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Henry Noel (MP)

Henry Noel
Born 1642
Died 20 September 1677
Residence Luffenham Hall
Occupation Aristocrat, politician
Spouse(s) Elizabeth Wale
Children 1 daughter
Parent(s) Baptist Noel, 3rd Viscount Campden
Hester Wotton
Relatives Charles Boyle, 2nd Earl of Burlington (son-in-law)

Henry Noel (1642 – 20 September 1677) was an English politician during the reign of Charles II. A younger son of Viscount Campden, he inherited a large estate from an uncle in infancy. Returned as a court candidate for Stamford in an expensive by-election, he died less than a year later.

Henry Noel was born in 1642. He was the second son of Baptist Noel, 3rd Viscount Campden by his third wife, Hon. Hester Wotton. He was baptized on 23 October 1642 at Exton, Rutland.

In 1643, he inherited Luffenham Hall, in North Luffenham, Rutland, from his uncle Henry, who died a prisoner of the Parliamentarians. He was admitted a fellow-commoner of Trinity College, Cambridge in 1660, and was considered for the proposed Knights of the Royal Oak at the Restoration, his income being estimated at £1,000 per year. Around this time, he made a gift of a fire engine to the town of Stamford, Lincolnshire.

In 1663, Noel was appointed a deputy lieutenant of Rutland, and to the commission of assessment for that county. In 1665, he was appointed to the commission for the enclosure of Deeping Fen, and was made a freeman of Portsmouth in 1668. In 1669, he was appointed a justice of the peace for Rutland.

In 1676, Hon. William Montagu, member for Stamford was appointed Chief Baron of the Exchequer, vacating his seat and necessitating a by-election. Noel contested the election with John Hatcher, a Presbyterian who had his own interest in the town, and was also backed by the strong interest of the Earl of Exeter. However, Noel's father Lord Campden and the Earl of Lindsey, supporters of the court party, lavishly treated the residents of Stamford and their friends, dismaying Hatcher, who could not match their expenditures and arranged to be appointed High Sheriff of Lincolnshire to escape from the contest. Exeter switched his interest to a new candidate, William Thursby, who looked to have no better success; Hatcher put himself back into the race, hoping to delay the election long enough to obtain some advantage, but in vain. Noel was returned for Stamford on 27 February 1677, and Hatcher's petition against the result was disqualified due to his ineligibility as the Sheriff of the county.


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