumont
Colonel of Princess Anne of Denmark's Regiment of Foot
1695–1715
Succeeded by
Henry Morrison
Retrieved from ""