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Up for sale the "1st Baron Melcombe" George Dodington Clipped Signature.
ES-8866
George
Bubb Dodington, 1st Baron Melcombe PC (1691 – 28 July 1762) was an English
whig politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1715 to 1761.
Christened George Bubb, he
was the eldest son. of Jeremiah Bubb of Foy, Herefordshire and his wife Mary
Dodington, daughter of John Dodington of Dodington, Somerset. His father died
in 1696 and he was taken under the care of his uncle George Dodington. He was educated at Winchester College in 1703 and matriculated at Exeter College, Oxford on 10 July 1707
aged 16. He was admitted at Lincolns Inn in 1711 and undertook a Grand Tour
from 1711 to 1713.
Bubb was returned as Member of Parliament for Winchelsea at the 1715 British general election. He was sent
as envoy to Spain from 1715 to 1717. He changed his surname to Dodington by Act
of Parliament in 1717. In 1720 he was appointed Clerk of the Pells for Ireland
for life. His uncle died in 1720 and left him his estate. He was Lord Lieutenant of Somerset from 1721 to
1744. At the 1722 British general election he was
returned as MP for Bridgwater. He was taken
up by Walpole, who made him a Lord of the Treasury in 1724. He addressed an
adulatory verse letter to Walpole in 1726, in which he praised loyalty as the
supreme political virtue. He married Katherine Behan in secret, some time
around 1725. He was returned again for Bridgwater at the 1727 British general election.[2] Enormously rich, he became a friend of Frederick, Prince of Wales, who took
advantage of their acquaintance to obtain loans that helped clear his debts,
and, on being thrown out of St James's Palace by his father, King George II, moved into a London
house belonging to Dodington Dodington was returned for Bridgwater again in
1734 when he was also returned for Melcombe Regis, and in 1741 when he was also
returned for Appleby, choosing to remain at Bridge=water on both occasions. He
was appointed Treasurer of the navy in 1744 and became Privy Counciller on 3
January 1745. He was returned again for Bridgwater in 1747 and was treasurer of
the chamber to the Prince of Wales from 1749 to 1751.At the 1754 British
general election, Dodington was returned for Melcombe Regis. He was Treasurer
of the navy again from December 1755 to November 1756. He was created Baron
Melcombe on 6 April 1761.
Dodington had many contacts with
artists and was a collector, purchasing antiquities via Cardinal Albani in
Rome. His house at Hammersmith, known as 'La Trappe' (an ironic
reference to a Trappist monastery) was the focus of a lively political and
cultural salon of supporters of Frederick, Prince of Wales whose palace at Kew
was located just across the river. It was designed by the neo-Palladian architect Roger Morris who had been connected with
the circle of Lord Burlington and the sculpture gallery was designed by the
Italian architect and firework display designer iovanni Niccolo Servandoni Dodington is said to have been involved in a
spy-ring, collecting valuable information about Jacobite
activities. In 1761, following the accession of Frederick's son to the throne
as George III, he was created Baron
Melcombe. Historian N.A.M. Rodger describes Dodington as an
"indefatigable schemer" on behalf of his friends and interests of the
time.[7] Dodington is depicted in William
Hogarth's 1761 engraving Five Orders of Periwigs; his diary was
published posthumously in 1784 by Henry Penruddocke Wyndham.