Henry Howard (historian)


Henry Howard FRS was an English antiquarian and family historian, best known as the author of Memorials of the Howard Family.

Early life

Howard was born at Corby Castle in Cumberland on 2 July 1757, into the large and promient Roman Catholic Howard family. Henry was the eldest son of Philip Howard of Corby Castle, who wrote Scriptural History of the Earth and of Mankind, first published in London in 1797. His mother was Anne Witham, daughter of Henry Witham of Cliffe, Yorkshire. Among his sisters was Maria Howard, the second wife of Hon. George William Petre. After his death in 1797, she married Col. Henry William Espinasse in 1802.
His paternal grandparents were Thomas Howard and, his second wife, Barbara Musgrave, daughter of Philip Musgrave and Hon. Mary Legge. Before his grandparents married, his grandfather had been married to the Hon. Barbara Lowther. His great-grandfather, William Howard, was a son of Sir Francis Howard.
Howard was educated at the college of the English Benedictines at Douay, and for a short time in 1774 studied at the University of Paris.

Career

On 17 December 1774, Howard entered the Theresian Academy in Vienna, and there became a friend of Montecuccoli and Marsigli. He left Vienna in September 1777, but failed to obtain permission to serve in the English army. He then travelled for a time with his father and mother. At Strasburg the governor, M. de la Salle, and General Wurmser showed him favour, and during the two or three years that he passed in study there, living with his father and mother, he often visited Cardinal Rohan. General Wurmser tried to induce him to accept a commission in the Austrian service, but he refused, still hoping that he might obtain an English commission. In 1782, however, he went with Prince Christian of Hesse-Darmstadt to the camp before Prague. In 1784 a final attempt on the part of the Earl of Surrey to get him admitted into the German detachment of the Duke of York's forces failed; and the following year he returned to Great Corby.
Howard spent the rest of his life as a country gentleman and antiquary. In politics he was a Whig; he signed the petition in favour of parliamentary reform, and advocated the repeal of the Penal Laws against Catholics. When in 1795 it became possible, Howard was made captain in the 1st York militia, with which he served for a time in Ireland. In 1802 he raised the Edenside rangers, and in 1803 the Cumberland rangers: for this regiment he wrote a short work on the drill of light infantry. In later life he was a friend and correspondent of Louis-Philippe. He was a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London, and in 1832 high sheriff of Cumberland.

Works

Howard's major works were:
He also contributed to Archæologia, and assisted John Lingard, Agnes Strickland and others in historical work. With Charles Butler he helped Charles James Fox in tracking the papers of James II, as far as the Scotch College in Paris.

Personal life

On 4 November 1788, Howard married Maria Archer, third daughter of Andrew Archer, 2nd Baron Archer and the former Sarah West. She died in 1789, leaving one daughter; the monument by Nollekens erected to her memory in Wetheral Church, Cumberland, is the subject of two of William Wordsworth's sonnets.
Howard's second wife, whom he married 18 March 1793, was Catherine Mary Neave, second daughter of Sir Richard Neave, 1st Baronet of Dagnam Park in Essex and the former Frances Bristow. Catherine kept journals, and printed privately four volumes at Carlisle for her children from 1836 to 1838, entitled Reminiscences. Together, they were the parents of two sons and three daughters, including:
Howard died at Corby Castle on 1 March 1842.

Descendants

Through his second son Henry, he was a grandfather of Sir Henry Howard, who also became a diplomat, and Francis Howard, who became a general in the British army.