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  1. Sir George Gordon-Lennox (son) Sir Alexander Gordon-Lennox (son) Major Lord Bernard Charles Gordon-Lennox (1 May 1878 – 10 November 1914), was a British Army officer . Gordon-Lennox was the third son of Charles Gordon-Lennox, 7th Duke of Richmond, by his first wife Amy Mary, daughter of Percy Ricardo, of Bramley Park, Guildford, Surrey ...

  2. LENNOX, Lord George Henry (1737-1805), of West Stoke, Suss. Published in The History of Parliament: the House of Commons 1754-1790 , ed. L. Namier, J. Brooke., 1964 Available from Boydell and Brewer

  3. Simon Donald Rupert Neville Lennox-Boyd, 2nd Viscount Boyd of Merton (born 7 December 1939), is a British hereditary peer and former member of the House of Lords. Family [ edit ] The son of Alan Lennox-Boyd, 1st Viscount Boyd of Merton , Lord Boyd was educated at Eton and graduated from Christ Church, Oxford , in 1962, with a Bachelor of Arts and in 1966 with a Master of Arts .

  4. His exertions, aided by those of Lord George Bentinck, maintained the importance and success of the annual race-meeting at Goodwood. Richmond married, on 10 April 1817, Lady Caroline Paget, eldest daughter of the first Marquis of Anglesey, and by her, who died on 12 March 1874, had ten children, of whom the eldest, Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox, born on 27 February 1818, became the sixth duke.

  5. OD 4: 1/2 length, seated, face turned to left, flower in hair, white frill at neck, lace mantle about shoulders, white ruffles, right arm around small dog. Cut down without publication line. 2nd state ?

  6. Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox, 11th Duke of Richmond, 11th Duke of Lennox, 11th Duke of Aubigny, 6th Duke of Gordon, CBE, DL (born 8 January 1955), styled Lord Settrington until 1989 and then Earl of March and Kinrara until 2017, is a British aristocrat and owner of Goodwood Estate in Sussex. [1] [2] He is the founder of the Goodwood Festival of ...

  7. Lennox was not appointed. He did not vote on Shelburne’s peace preliminaries, 18 Feb. 1783; but voted for parliamentary reform, 7 May 1783; against Fox’s East India bill, 27 Nov. 1783; and supported Pitt’s Administration. He retired from Parliament in 1790, and was succeeded in his seat by his son. He died 22 Mar. 1805.