- Francis Perceval Eliot
Infobox_Person
name = Francis Perceval Eliot
residence =Kew ,Surrey Richmond, Surrey
Elmhurst Hall,Staffordshire
22 Portman Street,London ,England
other_names =
imagesize = 200px
caption = "with permission from"
The Eliot Sisters Collection
birth_name =
birth_date = September 1755
birth_place = Kew Green,Surrey ,England
death_date = death date and age|1818|08|23|1755|09|01
death_place = 22 Portman Street,London ,England
death_cause =
known =
occupation =Colonel ,Auditor ,Man of letters
title =
salary =
term =
predecessor =
successor =
party =
boards =
religion =
spouse = Anne Breynton
partner =
children =William Granville Eliot (September 7 1779 –August 26 1855 )Francis Breynton Eliot (1 April 1 1781 – 1855)Edward John Eliot (20 September 1782 – 6 November 1863)George Augustus Eliot (19 February 1784 – 6 August 1835)Elizabeth Mary Eliot (11 October 1785 – 21 July 1872)Lionel Ducket Eliot (27 March 1787 – March 1855)Henry Algernon Eliot (23 August 1788 – 1857)Ann Cathrina Eliot (8 November 1789 – 30 October 1891)Frances Charlotte Eliot (23 December 1790 – 28 October 1819)Charles Turberville Eliot (4 July 1794 – 17 February 1875)
parents =Granville Elliott and Elizabeth Duckett
relations =
website =
footnotes =
employer =
height = 4 ft 9 ins
weight =Francis Perceval Eliot (September 1755 – 23 August 1818) was the son of General
Granville Elliott (1713 – 1759) and his second wife,Elizabeth Duckett (1724 – 1804). He was born atKew Green ,Surrey , and baptised on 9 October 1755 atSt Anne's Church, Kew Green .Following his father's death on 10 October 1759, the family moved on 15 April 1760 to Richmond. In 1762, Francis lodged at Hargreaves in St Martin's Lane,
London . On 17 April 1764, he lodged with Mrs Bathurst,Charterhouse Square and attended the public school of St Bartholomew. In 1770, he went to Mrs Betesworth's Academy in Kingston, nearPortsmouth ,Hampshire , leaving in 1772 to join Mr Lockee's Military Academy,Little Chelsea , London, and later to Colonel Gallatin's School of Equitation for 7 months.On 15 December 1773, he was commissioned as Ensign in the
14th Regiment of Foot . On 28 March 1774, he joined his first regiment, moving to quarters in Dover on 13 May 1774. In March 1775, he left for America, where, on 25 August 1775, he was appointed Lieutenant in the 14th Regiment of Foot. By 28 November 1778, he had returned toSt George Hanover Square , London, where he marriedAnne Breynton (cir 1756 – 15 August 1829), the daughter of the famous minister inNova Scotia , Rev DrJohn Breynton (cir 1730 – 1799).In 1790, he bought Elmhurst Hall and various other properties in
Staffordshire , while still maintaining a house in London. In 1794 he raised the Staffordshire Yeomanry Cavalry and became its Major and subsequently Colonel. In 1797, he tried to sell off his Staffordshire estates. The following year 1798 he raised the Staffordshire Yeomanry Infantry. By 1800 he had moved toLichfield and in 1803 raised the 2nd Staffordshire Militia, eventually becoming its Lieutenant-Colonel.In 1806, he finally disposed of his Staffordshire properties, pulling down the derelict Elmhurst Hall. He moved back to London full-time, and took an oath as a Commissioner of Public Accounts [ [http://www.history.ac.uk/office/comms_audit.html Office-Holders: Commissioners - Audit ] ] , based at
Somerset House in the Strand. Around this time he became a man of letters, addressing the foremost politicians of the time, while also writing for a magazine — The Aegis.The next year, he attempted to be elected as MP for Westminster in the
United Kingdom general election, 1807 . On Friday 8 May 1807, he attended a meeting atCovent Garden , London where he was introduced to the meeting, by Col. Robinson who at that time commanded London Recruiting District, and the Pimlico battalion of theQueen's Loyal Volunteers from about 1803. His election was unsuccessful and he returned to his literary pursuits.He died at his home at 22 Portman Street, London on 23 August 1818 and was buried in or by the western wall of the St Marylebone burial ground on the south side of Paddington Street, London — near to his father-in-law, Rev Dr John Breynton (cir 1730-1799).
Family
On 28 November 1778 at St George's Church, Hanover Square, London, Francis married Anne Breynton (cir 1756 – 15 August 1829), and had by her 7 sons and 3 daughters:
*William Granville Eliot (7 September 1779 – 26 August 1855), who married Ann Heywood, a daughter of Samuel Heywood
*Francis Breynton Eliot (1 April 1781 – 1855)
*Edward John Eliot (20 September 1782 – 6 November 1863)
*George Augustus Eliot (19 February 1784 – 6 August 1835)
*Elizabeth Mary Eliot (11 October 1785 – 21 July 1872)
*Lionel Ducket Eliot (27 March 1787 – March 1855)
*Henry Algernon Eliot (23 August 1788 – 1857)
*Ann Cathrina Eliot (8 November 1789 – 30 October 1891)
*Frances Charlotte Eliot (23 December 1790 – 28 October 1819)
*Charles Turberville Eliot (4 July 1794 – 17 February 1875)Many of his sons went on to play significant roles in the British Armed Forces.
Publications
1791–1800 Common Place Book — University of Birmingham Library Special Collection (Ref: 6/vi/5) [ [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/nra/searches/subjectView.asp?ID=P9113 The National Archives | National Register of Archives | Person details | Archive Details ] ]
1794 "Letters on the subject of the arm'd
Yeomanry , addressed to the … Earl Gower Sutherland, etc." by Francis Perceval Eliot, second edition published Stafford 1794.1797 "Six letters, etc." by Francis Perceval Eliot — another edition of "Letters on the subject of the arm'd Yeomanry, addressed to the … Earl of Gower Sutherland, etc." — published London 1797 British Library Shelfmark: 8827.f.30
1807 "Demonstration, Or Financial Remarks With Occasional Observations On Political Occurrences" Printed for John Cawthorn, 1807 (London: T. Collins) 117 pages, xi, [10] , [13] folded leaves of plates; 22 cm British Library Shelfmark: 8135.g.11
1811 "Observations On The Fallacy Of The Supposed Depreciation Of The Paper Currency Of The Kingdom With Reasons For Dissenting From The Report Of The Bullion Committee" by Francis Perceval Eliot Printed for J.J. Stockdale, London 1811. 171 pages, 24 cm British Library Shelfmark: 1028.e.3(4) and 1028.e.5.(1)
1811 "A Supplement To Observations On The Fallacy Of The Supposed Depreciation Of The Paper Currency Of The Kingdom, &c." Printed for J.J. Stockdale, London 1811 28 pages, 21 cm
1814 "A series of letters on the Political and financial State of the nation at the commencement of 1814" by Falkland (i.e. Francis Perceval Eliot) — published 1814. British Library Shelfmark: P.P.3557.w
1814 "Letters on the Political and financial situation of the country in 1814; addressed to the Earl of Liverpool" by Francis Perceval Eliot — published 1814 British Library Shelfmark: P.P.3557.w
1815 "Three letters on the financial and political situation of the country in the year 1815 … addressed to the Earl of Liverpool" by Francis Perceval Eliot — published 1815 British Library Shelfmark: P.P.3557.w. These letters proposed a system of measures based on a single weight measure, similar to the metric system used in France at the time [http://books.google.com/books?id=twUNAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA96&lpg=PA96&dq=francis+perceval+eliot&source=web&ots=404lPrrxTY&sig=JgsMX5mwrhvDevaa1WHAMEc5qto#PPA96,M1]
1816 "Letters on the political and financial situation of the British Empire, in the year 1816 … addressed to the Earl of Liverpool" — published 1816 British Library Shelfmark: P.P.3557.w and C.T.114(1)
ee also
*
Staffordshire Yeomanry (Queen's Own Royal Regiment) References
Persondata
NAME=Eliot, Francis Perceval
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Elliott, Francis Perceval
SHORT DESCRIPTION=Military officer, auditor, man of letters
DATE OF BIRTH=September 1755
PLACE OF BIRTH=Kew Green ,Surrey
DATE OF DEATH=1818-08-23
PLACE OF DEATH=22 Portman Street,London
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