Lewis Disney Fytche

Danbury Place in the time of Disney Fytche

Lewis Disney Fytche (9 October 1738 – 1822),[1] originally Lewis Disney, often known after his marriage as Disney Fytche,[2] was an English radical and landowner.

Early life

The son of John Disney of Lincoln, he was brother of John Disney the Unitarian. He owned Flintham Hall in Nottinghamshire, a family property.[3][4] He also inherited Swinderby, in Lincolnshire.[1] The eldest son, he received in the end the bulk of his father's property. Flintham Hall was from a grandmother.[5]

Reform radical

Disney married Elizabeth, daughter of William Fytche, on 16 September 1775. He changed his name, to Lewis Disney Fytche, by Royal Sign Manual eleven days later, for reasons connected with property holdings.[1] Around this time he bought Syerston, Nottinghamshire, from Lord George Manners-Sutton.[6][7] He became captain in the 21st Regiment of Foot, and served in the American War of Independence. He was promoted major in 1780.[8]

Fytche had the radical John Cartwright as a first cousin, on his mother's side.[9] He supported the reform petition at the Essex country meeting at Chelmsford on 24 January 1780.[10] That year he joined the Society for Constitutional Information.[11] He attended the meeting of 28 February 1782 at the Moot Hall, Mansfield on parliamentary abuses, and the Thatched House Tavern reform meeting of 18 May 1782.[12][13] His brother John was an associate of Christopher Wyvill and Capel Lofft.[14]

The simony case

In 1782 Fytche brought a court case over the Essex church living of Woodham Walter, in the gift of his wife and vacant by the death of Foote Gower, and his conditional presentation to it of John Eyre, against Robert Lowth as the Bishop of London. Having won the case in the Common Pleas, where Lord Loughborough ruled that the imposed bond of resignation was valid, he saw the result overturned narrowly in the House of Lords.[15][16][17][18]

In the aftermath of the case, Fytche had been given the right to nominate again. John Disney asked his brother to accept a nominee, Peter Fisher who was then chaplain to Elizabeth, Dowager Countess of Westmorland (later incumbent at Staindrop), for John Lee, a fellow Honest Whig and supporter of Essex Street Chapel.[19][20][21] Timothy Cunningham published a work The Law of Simony (1784) dealing with the legal debate.[22]

European traveller

In 1787 Fytche's wife Elizabeth died.[8] He began to dispose of property; 1789 he sold Flintham Hall, to Thomas Thoroton (1753–1813).[23] In 1791/2 he sold Syerston to William Fillingham, who had advised the Duke of Rutland on its enclosure in 1775. Both Flintham and Syerston were parks created by enclosure acts.[24] In 1791 he sold Disney Place in Lincoln to his brother John.[25][26] In 1792 he sold the estate of Kirkstead, Lincolnshire to Richard Ellison;[27]

Fytche then took his family to France, buying a house in the Rue d’Anjou-Saint-Honoré, Paris; this did not end well, with Fytche treated as an exiled émigré when he left the country, and his property being seized.[28][29] He also purchased a French garden, the Désert de Retz, from François Racine de Monville. The political situation in France then shortly made his own position uncertain, and his property was considered that of an "enemy alien". He left for Switzerland, and the Désert de Retz was confiscated by the French revolutionary state: this was despite unavailing legal precautions, and a passport of March 1793 from the Convention.[28][30][31] He protested to the Convention in April.[32]

In 1795 Fytche took part in the funeral in Rome (13 September) of James Durno.[33] In 1801 he sold his estate Danbury Place to his son-in-law, and lived in Jermyn Street, London.[34] In 1816 he reclaimed the Désert de Retz from the French government.[35]

Danbury Place and Park

Main article: Danbury Place

Danbury Place, near Danbury, Essex, was a country house built by Walter Mildmay, and his second son Humphrey Mildmay resided there.[36] It came to Disney Fytche, through his wife's uncle Thomas Fytche.[1] He tried to sell it in 1812, to John Goslin, the deal foundering on bad debts.[37] Lady Hillary, divorced from her husband by 1812, continued to live at Danbury Place until her father died, then moving to Boulogne.[38]

Family

His daughter Frances Elizabeth married William Hillary.[39] The other daughter Sophia married John Disney the barrister, her first cousin.[40]

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Publications of the Harleian Society: The visitations of Essex by Hawley, 1552; Hervey, 1558; Cooke, 1570; Raven, 1612; and Owen and Lilly, 1634 : to which are added miscellaneous Essex pedigrees from various Harleian manuscripts, and an appendix containing Berry's Essex pedigrees". Internet Archive. 1879. p. 657. Retrieved 11 August 2015.
  2. Numerous name variants, such as Lewis Disney Fitch, Louis Disney Fytche
  3. Gill, David. "Disney, John". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/7686. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  4. Robert Thoroton (1797). History of Nottinghamshire. J. Throsby. p. 257.
  5. http://www.english.qmul.ac.uk/drwilliams/journal/issues/21(2002).pdf, pp. 2 and 49 note 37
  6. Transactions of the Thoroton Society of Nottinghamshire. 1971. p. 24.
  7. "Indenture, bargain and sale enrolled. 1) George Sutton (younger s. of John, Duke of..., The National Archives". Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  8. 1 2 D. O. Thomas, "John Disney’s Diary" Enlightenment and Dissent No. 21 2002, p. 7
  9. http://www.english.qmul.ac.uk/drwilliams/journal/issues/21(2002).pdf, p. 9
  10. Thomas Pownall (1780). The Remembrancer, Or Impartial Repository of Public Events. J. Almon. p. 132.
  11. Eugene Charlton Black (1963). The Association: British Extraparliamentary Political Organization, 1769-1793. Harvard University Press. p. 180. ISBN 978-0-674-05000-6.
  12. Cartwright, John; Frances Dorothy Cartwright (1826). "The Life and Correspondence of Major Cartwright". Internet Archive. London: H. Colburn. p. 144. Retrieved 12 August 2015. Cite uses deprecated parameter |coauthors= (help)
  13. Thomas Erskine Baron Erskine (1813). The Speeches of the Hon. Thomas Erskine. Eastburn, Kirk & Company. pp. 417–8 note.
  14. Dinwiddy, J. R. (1992). Radicalism and Reform in Britain, 1780–1850. The Hambledon Press. pp. 32, 53. ISBN 1852850620.
  15. Great Britain. Court of King's Bench; Sylvester Douglas Baron Glenbervie (1831). Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Court of King's Bench: By the Right Hon. Sylvester Douglas. Reed and Hunter. p. 142.
  16. The Gentleman's Magazine. F. Jeffries. 1783. p. 574.
  17. Hore, Alexander Hugh. "The Church in England From William III, to Victoria". p. 478. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  18. Richard Watson (1817). Anecdotes of the Life of Richard Watson: Written by Himself at Different Intervals, and Revised in 1814. T. Cadell and W. Davies. pp. 122–.
  19. The Gentleman's Magazine (London, England). F. Jefferies. 1783. p. 575.
  20. http://www.english.qmul.ac.uk/drwilliams/journal/issues/21(2002).pdf, p. 11
  21. CCeD database Fisher, Peter (1771–1794)
  22. J. G. Marvin (1847). Legal Bibliography, Or a Thesaurus of American, English, Irish, and Scotch Law Books: Together with Some Continental Treatises. Interspersed with Critical Observations Upon Their Various Editions and Authority. To which is Prefixed a Copious List of Abbreviations. T. & J.W. Johnson. p. 245.
  23. Thoroton Society (1992). Transactions of the Thoroton Society of Nottinghamshire. p. 15.
  24. Transactions of the Thoroton Society of Nottinghamshire. Thoroton Society. 1998. p. 135.
  25. Lincolnshire Archives Committee, Archivists' Report 10, 1st April 1958 – 14th March 1959, p. 21
  26. "Title Deeds for Disney Place, Eastgate, Lincoln, and other Disney property in Lincoln, Lincs to the Past". Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  27. Thomas Allen (1834). The history of the county of Lincoln: from the earliest period to the present time. J. Saunders, Jr. p. 79.
  28. 1 2 "Bruni, 1890, un inventaire sous la terreur, préface de Galay" (in French). Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  29. Bruni, Antonio Bartolomeo (1890). Un inventaire sous la terreur (in French). Paris: G. Chamerot. pp. 113–4. Retrieved 12 August 2015 via Internet Archive.
  30. Ketcham, Diana (May 21, 1995). "European Enigma - Page 2 - tribunedigital-chicagotribune". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  31. Marc Tolédano (1984). L'Officier de Magdebourg (in French). Éditions France-Empire. p. 136.
  32. France. Convention nationale. Louis Disney-Ffytche, à la convention nationale. [Pour protester contre l'apposition des scellés sur ses biens durant son absence. 30 avril 1793.].
  33. The Gentleman's Magazine (London, England). F. Jefferies. 1796. p. 81.
  34. Hopkirk, Mary (January 1948). "Danbury Place-Park-Palace in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries". The Essex Review LVII: 8–13.
  35. Patricia Taylor (2001). Thomas Blaikie (1751-1838): The 'Capability' Brown of France. Tuckwell. p. 150. ISBN 978-1-86232-110-6.
  36.  Lee, Sidney, ed. (1894). "Mildmay, Walter". Dictionary of National Biography 37. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  37. London Gazette, 23 November 1819 (PDF)
  38. The Essex Review 57. 1948. p. 11.
  39. John Debrett; William Courthope (1835). Debrett's Baronetage of England: with alphabetical lists of such baronetcies as have merged in the peerage, or have become extinct, and also of the existing baronets of Nova Scotia and Ireland. J.G. & F. Rivington. p. 321.
  40. Christopher Clarkson (1821). The History of Richmond, in the County of York. author. p. 257.
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