John Lovelace, 3rd Baron Lovelace was an English politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1661 to 1670 when he inherited the peerage as Baron Lovelace.
Background
Lovelace was born at Hurley, Buckinghamshire, the son of John Lovelace, 2nd Baron Lovelace, and Lady Anne, 7th Baroness Wentworth and Baroness Le Despenser. In 1661, Lovelace was elected Member of Parliament for Berkshire in the Cavalier Parliament, and sat until 1670 when he inherited the peerage on the death of his father.
Career
He matriculated at Wadham College, Oxford, on 25 July 1655, and was awarded Master of Arts on 9 September 1661. Lovelace was also notably anti-Catholic: he created a scandal when a Catholic magistrate sent him a summons, which he used in public to wipe his bottom, for which action he was severely reprimanded by the Privy Council, and threatened with prosecution. Justice of the Peace Kenyon remarks that a more sensible ruler than James II would have let the matter pass, as being just a rather tasteless joke.
In March 1688, he was summoned before the Privy Council and questioned about his dealings with William, but was released on account of insufficient evidence.
He protested his loyalty to James in person, but the King was unimpressed, saying angrily: "My Lord, this is not the first trick you have played me". Lovelace indignantly replied "I never played a trick on your majesty or anyone else".
He arranged secret meetings in a cellar at Ladye Place, his home in Hurley. Once he heard that William had landed in England, he set out with 70 men to join him, but was captured and imprisoned in Gloucester Castle.
After his release he entered Oxford with a force of 300 cavalry to occupy the city for William.
Lovelace was Captain of the Gentlemen Pensioners in 1689 and was Chief Justice in Eyre south of Trent. In 1692, suffering from the ill-effects of a lifetime of alcoholic excess, Lovelace fell down a flight of stairs and never recovered. He died in 1693 in Lincoln"s Inn Fields, London at the age of about 53.
Lovelace married in 1662 Martha Pye, the daughter and coheiress of Sir Edmund Pye, 1st Baronet, of Bradenham, Buckinghamshire.