The Eglinton TournamentIn 1839 his name became more widely known in connection with the Eglinton Tournament. This took place at Eglinton castle and is said to have cost him £30,000 or £40,000. It was made the subject of much ridicule and was partly spoiled by the unfavourable weather, the rain falling in torrents. It was a real tournament, and the knights broke their spears in the orthodox way. Prince Louis Napoleon (Napoleon III) and Lady Seymour, a granddaughter of Richard Brinsley Sheridan and the wife of Lord Seymour, afterwards 12th Duke of Somerset, took part. A list of the challengers with an account of the jousts and the mêlée will be found in the volume on the tournament written by John Richardson, with drawings by J. H. Nixon. It is also described by Disraeli in Endymion. PoliticsEglinton was a staunch Tory, and in February 1852 he became Lord Lieutenant of Ireland under the Earl of Derby. He retired with the ministry in the following December, having by his princely hospitality made himself one of the most popular of Irish viceroys. When Derby returned to office in February 1858 he was again appointed Lord-Lieutenant, and he discharged the duties of this post until June 1859. In this year he was created Earl of Wintoun, an earldom which had been held by his kinsfolk, the Setons, from 1600 until 1716, when George Seton, the 5th Earl (c. 1678 – 1740), was deprived of his honors for high treason. FamilyHe married, firstly, Theresa Newcomen (see below), by whom he had the following children:
He married Adela Caroline Harriett Capell (b. 4 March 1828 - d. 31 December 1860), following the death of his first wife and by whom he had the following children:
Lady Theresa MontgomerieThe 13th Earl of Eglinton's first wife, Theresa Newcomen, was a daughter of Thomas Gleadowe-Newcomen, 2nd Viscount Newcomen and Harriet Holland. She was born in Calcutta on an unknown date, and died on 16 December 1853 at Eglintoun Castle of unknown cause. HeirsThe Earl was succeeded by his eldest son Archibald Montgomerie (1841 – 1892). When this Earl died in 1892 his younger brother George (b. 1848 - d. 1919) became 15th Earl of Eglinton and 3rd Earl of Winton. See alsoExternal linksReferences
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