James Gordon (c. 1758–1822) was a British barrister, politician and plantation owner on Antigua and St Vincent.[1][2]
Life
He was the son of James Brebner and Anne Lavington (or Mary), born on Antigua.[1][3] His father adopted the surname Gordon in 1768.[1] His sister Mary married Sir William Abdy, 6th Baronet.[4]
James Gordon committed suicide at his London home on Hill Street, Mayfair, on 18 February 1822.[2]
Moor Place
Gordon inherited Moor Place at Much Hadham, Hertfordshire, when his father died in 1807; it was built by Robert Mitchell of Aberdeen for his father in 1777–9.[5][6] The Moor Place estate had belonged to his great-uncle James Gordon (died 1768, of Antigua and Moor Place, 9th of Knockespock), whose will had caused his father to change name to James Brebner Gordon.[7]
Plantations
Gordon left extensive slave-run plantations to his son James Adam, in Antigua, St Vincent and St Kitts, and around 500 enslaved people.[8]
Family
Gordon married in 1789 Harriet or Harriot Whitbread, daughter of Samuel Whitbread (1720–1796) the brewer and politician.[1] She inherited Stocks House in Hertfordshire, from her maternal grandfather William Hayton of Ivinghoe.[9][10]