- Sir Claudius Stephen Hunter, 1st Baronet
Sir Claudius Stephen Hunter, 1st Baronet (1775–1851), lawyer and
Lord Mayor of London .Biography
Hunter, born at
Beech Hill , nearReading , 24 February 1775, was the youngest son of Henry Hunter (1739–1789) of Beech Hill,Berkshire , abarrister , by Mary, third daughter of William Sloane, the great-nephew of Sir Hans Sloane, bart. His sister Mary (d 1847) was the second wife ofWilliam Manning , M.P. for Leamington, and was thus mother of Cardinal Manning.He was educated at Newcome's school at
Hackney , and afterwards by a Protestant clergyman inSwitzerland . He entered as a student of theInner Temple , but was subsequently articled for five years to "Beardsworth, Burley, & Moore," solicitors, ofLincoln's Inn . He commenced business in 1797 as a "solicitor" in Lincoln's Inn, in partnership with George Richards. A wealthy marriage in the same year proved of assistance, and his practice grew very large.He was solicitor to the commercial commissioners under the income duty acts, the "
London Dock Company ", the "Royal Institution ", the "Society for the Promotion of Religion and Virtue and Suppression of Vice," the "Linnean Society ", and the "Royal Exchange Assurance Company." In September 1804 he was chosenalderman of the ward of Bassishaw, and then relinquished the general management of his business to his partner. Two years afterwards he was appointed lieutenant-colonel of the Royal east regiment of London militia (becoming colonel 10 Jan. 1810), and devoted much time to his regiment, which was occasionally called upon to serve at a distance from the metropolis. In June 1808 he was electedSheriff of London .He retired from business as a solicitor on 11 January 1811, and was
called to the bar . On 9 November 1811 he became lord mayor of thecity of London , when he revived all the ancient ceremonies worthy of renewal, and his pageant was exceptionally magnificent. He was created abaronet on 11 December 1812 and made an honorary D.C.L. of theuniversity of Oxford 23 June 1819. In 1835 he removed from the ward of Bassishaw to that of Bridge Without, and at the time of his death was the ‘father of the City.’He died at
Mortimer Hill , Reading, Berkshire, 20 April 1851. His first wife, whom he married 15 July 1797, Penelope Maria, only daughter of James Free, having died in 1840, he married again, on 25 October 1841, Janet, second daughter of James Fenton of Hampstead; she died at Cambridge Terrace, Hyde Park, 21 Jan. 1859. By his first wife he had two sons and a daughter. His elder son John (1798–1842) left a son, Claudius Stephen Paul, who succeeded his grandfather in the baronetcy.References
*DNB
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.