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Sir John Brownlow ('Young Sir John) 3rd Bt (1659-1697)
John Riley (London 1646 London 1691) and John Closterman (Osnabrück 1660 London 1711) .
Oil painting on canvas, Sir John Brownlow ('Young Sir John) 3rd Bt (1659-1697) by John Riley (London 1646 London 1691) and John Closterman (Osnabrück 1660 London 1711), circa 1685. A full-length portrait of the son of Sir Richard Brownlow, 2nd Bt (1628-1668) and Elizabeth Freke (1634-1684) as a plump young man, standing, leaning on a plinth with his right arm, in a bull-bottomed brown wig, dressed in a plum coloured coat and mauve cloak. When Riley painted the 4 pictures at Belton (NT 436004.1-2 and 436005.1-2), he appears to have had the assistance of the recently-arrived John Closterman, and reputedly got £40 a full length, painting only the heads himself and giving Closterman just 30s (£1.50) for all the drapery.
John was baptised on 6 July 1659 at Rippingale, Lincolnshire, England. He married on 27 March 1676 at Westminster Abbey, Alice Sherard (1659-1721), the daughter of Richard Sherard (d.1668) of Lobthorpe and Margaret Dewe, in conformity with the 'earnest desire' of their childless great uncle, 'Old' Sir John Brownlow (1594-1679) who settled his estates on them. His children were:
1. Elizabeth Brownlow (1681-1723) Countess of Exeter
2.Alicia Brownlow (1684-1727) Lady Guilford
3.Margaret Brownlow (1687-1710)
4.Jane Brownlow (1689-1736), Duchess of Ancaster
5.Eleanor Brownlow (1691-1730) Viscountess Tyrconnel.
He succeeded to the title of 3rd Baronet Brownlow, of Humby on 30 August 1668. He was MP for Grantham from 1689 to 1697. On 23 November 1679 he inherited the Belton estates of his great-uncle Sir John, 1st and last Baronet. This gave the couple £20,000 in ready money and an income of around £9,000 a year. They launched into London society, bought themselves a house in Southampton (now Bloomsbury Square) and then created a new country house, Belton, which would be an appropriate setting to their rank and wealth. The design of Belton is attributed to the soldier-architect William Winde (d.1722), and preparations for the new house began in 1684. The house was then opulently and fashionably decorated.
Having built himself an appropriately grand new house, and even on 29 October 1695 entertained King William III. Everything seemed set for the young man's further advancement, perhaps even a peerage. But in July 1697, a contemporary reported that 'Sir John Brownlow member of Parliament for Grantham... last week shot himself at Mr Freakes (his uncle's house) in Dorsetshire, but the reason not known'. The reason is still not known. He died on 16 July 1697 at age 38, without surviving male issue. He was buried at Belton, Lincolnshire, England. His will (dated 29 July 1689) was probated on 2 September 1697.
Belton House, Lincolnshire (Accredited Museum)
Photo credit
National Trust Photographic Library / Bridgeman Images