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  1. General Charles Richard Fox (6 November 1796 – 13 April 1873) was a British army general, and later a politician. Background. Funerary monument, Kensal Green Cemetery, London. Fox was born at Brompton, the illegitimate son of Henry Richard Vassall-Fox, 3rd Baron Holland, through a liaison with Lady Webster, whom Lord Holland would later marry.

  2. Whilst nothing in the Jamestown archives attests to the presence of this visitor to St Helena, it is indeed quite possible (indeed even probable) Charles Richard Fox passed through the island in September 1822. Fox had become a captain in the Cape Corps (South Africa) in 1820.

  3. General Charles Richard Fox (6 November 1796 – 13 April 1873) was a British army general, and later a politician. Fox was born at Brompton, the illegitimate son of Henry Richard Vassall-Fox, 3rd Baron Holland, through a liaison with Lady Webster, whom Lord Holland would later marry. After some...

  4. Her husband, Charles Richard Fox (1796–1873), was the illegitimate son of Henry Richard Vassal-Fox, 3rd Baron Holland, who was ‘awarded part of the compensation for under three awards for the enslaved people on his estates in Jamaica, which had come to him through his wife, Elizabeth Webster (née Vassall)’.

  5. 11 de ene. de 2021 · Soldier Charles Richard Fox took the key from St Helena and gave it to his mother, Baroness Holland, a "super fan" of Napoleon. She already had a collection of items connected to the...

  6. Charles Richard Fox (1796-1873), Numismatist; General; politician. Early Victorian Portraits Catalogue Entry. Sitter in 1 portrait

  7. Charles James Fox (born Jan. 24, 1749, London, England—died Sept. 13, 1806, Chiswick, Middlesex [now in Hounslow, London]) was Britain’s first foreign secretary (1782, 1783, 1806), a famous champion of liberty, whose career, on the face of it, was nevertheless one of almost unrelieved failure.