- Robert Spencer, 2nd Earl of Sunderland
Robert Spencer, 2nd Earl of Sunderland KG PC (
September 5 1641 –September 28 1702 ) was an English statesman and nobleman.Born in
Paris , son ofHenry Spencer, 1st Earl of Sunderland , Spencer inherited his father's peerage dignities at the age of three, becoming Baron Spencer of Wormleighton and Earl of Sunderland. He joined theBritish Army , reaching the rank ofcaptain inPrince Rupert's Regiment of Horse . He married Anne Digby (d. 1715), daughter of the Lord Bristol on10 June 1665 , then proceeded to serve successively asambassador toMadrid (1671–1672),Paris (1672–1673), and the United Provinces (1673). He served as aGentleman of the Bedchamber from 1673 to 1679, then was invested a Privy Councillor and appointedSecretary of State for the Northern Department in 1679; at the same time, he served as Ambassador Extraordinary to Paris.Lord Sunderland also served as
Lord Lieutenant of Staffordshire during the minority of Lord Shrewsbury until 1681. That year, he was dismissed by Charles II, due to his opposition of the Duke of York's succession, but presently regained the king's confidence (through his mistress, the Duchess of Portsmouth). Intermittently, between 1682 and 1688, he served asSecretary of State for the Southern Department ,Lord Lieutenant of Warwickshire , andLord President of the Council ; in 1687, he signed the King's grant of religious freedom for the Brenttown (Brenton) tract in Old Prince William County, Virginia, to encourage settlement of French Protestants. The same year he openly embraced the Roman Catholic faith to please the king. That year, he was also made a Knight of the Garter. However, it was clear that he was growing uncomfortable under the recently enthroned Duke of York (James II), and was summarily dismissed in October 1688, with the remark, "You have your pardon; much good doe it you. I hope you will be more faithful to your next master than you have been to me."Sunderland fled to Utrecht, the
Netherlands , and wrote to Sir John Churchill, a prominent English statesman, asking him to "make things easy for a man in my condition." At first, King William III excepted Lord Sunderland from the 1690Act of Indemnity , but by 1691, he was allowed to return to the country. He began sitting in theHouse of Lords , and soon enough, King William paid a visit to his home inAlthorp ,Northamptonshire , to discuss public affairs. Lord Sunderland advised him to select all of his ministers from one political system, and eventually effected a reconciliation between King William and his sister-in-law, later Queen Anne. He was an influential adviser, causing William to accept only Whigs in his government.Sunderland became Lord Chamberlain of the Household in April 1697, and was a
Lord Justice for a short period, but "the general suspicion with which he was regarded terrified him", and he eventually retired from public life in December of that year. Sunderland died in 1702 at Althorp, where he led a secluded life, and his only surviving son wasCharles Spencer, 3rd Earl of Sunderland .Children
He married Anne Digby, daughter of
George Digby, 2nd Earl of Bristol . They had at least five children.*Robert Spencer (1666–1688).
*Anne Spencer (1667–1690). MarriedJames Douglas, 4th Duke of Hamilton .
*Isabella Spencer (1668–1684).
*Elizabeth Spencer (1671–1704). MarriedDonough MacCarty, 4th Earl of Clancarty .
*Charles Spencer, 3rd Earl of Sunderland (c. 1674–1722).At least two other children are considered to have died young.
ee also
*
Whig Junto External links
* [http://www.thepeerage.com/p10538.htm#i105374 The Peerage]
* [http://91.1911encyclopedia.org/S/SU/SUNDERLAND_2ND_EARL_OF.htm 1911 Britannica Encyclopaedia]
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