8 CARBERY coh. of Ferdinando (Stanley), Earl of Derby. He d. 3 Dec. i686.(») Admon. 12 Apr. 1687. Will pr. May 1688. His widow, who d. s.p., was bur. 19 July 1689, in Westm. Abbey. Admon. dat. 3 Feb. 1689/90. [Francis Vaughan, styled Lord Vaughan, s. and h. ap., by 2nd wife. M.P. for CO. Carmarthen 1661 till his death. He w., about 1653, Rachael, 2nd da. and eventually coh. of Thomas (Wriothesley), Earl of Southamp- ton, sometime Lord High Treasurer, by his ist wife, Rachel, ist da. of Daniel DE Massue, Seigneur de Ruvigny. Yitd. v.p. and j./).j.,() 7 Mar. 1666/7. (') His widow m. (lie. at Fac. office, 31 July 1669) William Russell, after- wards styled Lord Russell, who was beheaded 21 July 1683. She (the well-known " Rachael, Lady Russell") d. 29 Sep. 1723, aged 86. See fuller account in vol. ii, p. 81, under "Bedford," Dukedom of] in. 1686 3. John (Vaughan), Earl of Carbery [1628], and to Baron Vaughan of Mullengar [1621] in Ireland; also 1713. Baron Vaughan of Emlyn [1643] in England, styled Lord Vaughan 1667-86, 2nd but ist surv. s. and h. by 2nd wife. He was bap. 18 July 1639, at St. Dunstan's-in-the-West, London. He matric. at Oxford (Ch. Ch.) 1656. K.B. at the Coronation, Apr. 1661 ; M.P.^) for Carmarthen (borough) 1661-79, and for the County 1679-81 and 1685-87. Col. of a regt. of Foot 1673-74; Governor of Jamaica 1675-78; a Lord of the Admiralty 1683-84, and 1689-90; F.R.S. 28 Jan. 1684/5, and Pres. 1686-89. He did not attend the Pari. [I.] of James II, 7 May 1689. (") He »;., istly, Mary, da. of George Brown, of Green Castle, co. Carmarthen. She d. s.p. Her admon. (as Lady Vaughan) 14 Oct. 1674. He m., 2ndly, 10 Aug. 1682, at St. Martin's-in- the-Fields (lie. Vic. Gen., he about 35, she about 20), Anne, ist da. of George (Savile), ist Marquess of Halifax, by his ist wife, Dorothy, da. of Henry (Spencer), Earl of Sunderland. She, who was b. 1663, was bur. from Red Lion Sq., 23 Jan. 1689/90, at St. Andrew's, Holborn. He d. s.p.m.s.,{^ 16 Jan. 17 12/3, at Chelsea, Midx., aged 73, when (^) He was the patron of Jeremy Taylor, who lived at Golden Grove for many years, and dedicated his Ho/y Living and Ho/y Dying to him. V.G. (^) He had one child, h. 1655, who lived long enough to be tap. V.G. ("=) A conspicuous profligate even in that Court. He took an active part in the steps towards the impeachment of Clarendon, who describes him as " a person of as ill a face as fame, his looks and his manners both extreme bad." V.G. (^) He began his political life as a courtier, and later on was a strong Protestant and exclusionist, and belonged to the Kit Cat Club, which was Whig. V.G. (^) For a list of peers present in, and absent from, this Pari., see Appendix D to this volume. "George Vaughan," who was hur. 7 May 1685, in Westm. Abbey, was, probably, his infant son, and identical with "George, s. of John, Lord Vaughan, and dame Ann, t. 6" and bap. 30 Oct. 1683, at St. Martin's-in-the-Fields.