'Charles Gerard, 1st Earl of Macclesfield'
PC (c.
1618 –
January 7,
1694) eldest son of
Sir Charles Gerard, was a member of an old Lancashire family, his great-grandfather having been Sir
Gilbert Gerard (d. 1593) of Ince, in that county, one of the most distinguished judges in the reign of
Elizabeth I. His mother was Penelope Fitton of Gawsworth, Cheshire.
Charles Gerard was educated abroad, and in the
Low Countries learnt soldiering, in which he showed himself proficient when on the outbreak of the
Civil War in England he raised a troop of horse for the king's service. Gerard commanded a brigade with distinction at
Edgehill, and gained further honors at the
first battle of Newbury and at
Newark in 1644, for which service he was appointed to the chief command in
South Wales.
Here his operations in
1644 and
1645 were completely successful in reducing the
Parliamentarians to subjection; but the severity with which he ravaged the country made him personally so unpopular that when, after the defeat at
Naseby in June
1645, the king endeavoured to raise fresh forces in Wales, he was compelled to remove Gerard from the local command. Gerard was, however, retained in command of the king's guard during Charles' march from Wales to Oxford, and thence to Hereford and Chester in August
1645; and having been severely wounded at
Rowton Heath on
September 23, he reached
Newark with Charles on
October 4.
On
November 8,
1645 he was created
Baron Gerard, of Brandon in the County of Suffolk; but about the same time he appears to have forfeited Charles's favour by having attached himself to the party of
Prince Rupert of the Rhine, with whom after the surrender of
Oxford Gerard probably went abroad. He remained on the Continent throughout the whole period of the Commonwealth, sometimes in personal attendance on
Charles II, at others serving in the wars under
Turenne, and constantly engaged in plots and intrigues. For one of these, an alleged design on the life of
Cromwell, his cousin Colonel John Gerard, was executed in the
Tower in July 1654.
At the Restoration, Gerard rode at the head of the king's life-guards in his triumphal entry into London; his forfeited estates were restored, and he received lucrative offices and pensions. In 1668 he retired from the command of the king's guard to make room for the
Duke of Monmouth, receiving, according to
Pepys, the sum of £12,000 as solatium. On
July 23,
1679 Gerard was created
Earl of Macclesfield and
Viscount Brandon. A few months later he entered into relations with Monmouth, and co-operated with
Shaftesbury in protesting against the rejection of the Exclusion Bill.
In September
1685, a proclamation having been issued for his arrest, Macclesfield escaped abroad, and was outlawed. He returned with
William of Orange in
1688, and commanded his body-guard in the march from Devonshire to London. By William he was made a privy councillor, and Lord Lieutenant of Wales and three western counties. Macclesfield died on
January 7,
1694. By his French wife he left two sons and two daughters.
Reference
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External link
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Portrait in the National Portrait Gallery
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