John Clevland
Member of Parliament for Saltash
In office
1754–1761
Serving with George Clinton
Preceded byCharles Townshend
George Clinton
Succeeded byGeorge Adams
Hon. Augustus Hervey
In office
1741–1743
Serving with Thomas Corbett
Preceded byLord Glenorchy
Thomas Corbett
Succeeded byThomas Corbett
Stamp Brooksbank
Member of Parliament for Sandwich
In office
1747–1761
Preceded byJohn Pratt
Sir George Oxenden, Bt
Succeeded byThe Viscount Conyngham
George Hay
Secretary to the Admiralty
In office
30 April 1751  18 June 1763
Preceded byThomas Corbett
Succeeded byPhilip Stephens
Personal details
Bornc.1706
Died19 June 1763(1763-06-19) (aged 56–57)
Tapeley Park
Spouses
Elizabeth Child
(m. 1729, died)
    Penelope Davie
    (m. 1743, died)
      Sarah Shuckburgh
      (after 1747)
      RelationsWilliam Clevland (brother)
      John Davie (grandfather)
      Parent(s)William Clevland
      Ann Davie

      John Clevland, (c.1706 – 19 June 1763), of Tapeley in the parish of Westleigh, North Devon, was Secretary to the Admiralty and was twice a Member of Parliament for Saltash in Devon and for Sandwich in Kent.[1]

      Early life

      Arms of Clevland of Tapeley

      Clevland was the eldest son and heir of Commander William Clevland, Royal Navy, of Tapeley, a Scotsman by birth, and the former Ann Davie of an old Devonshire family. His brother, William Clevland, became King of the Banana Islands, Sierra Leone, after being shipwrecked.[2][3] His father was born in Lanarkshire, and became Controller of the Storekeepers' Accounts for the Navy Board.

      His maternal grandfather was the prominent merchant John Davie of Orleigh Court near Bideford.[4]

      He was educated at Westminster in 1718 and called to Middle Temple in 1723.[5] Upon the death of his father in 1734, he inherited Tapeley Park in north Devon. The elder Clevland had acquired Rayhouse, the principal estate at Woodford Bridge in Essex, at some time before 1700, which the younger Clevland sold to Alvar Lopez Suasso in 1732.[6]

      Career

      Tapeley Park

      His father used his position to advance his son, first as a Clerk (Storekeepers' Accounts) and then Chief Clerk from 1726 to 1731 at the Navy Board. In 1731, John was appointed Clerk to the Cheque and Master Muster at Plymouth. He then became Clerk of the Acts in 1744 and Joint Secretary to the Lords Commissioners of Admiralty in 1748. In 1751, he succeeded Thomas Corbett as Secretary to the Admiralty.[1]

      Clevland was MP first for Saltash from 1741 to 1743, then Sandwich from 1747 to 1761 and then Saltash again from 1761 until his death in 1763.

      Around 1750, he purchased the lordship of the nearby Manor of Bideford, then a nationally prominent port.[7]

      Personal life

      "Mrs John Clevland of Tapley", portrait by Joshua Reynolds of one of the three wives (unidentified) of Clevland.

      Clevland married three times and had six sons and five daughters.[8] His first marriage was in 1729 to Elizabeth Child, the daughter of Sir Caesar Child, 2nd Baronet, of Gwynne House, Woodford Bridge in Essex,[9][10][11] by his wife Hester Evans of Claybury Hall.[12] Before her death pre-1743, Elizabeth and John had three sons and three daughters, including:

      His second marriage was in 1743 to his first cousin,[16] Penelope Davie, the daughter of Joseph Davie, of Orleigh in Devon.[17] Before her death pre-1747, they were the parents of one son.

      His third marriage was in 1747 to Sarah Shuckburgh (d. 1764), the daughter of Charles Shuckburgh of Banks Fee, Longborough in Gloucestershire and a sister of Sir Charles Shuckburgh, 5th Baronet.[18] Together, they were the parents of two sons and two daughters, including:

      Clevland died at Tapeley on 18 June 1763,[5] as is recorded on his monument in Westleigh Church, as a result of having "contracted a complication of disorders" due to his "constant application to the discharge" of his office of Secretary of the Admiralty.

      Monument

      Mural monument in Westleigh Church to John I Clevland (1706–1763) of Tapeley

      His mural monument survives in Westleigh Church, inscribed as follows:

      "Sacred to the memory of John Clevland Esqr. of Tapley in the county of Devon who for the space of forty years served his king and country with the greatest honor and fidelity the last seventeen years of which he was joint and sole secretary of the Admiralty in which office through a multiplicity of business and his constant application to the discharge of it he contracted a complication of disorders which occasioned his death at Tapley 18th June 1763. Near him here lie also enterred Elizabeth the daughter of Sr. Caesar Child, Baronet, of Gwin in Essex, with whom he intermarried in the year 1729 who dying left issue three sons and three daughters; Penelope the daughter of Joseph Davie Esqr. of Orleigh in Devon, with whom he intermarried in the year 1743 who dying left issue one son; Sarah the daughter of Chas. Shuckburgh Esqr. of Longborough in Gloucestershire with whom he intermarried in the year 1747 who dying his widow the 5th Decr. 1764 left issue two sons & two daughters"

      References

      Notes
      1. In 1762, William Saltren-Willett was Captain of HMS Warspight, and fought at the Battle of Quiberon Bay.[14]
      2. William Saltren-Willett was also heir of John Willett (d. 1736) of Combe, Abbotsham, lord of the manor of Abbotsham.[15] Hester and William's grandson, Col. Augustus Saltren-Willett II (1781–1849), inherited the Clevland estates, including Tapeley, in 1817 on the death of Hester's brother John Clevland II.
      Sources
      1. 1 2 James, G. F. (June 1938). "The admiralty establishment, 1759". Historical Research. 16 (46): 24–27. doi:10.1111/hisr.1938.16.issue-46.
      2. Lang, George (1999). Entwisted tongues: comparative creole literatures. Amsterdam and New York: Rodopi Bv Editions. ISBN 978-90-420-0737-6.
      3. Caulker-Burnett, Imodale (2001). The Caulkers of Sierra Leone: The Story of a Ruling Family and Their Times. Xlibris. ISBN 9781456802417.
      4. Persons after whom Cook named geographical features Archived 15 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 15 January 2011
      5. 1 2 "CLEVLAND, John (c.1707-63), of Tapley, Devon". www.historyofparliamentonline.org. History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 11 February 2022.
      6. Victoria County History, Essex, Vol.6, 1973, Woodford: Manors
      7. Magna Britannia: volume 6: Devonshire Retrieved 15 January 2011
      8. Wives listed on his mural monument in Westleigh Church
      9. Green, Georgina, Woodford Times (Woodford Historical Society Newsletter), Spring 2014
      10. "Woodford" Per Burke's Landed Gentry, p.408
      11. Extract from Woodford Parish Church register: "Sr Caesar Child, Bart, and Madam Hester Evans, both of Claybury, married Dec. 1, 1698; Hester, their daughter, baptized Apl 14, 1700; Caesar, their son, born Feb. 8, 1701–2; John, buried Feb. 8, 1702–3; Lady Child, buried Mar. 14, 1732–3."(Lysons, Daniel, The Environs of London: volume 4: Counties of Herts, Essex & Kent, 1796, pp.273–287 )
      12. Green
      13. "STEVENS, Richard, of Winscott, Devon". www.historyofparliamentonline.org. History of Parliament Online. Retrieved 11 February 2022.
      14. "Will of William Saltren Willett, Captain of His Majesty's Ship Warspight" dated 15 March 1762, proved 12 March 1770, National Archives, PROB 11/956/87
      15. Per inscription on mural monument (erected by William Saltren Willett) of John Willett (d. 1736) in Abbotsham Church
      16. Both were grandchildren of the Bideford merchant John Davie (d. 1710) of Orleigh
      17. See his mural monument in Buckland Brewer Church
      18. Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry, 15th Edition, ed. Pirie-Gordon, H., London, 1937, p. 408, pedigree of Clevland, appended to pedigree of Christie of Tapeley Park and Glyndebourne, pp.407–8; List of father's wives per inscription on his mural monument in Westleigh Church, Devon
      19. Christie of Tapeley Park Archived 2 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 15 January 2011
      20. Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage. Burke's Peerage Limited. 1878. pp. 97–99. Retrieved 11 February 2022.
      21. Session, Scotland Court of (1869). Cases Decided in the Court of Session, Teind Court, Etc. and House of Lords. T. & T. Clark. p. 90.
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