George Byng, 8th Viscount Torrington

Arms of Byng: Quarterly sable and argent in the first quarter a lion rampant of the second

George Stanley Byng, 8th Viscount Torrington (29 April 1841 – 20 October 1889), known as George Byng until 1884, was a British Conservative politician.

Origins

He was the son of Major the Hon. Robert Barlow Palmer Byng (third son of George Byng, 6th Viscount Torrington), by his wife Elizabeth Maria Gwatkin, a daughter of Major-General Edward Gwatkin, a son of Robert Lovell Gwatkin.[1]

Career

In 1884 he succeeded his uncle George Byng, 7th Viscount Torrington (1812-1884) in the viscountcy. In 1888 his uncle's companion, Andalusia Molesworth died. She left her fortune to Byng as she was estranged from her ex-husband's family.[2]

Byng served briefly as a Lord-in-waiting (government whip in the House of Lords) from March to October 1889 in the Conservative administration of Lord Salisbury.

Marriages and children

He married twice:

  • Firstly in 1882 to Alice Arabella (d. 1883), a daughter of James Jameson.
  • Secondly in 1885 to Emmeline Seymour (d. June 1912), a daughter of Rev. Henry Seymour,[3] by whom he had children including:

Death and succession

He died in office in October 1889, aged 48, and was succeeded in the viscountcy by his son from his second marriage, George Master Byng, 9th Viscount Torrington (1886–1944).

Arms

Coat of arms of George Byng, 8th Viscount Torrington
Coronet
That of a viscount.
Crest
An heraldic antelope ermine.
Escutcheon
Quarterly, sable and argent, in the 1st quarter a lion rampant of the second.
Supporters
Dexter, an heraldic antelope ermine, armed, unguled, maned and tufted or, standing on a ship’s gun proper; sinister, a sea-horse also proper also on a ship’s gun.
Motto
Tuebor (I will defend).[4]

Notes

  1. ^ Colby, Frederic Thomas (1884). "Pedigrees of five Devonshire families, Colby, Coplestone, Reynolds, Palmer and Johnson [microform]". Internet Archive. Exeter: Exeter : Printed for private circulation by W. Pollard. pp. 22–3. Retrieved 19 June 2016.
  2. ^ "Molesworth [née Carstairs; other married name West], Andalusia Grant, Lady Molesworth (c. 1809–1888), society hostess | Oxford Dictionary of National Biography". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/47908. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
  3. ^ Maureen E. Montgomery (2013). 'Gilded Prostitution': Status, Money and Transatlantic Marriages, 1870-1914. Routledge. p. 264. ISBN 978-1-136-21495-0.
  4. ^ Debrett's peerage and baronetage. 2003. p. 1588. ISBN 0333660935.

References