Sir Egerton Leigh, 1st Baronet

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Sir Egerton Leigh, 1st Baronet (11 October 1733 – 15 September 1781) was a British colonial jurist, who became HM Attorney-General of South Carolina.[1] He was a Loyalist who permanently fled South Carolina in 1774 for England.

The son of Peter Leigh and Elizabeth née Latus, he was educated at Westminster School, London,[2] before emigrating to America where his father was Chief Justice of South Carolina.

Leigh became a lawyer and served as a Member of Council and a Judge of the Vice-Admiralty Court, before becoming Surveyor-General of South Carolina. He was appointed Attorney-General of South Carolina by King George III in 1765 and, on 15 May 1773, was created a Baronet, styled "of South Carolina, America".[3]

In addition to his enterprises and legal positions, Leigh was a Freemason of the Moderns Lodges, and was elected and then re-elected as Provincial Grand Master of South Carolina in 1772, with a rather large celebration in Charleston for his election.[4] Following his adultery scandal and his continued loyalty to the Crown, his credibility was ruined and no Masonic meetings were held, and by default Leigh remained Provincial Grand Master for nine years[5] until he was finally seceded by John Deas in 1781.

In 1756 he married Martha Bremar (died 1801) and they had 13 children, including: Martha Leigh who married Nathan Garrick; Elizabeth Leigh who married Lieutenant-Colonel Friedrich Wilhelm, Baron von der Malsburg; Harriet Leigh who married Captain James Burnett, RM ; the Revd Sir Egerton Leigh, 2nd Baronet (born 1762); Sir Samuel Leigh, author of "Munster Abbey, a Romance: Interspersed with Reflections on Virtue and Morality" and father of Sir Samuel Egerton Leigh, 3rd Baronet (born 1796);[6] and, Thomas Leigh a plantation owner in Georgetown County, where he remained settled after the American Revolutionary War.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ www.nationalarchives.gov.uk
  2. ^ Burke's Peerage & Baronetage (1832 edn)
  3. ^ Tracts of the American Revolution 1763-1776, ed. Merrill Jensen
  4. ^ Albert G. Mackey. History of Freemasonry in South Carolina. Columbia, SC: South Carolinian Steam Press. 1861. Pp. 43-4.
  5. ^ James Laurens to Henry Laurens. 29 December 1773, in The Papers of Henry Laurens, Vol. 9. Pp. 211-3.
  6. ^ www.burkespeerage.com

Further reading[]

  • Robert M. Calhoon and Robert M. Weir, "The Scandalous History of Sir Egerton Leigh", William and Mary Quarterly (1969) 26#1 pp. 47–74 in JSTOR
    • reprinted in Robert M. Calhoon and Robert M. Weir, "The Scandalous History of Sir Edgerton Leigh" in Robert M. Calhoon and Timothy M. Barnes, eds. (2012). Tory Insurgents: The Loyalist Perception and Other Essays. University of South Carolina Press. pp. 53–69. ISBN 9781611172287.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)

External links[]

Baronetage of Great Britain
New creation Baronet
(of South Carolina)
1773–1781
Succeeded by
Egerton Leigh
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