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Broughton Benjamin Pegge Burnell

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Beauchief Abbey today

Broughton Benjamin Pegge Burnell (c. 1774 – 1850) was a landowner who lived at Beauchief Abbey and Winkbourn Hall. He was High Sheriff[1] and Deputy Lieutenant of Derbyshire and a magistrate for Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire and Yorkshire.[2]

Biography

Pegge Burnell was born Broughton Benjamin Steade to a Yorkshire family. His father Thomas Steade had married Millicent the daughter of Strelly Pegge of Beauchief Abbey in Derbyshire (later Boundary changes have now put the Abbey inside the city of Sheffield boundary). When his elder brother died on the island of St Domingo in 1796 he inherited his family's estates.

Steade married his first cousin, Elizabeth Dalton, on 21 December 1803.[3] and they had Edward Valentine Pegge Burnell. Edward married in 1836 Harriet daughter of Hugh Parker of Woodthorpe near Sheffield.[2]

Steade was then left the estates of his uncle, Peter Strelly Pegge on the condition that he take the surname of Strelley Pegge. He did this in 1836 by Royal licence in the same year as his son married. He also carried out alterations to the family home that year and had his new initials added to the entrance.[3]

Pegge Burnell served as High Sheriff of Derbyshire in 1839.[1]

He died aged 76 in Regent Street London.[2]

Honorary titles
Preceded by High Sheriff of Derbyshire
1839–1840[2]
Succeeded by
Sir Henry Hunloke, 6th Baronet

References

  1. ^ a b "No. 19704". The London Gazette. 4 February 1839. p. 214.
  2. ^ a b c d The Gentleman's Magazine
  3. ^ a b De La Salle Sheffield[permanent dead link], from the Derbyshire Archaeological Journal, accessed September 2008
This page was last edited on 24 March 2023, at 20:54
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