Sir Philip Carteret, 2nd Baronet

Sir Philip Carteret, 2nd Baronet (c. 1650 – 1693), also known as Philippe de Carteret IV, was the 5th Seigneur of Sark from 1663 to 1693.

Monument to Elizabeth Carteret (1665-1717), wife of Sir Philip Carteret, 2nd Baronet, formerly in Westminster Abbey, now at Haynes Park in Bedfordshire. The inscription is on the thin diagonal slab held by a putto

Origins

He was born in about 1650, the eldest son of Sir Philip Carteret, 1st Baronet (1620-1675) (Philippe de Carteret III), the 4th Seigneur of Sark, by his wife Anne des Augres (1566–1644),[1] daughter of Abraham Dumaresq Seig des Augres. His father died before he came of age (aged 21) in 1671.

Career

As the Sark court refused to allow an Anglican to preside, in 1675 Philippe requested the British crown to dissolve the court, which having been achieved by an Order in Council in 1675, he instituted in its place a jurisdiction composed of a Seneschal, Greffier and Prevot.

Marriage and issue

Carteret married Elizabeth Carteret (1663–1717),[2] a daughter of Sir Edward De Carteret, Seigneur De Trinity, Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod during the reign of King Charles II[3] and First Gentleman Usher Daily Waiter in Ordinary to the King,[4] by his wife Elizabeth Johnson.[5]

By his wife he had one son:

  • Sir Charles Carteret, 3rd Baronet (1679-1715), eldest son and heir,[6] who died aged 34 and was the last in the male line of the senior line of the Carteret family. He was baptised at St Margaret's Church, Westminster on 4 June 1679, when King Charles II was one of his godfathers. He was Gentleman of the Privy Chamber to Queen Anne and High Bailiff of Jersey. He married Mary Carteret, a daughter of Amias Carteret, by whom he had a son:
    • James Carteret, who predeceased his father and died without surviving issue.

Death

Upon his death in 1693 Charles de Carteret, his eldest son, inherited his titles and lands.[6]

Monument to wife

A monument to his wife Elizabeth Carteret (1663–1717) was in Westminster Abbey until 1847 when having become dilapidated it was removed (all but the inscription) by Lord John Thynne, Sub-Dean of the Abbey and representative of the Carteret family, who re-erected it at his country house of Haynes Park in Bedfordshire. The inscription (which still survives in Westminster Abbey) is as follows:

Near this place lyeth buried Dame Elizabeth Carteret daughter of Sr. Edward Carteret, Knt., Gent. Usher of ye Black Rod in the reign of K. Charles the Second Relict of Sr. Philip Carteret Bart. and by him mother of Sr. Charles Carteret Bart., her only son, interred likewise near this place by whose decease June ye 6th A.D. 1715 in ye 34th year of his age, was extinguished the eldest branch of the antient family of the name of Carteret Seigneurs of St.Ouen in ye Island of Jersey. She died March ye 26th A.D.1717 aged 52 years.

Notes

  1. "Anne Dowse - Historical records and family trees - MyHeritage". www.myheritage.com.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 8 May 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. Per inscription on her monument formerly in Westminster Abbey
  4. Per inscription on her brother's monument in Westminster Abbey ("To the memory of their most beloved son Edward de Carteret Gentleman, Sr Edward Carteret (Knight, Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod and First Gentleman Usher Daily Waiter in Ordinary to the King) his father and Dame Elizabeth his mother, have caused this monument to be erected. His body lieth under the stone beneath. He dyed the thirtieth day of October MDCLXXVII [1677] aged seaven yeares and nine months".)
  5. Elizabeth Johnson per https://www.westminster-abbey.org/abbey-commemorations/commemorations/carteret-family/
  6. Decarteret staff 2007.
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References

Preceded by
Philippe de Carteret III
Seigneur of Sark
1663–1693
Succeeded by
Charles de Carteret
Baronetage of England
Preceded by
Philip Carteret
Baronet
(of St Owen)
c. 1672–1693
Succeeded by
Charles Carteret


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