Sir Anthony Thomas Abdy, 5th Baronet, KC (c. 1720 – 7 April 1775)[1] was a British barrister and Whig politician.
Family
He was the eldest son of Sir William Abdy, 4th Baronet (of the 1641 creation), and his wife Mary Stotherd, daughter of Philip Stotherd.[2] Abdy was educated at Felsted School and went then to St John's College, Cambridge.[3] On 13 August 1747, Abdy married Catherine Hamilton, daughter of John Hamilton of Chancery Lane.[4] Their wedding was held in St Paul's Cathedral in London.[5] In 1750, he succeeded his father as baronet[6] and in 1759, also inherited the estates of Sir John Abdy, 4th Baronet, the great-grandchild of the brother of his great-grandfather.[7] These estates included Albyns, in Stapleford Abbotts, Essex, which he made his home.
Abdy suffered from gout in his last years, and died of it in 1775.[8] Having no children, Abdy was succeeded in the baronetcy by his younger brother William.[9] The Albyns estate passed to his nephew, Thomas Abdy Rutherforth (1755–98) and his other property, including Chobham Place in Surrey, to William.
^Kimber, Edward (1771). Richard Johnson (ed.). The Baronetage of England: Containing a Genealogical and Historical Account of All the English Baronets. Vol. I. London: Thomas Wotton. p. 373.
^Debrett, John (1824). Debrett's Baronetage of England. Vol. I (5th ed.). London: G. Woodfall. p. 138.
^Burke, John (1841). John Bernhard Burke (ed.). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Ireland and Scotland (2nd ed.). London: Scott, Webster, and Geary. pp. 1–2.
^ abcdeSir Lewis Namier, John Brooke, ed. (2002). The House of Commons, 1754-1790. Vol. II. London: Secker & Warburg. p. 1.
^Burke, John (1832). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage and Baronetage of the British Empire. Vol. I (4th ed.). London: Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley. p. 1.