James Howard, 3rd Earl of Suffolk
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James Howard, 3rd Earl of Suffolk, KB (10 February 1606/1607Template:SndDecember 1688), and 3rd Baron Howard de Walden (1619–1688), eldest son of Theophilus Howard, 2nd Earl of Suffolk. Howard was honoured with knighthood in the Order of the Bath in 1626, and was a joint-commissioner of the parliament to Charles I the same year. He supported the Royalist cause in the English Civil War, and was a courtier after the Restoration of the monarchy in 1660. He was lord-lieutenant of Suffolk and Cambridgeshire and gentleman of the bedchamber, 1660–1682.Template:Sfn
Biography
At the coronation of Charles I on 2 February 1626 Howard was created K.B.,<ref>Template:Harvnb cites Metcalfe, Book of Knights, p. 186</ref> and in February 1639, as Lord Walden, became leader of a troop of volunteer horse for the king's army.Template:Sfn
On 3 June 1640 Howard succeeded his father, Theophilus as the 3rd Earl of Suffolk, and on the 16th of the same month was sworn joint lord-lieutenant of Suffolk.Template:Sfn The parliament nominated him lord-lieutenant of that county on 28 February 1642.<ref>Template:Harvnb cites Commons' Journals, ii. 459.</ref> On 28 December 1643 he received a summons to attend the king's Parliament at Oxford,<ref>Template:Harvnb cites Cal. State Papers, Dom. 1641-3, p. 508.</ref> and on 7 July 1646 was appointed joint commissioner from the parliament to the king at Newcastle.<ref>Template:Harvnb cites Commons' Journals, iv. 606.</ref>
Acting on a report from the Committee of Safety, in September 1647, the commons decided, but went no further, to impeach Howard, together with six other peers, of high treason.<ref>Template:Harvnb cites Commons' Journals, v. 296, 584.</ref> On 8 September 1653 Howard was sworn as high steward of Ipswich.Template:Sfn
After the Restoration Howard became lord-lieutenant of Suffolk, and of Cambridgeshire on 25 July 1660.Template:Sfn From 18 to 24 April 1661 he acted as Earl Marshal of England for the coronation of Charles II.<ref>Template:Harvnb cites Walker, Coronation, p. 46.</ref> In the same year he became colonel of the Suffolk Militia Horse.Template:Sfn On 28 September 1663 he was created M.A. of Oxford,<ref>Template:Harvnb cites Wood, Fasti Oxon., ed. Bliss, iv. 272.</ref> and M.A. of Cambridge on 6 September 1664. He was also appointed governor of Landguard Fort, Essex, gentleman of the bedchamber to the king on 4 March 1665, and keeper of the king's house at Audley End, Essex, in March 1667.Template:Sfn He commanded the Suffolk Militia during the Battle of Landguard Fort on 2 July 1667.<ref>Hussey, pp. 71–108.</ref> He was appointed joint commissioner for the office of Earl Marshal of England on 15 June 1673, colonel commandant of three regiments of Cambridgeshire Militia in 1678, and was hereditary visitor of Magdalene College, Cambridge.Template:Sfn In March 1681 he was discharged from the lord-lieutenancy of Suffolk and Cambridgeshire, and from attendance in the king's bedchamber<ref>Template:Harvnb cites Luttrell, i. 69.</ref>
Howard died in December 1688, and was buried on 16 January 1689 at Saffron Walden, Essex.<ref>Template:Harvnb cites Luttrell, i. 496.</ref> On his death the earldom passed to his brother George (died 1691).Template:Sfn The barony Howard de Walden fell into abeyance for nearly a century, until it was called out of abeyance for a descendant of his elder daughter Lady Essex Howard, later Baroness Griffin.Template:Citation needed
Family
On 1 December 1640 (later in the same year that he became 3rd Earl of Suffolk) Howard married Lady Susannah Rich (died 15 May 1649), daughter of Henry Rich, 1st Earl of Holland, and with her had a daughter Essex.Template:Sfn
In about February 1650, Howard married for a second time, Barbara (died 13 December 1681), daughter of Sir Edward Villiers, and widow of Richard Wenman and latterly Sir Richard Wentworth. The second Lady Suffolk died on 13 December 1681, leaving a mutual daughter, his second child, Lady Elizabeth Howard, groom of the stool to the queen.Template:Sfn
After December 1681 and before 8 May 1682 Lord Suffolk married Anne (died October 1720),<ref>Template:Harvnb notes that she was buried at Saffron Walden on 27 October 1720</ref> eldest daughter of Robert Montagu, 3rd Earl of Manchester, with whom he had no children.Template:Sfn
Land and buildings
Lord Suffolk owned central London property including Suffolk House and appears to have left his Jacobean house, Audley End, Essex, built by the 1st Earl, to the descendants of his elder daughter.Template:Citation needed
References
Bibliography
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- Frank Hussey, Suffolk Invasion: The Dutch Attack on Landguard Fort, 1667, Lavenham: Terence Dalton, 1983; Landguard Fort Trust reprint 2005, ISBN 0-86138-027-4.
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