Champion_de_Crespigny_baronets

Champion de Crespigny baronets

Champion de Crespigny baronets

Extinct baronetcy in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom


The Champion de Crespigny Baronetcy, of Champion Lodge, Camberwell, in the County of Surrey, was a title in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom,[1] created on 31 October 1805 for Claude Champion de Crespigny.

Escutcheon of the Champion de Crespigny baronets

Background

Sir Claude Champion de Crespigny, 1st Baronet
Sir William Champion de Crespigny, 2nd Baronet
Augustus James Champion de Crespigny

The Champion de Crespigny family originated in Normandy, France. The name Crespigny is probably related to Saint Crispin. The second part of the placename, igny, is common in the northwest of France: there are four places called simply Igny and many which include it in their name. It may be derived from the Latin ignis "fire," with the extended meaning of a hearth-fire and hence a place of settlement. On this basis, Crespigny first acquired its name as a settlement containing a church, a chapel or some form of a shrine to Saint Crispin.[2]

Claude Champion de Crespigny (1620–1697) settled in England after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes and his sons served in the British Army.[2] His grandson Philip Champion de Crespigny (1704–1765) married Anne, daughter of Claude Fonnereau, and was the father of the first Baronet.

The second Baronet sat as the member of parliament for Southampton. The fourth Baronet was a well-known military adventurer and sportsman. He was eccentric enough to bribe hangman James Berry into accepting him as assistant executioner on the occasion of a triple hanging in Carlisle on 8 February 1886.[3] The title became extinct on the death of the eighth Baronet in 1952.

The 8th and last member was Sir Vivian Tyrell de Crespigny, OBE (25 April 1907 – 3 March 1952), who married Helen in 1930 and had a daughter Fleur (later Horley) in 1937, divorced and married Monica Fleming; Helen married one Whitehead. Both couples divorced and De Crespigny and Helen Whitehead remarried in 1947.[4] They divorced in 1951[5] and he died the following year of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.[6]

In 1775, Crespigny House was built for the first Baronet in Aldeburgh, Suffolk, where his brother, Philip Champion de Crespigny (1738–1803), was the member of parliament from 1780 to 1790. The family also lived at Champion Lodge in Camberwell, London, which was built in 1715 and demolished in 1841, and later at Champion Lodge in Maldon, Essex.

Champion de Crespigny baronets, of Champion Lodge (1805)

Extended family

Notable members of the family include the soldier and polo player Claude Champion de Crespigny (1873–1910), who was the son of the fourth Baronet, and the artist and author Rose Champion de Crespigny (1859–1935), whose second son became the seventh Baronet. The poet Caroline de Crespigny was the daughter-in-law of the second Baronet.


References

  1. "No. 15848". The London Gazette. 1 October 1805. p. 1245.
  2. de Crespigny, Rafe (December 2017), Champions from Normandy : An essay on the early history of the Champion de Crespigny family 1350-1800 AD, Anne Young (published 2017), ISBN 978-0-648-19172-8 Retrieved from https://ayfamilyhistory.com/champions-from-normandy/
  3. Stewart P. Evans, Executioner. The Chronicles of James Berry, Victorian Hangman, 2004, p. 93
  4. "Three Divorces: Re-united". The News (Adelaide). Vol. 49, no. 7, 587. South Australia. 27 November 1947. p. 5. Retrieved 25 September 2019 via National Library of Australia.
  5. "Divorce for Titled Man". The National Advocate. New South Wales, Australia. 10 May 1951. p. 2. Retrieved 11 September 2020 via National Library of Australia.
  6. "Officer Found Dead Before Court Martial". The West Australian. Vol. 68, no. 20, 476. Western Australia. 5 March 1952. p. 4. Retrieved 11 September 2020 via National Library of Australia.
  7. Foster, Joseph (1881). The Baronetage and Knightage. Nichols and Sons. pp. 152–153.
  8. London Naval exhibition (1891). Official Catalogue & Guide. p. 129.
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