Lavington, Ralph Payne, Baron, 1738-1807.

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Lavington, Ralph Payne, Baron, 1738-1807.

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Lavington, Ralph Payne, Baron, 1738-1807.

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Ralph Payne, Baron Lavington, politician, member of Parliament for several terms, was named Knight of the Order of the Bath and Governor in Chief of the Leeward Islands in 1771. After his return to England, he held several appointive offices and was created Baron Lavington of Lavington in 1795. Lavington was named a Privy Counselor in 1799, and died in Antigua in 1807.

From the description of Lavington papers, 1771-1799. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 84038142 From the description of Lavington papers: Stuart negotiations, 1771-1799. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 702146353

Ralph Payne, Baron Lavington (1738-1807) was born on St. Kitts but educated in England. After serving as Speaker in the Assembly of the Leeward Islands, he returned to England and in the 1760s was a member of Parliament for several terms. In 1771 he was named Knight of the Order of the Bath and Governor in Chief of the Leeward Islands, serving until 1775 when he resigned for reasons of health. He subsequently held appointive offices in London and was created Baron Lavington of Lavington in 1795. Lavington was named a Privy Counselor in 1799, and Governor in Chief of the Leeward Islands, to which he returned. He died in Antigua, at the Governor's House, in 1807.

From the description of Ralph Payne, Baron Lavington family papers, 1679-1855 (bulk 1730-1790). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 702195658

Ralph Payne was born in the West Indies in 1738. The son of a governor of St. Kitts, he was educated in England and in 1767 married Françoise Lambertina Kölbel, daughter of Henry, Baron Kölbel of Saxony. After several years in Parliament, he was made Knight of the Order of the Bath in 1771 and appointed Governor of the Leeward Islands. Payne was recalled in 1775, and spent many years in various elective and appointive offices in England. In 1788 he journeyed widely on the Continent, during which his secret negotiations with Charlotte, Duchess of Albany took place.

Payne was created Baron Lavington of Lavington in the Irish peerage in 1799, and was reappointed to the Governorship of the Leeward Islands in the same year. He died at Government House, Antigua, in August of 1807.

From the guide to the Lavington papers: Stuart negotiations, 1771-1799, (Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library)

Ralph Payne was born in Basseterre, St. Kitts, in 1739, the surviving son of Ralph Payne (d. 1763), chief justice of St. Kitts, and his first wife Alice Carlisle, the only surviving child and heiress of the Antiguan planter Francis Carlisle.

Like many of the West Indian elite, Payne divided his time between England, especially London, and the Caribbean plantations from which he derived his wealth and power. Educated at Christ's Hospital, Payne returned to Antigua in 1759, where he was promptly elected to the House of Assembly and unanimously voted Speaker of the House.

Payne returned to England in 1762 and embarked on a lengthy and expensive Grand Tour of Europe. In 1767 he married Françoise Lambertina Kölbel, daughter of Henry, Baron Kölbel of Saxony; she was a close friend of Queen Charlotte. Shortly after his marriage, Payne entered English politics, and was M.P. for Shaftesbury from 1768 until 1771, when he was made Knight of the Order of the Bath and set sail for Antigua as the newly-appointed Governor-General of the Leeward Islands.

Payne was popular with the plantation owners. He supported Lord North's government in its struggles with the North American colonists, reporting in 1774 that his islands were free of "mischievous sparks of the Continental flame." He was the first governor in over fifty years to visit every one of the Leeward Islands, after the "Great Hurricane" of 1772. (At the time, the colony consisted of Antigua, Barbuda, the British Virgin Islands, Montserrat, St. Christopher's (St. Kitts), Nevis, Anguilla and Dominica.) He also patronized the artist Thomas Hearne. In 1775, the Paynes left for England "to reestablish Lady Payne's health," and the Assembly petitioned for his speedy return and presented him with a diamond-encrusted sword as a token of their affection. Payne was to remain in England for the next twenty-four years.

He spent many years in various elective and appointive offices, becoming a supporter of Fox after 1780. Payne and his wife also became known for their elaborate parties, despite the rumored unhappiness of their marriage. In 1788 he traveled again on the Continent, and conducted secret but unsuccessful negotiations with Charlotte, Duchess of Albany over the possible return of the Stuart crown jewels to England.

Payne, whose wealth was declining rapidly due to his lavish spending and to the sharp decline of sugar profits after the American Revolution, seceded from the Whig Club and allied with William Pitt and Henry Dundas. In fact, the dinner at which Dundas and Lord Loughborough first broached the idea of an alliance between Pitt and the Duke of Portland was held at his Grafton Street house. His reward for changing parties followed quickly; he was created Baron Lavington of Lavington in the Irish peerage in October 1795.

In 1799 he was re-appointed Governor-General of the Leeward Islands, and arrived in Antigua in August, 1801. He moved into the just-completed Government House, and remained on that island until his death in August, 1807. Payne was buried on Carlisles, his Antigua plantation. His estate was thoroughly encumbered by debts, mortgages, and liferents, and his widow was left so poor that the Antiguan assembly voted her a pension of L 300 a year "in affection and esteem." She returned soon after to England, and died at Hampton Court Palace in 1830. See "Payne, Ralph, Baron Lavington" in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, 2004) for further information.

From the guide to the Ralph Payne, Baron Lavington family papers, 1679-1855, 1730-1790, (Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library)

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Jacobites

Seven Years' War, 1756-1763

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Great Britain

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Leeward Islands (West Indies)

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