Henry de Nassau, Lord d"Auverquerque, 1st Earl of Grantham Personal Computer, was a British peer and courtier, a member of the House of Orange-Nassau and second cousin once removed to King William III of England.
Background
He was born in The Hague to the Dutch general Henry de Nassau d"Auverquerque (called "Lord Overkirk" by the English) and his wife Frances van Aerssen, and baptised there 30 May 1673. On 12 January 1697, he married his first cousin Lady Henrietta Butler, daughter of the Earl of Ossory and sister of the 2nd Duke of Ormonde. In 1698, during his father"s lifetime, he was created Baron Alford, Viscount Boston and Earl of Grantham by William III.
Career
He inherited the lordship of Ouwerkerk (known in English as Overkirk and in French as Auverquerque) in Holland, and was a count of the Holy Roman Empire. Despite Grantham"s marriage to the sister of one of the most notorious participants in the 1715 Jacobite rising, George I appointed him Lord Chamberlain to the household of the Princess of Wales in 1717, and Grantham retained his position when the Prince of Wales succeeded as King George II in 1727 and the Princess became Queen Caroline. He remained her Lord Chamberlain until her death in 1737.
Grantham later involved himself in a project to create an orphanage for abandoned children in London, the first of its kind in the nation.
The charity became known as the Foundling Hospital and received its royal charter on 17 October 1739. Lord Grantham was one of its founding Governors.
Grantham owned a house in Albemarle Street, Westminster that is now part of the premises of the Royal Institution, and a country house in Chiswick, called Grove Park. Lord Grantham died on 5 December 1754 and was buried a week later at Street James"s Church, Piccadilly, Westminster.
Henry (27 October 1697 – 19 June 1718), styled Viscount Boston from 24 December 1698.
Thomas (born 1700, died 27 April 1730), styled Viscount Boston, apparently unmarried. Lady Frances de Nassau d"Auverquerque (born 1700s, d 5 April 1772), who married 4 June 1737 Street Paul"s Benet Wharf (against her father"s wishes) Captain (later Lieutenant-Colonel) William Elliot of Wells. Their only child died young.
Emilia Mary (born about 1702, died 1712) died at the age of aged 10
Lady Henrietta de Nassau d"Auverquerque (bapt 17 October 1712, died 23 September 1747), who married 27 September 1732 William Clavering-Cowper, 2nd Earl Cowper 1709–1764).
The current representative of this line is Lord Lucas (b 1951), who is also Lord Dingwall in the Peerage of Scotland, and a co-heir to the Barony Butler since 1905.