Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Hesketh was the son of Sir Thomas George Fermor-Hesketh, 7th Baronet, and Florence Emily Sharon, [1] daughter of U.S. Senator William Sharon. [2] Among his siblings was Frederick Fermor-Hesketh, a Lieutenant in the 9th Lancers who went missing in 1910. [3] He was educated at Eton, the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, and Trinity College ...
Born Thomas George Hesketh, he was the second son of Sir Thomas Fermor-Hesketh, 5th Baronet, and Lady Anna Maria Isabella Fermor, daughter of Thomas Fermor, 4th Earl of Pomfret. In 1867 he and his father assumed by Royal licence the additional surname of Fermor and in 1876 he succeeded his elder brother as 7th Baronet of Rufford.
Sir Thomas George Fermor-Hesketh, 5th Baronet (11 January 1825 – 20 August 1872) was an English Conservative politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1862 to 1872. Early life [ edit ]
Thomas Alexander Fermor-Hesketh, 3rd Baron Hesketh, KBE, PC (born 28 October 1950) is a British peer and UK Independence Party politician. Early life.
Thomas Fermor-Hesketh may refer to: Thomas Fermor-Hesketh, 1st Baron Hesketh, British peer, soldier and politician; Thomas George Fermor-Hesketh, British baronet and ...
Rufford Old Hall, the original seat of the Hesketh family. Baron Hesketh, of Hesketh in the County Palatine of Lancaster, is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom.It was created in 1935 for Sir Thomas Fermor-Hesketh, 8th Baronet, [1] who had previously briefly represented Enfield in the House of Commons as a Conservative.
The seat of the Fermor family was Easton Neston in Northamptonshire. [1] The house came into the Hesketh family (who were later created Barons Hesketh) through the marriage in 1846 of Sir Thomas George Hesketh, 5th Baronet , of Rufford, to Lady Anna Maria Arabella Fermor, sister and heiress of the 5th Earl of Pomfret.
Hesketh was the son of Thomas Fermor-Hesketh, 1st Baron Hesketh, and Florence Louise Breckinridge, of Kentucky, daughter of John Witherspoon Breckinridge, and granddaughter of General (CSA) John C. Breckinridge, Vice-President of the United States of America and Secretary of War for the Confederate States of America, in 1909.