Henry Dawkins II (24 May 1728 – 19 June 1814) was a Jamaican plantation and slave owner[1] and Member of the
Parliament of Great Britain (MP).
Background
The Dawkins family settled on Jamaica shortly after its seizure from the Spanish in 1655. William Dawkins (d. 1694) acquired plantations in Jamaica, by grant, in the period 1669 to 1682. These descended to his grandsons
James Dawkins I, and the sons of Henry Dawkins I (1698–1744),
James Dawkins II and Henry Dawkins II, sons of Henry Dawkins I, all three being MPs. Both James I and James II left property in England to Henry II, who also inherited Jamaican properties from relatives, for an annual income of £40,000 to £50,000.[2] It has been estimated that the gross income of the Jamaican plantations was more than £44,000 in 1775.[3]
At his death in 1744, Henry Dawkins I owned in Jamaica Old Plantation, Parnassus, Friendship, Green River, Leicester Fields, Trout Hall, One Eye, Sandy Gully Pen, Windsor, Folly Pen, Bog Hole Pen, Withywood Pastures and Treadways, including 1,315 slaves in total.[4]
Life
He was born 24 May 1728 in
Clarendon, Jamaica. He was the third surviving son of Henry Dawkins I (1698–1744), a slave-owner,[5] sugar planter, and his wife, Elizabeth (1698–1737), daughter of Edward Pennant of Clarendon, chief justice of Jamaica and of Elizabet Moore. His brothers were plantation and slave-owner[6]James Dawkins II, his eldest brother and the elder brother, major slave owner William Dawkins (1726–1753).[7][8][9]
He studied at
John Roysse's
Free School in
Abingdon, (now
Abingdon School) c. 1739-1744 and
St Mary Hall, Oxford from 1745.[10][11]
Dawkins's father on his death in 1744 bequeathed 25,000 acres of land and approximately £100,000 to his three surviving sons. James, the eldest son (James Dawkins II, who died in 1757), inherited 14,300 acres, William (died in 1753, without issue) received 5,000, and Henry 5,700. By c. 1750 he owned 20,000 acres in Jamaica (St Elizabeth, Clarendon and Vere) and of estates in Wiltshire and Oxfordshire.[12] By 1809 he owned the total of 1,464 slaves on the estates of Parnassus, Folly, Old Plantation, Friendship and Suttons.[13]
From 1752 to 1758 Henry Dawkins was a member of the assembly in Jamaica, and was then on the council to 1759. In 1760 he entered the Parliament of Great Britain as member for
Southampton, holding the seat to 1768. He then was member for
Chippenham,
Hindon and Chippenham again, leaving Parliament finally in 1784. He served for a 24-year period with only short breaks (one caused by his defeat at
Salisbury, near his estate at Standlynch, in 1768). He was a Steward of the
Old Abingdonian Club in 1769.[14]
He died 19 June 1814 in London and was buried at
Chipping Norton. His wealth at death was £150,000.[15]
Properties in England
Dawkins sold his brother's estate at
Laverstoke in 1759.[16] In 1766 he inherited
Over Norton Park in Oxfordshire from his uncle
James Dawkins. He kept this property (which remains in the Dawkins family to this day). The family also rented a London property in
Upper Brook Street.[17]
Standlynch House
Also in 1764 he bought
Standlynch Park in Wiltshire. This house, now called
Trafalgar Park, was bought from
William Young for £22,000.[18][19] When Dawkins died in 1814, Standlynch Park was sold for £90,000 to
William Nelson, 1st Earl Nelson, who had been voted the money needed to purchase an estate by Parliament.[2] He changed the name to Trafalgar House and Park.[20]
Intellectual interests
Dawkins was a patron of neoclassical architects. He had alterations done to Standlynch House (a building by the architect
John James dating from the 1730s).[21] Dawkins had work done on the wings, by
John Wood, the Younger, and on the portico by
Nicholas Revett. Revett was an associate of Dawkins' brother James, who had antiquarian interests.
Revett and both Dawkins brothers were members of the
Society of Dilettanti.[22] As can be seen from the original floor plans signed by J. Wood Arch, Dawkins seems to have built the north wing for himself and his wife Lady Juliana, while the south wing mainly housed the dining room, kitchen and brewery.[23]
Dawkins married in 1759, Lady Juliana Colyear (1735–1821), daughter of
Charles Colyear, 2nd Earl of Portmore and Juliana Hele.[11] They had eight sons and four daughters. The sons were:[25]
James (1760–1843), Member of Parliament, married in 1785 Hannah Phipps, and secondly in 1814 Maria Forbes, daughter of
General Gordon Forbes[26]
Henry (1765–1852), Member of Parliament for Boroughbridge, married in 1788 Augusta, daughter of
Sir Henry Clinton, father of
Henry Dawkins (1788–1864), also Member of Parliament for Boroughbridge[28]
William, died an infant 1766
Richard (1768–1818), married Jane Catherine Long, daughter of
Edward Long and Mary Ballard Beckford
Edward (1769–1816), took holy orders
Charles (1772–1799), officer in the Grenadier Guards, died after a battle in Holland
Elizabeth (1761/62?–1831), married in 1795 William Ronke Leeds Sergeantson[30] or William Rookes Leedes Serjeantson[31] or W. Serjeantson, Esq. of Camphill, Yorkshire, leaving issue
Henry was the great-great-great-grandfather of the biologist Professor
Richard Dawkins. In 2010 Richard Dawkins wrote an obituary for his father, describing how John Dawkins had inherited
Over Norton Park from a distant cousin and how the estate, in the Cotswolds
Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, had been in the family since the 1720s.[33]
^
abH. J. Habakkuk (1994). Marriage, Debt, and the Estates System: English Landownership, 1650–1950. Clarendon Press. pp. 455–6.
ISBN978-0-19-820398-8.