French Huguenot refugee
Claude Fonnereau (22 March 1677,[ 1] – 5 April 1740) was a French Huguenot refugee who settled in England and became a prominent merchant.[ 1] [ 2] He was the founding father of the Fonnereau family in England .
Early life
Fonnereau was born on 22 March 1677 at La Rochelle .[ 1] He was the son of Zacharie Fonnereau and Marguerite Chataigner.[ 1]
Career
Christchurch Mansion , Ipswich c. 1890
From 1738 to 1740, he was a Director of the Bank of England .
In 1735 he purchased Christchurch Mansion in Ipswich , Suffolk , from Price Devereux, 10th Viscount Hereford .[ 3]
Personal life
He married Elizabeth Bureau, also a Huguenot, the daughter of Anne Bureau, and had several children:[ 1] [ 4]
Thomas Fonnereau (1699–1779), a merchant and politician, who inherited his father's estates, including Christchurch Mansion.[ 5]
Claudius "Claude" Fonnereau (1701–1785), a doctor who inherited Christchurch Mansion on his elder brother's death.
Elizabeth Frances Fonnereau (b. 1702), who married Jacques "James" Benezet, also from a Huguenot family, who had settled in London .[ 6] [ 4]
Abel Fonnereau (1703–1753)[ 4]
Anne Fonnereau (b. 1704), who married Philip Champion de Crespigny , proctor of the Admiralty court ,[ 7] also from a Huguenot family, who had settled in Camberwell .[ 8]
Zachary Philip Fonnereau (1706–1778), a merchant and politician who married Margaret Martyn.
Peter Fonnereau (1709–1743)
Marie Anne Fonnereau (b. 1711), who married John Martyn .
Elizabeth Fonnereau (b. 1712), who married Mr. De Hauteville[ 4]
Fonnereau died on 5 April 1740 at Hoddesdon .
Descendants
Through his daughter Anne, he was a grandfather of Sir Claude Champion de Crespigny, 1st Baronet , and Philip Champion de Crespigny , MP for Sudbury and Aldeburgh .[ 8]
Through his son Zachary, he was a grandfather of Philip Fonnereau and Martyn Fonnereau (both MPs for Aldeburgh) and great-grandfather of author and artist Thomas George Fonnereau .[ 9]
References
^ a b c d e Agnew, Rev. David C. A. (David Carnegie Andrew) (1886). Protestant Exiles from France, Chiefly in the Reign of Louis XIV: Or, The Huguenot Refugees and Their Descendants in Great Britain and Ireland, Volume 2 . Edinburgh: Turnbull & Spears. p. 400.
^ Namier, L.B. (October 1927). "Brice Fisher, M. P.: A Mid-Eighteenth-Century Merchant and His Connexions". The English Historical Review . 42 (168): 514– 532. doi :10.1093/ehr/XLII.CLXVIII.514 . JSTOR 552412 .
^ "History | Ipswich Borough Council" .
^ a b c d Lart, Charles Edmund (1967). Huguenot Pedigrees . Genealogical Publishing Com. ISBN 978-0-8063-0207-2 . Retrieved 25 December 2019 .
^ "FONNEREAU, Thomas (1699-1779), of Christ Church, Ipswich, Suff" . www.historyofparliamentonline.org . History of Parliament Online . Retrieved 15 November 2023 .
^ "Benezet family papers 1729-1839" . quod.lib.umich.edu . University of Michigan. Retrieved 24 December 2019 .
^ Protestant Exiles from France/Volume 2 - Book Third - Chapter 20 - Fonnereau
^ a b "Champion de Crespigny family" . www.southlondonguide.co.uk . Retrieved 24 December 2019 .
^ Browning, Reed (June 1971). "The Duke of Newcastle and the Financing of the Seven Years' War". The Journal of Economic History . 31 (2): 344– 377. doi :10.1017/S0022050700090914 . JSTOR 2117049 . S2CID 154806047 .