Hugh Clifford, 2nd Baron Clifford of Chudleigh (21 December 1663 – 12 October 1730) was an English aristocrat.
Early life
Clifford was baptized on 21 December 1663 in Ugbrooke. Though the seventh child and second son, he was the eldest living son when his father, Thomas Clifford, 1st Baron Clifford of Chudleigh, died. His mother, Elizabeth Martin, was the sister and co-heiress of William Martin, both children of William Martin of Lindridge.[1]
He succeeded his father in the barony on his father's death in 1673.[1]
They had nine sons and six daughters. Their children were:
Hon. Francis Clifford (b. 1686, d. young)
Hon. Thomas Clifford (12 December 1687 – 2 December 1718), buried 9 March 1719 in Cannington, Somerset. He married, as her first husband, on 22 December 1713 Charlotte Maria Livingston, 3rd Countess of Newburgh (1694–1755). Her second husband was Charles Radclyffe. They had two daughters:
Anne Clifford (d. 1 April 1793); married first, on 22 December 1739 at Saint Sulpice in Paris, John Joseph Mahony, 2nd Count of Mahony (d. 1757), by whom she had one daughter; married second, on 13 April 1773, Don Carlo Severino.
Frances Clifford, died in Ugbrooke, buried at Chudleigh Church on 7 July 1771.
Hon. Henry Clifford (1702 – 21 August 1725), buried in Cannington.
Hon. Anne Clifford (1704–1762), married in 1723 George Cary of Tor Abbey, Torquay, Devon, without issue.
Hon. Amy Clifford (1705–1731), buried at Saint Pancras in London,[3] married in 1719 as his first wife Cuthbert Tunstall Constable (d. 1740) of Burton Constable, Holderness, the nephew of both the 3rd and the 4th Viscount Dunbar. They had two sons and two daughters.
Hon. Preston Clifford (1707–?), nun at the English Benedictine Convent in Ghent.
Hon. Lewis Clifford (1709–?), died in Flanders.
Lord Clifford died 12 October 1730 at Cannington in Somerset, England. He was succeeded in the barony by his eldest living son.[1]
References
^ a b c d"Clifford of Chudleigh, Baron (E, 1672)". cracroftspeerage.co.uk. Heraldic Media Limited. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
^Horner, Ed. "Long missing portrait worth £14,500 to go on display at Fairfax House". York Press. Retrieved 4 August 2023.
^Godfrey, Walter H and W McB Marcham. "Additional Burial Grounds Pages 147–151 Survey of London: Volume 24, the Parish of St Pancras Part 4: King's Cross Neighbourhood". British History Online. LCC. Retrieved 9 October 2021.