Sampson Eardley, 1st Baron Eardley, FRS (10 October 1744 – 25 December 1824) was a British banker, Tory politician and peer who sat in the House of Commons from 1770 to 1802. The son of Sampson Gideon, a Jewish banker in the City of London, he was raised to the peerage of Ireland in 1789.[2]
Biography
The younger Sampson Gideon (as he then was) was educated at Tonbridge School and Eton College. He was created a baronet, on 21 May 1759, under his father's influence though aged only 14 years.[3] His father had lobbied for the same honour for himself from Prime Minister Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle, but was denied it on account of his own religion, as he remained a practising Jew. The younger Sampson Gideon and his two sisters, on the contrary, whose mother was Christian, were baptised and brought up in the Church of England.[2]
Lord Eardley was the first Provincial Grand Master of Cambridgeshire Freemasons, appointed in 1796, until his death.[6]
His two sons predeceased him, and the peerage became extinct on Lord Eardley's death, at 10 Marina Parade, Brighton,[7] on Christmas Day, 1824, aged 80. He was buried at Erith, Kent.[7] The monument was sculpted by Francis Chantrey.[8]
His daughter the Honourable Charlotte Elizabeth married Sir Culling Smith, 2nd Baronet, and their son Sir Culling Smith assumed the surname of Eardley in lieu of Smith in 1847 (see Eardley baronets). Charlotte's and Sir Culling Smith's daughter Maria Charlotte married Reverend Eardley Childers Walbanke-Childers and was the mother of politician Hugh Childers.
^ abOxford Dictionary of National Biography,Volume 22. Oxford University Press. 2004. p. 106. ISBN0-19-861372-5.Article on Sampson Gideon (1699–1762) by Edgar Samuel.
^ abcThe Complete Peerage, Volume V. St Catherine's Press. p. 1.
^Wells, Samuel. History of the Drainage of the Great Level of the Fens Called ..., Volume 1. p. 505.