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John Fayram (active c.1713d.1744).
Oil painting on canvas, The Hon. Felton Hervey (1712-1775) by John Fayram (active c.1713d.1744), circa 1730. A painted oval half-length portrait of a young man, facing, gazing at the spectator, brown eyes, dark short hair/wig(?) wearing a deep blue velvet coat and white and gold brocade waistcoat with gilt buttons, and a white lace cravat, holding a cocked hat under his left arm. Inscribed at bottom 'The Honble Felton Hervey. Apparently a pair with portrait of Thomas Hervey.
He was the ninth and youngest son of John Hervey, 1st Earl of Bristol (16651751), the eighth by his second wife, Elizabeth Felton. Married on 25 December 1740 Dorothy Ashley, daughter of Solomon Ashley and widow of Charles Pitfield of Hoxton; she died in 1761. Apart from being dismissed as one of Queen Carolines equerries he appears to have led a respectable life. He died shortly after his return from a tour of Italy (177273) with his son and one of his daughters. They met up with his nephew, Colonel William Hervey (see ICK/P/88) on 10 September 1772 in Florence, where early in November he was presented to the Grand Duke, and by December had been painted by Zoffany, who inserted his portrait in a prominent position into the Tribuna, sitting in front of the Venus of Urbino, in conversation with Sir Horace Mann and Thomas Patch. In April 1773 he had an audience in Rome with Pope Clement XIV, and was quite charmed by him .After his death his considerable collection of pictures was sold at Christies, from his mansion at Bury, 3 and 4 February, 1775. He was also Groom of the Bedchamber to the Duke of Cumberland, and from 1759, Joint Remembrancer of the Court of the Exchequer with his son, Lt.Col.Felton Lionel Hervey, who married Selina Elwell, daughter of Sir John Elwell Bt. and Selina Bathurst in 1779. Their eldest son, Felton Elwell, Colonel, and ADC to the Duke of Wellington at Waterloo, added the name of Bathurst to his own in 1801, and in 1818 was made a baronet, with special remainder to his brother, Frederick Anne, from whom the Hervey-Bathurst baronets descend.
Felton was the best of the brothers in that after an inauspicious youth he never worried his father more and he led an exemplary life. He went to court as a page to Queen Caroline, but was apparently dismissed for misconduct. He had a private tutor before going to Eton 172730; he was sacked [expelled] from the school. He became Her Majestys equerry in 1736, and also attended the Duke of Cumberland abroad in 1743 as his Groom of the Bedchamber. He was MP for Bury St Edmunds from 174761 and lived for some of his time at the Manor House, Bury St Edmunds which he inherited from his mother in 1741. His wife was Dorothy, daughter of Solomon Ashley of Westminster, widow of Charles Pitfield of Hoxton. She died in 1761 & was buried in Bury St Edmunds but on Feltons death her remains were removed to Ickworth.
There were three daughters, Amelia, Caroline & Eloisa, and a son Felton Lionel Hervey. He inherited The Manor House in Bury St Edmunds from his father, but shot himself in a London gunsmiths shop in the Strand in 1785. In Egham church is a monument to Felton Herveys grandson, Sir Felton Elwell Bathurst Hervey who was ADC to the Duke of Wellington at the Battle of Waterloo, he lost an arm in the campaign and died in 1819 age 36.
Ickworth, Suffolk (Accredited Museum)
Photo credit
National Trust Photographic Library / Bridgeman Images