The Lord Ashcombe

BornHenry Edward Cubitt
(1867-03-14)14 March 1867
Stowmarket, Suffolk, England
Died27 October 1947(1947-10-27) (aged 80)
Surrey, England
Spouse(s)
Maud Marianne Calvert
(m. 1890)
Issue
ParentsGeorge Cubitt, 1st Baron Ashcombe
Laura Joyce

Henry Edward Cubitt, 2nd Baron Ashcombe CB TD (14 March 1867 – 27 October 1947), was a British politician and peer, the son of George Cubitt, 1st Baron Ashcombe, and his wife Laura Joyce. He is also the great-grandfather of Queen Camilla.

Education and career

Cubitt was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge.[1] He was Conservative Party Member of Parliament (MP) for Reigate between 1892 and 1906. He later served as Lord Lieutenant of Surrey from 1905 to 1939, and was appointed to the Order of the Bath as a Companion (CB) in 1911.[2]

Cubitt succeeded to the peerage upon the death of his father in 1917. He was appointed to be a Deputy Lieutenant of the County of Surrey in 1940.[3]

Denbies, a large estate in Surrey, was included in his inheritance from his father. The payment of death duties and the upkeep of large estates during World War I resulted in large parts of the estate being auctioned on 19 September 1921.[4]

He was appointed Honorary Colonel of the 4th Battalion, Queen's Royal Regiment (West Surrey) in the Territorial Army on 12 July 1922, and was awarded the Territorial Decoration (TD).[5]

Family

He married Maud Marianne Calvert, daughter of Colonel Archibald Motteux Calvert and Constance Maria Georgiana Peters, on 21 August 1890. They had six sons, three of whom were killed in World War I:

Death and burial

Henry Cubitt funerary monument, St Barnabas Church, Ranmore Common, Surrey

He died on 27 October 1947 and is buried in the churchyard of St Barnabas Church, Ranmore Common, Surrey.

References

  1. ^ "Cubitt, Henry (CBT886H)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  2. ^ "No. 12365". The Edinburgh Gazette. 20 June 1911. p. 621.
  3. ^ "No. 34838". The London Gazette. 26 April 1940. p. 2473.
  4. ^ Fortescue, Stephen E. D. (1993), The House on the Hill: the Story of Ranmore and Denbies, Denbies Wine Estate, p. 47, ISBN 095209150X
  5. ^ Army List.