BERKELEY 147 BARONY BY 15. Louisa Mary, suo Jure, Baroness Berkeley, WRIT. niece and h. general, da. and h. of the Hon. Craven „„ „„^ Fitzhardinge Berkeley, by his I St wife, Augusta, widow ■ ^ "■ of George" Henry Talbot, formerly Augusta Jones, TJTrrnrMlQTrn spinster, illegit. da. of Sir Horace St. Paul, Bart., of KiiCUUINlbliU g^^j.^ p^^j^^ Northumberland, which Craven (who d. 1893. s.p.m., I July 1855, aged 50) was the 3rd and yst. br., but the only one who left surv. issue, of the 6th (Je Jure) Earl abovenamed. She was i. 28 May 1840, in Mansfield Str., Marylebone. She m., 3 Apr. 1872, Major Gen. Gustavus Hamilton Lockwood Milman, Royal Artillery. Her right to the Peerage was declared by letters patent 12 June 1893. She (/. 10 Dec. 1899, at Martin's Heron, Bracknell, Berks. Will pr. over ;£6,ooo gross and over ^1^2,000 net personalty. XVI. 1899. ^^- Eva MARY,iao_;«rf, BaronessBerkeley[i42i],(*) only child and h., i-. 4 Mar. i^j^,m., 5 Aug. 1903, Frank Wigram Foley, D.S.O., Major R. Berkshire Regt. BERKELEY OF STRATTON BARONY. I. John Berkeley, 5th and yst. s.^") of Sir Maurice T ^ „ B., of Bruton, Somerset, by Elizabeth, da. of Sir Henry ^ ' Killigrew, of Hanworth, Midx., was I/ap. at Hanworth, I Feb. 1606/7, and matric. at Oxford (Queen's Coll.) 14 Feb. 1622/3. Ambassador to Christina, Queen of Sweden, Jan. 1636/7. Being a Commander in the Army against the Scots, he was knighted by the King at Berwick, 27 July 1639. M.P. for Heytesbury in the Short Pari., Apr. i640.() During the rebellion he was one of the most eminent officers of the Royal party; in 1642 (as Commissary Gen.) he secured nearly the whole of Cornwall ; and being in joint command with Sir Ralph Hopton, (subsequently he was Gen. of all the Royal forces in Devon) he won divers battles against the insurgents at Bradock, Saltash, Launceston, Stratton, and Modbury, investing and reducing Exeter, of which he was made Governor, being holder of that office during the time of the Queen's giving birth there to the Princess Henrietta Maria. This city he afterwards (13 Apr. 1645) was forced to surrender, on honourable terms, to Fairfax. He attended the King in his ill-fated journey to the Isle of (*) For a list of the only recognised Parliaments (down to 1500) which furnish a date of origin for Baronies by writ now (191 1) existing, see vol. vi. Appendix G. V.G. C") Charles Berkeley, the ist s. of this Sir Maurice, became in 1665 (by succession to his own son the Earl of Falmouth) Viscount Fitz-Hardinge [I.]. See tabular ped. of this branch of the family (a cadet line of the Berkeleys of Stoke, co. Gloucester) under "Botetourt." ('^) He was also elected for Reading. He did not sit in the Long Pari., and so tvas not expelled, as stated in Did. Nat. Biog. V.G.